All-In with Chamath, Jason, Sacks & Friedberg - E1: US Response to COVID-19 & Impact on Startups, Venture Capital & Public Markets with David Friedberg
Episode Date: March 19, 2020Follow @chamath: https://twitter.com/chamath Follow @jason: https://twitter.com/Jason  https://linktr.ee/calacanis 0:01 Jason & Chamath intro David and check in on each other's quarantines 2:26 Has... the US overreacted or underreacted so far? David & Chamath give their opinions on new directives & statistics 13:15 Thoughts on potential treatment options & policy changes 22:25 Chamath explains the circumstances of recording a podcast while the Stock Market tanks in real-time 25:03 Should the US adopt Chinese & South Korean quarantine strategies? 29:53 What do the current market conditions mean for startups & VC? 41:24 Chamath explains what is currently happening in the capital markets 45:05 How close is the US on being able to do mass-testing? 54:13 Thoughts on bailouts for companies that manipulated their earnings-per-share ratio by stock buybacks? Impact on the global economy 1:03:14 Impact on luxury goods? Should there be a monthly stipend for low-income citizens? 1:12:10 COVID-19 exposing holes in the US healthcare system 1:17:44 Should we ban wet markets globally? 1:24:12 Over/Under: when Americans will be allowed to go out to restaurants again 1:28:18 When will the weekly poker game resume?
Transcript
Discussion (0)
All right, everybody, welcome to another edition of the all in podcast. We'll call this episode one
We did a test and over a hundred thousand of you listened to the test podcast that we did a few days in a few days
Chimoff is already getting addicted to his statistics a new podcaster. I need to focus on something going up
Yes exactly
Our portfolios are getting crushed, but the podcast numbers are going up. Yes, exactly. Our portfolios are getting crushed, but the podcast numbers are going
up there. A meaningless victory to be sure. But we got a lot of positive feedback, and
we're all sitting at home in quarantine. As you can see, I set up my home office, I got
a microphone here, and Shamaat is in his bedroom, and Dave Freberg, I think, is in his
wine room or something in his compound. Are you in the safe room?
Is this the safe room day?
Freeberg is with us again.
He got a lot of great feedback.
And he's now on the Twitter.
You can follow him at freeberg.
I don't know if he should his Twitter down
because he was getting harassed on Twitter.
Welcome to the club.
Are you in your safe room, David?
Yeah, it's brutal on Twitter.
I don't know how you guys do it.
You put something up and everyone, you know,
just goes after you. It's harsh out there in the Twitter world. It's Twitter on Twitter. I don't know how you guys do it. You put something up and everyone just goes after you.
It's harsh out there in the Twitter world,
in the Twitterverse.
Basically, you have to mute and block anybody
who is under 100 followers and being an absolute jerk
because it's likely a Russian bot being run out of
like Manila or something like that.
They've got all these like sophisticated rings of people that they just hire for 10 bucks
a day to harass people online.
I mean, I know it sounds like a crazy conspiracy theory, but it's actually true.
This large groups of bots who go after people and try to create chaos.
But hey, we're sitting here.
It's today's Wednesday.
We did our podcast on Saturday.
The stock market has gone down another 20% since then, I guess. Or so. And we are looking like this is
going to be a 50% correction or something like that. We're now, you know, well past a 30 plus percent.
now well past a 30 plus percent. And on the good news front, it looks like testing is actually occurring and that work on treatments
is occurring.
I don't know if we can call them cures, but treatments is occurring and quarantine in
place is being taken seriously.
And I guess the biggest thing is that Trump has basically admitted that this is a crisis
and he's taking it seriously
Friedberg what is your assessment of where we are today versus when we taped on Saturday in terms of the resolution to this
We are we overreacting reacting just enough or not reacting enough?
There's three things to consider the The health, the policy, and then the markets.
On the health front, it seems like we have done a lot in terms of containment, and we're
ramping up testing.
We are still not doing broad general population testing, which is necessary for us to truly
understand the dynamics of this disease, and also to understand the contagion of this
disease. And we need to fix that problem.
There's a task force of 100 people out of DC
being led by Jared Kushner and a number of people
from the tech industry that are working on ramping up,
testing and doing broader general population testing.
The policy decisions are what get quite scary
and that is all of the containment, shutting down travel,
shutting down borders, shutting down bridges and the economic ramifications of doing so are frightening.
I think I mentioned the other day that 48% roughly of the US Treasury Secretary was saying that we should expect 20 to 30 percent of the workforce
to be unemployed by this summer if we keep this up.
So that is a frustrating and staggering statistic and something worth debating, whether
that policy decision is appropriate relative to the potential life and health and health
system impact, you know, which one is worse.
And then the market question is just, I don't know how to address that, but things go from that
back to worse. I have eight things that I've told them. I want to say one more thing.
And I think the most important data to come out today.
So the markets are fucked, we're all in trouble.
Yada yada.
The most scary thing is Ford and GM just shut down their plants today.
And the reason they shut down their plants is because out of fear of coronavirus and auto
workers, the UAW basically forced them to do it.
The world lives on a 30-day food supply.
So if you stop food production today,
there would only be 30 days of food
for the whole world to eat based on our calorie consumption per day.
And especially with an isolated border
and we import a lot of food in the United States.
If that means that we are then going to shut down other factories,
the Ford GM shutdown, and we're going to shut down food production,
processing, and distribution factories, then we have a food security crisis.
And this becomes a real societal problem.
So the concern that I have with the factories being shut down today is the precedent it
sets and the potential follow on from there in the food system.
And one thing we can't stop doing is making a distributing food to humans in the United
States, or else we don't't have problems. You're right, but before we go there, the good news is that these
directives don't apply to national critical infrastructure. And the food supply is covered
within that. So unless something cataclysmic happens, those folks are still going to make
sure that food supply is there. I do agree with you that the issue that we have to contend with is that, you know,
there may not be as much.
And in the, you know, 30th to 90th day, that becomes a real issue of this thing,
becomes a very protracted problem.
This sort of brings us back, David, without being too alarmist about how we started,
and how you started
really importantly at the beginning, which is there is a small, but very credible body
of evidence that is starting to show. And this is what you put out on Twitter and part
of why you got, you know, attacked probably by the pharma lobby. But that shows that there is a potentially, an enormously large asymptomatic spreader
dynamic in this disease.
So can you describe that and what that may mean and why there is a lot of silver lining
and good news in that, if it's true?
There are several data points that are showing us that there may be an unexpectedly high number
of people that get this disease and don't have any symptoms and show it.
The historical data that we've gathered to date has been largely symptomatic patients,
and in some places like in Korea, asymptomatic patients that had really close contact with
symptomatic patients that were confirmed to be positive.
And in Korea in particular, they found a large cohort,
nearly 40% of the infected population
were people between 20 and 29 years old
that did not exhibit any symptoms
or had very mild symptoms had a runny nose
and didn't even know that they were sick.
On the Princess cruise ship, it turns out that up to 50%
may have been asymptomatic. People were all tested on Princess cruise ship, it turns out that up to 50% may have been asymptomatic.
People were all tested on that cruise ship
because there were so many people that were positive
and through that data set, that cohort,
we found a very large asymptomatic population,
50% roughly.
The NBA players have now been tested
and out of seven players on five teams.
So out of seven players on those five teams
that have tested positive, it seems like
none of them are having any symptoms. There may be one person who's having a cough, but
generally they seem one of, I think it was Don of the Mitchell said I could go play a
7 game series tomorrow. So this data is really important and it hasn't been fully accounted
for in the models and the predictions of the pandemic and the predictions of the fatality
rate. We're assuming that let's say 2% of people that get this disease end up dying.
And by the way, that's also based on an age histogram that may not be appropriate
for our particular cohort in the United States.
If you took that data and then you just did it based on the fact that a large percentage
of people actually don't die, but they end up just being asymptomatic, it really changes
the denominator and it skews the results.
A paper published showed that in China, up to 86% of people did not realize that they were
sick or they were unreported and they had mild symptoms.
If you take that high level, you take that low level, call it somewhere between 25 and
86%, maybe even as high as 86% of patients are asymptomatic, which means that the actual
fatality rate is much, much lower, even in
a large cohort that gets infected here.
So we should be mindful of this new data that's emerging, and we're still racing and acting
from a policy basis as if 2% of people, 3% of people, 4% of people that get this are
going to die, and that may not actually be true based on what we're seeing in the last
week.
I have a comment in a statement. The comment is people will say,
David, you can't extrapolate from an NBA player who may just be in peak physical fitness,
although I think your answer is going to be, it's not clear that the disease is correlated
necessarily with physical fitness for unphysical fitness at all. It just may be the strain
in how your body processes it.
But then the question is, doesn't this mean that we need to have broad-based, massive
testing, not just of symptomatic population, so not just the PCR test that we've heard
a lot about, but also these antibody tests so that we know that people have had it?
And what's the status of that, David?
What's the status of it?
That's exactly right, Timot.
And by the way, on the healthy NBA player point,
it's absolutely true.
People that are between 20 and 30,
the average age of the NBA is 26 years old.
People that are between 20 and 30 years old
generally seem to have no to mild symptoms
based on what we saw in Korea.
The other data sets need to be taken into account.
So the NBA is an interesting anecdote, sure.
And you could discredit it all you want
and say that it's a highly correlated class
and so on, because everyone's together all the time.
