Day: October 25, 2025
The U.S. Department of State has published a statement announcing that the Special Envoy for South and Central Asia, Sergio Gor, and Deputy Secretary of State Christopher Landau will travel to Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan from October 26 to October 30. According to the statement, “Special Envoy Gor and Deputy Secretary Landau will meet with Kazakh and Uzbekistani government counterparts to discuss a wide range of economic and security issues. The United States will continue to work with our Central Asian counterparts to strengthen relations and expand commercial ties. We look forward to enhancing bilateral cooperation between our countries and also recognizing ten years of U.S.-Central Asian partnership through the C5+1 diplomatic platform.”
No further details were provided in the announcement.
As revealed by a Times of Malta and OCCRP investigation, Gor was born as “Sergio Gorokhovsky on November 30, 1986, in Tashkent, Uzbekistan, which was part of the Soviet Union at the time.” Gor’s lawyer, Robert Garson, confirmed by email that his client was born in Tashkent. The investigation did not reveal any evidence of any crimes.
The previously unannounced visit is a continuation of recent talks held by the leaders of Astana and Tashkent with President Trump, and comes in the wake of new sanctions imposed on Russia last week, which directly affect countries in the region. In addition, last week, the U.S. Congressional Foreign Affairs Panel asked U.S. President Donald Trump to host a meeting in Washington, D.C. with leaders from Central Asia by the end of 2025.
Courtesy of Anish Patipathi
- Anish Pathipati was a Wall Street Rising Star in 2018 while working with investing legend Glenn Hutchins.
- Now, he’s launching a new fund, focused on building one big business at a time. First stop: tires.
- He’s bringing along two operational experts, including his dad, as a differentiator.
Anish Pathipati spent years honing his skills as a private equity investor, and now, he’s decided to “hang out a shingle,” launching his own fund, Simha Partners.
The last time we spoke to Pathipati for our 2018 Wall Street Rising Stars series, he was a director at North Island, a private equity firm founded by Glenn Hutchins, a cofounder of Silver Lake. He then joined Periphas Capital, cofounded by Sanjeev Mehra, a cofounder of Goldman Sachs’ private investment arm.
He’s applying what he’s learned from these renowned investors to inform his plan for Simha Partners, which raised $45 million for its first fund earlier this month, Pathipati said, adding that it was oversubscribed. He’s also trying something different, investing all of the capital in the fund to build a single business in a single sector: tire and auto repair.
Unlike search funders who look to buy a blue-collar business after working in corporate or investment roles, Pathipati will have plenty of help from his two other partners: Pathipati’s father, Narendra “Pat” Pathipati, and another close family friend, Tim O’Day,
O’Day and the senior Pathipati rose to CEO and CFO of Boyd Group Services, the parent company of auto collision market leader Gerber Collision & Glass. From when O’Day became president of US operations for Gerber Collision & Glass in September 2008 to when he retired over the spring, Boyd’s stock price had grown 100 times.
O’Day and the elder Pathipati, who retired as CFO in 2022, have decades of experience growing an auto collision business. And now, with the help of the younger Pathipati’s technology investing expertise, Simha Partners will look to replicate that success in the tire and auto repair business.
Pathipati spoke to us about the impetus for Simha Partners’ strategy, how it compares to the growing trend of search funds, how his career led up to this, and what it’s like to work with your dad.
The following conversation has been edited for clarity and length.
How has your career led you to creating your own firm?
I knew from day one that I wanted to be an entrepreneur, and I got closer to that goal at each phase of my career journey.
Phase one was institutional training at a mega-cap firm, Silver Lake Partners. Phase two was what I call my apprenticeship, working closely with legendary investors in startup settings. Phase three is now underway with the launch of Simha Partners, where I become the captain of my own journey.
In phase one, my approach was to work as hard as possible at this best-in-class institution. Working on transactions like the take-private of Dell helped me quickly pick up the tools of the investing trade.
In the apprenticeship phase, the key to success was choosing to work with people I had great regard for and who I could learn from.
This third phase requires a different mindset from the first two phases. Instead of trying to replicate what others have done, we want to build something new. In an industry that’s 40 years old, how can we innovate?
What are you looking to do differently at Simha?
I call it our modern-day industrialist vision. The goal is not to have 15 or 20 different portfolio companies, like a traditional private equity firm, but to instead focus on building one platform, standing it up on its own two feet with a self-sufficient management team, and then doing the same for platform two or platform three.
