All-In with Chamath, Jason, Sacks & Friedberg - E121: Macro update, Fed hike, CRE debt bubble, Balaji's Bitcoin bet, TikTok's endgame & more
Episode Date: March 24, 2023(0:00) Bestie intro! (2:58) Fed hikes 25 bps (32:35) Balaji bets on Bitcoin $1M, predictions for hyperinflation, crypto crackdown in the US (54:27) Should the commercial real estate sector receive a s...imilar treatment as regional banks? Math and solutions on 100% FDIC insurance (1:16:04) TikTok CEO grilled by US lawmakers: What is TikTok's endgame in the US? (1:25:46) Relativity Space shoutout and bestie wrap! 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.wsj.com/articles/fed-raises-rates-but-nods-to-greater-uncertainty-after-banking-stress-6ae9316f https://twitter.com/scottrechler/status/1638534824808923136 https://www.wsj.com/articles/commercial-property-debt-creates-more-bank-worries-b36184ba https://twitter.com/elonmusk/status/1636928718173003776 https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/WGS10YR https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=4387676 https://www.sfgate.com/business/article/Pinterest-terminate-SF-office-lease-88-Bluxome-15525421.php https://twitter.com/boazweinstein/status/1638964105917890561 https://twitter.com/mr_derivatives/status/1638772846326583296 https://twitter.com/DavidSacks/status/1638957986138959873 https://twitter.com/balajis/status/1636797265317867520 https://twitter.com/balajis/status/1222921758375927808 https://thehill.com/opinion/finance/3911036-how-to-escape-the-trap-of-the-clean-debt-ceiling-vote https://www.cnbc.com/2023/03/22/coinbase-warned-by-sec-of-potential-securities-charges.html https://www.piratewires.com/p/2023-banking-crisis https://twitter.com/balajis/status/1448455115271143424 https://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/documents/executive-order-6102-requiring-gold-coin-gold-bullion-and-gold-certificates-be-delivered https://twitter.com/markgags/status/802597908033966081 https://twitter.com/relativityspace/status/1638753739128315906
Transcript
Discussion (0)
What are you eating, free, brook? Is that Buffalo jerky? What is that?
That's a red pepper. It is not the bull tongue.
I didn't have time for lunch. I got pistachios. I got a red pepper.
Oh wait, wait, look at this. Look at this.
Oh, is that our branded pistachios? Are these the best pistachios?
They're the best. You've got something vinegar, yeah, it's the best.
Something vinegar, yeah, yeah, yeah, they're the best.
Are those unpeeled pistachios?
These guys are so rich, people peel their nuts.
People have been peeling my nuts since the Facebook I've been. Oh, 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, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, Yeah, that's it. They've just got crazy with it. Love you, West Nice. Queen of King. I'm going to leave.
Hey, everybody, welcome to episode 121 of the World's Greatest
Podcast, the All-In Podcast with me again.
Of course, the dictator himself,
Chimoff Polyhapatia, the Sultan of Science, David Friedberg,
and the rainman himself.
Yeah, definitely.
David Sacks, gentlemen.
How are you doing?
The world's greatest genuiflector.
The world's greatest moderators here.
Oh, this, you guys, I gotta tell you something, the grift is on.
A lot of corporate gigs for me to moderate.
I don't even have to prepare.
I just show up and moderate.
What is that great?
What is an example of such a gig?
There's a lot of corporations and conferences that pay a pretty penny to have the world's
greatest moderator come and interview people.
This is like the used car parts association of America.
I think it'll be like, I did one with like a thousand litigators at an attorney conference
for like the SaaS software they all use and it was a wonderful far aside, you know, it's
just great. This is like the grift is really.
You have to fly commercial.
Where are they?
Private.
It's commercial at this point.
Yeah.
What is your writer say?
What kind of what do you do ask for spice salted
macadamia nuts?
What do you ask for?
I do not have them.
You'll my nuts.
No.
What I do is I blend the travel costs into the speaking fee.
And then nobody knows when I'm in a row, what hotel I'm staying at or whatever, but basically
I'm back on the road, folks.
I'm back on the road.
You got like a trailer or do you get, you know, what he's saying is, no, what he's saying
is he gets a $2,500 travel budget.
And instead, he comes the day of and leaves the day of saving and netting himself an extra
$2,500.
Well, you know, you can optimize.
If you're saying optimize, I did use, I had, you know, during COVID, I racked up a million
and a half, two million of these United points, and I have just been grinding those United
points down, so shout out to United and the pandemic.
All right, just a lot of news.
So you're right, Tomas, Stephen Worson, that's even worse than that.
Stephen Worson, that's starting to happen for travel expenses when he's not even paying anything. Maybe Jason's part, that a lot of news. You say you're right, Tomas, even worse than that. It's even worse than that. Even worse than that for travel expenses when he's not even paying anything.
Maybe Jason's part of the, that's not happening.
That's not happening.
Part of the, part of the, part of the grifters using the cash app to commit fraud and murder.
Oh, Lord, I mean, that Hindenburg report is, I mean, it's a work of art, but we got
to start with the fed hiking rates by 25 basis points.
And the general feeling in the country that maybe the
Fed doesn't know what they're doing. And maybe it's time for regime change. The Fed increased
rates by 25 basis points yesterday Wednesday. So the Fed has increased the federal funds
rate from nearly zero in March of 2022. Now the range of 4.75 to 5% fastest rate hike since the 70s, speculation that fed my
pause rate hikes, or even cut, do the recent banking failures didn't happen.
So if you bet that they were going to pause, you were wrong.
If you bet they were going to cut, you were also wrong.
But the market has ripped a bit a day after, which people are trying to figure out in the group chats,
doesn't seem like anybody has a theory here. But let's start with SACS, maybe an explainer,
a little bit on how the Fed works. There's a board there, people serve a 14-year term.
Fed works. There's a board there. People serve a 14-year term. I guess they replaced somebody every two years. And Jerome Powell was placed in 2018 by Trump. And I guess there's a lot
of hand-ringing now that they were laid on inflation, obviously. And then they went too
fast. And maybe they went too fast,
and maybe now they're not slowing down enough.
So what's your take on it objectively, sex?
Putting aside partisanship and this administration
versus that administration, just objectively,
do they know what they're doing
and how could they do a better job?
No, I don't think they know what they're doing.
They clearly reacted way too late to the inflation.
We've talked about this before.
We had that surprise inflation print in the summer of 2021,
5.1%.
They said it was transitory.
They didn't react until November.
They continued QE for another six months.
And they suddenly got a hawkish in November of 2021.
And they didn't even start the first rate increase
until March of 2022.
So they were really asleep at the wheel
and late
to react to the inflation by about nine months.
Now I think they're potentially making
the opposite decision, which is they are late
to recognize what stress and distress the economy
is under right now.
And Powell had, there were three choices
they could have made at this meeting.
They could have raised rates, which is what they did. They could have cut rates, which
they didn't, or they could have done nothing, basically held Pat. And the argument for
raising rates is just that, well, we have this inflation problem. We need to keep raising
interest rates until the rates are above inflation. And that will bring inflation down. Then
you can start to lower rates. That's sort of the conventional view.
I think the problem with that view is it ignores
that we've just seen a run of bank failures
and there's tremendous stress building up
in the banking system from unrealized losses
on long-dated bonds,
also unrealized losses on commercial real estate loans.
And we've barely scratched the surface
of seeing that problem.
That's, I think, the next shoot-a-drop in this whole thing.
So, I think that the right decision here was to either cut rates or to stand pat.
You may have seen that Elon said, listen, we should be cutting rates here.
There's way too much latency in this inflation data.
The economy is seizing up.
And we don't need to be raising
rates right now.
We actually need to be cutting them.
I think that probably, if or me looking at the upside down side of these decisions, I
probably would have just stood pat because, again, we've just seen this banking crisis.
Why won't you just wait one month to see?
Maybe there is latency in the inflation data.
Maybe that banking crisis is not over.
Why won't you just stand pat for one month? You can always raise rates in a month. I think
that this move here could in hindsight be seen as the straw that breaks the camel's back.
Shemoth, would you have paused and waited to see another card and then watch the hand
developed? Or do you think they're doing the right thing by raising or should they have
cut?
I think they did the worst thing possible, which is they took the middle path.
If you think about what the Fed
has the ability to do, they obviously have the ability to
raise in lower interest rates. But what we don't talk about is they have a balance sheet that can
absorb assets. For the last 10 or 15 years, we've had a phenomenon called quantitative easing and for folks
that don't understand what that means, that is essentially the Federal Reserve buying
assets out of the market and giving people money for it so that people can then go and
buy other things with that money.
Last June, they started what's called quantitative tightening, which is essentially reversing that policy and
restricting the liquidity in the system.
So, if you look at those tools and you sort of play a game tree on what the Fed could have done,
I think that you have two choices.
One is you massively let inflation run
a muck where you have no tools to fix or you have massive
illiquidity in the financial system, but you actually do have tools to fix
that, which is through some combination of quantitative easing and tightening
depending on how much liquidity you want in the system.
So I think actually I disagree with SACS. I think they should have done the opposite. They should have raised 50 Bips.
It would have
created a little bit more chaos in the short term.
But it would have set us up to understand what was fundamentally broken and
still give the Federal Reserve the ability
to use their balance sheet and use liquidity in the future to solve the problem.
They took the worst option, which is neither did they cut nor did they raise enough.
And so this problem that SACS represents actually is the fundamental problem now, which
is you won't have enough clarity and signal to really know whether this 25
basis point enough. Look, I've maintained now for nine months that rates are going to
be long higher than we like and longer than we want. And so I think it's high time that
we acknowledge that we have a sticky inflation problem, who's back we have to break. We've
known since Volcker era what we need to do to do
that which is you need to get interest rates to be greater than terminal
inflation which means that a 5% Fed funds rate is insufficient. So we're gonna need
to see a print of 5.5, 5.75% and that's when you're gonna have enough
contraction and then the Fed can come back
with liquidity.