But we could look at the data that came out of China
in a paper that was published in the journal Science
and a paper that was published in the journal Nature
from Korea that showed very large percentages anywhere
from 20 to 50 to 80% or 90% of people
being completely asymptomatic across an age spectrum.
Certainly very heavier weighted towards the younger age bracket from children all the way
up to 30 or 40 years old, you can be completely asymptomatic.
These are really interesting discoveries that have happened.
To your point, we need more data and we need to confirm that hypothesis
because that's how science works.
So we have a hypothesis, let's go test it.
The problem is we're not testing it
and we should be as a priority right now
because the policy decisions we're making
are based upon a denominator that may be wrong.
So the correct action should be to go get those antibody tests,
go out into the population
and start testing the asymptomatic general population
and see what percentage of people in these high risk zones like Seattle and LA and New
York and SF already have the antibodies to this virus meaning they've been infected with
this virus and have not or are not showing any symptoms.
And that gives us a better sense of A how widespread this infection is and B the true
dynamics of the fatality rate and the symptomology
of this disease and how it may affect people.
Those IgG tests are being made en masse in China today.
They are being shipped to countries like Italy where they aren't fact being used on the
front line.
They involve a blood draw, and then they have this lateral, it's called a lateral flow assay
in terms of how they're kind of tested.
The blood runs across a strip and you see a value,
and you have a pretty good sense at that point.
Those kits cost a couple of pennies to make in China.
We could probably get a couple million of them.
I don't understand why we're not.
I don't understand why someone in the federal government
isn't begging China and apologizing and appeasing to them
to send us those kits.
There are a lot of people I know that have bought them
on the internet.
I have a bunch of them.
People that I know have bought them.
They have been shipped in through brokers and they are not FDA approved.
They cannot be used for diagnostic purposes because of FDA guidelines and have the FDA
regulate these things.
They can be used for research purposes, but they may not be very sensitive and very specific.
And they don't have great testing on them.
So they estimate the sensitivity and the specificity to be 90%, roughly 10% false positive,
roughly 10% false negative.
But for what we're trying to accomplish,
that's good enough.
We're not trying to give people a diagnosis of disease.
We're trying to run an epidemiological study
and we should, on the general population
to figure out how many people out there
are asymptomatic and have been infected.
That is an important statistic that's missing.
And to your point, if we find out that there is a large population of
people that have actually felt this disease pass through them,
it's faster that we can sort of get people back to work out in the
streets, which is now probably going to be the most important thing
we can do to just prevent a complete economic calamity. Yeah. Yeah. There are Jason. And by the way, and sorry, treatments,
Shema, I'm sorry, I didn't interrupt you, but treatments are the other thing and I think
you're going to talk about that. Well, treatments are interesting. Let's talk about that
right now because to me, what's incredible is again, now what is emerging, and it's small in scale relative to how amplified it may
should or should not be, is, you know, Remdesivir is very different, but it just seems like
prophylactically even there's some data that's showing out of France that Chloroquine seems
to be effective.
These are solutions that are pennies to make.
And some of the feedback that I've heard is that part of why the FDA, the CDC,
the federal apparatus is reluctant to embrace these things is in part because of pressure from those
lobbies. But that seems to me unfathomable in a moment like this. So why do you think the government hasn't put out a CDC has zero directive right now on the
Management and efficacious management of this disease. Why is that?
Okay, what Fauci and others have said and doctors around the country echo is that these treatments have not been clinically tested through a blinded controlled study
And that is a very fair assertion generally speaking for doing good medicine.
But we are in a crisis state. And in a crisis state, you have to triage. And you also have to
triage policy. And we should be considering triaging policy and changing the way that we do policy
under these extenuating circumstances. If doing treatment can reduce fatality rates by up to 4x as Korean doctors have claimed,
it is worth taking the risk or perhaps it is worth letting the FDA say, Rendesavir,
Kalehtra, Chloroquine, and others are being widely produced, widely distributed, the government
is mandating it, and doctors and their patients can decide if and when they want to use it,
and let them take the risk without clinical trials and without data and the typical process of the FDA.
What's the downside of taking these drugs?
Are they particularly dangerous?
I mean, I've heard the colloquine,
am I pronouncing correctly, colloquine, chloroquine.
I've heard that this can be a little bit nasty
in terms of side effects.
So is there some major downside that,
I mean, it's kind of like an off use of a drug, right?
Like this is an off use of a drug as opposed to it's an off use of a drug and some of
the antivirals aren't even fully tested in humans. So we don't yet know what the side effects
may be. And also, remember, side effects can change based upon your health condition. So someone
that's in respiratory distress may have different side effects than someone who's taking it in a
healthy controlled clinical trial.
So we're not really sure.
That's the argument that doctors would make is, you know, our first mandate is to do no
harm.
And so they don't want to apply a medicine that might do harm.
And so that is the standard protocol and practice and process.
However, again, in a crisis state, China and Korea said, guys, we're trying this thing,
and it's working, and we're adopting it. let's go for it. And they raised forward. It could be that this is a good time for the
United States to consider an emergency policy action where we make a lot of this stuff, make it
available and simply let doctors use their best judgment rather than have the FDA be the
paternal state that makes a decision for the doctors or makes a recommendation to the doctors.
What do we think the fatality rate actually is?
Like, David, if you were looking at this and you had to place a bat and put 100% of your
net worth on it and be all in and have massive skin in the game, where do you think the fatality
rate here in the United States winds up being overall?
Because the data that came out of Wuhan has been markedly going down as they get the numbers corrected
who knows Chinese numbers, you know, censored by the government and maybe perhaps massaged.
It's going to be hard to tell. What do you think the real fatality rate is? The first fatality
rate I heard was 5.8% out of China. The we had data, the we based on the paper that came
out in science over the weekend, the Wuhan data, based on the paper that came out in science
over the weekend, the WUHAN data was estimated
to be 1.4%.
And WUHAN was the worst data out of China.
The quote unquote rest of China is still estimated
at about 0.15%, or 0.16%, or 0.14%.
Something like that.
Where is that versus the flu every year or something,
or the normal flu?
1.1% roughly.
And so if you're looking at somewhere between point 2 and 1.5%, now in Italy I think they're
at over 7%.
We talked about this on the last show, but Italy is a much older population and their health
system is completely overwhelmed.
So there's some confounding variables there that may be making Italy a very unique
outlier on a distribution of what's going to happen here.
The United States has a population that's a little bit older than China, but much younger
than Italy.
So our health system is, and our health system is generally more ICU beds per capita than
Italy, so we should be in a better place.
The thing we don't know that does concern me about the health system in the United States
and the population in the United States is it seems that there may be a high correlation with severity of disease and A1C levels?
And as a result, the U.S. has one of the highest obesity rates of any country in the world
and highest diabetes rates.
And so we may have a population that has a very high percentage of people with a high
A1C that may be at higher risk than say people in other
countries. I don't know that for sure, but those are two kind of confounding statistics
that may kind of make things a little bit worse. If I were to put my money on this, look,
I'm a betting guy, I would be a little bit nervous at this point, but I'd say it's probably
somewhere between 0.15 and call it 1.8%. That's an order of magnitude, I know, so.
But you could do the math.
That's probably somewhere between one and 10 times as bad as the flu.
And so that, again, leads to the big policy question about
are the actions warranted?
Is it okay to let the health system crash?
So that's a perfect, then flip to you, Chimath.
You've heard his, basically his line at, you know,
0.1 to 10 times the flu, 1.8 or something. You know, if we split the difference of those two,
it's 0.5, it's 0.6, 0.7, fatality rate, is the reaction of sheltering in place and the economic
turmoil that's causing worth it. Yes or no?
Right now, you guys need to keep talking. I need to jump off for two seconds
and I'm gonna-
No problem right back.
I'll be right back.
Okay, no problem.
And so what do you think now if we were to look
at your estimate, David, is it actually worth what's happening?
Would we, if you and I were making the policy
or you and I in a schemaugh were,
you know, the cabinet members as I were making the policy or you and I in a schamaath were, you know,
the cabinet members as it were making this decision, is this decision and the economy crashing
in a potentiality of 10, 15, 20% unemployment and all the downstream effects would be better
to do what the UK was originally doing, which is just, hey, let's get the herd mentality
going and let's get the herd immunity going.
I know this is like the most difficult question in the world, but we're here.
So let's look.
There's a spectrum of options.
It's not binary, right?
It may not be lock everyone up and let everyone out the door.
It may be that you have a more nuanced policy where you say, let's keep people
over 65 years old, give them the strong recommendation to stay home and make
sure that you distribute chloroquine to doctors around the country
So as soon as elderly people start having symptoms they maybe get some treatment
But you know that's kind of an option you keep 65 year olds at home you do random general population
Antibody testing and once you hit a certain percentage of the population having been exposed to this thing
It may be that at that point you say, okay, you know, the over 65
limit is lifted, or it may be that, you know, you do something similar to that.
Different age brackets have different containment recommendations. You also do it with random
gen-pop screening. You also do it with medicine being distributed. So there's a new on-sensor to that,
where the policy should be a little bit more directed. It should be a little bit more involved in terms of treatment, testing, and containment strategy, and
it doesn't need to be so binary.
