All-In with Chamath, Jason, Sacks & Friedberg - E100: Reflecting on the first 100 shows, fan questions, nuclear threat, markets, Amazon & more
Episode Date: October 14, 2022(0:00) Bestie intros are back! (6:35) Reflecting on the first 100 episodes and what makes the show special (29:12) Fan questions: Building in a downturn, how to be successful in tech, importance of un...capped upside, and more (53:43) Ukraine/Russia update: Nuclear escalation, when to draw a line in the sand, how inflation could deescalate any WWIII scenario (1:14:57) Reacting to Amazon CEO Andy Jassy's comments at an all-hands meeting earlier this week, VC firms buying public tech stocks Follow the besties: https://twitter.com/chamath https://linktr.ee/calacanis https://twitter.com/DavidSacks https://twitter.com/friedberg Follow the pod: https://twitter.com/theallinpod https://linktr.ee/allinpodcast Intro Music Credit: https://rb.gy/tppkzl https://twitter.com/yung_spielburg Intro Video Credit: https://twitter.com/TheZachEffect Referenced in the show: https://www.businessinsider.com/leaked-amazon-slides-instruct-employees-to-double-down-frugality-2022-10 https://www.cnbc.com/2022/10/12/amazon-cost-cuts-under-andy-jassy-reflect-new-reality-after-25-years.html https://www.wsj.com/articles/venture-firms-are-betting-on-public-tech-stocks-as-startup-market-stalls-11665653404 https://www.nytimes.com/live/2022/10/13/business/inflation-cpi-report https://www.nytimes.com/2022/10/12/opinion/china-semiconductors-exports.html
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Jake out, do you have intros today?
No, I don't have time for intros.
Oh, come on.
Alright, fine.
He started as a nerd with no followers on Twitter.
Now he's a nerd that gets recognized when leaving the shitter.
He turned water into wine, he just was to please us.
Now he's a mixture of Kermit DeFrog and a science nerd Jesus.
He's the man with the stands, the queen of Kinoa, the Sultan of science,
the prince of Prozac, the lord of Lexapro,
he gets stops for selfies all over town.
My producer fee gave him a mental breakdown.
The resultant of Zolof Mr. Gale of Rebar.
It's true, it didn't give me a breakdown.
It's true. But you're over it now.
You just named dropped three SSRIs
and that intro is incredible.
Well, I talked to his psychiatrist.
He said he's working on the cocktail.
Yeah, save some for me.
Yeah.
Oh, you're speaking of you.
He's got a very quick wit and impeccable grammar
known for building beautiful products that don't work.
Oh my God.
Like Colin and Yammer, he used to invest in SaaS quite a lot.
Now he's fighting a brigade of Ukraine bots.
He's spending so much time in his bunker.
It's starting to get smelly.
We see him only three times a week, all in Tucker and Megan Kelly.
He'd invest in your startup if you had the knack, but right now he needs that cash for
his GOP Super PAC.
The world's biggest asshole, the rainman himself, Mr. Davidsack.
That's all.
That's a repeat joke, that's not.
I know, but it kills every time.
So I'm going to keep repeating it until you stop laughing.
His wardrobe costs so much he can't get into a scuffle.
He bought all his friends with his white truffles.
He scaled Facebook to a billy, that wine collection.
It's just fucking silly.
He's on the world tour meeting with princes and kings.
Is he talking luxury sweaters or maybe bigger things?
The dictator himself,
Chimoff Polly Hapatia.
Oh, that was really nice actually.
Wow, I mean, I appreciate that.
You were obviously trying to get invited to dinner tonight.
Because I'm trying to get off the alternate list.
All the alternate list, he's trying to get off the alternate.
The email was harsh, nine was alternate.
You were trying to, I know I have a seat.
As for me, I'm the world's greatest moderator
who can take a note.
Compared to these guys, I'm just a millionaire who's broke.
The all-in-summit almost killed us.
But we came back from Deathstore.
I knew we peaked when Freeberg took over the dance floor.
We love the fans, but we love each other more.
Thanks for the first 100 fellas.
Here's to 100 more.
Really good.
Wow.
That's really, really good.
Look at you touching it.
Surprisingly, the half came prepared today.
First time, after after a hundred episodes,
he finally figured out he has to prepare. So that was the note, just prepare.
Do your job. Do your job. Do your job. Do your job. Do your unremutuated job.
Do your job. Speaking of unremutuated, we heard that somebody's grifting off the pod.
Oh, yeah. So good point. What we heard, Zach, is that you got a big care package
for Montclair.
Yeah, that's true.
What?
What I think we're all gonna declare today
is that we all wanna wet our beak.
And if Montclair sends each of us a care package,
we will all wear Montclair gear at episode 100.
Montclair's my brand, Google your own brand.
Yeah, we decided to.
Chimazka, Laura Piano, I got Moncler,
you go get like, you know, Izod or something.
I don't know.
Izod. Izod.
Actually, I got Izod too.
You're gonna have to do,
I got Unipleur and...
I got Unipleur.
We got gap kids for J-Cal.
Yes, exact.
You didn't declare your Moncler gift package by the way.
No, I get, that was the discovery we made this weekend.
So I want to thank the folks that there's a company called
and they sent me this, actually this hoodie, this Montclair hoodie,
which I never seen before.
Wait, what is this plug?
They sent you a hoodie for $1,200 and they get a $1,500
and they add some.
There were several other things that I'll bring you guys
each a shirt from Montclair.
Oh my goodness, you're a huge nut.
Sure, sure.
Yeah, you got that tour of five.
These guys are getting hundreds of thousands of dollars
of revenue.
This is the cool thing.
We gotta share.
Yeah.
How bad is your portfolio that you're grifting?
Did you put this Montclair stuff onto like eBay
after you got it?
I was already wearing it and they sent me more.
So I'm gonna wear this hoodie.
It's pretty cool.
What can I say?
I'm not gonna wear this suit.
It's three cents and all of a sudden you're grifting.
I just for everyone listening, I'm looking for a wardrobe.
Two cents.
Okay, just send my package to my office.
Let me tell you something.
There's no upgrade that's gonna help free-barring.
I think you're fucked.
No, I'm gonna bring you guys Monkler shirts
to the poker game tonight.
Gee, thanks, Zach.
Appreciate that.
How did you guys even find out that he got this gift?
We're at his flea week party.
And there was a Blue Angels party.
And there was someone there who started telling me,
like, did you hear the tax cut this whole thing?
Oh, somebody, there's a rat?
There was a rat.
I'm not telling you this, a rat.
But someone told me he's got a mole.
We were talking about the podcast.
We were talking about his hat. 100% it was a whole way.
100%.
No, no, it wasn't a whole way.
100%.
Was it Jeff?
What are my friends was in the man cave and he saw this care package from unclear and he
really admired this jacket.
It was like a puffer jacket but with like wool sleeves or something.
So you gave it to him?
And I gave it to him. He liked it so much.
I'm like,
I'm like,
you take care of him.
You're not even on the pod.
He's not even on the pod.
Give it to producer Nick.
So he was walking around with it and he was really appreciative.
So maybe he sent something or
or well,
I can't allow you to.
The grip is crazy.
Let's just say there was a lot of conversations going on about your care package,
Saks.
Well, and it makes us wonder, Sacks.
Are there other care packages that have come in and like,
or Chimau, have you been promoting other stuff on here?
So who makes the couch behind you?
So behind you, magazines that you wouldn't want to
read. How much of your Loro Piana have you actually paid
for over the past year?
That's 100% right?
100% right here.
100%.
I would never, I would never accept it for free.
Oh, it's important.
Look, wait, no, all joking aside, it's hard if you're running a clothing business, especially
if you're like a small niche provider of stuff.
So you have a responsibility to pay for this stuff, not to grift and get it for free.
No, I know.
When I was at the Lora Piano store on 57th Street in Manhattan, the 18,000 square foot store,
I was thinking the same thing.
These poor people, how do they survive?
Well, Lora Piano is on the L. 200, $7 square foot ride. How many thinking the same thing. These poor people. How do they survive? Well, we're gonna throw down the $27 square foot right now. How do they make it? I would
take a walk.
It's called Breyer's Friedberg.
Exploiting poor baby goats.
Well, whatever. I mean, the fact is the market's down. There's going to be a little grifting
on the margins. It's understandable. We open source it to the fans and they just go crazy.
I'm going to be nice.
Freeberg, he loves to produce every 17th episode.
It does a great job.
Oh, no, I like to prepare or at least know what the heck we're going to talk about when
we get together.
And you're in prompts. He got these prompts because you're not doing a job. Yeah, all right.
Sure. Oh God. All right. So first up on freeberg's curiousness. This is freeberg.
This is how you're going to do it. Let's skip it. No, no, no, no, no. Okay. So go, go, go, go.
Why do you think Chimoff people love the podcast? Why do you think they listen?
Why do you think they love it? What is the phenomenon? What lightning has been captured in this
model? First is I think that they appreciate our friendship. It's kind of like odd and quirky.
And I think a lot of, you know, it maps to like relationships that they have amongst their own
friends. So that's what makes it relatable.
But the second is that all of us uniquely have a point of view about stuff that matters more and more
in the world. I think that's just the basics of it. Like it's not like technology is going away.
And it's not like its impact in the world is going away. And the more it becomes mainstream,
the more it's important for a lot of folks to understand what's happening. And I think we provide a pretty
unfiltered view of it. And we do it where, and this is a lot of credit to SACs, more than
anyone else on this show, has to take a counterpoint and steal man, what would otherwise otherwise
be controversial views. And if he didn't have his three friends around him, that would make the pod meaningfully worse, I think.
Can you factor for people who don't know what steel manning is? What that means?
Well, it just means like to intab intellectual honesty around a point of view and actually
put your best foot forward in trying to explain it even when it's not orthodox, even when
it's not what the mainstream would say is right. And so what it actually does is it creates a contrast against every other alternative
that you have to learn about things, which you find incrementally is biased.
And I think that's what we've gotten right.
We are four friends that have a reasonable point of view rooted in some amount of success.
