Before any of the deals, before O’Hara Administration, before the VTC licenses and the Hawkers presidency and the early AI position that would return 20 times its cost, Leopoldo Alejandro Betancourt López spent time being told he was wasting it. The habit in question was daydreaming. Specifically, projecting himself forward into outcomes he had not yet reached — goals that seemed implausible from where he was standing at the time.
He describes the habit without apology and connects it directly to how he has since approached business and investment decisions. “I always was daydreaming about being somebody more important or achieving higher goals,” he said in a recent interview. “Everybody thought I was losing my time or wasting or being irrelevant.”
What the Habit Actually Does
Betancourt’s account of how visualization functions is specific. He is not describing a passive fantasy. He is describing a forward-projection habit that sustains effort through the intermediate period between a decision and its outcome. “That’s what motivates you, and you daydream about that all day. Once you start believing in it, it becomes reality without you noticing it.”
The operational significance: holding a pre-commercial AI investment for five years, accumulating VTC licenses before Uber entered Spain, and backing a consumer eyewear brand before it had the capital to sustain growth all required sustained conviction during periods when the thesis was not yet validated. Visualization — the specific mental habit of projecting forward into the validated outcome — is the mechanism that makes that kind of extended hold psychologically possible.
The ‘Always Look Forward’ Rule
Betancourt’s stated operating principle, when asked what he wants the world to hear, was direct: “Always look forward. Never consider stopping or quitting.” Applied to capital allocation, that instruction has a specific meaning. It means not allowing an unrealized position to recalibrate a thesis that hasn’t been disproven by the underlying facts.
Investors who let short-term losses or slow-developing theses change their baseline orientation abandon positions before they validate. Betancourt’s documented track record — the Auro result, the Hawkers outcome, the AI return — was produced by holding through exactly those periods. The forward-looking posture is not optimism for its own sake. It is the condition that allows a well-constructed thesis to play out.
Where the Line Is
Betancourt draws a hard limit between productive forward-belief and uncritical fantasy. His warning: “If you pass the border from the realistic world to a fantasy world, that’s where you get lost, and you can destroy your company and your project. Every entrepreneur has to dream big — but it has to have a route to success. It has to be doable.”
The daydreaming habit only produces useful outcomes when it is anchored to a specific, evaluable thesis. Hawkers had a concrete price gap and a distribution model advantage. Auro had regulatory scarcity and cross-market cycle precedent. The AI position had a functional technology thesis. The visualization was not a substitute for analysis — it was the psychological mechanism that allowed the analysis to be trusted through uncertainty, long enough to be proven right.

