All-In with Chamath, Jason, Sacks & Friedberg - E141: State of Series A's, VC dry powder, IPO window opens + more with Bill Gurley & Brad Gerstner
Episode Date: August 11, 2023(0:00) Bestie intros: Friedberg's bad haircut (1:17) Welcome BG^2! Biography recommendations and film talk (22:27) VC market update: State of Series A's (33:43) Dry powder misconceptions, marking ince...ntives (48:57) IPO window starting to open, IPO down rounds, incentives to go public (1:03:17) Cyclical venture cycles, managing distributions, benchmarking VC performance vs public market (1:22:26) Tragic Maui wildfires, extreme temperatures (1:26:11) Macro picture: inflation cools, deflation risk? Follow the besties: https://twitter.com/chamath https://linktr.ee/calacanis https://twitter.com/DavidSacks https://twitter.com/friedberg https://twitter.com/altcap https://twitter.com/bgurley 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://youtu.be/xmYekD6-PZ8 https://www.amazon.com/Setting-Table-Transforming-Hospitality-Business/dp/0060742755 https://www.amazon.com/Steve-Jobs-Walter-Isaacson/dp/147770146X https://www.amazon.com/Elon-Musk-Spanish-Walter-Isaacson/dp/B0CBTHK86N https://www.amazon.com/Good-Great-Some-Companies-Others/dp/0066620996 https://www.amazon.com/Man-Arena-Selected-Writings-Roosevelt/dp/0765306700 https://www.amazon.com/Shoe-Dog-Memoir-Creator-Nike/dp/1501135910 https://www.amazon.com/Alexander-Hamilton-Ron-Chernow/dp/1594200092 https://www.amazon.com/Something-Autobiography-Vintage-Akira-Kurosawa/dp/B0C3D5NDJX https://www.amazon.com/Born-Standing-Up-Comics-Martin/dp/B017QUU3EO https://www.amazon.com/Writing-Memoir-Craft-Stephen-King/dp/1439193630 https://www.amazon.com/Autobiography-Malcolm-told-Alex-Haley/dp/0345379756 https://www.linkedin.com/posts/peterjameswalker_cartadata-seriesa-valuations-activity-7092542118803488768-vOcY https://www.theinformation.com/articles/venture-firms-still-writing-small-checks-despite-271-billion-in-dry-powder https://twitter.com/bgurley/status/1688605654188224512 https://finance.yahoo.com/chart/SN https://www.google.com/finance/quote/CAVA:NYSE https://finance.yahoo.com/quote/SRFM https://twitter.com/altcap/status/1686086247029055489 https://www.wsj.com/articles/university-endowments-mint-billions-in-golden-era-of-venture-capital-11632907802 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hhy7JUinlu0 https://twitter.com/gokulr/status/1680006171149869056 https://www.statista.com/statistics/277501/venture-capital-amount-invested-in-the-united-states-since-1995 https://www.bls.gov/charts/consumer-price-index/consumer-price-index-by-category-line-chart.htm https://www.bloomberg.com/news/newsletters/2023-08-10/disinflation-wave-the-bloomberg-open-americas-edition https://www.nytimes.com/2023/08/09/business/china-economy-inflation.html https://twitter.com/KobeissiLetter/status/1689010884062904320
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I'm recording, yeah.
How's my hair, Nick?
Do I look ridiculous and shit don't wear a hat?
Oh my God, I went to the
****
teaching salon in
for haircut a few days ago.
They're teaching salon.
$10.
You got $10 worth of value.
My neck was literally bleeding.
The guy cut my neck like six places.
It's diagonal of the back.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, yeah.
And he was stolen the whole time I walk in. He's like, what do you want? I'm like, I
put this thing. He's like shit. Okay, sit down. I thought I was like in a barber shop
candid camera. Why would you possibly do that? There was nothing available. I told my wife,
I'm like, get me any hair appointment. Anything. I just got to get my hair cut. It was so long.
And then she's like, oh, I got you an appointment at the teaching school. Oh, I'm like, that's high-end. All the hair salon stylists go there.
Must be awesome.
This guy fucking butchered me.
Guys worth over $100 million.
He got a $10.
Fucking $10.
And then he's like, what would you like to tip?
I'm like, you're the tip.
You should be a fucking barber.
Get a new career.
Yeah.
Oh, man.
You're like your winner's ride.
Rainman, David Sack. All right, everybody welcome back to the all in podcast episode one for one Chimoff Polyhapatia has gone missing somewhere in the Mediterranean.
We've sent some search crews out. We got some beacons. We're trying to find him, but he is not here
today. It will be no conspicuous consumption or discussion of truffle season or wine. But instead,
we went to the BG squared. If you got to come to all in summit 2022, one of the highlights of the event
was having two BG's, Brad Gersner and Bill Gurley on the pod. So we thought for all
star summer, we would bring in some all stars here. Welcome back to the pod, Fifth Bestie
Brad Gersner and Bill Gurley. How are you, sir?
I'm doing great. Thanks for having me, boss.
Bill, you don't do a lot of press. You don't do a lot of pods.
And I know you're on a lot of boards, but you're not part of benchmarks next fund.
So people are wondering, are you retiring? What are you up to? I know you're still got all these boards, you're on,
but what's Bill Gurley up to these days? Yeah, I appreciate that. I'm as you mentioned, I'm on nine benchmark boards still.
So I'm working with those and doing the classic work that I've been as you mentioned, I'm on nine benchmark boards still, so I'm working with those and,
and doing the classic work that I've been doing my whole career. Second thing is I've,
I've started, I've done a handful of angel deals, about one one hundred the, um, the frequency of
J-Cow here, but, but a few, so, definitely, dip in my toe in the water. And then third, I've been
working hard on, on a book, got a co-writer, we've been doing a ton of research, different my tone and water. And in third, I've been working hard on a book.
Got a co-writer. We've been doing a ton of research. We've got a proposal ready to go on
an agent. We're going to go out to publisher soon. Oh, well, you should just do Harper Business.
I'll put you in touch with Hollis. That's the winning publisher. That's the best business
publisher in the world. Perfect. Harper College Business. Well, it's great as publisher.
World's great publisher.
And you don't need what the theme is.
You don't need what the theme is.
Yeah, it's a further development of a speech I gave
at University of Texas Business School
about how to chase and succeed in your dream job.
Oh, nice.
Oh, so like career advice, letter to a younger girl,
is that what this is? A letter to a younger building? Yeah, I didn't want to do like, oh, here's my
you know thoughts on venture capital that didn't feel right. This is some more passion about that.
Some might I hope will be impactful to a lot of people. I've already gotten quite a bit of feedback
from people that have been moved by the shorter version on the presentation.
When you look back on your career, unpack it for a minute, what do you think the things
you got right where or the things you might change in terms of your career and being happy
and finding your passionately?
I do feel super fortunate that I was able to do my dream job for over two decades?
I love innovation, I love betting and gambling, and I love the combination of being able to think
through markets and disruptions and to be able to place bets and all those things are super
exciting. Things I got right, studying history, which is something I talk a lot about.
And we'll be talking about in the book, like knowing who the
patriarchs were of your industry and knowing what they
thought I think is super powerful in any endeavor.
And then networking, you know, just like crazy, which I
think is actually easier today.
So those are a couple of the themes that we developed.
Networking and studying history specifically you and i have had many conversations about biographies we both share a passion for those top biographies
not of business people but that had an impact on you and then i'll go around the horn top biographies that had an impact on you preferably ones that are business but if it is business, I guess it's okay. One that actually led to me developing this theme was learning more about Danny Myers'
journey, who is the renowned restaurant owner in New York City and the founder of Shake
Check.
But he had a career where he was in sales, he was about to go to law school, and his, I
think his uncle told him, what are you doing? You know you want to be a restaurant owner and he stopped that day, took a job at 10K a
month or 10K a year.
He took like a 90% pay cut and started studying and that gets into the history part but he
just started studying and obviously the rest is history.
Yeah.
To those of you that know about the any anyone. Setting the table is the book.
Yeah, that is the book.
That is the book, Union Square Cafe Grammar Sheet Averine
amongst some of his great restaurants
going around the horn here, Friedberg.
You have a favorite biography you read
or something that impacted you young in your career
and then do you feel like you figured it out
and what would you change about the early
part of your career.
So the same two questions.
That's a three very loaded questions.
I don't know how to pick which one you want to answer that one.