And I think that that's important because it gives us credibility. And we take all sides of issues. Yeah. And oftentimes it is not the obvious simple
reductive answer. And I think that that's where it really shines. Just for people know about the
steel man arguments, want to make sure people are coming. I think most people refer to it as the
act of presenting the other argument in the strongest
way possible to be intellectually honest.
Like the opposite of the shron man.
Yeah, the opposite.
Exactly.
Yeah, the opposite of shron man.
The way the debate happens on Twitter and so forth is it's almost like the intellectual
debate is being attacked using opposition research tactics like it were a political campaign.
So in other words, they go back through
anything you might have said or written, take the thing that was most wrong or at least justifiable
or the thing they can even just take out a context, and then they'll try to make it about that as opposed to
the argument you're actually making. And we just see this tactic over and over again, and it's not an
intellectually rigorous way of having
a debate about something.
You don't learn anything.
And deep down inside, you know that it's contrived.
And that is the inner nutshell.
So it has, it almost in many ways has less to do with how good we are, but frankly, how
bad all the alternatives are.
So even if you wanted to learn about tech, and you go up and you sign up for these
newsletters or if you look at some of these tech sites, they're really terrible and they have done an increasingly terrible job over the last five years in telling the most important things,
the truth and everything in between. And so if you can find a source for an hour a week
that is trying to tell you how basically the world
is going to come together in a really integrated,
multifaceted way, it's not like we're right
and it's not like we know better than other people.
In fact, many times a lot of the criticism I get
is how dare you talk about X or how dare you talk about Y because it makes people who are experts in that field, you know, feel like
how dare you come into my realm and even have an opinion on, you know, what Russian politics
was like in the 1980s.
And those things really annoy these folks because they feel that those opinions in that
knowledge should be cordoned off and held tightly as this secret that only they
are allowed to talk about into the world.
And this is the point where with the internet, all this knowledge is accessible.
So the value of that knowledge, in my opinion, is the least it's ever been.
It's the interpretation that's valuable.
And it's the ability to actually think narratively around how all these things connect.
And this is where I give a lot of credit.
I think you guys do an incredible job.
I think the way Fried Brook thinks is super unique.
I think the way that sacks as things is unique.
I think Jake, your courage to basically fight back is very special.
All of it together is a really unique recipe.
It works.
And what I will tell you consistently is the number of people that listen to this of import and influence. I am
constantly shocked. And if you are not sure of it, you need to get out of this stupid little
echo chamber of Silicon Valley, go to New York, go around the world. And if you're in the right
meetings, it's incredible how folks are getting educated using this pot. And I think that's,
that's really amazing. Yeah, I think there's like been a tendency in like what we call media today,
historically kind of communication amongst humans. It was very slow for a communication cycle
to go from beginning to end to clores because we had print and books and then telegraphs
and then telephones and then television and then radio.
And the internet, I think, has really changed the cycle,
the loop cycle to the point that a story iterates
and proliferates very quickly.
And a lot of people talk about the new cycle
being very short nowadays.
And what that means is that there is a group-think approach
to resolving to a point of view on what the means is that there is a group-think approach
to resolving to a point of view on what the news is.
So the news comes out, everyone iterates on it,
they form their point of view,
and all of a sudden everyone's on the same point of view.
And so there is no room for dissent
or debate or discussion,
because the cycle closes so quickly
and everyone coalesces around the same point of view.
And nowadays, I think we see not just that unipolar behavior, but we see this bipolar behavior,
where everyone coalesces on their point of view
and how their point of view is the opposite of the other side.
And everyone has their own heuristic
for what the other side is.
There's this populism versus elitism siding,
there's this red versus blue siding,
there's this us versus blue siding, there's this us versus them siding,
us versus China siding, everything is now bipolar. And so you very quickly coalesce around what your
poll says and what your poll is instructing you to believe. And that is what is fundamentally wrong
with how the system is working today. And I think what people find refreshing about a discourse that
doesn't succumb to that bipolarity as a standard is that it provides people the ability to have
a real rational out of sync point of view that maybe changes one's point of view and changes one's
mind in a meaningful way. And I think that's what's really missing today. And I think maybe sometimes
we do a good job and we touch on that.
And so that's what I would strive to do
is to always try and avoid that bipolarity on everything.
You know, the Zen Buddhists call it dualistic thinking.
You know, the human brain and generally the universe
seems to evolve into this kind of dualism on everything.
And it's not really always the case
that there are shades of gray that
there is nuance, that there is a complex dimensionality to things that I think people really, if
they take the time to understand, recognize that maybe it's not left and right, maybe it's
not elite in populism, maybe it's not all black and white. And that's an important, hopefully
framing that maybe we can bring, bring, bring to light through our diagnosis of what's
going on in things right now. Yeah. I like to add to that. I think there's, light through our diagnosis of what's going on in things
right now.
Yeah, I like to add to that.
I think there's a ton of great journalism going out there.
We see it.
There's a ton of great sub-stacks out there.
People go deep.
There's other great podcasts out there.
And right now, it's a tumultuous time for media journalism and getting information.
And what sources do we actually trust?
Who actually is thinking in a crisp way and informing people and having been a former
journalist?
When we were journalists, we knew that we would get 10, 20, 30, 40% of a story.
We would publish it.
And we would try our best.
But journalism has changed dramatically in the last 20 years.
And I can tell you journalism is dead.
Sorry. I'm sorry, I'm sorry.
There's some great journalism occurring.
It's on the margins.
It's irrelevant and I'll tell you why
because the facts are known instantaneously
on Twitter and through the internet.
We don't need people to relate facts.
We need people to wrap facts in context
and allow us to come to our own conclusions.
That's why I think journalism isn't what it used to be.
That's why people who are historically journalists struggle because now they actually have to create context
and narrative and have an opinion. But when you publish that into the Wall Street Journal
or the New York Times, it becomes very confusing. They don't know that that's what they were
supposed to do. That's not what they used to do. That's not how Pulitzer Prizes were
historically given out. And that's why everybody then, you know,
Ranson Rail, the sort of things.
That's where I was kind of going, is, you know,
if you look at it as journalists, people don't know this,
but journalists are being compensated.
There are little salaries in many cases
are based on their follower counts.
They're based on what audience they're bringing to the table.
And you see this in Substack, Stubstack,
you said we're gonna hire the top journalists
who have the most followers on Twitter.
But you have to change the word so that you change how people think about it.
These people are not journalists. These people are opinion makers.
Okay. In some cases, they're doing journalism.
In some cases, they're not. No, no, no.
There are some cases where they're actually doing real journalism.
There are people doing investigative reporting still.
It's not the majority of what you see, but it still exists.
It's just a very much smaller percentage.
But putting that aside, if you think about,
but you can't follow the crap of virtuous blanket
around every 1,000 people because of the acts of one.
I'm not, and I'm not.
I said, there is a range here.
It's a small percentage, but there's still
a range of percentages.
What do you think that percentage is?
Of content creation, I put it 5%.
So, you know, one out of 20.
Yeah, I'm shocked.
Anyway, I think it's less than 1%. know, one out of 20. Yeah, sure.
Anyway, I think it's less than 1%.
But let me just finish this one thought here.
You know, if you are going to be hired and compensated, and we talk about systems here
a lot, so just thinking from first principles, if you're a journalist, if you're a writer,
opinion writer, whatever, you produce content for Wall Street Journal, for podcasts, etc.
Today, let this sink in, your follow account
is what your book advances.
It's what your compensation is.
It's who hires you.
Now, if that's the truth, and it's not all the time,
but I think that we've had a good point.
And that your job is not to relay facts.
We can get facts from the thousands of words.
Exactly. Let me finish my thought here.
And so then what happens is how is follow account
on Twitter actually
derived? How do you get that follower account by being tribal? And so what's happened is journalists have became tribal.
They get big followings. They give spicy takes. They pick a side and then their compensation follows it. And that's why
New York Times said can we all stop on Twitter? And they literally put an e-ticked out. Then you look at this podcast. I think people look at us as, you know, in their mixture, podcasting long-form, taking the time, week after week to spend 90 minutes chopping these
things up.
I think that's what, to the original question freeberg you had, is what people find so
great.
I, when people ask me, I say it's really about the fact that there's a, there's a friendships
here and it's funny, but it's also informative and it's insightful and at times, as you
point it out, Chimoff, you know, random acts of bravery in taking positions that are not popular.
And to think that you and Freeberg almost blew this up over a few hundred K. I didn't.
No, yeah, no, the two of you equally share, boy.
I wouldn't classify it that way.
By the way, I think the bad feelings are ready.
Get spicy.
Just a, I have more of an ethical framework, but yeah, that's my, go ahead.
Oh, that's a good thing.
Free even worse.
Look at Tim Boff's during the pot.
Just a chime in on this point.
I mean, I think I'm in violent agreement with you guys, but I'd frame it a little differently.
I think the reason why people seek out our podcasts and other podcasts and substacts is and sort of this kind of independent
journalism and our willing to pay for it is because the mainstream media has become
totally devoid of substance.
It's as partisan and ideologized as it's ever been.
Reporters are extremely ideological.
You look at the New York Times, the Washington Post, the major television networks, it's all kind of the same thing.
And yeah, there is a little bit of an echo chamber problem
in terms of the partisan politics,
but the mainstream media is the most ideologized it's ever been.
I mean, just to give you one small example
that we talked about in the pod,
we had two quarters of negative GDP growth,
which the media has always considered to be
the definition of recession.
Then all of a sudden, they said, no, we can't know what a recession is anymore, because
they know that be a horrible headline for Biden right before the midterm elections.
That's more of a partisan version.
I think on the, you know, a more ideological version would be just around the Sue Crane
War.
I mean, it's just incredible how biased the coverage is.
They don't even present
the other side of the story, like this is called the Miersheimer take, about how we got
to this point that we're in. So the American people just aren't being informed at all.
You know, we love to talk about how the people of all these other countries are being
propagandized by their governments. We never talk about how propagandized the American
people are. The media does not present the other side of the story at all on how we got into the
Ukraine war and how we're now at the brink of what Biden calls Armageddon.
So how are we going to get out of it?
How are we going to get out of it?
Any topic, by the way.
I think that's so true.
That's all my punch.
I think it's all topics.