But if they don't take these steps, we're going to be in this very choppy, neither here
and neither there situation.
And I think that is what causes the real damage because it's the corrosive effects of uncertainty
in what that does to lending, to risk taking, and I think is really bad for the economy. For a bird, where do you land? We have SAC saying they should have stood pat.
We have to not saying either go hard, take the medicine.
I don't know. I'm not an economist on judging the balance that they're trying to weigh right now.
I think everyone's got a different, you can hear a cacophony of opinions on this one.
What I'm more interested in is, you can hear a cacophony of opinions on this one.
What I'm more interested in is, you know, we talk a lot about the banking crisis underway
and I know we're going to talk about this question on commercial real estate in a minute.
But if you look at the yield on the tenure treasury, I think coming out of this past two
weeks, you know, the yield on the tenure treasuryyear treasury drop from 4.1% down to, looks
like it closed at 3.4% today, nearly a 0.7% decline in the past two and a half, three
weeks. And that's also off of 3.8% since the start of the year. And remember when we
talked about the impact on asset values at banks, I think
if you look holistically at the roughly $7 trillion of assets held at banks, some, you
know, whatever the set of banks that are that we looked at, the average kind of equity
ratios about 15%. So, you know, a 2% or sorry, a 3% adjustment
over 10 years on the treasury impacts
the value of a chunk of that portfolio down 25%,
which starts to put you into dangerous territory.
And there's obviously a distribution of what
that does to certain banks that are overweight,
you know, 10-year bonds, whether they're
loan obligations on mortgages or treasuries or corporate bonds or real estate bonds, a real estate debt.
And so the more encouraging point that I think we should pay attention to is
does the market tell us that these short-term rate actions are driving down
the medium and longer term rates in a way that will improve the balance sheets
of all these institutions that own a lot of this debt, particularly the banks and funds
and so on.
And I'll do the math here real quick, but just in the last two weeks, the impact on the
tenure treasury has probably had a pretty sizable impact.
We talk about unrealized losses.
It's reduced those unrealized losses.
It's improved them
So I think that that's like the more important metric to be tracking is
you know
If you look at all the assets that we're all worried about right now
Are they going up in value or down in value in a way that introduces more stability
Into these kind of banking systems that we care about and I think right now it looks like maybe things are improving
And that might be part of the optimism around,
you know, equity markets and folks buying and so on.
Yeah, and so this is I guess
where people have started to talk about the next shoe to drop.
We obviously had this time-based liquidity issues
with Silicon Valley bank.
Now the Wall Street Journal is talking about
commercial real estate and how much debt there is since COVID. Obviously, people are doing more remote work. A lot of the
skyscrapers is not just San Francisco, but in many locations remain empty or underutilized.
People are now having their leases come up every year. More and more of these leases will
become vacant. And then we'll see if these buildings
are worth what people paid for them smaller banks hold around 2.3 trillion in commercial
and real estate debt, including rental apartment mortgages, almost 80% of commercial mortgages
are held by banks according to this World Trade Journal story.
SACs, you are an owner of some commercial real estate and you play in the space.
You have a lot of first-hand
knowledge. What is your, putting aside your personal holdings or exposure? What is your take on what
you're seeing? What is the game on the field right now in terms of commercial real estate and San
Francisco and beyond? Well, if you talk to the commercial real estate guys, they'll tell you that the
situation is dire. There's two, dire.
There's two problems.
First, there's a credit crunch going on.
So there's just no credit available.
If you're a commercial real estate developer and you have a building and you want to refinance
your construction loan or put long-term debt on a building, you just can't do it.
I mean, the banks are not open for business.
They literally don't want the business. And I think that comes back to the fact that banks right now are hunker down in an offensive posture.
They're seeing deposits flee from their banks unless, of course, you're one of the top four.
Does that freeze on the bank's pre-date the Silicon Valley bank crisis? And it was exacerbated,
where people having the hard time getting loans before that. It predates it, but definitely what you saw with SVB and these other banks, including Credit Suisse,
is that banks now are getting much more paranoid. That's why you saw that if you look at the
discount window, which is when the banks go to the Fed as lender of last resort and basically post collateral to get liquidity,
we had the biggest spike in discount window borrowing since the 2008 financial crisis.
Yeah, that line on the right side, that is a spike in one week's borrowing.
This exceeds anything that happened in 2008.
The warning sign should be flashing red over something like this.
Now, to bring it back to the...
And to be clear, that's banks who have real estate exposure,
going to the Fed, going to the government saying,
hey, can we get some money to cover these?
It's not specifically about real estate.
It's more about bank liquidity.
The banks are saying we don't have enough liquidity right now
to cover our needs, which are highly volatile right now,
because basically, depositors are moving out of community and regional and small banks
into the big four so-called systemically important or SIP banks.
So, what's happening is that, again, banks are hunkering down, they're getting very defensive,
they do not want to make new loans, because they can't tie up assets,
they are trying to stay liquid themselves
So that's what's happening now in sort of with respect to new lending and
Then on the other side of it you have existing loan portfolios
There's something like $20 trillion of commercial real estate debt and
Most commercial real estate lending is done by small banks by community banks
So they are sitting on these huge seary loan portfolios most commercial real estate lending is done by small banks, by community banks.
So they are sitting on these huge, seary loan portfolios.
And I think something like 300 billion needs to be refinanced or is coming due in the
next year.
Normally, that's rolled over and refinanced.
There was separately, there was a study showing that unrealized losses in these loan portfolios
in the banking system may be around $2 trillion.
It was a study that was reported on by the Wall Street Journal.
So in the same way that we had huge unrealized losses in these long dated bonds, I think
we also have actual Silicon Valley banks specifically.
That's where we saw the worst offender, but it's a systemic problem.
I think similarly we have huge unrealized losses in commercial real estate loan portfolios.
And this is, I think, even a more subtle and pernicious problem because with securities
like T-bills or mortgage bonds, it's very easy to know what the unrealized losses are.
The reason why they hadn't realized the losses was not because they didn't know what
they were, it was because of a stupid accounting rule that said they didn't have to realize
the losses if they were, quote unquote, holding them to maturity.
With these loan portfolios, we don't know how big the exposure is and we won't know until
you start seeing some defaults and repricings of assets and you actually see.
Real estate is a much more dynamic market, right?
You have to have a buyer there.
You have leases.
You have leases coming off at different times. You have sub leases occurring
and you have the owners of them flipping them, right, and refinancing them constantly to buy new buildings. And so, right. And those loans aren't as
liquid, right? With a mortgage bond, those are basically a bunch of loans mortgage, home mortgages, typically that have been packaged up and turned into a security
and there's a liquid marketplace to trade them. In the case of these loan portfolios, there may not
be a liquid marketplace, so you don't really know how impaired that loan portfolio is until you
actually get to a place where... When will we know? Because that's the thing I'm wondering. I saw
a lot of headlines, Pinterest bought themselves out of their new headquarters in the Bay Area, San Francisco, I believe specifically.
I heard Facebook got rid of a couple of billion dollars and wrote down some expansion.
Amazon is selling buildings.
They had gotten a ton of buildings and we saw it last week.
They got rid of another 9,000 or they're planning another 9,000 in a riff and they can't get people to come back to the office.
So how bad is the overbilled, I guess, is the
question because that will be the driver of the value of these buildings. If there's too
much supply, then what are these buildings actually worth? Are they worth $90 a square
foot? What if there's no, what if Amazon doesn't want more space? You can see it in the
credit default spreads of these banks. It's in the water table already. So you can, Nick,
you can just throw it up. If you look at any bank that's lending
and that has a portfolio, this is Deutsche Bank's,
you know, Euro-denominated CDS.
But it's the same for Barclays, it's the same for Sockgen,
it's the same for a bunch of American banks.
There is a risk in the system that SACs articulated
that is now getting priced in.
There are all kinds of loans whose payments,
which the banks need,
cannot necessarily be insured, which means that then there could be illiquidity there,
there could be a flow of deposits out from those banks, which would then make their ability to pay
their debt holders lower. You also have this complicated issue already, where it's really like the
first time in a long, long, long time where
debt holders actually got wiped out in the credit suite's debacle before the equity holders did.
And that's created all kinds of ripple effects. So this reddit bubble is here and it's being
manifested right now in these very sophisticated parts of the market.
And eventually, they'll ripple to the broader economy at large.
But how a person feels this is they're not going to be able to get a car loan or a mortgage
or the interest rates they pay will go up.
And then how bondholders will react to all of this stuff is they'll just start to find different assets, probably the front end of the curve, money market, cash, gold, and
they'll just abandon all these assets.
And then the other problem is that it's just really, really bad for risk assets.
So the things that we invested, startups, technology can be seen.
Either in a world of inflation run amok because the Fed isn't hiking fast enough, which
just destroys future cash flows, or in a world where the Fed pivots in a moment like this
and Nick, you can show the second chart, both result in the same outcome, which is that
you just see these massive drawdowns in the
value of risk assets.
So we're in a really complicated moment.
And this is why I think again, the Fed needed to take leadership this past week and actually
do the hard work of either cutting 50 bips or raising 50 bips. And this middle path is the absolute
worth path because trying to thread a needle in this complicated economy, I think, is just
going to be impossible. And then what happens is then the markets move around them, right?
The markets have completely said, we now discredit what you did, and they're basically banking that the Fed will be forced to cut rates
massively in short course, because the crisis will be so severe that it'll outweigh the risk
of inflation.
Think about that.
Yeah, so all of this real estate comes on the market.
There's no buyers for it.
The mortgages are due.
Does that mean a commercial real estate owner
just basically gets foreclosed on
and they hand the keys back to the bank
or the banks as the grocery journal story
was sort of alluding to that the Fed will say,
you know what, we'll just extend,
we'll backstop this real estate,
which happened in the last bubble.
