The Red Box That Built a Billion-Dollar Portfolio Manager
The personal story behind the numbers
After teaching thousands of students about market dynamics and compound growth, I thought I understood the power of early financial education. Then I watched my brother Aown's recent interview, and I realized I was witnessing how childhood curiosity can be nurtured into world-class expertise.
The video opens with a simple question about managing billions in public markets for an entire country. But Aown's story begins much earlier, with a red savings box and the entrepreneurial instincts of a child who chose business over football (soccer for my U.S.-based readers.)
Although I share this story with you out of pride, it also offers some valuable lessons in economics, leadership, and education that we can learn from. So allow me to share my perspective.
The Economics of a Red Box
In the video, Aown recalls his childhood differently than most kids remember theirs. While other children played, he had a red savings box where he collected money. One day, and I remember this day vividly, instead of joining friends for football, he bought snacks and set up shop right outside the field. His logic? Players would get thirsty and hungry, and he'd be there to meet that demand.
As an economist, I recognize this immediately: at age seven, my brother intuitively understood market timing, location strategy, and consumer behavior. But more importantly, he understood opportunity cost, giving up immediate pleasure (playing football) for future financial gain. He also understood arbitrage. Arbitrage is buying and selling identical or equivalent assets in different markets to profit from price differences. Lessons and topics he leverages every day at work.
Three Strategic Lessons Hidden in This Success Story
Early Specialization - The video shows how Aown's childhood business instincts led him to double-major in Finance and Marketing at the University of Louisville, then pursue both his CFA charter and Master's degree simultaneously. By 2014, he had completed both credentials. He clearly articulates something I truly believe in: why make a choice when you don’t have to?
Global Markets Never Sleep - One of the highlights of the interview is when Aown explains his daily reality: markets open in Tokyo at 4 AM Oman time and close in New York at midnight. "We're always busy, and we always need to know what's happening in the world," he says. This highlights the importance of being informed.
95% Preparation, 5% Execution- Perhaps the most valuable insight from the interview comes when Aown breaks down his team’s work: "95% of our work is studying, analyzing, reading, and understanding what's happening in the world with different market conditions. Only 5% is making the investment decision."This ratio should revolutionize how you think about decision-making in your organization. The companies that outperform aren't making better split-second decisions; they're doing better homework.
The Results
The video highlights that under Aown and his team at Oman Investment Authority, they achieved:
9% outperformance above global market indices over three years
#1 global ranking among sovereign wealth funds in 2022
68% of the team holds or is pursuing CFA certification—an exceptionally high rate for sovereign funds
This success stems from a culture that values continuous learning over short-term gains.
Why You Should Watch This Video (Even If Your Arabic Is Rusty)- English captions are available.
Beyond my pride as a big brother, this interview offers something rare: authentic insight into how billion-dollar portfolio management works and the people behind the numbers.
Watch the interview here:
The Takeaway
Every organization talks about developing talent and thinking long-term. But how many actually nurture the equivalent of "red box thinking"—the willingness to sacrifice immediate gratification for strategic positioning?
Watching Aown's journey from that entrepreneurial child to managing billions, I hope this video inspires a generation of younger financial and investment analysts.
As an educator and someone who believes in the power of financial education, it is a reminder that early investments in economic and business education compound and yield high returns.
Well done, brother!
-Dr. A
Dr. Abdullah Al Bahrani is Professor of Economics and Associate Dean at Northern Kentucky University's Haile College of Business. He provides strategic economic insight to business leaders and has taught economics to thousands of students. His research focuses on household finance and the economics of decision-making with imperfect or incomplete information. Subscribe to my newsletter to receive my posts on economics, leadership, and professional development.
Well written. I guess I have always been a red box thinker and hadn't noticed. I know part of my problem is I get too strategic sometimes and it can lead issues. The importance of early investment cannot be overstated
I enjoyed the video. Glad to see that you have such a successful brother! Many good lessons as well.