So many topics that we see effectively short So many topics. So many topics.
So many topics.
So many topics.
So many topics.
So many topics.
So many topics.
So many topics.
So many topics.
So many topics.
So many topics.
So many topics.
So many topics.
So many topics.
So many topics.
So many topics.
So many topics.
So many topics.
So many topics.
So many topics.
So many topics.
So many topics. So many topics. So many topics. So many topics. So many topics. So many topics. So many topics. So many topics. So many topics. So many topics. So many topics. So many topics. So many topics. So many topics. So many topics. So many topics. So many topics. So many topics. So many topics. So many topics. So many topics. So many topics. So many topics. So many topics. So many topics. So many topics. So many topics. So many topics. So many topics. So many topics. So many topics. So many topics. So many topics. So many topics. So many topics. So many topics. So many topics. So many topics. So many topics. So many topics. So many topics. So many topics. So many topics. So many topics. So many topics. So many topics. So many topics. So many topics. And so there's one perspective, one point of view on one dimension.
And the dimension, like SACS is talking about, about the time and the history of the dynamics
of all the countries and all the people and all the interactions that have happened for
the past couple of decades that led up to this moment.
But then this moment is taken in its context alone and reclassified as being something that
is good versus evil.
It completely misses the entire storyline of what happened.
It's like going to the end of a fairy tale and saying,
here's this moment of what happened,
and all the build-up and all the things that occurred
are often missing, and all the different sides of the story are missing.
And I think that that's really what makes it so difficult today
to feel like you can trust authority
and that you can trust the media that's
presented to you as a consumer not just in the US or in the West, but around the world, because
there's so much that's left out and manipulated and kept away. And what people are waking up to
is the fact as Chimac points out that so much of that information, the direct information is
available now. And so this investigation, this ability to uncover the data
and the storylines and the perspectives that are typically
missing from one form of media is making people realize
that there's so much that's being left out.
The live, 100%.
100% and I think in this podcast.
That's what's really shocking to people nowadays.
And I think that's what makes maybe to some degree,
hold our conversation a little more appealing. I'll drop to you on the second there, sex. But I did see this happen in three
specific topics that we discussed here. If you remember, we talked about abortion and we were on
that topic very early and no one wanted to talk. I remember when we started talking about the
number of weeks, maybe how Europe looks at this, that wasn't part of the popular conversation. It
was always just are you against choice? Are you for killing babies? It was like a very two-dimensional look at it.
Immigration, same thing. Nobody would talk about the numbers. Nobody talked about recruitment.
Nobody talked about the point systems used in other countries. It was almost like those basic
things were not allowed to be discussed. Why can't the media discuss those nuances? And freedom of speech is, I think, the biggest one, and the search for truth. Nobody wants to talk about the fact that the ACLU used
to actually protect unpopular speech. And unpopular speech is the hardest thing in the world to
protect, but how did that become something we can't even talk about now? And just the snap
silencing of any opinion, whether it's Chappelle or, you
know, pick a topic in freedom of speech, Trump, etc. Who gets protection for freedom of
speech? And we'll talk about it later on the news with Alex Jones, obviously, a very controversial
topic as well. Go ahead, Sacks. You want to add something to that?
Well, I think just to take this Ukraine situation as an example, I think the media's biggest
power is the power to define when time begins on an issue.
So especially, well, like with Ukraine, we're part of an escalatory spiral that's been going on for
well more than eight or nine months. This issue's been going on since 2000.
That's a decade. Yeah. Over a decade. So in other words, if you come in in like the seventh inning, okay, so to free
works point, you come in at the end of the story and it's been an escalatory spiral. But the media
just pretends like time begins on February 24th. Of course, you're going to have a certain kind of
you on the subject. Whereas if you know the history of the situation, if you know that back in the 1990s,
you had people like George Kenan, who was the architect
of our Cold War containment policy.
You had William J. Perry, who was Bill Clinton's Defense Secretary.
You had Henry Kissinger, you had John Mearsheimer, all worn that bringing NATO right up to Russia's
front porch was extremely provocative to them.
That they would see that as a provocation, it would eventually lead to a moment of crisis.
When that moment of crisis finally came,
you know, we're not told that this was predicted. We're told that anyone who says that this war has anything to do with NATO expansion
is basically a Putin apologist and is spouting Putin talking points. All right. Let's not let's not let's save some of that for the Ukraine talk
We're gonna talk about in the news section. Nobody could agree or disagree. Take, but the point is the media doesn't even portray it.
They really just pick a side, and I think I like your analogy of just coming in for the
last 15 minutes of the game and just describing that.
You need to have a deeper discussion of how did we get here?
How did we get here on immigration?
Why don't we have a point system?
Why do we look at people suddenly coming from south of the border, differently than we
did just 20 years ago?
How did that become a politicized issue?
What's the right solution here, especially if we can't hire people for basic jobs in the
United States?
Everybody wants to know this question.
What's your favorite moment or a least favorite moment?
A great moment in the show history, and then I guess we'll move on maybe to some audience
questions here.
But let's get this one,
because an embarrassing moment,
your favorite moment, your least favorite moment,
a moment now you look back on,
and you're particularly proud of,
I love the cold opens.
I think that they are unbelievably human and funny
and normalizing.
They are, by far, the best part of the pod in life.
And yeah, that's my absolute favorite part,
by like miles and miles.
So actually got a favorite moment other than Ukraine,
other than Ukraine, I know you got Ukraine on the brain.
Probably when you started talking like Joe Pesci.
The Joe Pesci voice.
I can't do it on command.
I'm not your monkey sax.
Don't you talk to me like that.
I'm gonna fucking bat in here.
No, seriously, you have any other favorite moments?
Or things you're particularly proud of, things that people tell you, you know, hey, I love this part of the show.
I'm also proud that we were able to air our dirty laundry
a little bit in public and still get over ourselves
and our own egos and we're still here.
That takes a lot of courage and a little bit of maturity
that's not in public visibility all the time in the media.
I like that sentiment a lot.
People are pretty much comfortable with that.
They were uncomfortable about it.
I think there's a lot of personal growth
that's going on here for everybody involved.
Afreeberg, you got a favorite moment,
are there, you know?
I don't like it when you and sex fight.
That's just a annoying moment.
That's your least favorite moment when we are.
I'm not really dealing with it.
I literally turn my headphones off
and I like do some emailing.
It really is just, it really is just this political thing,
but yeah, it does come up.
You know, I don't like the fact.
All the moments I've been interrupted by you
that like that just happened five seconds ago,
like those are usually pretty tough.
Go ahead, Frank.
I don't know.
What I did enjoy, I did enjoy meeting people at the summit, who shared that this has
been like a really important thing for them to listen to.
I think I was at a pizza coffee in the city and some guy came up to me.
This was one early after, early when we were doing the podcast and he was like listening
to you guys has really helped me get through. And he was like listening to you guys
has really helped me get through COVID.
And he was like locked in his apartment
and he didn't have a lot of friends
and he didn't have a lot of people to talk with.
And just being able to hear through, you know,
kind of a good conversation around when's this gonna end?
How's COVID gonna, you know, what's gonna change in the city
and hearing our friendship really made a big difference
for him and it was actually really interesting.
That was off the show, but it made me realize
that this show actually is impactful and helpful
and it gave me kind of the energy to keep going
even though I've had frustrations in the past.
So I don't know, I like those moments a lot,
to be honest, that there's real value here for people.
I also, I thought the summit was a lot of fun.
I mean, I had a good time.
Well, you know, it's, I think we're steering towards,
I think we're steering towards summit 2023.
That was me starting to pot a little bit.
I think we've done maybe.
We've done 20, 20, 20.
We've done.
One and done.
As far as I'm concerned, you do it, you produce it, or you hire a producer, I'm gonna make a story, I'm gonna make a story, I'm gonna make a story, I'm gonna make a story, I'm gonna make a story, I'm gonna make a story, I'm gonna make a story, I'm gonna make a story, I'm gonna make a story, I'm gonna make a story,
I'm gonna make a story, I'm gonna make a story, I'm gonna make a story,
I'm gonna make a story, I'm gonna make a story, I'm gonna make a story,
I'm gonna make a story, I'm gonna make a story, I'm gonna make a story,
I'm gonna make a story, I'm gonna make a story, I'm gonna make a story,
I'm gonna make a story, I'm gonna make a story, I'm gonna make a story,
I'm gonna make a story, I'm gonna make a story, I'm gonna make a story,
I'm gonna make a story, I'm gonna make a story, I'm gonna make a story,
I'm gonna make a story, I'm gonna make a story, I'm gonna make a story,
I'm gonna make a story, I'm gonna make a story, I'm gonna make a story,
I'm gonna make a story, I'm gonna make a story, I'm gonna make a story,
I'm gonna make a story, I'm gonna make a story,
I'm gonna make a story, I'm gonna make a story, I'm gonna make a story,
I'm gonna make a story, I'm gonna make a story,
I'm gonna make a story, I'm gonna make a story,
I'm gonna make a story, I'm gonna make a story,
I'm gonna make a story, I'm gonna make a story,
I'm gonna make a story,
I'm gonna make a story, I'm gonna make a story, Well, you peck, you peck. So here's a question. We got it over email from Nathan.
And Nathan said, we know the reasons, the reason you guys
started the pod, what is the motivation of each bestie
to continue doing it every week?
Now ask myself that every week.
You're me, but that's not.
You're me, that's not.
That's not, is therapy.
It sounds therapy.
No, I'm doing it.
I'm thinking about taking a break,
not because I don't like doing it,
but it is time consuming.
And I do want time to get back
to doing some business writing.
I was on a pretty good track
to publish a book about SaaS
before we started doing the pod.
I had written a lot of business blogs.
And this is kind of cutting to that.
Taking a break, how many weeks?
How many weeks?
What are 10 weeks?
What are you thinking? Maybe like a month or something? Yeah. Oh, four weeks. You can take that's no big deal.
10 weeks maybe. I don't know. Four to 10. All right. There's a, but I've got like a
hard work right now. Black version is like doing jumping jacks in his backyard and put me in the game.
Well, we could do that. I mean, I've got like five half-written business blogs in my hopper
that I really want to finish. And so I don't know.