I will tell you when I was running my company in 2011, climate cooperation.
The climate corporation, I read the Walter Isaacson biography of Steve Jobs.
And he actually profiled a biography of Steve Jobs. Yeah.
And he actually profiled a number of Jobs' management techniques, my only operating role
prior to that was working at Google.
So that was the only management experience or exposure I had had.
And then reading about how Jobs ran his management team, it actually changed my behavior going
into the office.
I took a very different approach and I saw
the results almost immediately. What was the primary thing that impacted you?
Well, first of all, like having the cadence and the directness with the team, engaging
the team fully in discourse, immediately making decisions, getting everyone to commit,
moving forward very quickly. I was the first time CEO,
so I never had a good mentor and reading those segments of jobs as management style in
his biography was just a really great tool to add to my emerging toolkit on how to be
a manager and how to be a CEO and how to run a company. That was big for me. I could
rehash everything about early on in my life. I don't think that's a good
use of water. But yeah. Isaacson's bug on Elon coming out in a couple of weeks, which
should be interesting. I sat for an interview with Walter for that one. So I'm interested
to see how that turns out. Yeah, I did too. I was asked to. I didn't, yeah, we were asked
to. You didn't do it? No, I did it. I did it. I, you know, I don't, I didn't ask to
do it. I got asked, you know, if I No, I did it. I didn't ask to do it.
I got asked if I would give some anecdotes.
I think Saks also got asked if he would do some anecdotes.
So I think it's going to be pretty good.
And Walter was hanging around and eating.
He's been putting passages out on Twitter, right?
Yeah, I mean, he's such a good writer.
And in just watching him, you know,
David and I were at Twitter for a little bit.
And you know, just being...
He was hanging out.
He was like, you know, in the corner of the room,
like just paying a lot of these meetings. Yeah. So he was there basically during the whole transition.
I think that was going to be the ending of the book is, you know, he had to cut it off at some point,
but he was there for the first month of the transition,
of the Twitter takeover. And for rocket launches and everything in between. So he, I mean,
watching his biography technique is,
it's pretty intense.
I mean, he spends a long time with the subjects
and just taking notes and talking to everybody around him.
So he would peel off sacks or peel me off,
hey, could I ask you a question about this?
Or ask you question about that?
What do you think of this?
Well, Jake, I'll speaking of books.
I'm in the rare position of needing your advice.
Oh, okay.
There we go.
I think that's a compliment, maybe.
Sort of a compliment, okay.
You have Harper College, Thomas.
I'm going to do a book about how to create, run, scale, operate software companies, which
will be an extension of the blog I've been writing for a couple of years, which I haven't
been active on mainly because I've been using that time for this pod, but I was writing at a pretty good clip until we
started doing all in pod.
So I want to get back to putting that together.
And I could go chapter by chapter, you know, here's how you should think about marketing,
here's how you should think about sales, here's how you should think about finance metrics
and so on.
But I'm not sure that's the best way to present the material.
So, do I just write the book that I think it should be,
or do I work with a publisher on what the business book should be,
and they kind of give me the guidance?
So, it's a great question.
You are in a unique position where you're successful,
you have an audience for the book, and success for you is for great founders to read the book
and for it to have impact.
As opposed to somebody who's an author,
we just wants to be published, right?
So you have a different reason to do this.
I think you should write the book,
you should decide who you want the audience to be
and what you want to get out of the book,
and you should forget about publishers
in the whole grand scheme of things.
Then when you write the treatment,
you write the first five chapters or so, then you can bring it to a select group of publishers. You
can get an agent, I can introduce it to two or three agents. There's a top two or three
in this field. And I think what you should do is the business advice is out there, right?
And the techniques are out there. But what you have is you have war stories. So the technique I used in my book, Angel,
was to talk about techniques and investing
that I had learned from other folks,
including Bill Gurley and Michael Moritz, or whatever.
But then I would give my anecdotes,
things I had experienced personally.
And what that does is it makes the examples
let people really get some narrative out of the book.
And so the lesson combined with the actual practical experience, that's kind of the magic
of these business books, I think.
Do you have a favorite biography, yourself, Sacks, either business or non-business?
I don't think I read a lot of business biographies.
Really?
I read it.
I read one business, how to book, back in the PayPal days.
I didn't have any real business education.
Good to grade. Do you remember what it was?
It was good to grade.
Yeah, I mean, that was the seminal book at the time.
So I read this book and literally one chapter
was on how you should stick to your core idea.
And then the next chapter was about how you should be flexible.
So I'm like, well, both of these ideas are right, situationally.
Yes.
But so how do you decide?
Right.
So I came away from the book thinking, this isn't really going to help me because it doesn't
give you what you really need, which is what are the specific situations in which you
should apply a given principle.
Yes.
And I kind of came away from like thinking that business self-help books just weren't that they're too theoretical and weren't that helpful?
Well, and this is where biographies really become helpful because you actually get to see why that you know technique was to play Brad
Do you have any business bios that you gonna relate into that about sex sex do not write a how to book?
Yeah, right right a book about your visceral experiences
book, right? Write a book about your visceral experiences, right? That just you happen to teach people how to along the way, right? You have a lot of, you know, I
just think the story is powerful.
Holy shit! What?
Unbelievable.
Is it calling zoom bombing when you just zoom?
Wait a second. Is it calling zoom bombing when you just
Thank you to the starling team yet again coming to the rescue
No, I just wanted to come and say, I just want to say hi to you. You have to hang. This is the blusky version of the Brady
bunch right here. What happened? Are you lost and see we tried to
get you? We'll find you. The yacht was missing the dinghy's
missing. We sent out search crews. Hold on, your camera and go,
you look like Tiger Woods in this shot. A guy, a guy that I work
with, it's my through you're the Michael Bridges
of the Ellen podcast and that you haven't missed a podcast since the beginning. So then
that's the only reason why I'm telling him to get to the senior head. Yeah, yeah, it's
in my head. I just want to enjoy the podcast. I'll talk later. I'll watch. Bye, bye.
Look at that. The Iron Man Street continues. He did want to give up a stream by, I love you.
He's drunk.
He's a drunk zoomed on.
Here, remember, he's nine hours ahead.
Jake, how to answer your question.
Yes, please.
Teddy Roosevelt, man in the arena,
Phil Knight, Alexander Hamilton.
Those three for me that like to take away
the red thread that connects them is do shit that matters.
Do stuff that matters do stuff that
matters your life is short get in the arena major in the majors but do stuff that
matters so they all were inspirations for me both in terms of how I organize my
own life but also how I think about investing fantastic and I'll give you a couple
of ones that you may not have thought of something like an autobiography the
biography of a Tura Kuros, the famous film director, absolutely outstanding.
Great recommendation.
I'm gonna, I actually wanna read that.
That's a great recommendation.
I'll read that.
Who wrote it?
Atura Kurosawa.
It's an autobiography.
Oh, it's his autobiography.
Autobiography.
Born standing up.
Steve Martin.
Bill Gurlyan talked about this one.
And it really is fantastic.
I've actually listened to it twice.
And that's one of the great things about these biographies.
You listen to him a second time.
Here's another one, Sacks, this is critical for you.
On writing, Stephen King's biography.
You've listened to it?
Who's biography?
Stephen King.
Oh, Stephen King, come on.
On writing might be top five for me of all time.
And he really goes into like the story of Harry.
He wrote like a small treatment of Harry.
He was a math teacher through it in the garbage because he was so frustrated with his wife.
Seize it in the garbage.
She reads it.
She says, this is incredible.
You should keep writing it.
He writes it.
He sells the book for $10,000.
She's getting paid like $9,000 as a teacher.
He can't quit his job.
And back in the day, they used to sell your hard cover rights and your paperback rights separately.
If your hard cover went well, then you would do a paperback and go mass market.
He gets a call.
They sold the rights to the mass market book for $400,000.
The paperback.
The disaging gets on the phone and says it's $40,000 and he thinks
he hears $40,000. He says, well, $40,000, that's incredible. That's four years. I might
be able to quit. My job as a teacher because no, that's $400,000. He says, okay, so $40,000
divided by nine. It's like, maybe it's even closer to five years. He says, no, you're getting
$400,000. He can't believe it. And that was basically the story of Stephen King.
But it'd be great to listen to prior to writing a book
He's absolutely it's super amazing
Most people don't know this fact, but King wrote the novella that became Shawshank
Absolutely, yes
He's got a lot of those you you didn't know it and then the Malcolm X biography is amazing too if you haven't read it
So those are just non-traditional ones of people following their passion.