Right. It doesn't have to be everybody stay at home. If we get to the point where a population
has very few people have had it, then more people should stay home so it doesn't spread
or, and then if more people
have it, so if 50% of young people in San Francisco haven't already, we've got herd immunity,
then maybe we can start saying, hey, if you're over 65, you can go out, but just stay at a
restaurant or something.
Is that what you're saying?
Yeah, once you hit like 50 to 60% of the population having antibodies to a particular
virus, you know, or like a flu for example
you'll see that r0 number drop well below one and then explain why not to everybody again just so yeah
It's basically like the viral coefficient like for every one person that's infected r0 tells you how many other people will get infected after them
And so if it's 2.5 which is what some estimate say it is for coronavirus right now
Then for every one person that gets infected roughly two and a half people get infected.
That number goes down as more people get infected.
There's more people get infected, there's less people to infect, and the rate at which you
can then infect other people also drops, so you're R-Nought collapses.
At a certain point, you have this basis for saying, hey guys, I got to step off.
Sorry, guys. You interpromise, do you think?
So Shema, what do you think is incredible?
I mean, what you were seeing in real time as we're doing this
is literally like, I've never seen this before.
We should probably explain what is going on.
So what is going on in the background is the markets are just completely torn.
Now why are the markets important?
Many people aren't invested at all in the stock market.
I get it.
But it is where liquidity and capital markets function and derived out of those capital markets
is the money that then kits startups-ups, it hits the banks,
which then lend to small businesses. It is the functional machine, the undergirding of the US
and the world economy. And we are in a moment that I have really not seen since forth where there are seizures in this market in extremely violent ways.
And so when I had to jump off the phone, it was me trying to do my part to kind of help,
but also trying to make sure that we maintain full liquidity in times like this.
It's incredible.
Now Jason, on the assumption that,
Friedberg may or may not come back,
I mean, what dramatic podcasting we're dealing with.
I know.
Well, people also have their kids at home.
So I might have to jump out and take care of the twins
or the 10-year-old.
So it is definitely having a psychological impact
on everybody being home. You've been home for over two weeks. I've been home for a week. I went out once to do a podcast
on my office with just one person there. What I wanted to do was start at sort of the
10 foot level and I'd like to build up to the 100,000 foot level. And I think that'll be a good way of talking about what we teased and talked about a little
bit in episode zero, which is sort of these second and third order dynamics.
Before we go to that, let me just, I want to wrap up with Dave with saying about what the
change in policy should or could be.
So right now we're having,
this basically quarantine, in some cases, it's a hard quarantine,
in some cases a little bit softer,
it's a recommendation and people are being told
to stay at home.
Should this change,
and under what conditions do we start going back
to normalcy?
Because I think that's what people want to know
is when is this going to end
and under what circumstances I'm just talking about staying home. Well, look, if it were me,
I think what we would do is adopt some of the mitigation strategies of China and Korea and Singapore.
All of these countries have kind of showed us a way to deal with it now.
We have to decide that a short-term suspension of typical civil liberties is worth the trade-off.
Now, it's not worth it under the normal course, under any, any, any imaginable way.
But if we had to trade off some of those civil liberties in the short course
so that we could get back to normalcy
I think most of us at this point and definitely all of us after another week or two of home isolation
We'll do it and what I think it would entail
Is setting up zones that we would understand to be uninfected?
And what that means are people that don't have it or people that have antibodies and eventually
allowing those zones to reopen so that we can actually have some amount of economic activity.
And what that will require is massive testing of the entire population.
Testing, testing, testing.
I mean, there should be lines and lines and lines. It should be, you know, how we would have,
and we know, by the way, how to mobilize this, it is no different than when we would go to vote.
Right.
And, you know, we could all be told, based on birth year, right? Everybody go based on birth year to your
local voting facility. There are phlebotomists there. They can run these LFIAs, they can, and they can, they can allow you to be in a safe zone or not a safe zone. If you're found to be an asymptomatic
carrier, then you can self-quarantine in socially distance. And we can really, you know, nip this
thing in the bud in a, you know, four, five, six week time frame. And because these tests are available at such large scale and because these tests are so insignificantly cheap,
if it were up to me, I would mobilize the military
in the national guard, I would mobilize
or voting infrastructure.
I mean, another way to do this would be,
why don't we just have the national guard or doctors
or whatever, just go to everybody's mailbox,
put in the kits and then say, you know, we have your kit in here on this date, and we'll go pick up the
kits.
The problem with these LFIAs is that the amount of blood that you need, you cannot draw
by yourself.
It's not a finger.
Oh, what about the swab stuff?
I mean, if we just did the swab testing, we just said, hey, we'll come in by your house.
The swab is a PCR test that's looking for RNA, and the problem with that is that it's effective
in a window.
It's uncomfortable to administer and it has to be done right away for those that are in the process
of viral shedding. If you are not in the process of viral shedding, then that PCR test is effectively
ineffective. And what I'm advocating for is move past the PCR testing. That should be done in an
acute situation if you come into a hospital where you're exhibiting symptoms.
The more important thing right now is to find people that don't have it or people who
are asymptomatically spreading or those people that are immune, because if we can rebase
line the denominator, as Friedberg said, we may find some good news in that it's very
much like the flu in terms of numerical distribution in which
case we can make some policy changes and reestablish economic activity. If it
turns out that it's not at least we know that too. But right now we're in the
worst place which is that we are in a situation of isolation and
confinement in the absence of data. And this is I think what's so what's so
infuriating to folks is that we, you know, it's like Winston
Churchill said, America will do the right thing. It's just that they'll try everything else first.
And I think that we are clearly on that path to trying everything until we do the right thing.
Everything okay, and I think it's political, I think it's political poker as the reason why. Freeberg, everything okay?
Just market trades.
Really?
You're literally trying to cover stuff and just...
I'll tell you, it's a great time to tax harvest losses, man.
Yeah, if you've got companies that you're really
religious about that you would love to own for a long time and
you're under water on them. It's a great time to sell them, take the loss, harvest it, and then
buy them back in the next 30 days. So David, I have a list of eight things and what I told Jason is
I wanted to start at the 10-foot level and end at the 100,000-foot level. Okay? And so I'm going to
tee up the first question for both of you guys and I have a view, but I'll save it to the end.
So question number one of these eight lists of interesting things to talk about, which may be relevant for the folks listening.
What does this mean for startups?
And what should you do if you are a unprofitable, I mean, by definition, these companies are default dead.
What do you do if you start up CEO today?
Yeah, I think it's a great question.
I'm dealing with it.
With about a dozen companies a day who are in this very acute situation, you have to
figure out how you have to look at the instrument panel and then try to, like a pilot, I use
the analogy, understand exactly how much altitude you have,
where the nearest airport is,
how much fuel you've got on board.
So, I literally told folks, listen,
if you can close this money,
because a lot of people were in the middle of doing deals,
close it immediately.
So, that's number one.
If you've got a deal on the table, take the money.
And some people do, but most people don't.
And I'm already seeing people retraining deal terms
based and backing out. So, I had already seeing people retrading deal terms based
and backing out.
So I had one person back out of a deal on the syndicate.com,
an angel investor said, because of market conditions,
I'm backing out.
And they had made the commitment they're backing out.
So you can see commitments broken.
So assume it's going to, that no money's
going to get raised for the next three or six months
at a minimum.
And then you have to ask yourself, well,
how do I keep this company alive? I have people who are founders taking 80% salary cuts and then giving their staff 50%
salary cuts. And then that takes their six months away and makes it nine. So that's number
one. You have to just make the cuts. And if you've chosen to be the founder of the company,
that's that's your job is to get everybody to safety. And better to have four out of five or three
out of five employees lose their job. and the company be alive to come back and
maybe get some stimulus later.
Then to have the company go out of business because you wouldn't make the cuts.
So you got to just take the medicine and that's really with first-time entrepreneurs. They don't understand that.
And if they have a and then every business is different.
We have some companies that are subscription-based business or delivery-based businesses.
They're actually seeing an increase in utilization,
increase of people trialing their software.
So I have one company that's a consumer subscription,
they had more trials this week than ever
because people have free time.
So that company's gonna be fine,
but you gotta make the cuts.
David, I'm not sure what your advice is
or what you're doing in your portfolio.
Yeah, I mean, look, I'm on 12 boards.
Four companies have been or are in the middle
of term sheet or closing a deal.
So it's been an unfortunate timing for all this stuff.
What happens to those four companies?
Do you different things?
Do you have different sheets?
Yeah, very different things.
I mean, we've got one that I hope we close on Friday.
We signed on Friday, the final docs
and money's not in the bank account yet.
I've got another one that's had a bunch of offers
that got rescinded, but they weren't signed yet.
It's just all over the place.
And I think one thing that's worth kind of paying attention to
for every company is you've got to ask yourself,
firstly, the hard question of going into this
and coming out of this era that we're now entering
that is a very bleak and dark era economically,
where is your customer going to be?
And what is your customer going to be doing?
The customer model is changing overnight.
If you're a company that sold software into restaurants
and restaurants are about to potentially go bankrupt
or suffer absolutely loss of revenue
and get debt payments restructured.
They're not gonna necessarily be rushing
to spend more money each month
unless you can help them immediately save money.
If you're a company selling to consumers,
and you're selling to consumers that are gonna lose
their jobs in the next three months, or lending to consumers, they you're selling to consumers that are gonna lose their jobs
in the next three months,
or lending to consumers,
they're gonna be losing their jobs in the next three months.