And we hope that over time, it works itself out
and demand returns.
Now, of course, that's different than a post-COVID world.
So this time could be different.
What happens in the case of 2024, 2025?
All of these office spaces are returned
and the keys are handed back.
Yeah, so, okay, so Jason, you asked the question,
like, how does this problem manifest?
Let me describe from the point of view of that real estate owner.
There's basically two problems.
One is that you have a tenant who's in a long-term lease, five, seven, ten years, that lease
rolls, so that lease comes due.
Now they don't need the space anymore.
We know that takes to Francisco, which has got to be the worst market for Siri in the
country right now.
That's something like 30 to 40% of the space is vacant.
So that's either space for rent or space for sub-lease because no one's using it, so
they put it back on the market.
Well, all those sub-leases, they're still paying rent because they have a contract.
So what happens is, as those leases roll, now all of a sudden you don't have to pay rent
anymore, so you're going to stop.
Or if you still need the space,
you're gonna negotiate a much, much lower rent.
So now all of a sudden, the real estate owner
can't make their debt service covenant ratios.
The income from the building is just substantially less.
They can't make their debt service.
It's on that and explain that ratio to folks.
You have a certain amount of debt you own,
let's say sales force tower, in Salesforce's case,
they're sub-leasing 125,000 square feet.
Let's say they were into that for 500 million.
What is this debt service ratio?
Explain that to the audience.
When the bank underwrites the loan,
they just figure out the interest that you got to pay
on the loan relative to the value of the building
or the income that is generating.
But all those ratios are upside down now
because the value of the buildings, the income that is generating. But all those ratios are upside down now because the value of the buildings, the rent, has
gotten down so much because there's so much vacancy.
I mean, when these loans were under written, San Francisco had like a 5% vacancy rate.
And now it's like 30 to 40%.
There are just no tenants.
And then, you know, in parallel with that, Jason, you've got all these cases where, you
only have tenants or leases rolling, you have loans rolling.
Again, if the owner of the building has either a construction loan or a long-term debt and
that needs to roll, they have to refinance it.
If they can even get credit, which they may not be able to because of this crunch, they're
going to be paying a lot more for it.
Now, all of a sudden, the income statement for that building doesn't make sense.
Think about it.
Your borrowing costs are higher and your revenue is lower. Now, all of a sudden, the building is under water. So, where
does that end up? Well, they default on the debt and the bank ends up owning the building.
So then what happens is you end up with all of downtown San Francisco owned by a bunch
of banks. What are they going to do with it? They don't want to be in the real estate business.
So they have to fire sale those buildings in a bunch of auctions at rock bottom prices
because by the way, there's no cash or liquidity out there.
So who are the buyers gonna do?
Who's the buyer?
Yeah, I was like, no buyers.
We have a 30% vacancy rate.
There's no renters.
So what happens Detroit?
Like is it just like a debt city?
And then the tax base collapses in the city
because so much of the tax base is dependent on real estate.
So listen, I think they're to have to work this out.
I don't think they can just let the free market take its course here because you're going
to end up with the scenario I just painted.
I think what hopefully would happen maybe is that the banks do some sort of deal with
the real state owners, that they blend and extend or whatever, but in order to do that,
they're going to need to be backstop by somebody. And that's the Fed.
Freeberg, what are your thoughts? Just writ large as it were on the commercial.
Yeah, all these things.
Because it's $90. It was $90 a square foot, right, for class A, SACs in the city. Was that
the price?
Yeah, I mean, what's that going to be?
60, 70, 80, 90 bucks a foot, depending on what kind of building you're talking about.
I mean, you have all these empty office towers.
So look, I never invest in office towers. I do small boutique, kind of brick and timber spaces and Jackson Square.
We're doing okay because people still want to be in those spaces.
But these office towers on Market Street or in Soma, I mean,
which is where all the investment went during the boom.
Nobody wants to be in those buildings anymore.
And it doesn't help that the city has allowed this giant, you know, open-air drug markets and metasties right
outside their door.
Freeberg?
Yeah, I think it's inevitable. We'll have probably two to three trillion dollars of federal
money, you know, spent to backstop and support the asset. I mean, that's the general theme here in case everyone isn't paying attention at home is that the
Fed, the US government will continue to print money and create programs to effectively support asset values such that there isn't
a crippling economic ripple effect. And this is the danger of debt spiral of debt. And it's why I always talk about how concerned I am about global debt levels and particularly debt levels in the US, but really global debt levels.
I'll say this statistic again and over and over again, 360% global debt to global GDP. But even within some of these asset classes, a significant amount of debt has been used to fuel asset prices and to fuel equity value.
And then that equity value gets levered and reinvested.
And so the rippling effect in the economy of declining asset value can be magnified through leverage.
And it unfortunately debt in general forces growth without growth debt fails.
forces growth without growth debt fails. And so when we've used debt to demand growth on a macro perspective, it causes significant
stress and strain on the system when you're going through periods of like we are right
now, what should be natural recessionary effects from COVID and shutting down the economy or
natural asset price declines because of that?
And we can't let it happen because if it were to happen,
the rippling effect would be crippling.
So this is a good example.
You'll probably, I don't know what the facility will look like.
Maybe the government passes some congressional bill that says,
hey guys, here's $3 trillion to support all this real estate.
Here's another $2 trillion to support banks and giving them liquidity.
Because the other problem, as you guys know, is most people's, and you know giving them liquidity because the other problem as you guys know is most people's
most of the population in the US has most of their assets their asset value or their equity value in their home and
those home prices are supported by
residential loan programs and
you know if you actually
have a massive right-down of the value of that asset class, that's when everything falls apart.
So we will continue to be buoyed by that kind of inflationary behavior.
Unfortunately, biology, I think, has it right, and we'll talk about it in a minute,
that there has to be money printing to get out of this hole.
I don't know if it's necessarily in this moment hyperinflationary as he predicts.
He uses the Deutschmark and the Weimar Republic as this kind of storyline that this is
what's about to happen in the US. The truth is it looks a little bit more like the pound sterling
at the end of the British Empire where, you know, there's certainly an inflationary and
devaluation effect that arises, but it is the reserve currency of the world today.
Well, let's see. And so it's really hard to kind to just say, hey, it's going to be hyperinflationary and the
value is going to go to zero.
It's just not going to happen.
So that seems to be the bad of the dollar.
Of the dollar.
So that seems to be the bet now, Chemaafat.
Some folks are predicting catastrophizing, hey, this is the end of U.S. supremacy, the
end of the dollar.
Of course, modern monetary theory seems to stay.
You can just keep printing dollars and make a couple trillion dollar coins, a backstop
it.
And by the way, tarp was profitable modestly for the United States and the backstop of real
estate totally work.
So where do you land on this?
Do you think these backstops and modern monetary theory stating that you can just print money?
You own your own fee of currency is going to work. Or as we pivot to the billion dollar, sorry, the million dollar
biology Bitcoin bet that this is the end of days.
I think it's not the end of days, but I think you're conflating a bunch of things together.
So look, M-M-T-S-M. Yes, I am.
Yes.
Was in hindsight idiotic. In the moment, it never quite made sense, but in hindsight,
it's clearly idiotic. I think that we can properly dispense with that. But the reason that
we print so much money is sort of what Friedberg says, which is that we just want a well-functioning
society. The simplest and shortest way to do that is to make sure that
there aren't any winners and losers anymore. And the most effective way to do that in the
markets is with money. Print a bunch of money and there are no more winners and losers.
And so everybody can kind of win. Some people may win more, but nobody really ever loses.
So I think that's the M.O. that we're operating under.
The thing is, I don't think that-
There's something unhealthy to that,
Chimath, you're sort of alluding to-
Yeah, but no losers.
That's a more philosophical and a commentary
on capitalism and a bunch of other things.
And you're right, I don't think it makes sense.
I do think you need winners and losers
to really make society function well.
But the other part of it is like, does it reinforce or does it decay US dollar hegemony? And I think
it actually reinforces it. And the reason is just very practically speaking, when you
look at how dependent other people, other countries are on the US dollar, in times of stress, they actually become more dependent.
And that has a lot to do with their boring patterns, the amount of dollar central banks
need outside the United States.
And so what did you see in a moment of stress?
Actually, the Fed opened up swap lines to all the central banks that they work with their
most important operating partners, so Europe, Canada, Japan, et cetera, Switzerland.
And they move the liquidity window from weekly to daily
and they pounded the swap lines.
So I don't know, I think that most people
that kind of like, it's like a boy crying wolf,
maybe at some point somebody will be right,
but you're gonna lose so much money
trying to take a point of view around this topic
that it's more practical to just look at dollar flows
and dollar flows go up in moments of stress, not go down.
And they go up in a distributed manner across the monetary plumbing of the world.
All right.
So let's explain the biology bad since that trended and he is the boy, boom, as you're saying,
cried wolf this past week.
Cry bitcoin.
Yeah, the boy. I'm very upset.
So a friend of the pod, biology on March 17th predicted that Bitcoin
will reach $1 million in 90 days, due to US hyperinflation,
hyperinflation is defined as prices going up 50% month over
month, just so we're clear on exactly
how dramatic that is.
He made the bet on March 17 against a pseudo anonymous Twitter user, James Medlock, who said
they would bet one million that the US would not experience hyperinflation.
So, biology sort of inserted Bitcoin into that bet.
It wasn't a Bitcoin bet then.
And I think he's done two of these bets
So he's betting two million in total on Bitcoin hitting one million by June 17
Which there's probably no chance of that happening. We're very tiny chance. I'll ask the panel in a second
Bitcoin was trading at 2526,000 at the time. It's now trading at over 28,000
And Bellagia has been on every podcast known to man
in the last 72 hours talking about this.
I've watched one or two of them.
And it's pretty out there argument, I think.
And you can just type in biology on YouTube
and watch any of the 20s done.