The show does take a lot of cognitive energy.
It's what you're saying.
It takes a lot of those cycles.
It takes a lot of your time each week, sex?
I mean, as you guys know, the taping is only a couple hours,
but then it's just keeping track of all the issues.
And then, you know, if I'm preparing takes for this pod,
I also turn some of those takes into articles,
like for New Week or the American conservative,
whatever, something about which you know. And responding. And responding, and then tweeting takes, those takes into articles. This is the cost. This is the cost. This is the cost. This is the cost.
This is the cost.
This is the cost.
This is the cost. This is the cost.
This is the cost.
This is the cost.
This is the cost.
This is the cost.
This is the cost.
This is the cost.
This is the cost.
This is the cost.
This is the cost.
This is the cost.
This is the cost.
This is the cost.
This is the cost.
This is the cost.
This is the cost.
This is the cost.
This is the cost. This is the cost. This is the cost. This is the cost. This is the cost. But it's easy to just basically be on the side of the current conventional wisdom or to not have an opinion and to talk about things that are orthogonal.
But David is consistently the one that wades into the middle of the ocean and I can understand
why you like it.
There's an understaff there.
No, because he gets to crack under.
No, Jason, he has to be more prepared than the rest of us because he is more open to
the attacks from all of these knitwits.
It's just this.
He just is. No, I'm know, on Twitter, I'm being told
that we're both Jesus or blah, blah, blah.
These are like uninformed knitwits.
You know, they're the cancer, the cancer of people who comment on
Twitter is the following.
They suffer from the worst kind of cancer, which is a lack of
belief in themselves.
And so what they do is they point to other people and try to convince
yet more people to not believe in them. But that has nothing to do with anything. It's just
misdirection from their core problem, which is they don't believe in themselves. And so, you know,
David has to fight all of that stuff off, but he has to fight it off with logic, which must be
exhausting. You know, my approach has just been to turn off comments and to not start. This is the
single biggest problem, I think, with social media is it's at this heightened point
where it's this virulent strain of a lack of belief
in oneself that manifests in this hatred
that you direct to anybody else that believes in.
So interesting content, interesting theory.
Yeah, and I would just add to that,
it's not like I haven't heard any of the arguments
that they're making.
I guarantee you they have not heard the arguments I'm making, but I've heard of the arguments that they're making. I guarantee you they have
not heard the arguments I'm making, but I've heard all the arguments are making.
100%. I'm totally familiar with 1938, Munich, Neville Chamberlain, all this kind of stuff. I just
don't think that is the correct understanding of what's happening right now. I think the correct
historical analogy is either 1914 with War One and the Blankcheck Guar check guarantee or is 1962 the Cuban Missile Crisis the people on the other side
Generally don't understand that they are just kind of part of this like Twitter mob who's buying into the current thing and whatever
They're told by the media so it is it is a little bit exhausting
I think that that's what people don't realize is you know you when this thing got very popular the
when this thing got very popular, the two or three days after an episode comes out,
becomes your text, your email, your DMs,
and your replies become filled, especially.
So again, I would encourage you to keep doing this thing
and just to turn off comments and don't go back.
It's hard for the first few weeks,
and then you realize 99% of people who comment
have nothing important or useful or interesting to say.
Like zero, like negative zero.
And you forget that there is like 99.99% of the world
that just reads your content
and couldn't even care about their comments.
And I would just, I would focus on what you have to say
and ignore all these other things.
I'd agree that would make it less, but it would still be time consuming.
There is a bunch of business blogs I want to get done.
So.
I mean, I said you take two weeks off,
you come back and see how you feel.
All right.
I mean, you can do it week by week too.
I mean, just take one week off and see it.
See, I think you'll be catching up.
I think you'll, I think you'll be catching up.
And then you'll be able to,
you'll be able to, you'll be able to,
he'll be back.
He'll be back.
Great, great question from Nathan.
Thank you for your participation.
Yes, Nathan. Next question. I actually like this one. I'm going to pull it out. It's an email question from Juan T.
Oh, hey, Juan said, Bill Gurley recently put out a piece explaining how this might be as good a time as in a decade to build a company.
How are you guys seeing your own portfolio companies trying to take advantage of the situation?
And I guess I'll add you guys agree on how do you think about this as a moment for company building?
I could take that one.
I am seeing a lot of the companies that had done a great job raising around seed round
series A never got product market fit.
Now wrap it up, right?
They're shutting down.
They're doing the wind down process.
And then we're seeing lists of very talented people, and I've talked about this before
on the show, the consolidation of talent behind the winning ideas, the experiments that actually
worked, products that got some traction are now having an easier time hiring talent.
And so to Bill's point, he's got a lot more experience in this than the four of us put
together, is absolutely right. When you build in this down market,
yeah, it's harder to raise money, of course.
But talent is what makes great products
and products that delight customers get the fly will going.
And if you survive through this and you have that talent,
you're not going to face 20 copycats
and there's not 50 new products coming out a day.
People have more time to actually engage and try a product, which they've been burnt out
on.
And the peanut butter spreading, we got this thin layer of peanut butter talent.
Now it's getting consolidated in the winter.
So absolutely a great time for five CEOs and founders or 10 founders across five companies
to consolidate down to two.
Do those tuck-in acquisitions
and get focused and build really good teams and cut the weakest people on the teams. There's a
lot of weak talent that have been overpaid and aren't actually contributing to these teams and
they need to get cut and then you pull in the All Stars. It's a fantastic time. He's 100% right.
All of the, if you look back in history since 2000, all of the best performing funds of all times
were the ones that were formed right in the middle of the downturns, 0308, 0909. These are the vintages that have always
been the best. And what that means, it's a proxy for investing, which is it's the hardest time
right now. It's when you have the shakiest hand when you're writing the check, but it'll
probably be where all of the real money is made or the real generational wealth, both for the
entrepreneurs who have the courage to start and the investors who have the courage to invest. where all of the real money is made or the real generational wealth, both for the entrepreneurs
who have the courage to start and the investors who have the courage to invest.
There was a story that I heard in New York.
I was talking to a really well-known hedge fund or family office.
And they were talking about how they were meeting with a CEO of a Fintech unicorn, very
well-known Fintech unicorn.
And they said they left the meeting and they said, this person had an un-brewed, leave-able
disrespect for money.
And it was the most arrogant interaction that they had ever heard.
And they said, under no circumstances, would we invest in this guy in this company?
At any price.
And lo and behold, a year later, that company is now visibly going through a bunch of hiccups.
And it just reminds me that Jason,
we've always had two problems when times are good.
Problem number one is that there's never been a check
and balance on that kind of behavior,
a lack of respect for capital
and almost a disregard for business models,
which is just inexcusable.
And I think it's partly the fault of a very young entrepreneur, but it's also partly
the fault of a board who doesn't know how to direct that person.
And enable a man.
It's real.
But the second thing is we've always had this big tech put on the table where every time
you would try to really hone in on running a lean, highly efficient organization,
the alternative would be to go work at Google Facebook,
Apple, Amazon, Microsoft, where the terms are just completely different
to what the experience was at a startup.
And the bigger the gap, the harder it was for you to be able to hire and retain
good people without just copying them.
And now that that's also coming off the table, that is a key moment.
So girly is 100% right.
There is no longer the big tech put.
Those are the generals that are about to get shot over the next eight to 12 months, in
my opinion, in the public markets, in terms of market cap and employment and perks.
And then second is that these really thoughtful investors who felt pretty deeply
disrespected will now be able to call the shots.
And these founders will have to come back hat in hand and either apologize or just completely
find a different religion.
And I think in that you'll have a lot of amazing opportunities to build companies.
I think it's well said.
Tax, what are you saying?
Yeah, I think that's right.
I mean, look, when times where it's
frothy as they were, a lot of bad ideas get funded and there's a
lot of bad behavior that occurs. I don't think all of it's
intentional. Some of it is just the lack of discipline that when
capital is just so freely available, people are building their
businesses in ways that were optimizing solely for one variable,
which was top line growth. They just weren't paying enough
attention to gross margins or burn.
And when you then have a downturn in capital is not so available, you have to build your
business in a much more capital-efficient way.
And you can't create fake businesses where you're buying growth that's not economically
justified, where you've got negative, unicognomics around the growth.
So I think that this downturn is going to create a shake out.
It's gonna weed out bad ideas, bad practices,
and a lack of sort of focus, bad boards and...
Or not, are also, and in one trick ponies.
There are no boards for indicators.
One trick ponies, you know, there's just a lot
of one trick ponies out there who've optimized growth,
but don't have a real business.
And it's going to require entrepreneurs to play more multi-variable, calculus or math,
not just single variable.
It is extremely difficult to convert TVPI to DPI.
The value, paper values, into actual distributions, and that takes a skilled
hand.
And I think that a lot of young folks were hired into venture that fundamentally did
not know what they were doing.
They've neither ever built a company or helped build a company or actually learned how
to generate returns, but they became very good at buying free call options
on companies.
I remember a lot of people, the way that you,
these young people, I remember I heard a story
that you would sell against girly.
So let's just say you were trying to do a deal
and Bill gives you a term sheet from benchmark
and you get somebody else.
The young folks were like, oh, Bill's too negative
and he doesn't get it.
And they would try to convince these entrepreneurs that these rainy days don't happen.
My experience with Gurli is he is the most sophisticated investor of our generation.
And what I mean by that is, he was trained as an equity analyst that really understood
business models and cost of capital.
And so in a moment like this, the way that girly would help you on a board is meaningfully
more important than how some, you know, middling VP at some Randall startup who's now a, you
know, junior partner at AdventureFirm because that person has literally no clue.
And so these companies are going to go through a very difficult moment, which again is the
reason why a good steady
hand who knows what they're doing will make a ton of money in this next cycle.
And for people who don't know TVPI, let me just give you a quick definition. This is the total
value divided by the paid and capital. So total value is distributions. Like, hey, here's your
Robin Hood stock, here's your Uber stock, here's cash, plus the net asset value. What's that fancy
word for the value of the
shares of the companies that haven't had an exit? And so you divide those two numbers, you get a ratio, 1.5, 1.2, etc. But to Schmatz point, net asset value is debatable in some of these, right?
