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What Supercar Owners Do for a Living and Their Best Money Advice
Executive overview
At a Formula One track, a range of supercar owners — from a radiation oncologist to a UFC fighter to a SaaS founder — share how they built wealth and what they'd tell someone starting out. Career paths vary wildly, but the advice converges on a few consistent themes: passion, long-term thinking, and sales skills. Money does buy happiness, but only when family and communication are already solid.
Find what you love, go deep, and think in decades — not years.
Who owns supercars
- Radiation oncologist earning mid-six to seven figures; daily driver is a Tesla Plaid, track car is a heavily modded Viper making 1,600 hp on race gas.
- UFC fighter (top 5–10 paid) who started as a AAA tow truck driver; entered fighting because he had no other choice and loved it.
- Commodity trader partnered at a firm; wealth from natural gas trading funds construction, manufacturing, and a car customisation business.
- Oil and gas executive (now retired); attributes unhappiness among wealthy people almost entirely to poor communication and family problems.
- YouTube creator opening an exotic car storage and customisation shop called Zero to Sixty.
- SaaS founder running MailShank; turned down a Wells Fargo director role after realising a salary would cap his upside.
- Affiliate marketer who moved from promoting others' products to building his own and selling data.
What they said about making money
- Follow passion — you will not sustain 18-hour days doing something you don't love.
- Sales is the fastest path for employees: uncapped commissions mean effort directly equals income.
- UFC pay is low early; the fighter reached top earnings only after years of grinding at the bottom.
- The SaaS founder: being an employee caps your ceiling; entrepreneurship is how you break through.
- The affiliate marketer: start with other people's products to learn, then build your own.
Long-term investing advice
- One retired owner shows his kids a single-page S&P 500 chart going back to 1900.
- At one year, you can be down 50%; at 10–30 years, returns are never negative and often very positive.
- Short-term crypto bets are dismissed as a path that "just doesn't work."
- Get a good financial planner and start early — that's the consistent framework.
How to get access without money
- Track days are open to anyone who can afford entry.
- Volunteer with event organisers — "be a lab boy" — to get proximity to successful people.
- The commodity trader credits meeting smarter people at track events as a major source of wealth-building advice.
On money and happiness
- Retired oil executive: money does make you happier — people who say otherwise usually have relationship or family problems.
- Wealth alone doesn't fix a bad marriage or poor communication.
- Several owners frame nice cars as personal rewards tied to internal satisfaction, not status signalling.
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