He believes regional banks are insolvent.
He thinks the feds need to,
because it's gonna need to print a massive amount of money, like we've said here, to more QE and then cut rates, it all seems reasonable, but
that that will lead to hyperinflation. It's not reasonable. Wow. No, no, that is reasonable.
We just printed that they're going to cut rates. We just discussed. They're going to eventually cut
rates and they'll be more QE. So that part is reasonable, just that one little piece. But then he believes as the part that is kind of out there that hyperinflation is going to
devalue the dollar and this is the time. He does not and I made a bunch of I asked him
this a bunch of times and he would not be honest about it or didn't want to answer my question.
I said, Hey, what percentage are you in Bitcoin? Somebody says he's 99% in Bitcoin. He will not confirm. And so I was like, well, if you want a thousand
bitcoins, if this goes up, you know, a very small amount, four or five percent, you're going to pay
for the bets. And are you talking your own book here or not? Sax, what do you think of this overall
bet? Is it a stun? Yeah. He's saying like, this is the lifeboat's moment. And just to add
to it, he says, you have to leave the United States and get to Singapore or a place, or
if you're going to stay in the United States, you need to get to Wyoming or Texas or somewhere
that explicitly allows Bitcoin because the closer you are to the United States banking
system, what happened to Silicon Valley bank on that fateful weekend where people couldn't
get their cash and we're going to have to, you know, mispayroll. He says that's the dry run for the entire US banking
system. Sex. So first of all, I don't think you can disparage biology because someone who
cries wolf says this repeatedly and makes a dire prediction repeatedly and is wrong. And we
can't say yet that biology is wrong. Do I think that we're going to have a million dollar
Bitcoin in 90 days?
I personally find that very unlikely,
but you can't say yet.
He stuck his neck out making a prediction that will be
easily falsified if he's wrong.
Second, the last time that biology made a dire prediction
was COVID and he was right about that one.
So you can't say that this is just like a doomer
who throws out crazy predictions and is always wrong.
He's actually pretty selective about his.
You know that one.
Predictions.
Yeah, there is a tweet from January 30th of 2020
in which he basically predicted a pandemic
based on a coronavirus and laid out a whole bunch
of consequences that mostly came true.
Which is why we're talking about this. This is not just some random person
like he actually has a pedigree and a track record.
But here's my view on it.
He can doom and gloom.
Yes, because him and the secret to lab,
the two of our opening speakers,
all in summary, 2023.
Those are our book head speakers.
Book them now.
Anyway, so look, now what do I think about it? I posted my own theory today, which I would
call sort of, Balji Light, which is, okay, look, if you think about the spiking and
stress that we've had, and that Jamaat things will actually continue quite a bit longer,
there are three main effects that it indisputably has. Number one, undercuts the value of long-dated bonds. Number two, it's
made lending much more expensive, particularly for big purchases like real estate. Number
three is increased government lending costs. Okay, now play that through the financial
system. What does that mean? Well, if the value of long-dated bonds has sharply decreased,
well, that's led to this
banking crisis with the unrealized losses.
That's already happened.
Number two, it's made lending more expensive to credit crunch and CRE, where we need to
see that.
And I believe that's going to play out as the second crisis of this larger financial crisis.
And then number three is the increase in government borrowing costs that will eventually play out
in terms of being a government debt crisis of some kind.
And I think it will involve a spike in borrowing costs, the federal level, and involve sovereign
debt issues internationally.
I think it will involve budget deficits at states and cities.
So I think there's three phases to this financial crisis.
We're in phase one, and I think CRE and government debt are the
next two phases. And I think a lot of that lines up with what Balji thinks where I disagree
with him is I don't think we can know what's going to happen in 90 days. I think that the
CRE crisis is highly deflationary. It's going to create distress everywhere in the economy.
That is going to lead to a massive reduction in liquidity. I think that the government debt
crisis, assuming the government wants to inflate
and monetize the debt as a way to solve that problem,
that will be highly inflationary.
But when these things play out, we can't know.
I think that's what makes this really hard is,
I think jumping all the way to the sort of finish line
and saying we're going to have a million dollar Bitcoin
in 90 days because US dollars worthless,
I think that's pretty mature. I think this could play out over the next couple of years.
We have a real problem if Bitcoin is the exit ramp. Why?
For an inflationary crisis because it's not accessible enough. It's not easily transactable
for for for I'm sorry to be negative to the Bitcoin maximalists. I'm generally in favor of this kind of independent
storage system that's outside of government state control.
I think there's just this unfortunate reality,
and we saw what the Wells noticed at Coinbase today.
They just arrested that crypto guy.
Dokewuan was arrested in Contenegro,
of all places.
Great country.
Cracking won't let you wire money in or out as of, I think, Monday or Tuesday.
And so, you know, it's clearly becoming kind of a less accessible system of storage.
No, what's more accessible?
Well, I do think that one of the reasons we're seeing the market move the way it does
is because folks are shifting their risk assets around quite a bit right now to figure
out where is a good place to put money.
I was talking with a asset manager this morning, and they had a very strong point of view.
Folks are moving capital away from what they think are going to be most impacted by
the risk of this kind of massive inflationary event that may arise, or this massive banking
crisis that may arise, or this massive real estate crisis that may arise and
There are other places to then put your capital
That's not just Bitcoin and sure maybe some of these things are dollar-denominated
But for example, there are many businesses that sell products in non-dollar denominated currencies globally and while they report and trade on US
Stock exchange is you're buying a security interest in a business that generates most of its income.
You're referring to many different companies.
And so there are many companies that get the bulk of their revenue, the bulk of their sales internationally.
There are also many companies that will benefit in an inflationary environment, businesses that are tied to other types of real estate,
businesses that are tied to certain capital equipment where consumption will not go down unless there's you know significant massive global socioeconomic shock.
And so I think that that's kind of a lot of what's going on right now it's less about hey good coins the only place to go and be safe and it's more about let me reallocate my risk assets a little bit.
You know to places that may be benefit benefit that that may benefit from or may be better guarded from
a massive kind of inflationary shock.
And let me just say, let me say one more thing.
I think one of the biggest risks that is not being
talked about is the debt ceiling vote that's due in June.
In June, Congress needs to pass
an increase in the debt ceiling because the amount of debt that the
federal government is going to have to take on in order to meet our budget deficit and
refinance our debt and pay our obligations historically means that we're going to have
to have more than what we're, you know, we've approved to date in terms of the total amount
of debt.
Now this has historically been a last-minute vote, crazy dramatic thing that drives markets
nuts.
The Hill had a public opinion piece from Peter or work and Mary Spade, but I think they
make a good point.
I've talked to a lot of folks who are calling it in the fixed income market, but also folks
are in the equity markets publicly who are pretty nervous it in the fixed income market, but also folks are in the equity markets
publicly who are pretty nervous about the stat ceiling vote.
And if it does look like the Republican party takes a very hard line and says, because
this is the current party line, if you don't agree to massive deficit cuts or spending
cuts, and really commit to that in a bill that we can pass that Ben also approves the increase
in the debt limit.
We are not going to approve increasing the debt limit.
And what this opinion piece argues, I think is a very good middle of the line solution,
which is come up with points of view and actually document those points of view on making sure that government spending
is effectively accountable,
that there's no more wasteful spending.
And that there are certain programs
that both parties can very quickly agree to
as being very wasteful.
And if you start there, you maybe get enough
across the line that both parties kind of say
this makes sense, let's do this.
And then we can kind of increase the debt limit.
Because in the absence of that,
the US will have to default on debt.
This is always the big threats never happened.
And if that happens, or there is the looming threat
of that happening, combined with the banking crisis,
combined with the liquidity crisis,
combined with the real estate crisis
that may be emerging here.
Let me ask you a question.
That's kind of a thing for you.
You could have things really melt down.
So look, I think this is the biggest black swan, it's not a black swan, but this
is the biggest kind of elephant in the room right now is, and I think if people in DC
could get together today, and if you could, instead of doing the typical last minute,
24 hour vote, a day before the debt ceiling needs to be increased, if this could be addressed
today, it could start to put in some of the
layers of backstop and coverage and protection and safety that the markets, I think, really
need to manage some of the trepidation in the weeks and months ahead.
I want to jump to the crypto crackdown and get your opinion on that, Saksverse. But I wanted
to a clarifying point here with Freeberg. You have been in the redolio end of empires,
empires collapse and that, hey, maybe the US is winding down its supremacy
and biology was pretty much saying,
yep, this is the moment.
Where is there any light between your position
of like, hey, Dalio's correct, this is the end of the empire
and biology is like, it's the end of the empire right now.
Where do you stand on that pre-birth?
So, I mean, I've always been concerned,
I've told you guys this for like three years,
and I've obviously promoted this book for two and a half years.
And Dalio's points of view with lots of kind of empirical wisdom
behind it,
I think indicate that the US is on a path
and the way we spend and the way we behave
and the way markets are reacting,
I think indicates that a lot of what has happened historically is happening now in the US.
Now, it doesn't, I don't know if it's going to happen overnight, that's where I would have
light with Bologi. Okay, the notion of kind of hyperinflation again, I think means that
so think about all the US dollar holders
around the world.
It would be a shock for the collective system.
It would require the collective system
to collectively agree to get off the dollar
very quickly for that to really happen.
In the meantime, I do think there will be
a flationary effects.
I do think there will be massive asset value shocks.
But I'm not sure there's gonna be this kind of
like YMAR Republic Deutsche Mark hyperinflation thing
because it is the reserve currency
and it is so widely held by everyone.
It would require collective giving up.
It also seems like there may be,
we talked a lot about the Petro you want trade,
which I think is critical to see that actually happen.
I think that's gonna be the Lynch pin.
Got it.
Maybe that catalyzes this
and that seems to be a little bit tightrope right now too.
It doesn't seem super definitive that Saudis
are embracing China.
There's obviously this behavior with Saudi Arabia.