And distributions are what matter. You can't eat the the RRR. You got to eat the stuff that's
been distributed. Yeah. All right, let's keep going. I'll do one more.
I'm going to skip over.
Well, I'll just, the question on Twitter that got the most votes was,
what's the exact net worth of each bestie?
I would make the case that's probably not the best way to measure oneself.
I don't think we're going to do it.
I also would argue that we're probably all exposed
to a lot of fuzzy math with private assets that we own
and in terms of companies we're invested in.
I still care.
Like how does that correlate with happiness in life?
It doesn't, so it doesn't really.
Stupid question.
I don't think it's a big focus in terms of objectives.
I'll say the next one, they got a lot of votes,
which I really like.
It's a lagging indicator and a byproduct of what we do.
There are moments when what we do reflects in value that, frankly, where we are over-earning.
And then there are periods where what we do is under-reflected and we are under-earning.
And so the through line has to be that you need to survive in both good times and bad
times, which means you got to like what you're doing.
And if you get caught up in a numerical number, there's all kinds of math you can do to make
it look a lot bigger than it is, but it's all meaningless.
Yeah, I would argue you're as long as you're actively developing yourself over time, the
weighing machine will do its job.
Something told me in my 20s, when I was at AOL, he said, you know, if you're, because at the time, I, you know, I grew
up on welfare, I thought the goal was to make money. I didn't know any better. I've learned
later that there's a lot more leading indicators of happiness and things that actually
catch later.
Yeah, happiness.
Why truffles?
Why truffles?
I was going to say friendship, my family, but yeah, okay.
Friendship and family.
Lapse.
I had to find it as it's laughs and friendships.
You know, friendships.
But, but he said to me, you know,
your goal should be to just be in the upper few percent
of your age bracket and just enjoy what you're doing.
And he said, let time take care of everything else.
Because as long as you find something,
you know, you decently enjoy and are good at,
you'll just get better and better at that thing. And then at some point, you know you decently enjoy and are good at you'll just get better and better at that thing and then at some point
You know you will lose track of what the you know measurement of that is because you're just too caught up in in how much
You enjoy doing the thing and I thought that he had no idea what he was talking about and now 25 years later
I can tell you he was totally right
Totally right. Yeah.
By the way, this was a question I was trying to skip over.
So, it led to a good fork, yeah.
Okay.
What is happiness?
Yeah.
Yeah.
I think after, you know, observing outcomes for 25 years in tech, what I would say is
that if you're smart, hardworking, don't have behaviors that sabotage yourself
and take intelligent risks,
you will be successful in this business.
I mean, technology is such a wind at your backs.
It's such an engine at wealth creation.
How can you not do well?
But the exact magnitude of how well you do,
I think it's ultimately, it is substantially affected
by timing.
And, you know, like if you were employee,
whatever number X at Google,
you're gonna do better than most founders,
even of a unicorn company.
And when you found your company,
and then when you exit, what the market is doing,
those things have a huge impact on the magnitude.
So, you know, whether you end up being,
you know, a billionaire or a centimillionaire,
you know, a decommillionaire, whatever you want to do, those things are very affected
by timing and chance, but not whether you're going to be successful at a substantial level.
And so just, you know, be smart, be hardworking, don't sabotage yourself, you know, get into
tech, and you will do well.
Trust the process.
Trust the process.
The exact amount of how well you do
will be dependent on some, you know,
stochastic factors, but not the fact
that you're going to do well.
We are enormous beneficiaries of having been born
when we were because we were a bunch of late 40
and early 50 some things that in the prime
of our career in tech, the Federal Reserve took rates to zero. And we had no idea
a priority how important that would be in all of our outcomes, but they were. And even more importantly,
PCs, internet, and mobile happened. All of that hard work was done beforehand by an entire
court of people that had to fight much stronger headwinds. We had to fight. So, David, I just want to build on that.
We were extraordinarily lucky.
And so, don't get caught up in that,
because all these factors you cannot control.
I'll say one more thing that I think is the most important observation I've made
in terms of whatever it is building wealth over time is
to make sure you're building equity in
yourself.
If you're in a services business and every day, and whether that's serving the clients
of the company you work for or just serving clients on behalf of yourself, and everything
you do is of transaction.
And that transaction doesn't build on itself, doesn't compound value in some way.
Then you're missing out
at an opportunity every year that goes by that you're earning income or you're not building equity
is a non compounding year. And it's compounding equity value that I think ultimately pays off for
you as an individual. And I can give a lot of examples of this, but if you're in a, let's say,
a brokerage business and you just
do deals and you might make, have a good year, you might have a bad year.
The real question you need to ask yourself is, what is compounding?
Are you growing a client base?
Are you growing your skill set?
Are you next year able to do more things or have more options than you have this year?
And if the number of options you have is declining or a static every year, then you're limiting
your equity value
And that ultimately will translate into limited wealth creation.
I mean on that point around equity, so yeah, when I discovered what equity was
This was an awesome law school and actually the guy explained to me was Antonio Grasias
A light bulb really went off for me because my dad is a doctor and I was on a path to becoming a lawyer and in both
Those cases you're a professional.
The way you get paid is you're more or less
charged an hourly rate.
And so the amount of money you can make is capped, right?
Just take the number of hours in the day and in the week,
multiple apply it by your rate.
And that's the most money you can make in a year.
And the difference between that and equity
is with equity, you own a piece of a business and that business could be ultimately worth
You know any amount and so your equity could therefore be worth
Virtually any amount and so you're uncapped and so just you know if you want to have outside success
You have to have equity in something. I think that is exactly right. If you're just basically working for wages, even if you are the best of what you do and
you get paid an insane hourly rate, again, you can be successful, but you're not going
to be uncapped.
That's the beauty of Silicon Valley is all these companies offer equity to everybody.
It's not just shares in something.
You can actually get equity and create leverage
in your life.
In this era, more than any human has ever had in any era prior because of software and
computing and automation, you can create a website that prints cash for you every day if
you wanted to.
You can create a service that you get leverage out of.
And there's equity value in that.
And I think that's really key because then you can go build another one,
another one, and you're building value over time.
And that's just the most simplistic example
of how technology today provides leverage
that can really allow anyone to pursue a path of equity.
And I think you made a good point about
what are you getting leverage off of?
Yeah.
So there's a bunch of different things
that you get leverage off of.
You used to be labor, right?
So the old way was levered off labor.
And I guess if you were to own consulting firm
or some sort of factory, then the more people you have working,
the more money you would make, the other way would be
you can get levered off capital, like a fund manager,
or you can get levered off of technology,
because software can basically create these super scaled outcomes.
So you need to figure out like, what is it you're going leverage off of?
Yeah.
I'll do the last one, which I thought was a really good question.
And it got a lot of votes from Marcos or T's.
If you had to start from scratch, no money, no connections, only the knowledge
you have right now and a hundred bucks, what would you build in 2022?
only the knowledge you have right now and a hundred bucks. What would you build in 2022?
I would build something in energy transition
or in life sciences.
With a hundred dollars.
Yeah.
I would build a startup incubator venture fund of some type.
A way to fund entrepreneurs and just be a capital allocate
or much earlier in my career.
I would create a B2B software company that actually I'm already creating it, so I haven't
unveiled it yet, but there's a link to getting right now.
Go David, go.
Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, wait.
What my way, your beak, what is going on here?
I haven't gotten the subscription documents.
Have you raised money for this? I have not raised money yet. When I haven't gotten the subscription. Have you raised money for it?
I have not raised money yet.
When I was on the internet.
I have not gotten my subscription documents, sir.
You could think of this idea as e-mr 2.0.
So, Jake, you're not in because you criticize e-mr.
But it wasn't joke.
I gave you the, I let you win TechCrunch 50.
This is, I put the fucking fixes.
David, just to put my pitch in,
I ran e-m-n-i-c-q, help Facebook.
Was an investor in e-mr? Was the series a investor in Slack? So an I CQ help Facebook was an investor in Yammer was the series
investor in slacks. So I'm ready for you.
Yeah, I'm ready. We were there for us. We needed you back at Yammer days, unlike Jake
Hell. We're talking about your wife came to my wife.
Okay. You're on me.
You're on me. You're on me.
Let me in. Let me in. Let me in. Let me in. Let me in. Let me in. Let me lead it.
Let us do it. Let us do it. Let me in. Let me in. Let me in. Let me in. Let me in let me do the round you guys are in let me in let me lead it
We ran around Yes, yeah, I'm pretty round. Thank you. We very did you disagree on TV?
Well assuming on there's one thing you have to do which is you've got to rip out slack and use this instead
Yes, 100% I will say you know, I'm gonna be very honest with you the day I left Facebook. I stopped using it the day
We sold we distributed slack stopped using it. Don't worry. Bummy. I am 100% all I'm all in I'm all in
Absolutely, all right. Let's do the show
Freeberg you didn't answer that question. What would you do? Well actually? I would get some water vaporizers and then I would get some molecule
What would you do? Well, actually, I would get some water vaporizers and then I would get some molecule and I would make a new super protein that was made out of, good, sorry.
Good. No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no the, you know, the challenge is,
as you move past that stage in your career where, you know, you have the willingness and the time
to be 120% building one product every day.
It's really hard to go back to that.
And I think if I was in a position again,
where I had no money and had no...
I think that's the key part of the question,
not the hundred dollar part.
Yeah, I think I would go back to building something.
I do think the intersection of life sciences
with software creates this era of opportunity.
It would probably be something in the realm of AIML
meets life sciences where you can actually work
in a leveraged way with software
to drive outcomes in these important markets.
So I would actually create free-burning cat.
Free-burning cat.
We could have started something.
Maybe we can't still.
Oh, not too late.
We can.
The co-founders.
Sacks will let you in the pre-round if you let us in your pre-round.
Okay, sounds good.
All right.
Okay.
Can you take us forward? Should we go forward? Okay, let's see what's on the docket. We've got Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
You had Biden last week saying we're facing the risk of Armageddon. How is that not the top story?
Go Saxi Puk, go take it. All right, here we go. Let me just queue it up for Sax.
