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What Is “Trust”? Why Even Larry Ellison Didn’t Fully Pass the Test

What Is “Trust”? Why Even Larry Ellison Didn’t Fully Pass the Test

Published 6 months, 4 weeks ago
Description

In this episode, we reflect on a recent U.S. media acquisition story that raised a simple but unsettling question:
Why wasn’t even Larry Ellison’s backing enough to secure full market confidence?

Behind a high-profile hostile takeover bid, Ellison’s name — one of the most trusted and powerful figures in business — seemed unquestionable. Yet the market hesitated. Looking closer, the issue wasn’t the person, but the structure: how the funding was arranged, and whether it could operate without relying on personal intent.

From there, the conversation expands into a broader idea.
Personal trust and financial trust are not the same. Markets are designed around the assumption that people change, circumstances shift, and relationships evolve. What they value is not belief, but systems that continue to function regardless.

We explore how this distinction applies not only to global finance, but also to everyday work — even small businesses — and what it really means to build something that can be trusted over time.

A quiet look at trust, structure, and why reliability often matters more than reputation.

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