1 The Tax Nobody Lists
Every investment firm publishes its fees and buries its latency. Yet latency, the time between seeing an opportunity and holding a position against it, is the most expensive line item a house carries, and the only one it can choose to remove.
In continuous markets the cost is not theoretical. Price discovery does not pause while a committee deliberates. The edge decays in the interval, and the interval is manufactured entirely by structure.
is a latency tax.
2 Why Capital Cannot Buy It Back
The intuitive fix is more capital: a bigger book to overwhelm the friction. But capital does not shorten the path between conviction and execution; it lengthens it, because larger pools demand more oversight, and oversight is itself another layer.
Structure compounds where capital merely accumulates. A house that removes a layer keeps that advantage every single cycle, while a house that adds capital pays the latency tax again on every position.
3 One Operator, Zero Distance
OX85 collapses the distance to near zero. One operator holds the thesis, the capital, and the execution at once. There is no handoff, no memo, no waiting for permission to move. The position is taken in the same motion the view is formed.
That is not a smaller version of a fund. It is a different instrument entirely.