By last week, so we're facing risk of Armageddon. That's your T.O right, here we go. Let me just queue it up for a sax. By last week, so we're facing risk arm again. That's your T.O. Okay, we go. And then, and then
Leon Panetta just let's tee up, Jacob. We don't need everyone knows what's going on. Then you
had to put out Leon Panetta just who was the former Secretary of Defense and Director of Central
Intelligence wrote an op-ed for Politico saying that intelligence analysts have now
saying that intelligence analysts have now raised the probability of a use of a tactical nuclear weapon in Ukraine from one to five percent at the beginning of
the war to 20 to 25 percent now is what he says. So and I don't think he'd be
saying that if this wasn't pretty much conventional wisdom in Washington now.
I mean, Panetta is sort of a very respectable figure in the
beltway.
And by the way, you said it right for the first time.
And by the way, I said that we're facing the most dangerous situation and the highest
risk of nuclear war since the Cuban Missile Crisis, you call it the risk of Armageddon.
The problem is that nobody is willing to say what we should be doing differently to avoid
this situation.
So people are always attacking us for having a point of view on foreign policy.
First of all, this affects us.
I don't know why we're not allowed to have a point of view.
But in our business thinking, where there is an existential issue, you have the attitude
of drop everything and figure this out.
If somebody told you that there's a 25% chance of your company blowing up, maybe in the next few weeks,
you would drop everything and focus on that problem. But it's like, you know, after the Armageddon
comments, it's like the media just passed over it. It's like, oh, this is like crazy Biden or whatever.
It was minimized. It was contextualized. The White House walked it back. Nobody's really focusing
on this and we'll be doing differently. And in fact, what Panada recommends and Petraeus said the same thing is that if Russia uses
a tack nuke in Ukraine, then we should respond by attacking Russia directly.
Now if we do that, we are literally in World War III.
And remember, at the beginning of the war, Biden was really clear that we weren't going
to get directly involved.
He vetoed the idea correctly of the no fly zone, which would have required us to shoot down
Russian planes.
Biden, remember he was asking the press conference at the beginning of the war by Lester
Holt?
He said, Holt said, Mr. President, what if Americans are trapped behind enemy lines in Ukraine?
Would you send in American troops to go get them?
Biden said no.
I think very properly said no because he said, listen, we do not want to risk war three.
But now because of mission creep and a slippery slope,
and we've all gotten more involved in this war,
we've got a more emotionally committed,
you now have Pineda and Petres calling for us
to directly attack Russia and get in war three.
The Russians almost certainly would respond with nuclear
because that's all they've got.
They don't have the conventional forces to stand up to us.
So look at how close we have now gotten to the brink of a nuclear showdown.
And has anybody reassessed?
Is anyone calling for us to reevaluate?
Because that's the conversation we should be having right now.
And Freeberg this brings up two points that I think you can comment on. Naval actually, the founder of Angel,
a list angel investor and just public thinker,
I would say public intellectual.
He came on to call him with the two of you
and he outlined like, who does get to have an opinion
on Ukraine and other issues, which has dovetail with this,
like who gets to be an expert in the world today?
And, of course, at the same time, not only Sachs has been commenting on,
hey, what's the off-ramp here? Elon has been talking about, hey, how do we get out of this?
Do we have some votes, you know, by these regions that have been annexed or that are in dispute?
AOC now is getting criticized on people shouting her down at a public event today or yesterday
that she's a war monger and she won't speak out against war.
How do you frame the public dialogue about this, Freberg?
And then do you see a potential off-ramp here other than Putin leaves Russia, which is
I think the public stands by a lot of folks.
Putin can end this.
He just has to leave Ukraine in order for this to end.
So two questions there for you, Friber.
It's very hard to have good dialogue about any situation
where an argument could be made on the grounds of morality
in an absolute sense, making it really difficult
to have a discourse around what the right thing to do is,
because you don't agree fundamentally
on the objective you're shooting for.
One side says the objective is to preserve
the integrity of democracy and the freedom of people.
And the other side says the objective should be
to secure the interests of the West and
the United States and preserve the world from nuclear holocaust.
I think that's what makes this a challenging conversation.
The objective can be reframed and then from that objective, each side can make their own
case without being forced to take in the point of view of the other side.
And it's why we're at a bit of a standstill, and it's also why it's so easy to get swept up
in a mass point of view, a coalesce point of view of the masses, that makes one feel good
about what may end up being a very bad situation. It feels good to say I'm doing this for freedom of the people.
I'm doing this to save lives.
And the end of the day, it may cause a nuclear war.
And it's okay because I feel good going into this debate
that this is the right thing.
It's the morally superior thing to do.
What's very hard is that we can't actually say as a group, our objective should be to preserve the integrity of
democracies around the world to an extent, and that's a nuanced point of view.
To an extent means I'm willing to preserve the democracies through certain actions,
but I'm not willing to cross a certain line. An
absolutism doesn't need to come into play.
but I'm not willing to cross a certain line. And absolutism doesn't need to come into play.
That's what I think is making this such a very difficult
conversation, and it's why it's so hard to actually
have a conversation around it.
And it's really, I would argue,
the most poignant and the most dramatic moment
in what we talked about earlier,
which is this deep-seated kind of bipolarity.
And once you're sitting on your pole,
you don't want to come off.
And you don't realize that so much of the dialogue
is in this middle, and we have to come to some point of view
that maybe this isn't about an absolute outcome.
It's not absolutely gonna be a nuclear war,
and it's not absolutely gonna be the end of democracy.
There's some conversation in the middle
that's very difficult to have,
and people that work somewhere in the middle that's very difficult to have and people that work somewhere in the world
hopefully ambassadors foreign policy people state department people hopefully are having the more
nuanced critical conversation about how do we resolve to the maximal outcome that doesn't
necessarily take us to an absolute end. Tramoth to to that point it's going to be an imperfect outcome here. I think this is much, much simpler than all of this.
Leon Panetta is a senior counselor to this defense contracting agency called Beacon Global
Strategies, who works on behalf of Raytheon.
I found that out while feedback was talking in a two second Google search.
I suspect that if you looked for Patreus's conflicts of interest, you would find that through
some Byzantine set of strategic consulting organizations and whatnot, he also works on
behalf of the defense industry.
So you have these people who will generate more revenue and more profit if there is a massive
war.
And those people have been trying to push us into a land war in Europe since this whole thing started.
And so this is just yet another attempt. It's just the most final way of doing it. So I was just
encouraged people whenever you see all these folks clamoring for war, is just to keep in mind that
they are riddled with conflict and that you can find it out. Again, this information is sitting
in plain sight on the internet.
And you can figure out whether this person is really advocating a truth that
makes sense or they're getting paid to shill a revenue generating mechanism for
some part of the military industrial sex.
How much of this is people talking their book, their book being the military
industrial complex in your mind?
I think it's a big part of it.
I think all these Washington think tanks are funded by defense
contractors. I think it's short-sighted, obviously, because if it leads to a nuclear war,
there's nobody in the defense industry that won't be anything left. But look, I think
that Washington is wired for war in part because there's a huge lobby for it for all these
defense contractors and what's the lobby for peace? I mean, there's a huge lobby for it for all these defense contractors and what's the lobby
for peace. I mean, there's no one really arguing for peace. Speaking of this, Elon, I'll tell you
what's lobbying for peace. And I'm going to connect what may seem two disparate ideas together.
But the single biggest thing I think that will prevent nuclear war is the inflation that we're
feeling. And the reason is because it allows the
Fed, in my opinion, for the first time, really in the last 15 years, to act properly. And
if they hold the line, and they take interest rates to 4-5%, I think one non-obvious outcome
of all of that is that it becomes extremely expensive next to impossible to finance military
adventurism abroad. And that's a practical economic outcrop of really, you know,
meaningfully high rates greater than zero. And so I actually think the reality is
that for a lot of these governments, the more that inflation sticks around,
the stickier it is, the higher rates are in general,
the bigger the problems at home are, and the less prone they're going to be likely.
I actually think that explains the escalation of this rhetoric because people want to
try to make this issue and put it on the table.
But you understand that these folks don't say it's a 90% likelihood.
They go from 1% to 25%, which if you understand probabilities is effectively a left-till
risk that's effectively the same.
And the reason they're trying to do it is they're trying to get it back, David, as you
say, to timestamp it, to get it in front of people's perspectives to make it important.
In a moment where everybody, increasingly, not just in the United States, but in the UK,
in Europe, are looking internally
and trying to figure out how to keep their economies in a reasonably functioning way, and
how to make sure that their financial and other infrastructure keeps working.
And that is not necessarily a priority when rates are zero.
But when rates are 4%, I mean, just by the way, if you guys saw what happened today, it
was the competing of two narratives this week.
There was the financial narrative of the UK having to bail out their pension system, right? Of all of a sudden, the pensions being forced sellers, of those forced sellers now,
spilling into the United States debt markets around CLOs and collateralized loan obligations
and junk debt, which then could theoretically
spill as a contagion to other parts of the market.
That was narrative one.
And all of that, by the way, is a result of hiding inflation and the fed moving up rates
and other countries being forced to attack inflation with higher rates and creating all these
dislocations, narrative one.
Versus narrative two, which is, hey, all of a sudden, we have to put the nuclear risk on the table.
And if you actually saw the print that was spilled, the disproportionate amount
of the rhetoric actually focused on the former narrative and not the latter.
And so I think that that's why the, these folks are escalating the rhetoric
in order to kind of create an
Equality so that they get enough print. They want that version of the outcome What you're saying is you have the the world saying we can't afford to have this conflict
We are broke
I think the world is saying we are increasingly under enormous domestic pressure and as a result we cannot spend
On things abroad.
We can't afford this.
And then the other side saying,
well, we need you to afford this.
So nuclear is gonna happen.
There's gonna be a nuclear annihilation.
No, no, no, no, no.
There's a small strain.
You can pay more attention to this.
There's a small strain of folks
who would economically benefit.
Yes.
We're now ratching it up.
They're rhetoric so that that second path
becomes more and more on the table.
What do you think of this freeberg,
this analysis that Shamaat has?
These two polar, these two groups vying for the attention and or budget of the world.