You've gotta be asking yourself the question,
what can I be doing with my business?
So you gotta start with your strategy question,
and you gotta make sure that you're cost,
and you gotta think about where your customer's gonna be,
and how you can adjust your strategy as a result.
The second thing I'd say is,
and I sent out a note to my CEOs and I was like, guys,
you gotta cut your burn and then you gotta cut your burn and then you gotta cut your
burn if you've got burn. You gotta do everything you can to give yourself the greatest chance
of survival. And I think on the last all-in podcast, Jason, you mentioned having a 36 months
of cash, that's ideal. But if you can get your cash to get you to an 18 month runway, you should be doing everything
you can to number one, kind of give yourself that breathing room, even if that means trading
milestones, trading features, trading revenue goals, trading all the things that you're
expecting to do, survival matters more than growth right now.
David Sinclair, who wrote the book Life Span
and is a Harvard biochemist,
has highlighted that there's basically a gene,
the certi genes, there's about seven of them in humans,
and the certi genes get turned on or off,
and it turns out every biological organism
on planet Earth has a certi gene.
The certi gene tells the organism or tells the cell
to either grow or heal, and this is a time for everyone to activate their certi gene tells the organism or tells the cell to either grow or heal.
And this is a time for everyone to activate their certi genes and stop focusing on growth
and focus on healing.
It's really important to optimize your unit economics to make sure you know where your
customer is, to really reduce the burn, to reduce the spend, to reduce the push for growth
and expansion, and just make sure you've got a core business that you have a customer
that you can make money from that customer that you've really got
Uniteconomics right and reduce your burn and give yourself that runway and extend your life. So that's my that's my kind of
I think we got a question one out of the way
Let me let me give you my
My advice which is building on the back of both of what you said
But I'm going to take it from a different perspective.
So let's look inside of a VC firm.
VC firms have limited partners.
And those limited partners
are the most sophisticated financial institutions
in the world, family offices of well-renowned individuals,
foundations, university endowments, nonprofits, you name it.
And all of them are allowed to invest in this asset class
because they themselves can prove that they're sophisticated.
And one way in which they do it is they have
what's called portfolio allocation theory.
They construct a portfolio of every $100 they have
and they say, well, I'd like
to have 70% of that in liquid instruments and that I'm going to have 60% in bonds and
40% in equities.
And then that 30% they'll take and they'll say, I want to have a mixture of all kinds of
different stuff, some real estate, some hedge funds, some private equity, and eventually
when all of those allocations are done, there's an allocation to venture. Now in the last
few years, what happened is all of these folks, you know, move the dial, they push the risk
meter so that the allocation into venture was upwards of 7, 8, 9% of their overall portfolio.
Now, just to remind you guys, you know, basic theory, monetary theory would tell you,
when you put money in into an e-liquid instrument, remember, venture doesn't return money until 13 years after it's done and you can't get it out.
It's not like a bond where you can go and instantaneously sell it in a second.
You have to get returns that are much better than the market
because you need to be rewarded paid back for that
illiquidity. Now in the last month what you've seen are portfolios get completely turned upside
down. If your bonds and equities before were worth $60 or $70 of that hundred.
It's now worth $56.
It could be worth $40.
What that means is that that other $30
needs to be worth much, much less otherwise
your portfolio model is completely upside down
and all of these limited partners become forced sellers as well.
So that can't happen. So what is the, my understanding is the last time this happened in 2008,
LPs kind of winked to the GPs and said, listen, it would be good if there wasn't a capital call right
now. And then GPs not wanting to piss off their LPs, the VC
firms not wanting to piss off the endowments as an example, said, okay, we're just going
to not make any capital calls right now while the market recovers so that your equities
go up and the percentage of entry goes back down. Is that the likely scenario is LPs?
It's worse than that. It's worse than that. Because right now, these foundations and sovereign wealth funds are trying to just stay
above water.
And as we get to the 10,000 and 100,000 foot view, I'll give you the picture of what's
happening in their offices.
And again, it's important because it is what makes sure we come out of this reasonably
well, which is a properly functioning capital market. And right now, it is the most precarious that I have seen in 20 years.
So basically, these LPs are going to have to portfolio rebalance, and they're going to
have to force venture capitalists to mark down their books.
So wait, VCs are just going to make that decision to say, hey, my investment in Airbnb Slack or Uber
is worth X now. I mean, when they were private companies, so not not slack and not Uber because they're
public. No, but previously private. Yeah. But Airbnb, can it be marked at 30 or 40 billion dollars?
The auditors will probably say no. The LPs will say that it's not. The GPs will want to because
it'll allow them
to maintain their IRRs, their rates of return.
And so what you're going to have is when these when these markdowns are forced to happen,
which will take another six months, venture capitalists returns will look terrible.
And so their propensity to be able to add bad dollars after good, quote unquote, you know,
to defend every company is going to go to zero.
Right.
And as you said, Jason, there's going to be a poll on activity.
So I don't think 18 months is sufficient.
I think you need at least 36 months.
Double.
You need to have three years of capital in the bank. The worst thing that will happen if you have 36 months is you think to yourself, wow,
I was really conservative.
The best thing that happens with 36 months is you survive.
The distribution of outcomes would tell you there is zero point in taking the risk if
you don't have to.
This is why, unfortunately, it's going to be a very difficult process
of recalibrating all of this stuff.
So for folks that are in these startups,
we're going to have to go through an unfortunate period of pain.
And, you know, as Buffett said,
you know, rule number one of our business
is to not go out of business.
Rule number two is not to forget rule number one. Yeah.
All right, I think it's well said and
Is there any chance?
While we're sort of at this you know, the street level on the front lines. Is there any chance that
we
Contain this very quickly. Let's say under days. And that it looks like this virus mitigation
through the various drugs we talked about actually starts
to work.
If that happens in the next 60 days,
what will happen to the markets?
They rebound.
It's not what we're dealing with.
But Trump says there's a chance it could come roaring back.
Where are the chances of a roar back?
It cannot come roaring back. So let me explain to you what's happening chance it could come roaring back. Where are the chances of a roar back? It cannot come roaring back.
So let me explain to you what's happening right now
in the capital market.
So let's take a step back and first look at what the Fed
has announced over the last couple of days.
So and here's why the Federal Reserve is important.
So the Fed basically acts as a market making
and liquidity function in what's called the overnight
repo market. Now that's an obscure market for the average individual on Mainstreet, but
let me roughly explain why it exists. And at the end of it, you're probably going to have
the same reaction as me, which is what the fuck, fucking, what the fucking fuck, okay? But I'll explain
it in English first
You're an LP a limited partner and you give a hedge fund a dollar and very much like last episode how I explained why hedge funds run levered
The hedge fund says well if I take this dollar
You know the bank will give me some some amount of leverage on it
But it would be much better if I if I was able to basically you know give them a an instrument like a bond me some amount of leverage on it. But it would be much better if I was
able to basically give them an instrument like a bond or some sort of short-term commercial
paper and then they'll give me more because they'll believe in the quality of the instrument.
Okay. So they go in the repo market and they basically do a transaction overnight where
they basically buy some short-term commercial paper, they use it as collateral,
and then they lever it up,
and then they go put it in the market.
That entire dynamic works,
as long as the repo function works every day.
Every night, you kind of go and you clean up your balance sheet,
you look at how much leverage you have,
you look at your leverage ratio,
you make sure that you have enough money,
and you go and you refinance your short-term paper
that keeps JP Morgan Goldman
Sacks Morgan Stanley lending to you.
But if that market ceases when the repo market ceases and there's no way for you to either
buy or sell commercial paper, buy or sell short-term money market instruments.
And on the other side, the markets are whip-sying up and down and so you are being margin-called, not being margin- you're being margin-called, not being margin-called,
being margin-called, not being margin-called, the markets start to really season capitulate,
and everybody is just losing enormous amounts of money.
And what I mean by everybody, it's everybody.
It's hedge funds, it's sovereign wall funds, it's foundations, it's central banks, everybody
is losing money.
And if we don't figure out how to bring some calm into the financial markets,
it will leave all of these limited partners and all of these other people
with not just a lack of liquidity and a lot less money than they had before, but this psychological pain of remembering what they just went through.
And that'll prolong what we have to deal with to get out of it, right?
So, you know, this is why I think it's really important to understand that
if we can nip the stage zero of this problem, which is the disease itself
in the bud, and I don't mean by curing it, and I don't mean with a vaccine, I mean by
testing and data.
If we can understand and bound it, then everybody's psychology can move to fixing the capital
markets.
How close are we to that, David?
We need it to be fixed.
How close are you to think we are
to having that mass testing done?
And then I think we all think we're gonna have a low
mortality rate and then go back to normalcy.
Is that something that's happening in 10 days, 30 days,
or 60 days if you had to pick a number?
The march back to normality, David.
I don't see any action to get the testing done. It needs to normality. David. David.
I don't see any action to get the testing done.
It needs to get done right now.
My mom got tested yesterday.
It seems like there are more tests out there this week than three of us.
Oh yeah, the Stanford opened up the test.
There's definitely PCR testing available now.
And you can probably get your results in three to four days on average, although some
labs are super backed up.
Yeah, my mom said she's going to take three days or four days.
Yeah, but the stuff that we're talking about, which is the general population testing,
I'll keep saying it, it's so critical that we do this to figure out how many people have
already been infected and didn't know it.