One of the things about it is the extreme effort and the decades of perfecting a craft that I found super appealing about these.
Nothing happens easily.
In your honor, Jake Hell, the rest of the episode.
Seven summers. Seven summers.
Seven summers, by the way, if you were a startup founder,
entrepreneur, CEO, best film to watch.
Because, well, yeah, best film to watch.
Because, well, yeah, I mean, there is no giving up.
There is, you do what it takes and you persist.
I think persistence is one of the biggest, I've talked about it's one of the biggest predictors
for success.
And there's a character that emerges once you're facing challenge.
This film does such an incredible job
of demonstrating the essence of that character.
Yeah, I think it's also a similar character
that's needed in filming it's a special business.
For us, I was biography,
you'll see that a number of the actors in that film
occur in other films by
Kurosawa.
And do you know who that star is?
To Shira Mufuni.
Yeah.
Well, he's in all of, he's just about in all of...
He was his muse.
He was, he was, he was to, to De Niro to Sorsese.
Yeah.
Sorsese sort of modeled his relationship with De Niro after Kurosawa.
And George Lucas, Kurosawa, Francis Four Coppola were all disciples of Kurosawa's,
you know, incredible.
Well, the seven samurai was remade as a Western, the Venus and seven with Steve McQueen and
Joel Brenner. Yep. A lot of Chris Awa's movies were remade as Westerns. Yep. It just works pretty
well. And they were all scored by any Omorah Coney. A lot of them by Inu Markarney, which I was
listening to in the Cold Plunge.
I started doing the Cold Plunge.
Oh my God.
I would just like to say I'm just a hearty fuck you.
This is such a random show.
We have nothing.
Well, we'll get there.
But I mean, I just want to start the podcast
by saying fuck you to tell you guys.
I don't know if there's anything else
that's going to be talking about in the show.
I'm like, no, no, it's not.
Show Rogan and all these assholes who said,
in order to be like successful,
you have to jump in a cold plunge,
because now I've done it four times out of the last,
like I'm doing it every other day,
and they're right.
I feel like a superhero after I do this.
Anybody doing cold plunge here besides me and Shema?
No, but...
I was in Mexico a few weeks ago.
Oh, there's a case of him.
And they had this cold plunge thing,
and we did it every day that we were there at the hotel
But then we came back
Well, it's it's you get this in Dorf and Runcha
Runch afterwards. It's incredible and then afterwards now when I go to the gym
I only do like a 10 minute ice cold shower afterwards like it's critical to like and it feels amazing
You feel like so relaxed after I did six I did five or six minutes at 58 degrees
I'm lowering it two degrees a day, but the first day I did it, I did five or six minutes at 58 degrees. I'm lowering it two degrees a day,
but the first day I did it at 43 or 44,
for like 45 seconds, and my body started shaking,
I got hypothermia instantly built.
You've done it, you've done this nonsense.
Occasionally, okay, so I'm still not convinced
there's any medical benefit to it, but you got to sit down.
You've severed it, it's very trendy. It's It's very trendy. I have an inference on it too.
I'm doing inference on it. I'm a starter pickable bike.
And lower cycle bikes.
You bike it cold.
And we literally last week has been failure.
You just take your bike into the cold fight,
and then you ride it into the area of Saada,
and then you go play pickleball.
Okay, and you're wondering why everybody hates us.
Lifestyles of the abhorrent 1%.
All right, listen.
Spend a couple other rentals
that are were, Curacao with films
are worth watching.
Actually, he did versions of Shakespeare,
which I think is really interesting.
Absolutely.
So Kurosawa took on Shakespeare
and then Holly would kind of adapt it to Kurosawa.
But a couple of really good ones,
throwing a blood was Kurosawa's adaptation of Macbeth
and then Rand was his adaptation of King Lear,
two of my favorites worth checking out.
Hidden Fortress, also great.
Hidden Fortress became the basis for Star Wars.
Or was it a big influence?
Yeah, the R2-D2 and C3-P characters, C3-P-O characters,
who are like sort of telling the story,
are in the Hidden Fortress, you can see the direct
descendancy of it.
But for me, the genre I love, for course I love,
is his film The War, era, straight dog, high and low.
I mean, these are exceptional films.
And high and low, I wanted to remake
when I was thinking about being a film director
and it turns out Spielberg owns the rights.
High and low.
Incredible story, but we digress here.
Let's get to the die.
You got just one last anecdote.
Oh, the TV show Breaking Bad was inspired by Akiru,
the Kurosawa film, about a guy who finds out he's gonna die. And when he finds out he's gonna die suddenly he becomes.
His crew self, like this crew, like nature comes out.
So an incredibly poignant film that obviously inspired
the extraordinary TV show breaking that.
Yeah.
Curus is means to live in Japanese.
And this is a story of somebody who is basically lived
a modest amid. It's somebody who lived a mid life. But then I means to live in Japanese. And this is a story of somebody who has basically lived a modest amid.
It's somebody who lived a mid life.
But then at the end, decides he wants to do something meaningful with his little pittance
of money and to make an impact on the world.
And so he decides he's going to take a parking lot that's disgusting and fill a garbage
and make it into a kid's playground.
So people can enjoy their life.
It is, and it's also,
it's to share a mufune as an old man.
So in a way, this parallels their careers
and trying to do something important.
There's another one I live in fear.
So those two to live and I live in fear
about aging and getting old.
The genre, if you don't know, of course,
I'll just, you're gonna need to be a little patient
because it doesn't have a thousand cuts per minute,
like modern films, it's not the Transformers
or Marvel film, but it's well worth it
if you can get your ADHD under control.
I would start with the samurai movies.
I get the super samurai.
Seven samurai, throwing a blood and ran.
Yeah, you go there. I mean if you want to go super intellectual
Roshamon. Yeah, which is about
Truth every people's different perspective on every film theory class starts with Rossimo. Yeah, so there's your
USC film school
divergence
Save a hundred grand. Okay, we just
We'll see you all at UCL. Yeah, okay, VC market update They're virgins. Save 100 grand. Okay. We just saved 100 grand.
We'll see you all at UCL.
Yeah.
Okay.
VC market update.
Carta has released a series of funding map covering the first half of 2023.
But the data is what's interesting.
They covered and Carta basically manages capables and stuff like that for folks.
Original company was e-share as I think.
This is a funding map which just shows like how much money was raised, nothing really too consequential in there, but what's
really interesting is the data on series A rounds. Series A rounds are
typically the rounds when a benchmarker Sequoia, a craft come in and you know
join the board and put in a significant check. Before that you have angels and
seed investors and after that you have angels and seed investors
and after that, you have growth funds.
But the series A is considered like a seminal moment
in the history of a startup.
Media and Round is now 7 million raised.
That's down 26% year over year.
And this is all data from the first half of the year.
So first half of 2023 versus 2022,
which was a really crummy year,
we're down from the crummy year, we're down from the
crummy year, 26% on the dollars raise, 7 million.
And the the pre-money valuation, 40 million down, 17%.
So last year, it was 11 million raised on 48.
I don't have the 20, 21 data here, but it would be even more.
So just right off the bat, reactions, I'll sorry, you bill, girly, to what we're seeing
in this series, A space is a return to normalcy. I mean, the series A's back in the, you know,
Uber days and Airbnb days where what, five, 10 million bucks on a 30 million. So this
is a return to normalcy. Yeah, I don't think you've gone quite
back to that line, right? And so I think there's still
a significant amount of competition at that level. And the fact that it's off a little bit is
no worthy, but it's not like off 50%. I think that market remains competitive. I think there's
a number of great people out there investing at that level. And of course, the AI deals, like one thing you might be interested in is if you pulled
the AI deals out, I bet those numbers would be more akin to what they were two or three
years ago, because those are being done at 200.
Is the reason you went to angel investing or scene investing?
Let's call it because it's so crowded and competitive at the series A level and what seed investing
is now is what series A investing was for the 20 years of your career.
No.
I did.
Okay.
I think if I were practicing institutionally, I would state the series A level and take board
seats and try and get as much ownership as possible,
which is the benchmark strategy.
I am, this is more of a hobby thing for me.
Got it.
And I don't want board seats anymore.
But it's super, super crowded at series A
still to this day, yeah.
I said it was competitive.
I don't know that it's super crowded.