There's a little saber around it.
Lattling around that.
Yeah.
You know, it's not as definitive right now.
I think that looks to happen to kind of really catalyze that.
Let's get our tinfoil hats on here for a second.
In relation to the biology bet, there has been a lot of action against crypto.
Obviously, authoritarian countries took control of crypto long ago, China banning it, etc.
North Korea, other authoritarian places kind of tighten their grip on it.
Now, here in the United States, Coinbase got a Wells notice that is a warning basically
in giving you a last chance to kind of respond to the SEC.
And this was based on their loaning programs.
And on top of that, a number of other crypto crackdowns have occurred.
We saw celebrities getting smackdown and getting fines and doing settlements.
This has led sacks to a theory that the United States government wants to
break the back of crypto. Crypto has done a great job of breaking their own back with
plenty of crypto grips inside of trading and all kinds of shenanigans with FTX and
front running and painting the tape. Any grift or criminal activity possible seems to
have been exploited. Do you think that these two things are in some way coordinated or there's a coordinated effort by the US government to destroy and
kill crypto as an off ramp for the US dollar while the US dollar is dealing with these crises.
Well, there's a really interesting article that was just published on the substack by Nick Carter, who I guess a guest writer on Mike Solana's substack called Pirate Wires.
It was a follow-up piece to an article he wrote six weeks ago where he laid out an operation
by the Biden administration called Operation Choke Point, which made the case that the
Biden administration was quietly attempting to ban crypto.
And now, you know, a month later, there's all these things that are, all these
steps that the administration is taking to go after crypto. And he, you know, he lays
out a bunch in a bullet point list. So the SEC announced a lawsuit against crypto infrastructure
company, Paxos, crypto exchange crack and settled with the SEC, SEC chair, Gensler openly
labeled every crypto asset other than Bitcoin security
Senate committee on environment and public work works held a hearing lane-based Bitcoin
By administration proposed a bill that singles out crypto miners for owners tax treatment New York attorney general declared a theorem Which the second largest crypto asset is security. That's a huge change by the way. Yep. SEC continue to say and he gets more protection efforts
By doubling down their attempt to block a spot between ETFs, OCC, let crypto bank, Protegos application for a national trust charter
expire, and then the SEC just sang Coinbase a Wells notice.
So I think it's hard to argue that there isn't a concerted effort now to crack down on crypto by a wide variety
of government agencies and authorities starting with Gensler at the SEC who seems incredibly
hostile to crypto.
So now the only question is, is this correlated with the stress that the banking system is
under or is it just a coincidence?
And that I don't know, but I think the argument that
biology would make is that at the same time,
they're going to deflate the dollar,
they're going to make it harder for you to find an off ramp.
And he actually brought up a historical example
that wasn't aware of.
I think it was called the Executive Order 6201,
which is FDR, way back in the 1930s,
actually had an executive order that confiscated
all the private gold bullion in the country, and they seized the gold bullion, making the
accusation that private citizens were hoarding too much gold.
So in any event, this is the theory, I don't know whether it's true or not.
It could be a coincidence.
Shabbat, do you think that this is correlated in any way with the crisis or is just the fact
that FTX blew up and all these other things blew up and the public is really upset that
they lost a lot of money on this and the SEC has got to cover and be a little bit more
active instead of reactive when it comes to dealing with the crypto losses that consumers
had.
That's the latter. I mean, I think that there was a rumor going around.
I don't know how true it is that FTX was days away from getting a critical approval by
the SEC to actually even further legitimize their US exchange before they went out of business.
So I think Gensler had to pivot very hard from at a minimum being very pro
FTX and there's all kinds of stories about his interrelatedness with Sam and his family
to very anti-bit or anti-crypto in general. That's clearly happened. But look, I think
that this is like a lot of tin-hatting which I don't think is very productive. If you look at the total number of non-zero
Bitcoin wallet addresses in the world, and let's be extremely generous and say it's 100
million, there are still 7 billion people in the world. And so I just think everybody
that tries to speak about the fragility of the US and worldwide banking system is right.
But and that part I think is quite lucid and unemotional.
But every time they try to connect to Bitcoin, they sound like a crazy person because they're
just talking their book.
And that is exactly the case, by the way, with this kid Nick Carter.
And the best example to demonstrate this is in all of this chaos, if Bitcoin or crypto assets
in general were truly a legitimate off-ramp and salvation from US dollar hegemony and all
of this stuff, why isn't Bitcoin at least at 35,000 a coin right now?
It's barely above 28,000.
It really hasn't moved that much.
And I think the real answer is that most people in Bitcoin
are not trying to hedge their existing fiat currency exposure.
They're just picking off people in retail.
And they're just betraying this thing.
I mean, how else do you explain an asset
that is not absolutely ripped in the face of all of this terrible news about the financial system?
And I think the answer is because it's still a cul-de-sac of users, it's not broadly available,
not broadly adoptable, not broadly used, I still believe that it's valuable.
I was the earliest proponent of Bitcoin in 2011, 2012.
So I believe that there's a place for it in one's portfolio, but I just think connecting
these dots misses the point.
And I think the point is much, much bigger than a crypto offering.
The point is that we have a lot of systemic shocks that are building up in
the system. We have broken a ton of the systems that cause the financial infrastructure and the
world to work properly, and we are just starting to uncover how they're broken. So I think we need to
focus our energy on that and dial down a little bit of the Bitcoin maxi stuff because it distracts from a really
important set of topics that are more inclusive and actually touch 7 billion people.
We have to do the cleanup work and just to be perfectly clear here.
Nick Carter is a career crypto.
He's on his third fund.
He's $250 million, third fund according to a quick Google search.
He's a partner at Castle Island ventures and I believe,
biology believes what he's saying.
And at the same time is massively in Bitcoin and the $2 million
hill obviously lose in this bad or the 99.9% chance.
And he's that that already.
I think he believes he's doing a service just like he did believe he was doing
a service just like he did believe he was doing a service
with COVID.
So I do not doubt his intent, but I believe it's his book is based on this and the $2 million
will be easily paid off very smart.
He's a very smart and good guy.
My point is put this in the who cares bucket and get back to the facts.
Freeberg mentioned it.
We have a debt ceiling problem that's in the offing.
Sacks mentioned it.
We have a commercial ceiling problem that's in the offing. Sacks mentioned it. We have a commercial riddle of state crisis.
We just talked about the fact that he didn't raise rates enough,
nor did he cut enough. So we're in this weird middle path that Jay Powell we're talking about.
So those are the facts on the ground that I think we should focus on because those will have
implications to how people can borrow, start businesses, capitalize risk assets.
That's a big problem.
I guess the moral hazard comes up, Sachs.
The critique that people have had of you, focusing on bank bailouts, etc. has been.
You have been anti-bailout, and now, hey, maybe backstopping the deposits, not backstopping
the bank.
The shareholders lost you very clear about that.
But let's talk about moral hazard here for a minute.
Are we started getting-
I'm not for bail.
When did I say I was either for-
I just clearly stated you were not.
I just clearly stated you're not.
I'm saying this is the critique that people have had of you.
So I'm giving you a chance to address it.
Why are you giving him people's critiques of him?
Nobody, because I want him to talk about the future moral hazard.
What people, more of us?
You're 7, 6, 5, 4, 2, 1 Twitter.
Who cares for that person?
Okay, I was also thinking about the world.
Let me jump in some people.
I'm also thinking about the whole street journal,
The New York Times and everything.
Let me jump in and just clarify.
I was really clear that SVB's shareholder should be wiped out. They're bondholders should be wiped out. They're management stock
options should be wiped out. In fact, if it turns out that they should have known the thing was
about to go under, I think their stock sales should be clawed back. So I'm not a favorite
of bailing at SVB. I don't care about SVB. Yes, of course. Now let's do that for commercial
real estate. No, the question is what you do with deposits and depositors.
Correct. I think there is a real debate about how you treat depositors in a banking
crisis. And I think there are two views on that.
There's kind of an old fashioned view and then there's kind of a more modern regulatory
view. The old fashioned view is that if your money isn't a bank and that bank goes under and you're
over the FDIC amount, you lose your money.
We need people in the system to lose their money because that creates discipline on the
banks.
It'll make those depositors do a better job shopping for the right bank.
That's kind of what I would call the old-fashioned hard-line view.
There's a more modern regulatory view, which is that, listen, the typical depositor,
even a fairly sophisticated deposit
like a small business, or even a high-net-worth individual,
they're not in a position to evaluate
the balance sheet of these banks.
How are they gonna figure out
if there's toxic assets that are hidden
on the balance sheet of these banks?
The regulators didn't see it.
It's all good for the bank and a lot of these banks. The regulators didn't see it. Oh, it's looking really bangin' all out of these banks soon.
You don't really get that much more moral hazard
by putting the deposit on the hook for that.
Remember, the management of the bank already
is penalized severely by losing all their stock and also-
Yes, so I'm trying to get to,
before Chimath interrupted me,
I'm trying to get to the bigger moral hazard picture here,
which is-
Fuck you, Jason.
Fuck you before you're dropping.
But the point, each or not, it's for a second.
The point I'm trying to get to is should commercial real estate,
should that be spelled out?
How should society look at that next card
that you are saying is gonna tip over?
How would you handle that piece?
Should they?
Okay, well let me just address the phone on depositors.
So the Modern Relative Review is that when you open a bank account,
you shouldn't have to think about the bank's balance sheet. You just want it to be safe. You
don't want all the brain damage. And look, I think there's a lot of merit to that argument.
As it turns out, I've been trying to look into this, how much would it cost the system
to just fully ensure depositors? It turns out that we have about 17.5 trillion in deposits
in the U.S, almost 18 trillion.
And one of the misnomercial here is, well, it would cost us 18 trillion to basically insure
all the deposits.
That's not true, because first of all, 10 trillion is already insured under FDIC.