The military industrial complex versus, yeah, citizens saying our country can't afford this,
we need to focus inward.
Not citizens of central banks. Okay, but I think the central banks influence by citizens, right?
Like this is a whole system here. We're talking about people are, you know, watching their
pensions go away. They're watching jobs get cut. If I was a betting man, I spent that I would guess
that the next half a trillion to a trillion dollars that is spent in Western world economies
will be to subsidize something that's broken internally inside of one of our countries. $1,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 Just to answer that point. So there's an article today in the Washington Post about how the US government's debt service is
Going to be around 570 billion this year, which is a 45% increase
Biden's budget for 2023 is only 1.6 trillion so you're talking about something like over a third now of the official budget is already going to debt service
Because it's not variable, right? It's a variable right exactly because so much of it is is
It's not locked in in long-term rates.
So because interest rates have gone up so much, the debt service has gone up.
And interest rates are still going up.
And so, you know, Druckemiller had those points around how the debt services within a decade
is going to eat up practically the whole federal budget.
So, Jamalath is right that we've never really had to choose between guns and butter before in the past.
It was just, let's just do both both and we'll rack up more national debt.
I do think there will be more and more pressure to question this type of spending and why we've
already given Ukraine $80 billion in handouts when we can't afford to basically pay for
major entitlements at home.
So I think there'll be more pressure.
Now, I don't know if that pressure is going to come in time, though, to de-escalate this
Ukraine more.
It's not.
And that's what concerns me.
And just to cut to the chase on this, I think where the rubber meets the road on Ukraine
is Crimea.
And why?
Because the Russians have a major naval base there.
It's of a stope.
It's the home of the Black Sea Fleet.
And they will never give that up.
They are willing to use Nukes, I believe,
to basically protect that asset.
It's a vital interest of their Svalon.
80% of the population of Crimea, they're Russian.
And three quarters of them,
according to polling that was done by Gallup
and by a German polling firm, so not Russian polls,
indicated that they see themselves as Russian and will be part of Russia.
So if we support a self-determination, we'd be fine with Crimea being part of Russia.
But here's the rub.
Ukrainian nationalism demands that every square inch of Crimea goes back to Ukraine, and it
is State Department policy right now, that we will never recognize Crimea as being Russian,
we'll never recognize the annexation,
which happened back in 2014.
So something's got to give here, something's got to give.
Either we have to sit down Zelensky and say to him, listen, you're not getting back
Crimea, we're going to make that part of a peace deal.
Or we are going to back the Ukrainians in their military effort to retake Crimea with
the result that I think is quite likely that
the Russians will be willing to use a tackled nuke to prevent their total defeat.
So at some point, we're going to have to choose here which of these outcomes do you want?
Do you want to basically go for a negotiated settlement, which means telling the Ukrainians
they cannot have everything they want, or do you really want to risk a nuclear war to
take back Crimea, which is Russian and the people that
see themselves as Russian.
So we need to make a choice here.
Yeah, so Elon put out a tweet and got savage for it.
And he outlined sort of what you're saying here.
So do you think his plan?
He said redo elections of annex regions under UN supervision, Russia leaves if that is
the will of the people.
And then he says Crimea formally part of Russia,
as it's been since 1783,
what are supplied to Crimea?
Short as you're saying,
Ukraine remains neutral.
Should the West force Ukraine to accept these type of terms
essentially elections,
and I don't know why Crimea
wouldn't be part of that election process,
do you think UN supervised elections
in those regions should occur and we should force
Zelensky to do that?
So actually, he who pays the paper calls the tune.
Of course, we need to have a point of view on how this work should be resolved when we
do that.
Should we do that?
Listen, it's not about force.
They can fight on and do whatever they want as long as they want.
Hold on with our support and weapons.
That's what you said.
That's what you said.
So you think he should do that.
We should hold on to the American weapons.
If he doesn't.
If Zelensky wants our weapons and support, which appear to be infinite, we should not
give him a blank check guarantee.
The blank check is what started World War I.
The German Kaiser gave Austria a blank check guarantee and it led to World War I.
That is how great powers get pulled into the wars of minor powers.
And we absolutely have to have a point of view
on how we do not get pulled into this.
And I think one of our lines should be
that we are not gonna fund the Ukrainians
in retaking Crimea.
Got it.
So just to put it to clear this,
so we can move on to the next topic.
You're in support of removing
our not giving further weapon support to the
Ukraine in last day.
Negotiate this.
It's not going to come to that.
We need to have a point of view on how the story gets resolved.
But you are in support of that.
Stopping our support if they don't sit down and negotiate a settlement here. That's
what you would do.
America needs to have a point of view of what is in its own interests. What is in our
interests is for this to get resolved diplomatically at some point through a negotiated settlement, not for to escalate into a nuclear war that we
could get pulled into. The only way that's going to happen, okay, is if Crimea goes back
to Russia. I'm telling you, they will be willing to pull out all the stops.
They could even use taknukes before Crimea.
Can you answer the question, though, that I asked three times. Would you remove American
support in weapons if they don't accept that?
If Ukraine doesn't accept that, would you be comfortable taking away our support in weapons?
I don't think it's going to come to that, but yes, we should be willing to threaten that.
Okay, that's it. I'm just trying to get you to answer that one question.
They are clients. Hold on a second. They are a client state of the US.
They do not call the shots. We're America. We call the shots. We're the big dog here.
That's the bottom line.
And you really want to get pulled into a nuclear war because I do not I just wanted you to answer that one question
We should pull away if they don't let's get real. Okay. This guy about our future
You know, we are American nationalists at least I am. I'm not a Ukrainian nationalist. I support self-rule
I think we accomplished something by preventing Kiev from getting toppled
But I wanted to support self-rule for the people of Korea. It's time for a settlement in Saxon, my team.
I think the most important thing that we can all be thankful for,
which I think will prevent a lot of wars in the next 10 or 20 years
is inflation and non-zero interest rates.
It's just going to be really tough.
For example, for the fact of...
I want both of those factors.
The UK cannot do anything right now other than make sure that they have foreign currency reserves
to back up the pound, which they don't really have that much.
They're going to need money to bail out their pension system.
Whoever thought it was a good idea to allow pensions to run levered risk was it's obviously
insane.
Could you imagine if it turned out that the teachers pensions and the firefighters pensions
in America were running levered long?
I mean, they're not all.
There's high errors off now. I mean, it's just breaking point. Yeah, it's
clear. You know what a pension is? I know, I'm not trying to
get a hole. Yeah, it's just a dead end. I'm saying, I'm saying, I'm
saying, don't use some fancy intellectual argument. I'm
saying, practically speaking, the treasure is not allowed to
call Goldman Sachs and say, I'm going to run two turns of
leverage on this money. That is not allowed to happen in the
United States. Okay. I get in some fancy way it could be thought of as levered long
with all kinds of indirection.
But that is not how the world works today, practically speaking.
It is how the UK works.
A treasure in a UK pension system is allowed
to call an investment bank and actually run levered.
That is insane.
OK.
So my point is, when rates are non-zero, all of that jig is up.
Governments are forced to batten down the hatches, and husband cash, for God knows what
will break in the system.
And I think that that is, and as disruptive as that is, it may actually be the bullwork
against war.
The jig is up, folks.
I mean, I think that's what we should take away from this is,
we can't afford this, and the United States is funding it.
We have to force a settlement here,
and it would be a profound courage.
And maybe the silver lining of inflation.
Okay, Andy Jassy's had an all hands meeting.
Amazon is freezing hiring for corporate roles
in its retail business.
Almost 90 VPs are higher.
Level execs have left Amazon since 2021.
Earlier this week, there was an all hands presentation and the slides were leaked to business
inside.
Some of them constraints, breed, resourcefulness, self-sufficiency, and innovation.
There are no extra points for a growing head count, budget size, or fixed expense, the
slide instructed employees to accomplish more with less.
Sounds familiar, sounds like something the US needs to do and foreign policy needs to do.
Amazon leadership team urged employees to double down on frugality.
Jassy also spoke in the meeting just a couple of quotes and then I'll get your thoughts,
Chimoff. It's on a lot of people's minds and of course none of us know for sure what's going to
happen, but there are a lot of signs that point to this being a difficult and rough economy ahead of us. And I don't know how long that'll last.
But I think it's one of the things that we are thinking about and we decided that
we're going to be more streamlined in how we expand in 2023, good companies that last a long
period of time who are thinking about the long term always have this push and pull.
Tremoth, what do you read into this?
I'll say three quick things.
One is that today, Thursday, October 13th, we had an inflation print which was worse than
expected, and the markets are materially higher.
Strange. Why?
Well, we talked about this a few weeks ago, but my thought then, and it's the same that
I think now, is that we've
effectively seen the near-term bottom and we're now consolidating.
And so every opportunity people have to justify that most of the news is behind them.
They take, and they use that as a reason to buy.
Okay, so that's number one, which is that we are sort of near the end.
The second, however, is that if we do see another leg down, there is really only one cohort
of company that hasn't been really whacked.
And I'll summarize it very quickly by saying it's Microsoft, Amazon, Apple, and Google.
That's it.
Even Facebook has now been sort of put into the bucket of everybody else where we've
been crushed 60, 70, 80% in those companies.
So what does that mean?
Well, those four companies are now being identified for what they may be,
which in capitalism is called over-earning.
They are making more money than we think is appropriate.
This letter from Andy Jassy is his way of effectively telling his major shareholders
that he is now moving the business to become more of a cash cow business. Tim Cook made this
incredible decision in 2016, 17, 18 that effectively did the same thing. That's when Buffett came in.
That's when he established a huge ownership in the stock. That's when the stock absolutely ripped
because it moved into a different bucket
in people's minds. It became growth at a pretty reasonable price. And I think Andy is making
the case that Amazon is going to become one of these garb stocks growth at a reasonable
price. He's going to generate a ton of cash flow. He's going to keep expenses nominal.
He's going to return a ton of cash to shareholders with buybacks. That's the reading
in between the lines of that letter. I think it's a really profound statement and a very smart move
because you haven't seen that letter or a version of that letter yet for Microsoft.