I think a lot of people realize that if you can get
2.5 or 3% management fee investing $300 million at a pop, that's an easier lifestyle than actually taking boards
seats and doing work. And so I think a lot of money and activity got pulled into the late stage market nearly every firm
started doing that. And once the center of gravity goes there and affirms,
you're investing 200 million a clip.
Can you imagine the Monday meetings?
Like who's paying attention to the person
that's putting 5 million out of the time?
Like it'd be hard for that.
It's like going to playing high stakes cards
and then you get invited to it.
You're playing, you know, 200, 200, 200, 200, and you go to five, 10 games.
It's up to the team and who's paying attention
to the person playing in the little game.
And so I actually think the number of people
that practice at that level has actually gone down.
Huh.
But that doesn't mean, you know,
the business since I got in only got more competitive.
And so there's still enough.
And the other thing is the founders have learned how to play, if there's 10 people doing it,
they know how to play a muscle one another, they're very skilled at it.
That's a weird thing that happened is the playbook because of podcasts, because of blog posts.
playbook because of podcasts, because of blog posts. I mean, just how to run a company and then, you know,
how to, you know, negotiate with VCs is it's all been unpacked.
Sachs, what are you seeing?
You're a series A investor.
You compete with the Sequoias, the benchmarks heads up for these
series A's.
What are you seeing in the series A?
And what do you take from this data being down 26% year over
year, which probably actually means probably 50% down from the peak? What are you seeing in the series? And what do you take from the state of being down 26% year over year, which probably
actually means probably 50% down from the peak?
What are your thoughts?
Well, yeah, the venture capital market peaked in Q4 of 2021 in terms of both valuations
and the amount of money that was being deployed and it kept going down throughout all of 2022.
And I think a bottom down in Q1 of 2023,
basically in the last several months.
And I think now the pace of deployment
has sort of stabilized.
And it's kind of stabilized at a pre-pandemic level.
So maybe at 2019 level.
Now I think that probably massed
some big differences by round. So like you're saying,
series A rounds are more competitive. There's relatively more action there. I think the late-stage
rounds, Brad can speak to this. The capital there is dried up, I think, considerably more.
And those rounds are much harder to get. And the reason I think is because that when you have
more operating history, then it's harder to raise
around based on narrative. Whereas when you're at a very early stage, you can basically just
raise money based on a dream and a story.
Yeah, the way I frame it to people is when I'm in part of this is my fault because I'm
training people in our accelerators and pre-exealers. I tell them you're either selling
promise or performance. And once you start having customers and numbers and retention, someone like SACS is gonna be like,
give me the data and they're gonna look at churn
and say, yeah, this business is too much churn,
it's a leaky bucket, whatever.
But when you're selling promise,
it's a lot easier than selling performance.
I'll tell you guys to see you.
Go.
That is a well-known CEO, public company now.
He told me, and I think, girly,
I think you guys weren't bastards.
He said as soon as we started having revenue,
our valuation felt like it went down,
as soon as we started making profit,
our valuation went down.
Because at that point, you're judged
on the quality of that stage of the business,
whereas before you could paint a picture
with a thousand words about the different paths
you might walk and everyone wants to believe the optimistic path
will be walked.
And so you can boost your valuation,
boost investor interest.
But once those numbers start to come through,
it really changes the investor criteria
for how they assess the value of the business.
12 out of people will state if they have a product launch,
telling them they'll tell you to raise money
before you launch.
Yeah, sell the promise of that launch.
Yes.
Old saying, it's better to raise on the sizzle than on the steak.
Yeah.
Unless the steak is pretty high grade.
Yeah, obviously, if the steak is great, then yes, that's the best time.
But just to take that risk off the table.
Yeah.
But just to recap, I think where we are, I think the venture capital markets have stabilized
for funding new companies.
I think there's a mania going on with AI, both in terms of the size of these rounds and
the valuations.
It's like 2021 for a lot of AI companies.
We're not participating in that craziness.
We are doing some C checks, I would say, and early stage AI companies were kind of calibrating
the size of the check with the stage and amount of risk.
And I think that's appropriate.
So you are going pre-series, A, C, putting in,
that's a 500K, $1 million check?
C is what makes the most sense.
I think for AI startups, because if you wait
for a lead around, then they're not being priced
based on fundamentals at all.
It's not.
Yeah.
So it's become.
So what check size is that 500k million?
We just did, we did one of a four million dollar check
where he led kind of a bigger seed round.
Got it, fantastic.
I love that those are called seed rounds today.
I mean, he used to be three to five million
was your series A, but yeah, sure, seed round, three to five.
I still don't understand the term pre-seed.
So just to finish the thought, I think where we're at
and you know, Brad can chime in
on this, is I think the venture capital market has stabilized for new companies, new fund
raising, however, I think there's going to be a one to two year period of distress for
all these companies that raise in the peak.
Yep.
2020, 2021, and are now running out of money and they don't have enough revenue, they're
not growing fast enough, and or their burn is too high, and all those companies are gonna be facing down rounds
or restructuring, or they're not gonna be able to raise.
And so I saw marking their books now.
We're starting to see the marking of the books.
They're gonna get marked down.
So we're gonna have probably a one to two year period
of distress for all those bubble companies,
while we have a little bit of a resurgence
for new companies.
I got another topic I'm going to go to here related, but Bradage wanted to let you chime in
on the late stage there because you operate in the BC, Sarah.
I think, and this is related to the topic I suspect we're going transition to, but listen,
there is a lot of activity in venture today, right?. We're very reflective to the stock market.
People were really scared in Q3 and Q4 of 2022.
Started in 2021, but 2022 was scary to people
because public market valuations for growth companies
were down over 50%.
So we really saw IPO markets, venture,
all start to slow down.
Coming out of that, we've seen you know stock market within
you know 10% of all time highs. We see you know this wave of AI occurring what I would tell you is
under 500 million maybe under 600 million right series B and C rounds are as hot as I've ever seen them
in data infrastructure and AI and software,
etc. So there is a lot of competition there. The later stage stuff, which as you know, I call
Quasie Public. So if a company is over a billion dollars, right? Now you're very reflexive relative
to what's happening in the public markets. We're starting to see activity. I just read WizRaze
more money. It's got $200 million, ARR raised at $10 billion. So those markets are definitely-
50 times revenue. Yeah, we did not participate. 50 times revenue.
You know, so there is definitely activity. I know a deal we got called on yesterday,
raising $2.5 billion at $100 billion. There is a lot of activity. However, sacks is right. There is, you know, remember, we had a thousand unicorns at the end of
2021. And I've said 100% of those are going to do it down around. And we're still in the
early stages of that reset to occur. There was some, you know, there's a report out this
week that lots of people coming on Twitter where public markets were down 50% and private marks were down, I don't know, 5 to 10%. Like that will
all normalize. It's all going to be down, you know, the same. So that's the only place I don't see
activity. Underperforming companies that were valued over a billion dollars, those are dead
on arrival until you get to a market clearing price and we're not there yet. Okay, so the other big issue here is a lot of money was raised by VCs, commonly known
as dry powder in the industry, but there are some misconceptions about this dry powder.
People are saying, oh my God, all this money is going to come flowing into the ecosystem.
Kumbaya, it's going to be the roaring 20s again.
However, Bill, you did a little tweet storm.
What people don't realize is when we refer to dry powder at VC firms, the VCs do not have that $250
billion or whatever it is, quarter trillion dollars sitting in their bank accounts. That money
is sitting in another person's bank account, LPs, Harvard's endowment, CalPERS, sovereign wealth funds, etc.,
it has not been drawn down by the VCs yet. So, Bill, why is this an important fact for people
to understand? And one of the dynamics that LPs are dealing with.
Yeah, and there's a ton of dynamics between the GPs at the venture capitalists and the LPs at those endowments that Brad
started to hit on one of those, which is the marks aren't in the right place.
And so the thing you just explained critical Jason, which is you don't actually have the
money. There's no venture firms sitting around with all of the money that they've got
committed to their fund in a bank account.
This just taking...
Why not?
Why does that not actually occur?
Because people would say, oh, you raised a billion from these folks, they gave you
the billion, right?
Why not take it down?
It's one of the brilliant realities of the way that a LP agreement works with a venture
fund is they're not on the IRR clock until they actually pull the money down.
So they... Explain what that means.
They charge fees based on the total committed amount, but they don't actually draw the money
down and get gazed on the performance of their investment until they need it.