It's only about 7.5 to 8 trillion.
That's less than half is left, okay.
Yes, right.
Exactly.
It's around 8 trillion.
So, isn't it shocking the enumeracy of people that make these claims? I know. It's
amazing. This is why this is why I call it podcast ill basic money or top 10 in the world because
we're actually breaking down the numbers. Right. So continue. The leading proponent of this theory
that we should just basically not bail out, but backstop the deposits is bill after. And he's been making, I think, a pretty compelling case
that if you don't protect deposits at small banks,
all the money's gonna flow to the top four banks.
That's right, he works for us.
Of course, I wish I had that happening.
Yeah, we're watching it happen.
Right, so I've been trying to figure out
how much it would actually cost us to do that.
And what I've realized is that it's not 18 trillion.
It's eight trillion, but by the way, that's the amount of deposits.
That's not the risk premium.
So if you look at FDIC at the end of last year, there was about 130 billion that have been
paid in to the FDIC fund by premiums paid by these banks.
So in other words, the insurance premium paid by banks was about 1.3%.
So if you were to now additionally cover the whole thing,
all the deposits, it would be another roughly 100 billion of premiums paid by these banks.
That seems very manageable to me actually. The question is, is the FDIC fund adequate?
And I think we're about to find out. It may be the case that a 1.3% insurance premium
out. It may be the case that a 1.3% insurance premium grossly, you know, understated the true risk of putting your deposit in a bank. And we're about to find out that the FDIC is inadequate.
I don't know the answer to that question. Well, I think this boils down to the profitability
that an equity shareholder of a bank expects of them. And to your point, is it viable for large G-Sibs to guarantee a hundred percent of
their deposits? Absolutely. The implication of that will be an enormous hit to their
short-term profitability and their return on invested capital, it would just take a massive
hit. And so as a result, the stocks of those banks would fall pretty precipitously, which
would have a real negative impact on the executives and the CEOs of those banks and the shareholders
that own those bank equities. So I think ultimately it'll come down to that decision, which is that
if you do want to protect the depositor in the American banking system, a hundred percent for every
dollar and do it in a simple way.
It will come at the sake of the equity holders of the banks.
And if you're willing to make that trade-off,
then you can guarantee 100% of the deposits.
If you do not want to make that trade-off,
then the equity holders will still retain more value
than they would otherwise.
And Freeberg, we've seen a couple of examples
of the market, the free market, looking at the situation and making new products and services
well-front mercury bank both
talked about load balancing across 12 accounts
$3 million so that would
Make some people who had over 250k just instantly be back stopped and
insured and then
Where you know there's discussion of,
I talked about last week, hey, why don't you just have a vault
where you pay a bank to hold your money safely?
I got a ton of responses from all in fans,
pointing out multiple banks and services
that have been trying to do this
and also crypto solutions.
So is there gonna be a free market solution you think
or when we're starting to see them emerge
that maybe covers this gap a little bit free
And then what are your thoughts just generally on should we backstop the banks and the deposit I'm sorry the banks the depositors to be clear so if we just quickly
Analyze the function of a bank they loan money to
Either residential real estate buyers like homeowners or commercial real estate buyers, like homeowners, or commercial real estate buyers
or businesses that need it.
I think the majority of the capital goes to residential real estate.
And if they can't loan enough money, they typically buy bonds, right?
They buy other people's loans in the form of bond securities, like treasuries or asset
back securities or other things like that.
Or mortgage back securities. So they use the cash to make those investments, to make those loans and then they obviously earn a return on that. I think we've talked about
this in the past. The thing that that biology I think has misstated and it would be good to have
a conversation with him about this publicly, because I have
listened to some of his interviews in the last couple days.
He says the banks are, they don't have the money that you, the depositor, thinks that you
have.
And so what he's saying kind of implies that there is no money, that there is no assets
value there at all.
He uses Sandbankman free to an FTX as an example, that the money that
was given to Sandbankman free exchange fund was used to buy assets that then very quickly declined
in value by 99%, but he held them on the book at 100% and then he reinvested the money and
all sorts of other different stuff. And in the case of the loans made by banks and the assets that they as a result
hold, the value may have dropped by 25% in kind of the worst case, which is the Silicon Valley bank,
tenure, treasury bonds scenario, where they bought all $20 billion worth of treasury bonds,
and they took a big hit on that. But it doesn't mean that there's no asset value.
It means that the value has declined.
And typically there's a buffer between the asset value that the banks are meant to hold
and the deposits that they owe back to their customers.
And if that buffer gets succeeded, then the bank is technically has negative equity.
And if all the depositors said I want my money back and they went and sold those bonds into the market, they wouldn't be, you know, depositors said, I want my money back, and they
went and sold those bonds into the market, they wouldn't be able to make the depositors
whole. But it doesn't mean the depositors end up with zero. It means instead of getting
a hundred cents on the dollar, they get 93 cents on the dollar or 88 cents on the dollar.
And it would require an orderly dissolution of the bank's assets selling those bonds into
the market to generate the cash to pay back the depositors. So the reason we've seen this kind of this fed vertical spike number is because assets are
moving so quickly, depositors are moving their value so quickly from one bank to another,
that in order for the banks to make the cash available to those depositors, they've got to borrow
from the Fed. And then they're going into the market and doing this kind of, they should be doing
this orderly asset sale of the bonds to generate the cash to pay back the Fed, which is just musical chairs.
Money's moving around.
They're causing these problems.
Music and if the musical chair stop, then we don't have this problem, correct?
So if people stopped moving deposits around, then you're right.
The banks wouldn't need to borrow money to give depositors their money and then go do the
work of selling the bonds in the market.
People free, so moving their money around because of the. need to borrow money to give the bothers are money and then go do the work of selling the market people free.
So moving their money around
because of the.
Sure.
Because it's not insured.
So here we go.
So you just ensure it and this
whole thing stops.
So it costs them nothing to just
say that right?
Yeah.
So here's the thing.
Jake, how you mentioned this case
that you hear a lot of people
saying, well, why don't you just
take your two and a half
million dollars and break it up
into 10 accounts of what people
are doing.
Yeah. Well, look, it's not feasible
when you need to run a big payroll
at the end of the month and you've got payables.
It's administratively too complicated.
And by the way, what have you accomplished doing that?
You haven't solved anything.
So I, I mean,
who hasn't accomplished for the start-up?
It hasn't accomplished.
So I'm just giving them prediction.
The system, yeah.
Why wouldn't you just raise FDIC to two and a half million
or have FDIC be based on the number of employees
in your company or allow a higher class, a business class of FDIC that goes up to say
5 million.
Yes, exactly goes to 10 million.
And in exchange, the quid pro quo has to be that the bank can't put that money in risky
assets.
This is so obvious.
FDIC, hold on a second.
The reason I walk through that whole explanation is because not, this is so obvious. FDIC, hold on a second.
I'll take a hold.
The reason I walk through that whole explanation
is because I want to answer your question.
I'm sorry, it took so long, but like,
I want to highlight that because that is what
an insurance underwriter put aside the FDIC
and put aside banks and put aside the government's role.
Yes.
That's what an insurance underwriter's job would be.
They would look at the volatility and the pricing
on the bonds that the bank holds and they would determine ultimately
two things
probability of loss and severity of loss and the probability is how likely is it that you end up in negative equity and
That you have people requesting money and you have to sell those bonds and it'll last very quickly and then a severity is how much would you actually lose?
so if if you know the Fed raises rates by 3% and your entire book is tied up in 10-year bonds,
you see a 25% decline in the value of your bond portfolio.
That's as bad as it gets.
If you start with a 10% buffer, now you only have 85% of the money you owe the depositors.
So your loss is 15 cents on the dollar.
So the insurance company would say what's the probability of that event happening, how much
should we underwrite it for, what should we charge as a premium to do that?
And that's ultimately how the rates would get set.
Now, the problem with most insurance models around this sort of a problem set is that
these are the extreme tail events that have never happened.
And so the insurance to SACSIS point is super cheap, leading up to the extreme tail event.
And then everyone's like, oh my gosh, we underpaid for so
many years, we didn't realize how severe the losses could have been. We didn't realize how significant
this was going to be. And as a result, you now see this kind of multiplying effect because people
are like, oh my gosh, if it happened to them, it could happen to me, let's all sell, and it gets
worse and worse and worse. And so, you know, the real rate for the insurance going forward will now
have to take into account this massive risk.
But the game theory problem is, as SACS has point out, if you just insure everyone,
the cost of the insurance actually goes way, way, way, way down.
Because now you don't have this money movement problem.
And so, the point is, the more you insure at this point, the cheaper the insurance will actually be,
if you're an actual or free market underwriter, you know, a free market kind of, you know, underwriting process on this thing.
Because now the probability of having this bank run goes way, way down.
And therefore, the cost of the insurance should go way down.
And so the irony is, if you actually did, and this is getting super technical, but if
you actually looked at the statistical model and said, how much is
this going to cost to ensure every deposit?
It gets much, much cheaper, the higher the deposits that you're willing to ensure would
be.
That's my sense of what the free market would do here.
And it's certainly what I think the federal government should probably think about doing
if they're going to continue to play a role in backstopping banks.
The NetNet is people start up to right now are doing backstopping banks. The NetNet is, people start up to right now
are doing five to 10 banks.
I'm watching it happen.
They're doing all these sweep accounts.
They're doing multiple accounts.
So the government, if it doesn't raise the FDIC element,
is basically just creating extra work for everybody
and it's going to be the same outcome.
So the people are going to,
the street will find its own use for technology
and how to hack this.
And that's what's happening with these services.
Yeah, that's a deal.
Just to steal man, the old fashioned view or the traditional view of this, they would
say that well, you want those startups being paranoid.
You want those startups doing the work of disciplining these banks by moving their money
elsewhere if they detect a problem.