We don't have that data.
We don't even have a plan for and it's not on the radar.
The task force in DC is focused right now on increasing the throughput and the availability
of PCR or just in time PCR testing.
The blood testing.
That's a good one.
Yeah, it's all blood testing.
It's just a matter of like, let me explain the PCR test involved, the RT PCR test involves
taking blood and then there's basically six steps that you have to go through with it in
a lab and it's done on like three different machines.
And the actual cycle takes 30 to 60 minutes, 30 to 45 minutes.
So by the time you have that backlog and you can multiplex it.
But meaning you can do multiple at the same time and you can kind of do different things.
But generally these machines are not highly automated.
There are new machines that are allowing us to automate more of these steps
and making them go a little bit faster and do more multiplexing. But it is still a multi-step
cycle to take the blood and turn it into a test result once you've amplified the viral RNA and
tried to measure its content. And so this takes some time. And so it's a chemistry lab
that's doing this work. So until we have a point of care solution,
which is like a test strip or something else,
and these are technically possible,
it's just that they're not FDA approved
and so they're not getting made and distributed here,
whereas China and Korea and Italy are using them
and they're made in factories in China,
even though they're not tested and approved
in the normal way.
Isn't the plan though to have these untested tests online
this week?
It's not what they're saying?
Yeah, but you people are buying them.
Yeah.
But so I guess the question is, when do you think
we will have these, the general population taking tests
and we get like a large-scale testing like South Korea did?
I think it's out of the blue.
That's part of the solution.
When does that happen?
Unfortunately, we're not parallel-pathing it. We've put all of our resources into increasing
the availability and throughput of the RTPCR tests for acute infection cases. And as a result,
we have everyone focused on this. There was some lab work and some research departments.
I won't name them that we're working on doing this general population testing, but they got
yanked into the getting the RTPCR scaled up because, oh my God, we're behind the curve.
We got to fix this thing.
So we got to get over this first hump.
I think once we get over this first hump, then you're going to see people distribute and
work on this.
And I think getting over the first hump is happening in the next call at seven to 10 days.
And so then it's probably another 30 to 45 days before we get these tests for general
population testing, more broadly distributed.
So call it 45 days out.
And then hopefully, don't-
Can we do this at the same time?
I mean, why can't we parallel this?
This makes no sense to me where they're currently-
Totally, and we have so many tests and so many entrepreneurs in Silicon Valley that are
banging their head on the wall asking this question, I've done so many phone calls over
the last few days with people being like, what can we do, how can we get these things
made, where can we go, And everyone's just like flustered.
It's really frustrating.
Anyway, we've got a lot of individuals
that we're trying to kind of collect together
to do this work.
Some folks are calling China today.
We're trying to see if we can get big bulk orders out of China.
We're just going to pay for it ourselves
and then try and get some research labs
to run the universities around the country
to run the experiments for us using these untested,
unproven, not- Have you run one of these us, using these untested, unproven, you know,
not as a company.
Have you run one of these on yourself yet?
One of these unproven tests yet?
I haven't, I actually, a friend of ours,
I did one with video on, with him this morning.
And so, you know, some mutual friends of ours.
I'm used to mutual friends of ours, yeah.
And so, and then I know lots of people
that have them and have used them.
And I've seen them and I've gone through,
like, you know, I bought a bunch of them,
they arrived tomorrow. And so I see, you people that have them and have used them and I've seen them and I've gone through like you know I bought a bunch of them they arrived tomorrow
and so I see you know we see we know how these things work they're actually from a reliable source you know these are not
No, no one's actually done the testing to prove the specificity and sensitivity we're relying on a third-party
You know test so we don't really know but I keep hearing their uncomfortable
I keep hearing their uncomfortable. What's uncomfortable about them? They stick it very far up your nose?
Is that what people are referring to?
Oh, no.
You're referring to the RTPCR test.
So what you're trying to do there is you're trying to get a sample
of living virus on a swab.
And the best place to get that living virus for this particular
virus is in your nose or in the back of your throat.
So they're taking a long Q-tip and they're sticking it up your nose
and they're sticking it back your throat.
Then they put it in a little solution
that will keep the viral RNA alive. And then that's what they're shipping to the lab and
that's what then gets uncomfortable to have it that far up your nose is what they're saying.
That's what people keep saying it's uncomfortable.
I've had more uncomfortable things up my nose. I'm sure it's fine.
You know, it's a cute tip in your nose.
Yeah, it's a cute tip way up in your nose.
So we actually think that mass testing is a 30 to 60 day.
No, I think it's a mass testing if in the worst cases 30 to 60 days,
what I'm imploring anybody with any influence is we need to get this starting to happen in the next two to three weeks.
It needs to start happening in the next two to three weeks. It needs to start happening in the next two to three weeks.
And this is where I would say there are a lot of other people other than David, myself,
you, Jason, the people on our group chat, buying tests for the mass population.
I just want to say something here, which is it is incredible to see guys like Jack Ma,
step up and do what he can to send stuff here.
But I would say that thus far there's largely been an inverse correlation of contribution and wealth
during all of this and folks that are in a position to help I think need to be more vocal.
You know we all can't just participate when the times are good. Take advantage of
the bully pulpit when the times are good. And then when times are complicated, disappear
and become anonymous, it's part in why I think you and I decided to just do these as often
as we can. Yeah. Because at least we can think through the problem so that at least people
can hear our voices and understand that we are thinking through as much as possible what to do. I am literally calling folks in Wall Street all the time because what little I can do to assure
them or be a market participant right now to maintain liquidity, I need to do because in the absence
of that participation, we're going to just create more and more havoc. And I think it's important
for other people who are in a position, either
monetarily or through influence or both to be out there right now doing something.
You know, just should call Friedberg right now. They should give Friedberg $100 million.
We'll go to China, we'll get the test, and we can do our Bromber on Broad-Based Population
study right now.
Yeah, I would jump on that. Right now looking at the statistics as of today,
we obviously the total cases in China hit 80,000 with 3,237 deaths. They had only 11 new deaths
yesterday. Italy, 35,000 total cases, 4,200 new cases, and they added 475 deaths yesterday with a
total death count of 2978. So that is just stunning what's happening in Italy, and it seems,
I don't know if the trend line is it's getting worse or not. But it's a horrific and awful situation.
They're completely out of beds.
They're triaging elderly people and letting them die in the hall so that younger people
who have a higher chance of surviving can actually get oxygen.
It's just awful.
And they're having 3,500 new cases or they're at 3,500.
Yeah, they're over 3,000 cases, but added yesterday. So there's really, it's, it
is flattening, but who knows if that's because they're just overwhelmed and they can't do
the testing. But the deaths are something that seems to have gone down the last three days.
We're looking at different time series. The number of people that died yesterday are,
in fact, the number of people that died yesterday. The number of people that died yesterday are in fact the number of people that died yesterday The number of people that tested positive yesterday doesn't tell you as much because the test results may be four days delayed
And they may be 10 days into their symptoms by the time they get tested and so on and so forth
So the testing data significantly lags the infected population count likely and may not represent much of anything
Right so there it's very and it's also hard to know what the average fatality timeline looks like.
There are published reports now out of China and Korea that start to try and specify this a little bit.
But we are looking at different time series when we try and compare these things.
And so everyone be cognizant of that as you look at these numbers.
It's not simple apples and apples.
Let's move to a slightly second and third order, Jason. I think if we stay into the disease
it's just going to be a fucking mental quagmire. We're going to jump out the window.
Okay, let's talk about something that Mark Cuban said, which I really agree with, which
is that if we're going to do bailouts, they can't come where we also do things like, you
know, allowing these companies to do buybacks where CEO pay isn't curtailed.
You know, it turns out that the airline industry
which looks like it's gonna be first in line for bailout,
spent 96 cents of every single dollar free cash
for they had on buying back stock,
which is only used to drive up earnings per share,
which is only relevant for CEO pay.
So they have, you know, they don't have the cash buffer, they don't have the 36 months
of operating, you know, a window that, you know, everybody should have. They're not
a very... They blew it on trying to hit, they blew it on trying to have their earnings
per share go up by reducing the number of shares in existence.
Shares. Exactly. So if you can't, if you can't, earnings per share, you know, you take
earnings, you divide it by the number of shares. So if earnings can't if you can't if you can't earnings per share, you know, you take earnings you divided by the number of shares
So if earnings can't go up just divide by the number of shares and
Earnings per share goes up lower than number of shares. Yeah, if you had a million dollars and earnings a million shares
It was a dollar per you get rid of half the shares and now goes up and and so now you know
You have CEO pay go through the roof
But these companies are not any more resilient than they were before.
And so now they're in line for a bailout. And I think the large caucus of people across both
iles are very clear that these things need to be wipeouts of the equity versus bailouts where
folks who took advantage of the financial system here continue to get rewarded. What do you guys think about that?
Totally agree. If you wipe out the equity, though,
just pausing for a second and taking the other side of the argument,
I'm not saying this is the side I would take.
If you wipe out the equity,
would not some of the people who would hit that pain
are shareholders from a retirement home
or a retirement plan, like CalPERS may be owned. Pension funds, yeah.
Pension funds, etc.
So, you know, it does seem like if you wipe out the equity, you could have some unintended
consequences as equity holders.
But I think what the other side of the argument is, we're going to have to have there be repercussions
for people running companies so close and recklessly to the cliff.