And so a classic venture firm will do five, six drawdowns over a 10-year period of a fund.
And so they don't act, they literally don't have the money. A couple
of other things worth noting. So, and some of that I didn't put in the tweet, but the marks
aren't right. And everyone kind of quietly knows that the marks aren't right. But there's
actually no incentive to get to marks, right? Here's what a mark is to folks. So private companies
have evaluation that's assessed either by the GP themselves
in most cases, which is a bit of a conflict of interest, sometimes by your auditor,
he and why, whoever's auditing your venture fund, but of course the techniques they have for
assessing valuation are extremely crude because they're not market based. They're not public
companies. Yeah, and so there's actually not a way to know they have a
extremely complicated cap tables.
The other thing is,
many LPs
are actually bonnest on
the paper mark. And this is something that a lot of people don't realize.
And so they don't have an incentive to dial around to the DPs
and say, get your marks right,
because it's actually going to affect poorly on them
if they were to roll those up.
Both of them are, both of the LP and the GP
are in a dance there.
Hey, we know that Stripe is not worth 100 billion right now.
It's worth 50 billion.
But if you mark it down, I don't get my bonus.
I'm the person who's giving you money for your next fund.
And so when we're assessing,
hey, how much are we gonna give you for your next fund?
We're gonna look at the performance
of previous funds as an indicator.
I placed back on what you just said.
I agree with what you just said, except no one has
the explicit conversation.
It's an emergent behavior of the time to have a system.
Show me an incentive.
I'll show you an outcome kind of situation, but there's no
I've never heard of an LP like brow being gps to get their marks right like especially on the downside never heard of that ever those marks can be done
By and what like you said they could be done by around a financing
And then there's the secondary market weird secondary market
And then there's the secondary market, weird secondary market. Secondary market can do it.
And sometimes LPs have this weird situation where different venture firms are marketing
companies, like radically different prices, which creates some interesting dynamics as well.
Okay, so I did the Siri, I did the seed round of Stripe, where I'm Y Combinator, and I
say, you know what?
50 billion is fine.
We're going to market at 50 billion because we invested at two million in Stripe.
But then whoever did the series G or whatever it's up to,
we did the hundred billion dollar mark.
It's like, yeah, we'll mark it down to 90.
But somebody Calpers or Harvard has the same share class
in two different funds at two different prices.
So then you could really try and go in on reality, huh?
Another dynamic that makes it powder less dry,
that I didn't mention in the tweet store,
imagine you're on your first or second venture fund.
Well, imagine you're a fund that used to just have
a one fund, but they've expanded to four funds.
Okay, now, imagine you don't have
a lot of liquidity proof points on those funds. Now, imagine you don't have a lot of liquidity proof points on those funds. Do you
really want to run out of money and go test whether or not you can raise your third fund or your
second fund? Or do you want to wait and see if you can develop some track records? Because you may
be facing the imminent death of your firm if you run out too quickly and go back to market
and there is no market.
So I have a hundred million dollar fund.
It's my third fund.
Okay, what pace am I going to do this?
Am I going to do it in 24 months or 18 months
like maniacs were doing during the P,
where am I going to take a 36 month approach
or more traditional three year deployment?
If I even if I take a 40 month deployment,
hey, I got time to work out all these issues
in the previous portfolio.
Sacks, you've heard this sort of dynamic,
what are your thoughts on the dry powder issue?
You yourself have a lot of dry powder, I understand.
So how do you think about it?
We do have a lot of dry powder,
and we're going really slow.
I mean, there's no feeling that we have to rush out
and deploy this capital.
And one of the things that's interesting about the period
we've been in that's been surprising to me is that our metrics actually haven't changed. I mean,
the things that we're looking for in a software company haven't really changed. We look for a
certain amount of ARR, certain growth rates, certain amount of net dollar attention, certain
CAC, certain capital efficiency. That bar hasn't changed for us, but the number of companies meeting
that bar has gone down considerably.
Because they have headwinds because customers are in austerity measures or companies are going out of business and saying,
hey, let me consolidate my SaaS tools. Enterprise buyers are sharpening their pencils.
They are trying to consolidate vendors. There's a lot of headwinds in the buying cycle right now.
Yeah.
And it's a little bit like, I don't know if you remember in the .com crash 20-something
years ago. Oh, I remember it. Yeah. So back in 1999 2000, the conventional wisdom was
that the company you wanted to be in was Yahoo, because Yahoo was profitable. And when all
these startups went out of business, Yahoo would be the way that you could own a piece of
the future of the internet, but you wouldn't have to take all the startup risk.
And then it turned out that all of Yahoo's revenues went away because their revenues were
coming from banner advertisements bought by startups which were funded by VC dollars.
So when you had the whole.com crash, Yahoo's business dried up.
So then Yahoo lost whatever it was.
The time went out, it turned out a lot of people were wearing swim trunks. It was. Yeah. So so Yahoo's business was actually highly correlated with startup funding.
And I think there's been an aspect of that with a lot of these companies where you would think that they're pretty insulated from the business cycle.
Even like especially the enterprise software companies, there's a lot of software companies that were selling to other startups.
That was pretty obvious.
They're going to be impacted.
But even the ones selling to enterprise companies have been affected in subtle ways.
They're just aren't that many startups right now hitting that same bar that they were
hitting just a couple of years ago. Trevor Burk, your thoughts on this LP, GP dynamics and dry pattern?
I mean, I think, I mean, one aspect on the same front of VCs being somewhat reticent
to deploy more capital, it's flowing through to the LP space and girly can probably pine on this, or
sack can probably pine on this too.
But, and all of you guys obviously could, but it's been apparent in the last year that
LPs are wondering what do they have?
What are these portfolios ultimately really going to be worth?
What's the actual cash distributions?
And I think there's these new rules right currently where you got to distribute 5% of your assets each year to the institution that
you're meant to represent.
Yeah, I'll explain this. You're an endowment. You're obligated to not just grow your endowment
both either from the board of the like the Adama Board of Trustees of University or I
think there was a tax provision put in that if you're not distributing 5% then you're
exposed to tax on the returns.
And so there's a unquestionable potential issue with LPs around their own liquidity.
So they've all followed the Dave Swinson model where they've all got 50% or even more
in illiquid assets.
You move into a cyclical decline
where the number of IPOs and liquidity events,
both for BC's and PE,
remember PE's way bigger than BC's.
Private equity.
Aren't coming.
And then the drawdowns keep coming.
And so you have to meet the drawdowns.
You're not getting any liquidity.
Your constituent needs 5% liquidity.
And now you have cash crunch.
Now you have cash crunches in LP.
And I think GPs are aware of this issue. So, you know, do you want to provoke that or not?
Right, so maybe you run early or you run late, You don't want to be in the middle. I'll just say anecdotally, it seems LPs are more reticent.
I've heard several folks talk about how they're reducing commitments by 50% two thirds
or in some cases 100%.
Particularly after the mad rush for capital over the last couple of years, or capital commitments
I would say for the last couple of years.
And so the downstream effect of that ultimately, as the current funds get deployed, there
are fewer new funds and less new capital being committed from these LPs into new funds.
You know, last forward two or three years.
And there's going to be less capital available.
And so it keeps the bar high.
This is a while this is, you know, and so the bar I think is only going to get higher over the next couple of years as that capital cycle moves its way through the system.
It's probably worth explaining what Freeberg was talking about in terms of a commitment. So you
may have a let's just say University X has committed 25 million to funds three through
five for venture fund Z. And now they're saying in the next fund we're going to be at 10
instead of 25.
When they say they're making that commitment, that capital gets deployed by the venture
investor over the next on average, call it five years.
So the reduction in a commitment this year
means that there's less capital to invest
over the next three to five years.
And so that gets played out as we fast forward,
we're still sitting on funds from the last couple of years
as those funds get invested.
The new funds are gonna be smaller,
there's gonna be fear of them.
And that's when the market gets much tighter in the next couple of years.
Brad, this seems like the greatest setup ever.
Feels like the setup last year of buying equities when everybody was scared.
If everybody is tightening their belts, if VC funds are not going to deploy, this feels
like the time to be deploying.
So maybe you could talk a little bit about this austerity, measures coming or just bell tightening,
or some people may be getting out of the venture business
who we shouldn't have been in it to begin with.
All of this seems like a great setup for more discipline
and more discipline founders.