However, the problem with that is you get these bank runs. That is what a
bank run is in parts. Is people moving their money because they're fearing that the bank is not
doing a good job with their loan portfolio. So this is why in the, let's call it the olden days,
before FDIC, we had bank runs and panics all the time. And that's why FDIC was invented. So
And that's why FDIC was invented. So there's a hugely destructive problem that comes along with placing the depositor in
charge of disciplining the banks.
And I would argue that the depositor is not the best person to do it.
It's the regulator, just to kind of lay around what Friebert was saying.
I think there's like a fundamental market failure with banking in the sense that the depositor or the consumer
and the bank, think they're getting two completely different things.
When you open a bank account or a checking account,
you think you're getting a checkbook and ATM card,
a place to do payroll, you know, and pay a bonus.
It's a service and maybe you make a little bit of interest
by signing your main motivation.
Okay, that's what you think you're getting.
Your money, most of all, is safe.
Because you're not signing up with a service provider
to have any chance of losing your money.
You're not going to.
Right, but now what does the bank think it's getting?
You know what the bank thinks it's getting?
An unsecured loan that they can then turn around
and invest in whatever they want or whatever the law allows them to.
So there's a disconnect between the parties and the transaction.
Exactly, it's a total disconnect.
And moreover, the way the management of the bank is compensated is that they only have
to pay back your loan, your deposit, basically, as they're alone at par.
And anything they make on a bet that they make with that money, they get to keep, they
get to keep all the upside.
Their stockholders' management get to keep that.
And those incentives are driving this.
And that's what drove the risk in all likelihood at Silicon Valley bank. They were getting $200 billion, whatever
percentage point they got, Shamaff.
They're in center.
They're in center.
It's not just them, but the whole banking system creates the incentive.
They're highly leveraged.
The deposits from their standpoint are leveraged.
They're leveraged 10 to one.
So they're incentive is to go to the casino and gamble it
because they get to keep all the upside.
And if they lose it, it's basically someone else on the hook.
Final work, you're moth.
In early May, the Fed will release their investigation
into signature bank and SVB.
Okay.
Howell said that this week.
I think it'll be really interesting to see how much honesty they both put into the report
and then whether the entirety of that report is made available to the rest of us to
read.
But I think SACS has very elegantly summarized what's happening.
And it doesn't take a genius to figure out that this doesn't make sense.
And so the question is, what is the tolerance that we have for changing something that clearly is
mischaracterized? What consumers think they're getting and what banks are then doing are two
totally different things. And if the Fed actually is really, really honest
and really lays bare everything that happened,
it'll be very hard to not legislate changes based on it.
And your best swing at a legislative change
would be what, Jamal?
What is the low hanging fruit?
What's the layup here?
Well, I think we've seen this happening
in other markets for a while, which is that banks
have become, in fairness to them, much, much better at risk management, post-Dodd-Frank,
post-grade financial crisis.
And the result of that is that there's been a lot of emerging private credit markets,
because most of the bank is about lending, right?
They're not really buying equities, they're lending money, they're a debtor in possession of something, right?
And there's been just a massive explosion
of private credit.
And it started in the most obvious areas.
It started in things like CLOs,
it started in asset-backed securities,
solar, car loans, credit cards, mortgages,
private equity back deals.
So I think the rational answer is that banks need to protect 100% of deposits and that
if they want to have extracurricular activities, if you will, they need to be able to raise money from investors,
put that to work in a really fair and transparent way, and then share in the profits between all
of the related parties that are involved in that transaction, no different than any other
risk-taking organization.
And I think that this is now what we've probably shine delight on is in really odd loophole
That just needs to get closed in 2023
There's such easy
Hygienic changes here like let's put it a different way if you
Raised money for a liquid hedge fund that had quarterly redemptions and then violated the LPA and stuffed it into
private companies that had tenure illiquidity.
There would be hell to pay.
And vice versa, if you raised money on tenure illiquid locked up capital on the presumption
you're going to invest in startups and then instead put it in the stock market thinking
that you could flip it and make some money, you would have violated the LPA and there be help to pay.
Similarly, I think what SACS is stating is that there is a mismatch of what the depositor,
in this case, the investor expects and what the risk manager is doing.
And I think that you have to correct that one way or the other.
Make it abundantly clear that we're never going to ensure 100% and deal with that risk or make it 100%
and deal with the fallout, which is largely about wiping out a lot of equity value in banks.
LPA equals limited partnership agreement. Just to clarify one thing, I'm not saying that these
bank managers are all going to the casino and gambling the money. I think that they are generally
more responsible than that. What I'm saying is that the incentives created
by this crazy system we call banking
create a weird incentive for them to gamble
because they're so highly levered.
From their standpoint, your deposits are their leverage.
Everybody but the G-Sibs, because I think the G-Sibs,
there's so much scrutiny.
If you look at how well-run city, B of A, Wells, and JPM are relative and contrast them
to the sub-G-Sibs, it's like night and day.
And so the other thing that I think we've realized is who thought it was a good idea to raise
the bar on eligibility from 50 billion of assets to 200?
Clearly now that made no sense. It makes more sense to actually
categorize every bank as systemically important, maybe not globally, but at a minimum to the
US economy because these people play a vital function in society and they were allowed to
take a much more aggressive risk posture because they were able to lobby the government to
change the rules.
The CEO of TikTok, which claims to be an American company now, or an international company,
was in front of Congress today.
His name is Sho Chiu.
This is the first time he's really, I think, spoken publicly in an extended period, four
and a half hours he was grilled.
And it was absolutely brutal.
It's the first time I've
seen a congressional hearing that was bipartisan in a long time. And he said that, quote, the bottom
line is, this is an American date, this is American data on American soil by an American company
overseeing by American personnel. And then wasirrely when asked if Chinese employees, including
engineers, have access to this US data.
And he said, this is a complex subject over and over again.
He was evasive and this did not look good for TikTok.
The question now becomes does it become divested and go public?
Or does it get shut down, sacks?
I think his goose was cooked as soon as they asked him the question in preparation for
this hearing. Did you consult with any member of the CCP?
And he could not just outright say no.
Nope.
So that's his goose was cooked as soon as he couldn't just say no.
What do you think about the bipartisan nature of this?
And what do you think the outcome is sex?
Well, this is one of the rare things
where it is bipartisan.
I mean, there's so much outrage and anger at this.
I think that they should let the company divest it.
I think it is divestiture or shutdown for TikTok.
Since we're not communists here,
I think they should be given the chance
to fully divest to an American-owned company.
But look, I just wish that there was as much bipartisan consensus and outrage directed
not just at Chinese spying of Americans, but on the American deep states spying on Americans.
Because we just had hearings showing that the American government could ducts elaborate
spying operations surveillance of Americans
on social media.
This was all revealed in the Twitter files.
And we got certainly no bipartisan consensus on that.
Republicans were outraged, but Democrats tried to portray
it as some sort of spat between Trump and Chrissy Teague.
I mean, that's all they wanted to talk about.
So I would like to see this problem comprehensively addressed.
And that means, I think TikTok going into the hands of an American company, but I also
would like more assurances that American companies will not be working with the deep state
to spy on us in a fringe or a fringe or a fringe.
Chrissy Teaguey and Donald Trump, who are two people you'd never invite to a dinner party?
Free perk, what are your thoughts?
Is it going to divest? Should it be forced to divest? Being intellectually honest about it? What are
your thoughts on TikTok in America? Yeah, I think I've shared this in the past. I think they're
probably going to have to spin this thing out. And if they hold any equity, if the Chinese parent
company holds any equity interest, it'll probably be non-voting shares. And there'll be a mandate that the majority of the shares
and some degree of oversight. You believe that's the right thing to do?
From a national security issue for America to force them to do that?
I don't know from a national security point of view. I really don't. I don't have an opinion.
From national security and TikTok. I don't know.
I've always thought that TikTok was a really, what's the right word?
Like a firefly for Chinese invasion.
And it feels like, it's a very easy kind of target for, I think what is generally a big
kind of social consciousness right now.
So whether or not there's actually some national security points, if there were, I'm pretty
sure that a national security person would have stood up and said, we need to stop this
thing.
I'm not sure I've heard that publicly.
Chabaf.
But I will say, my point of view from just seeing the political behavior is that they're probably going to mandate that these guys spend this thing out to US investors and and that they have, you know, don't own any that the Chinese don't have any equity or management oversight or interest in it.
government does not allow kids to play video games during the week and only three hours on the weekend. They're using apps like WeChat to dictate social score and social behavior whether it's smoking on
a train or not paying your bills. And they are saying they will not divest. But anybody who is an
investor in a company that had a chance to go public for tens of billions of dollars and eventually take on and people believe that this is a viable competitor to Facebook
and Instagram.
This could be a company worth ultimately hundreds of billions of dollars.
If you were an investor in China, you would want to IPO, you would want to get liquidity.
So if they are refusing to sell, what does that tell you as a market participated in
and participant in somebody who's been a capital allocator for over a decade? So if they are refusing to sell, what does that tell you as a market participated in,
participate in somebody who's been a capital allocator for over a decade?
There's bigger problems in China than even TikTok, US represents for them.
I think it's probably what it means.
So it's a pretty bad tell.
I don't think the investor's a real option because when you think about the details of
that, how will the government be satisfied that the code base was separated
elegantly, that there was no malware, surreptitiously planted? How will you actually prove all of this
to a degree that satisfies a legislator? So I think the pound of flesh that they want
is more easily and more salatiously satisfied by shutting the thing down.
So if I had to bet on what happens, I bet more on that.
I didn't think TikTok did a very good job.
And I think that there are some, they were terrible today.
And I think that there are some real issues around how much control does actually flow back. I don't think that it was definitive. He needed to be much clearer
and adamant that this was an independent business that didn't have back doors to China
and the CCP to a peace congress. He didn't do that. No, he was like, I have to check in
on that. I'm not sure. Yeah. I think it was a little bit of the exact opposite, actually,
Sax is right. Like that first question was just the death blow right from the beginning.