And there has to be some pain, not reward for doing that.
And a bailout is a reward for operating irresponsibly.
Is that what you're saying, Shema?
Yeah, I think that actually you have to wipe out the equity.
And I think the reason why wiping out the equity is important is that it overwhelmingly does not punish
the retiree in their who owns Boeing stock in their 401K.
Boeing has not been held by retirees in their 401Ks for years as a cohort of impactful investors,
massive large institutional pools of money owned these companies. These are the balance sheets of governments.
These are the balance sheets of foundations.
These are the balance sheets of a very few, very, very wealthy people.
And the reality is that for the broad-based population, for the 350-odd
and million Americans in the United States,
how many of them do you think are really active market participants, meaning
for every dollar of value, creation, or destruction? How much do they actually see? I would guess
it's less than 10 percent, meaning 90 cents of every dollar are nameless face of organizations
in a financial infrastructure. I think the lesson we have to, we have to, we have to
tell. And the place we have to move to is one of compassionate
capitalism, which is that we have been so hell bent on the use of leverage, on the use of these
financial gimmicks, on the use of accounting tricks to enrich a few at the sake of the many,
and this is the right time where you should nationalize some of these businesses,
This is the right time where you should nationalize some of these businesses.
And when they eventually do get taken back out
and floated publicly, all of those proceeds
should go back to the United States Treasury,
who should then use it to reinforce social security
and Medicare and everything else.
Because we are going to run a multi-multitrillion dollar
budget deficit to get out of this.
And to just give people some context here, the US national debt is at $23 trillion, which
is $72,000 per citizen and $109,000 for each citizen who pays taxes.
And we run our spending, our budget deficit is a trillion dollars a year.
We're going to talk about here, I think, a two to three trillion dollar stimulus package,
which will increase the national debt load by only 10%.
So it does seem like we can manage that.
But boy, was this a strategic mistake for us to run up the debt during good times?
Was it not?
It's even simpler than this.
And I hate to say this so bluntly, but the Eurozone is going to collapse.
Japan is finished.
So there are two economies that matter.
There's China and the United States as of today.
And the great thing about that is in a set of two, there's only one instrument of safety,
which is the United States dollar.
Thank God.
In that world, the United States has exceptional leverage,
exceptional exceptional leverage.
It is, and it has always been,
the beacon, the light on the hill, et cetera.
Now in a moment like this,
the United States has the
most ability to reset how we think about things. It could run $5 trillion deficits tomorrow.
It could run $10 trillion deficits because it is still the backstop. I'm not advocating
for that, but this is where I think you need bold decisive action and not piecemeal strategies.
I don't think a trillion dollars is enough. I really think that if you think about what the eurozone will have to do and what's going to
happen to the US dollar, we should be basically saying right off the bat at a minimum,
anyone who makes less than, you know, pick your number, a million dollars a year,
every man, woman and child, every or every 18 year old American man and woman should
immediately get $5,000.
Forget $1,000, $2,000, $5,000.
And next month, they're for still out of business, $5,000.
And all of that does, it's just, it's a trillion dollars.
It's $2 trillion over two months.
And then you add another trillion dollars in all this, you know, small business loans and
all the other things that's $3 trillion.
That you can deal with because we're the United States.
And I think it's really important to keep it in mind.
I know that sounds crazy.
Well, I mean, some people don't think,
oh, blah, blah, blah, you know, budgets and deficits,
but it's not because everybody else
is just as fucked if not more fucked.
Well, let me give you another perspective.
The GDP of the United States is $20 trillion roughly.
Let's assume the whole economy shuts down.
Every month that we're shut down costs us $1.5 trillion.
If we're going to have the country shut down for say three months, we're losing $4.5 trillion
right there.
The problem is economic growth in the economy is actually a first order function,
right? So the movement of cash drives the future economy. And so if we were just needing
to fill that hole, you would need to come up with a couple of trillion dollars and you
would have the government going out and buying ice cream cones and paying hair salons and
paying for dog walkers and, you know and paying for construction workers and paying for oil rig workers and basically employing and
buying all of those goods and services for that functional equivalent of a $20 trillion
GDP.
That's what it would take to just fill the hole.
Well, that's if you're assuming no economic activity.
I mean, we don't think there's going to be no economic activity.
Maybe let's say it's a third-less economic activity. I mean, we don't think there's going to be no economic activity with maybe let's say it's
a third-less economic activity. The shoe guys, the shoe that hasn't dropped is this idea that everybody is at home working. Nobody's at home working. That's a joke. That's a lie.
Okay, because as David said, companies are not, you know, self-contained units. Very few are.
Because as David said, companies are not self-contained units. Very few are.
Many of them and most of them operate in a very interconnected, socially dependent way
with other companies.
They're your customers, you are their customers.
Nobody is doing anything right now.
There's nobody evaluating the next great SaaS tool.
Guys, come on.
And the other issue is just leverage, Jason, right?
So we've also got to remember that a big chunk of the economy is levered, meaning that
there's debt and debt payments that need to be paid.
And so those income streams are now going to be absent.
And so there's a multiplier effect.
When revenue goes down, the economic impact is actually multiplied.
And so you can't just fill the hole.
So it becomes a very complicated non-linear kind of system
that you have to try and fill the holes
and you gotta find the places where cash is missing
and it's not moving the fastest
and that's where you gotta throw the money
in the first, like these repo markets and so on.
Well, and there's no doubt that,
we all agree bottom up is the way to do this.
So if we have 330 million Americans,
if you just have the bottom half, get $1,000 a month,
that's quality at $160 billion a month month that's only over the year two trillion dollars
so if we just did that it gave everybody a thousand dollars a month that's
twelve thousand dollars for the bottom half they're not saving that money
they're gonna use it just they're gonna spend it in the market correct they're
they're gonna pay their rent they're gonna go get dinner you think that
poor people are gonna who are late offering now are gonna save the money well if
you gave me a thousand dollars,
or somebody a thousand dollars
when they're in their house
on the sixth week of their home confinement.
What do you think they're like, John?
Well, I'm assuming that we're in week 10,
and we're not in self-confignment anymore.
We agreed in the first third of the program
that we're gonna get there in whatever it is,
60 days, 90 days.
You know what I realize?
You know what I realize after wearing the same pair of jeans, 60 days, 90 days. You know what I've realized? You know what I've realized after wearing the same pair
of jeans, four days in a row, I have too many jeans.
That's what I've realized.
And you know what I've also realized that the cotton shirts
that I buy from H&M are fucking perfect.
And I've complicated my life with all kinds of bullshit
that I've been buying because I thought it meant something and right now it means absolutely jack shit. Yeah
I agree with that perspective
That's what's really interesting when you see your entire portfolio collapse when you see this belt tightening
It's happening even amongst and we have you know
Listen, all three of us are lucky enough to be at the you know in the top the top of our careers, in the top of our income at this point in our lives,
but we all came from humble beginnings as well.
And if the people at the top are bell tightening
and saying, you know what,
I don't need to buy a $60 t-shirt,
I'm gonna buy a $16 t-shirt.
Boy, does that have ramifications
across the entire economy?
And this reminds me very much of the recession.
They said luxury goods would never rebound.
And sure enough, the last 10 years, luxury has rebounded massively.
Because it was not a psychological, broad-based impact to people's philosophy and framing
of how they viewed the world.
You think so?
I don't know.
I don't know if the economic crisis last time people did say there would never be people
specifically said there would never be luxury goods again.
And that there was an end to people buying that kind of shit.
I'm not talking about some prognosticating analysts, you know, the analyst is only as,
you know, good as their own biases.
What I'm saying is the average person didn't really have to internalize a broad-based
impact to their way in which they view what's important in their life.
This touches everybody.
And I think that there is an opportunity for us to really recalibrate what's important.
I think conspicuous consumption is unimportant. You know, helping each other is important.
Taking, you know, unnecessary vacations because it drives your Instagram follower
feed is fucking stupid. Making sure that we can contribute the incremental dollar we have
so that other people could get tested and get back to work, that seems like a better use
of your money in time. Yeah. So... No, go ahead David, get in there. I think that there, yeah, there's just great perspective setting that's happening.
And it's going to happen broadly across the economy. We've been fat and happy for a long time.
And at least a sub segment of the population has been. But we also have it really, really well,
a really, really good here in the United States. There's a website, I just recommend everyone check out
and spend some time on it's called Dollar Street.
And you can go to gapminder.org slash dollar-street
and check out the website.
It is unbelievable.
And it is probably my favorite website on the internet.
And Dollar Street is a project of Ola Rosling's wife,
Ola's the son of Hans Rosling, the great visual economist
who told people stories with visuals on the world
and income and population and growth and so on.
And she went around and she photographed families
all over the world and showed how much money
they make each month.
And then showed all these common household activities
and goods, brushing your teeth, the oven,
what kind of clothes you have,
what does your closet look like, what do you sleep on.
And it's pretty striking that half of the people don't have a toothbrush, a quarter of
people use mud off the floor to brush their teeth.
Most people don't have a bed on planet earth, right?
Only the top 1% have a kitchen, right?
I mean, there's like these amazing statistics with photos that really help kind of illustrate
this point.
