Why venture capitalist Chamath Palihapitiya is getting roasted for saying possessions are 'worthless'

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Social Capital CEO Chamath Palihapitiya at the Tenth Breakthrough Prize Ceremony at the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures in Los Angeles.

Chamath Palihapitiya is the founder and CEO of Social Capital, a venture capital firm. ETIENNE LAURENT/AFP via Getty Images

Venture capitalist Chamath Palihapitiya is getting roasted on X for saying possessions are "worthless."

In a video posted on his YouTube channel on Friday, Palihapitiya said possessions are "a sign of insecurity, and they're a sign of a rampant ego, and they're a sign of an unsettled mind."

In the video, Palihapitiya is wearing a plush, unbranded, off-white hoodie. There are no obvious clues about its maker, but some online sleuths have been quick to say it's a Loro Piana, the Italian brand synonymous with quiet luxury and famously behind Kendall Roy's $625 baseball cap in "Succession."

Some people shared screenshots on X of the brand's creamy-colored Breia Hooded Sweatshirt, which retails for just over $2,700.

"Chamath telling you this while wearing a $2400 Loro Piana Breia sweatshirt is pure comedy," one person wrote in an X post, which received over 5,000 likes.

Palihapitiya said on X on Sunday that the sweater he wore is not a Loro Piana. Business Insider was not able to reach Palihapitiya for comment.

This isn’t Loro Piana. I’ve moved on.

— Chamath Palihapitiya (@chamath) June 21, 2026

While the sweatshirt he is wearing in the video does not seem to match the Loro Piano Breia sweatshirt — they have, for example, slightly different necklines — Palihapitiya has long been perceived as a luxury aficionado, and he has spoken fondly of the Loro Piano label before.

In an episode of his "All-In" podcast that aired in 2022, he shared an anecdote about taking venture capitalist David Sacks to his tailor and to a Loro Piana store.

In Friday's YouTube video, Palihapitiya said he once spent money on luxury possessions but later came to view them as a distraction from what he truly cared about: building and creating things.

He said that some status symbols, like owning a private jet, felt like a box-checking exercise.

"I used to think watches were really beautiful, mechanical, amazing things. I still do. And so I bought one, then I bought another one, then I bought another one," Palihapitiya said.

He then said he had to get them fixed because he wouldn't wear them all the time, and the insurance costs were spiraling.

"I thought to myself, what is this? This is so stupid. I can just tell the time with my iPhone," he added.

The backlash toward Palihapitiya's comments comes as the AI boom mints a new generation of founders and investors, bringing with it a heightened interest in status symbols for the tech elite.

His declaration that possessions are "worthless" also comes as the luxury market slows after a post-pandemic boom.

"All the trappings of success used to be reserved for the most successful people. Now, when you look, all the trappings of success are an Instagram with a bunch of mids," he said, using internet slang for mediocre people.

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Roya is a business news fellow at Business Insider's London office.Before joining Business Insider, she worked as a reporter at financial newswire Alliance News and was a platforms and publishing intern at The Wall Street Journal. Roya graduated from City St George's, University of London with an MA in International Journalism. You can contact her via email at [email protected] or message her securely on Signal at royashahidi.36

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