If the VC's have to be disciplined,
doesn't that trickle down to the portfolio companies?
100%, and while this might happen,
while this might happen, Well, this might happen.
I'm going to take the other side.
I don't think that's what the lived experiences of most VCs
in Silicon Valley today on Series A, Series B, Series C
is certainly not in the area we're competing.
We're seeing four, five, $600 million deals
get done on zero revenue, two, three million dollars
in revenue.
And so let me just throw out perhaps an alternative
view as to why this might look a little different
than the world of austerity that we saw in 2002, 2003,
2009, 10, 11.
The first is, right, the stock market is near an all time high.
And we know that the venture markets
are reflexive to the stock market.
We talked about that.
The second reason, which I think is interesting is is most firms on average are a lot bigger. Okay. That creates
two issues. We have a situation where younger partners and principals who all did deals
that were overvalued over the last few years, they want to put some points on the board
in a reprised deal because they have to have some winners. So you have this principal agent
problem. The people who used to check them were the senior partners, right, the investment committee.
But now they have a lot of mouths to feed. So when you put money to work, you pull down more fee.
And so, you know, these funds, now, I mean, if you're tiger or some of these big funds,
you have giant cost bases that you've created because of the size of the firm that you created
The third is the nature of LPs and Bill mentioned, you know Dave Swinson in 2002
MIT Yale Harvard they would call you know who were the early backers of enter firms
They would call these venture guys up and say listen we're hurting. There were a lot of mark downs.
We need to slow down the pace of deployment, right?
And so they were a factor.
LP said, slow it down.
I'm not hearing that out of LPs today.
Okay.
And I think one of these change, I certainly am hearing it out of traditional LPs, some
family offices, some endowments, but
pensions, sovereign wealth funds, et cetera, who now represent a much bigger percentage
of the total capital-based adventure.
They have money coming out of the ground every day that they need to deploy, like they did
in private equity.
And so again, I'm not saying this for certain, And certainly there are more discerning sovereign wealth funds than others who are saying,
don't speed up the pace of deployment.
But I'm wondering if that change in the nature of the LP
base is also contributing to this, you know,
as Zach's called AI Mania.
Yeah, I mean, we see it in Hollywood.
Some new actors come in.
They want to build a brand.
We saw the Russians do it, we saw the Japanese do it.
And you see China do it.
People come in, new entrance at the table.
They get splashy cashy.
They want to place a lot of bats.
They want to make a name for subpolda brand.
So that's an interesting counterpoint.
Our entire business, of course, is based on exits.
The highest form of exit, I guess, is an IPO.
And over price acquisition would be the second.
And there's a secondary market for shares as a distant third.
It looks like the IPO window might be cracking open a bit,
and some people are being forced.
The guns to the head, arm owned by Softbank,
Maseo Shisan, looking to raise 10 billion,
had a 50, 60, 70 billion dollar valuation,
could be the largest IPO of the year.
Instacart, looking at a $12 billion valuation,
Reddit kinda went dark,
they had a couple of problems with their community,
but they were in line, stripe obviously in line,
clavios, got a $5 billion valuation,
and then we saw a couple of, what I'll say,
our non-traditional
companies going public, something called Shark Ninja.
I saw in public, we had a little conversation about this bread, person, they have a market
cap of $4.3 billion, they had a pop of 40%, half a Greek food chain, UPA.
They went public and have a market cap of $5 billion. Surf air, a company I'd passed on investing in,
but was intrigued by, they do pilates shuttles
between places on the west coast here,
little short runs, they did a direct listing in July.
Market cap of 85 million didn't go well.
Bill, Gurley is the IPO window opening
for our people kind of on the ledge,
who have no choice but to jump
and hope for the best?
One thing we didn't probably spend enough time on in the last topic, which I'll just
hit on briefly, is the complexity of those unicorns.
So Brad mentioned, I saw a deck that said there were more private unicorns than public
tech companies, so for a billion billion dollars at one point in time,
which is shocking.
But because those companies grew up in the 99, 22, 21 timeframe
where you could raise money at excessive valuation,
their cap charts are very complex and rigid.
They have different lick preferences at different places.
And they've got board members who all have different marks and are all very
worried about whether this thing can get to a certain place or not. And so it's very difficult to come
in and do another private round in those situations. You might have to you might have to put the
return in a guaranteed pick dividend IPO or some complex derivative. And a lot of people, I think Brad would agree with
this, a lot of people just say they opt out and say, no, this is too hard. I'm not going
to go in there and negotiate with five different constituencies on how to do is you can't just
do a simple investment because of that.
Okay, so it's gotten two complex, which then if the buyers of those shares do not want
to be involved in that crazy, okay,
is Stripeworth or just pick Stripe as an example, 50 billion or 100 billion and the last investors
are at 100 YC in a 2 million. Yeah, sure, maybe a bad example just because their total
lip-press stack may still be a fraction of their market stock. For a lot of these unicorns,
the lip-press stack can be very close to their market cap for
their today's valuation and that's what creates.
So you have a billion.
Real structural problem.
You got a billion dollars in investment in the company and liquidation.
Money that has to come out to pay those investors, but the company is only worth two billion
or a billion.
And now it's, yeah.
When you get to that place, sometimes going public is just the easiest way to clean it all
up. Because everybody converts to common and we just, the company starts trading and reality
is reality.
It's kind of like taking the medicine.
Yeah, and I think that happened when one good example was Square at one point had done
a derivative financing on top that was somewhat problematic and they just felt like they had
to get out and they did and it cleaned up the
cap chart and one thing I've been waiting on we'll see if it happens but because of hyper competition
and investing in 99 2020, 20, 20, 20, 20, there was a term removed for most term sheets that gave
investors the right to protect their lichpref on. That's gone in most of these cases. So you could convert lickpref
Under which for a founder or an early stage angel investor would be a huge win. Got it. Whereas if you sold a company in M&A
The lickpref would play does that make sense? Yes, so the last investor comes in. they're getting a multiple of their money back, except in an IPO.
Right, and the IPO happens, you know, yeah.
And I suspect most of those late stage investors keep assumed that their investment has a debt-like floor
on Lycpref, and if this were to start to happen, or recaps, which can also be done. Self-inflicted recaps I have seen many times
just to get past the structural complexity. Either one of those things could wipe out that
leg prep. So NetNet, Gurley, more IPOs are going to happen. I think you will see that.
There's two things. I think that cleaning up complexity is a great reason for the public market. And Brad already said,
we've seen a massive recovery in software stocks, like the marks are better than they were
two years ago. So Brad or Saks, just M&A-wise, we've seen Lena Khan, we've discussed it many times,
seems to be saying all business equals bad, any merger equals bad,
she's going to attempt to throw coal water on any merger that's happening.
So M&A seems to be being taken off the plate by not just Lena Con, but also the EU's seems
to be turning the screws.
So if we don't have an M&A market, then that means there's only an IPO market.
Correct.
I mean, that's just another one of the reasons
that is pressuring these companies.
These companies need to race capital.
So just to double click on what Bill said
and put some numbers around it, right?
Because we read a lot of stats about how many IPOs there were.
So I had the team pull some figures.
480 IPOs, US IPOs in 2020, a thousand, thirty-five,
so a huge bubble in 21, 181 in 22, and 123. Okay, but I think that over states, right, because we
had a lot of SPACs and crappy IPOs. So it really over states, the quality IPOs. So, you know, we're
one of the major buyers in tech IPOs. So I just went to the team and said, how many IPOs. So it really overstates the quality IPOs. So you know, we're one of the major buyers in tech
IPOs. So I just went to the team and said, how many IPOs were we tracking and did we consider
participating in during these years? So that was 46 in 2020, a hundred in 2021, three in 2022,
and zero year to date in 2023.
Okay.
Don't wanna be in the Greek food.
So, but what I would say is I just returned from Deer Valley
this week where Morgan Stanley's putting on a conference,
talking to their big potential IPO buyers.
We are now queued up as you and I,
we had this tweet exchange, Jason this week.
And I said, you know, in that exchange,
the world's normalized,
fear of COVID's past, hyperinflations past, et cetera. First-class IPOs are coming and
a bunch of down-round IPOs are coming. So let me just explain really quickly on that.