And I think that I'm not
saying that the extreme demonstration of humanity and the distribution of wealth income and prosperity
and humanity is as relevant here. But in all these photos, everyone's very happy and they live a happy
life. And there's a great reset happen that's happening that's underway. Happiness eventually finds
itself when the delta goes from being negative to being positive
again. When the Delta is flat or the Delta is negative, people are getting into a worse condition,
things are bad. So we're going to bottom out here and then we're going to, no matter what state we
find ourselves in, we'll very quickly find ourselves back in a state of happiness and we'll all reset
with respect to Chimoff's point on, hey, maybe I don't need all these genes, maybe I don't need
all this and this and this. But there's certainly like critical needs that people have.
And it's going to be pretty apparent pretty quickly.
How the economy and people are going to adjust to this new world.
But there's going to be an adjustment.
The part of this that I think is actually constructive is,
I do think that we're going to swing the pendulum back
towards nationalized economies and
away from global economies because I think this is a way that
politicians all around the world they'll characterize it in different political language
You know some people will call it you know sort of like
American exceptionalism if you're on the right if you're on the left
You'll describe it in much more social terms, but they all lead to the same outcome. Which
is that what we have seen is that in the push to globalization, we have created
too much brittle infrastructure that doesn't work and that we are not resilient
enough. Men, we are hyper-efficient and we are just in time and all of that is great and everything is super cheap.
But when we really need infrastructure to work, whether it's tests or whether it's the government or what have you, it just doesn't.
And I think resiliency will force us to be more nationally attuned. And I think it'll be the right thing.
It'll cause all governments to think about their own food supply differently, to think about their own supply chains differently.
It'll demand companies to be less profitable if it means that they can withstand these
kinds of shocks. And it's one thing to say that we could never have modeled, you know,
sort of like this two or three sigma event we're dealing with. But after the fact it's
no longer a two or three sigma event. And governments have to now internalize this, and companies have to internalize it.
We are not going to act the same.
Well, we just will be different.
Look, think about the iPhone, and obviously,
medicine and respirators.
We've been talking about these things
over the last couple of weeks, as this happens.
If we do have a breakdown in relations with China,
if we, let's say we stop
importing stuff, what would happen to Apple, the most powerful and valuable company, how
would they ever be able to make iPhones again in the United States?
Are they capable of making them?
No, it depends.
It depends on who you're answering it for.
On behalf of the US customer, Apple should probably be forced to bring a lot of their
production capacity back into the United States. They should find a diversified global supply chain so that you
have multiple suppliers in many countries in the world, but they should rely more on
America. It will be less profitable, but it'll be okay and it's the right thing to do.
Yeah, it's $100.00. What I read in the estimates was an iPhone would cost $100 or $100
and change more to make in the United States.
But if they did, they wouldn't have the supply chain.
So they make $500, $600 per iPhone anyway.
Well, by the way, the real outcome is that, you know, and we were going to do this anyways
after this, which is I don't think people are lining up to buy, you know, kind of irrelevant
products anymore in a way where we are just slavish to things.
I mean, I think it's important to ask
ourselves like, this is probably the most socially impactful world event that Globe has had
to deal with since World War II. And it's probably really important to talk to somebody
you know. And if you don't know, you can document and you can easily find the documents of people
who survived the Holocaust or lived through the bombings in London, etc. Their
mentality was different as a result of it. It changed their behavior in very
positive ways, right? It was like the great advances in humanity happened after
that. It was beginning refocused. Yeah, you're less focused on things that are not
cool or critically important. And, Freiberg, what do you think about what this is showing in
the healthcare system and the holes in the healthcare system? The fact that we couldn't mobilize
to deal with this after, we did scenario planning about this after SARS. We've done scenario planning.
We've had, you know, I sent to our group list the link of Bill Gates talking about this
four or five years ago and how this would be an issue. I sent a couple of links to people
writing about closing the wet markets in China after the SARS outbreak. I'm curious, David,
what you think the holes in the
healthcare system are that need to be fixed
and what we can learn from this.
Because I think we're now coming into the,
as we got through the virus,
we got through the economic second-order effects.
Let's talk about positively what we're gonna learn.
Because I think that's what Shemaat's getting at
is that there's a personal recalibrating of what matters,
maybe morality, ethics,
focus in our lives.
David, what can we learn from this on a health perspective?
What should we do when this ends?
There's no easy answer to that, right?
Nationalized healthcare systems, in some countries,
you could say they're great.
My family lives in London, I was talking to my brother
yesterday and they tried to go down and get tested
for a tooth infection yesterday.
And it's just brutal dealing with NHS in the UK.
People aren't telling great stories about NHS and they're not saying, oh my God, it's
the best health system, I love it.
Health care is hard.
People want personalized care, they want a lot of attention, there's only so many doctors,
there's only so much beds, When you start giving people good care,
costs a lot, solving this stuff.
And the R&D dollars were required to enter markets.
It's so extraordinarily high.
You end up charging a lot for products and services
on the back end.
It's a very complicated system.
And there's no simple answer.
I do think that we're learning and realizing pretty quickly
that the US, and we're going to do some post mortems on this, obviously as a world as a society.
One thing that's clear is the Chinese response in part was driven by a lack of bureaucratic
red tape and an ability to manifest action and an ability to produce and distribute drugs
and produce and distribute tests without needing approvals.
I think that's something that's going to change in the United States.
It has to be regulatory burden on healthcare companies, on pharmaceutical companies, on testing
and diagnostics companies is extraordinarily high, but the objective in the United States
has been do no harm, which means don't let anyone die through the action, but it may be
that many people are dying through the inaction.
I think we're going to maybe see a big shift in policy
and allow right to try laws that are going to be federalized.
So, you know, states can make decisions about right to try laws
and doctors and patients can try drugs on their own discretion
without having a federal oversight body.
Perhaps the same will happen with diagnostics and testing.
And, you know, with respect to what services the government provides
and doesn't provide, I'm not sure.
There's a lot of data on either side here
that nationalized health care systems do and don't work.
So it's very hard to say what the right solution is here.
And I don't think that you want to try and take R&D
and put it in the government.
I think that's a terrible idea.
I think that there's a financial and a capitalistic motivation to find discover molecules, get
them tested, improve that they have a positive effect in human health.
And we need to move this towards personalized medicine, which actually changes the construct
and probably increases the cost of doing this about 10X.
We're already seeing this with stem cell therapies and CRISPR-based gene therapies.
Is there so much more expensive?
In order to get that stuff moving faster, we need to remove the regulatory burden and allow
companies the ability to move quickly and make this stuff more affordable.
The more barriers we put in front of companies, the harder it's going to be.
If we try to do this with a top-down approach, with the government deciding what to do R&D
on and what not to do R&D on, we're going to be in a fucking mess.
Those are some of my points.
Yeah, I would say as well, I think that there has to be, you know, after the great financial
crisis, we smartened up about what the banks were allowed to do.
Unfortunately, we didn't really smarten up about what other financial participants were allowed to do. And a lot of what we're seeing here is our accesses around leverage and credit.
And I think we need to fix those.
We need to tell companies that you can't put out certain amounts of debt.
We need to be a little draconian actually to reset this properly.
We need to tell market participants that you can't run 10 or 13 times
levered. You can't take $100 billion and make it at like $1.3 trillion and then blow a 50%
hole in it. You're just not allowed to do that. I'm just sorry, but nobody should be
allowed to do that.
Okay, so if we look now on topolitics, which is the least fun to talk about in many ways,
but just on international relations, I think it's worth discussing. There's been a bit of a debate
about what we call this virus and the relationship between the United States and China.
China went on a little bit of a propaganda campaign the last couple of days saying that the US
created the virus.
Trump has now been trolling them actively talking about the Chinese virus.
I used the other day, the Wuhan virus.
I didn't realize that people consider that racist to say Wuhan virus because we called it
the Spanish flu and we called it the German measles, but I guess people are particularly sensitive
to this topic now.
And I think there is a critical issue here that I don't understand why we're not talking about this,
but wet markets specifically trade in exotic animals.
These viruses are contained in certain animals like bats, which are together in flocks of like thousands
and then these animals in wet markets, people don't know what that is. you know, together in flocks of like thousands and the viruses,
and then these animals in wet markets,
people don't know what that is,
you can Google it if you've got, if you're not squeamish,
but essentially in Chinese culture,
as I've read it in the Wall Street Journal
and in the World Health Organization's advisements
to cancel and to shut down wet markets,
and there's unanimous agreement on this
from the health officials that these have to be shut down.
The Chinese culture says we don't want to see meat in a package
because we believe it's counterfeited, it's been frozen,
and it won't be as tasty, and it won't have the same nutritional properties.
So you must slaughter the animal in front of us,
at least for some significant percentage of the population,
there it's a tradition.
And this is where these viruses have uniformly been generated from.
And now we have the president and China going at each other.
And we have to have this very delicate conversation, I think, David and I'm curious to see your
position on this because it's now hitting like a ratio and a bias against a certain culture is
how this is being framed by the left, which is just maddening because it's actually a culture,
it is a cultural issue that has to end.
Just like our cultural tradition of shaking ends obviously needs to ends or be deprecated
in some severe way.
So David, maybe you could talk a little bit about what you think the outcome here is on
a political basis in relation to those wet markets and China and US relationships.
Look, I think China suffered heavily.
I'm sure they're going to shut down the wet markets, but all I know is what I've read
on the internet.
So, you know, I think they're fucking awful and stupid and they should be shut down cultural
dependence aside.
