
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


The most valuable commodity for investors is information, and hedge funds and asset managers are going to great lengths to get it -- even to outer space. This week on the Odd Lots podcast, Tracy Alloway and Bloomberg View columnist Matt Levine are joined by James Crawford, a former NASA scientist who founded Orbital Insight. Crawford's company uses satellite photos to do things like track retail sales by studying parking lots and track oil supplies by scanning global oil tanks. He explains how his company figures out what to look for and how to look for it, and how investors and governments use his information to make decisions.
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
By Bloomberg4.5
17661,766 ratings
The most valuable commodity for investors is information, and hedge funds and asset managers are going to great lengths to get it -- even to outer space. This week on the Odd Lots podcast, Tracy Alloway and Bloomberg View columnist Matt Levine are joined by James Crawford, a former NASA scientist who founded Orbital Insight. Crawford's company uses satellite photos to do things like track retail sales by studying parking lots and track oil supplies by scanning global oil tanks. He explains how his company figures out what to look for and how to look for it, and how investors and governments use his information to make decisions.
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

977 Listeners

3,072 Listeners

406 Listeners

1,173 Listeners

2,175 Listeners

427 Listeners

355 Listeners

943 Listeners

970 Listeners

797 Listeners

196 Listeners

289 Listeners

2,145 Listeners

30 Listeners

435 Listeners

4 Listeners

155 Listeners

58 Listeners

273 Listeners

233 Listeners

230 Listeners

69 Listeners

87 Listeners

81 Listeners

85 Listeners

403 Listeners

19 Listeners

14 Listeners

7 Listeners

2 Listeners

155 Listeners

119 Listeners