To help accomplish this, I’m joined by two partners with a more operational background.
They’ve grown an exceptional business with a roll-up strategy, implementing an acquisition, integration, and operations excellence program that Tim and Pat helped develop.
Few private equity firms have partners with this type of operating track record, and especially not in the lower middle market, which is where we hope to begin.
With our first fund, we will focus exclusively on the tire and auto services industry. This shows target companies that we’re not just tourists in the industry, and allows us to focus our attention on one industry, as opposed to a typical PE partner who is pulled in a lot of different directions.
The scale is very different, but this focus on building one business vs a larger fund reminds me of the phenomenon of a growing interest in search funds as the industry institutionalizes and becomes more corporate.
While building the Simha vision, I did ask how we’re different from a search fund. One key difference is that our capital is fully committed, unlike a search fund that has to go back to its investors. This allows us to present ourselves very differently to target companies.
A second difference is scale. With $45 million of commitments and a multiple of that available via co-invest demand, our fund is much larger than a typical search fund.
Third, we’re not planning to run the company ourselves as CEOs. Search fund entrepreneurs are effectively buying a job, but we want to support a management team that can stand on its own.
How does your experience as a tech investor fit into this?
The best competitive advantage comes from interweaving tech with real-world operations. The tire and auto services industry is ripe for the application of technology in operations. This cuts across every part of the business, from customer-facing workflows like scheduling and vehicle inspections to internal workflows like technician staffing and tire ordering.
Technology can’t replace an auto mechanic, but it can allow the mechanics to serve customers faster, cheaper, and better.
What’s it been like working with your dad?
It’s really a dream come true. My dad has always been my closest mentor and greatest advocate — the opportunity to work with him is special. If anything though, it’s made me work even harder. No time is off limits when your dad is your partner.
I’m also very excited about the opportunity to work with Tim. I’ve known him for over a decade and in addition to being an exceptional executive, I consider him a family friend.
It’s been quite valuable for our business too, because many of the targets we would think about investing in are themselves family businesses. We can actually walk the walk, not just talk the talk, right? We can tell our targets that we have the capital of a private equity firm, the focus of a business builder, and top-tier operational experience, but it’s one family and family-friend talking to another.”
Courtesy of Kerri Allen
- I’ve only recently begun to think about my mother’s age and what it means.
- I’m an only child, and we’ve been through so many things together. We’re incredibly close.
- Thinking about being without her someday is hard, but I’m also beginning to appreciate aging myself.
My mother opened the door to her apartment, joyful to see me in her doorway. She was wearing an oversize black T-shirt with white cursive across the front that reads: “I can’t believe I’m the same age as old people.”
I’ve long accepted that she’s no fashionista, but I’ve only recently begun to grasp that my quirky 76-year-old mother is getting up there in years. (Can we say old? Her shirt says old.)
I’ve only recently started to grapple with her mortality
I’ve seen her scrape the edges of mortality many times: Stage II breast cancer, four joint replacements, rheumatoid arthritis, and a coronary angioplasty. These have been her personal trials, of course, but as her only child, I hope that I’ve borne some of the weight with her. I recall the diagnoses, the doctors’ appointments, the tears, the terror in her eyes from some awkward hospital bed.
But I saw each of these as mere moments in time. Bumps in the road. It took me years — decades, maybe — to internalize that these illnesses culminate in the truth that her mortal body is breaking down.
I inch toward acceptance at times, but then my mind reels. Isn’t 76 the new 56!? I recently Googled life expectancy tables for some reassuring data. I scrolled down to the birth year row of 1949. The average white American woman born in that year can reasonably expect to live to the age of 78. The research is right there, but how does a person process that information?
Courtesy of Kerri Allen
Our relationship is extremely close, even with its ups and downs
My mother and I have had years of deep, almost psychic, closeness. Whatever is happening in my life, whether auditioning for my middle school production of “The King and I” or discussing the realities of menopause (which I hear is coming for me soon), she understands, offers encouragement, is ever-present. Mom-on-demand.
She thinks whatever I say is hilarious, whatever I choose is smart, whatever I do is the best. Maybe she’s just great at faking it. In any case, I know I’m lucky.
That said, we have also barely made it through confusing and painful seasons of our relationship. Some people might call her…a bit dramatic or complex (I may be one of those people), and our battles have cut deep. My move to college was painful for both of us. A May-December romance she pursued rocked my world. She often felt abandoned by her only daughter. I bristled at feeling smothered.