There's another issue in China. Apparently, a huge amount of the impoverished communities
in China are encouraged to actually grow and harvest rats.
I don't know if you guys are aware of this,
but there's a bamboo rat business
where you grow these rats inside of bamboo
and then you kill them and you sell them.
And so the poorest people in China
make money growing and selling rats, rat meat.
And the Chinese government just in the last week
has told them to stop, which actually is a huge effect
on many millions of families who are growing these rats.
So there's an economic effect,
but it's obvious that it's a terrible health effect.
But I'm not sure the getting rid of the wet markets
truly eliminates or eradicates the risk
of a new viral outbreak, right?
Like, I think I mentioned to you guys
on our text stream the other day,
40% of the bacteria in the oceans are killed every day by viruses.
This is a great stat that Jennifer Doudna uses in her book
on the discovery of CRISPR.
There's 10 to the 28 bacteria in the oceans.
Half of them, they all get killed every other day,
every two days by viruses.
There are viruses everywhere.
They are going to emerge, they are going to hit us. The issue isn't necessarily where the source of the virus is coming from. it killed every other day, every two days by viruses. There are viruses everywhere.
They are gonna emerge, they're gonna hit us.
The issue isn't necessarily where the source of the virus
is coming from.
It's just that we have to have better testing
and diagnostics and preparedness and treatment plans
and ability to motivate and mobilize ourselves
to address pandemics like this in the future.
With respect to the relationship with China,
I'm not an economist, I'm not a trade guy.
I don't really know the nature of the relationships,
so I'll leave that to you, mom.
My thought on this is that this is not a question of,
what markets are no wet markets.
I think this is a question of if you are a,
an anchor participant of globalization
and the global economy,
is there an expectation to have a common set of
behaviors, the lowest common denominator set of behaviors and hygiene that everybody signs up for
to be a fully fledged global market participant? Now, the pros of that is that maybe everybody decides
to be a participant and to have
lacks borders and free trade agreements that there can be no wet markets and a whole
host of other things. We all agree on whether we are okay with shaking hands or maybe
it's Namaste from now on or maybe it's bowing. The problem with that on the other side is
that all of a sudden you create a monoculture that strips away the individuality and the richness of every country.
And, you know, I kind of think that, like, you know, we could have attacked wet markets when HIV started to spread because it was, you know, as we understand it, it was the emergence of the, you know, bush meat and raw bush meat and the killing of monkeys that had this virus that was
then passed to humans, et cetera, et cetera, that started the HIV epidemic. So these things have
happened before. And it's not as if we shut down, you know, all of those markets in Africa
they still exist in some form or fashion. And as David said, there are huge economic ramifications
to having these cultural edicts. And it's very difficult, I think, for
an American to demand China to do it when we're not willing to step up. Just like in other ways,
you know, countries can demand us to lower our carbon emissions and we say we're not going to do it.
So there are implications and very difficult issues all over the place. But I do think in general
over the place. But I do think in general that if we move towards a more nationalistic economic
dependency, interdependency, I think that it's probably the right thing to allow more resilience to exist and for cultural diversity to continue to compound. Because the world of just in time efficiency, I think we're learning now, was the wrong
optimization for the world.
We need to optimize for resiliency.
And that means some amount of inefficiency.
It means more mom and pop shops.
I think that that's a good thing. It doesn't mean everything is Amazon Prime now in Walmart.
I think that's okay. It means that the iPhone is a little bit more expensive, which means you
upgrade every other year. That's okay. It means that companies like Google and Facebook and others are less profitable in the short
term.
That's also okay.
All of these things are okay.
We just need to decide and now we need to move forward.
When do we, what's our best estimate of when people will be allowed to go to a restaurant?
I think it's, you know, again, getting back to what the people listening to this podcast
probably care about most as we wrap up here in the in the second hour.
And thank you for tuning into the all in podcast David freeberg is with us from.
What's the name of your incubator again?
David the production board, the production board, previously metramonclimate.com and Shem off polyhopathy of social capital partnership.
Com and Shem off polyhopathy of social capital partnership. When do we suspect people will be allowed to go back to work in the Bay area in New York? When will people be able to go and have a meal in a restaurant? Do you think this is May, June, or July or August? When will we be at a quarantine? I'm going crazy.
I'll give you my optimistic and then we can give the final word to David.
Here's my optimistic view.
I'm dying.
I think that the emerging evidence will soon be hard to ignore that we have a denominator
problem, which means that we're not testing enough, and that these IGG and IGM tests will come online at scale in the next two weeks.
And that we will establish demark zones within cities and towns, green zones, if you will,
where people who are either negative or who have already gotten it and have tested positive for the antibodies
will be allowed to interact. So I am telling you that it's within six weeks from now.
Six weeks from now will be in restaurants.
And we may have to show our papers to somebody
to get in or have our foreheads tested.
I don't know, you just have to show your test result
and have your passport or driver's license.
Yeah, I know this sounds crazy.
I would much rather go to a restaurant
in the next six weeks where I had to show my papers,
a little bit triconin, sounds a little dystopian. I would much rather go back to Thai show,
I got damn ramen, it'd show my papers and know everybody else did, and then have everybody go
through the very simple temperature test on their forehead like I give to my kids when they're sick.
David, you're taking the over or we're the under at six weeks for when
we'll all be at Thai show and having a ramen.
I'm taking the under, I'm taking April 7th rate.
April 7th rate, and we're recording this,
I think on the 17th or the 18th I think,
and so you're saying we're just gonna be whatever
20 days out, I too am taking the under, but barely.
I think it's, I think we're four or five weeks.
David, David, explain the under case just so, and we can end on that.
But what's the under case?
Because that's a great note, Denda.
Yeah, so as we see the number, if you look at the UW-Virology website, and I've shared
this with people on my Twitter account, which I started doing yesterday, which is
your guys' encouragement.
I'm not sure I'm gonna stick with it.
I don't know if I have the stomach for it, like you guys do,
but basically they're showing steady caseloads
of positives per day, which again, it's delayed.
And if you look at the ICU availability
and the emergency room wait time data,
which I think are better leading indicators
of where we are in the cycle,
New York is about two weeks behind us,
New York is gonna be fucked for a little while.
But I do think that the West Coast and with some travel restrictions is going to be able
to reopen for business probably around April 7th or 8th because we're going to see a dramatic
decline at that point and we're going to see a lower fatality rate that everyone is predicting
and we're going to start to have measures around washing your hands and masks because you
can't stay shut down for that long without literally never being able to open again.
So I'm kind of balancing the economic need against what I think the data is starting to show.
That hopefully we are seeing the second derivative turning negative now.
And so we start to see a slowdown in new cases and then we see a reduction in cases.
And I think that there's a huge distribution
and what that model can tell you,
but I feel really good about,
about April 7th or 8th,
I was getting enough confidence there,
okay, it's safe to go outside again.
And by the way, if we don't open up
for fucking business, everyone's done forever.
All right, so that's where I get the number.
And most importantly, when do we feel comfortable
playing cards again in person?
Because I'm starting to think that I want,
and I know this sounds crazy,
but at this point, if the three of us were positive
and we'd gotten through it already,
I would like to know that.
I think the entire poker group needs to get tested
and the best possible scenario
is that we're all inoculated, we're not carriers,
anymore, we're blockers in the system,
and we can get back to playing cards
because I am, and I'm being a little facetious here,
but the chances are we might all have it, right?
I mean, it's a possibility.
I am going bonkers being at home.
I am not designed for social isolation.
I am going crazy.
Jamal, do you like it?
Yeah, I mean, I'm a pretty isolated person
as a matter of course anyway, so other than work
and you know, doing this or TV, I'm always pretty isolated person as a matter of course anyway, so other than work and you know,
my doing this or TV, I'm always at home.
And but the one thing that I cannot live without is Monday Pokers and I'll really tell you
why it's like in a moment like this, here's what I've realized.
I've realized just how much extraneous stuff I have in my life, how much I don't need it, how much I've occupied my time with things that are just not important.
And it's really allowed me to clarify like, you know, working on the next deal, not important.
Thinking about my status in society, not important.
Thinking about what other people think of me, not important. My health important.
My family and their health important. And my friends, I love my friends.
Yeah. And we're very blessed. I mean, I love the both of you. That group saved me in some really
tough moments in my life. Yeah. And I hate not seeing you guys
and being able to just touch and feel you
on once a week.
That to me is brutalizing.
And just to be clear,
this is a poker group
when we define touching and feeling,
we're talking about poker table.
We're making man love, it's fine.
We make man love.
We make man love over the poker table.
And that's how men commune
is by just shifting large amounts of money across the table
I miss you guys, too. I'm going crazy. I'm not gonna be I don't think like you're gonna see me after this said and done
I can't take seriously buying things. I just think it's like what the fuck is the point?
Yeah, I really take seriously that we need to
Fix the social infrastructure of the United States and in part do what we
can to help as many people as possible.
I think I have a folks.
Jamoth Friedberg, 2024.
Hey Dave Friedberg.
I'll be both.
Thanks a lot for doing this.
Jamoth, thanks a lot for doing this.
Follow at Jamoth, follow at Friedberg.
If you want to help out the podcast, well, there's no ads to click on because Jamoth wants
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But I will say if you
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And follow Friedberg, follow at Chimath, follow at Jason.
We'll see you all next time.
Bye-bye.