It's like, oh, this is not going to go in a good place because they should have been
able to see that that question was going to get asked.
And you need to have that asked and answered philosophy where the only answer is no.
The only answer you could have given is no.
And the fact that he wasn't able to say that it was a bit of a ethical employee as soon as that was in my mind, I was like, this
thing is getting shut down. Because I don't think there's a
shutdown. Yeah, there's no divestiture plan that can be
technically audited in a short amount of time to appease these
folks. They want a pound of flesh. And then separately, the bigger
issue that I think you have to deal with is, what does
that mean for how other governments may be pressured to act, who want to be on the pro
US camp?
And I think that that's a question because bike dance and tiktok have presence beyond
just China and the US.
A third question is, how does the Golden Vote
get used on the Bike Dance Board?
And what do they do?
And do they even want this thing public?
Explain Golden Vote.
Essentially, they'll decide what happens to that company.
And they have that in Alibaba.
They have that, I think, a 10 cent.
I think they have that at Bike Dance.
So the Chinese government has a very strong hand
in the direction of these business.
And then the final point is that there is a secondary app that TikTok has called CapCut,
which also is enormously popular in the United States, which is yet another potential
backdoor for privacy or spying violations, whatever the US Congress wants to pin on them. So I think it's a very complicated moment
for that business and their US asset.
Sachs, it's pretty clear the CCP is making this decision.
If they decide, let it burn,
let it get kicked out of the United States.
What does that do in terms of game theory
between the two countries and going forward because obviously
they don't reciprocate. We're not allowed to have Google, Twitter, Instagram, whatever in
China. So is this just, you know, putting reciprocity?
What's what's decision you're saying the CCP is making? Well, the CCP has the golden vote.
It's their decision to divest or not divest. Chamopoli is not divest. I believe they will
not. I'm not saying that they're not divest. I believe they will not.
They're not going to have the choice.
I don't, I don't see what decision the CCP has in this.
It's going to be out.
They don't divest.
That's right.
They're, it's not a divest or don't divest.
I think it'll be shut down.
I think they're getting kicked out of the United States.
Okay.
Do you, but you believe they're going to divest sex?
I'm saying that that's what I would support just to give them the chance because what do
you think is going to happen?
At your mouth might be right, I'm not sure, but I think they should be given the chance.
And if you truly can't move the servers to the United States and vet the code base, I feel
like you could, I think you could have an acquire or figure it out, you know, vet the code
base, move the data centers, make sure there's no back doors.
I think it's not impossible, hard but not impossible. Okay, so let's go with the scenario.
That it gets kicked out of the United States is shut down. Are there any second or third order impacts?
Yeah, it just rashes up the tension between the US and China, but we're already there.
Yeah, we're right there So no change. All right.
Listen, this has been an amazing episode.
Oh, Tramoth, did your 3D rocket company make it to space?
I saw they had a nice little lift off there.
Thank you, Jason.
I just wanted to give a shout out.
This is like, while all this chaos is happening in the world, it's amazing to see pretty incredible
engineering.
So last night, we did have a successful
launch. So relativity has a 85% 3D printed rocket, which over time we want to try to get to
95%, but it's the fuselage, it's the engines. It brings the cost of space flight down by an order
of magnitude. It is a hugely disruptive idea. And so what they tried
to prove was that they could get this thing into space. And they accomplished a lot of goals. They
got past Max Q, which is sort of the point at which the atmospheric pressure is the strongest
on the fuselage. So we proved structural integrity. We got to main engine cutoff. We had stage two
separation. So a lot of really important technical milestones were achieved.
It allows them now to unlock a bunch of contracts that allow us, frankly, just to keep going
and building.
There's still a lot of work to do from here.
We're building now the next generation rocket, which is called Terran R and Rocket Engines, which can take instead of 1,500 kilograms
about 20,000 kilos.
So, enormously proud to have been around this journey.
My partner, Jay, has been really the key person on it.
But I just wanted to give a huge shout out
to Tim Ellis and the team at Relativity.
It's super, super, super cool.
What they pulled off on.
It's just amazing how access to spaces being democratized
and the prices are being lowered, so dramatically.
What's the impact that's gonna have ultimately freeberg,
you think, on humanity?
I mean, obviously going to Mars is this incredible feat
technologically and just mind blowing.
But what do you think the net result of all this
space activity is gonna be for the human condition and the species?
I mean, I think there's a vibrant community of startups and money coming into this space right now.
I do think all these guys are going to have to, in order to gain wider spread capital markets attention,
like Elon has had to do with SpaceX, they're going to have to find business models that have
kind of near-term viability that don't depend on government contracts
Like start like like Starlink. Yeah, and so I think that's the key question
It obviously these are very capital intensive businesses. They have very long horizons
To hit their milestones
So there's certainly capital available in the early stages to make bets on whether
or not you can get these milestones. But the broader kind of attention in capital markets
is going to come from these things, building real businesses that generate value for consumers
and markets. One of the things that I think an unlock opportunity for this market overall
is low cost energy.
You know, if we can get below, call it
one cent to three cents kilowatt hour of power,
call it one cent a kilowatt hour power.
I forgot the exact relationship.
You can get very cheap, you know, hydrogen
and oxygen fuel sources.
And so, you know, it's funny if you actually play out
the scale factor for space, for the space industry,
much of it at scale will get driven
by the cost of electricity.
So it's another reason why there's gonna be,
I think a pretty tight coupling between the cost of power
and ultimately the vibrancy of this market.
You mentioned something important.
The other key thing that we proved was that this is a pure methalox engine
so CH4 and liquid oxygen and it was not just stage one but also stage two which is unique. The only other folks that have tried to prove that you could have multi stage methalox is China and
there most recent launch failed but it highly simplifies the engineering problem at hand.
but it highly simplifies the engineering problem at hand,
especially the ground operations and whatnot and sort of like filling these rockets and making them viable.
So that was another really big milestone.
So the producing of that fuel freedberg
requires energy.
If that energy was cheap, it would be cheaper
to make and process that fuel.
That's right.
So there's a pretty direct tie-in, particularly the scale manufacturing on fuel that would
be used in these rocket systems and power prices here on Earth.
So if and as we get power prices down, either through scaled renewables or ideally fusion
or some other kind of new technology.
Or nuclear, or nuclear fission or something, then the cost of fuel and the cost of these space programs goes down.
And that ultimately, I think the real question everyone asks
is how do you get away from it just being government
services businesses, which have a low multiple in markets
and obviously high dependency on one or two key customers?
And how do you actually get private market products moving?
So tourism obviously makes a lot of sense, travel around the earth in 20 minutes or something
or some people have talked about mining or colonies and who would fund that real estate.
It's unclear right now what the ultimate traveling is.
Err is traveling is a wild one.
I've talked to Elon about that, but the idea that you could have a rocket ship take off
from Texas and then be in Tokyo, you know, like half an hour of minutes later
is I can only speak. I can only speak for myself, but I would really like to visit Uranus
Reaper. All right, everybody. Four. Hey, man, look at the player here. He's got layers
are for players. Taxi blue. He is he is two too layerson. Can you get an ask God subtle isn't it?
He's pulling a Steve Bennett. Oh, you got to get more disheveled.
He needs the six pens in the color pens. No shave.
Can you tell us on the show? Do you have a stylist, an actual person you pay for the
best you? Can you please put the picture of Steve Ben and where he wears the
multiple. Oh my God. No, no, no, no.
I'm sorry. I'm sorry. This again. When are you? he wears the multiple. Oh my God. No, no, no, no. I'm gonna send you this again.
When are you gonna use again?
You need to stop.
For next video.
They're attacking me.
It's really weird.
Oh yeah, Bannon.
He thinks you're a venture capitalist or something.
So I said, who's been attacking you?
Bannon was wanting many people attacking me.
On Twitter?
I think on his podcast.
I think, yeah.
You seem to have made a lot of, a lot of new friends on Twitter lately.
When you pass around half a million followers
Basically what happens is you'd become a politician
You will net there will always be a fringe element of people who need to manage their anxiety by venting
And that's what you're feeling you will live that now at million
Use you know followers two million ten million whatever
There's always going to be a small percentage. Jake. How doesn't know this because he has mostly bots that are his followers.
That's true.
When you have real, when you have real people, this is what it is.
You'll get this one percent or less than one percent and just the number goes up.
So I would ignore it.
Don't care.
Don't worry about what users seven, four, seven, seven, don't feed the brigadons.
Don't care what seven, user seven, four, seven, eight, six has to say, don't worry about
it.
Yeah.
Absolutely. I love you. All right.
I don't look forward to seeing you on Thursday.
For the rain man himself, David Sacks,
the Sultan of science, the Prince of panic attacks,
our pal David Friedberg and the host with the most
gonna make what about me?
What about me?
I'm calling you the host with the most.
I'm adding something, the host with the most
is making me the Sh so leaf tempora with
a kaito
and you know the world's best genuil flexor I am the world's greatest guest greatest
house guest if you need a house guest to look at your house oh my god
Italy Tokyo and the second wherever you need a house guest I'm ready to
come and make it a good time you're the modern kato-kailing you're horrible
absolutely the best you keep keep inviting me every week.
You are enjoyable though, love you boys.
Let's have fun, bye everybody.
Bye.
We're like your winners ride.
Brain man David Sack.
And it said we open source it to the fans
and they've just gone crazy with it.
Love you guys.
I squee-n-o-k-n-w
I'm going on a leash.
What?
What?
What?
What? What?
What?
What?
Besties are gone.
Go through.
That's my dog taking a wish.
You're driving away.
So, sex.
We're not on.
Oh, man.
My ham is a disaster.
We need to be at police station.
We should all just get a room and just have one big hug.
George, because they're all kids.
It's like this like sexual tension
But we just need to release that out
What you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big, what you're the big I'm doing all it.