TV & Radio Interviews

The Diary Of A CEO - Cathie Wood

Cathie Wood joins me today. Is everything you thought you knew about investing about to change forever? Cathie reveals the best investments to make in 2025 to get rich fast. She explains: ▫️How there are only 5 years until everything changes, and what you must do to prepare. ▫️Why she’s betting on Bitcoin hitting $1.5 million by 2030. ▫️The simple strategy that will skyrocket your passive income. ▫️How Tesla’s autonomous taxis and humanoid robots will reshape entire industries. ▫️The number one company that could make you financially free in 5 years. The information in this episode is for educational purposes only and should not be considered financial advice. Always do your research or speak to a licensed financial advisor before making any investment decisions.

Cathie Wood is not in the business of predicting the future — she’s in the business of building it.

When she sat across from Steven Bartlett on The Diary of a CEO, her presence wasn’t that of your traditional finance mogul. She didn’t throw around jargon like armor. She spoke with conviction — calm, calculated, and often startlingly human — about the exponential shifts she sees barreling toward us. In doing so, she pulled back the curtain on how she thinks, invests, and stays unwaveringly contrarian in a world addicted to consensus. At 68, Cathie Wood remains one of the most polarizing figures in modern investing. As the founder and CEO of ARK Invest, she’s become known — sometimes worshipped, sometimes criticized — for her moonshot projections and evangelical belief in disruptive innovation. Yet what sets her apart isn’t just what she invests in, but the reason why. To understand Cathie Wood is to understand how belief, data, and courage collide in an industry that punishes all three.

Cathie Wood Has a Message for Investors: You're Worried About the Wrong  Thing - WSJ

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Cathie Wood, ARK CEO, on Tesla and Nvidia Stock, Favorite AI Plays -  Barron's

In this conversation, she warned that we are just five years away from a complete economic overhaul. Think faster than the Industrial Revolution. More volatile than the Dot-com bubble. She predicts an era where artificial intelligence, blockchain, autonomous vehicles, and energy storage converge to produce cascading breakthroughs. And she’s not alone — technologists and economists agree: we’re not inching toward change, we’re accelerating into it. Cathie’s investment in Bitcoin is one of her boldest, projecting it to soar to $1.5 million by 2030. It’s easy to dismiss that figure as outlandish until you listen to her rationale. It’s not just a price prediction — it’s a belief in a decentralized future. A future where trust isn’t housed in banks or institutions, but in code. In resilience. In mathematics. Bitcoin, to her, isn’t just a coin; it’s a philosophical stance. Then there’s Tesla — her long-standing bet that has drawn equal parts applause and ridicule. While others focused on quarterly results, Cathie zoomed out. She spoke of autonomous taxis that could one day earn you more than your job. Of Tesla’s Optimus robots, not as novelties but as labor force disruptors. Where critics see hype, she sees network effects, declining cost curves, and margin expansions no spreadsheet can yet predict. 

But Cathie doesn’t romanticize the future. She prepares for it. She urges individuals to rethink not just how they invest money, but how they invest time, knowledge, and attention. Her advice? Learn about exponential technologies. Build conviction. Ignore noise. And perhaps most importantly, don’t delegate your future to someone who doesn’t believe in yours. This is where Cathie departs from the Wall Street elite. She doesn’t hoard insight; she shares it. Her belief in transparency — publishing her firm’s trades in real time, sharing research freely — has created an almost cult-like following. But beneath that openness lies something rarer: accountability. If her predictions fail, she does not hide. She studies. Adjusts. Moves forward.

It’s tempting to view Cathie as an oracle, a maverick investor with an almost mythic foresight. But listen closely, and you’ll see something even more compelling: a woman navigating an ocean of uncertainty, armed not with certainty, but with courage. In one of the most quietly powerful moments of the episode, she said, “It’s man versus the ocean.” That metaphor — of investors, builders, and dreamers confronting the vast unknown—echoes long after the cameras stop. Because it’s not really about money. It’s about possibility. About charting paths where maps don’t exist. About imagining a world that doesn’t yet reward your vision, but one day might. Cathie Wood doesn’t ask you to follow her. She challenges you to look ahead. Not with fear, but with faith — that the future belongs not to the loudest or the safest, but to those brave enough to believe.

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