Right. You mentioned Instacart, right? Super high-quality company. I think its last private
round was 50 or 60 billion in the bubble. And now it's rumored to be going public at somewhere
around $10 billion. Okay. So that represents the reset that will have to happen. And as Bill said,
if you were a investor in that last round of Instacart and you were buying preferred shares and
thought you were protected, that preference is washed, right? So you're going to be down 50, 60,
70% on those preferred shares because you're going to be down 50, 60, 70 percent on those preferred shares because you're going
to be converted into common in that IPO.
It's the right thing for the company to do.
It's the right thing for the investors to do.
It cleans up the cap table.
So that is an example of the down-round IPOs of high-quality companies that you're going
to see come public.
Then you're going to have folks like ARM,
like byte dance,
data bricks would be another one of these.
I think that, you know, sneak
that would be more in that Instacart camp, you know,
like there will be some discount relative
perhaps to their fully diluted last round's valuation,
but these make no mistake about it.
High quality companies that will lubricate
and altimeter will compete for those IPOs
because these bankers are hell will compete for those IPOs because
these bankers are hell bent on pricing these IPOs at a discount to fair value.
They need them to work.
They need to bring buyers back into the IPO market because these companies need liquidity.
So suddenly the banks need to get wins for the people buying these shares.
As opposed to in the past, they were like, yeah, we're just selling a security at the market rate, whatever that famous,
the famous model log from, always the movie, was that Jeremy Irons who gives that
monologue, we're selling securities to informed buyers and that's it. It's a pretty dark scene.
So it won't be a light switch, Jason, but I do think...
Margin call. Margin call, Thank you. It was Jeremy Irons. I don't think it'll look like a light switch
but it will be I think we're gonna see five six seven IPOs, good size IPOs in Q4. We'll
probably see closer to 10 in Q1 and then it will start opening up in the back half of next year.
In part because boards of directors will begin to realize, you know what, we have to go public.
If it's down-round, who cares?
It's acceptable.
And this is really healthy.
We need these companies.
And by the way, I'm in the Bill Gurley camp.
You should not stay private forever.
You should get your company.
If you have 100 or 200 million in revenue,
get your company public.
Innovate and grow in the public markets
with the discipline and cadence of the public markets.
And if it's, if it's, you should expect the prices lower because the world was out of
their mind in 20 and 21 and multiples of reset.
That's actually shared a, a new story with me just about some of the incredible returns
in the golden or venture capital, Washington University, Duke University.
Some of these endowments just exploded in value.
I remember when the circle came out.
It was September 29, 2021, less than two years ago.
We were all feeling really good about our industry.
As it turns out, the whole thing was inflated by all the free money that the Fed had airdrop.
So the public markets were really frothy.
It was basically very bubbly, especially for gross stocks.
You had all these new IPOs and SPACs and so forth, and they were super bubbly.
And the result was that the returns, both realized returns and on paper for these endowments were massive.
So, if you think about the LP community, if they're making commitments in 2021, the way
they do that is they look at the total value of their endowments and then they allocate
a certain percentage by asset class, so they'll allocate a certain percentage to public
markets, certain percentage to real estate, private equity, and then VC.
So if the overall value of the endowment is really big, then that percentage that goes
to VC is going to be really big too.
And then what happened is you had this huge correction over the next couple of years.
And so one of the things we heard from the LP community last year is a problem they
called the denominator effect.
It's planned.
Yep.
Well, the value of their portfolios had gone down a lot because the public markets were
down.
Well, is it something like 50% in some cases, yeah.
For growth stocks and like 15%, 20% for the entire market.
Right.
So, the value that portfolio was down, but the venture capital part of that was not down
both because of the lag and getting
fresh marks, and then also because they had already made commitments to new VC funds
at the peak of the market.
So all of a sudden the percentage of their portfolio that was VC-related, roughly doubled.
And so that's why all of a sudden the LP commitments have dried up is because they're
over allocated to VC.
Yeah. Now as a public markets have come back this year, then that problem mitigates to some degree.
But yes, I think it's still out there. And I think this is why you're seeing certainly domestic
LPs really slow their allocations to venture capital as they stole the denominator problem.
Now, I think that's less of an issue overseas.
I think Jake, how you observe that the four seasons of the bar at the Dubai course.
Abu Dhabi bar look like a rosewood to Brad Pitt's.
It's a little over there.
I literally got stopped four times from the elevator to the front door.
I am not kidding.
Four people stopped me.
That's two more than would stop me at the rosewood going to the front door. I am not kidding. Four people stopped me. That's two more than would stop me
at the Rosewood going to the front door. It was bond. You should recognize that as a hyper attractor
for where available money was relative to the US dollars and whether they were available.
Yeah. I think we're in for a period here. period of just continued to stress and pain even though
the market is sort of normalized or stabilized now. Again, I just think we've been in a huge
software recession for the last year. Yeah, I mean, it's been massed by the fact that the rest
of the economy seems to be okay, but this is the worst software recession we've been in. I think
it's the dot-com crash. I mean, the buyers have been laying off employees by the thousands.
And since software is bought on a per seat basis, the market has really condensed.
We had one startup that was selling to Twitter and they got a renewal and I think they're
contract with.
80% off?
80% off because he launched eight off eight percent of the employees.
Yeah.
And that's before negotiating the last 20%, which you could negotiate 50% off that.
I told them they did a great job.
It's getting that 20% because he wants to get everything.
Yeah.
I was like really impressed.
They were able to renew a 20% of last year's value.
You know what?
We had a vendor.
We had a vendor and this vendor went on for far too long and you know what?
If you go out, you know, two, three nights in a row until four or five
in the morning, that next week is going to be painful and suffering.
That's what the industry is going through.
It's just going to take a lot of cold plunges and infrared and pickleball and, you know,
sag to feel good again in this industry.
One thing I would like in retrospect that I think super interesting about the venture
capital cycle, one, I think super interesting about the venture capital cycle.
One, I think it's inherently cyclical and it's always going to be that way unless we fundamentally
change the structure of the industry, because it just invites competition and there's no
barriers to entry.
But I wouldn't talk to some LPs that have been in the business for a very long period of time.
And the vast majority of the reason venture outperforms other asset classes has to do with
these tiny windows when you have a super prodding market.
And if you aren't around for that part, if you strip those years out of a 40-year assessment,
it's actually not that interesting in asset class, which highlights the need for venture funds to get liquidity at the peak.
Yes, right when we are at the peak is when people get the most brazen, the most confident, and they start talking about how we're going to hold forever. had venture firms with the biggest positions I've ever had in their entire life,
go over the waterfall and basically evaporate
what could have been returned.
Yeah, I mean, Diamond Hands can come back and bite you
and you've said famously,
what was the line you had to candy an IRR?
Well, you can't.
I don't think I said it, but it's been said.
Yeah.
Since we're on our movie Bender here, for those of you haven't seen Margin Call, just
one of the great scenes ever.
This is the best scene, the whole scene, by the way, like the best scene, I think of
modern finance films.
So look at this murderous crime.
Will we selling this to?
Same people we've been selling it to for the last two years and whoever else will buy it.
But John, if you do this, you will kill the market for years.
It's over.
And you're selling something that you know has no value.
We are selling to willing buyers of the current fair market price so that we may survive.
Oh, man.
You can rationalize a lot on. Oh, man.
We can rationalize a lot on Wall Street, man.
Yeah, but what Bill's saying is that the opposite took place, which is VCs drink the
cool aid and didn't sell when we're at the peak of the market.
They also got caught up in a competition of trying to appeal to the founder community is saying,
hey, we're in it forever, we're going to hold forever
where your best friend, forever.
But Bill, there was also this element
that drove that strategic rationale, this data set,
which is the best performers in tech
generated most of the value after they went public.
I mean, there's a trillion dollars of market value generated in Nvidia, in Apple, in Google,
in Amazon, all over the many years post-going public.
And if you read Sequoia's notes when they kind of made the transition that they made, they
said, we don't want to walk away from the power law, that the
power law continues to accumulate in a crew, even in the public markets, and we want to
continue to participate in that, because there's another 100x upside coming from here, in
the ones that we select, we want to stay with, not necessarily we're going to stay in all
of them.
Back to be determined.
There are some that we believe are still a hundred x upside from here, and just because there's
an IPO, it doesn't mean that we want to exit the position
that there's now more capital available to them,
more public currency they can use to do transactions,
to hire, et cetera.
And we want to participate in that value creation.
And the last double could be the biggest, right, Bill?
I think the total number of companies
that meet that criteria in the history of the venture industry
is like 10 or 15.
And you name many of them.
