
Hello investors,
I am Professor Brendon McCloskey, currently serving as the Head of Canadian Operations at Tiger Global Management. Today, I would like to discuss an important topic: why the “Profit Plan” must be executed through institutional accounts.
In today’s global financial markets, institutional accounts have become an essential part of professional capital management. Especially in global investing, large-scale asset allocation, and quantitative trading, institutional accounts are widely considered the industry standard. As competition within international capital markets continues to intensify, more investment institutions are using institutional accounts to improve trading efficiency and strengthen risk-management capabilities.
What Is an Institutional Account?
An institutional account is a professional trading account opened through a brokerage firm by corporations, funds, or investment institutions. Within the financial industry, these are often referred to as VIP institutional accounts.
Unlike ordinary retail accounts, institutional accounts generally provide more stable market access, higher-level trading permissions, and broader investment capabilities. Many institutional accounts are directly connected to exchange systems and can efficiently participate in stocks, ETFs, mutual funds, futures, bonds, and certain derivatives markets.
Simply put, retail accounts function as standard retail trading channels, while institutional accounts operate more like VIP professional channels within the financial markets. This is one of the main reasons why more global investment institutions are transitioning toward institutionalized trading structures.
Why Are Institutional Accounts More Advantageous?
Professor Brendon McCloskey explained that one of the biggest advantages of institutional accounts is their broader investment scope. Institutional accounts are typically able to access stocks, ETFs, funds, futures, foreign exchange markets, bonds, and certain complex financial products, while retail accounts may face restrictions in some markets and investment categories. As global capital markets become increasingly interconnected, institutional accounts provide investors with greater flexibility in global asset allocation.
In addition to broader investment access, institutional accounts also offer greater trading flexibility and larger capital capacity. These accounts are designed to support large-scale capital operations while maintaining more advanced risk-management structures. According to Professor Brendon McCloskey, as investment scale increases, execution efficiency, operational stability, and risk management become some of the most critical factors in long-term investing.
Institutional accounts also provide access to more professional research and market support services. Brokerage firms often offer institutional clients dedicated investment advisors, professional research teams, customized investment strategies, and institutional-level market analysis services. Professor Brendon McCloskey believes that long-term investment success depends not only on market opportunities, but also on systematic research capabilities and disciplined risk management.
In addition, institutional accounts typically have access to more advanced trading systems and financial tools, including professional trading terminals, DMA (Direct Market Access) systems, quantitative trading software, and institutional-grade market data systems. These tools help institutional investors improve execution speed, optimize trading efficiency, and strengthen overall asset-management capabilities.
Professor Brendon McCloskey stated that future competition within global capital markets will not simply be a competition of capital size, but a competition of research systems, trading infrastructure, and long-term risk-management capabilities.
Why Does the Profit Plan Emphasize Institutional Operations?
When discussing the Profit Plan, Professor Brendon McCloskey explained that the project is fundamentally a long-term, institutionalized, and systematic global asset allocation strategy. As a result, the Profit Plan places strong emphasis on risk management, long-term capital stability, global asset allocation, and institutional-level trading efficiency.
As artificial intelligence, digital finance, and global capital flows continue to evolve, Professor Brendon McCloskey believes institutional investment models will play an increasingly important role in global financial markets, while institutional accounts will gradually become one of the core foundations of long-term capital management.
News Desk