And you started to see hints of that letter from Sundar where he said, you know,
it's and he's not almost say, baraddling. He's not there yet. He's in the appetizer part.
You know, he's a loose bush where he's like,
oh, you know, guys, you got to work harder.
Hey, guys, let's create some fancy acronym.
But soon, ours got courage.
No, no, but he's got courage.
He is going to rip the bandaid off too.
And so I think what it means is these three and maybe these four
companies are going to draw a hard line in the sand and say,
we are not over earning,
do not abandon the stock.
That again will help put in a bottom in the stock market.
What do you think, Freyberga?
You worked at this company and the principles
across the board, the saber rattling will turn into
saber swinging in Q4, Q1, you think?
Google Apple?
Cut's coming.
Amazon is affected in a different way
because they operate this physical supply chain business.
They're delivering goods to people's homes
that people are buying.
So they really have to change their trajectory very quickly.
It was incredible.
You guys remember when COVID hit, you tried to place an order on Amazon. It was incredible. You guys remember when COVID hit,
you tried to place an order on Amazon. It was like three weeks to deliver because the infrastructure
wasn't there to do it. So they actually were seeing more orders than their system had predicted.
And they did massive build out. They hired what? A million people or something in their network
to meet demand. And then over the next year, earnings went through the roof.
Their infrastructure and employee headcount went through the roof. And now we're obviously
coming back down the other side of a mountain. And they're having to shift strategy and
shift their operating model yet again. There's a broader set. And that's because they're
in the direct commerce business. Microsoft, Google, and other kind of software companies,
some of which benefit from advertising,
which is almost like a first derivative
on the consumer market,
or a first derivative on the spending of companies
that sell to consumers,
have a little bit of a different calculus.
They're a much higher margin business,
30% EBITDA kind of business
with EBITDA margin business, with a very
distinct kind of set of challenges on how advertising revenue is going to be affected
over the next couple of quarters. And balancing that against their cloud platform, which is
sold to enterprises, and their media consumption platform, which is generally like YouTube,
at Google's case, which is less affected. So it's not as much of a direct calculus.
I will say what's happened over the past decade, which we're now seeing change, is these
companies have had extraordinary growth, hiring people to no end.
There's always been, you know, kind of this extended expense on capital on human capital.
And that expense on human capital has driven the average cost per employee through
the roof. And it's not just the salaries. It's the cost of the RSUs. It's the cost of the facilities
and the free ice cream and the gyms and all the other stuff that's gone on to compete. That's now
changing. And so it really is creating a different model for operating that hasn't existed for the
last decade where everything has been, you know, how many more things can we throw in the kitchen,
you know, throw it like the kitchen sink at this problem to get
all the human capital here.
And I think that's really, you know, what's going to kind of structurally change in the
valley.
It's not as acute as what Amazon is dealing with.
It does feel like that is those are the last cities to fall, Chimoff.
They are the ones.
They are the ones that take the index to 3200.
If we're going to try to do it, there's only one place to look.
You've whacked everybody else.
Everything is down.
50 to 90% in some cases.
And then finally, you know, the way, sorry, just just at the end of last year, a quarter
of every S&P dollar was crowded in those names, a quarter.
So you got to go there. Yeah. I mean,
and also they're automatically bought right they're automatically bought by these index funds and
so who is at the wheel saying we're not we're going to take the money out of them right who
who in their right mind is taking money out of Apple Amazon and Microsoft where do you put it?
I guess is everybody's question right? Tremoff like if you take it out of there where do you put it?
Well, no, I think I think it's just that when you have patterns of selling, typically as I've seen
it, my experience is that initially it's the algorithms that really start to push a market
in a direction, then you have the more traditional fund complexes, that's the hedge funds and
the long only, they follow suit. And then the last group tends to be retail.
And it works in reverse the other way as well.
And so, obviously there's exceptions to all of these,
but as a general rule.
So if retail starts bailing on Amazon,
and Apple, yeah.
They are sellers now.
But again, time to buy it.
But again, this is where a sort where organized capital now is finding a bottom.
Again, when you start to just think about the psychology of being delivered bad news
after bad news, you go through the cycles, there's denial, there's anger, there's depression,
there's bargaining.
But then at some point, there's acceptance.
And in that acceptance phase, you're like, yeah, you're right, things are bad. But when you see a market rally into a print like this,
it's a really, really interesting psychological turning point.
As a proof point to what you're saying,
Sachs, Chimath, and Sachs,
I want to get your comment on this,
venture capital firms,
like Sequoia, Excel and others,
that have now changed their status as just private companies,
but also dabbling in public are buying public equities which basically means they see more opportunity
in public underpriced tech stocks, growth stocks, etc. then they do in late stage private companies
correct.
So the Wall Street Journal story I'm assuming, Sacks.
Can I solve that? What do you read into that?
Is it overblown or is it indicative of something?
I think it's probably overblown because Sequoia created that fund.
That is a hedge fund.
And in recent, Horowitz became a registered investment advisor
so they could buy public security.
So, look, I don't think most venture funds
are all the same investing in public markets.
We aren't even allowed to do that as far as I know,
nor would we ever try to. So I think probably it's exactly-
You have to give up stocks, your VC exception, but you could do it.
You could do it, yeah.
Yeah, I mean, we wouldn't want to, but it's kind of the point.
But look, I can't explain why the market did what it did today.
It could have liked your mindset. It could have been some sort of algorithmic, you know, buying or selling.
But I just think that the overall news today was the economic news was just another really
bad report.
I mean, just look at these headlines from the New York Times today.
Okay, I'm going to read you the headlines on a single sort of scrolling page here.
Number one, inflation came in much faster than expected, bad news to the Fed.
Takeaways from another painful inflation report. Three, disappointing inflation data keeps Democrats on defense head of midterm elections. Four, food prices climb again weighing on household
budgets. Five, rent inflation remained depeted, troubling sign. Six, use car prices aren't declining
as much as the comments of the host. Slow down, slow down. Give free burger chance to take some
dynamics. Take his annex free burger. Gas free, burger chance to take some dynamics.
Take his annex, free burger.
Gas prices fall slightly, but overall energy costs are soon expected to rise.
And eight retirees are getting an 8.7% so security cost living rates the biggest in
decades.
I guess that one is sort of positive.
But it's like, literally negative headline after the New York Times.
But can I reinterpret that for you?
I think the way to think about it is this gives the fed
the resolve it needs. It's going to go by 75. It's probably going to go another 75. We're going to
have rates by four to 450 to 5% probably within Q1, which means if you're trying to figure out where
the bottom is, it's rumply nowish. And so that's why you see smart money, David shaking this thing off
and starting to enter the market.
And so again, and the other version interpretation is when rates are four or five percent, the
cost of servicing United States debt is so meaningful as a percentage of their budget,
the incremental spend that they would need to make to enter a new war is too much, I think.
I love this point.
I love this point.
We're weaving all these things together.
Do we work with it?
Yeah, well look, so, right.
So on the economics page of the New York Times,
it's just disaster's headline after the disaster's headline.
The New Trent the foreign policy page,
you got Tom Friedman writing a column here saying,
we are suddenly taking on China
and Russia at the same time.
And Tom Friedman historically has been a huge hawk
and he is even saying.
He's saying puppet breaks.
You have come on the breaks.
Never fight Russian China at the same time.
So he says, we are an uncharted waters.
I just hope these are not our new forever wars.
It's like, whoa, so basically look, our economic base,
our economy is crumbling at home at the same time
that we are doing unprecedented saber-addling abroad.
This does not compute.
We need to take a time out.
My prediction is that we will not enter a new war with rates flexing up as aggressively
as they are.
I love it.
I love weaving these two stories together.
I think it makes a lot of sense.
We didn't have time for Alex Jones, but we'll save that for another episode.
Gentlemen, I think is our best episode ever.
It's an honor and a privilege to spend this hour and or so with you every week.
I love you like brothers.
And it's been a great hundred episodes.
I look forward to a hundred more sacks if you need a mental health break.
Dr. Friedberg's side.
No, no, no, no, David.
David, David, David will be back next Friday.
I just want to say, for applies, David, don't read your replies.
Get off of that.
I just want to say how much I love you guys.
And I'm really proud of what we've created.
And I'm really excited to get to the next 100.
And I'll see you guys tonight.
I'll break out the white trouble.
So we're all, you want to keep going.
That's the news today?
I'm sorry, I'm in for a handy.
I'm in for a handy.
I love you, Zach.
I will say that Jake House moderation has been
a lot better since he got brigaded. That is his way was saying. He'll be. He'll see you next Friday.
I love you, Tremac. I love you, freeberg. Let's see if we can get sacks to do it.
It's been a hundred episodes. He hasn't said it yet, but I love these sacks.
David, are you coming tonight? Sacks you, are you coming?
Yeah, I'll come. I'll come. Oh wait, wait, wait, wait. Let me check. I'll get back to you offline.
Oh, Jesus Christ. God, Jesus. come you're coming. Oh wait, wait, wait, let me check. I'll get back to your flight Jesus Christ God Jesus. Hold on a second. Hold on a second. Sacs. I love you. Let's see if we can just say it
I love you back at you. That's too good going around the horn
Back at you. Ray Burke. Can you say I love you too? Can you say I love you too?
I see you. I see you. What did you tell Kool-A-O? Freeberg I love you. I appreciate you. Oh, you're right.
Appreciate it. Okay, we got back at you and I appreciate you. You got a hundred baby. That's a? Freeberg I love you. I appreciate you. Oh you're right. Appreciate it.
Okay, we're back at you and I appreciate you.
That's 100 baby.
That's 100.
We'll see you in the next video.
Have a good time.
I love you, churchman.
I'll see you tonight.
Bye.
Bye.
We'll let your winners ride.
Bring man David Saad.
I'm going on with it.
And it said we open source it to the fans
and they've just gone crazy with it.
I'm the US, I'm queen of Kenwai.
I'm going all in. What, what hamlety ass will meet me at police.
We should all just get a room and just have one big hug or two because they're all just
just like this like sexual tension that we just need to release that out.
What, you're the beef.
What, you're the beer of beef.
Beef of beef. What, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, I'm doing all it!
I'm doing all it!