As I’ve gotten older myself, my own perspective has changed
All of these “issues” that I once wanted to untangle in therapy, well, I just don’t care anymore. At a certain point, you shift from seeing a parent as a parent to another flawed human like yourself. As we’ve both aged, we’ve also naturally mellowed out. I don’t have the time or energy to fight. I relish my own midlife for that very reason. The things that don’t matter fade into the background. Those that are precious sharpen into focus.
I recently shared that revelation with my mom. “I’m glad you find that getting older is better,” she emailed me. “It’s just a journey, you know? As you age, for some reason, living gets lighter.”
For so much of my early life, it was the two of us in an 800-square-foot apartment against the world, and I desperately feared losing her. And yet we remain. We may live 30 miles apart, connected by text messages most days, but the closeness endures.
I still fear the loss of her one day, but it’s tempered now with the wisdom and gratitude of an adult, not the panic of a child. I believe that this strange, almost miraculous, connection we have will outlive us both. Life expectancy tables be damned.
Anadolu/Anadolu via Getty Images
- Instagram Reels now has a watch history that shows you everything you saw on Reels recently.
- It’s only for the last 30 days, but this is hugely helpful.
- Now you can find that old Reel you saw last week from the account whose name you couldn’t remember
If I could have back all the time I’ve spent searching Instagram in vain for a Reel I saw in passing — trying for weeks to come up with the right combination of hashtags or keywords that would bring it back — well, I’d have back hours, I’d guess. Enough time to go to the gym or call my mom. These are the sacrifices I make to pursue my goal of pushing the known human limits of how much short-form video content can be consumed before one is driven to madness.
Which is why I was thrilled — Ecstatic! Rapturous! Ready to smash that like button! — upon learning from Instagram head Adam Mosseri that Instagram has added a new “watch history” feature.
This new tool lets you scroll back through all the Reels you saw over the last 30 days.
To access the watch history, go to your profile, then the Settings menu > Your activity > Watch history (scroll all the way down). You can sort from oldest to newest, or even by author.
Hallelujah!
Finally, I can use this to go back and find that weird video I saw last week, I forgot to save, but want to show someone today.
Despite my initial reservations, I’ve come to really enjoy Reels. It’s developed a sort of culture of its own, and I’ve noticed that its algorithm leads me to very different types of content than I get shown on TikTok. (I see a lot of front-facing videos of people talking about topics I’m interested in on TikTok; on Reels, I tend to get more slice-of-life videos of people doing things outside. I don’t understand why this is different.)
Instagram knows that most people are now spending time on the app watching Reels and DMing their friends — and often DMing Reels to their friends. It’s rolled out a handful of new features that cater to this. You can now see the videos your friends “liked,” as well as the “Blend” feature in DMs, where you can essentially share your algorithm with a friend to show them the crazy videos you get shown (this feature is actually really fun).
Just recently, Instagram also launched a big redesign that puts messaging and Reels at the forefront of the bottom nav bar.
It’s slightly sad that Instagram, as we knew it, has really changed — it’s no longer an app for people to post brunch pics. But I do appreciate that it’s been launching new features like “Blends” in DMs to accommodate new behavior. (Meta’s new product/feature launches aren’t always so good; Vibes, the new AI slop feed in its Meta AI app, is a total dud.)
Now, the only downside to this new Reels history feature is that it goes back only 30 days — that’s not far enough!
(One note: As of Friday afternoon, there was a small bug that makes it seem as if you can pick a custom date range further back than 30 days — Meta confirmed to Business Insider that you can’t, and that there’s a fix in the works.)
TikTok already has the watch history feature, and it will let you go back six months. Which is far better when you know you’ve seen some funny or interesting thing and want to pull it back up.
Is it mildly creepy to see your own watch history? Slightly! Feels a little embarrassing when you notice you went down a 10-video rabbit hole of one person’s account, like an older man who makes near-daily videos complaining about the parking situation on Nantucket or a 20-something who filmed his mom yelling at him about how he needs a haircut, and then you had to see all his other videos to see if the mom was right. (I can’t tell you why I was so rapt by this, other than to say I appreciate the full breadth of the human experience.)
But we’re way past the point of feeling creeped out by realizing Instagram remembers what videos we’ve seen. Of course it does! Duh!
Look, I came to Instagram to do two things: feed advertisers data on my personal shopping preferences to increase shareholder value, and to LOL at some funny videos. And guess what? I’m going to do both until my brain oozes out of my ears.