And the problem is that the rhetoric becomes common narrative
and it becomes part of the ethos of the firm.
And people want to apply it to every single company
and the whole thing.
That's right, totally.
And that's not true.
And it doesn't apply.
I don't want to get too specific here,
but you had a come, you had, you know, you do have some, let's say, season vets, yourself included Bill, who, when given the opportunity to get
liquidity on an incredible investment, we'll do so, Fred Wilson sold, I think, all of
Queen base, when it goes public.
He just clears the position when things go public.
That's been his philosophy, kind of the antithesis of what Sukhoi and Rulof
are doing with some of their holdings.
And then we've seen, we work,
has an existential crisis.
They don't think this might be a viable concern anymore,
but famously, benchmark was able to sell shares
at a very high valuation at some point
and lock in an incredible return, yeah.
Yeah. Okay, there it is, folks. That's return, yeah? Yeah.
Okay, there it is, folks.
That's it.
Yeah, okay.
So, let me ask you a question, Bill, about getting older.
Well, let me ask you a question.
Sorry.
Let me ask you a question, Bill.
I mean, older and larger.
Well, sex, sex, like, pre-brech,
like your name wants to be the world's 17th
best moderate ago.
Sex, you have an investment in SpaceX, right?
I mean, there's been a lot of secondary action in SpaceX.
Why would you not sell SpaceX at this valuation today?
Or maybe did he, as you kind of think about this, yeah?
I think we're going to wait till the company IPOs.
I think that would be our default.
When it goes public sex, do you then think,
what's the upside from here?
Or do you think my job is done?
I think my job is done. Yeah, I think my job is done? I think my job is done.
Yeah, I think my job is done.
I think what we do is just to read the shares and then each LP can make their own decision
about whether they want to hold it or not.
And you are the key to the side of the issue.
What do I think you want to do with your share?
Yeah, one of the nice things about distributions is that nobody has to sell.
So everyone can make their own decision about whether to hold or not.
Yeah. Once the company is public and the public has all the information through disclosures,
the odds that I know something special that a season public market investor doesn't,
that's probably pretty low. I mean, they great.
Paredox of what we all do and Brad, you have both a public and a private portfolio.
I started trading public market equities to get better at my private behavior.
Bill, you've done that forever is public markets.
You can't trade on inside information private companies.
That's all you're trading on.
Maybe you could speak to a little bit about being what do they call it when you do
both crossover investors that make you a crossover investor,
is that the proper term?
Well, Bill Gurley's the original crossover investor.
He's been trading public stocks since, you know,
and-
But he'd been doing that first.
Yeah, researching him.
You know, but, you know, the fact of the matter
as he has Warren Buffett and, you know,
who would laugh at the idea of a crossover fund,
he's been running one of the world's largest public portfolios
and private portfolios forever.
He would say, I invest in great companies that are mispriced.
There are moments in the market cycle
where late-stage venture is mispriced to the downside.
And there are moments in the cycle
where the public markets are mispriced to the downside.
What we saw in 2021 is the private markets
were crazily overvalued. In 2022, we had this massive
correction in the public markets. We believed that they overshot in part, we believe that,
because we didn't think we're going to have hyperinflation forever, et cetera. And so
you and I invested in, you know, Meta and a lot of other things that were on their ass,
you've got to buy in the public market when there's blood in the streets, right?
As Buffett says, buy when they're blood in the streets and sell when there's trumpets
in the air, and you know, there are definitely blood in the streets when you saw things
down 60, 70, 80, 90 percent.
Is it trumpets now?
Does it feel like trumpets to you now or does it feel like trumpets next quarter or
the quarter after?
If you look at people are polishing those trumpets right now.
Yeah, I mean, a lot of it obviously depends on your view on what's going to happen in
the economy, fundamentally, and I'm happy to shift to that.
But what I would say is this, remember the chart that I've showed many time about software
internet valuations, we were, you know, 70% above normal and then we were 30% below normal.
And now we're closer to the training 10-year average of internet and software evaluations.
They're always outliers on both sides of this.
But I would say a lot of the positive arbitrage that we saw in 22 has been squeezed out of
the public markets and we're close to fair value.
So now if you want to generate alpha, this is going to be about picking
individual winners versus individual losers. This is going to, you know, like the beta
trade on map on global macro, I think has largely played out, you know, the catch up back
to kind of fair value. And now I think there's a debate between kind of hard landing, soft
landing, are we going to have a re acceleration inflation or not have a re acceleration? Where you come down on these major issues, I think dictates whether or not, soft landing, are we going to have a re-acceleration inflation or not have a re-acceleration? Where you come down on these major issues, I think, dictates whether or not, you know,
now is a good time for us.
You could pivot for us now, I think.
Well, can I correct something?
You said, J.K.O.
Yeah, please.
All right.
So you said that public markets inside information isn't allowed, whereas private markets
it's all inside information.
I think that could give viewers a misleading impression of what we do as VCs. Okay. The way that around typically comes together, it's
not like we get tipped off by some insider at the company in some nefarious way. What
happens is that the company chooses to engage with us or a select number of firms in a process, and then gives us their metrics and gives us
the business plan and gives us the forecast.
And it's all done in a very above board way.
It's not like we're being tipped.
However, the part of it that I guess is true
is that a private company does not necessarily engage
with everyone in the world.
You might contact them on the website, a quarterly report, and say,
here's what our revenue and our cost were, and here's our earnings.
Although some private companies do start that process
before they're in large.
They don't.
They're selective about who they want to be on their cap table.
And that's the big difference between a private company.
A public company doesn't care who's on its cap table.
It doesn't really know.
Who's got, you know, Apple doesn't know every shareholder and who's got an account set,
e-trade or what are Charles Schwab.
I mean, they may care who their biggest shareholders are, but they don't care who the average
shareholder is.
Whereas a private company really does care.
And part of the reason why they care is because these startups are highly risky and they want to have investors who have a track record of behavior where
they don't have to worry about being so. Yeah, they go loose every time something doesn't
work out, which is most of the time. So I think there's good reasons why startups want
to control who their investors are. By the way, there's also the issue of value ad, right?
I mean, other things being equal founders and startups
would rather have investors who can help them
as opposed to simply, you know, John Q. Public.
Yeah, I mean, you mentioned both centers.
You don't want somebody who's a Neophyte,
who's gonna cause chaos and be upset
when revenue goes down or things are swinging up and down.
And yeah, if you're a public, yeah, buy the share if you want or sell the share if you
want, it's a marketplace.
Sorry, just pull up this image I just posted.
This is from, you know, you guys know GoKill Roger on?
GoKill is a great human.
We used to work together at Google.
Then he worked with Jack at Square.
He's at DoorDash today.
And he was a leader at Facebook after Google
But he did this tweet
last month
Any tech venture investor who compares their funds return to the S&P is being naive or just in
Genus the correct index to compare to is the QQQ
You know the NAFDAC composite and it's a performance has been mindoggling. And as you can see here, over a 20-year investment period, if you basically just buy the top 10
public tech stocks and at the end of each year rebalance to the top 10 at the end of the
year, your multiple over that period of time is 24x.
Over 20 years.
Over 20 years.
Yeah, and over a 10 year period.
There's quite a bit of hindsight bias here
in saying when you look at the top 10, right?
It's like, how do you determine?
Yeah, no.
You know, 20, why not top 100?
I mean, are you willing to say that
for the next 10 years,
that you should only buy the top 10?
What if over the next 10 years,
it's more of the field versus the top 10, you know, the next 10 years, it's more of the field versus the top
10, you know, the next one.
Part five.
Yeah.
I think comparing VC as an asset class to the NASDAQ makes a lot of sense.
I think that's fair.
Yeah.
And that's the second column from the right, which is basically, you know, you would,
yeah, 5.2X over 10 years.
So if you're not beating 5.2x, which is a totally liquid investment
if you just bought the QQQ index. What this shows is Apple, Google, Facebook and Amazon have had an
a massive run up. Well, that's not that's not that's actually not true, Jake, out because if you look at
just the static, it doesn't outperform.
It's the rebalance that outperforms, which is whoever is winning in the market, meaning
whoever is gaining market value each year, is he then double down your dollars into for
next year.
And that's changed over a 20 year cycle, over a 10 year cycle.
And it really starts to play out over time.
But I mean, yeah, if you just look at the QQQ, that's the benchmark as an investor,
as a private investor. And you know, GoKill's comment in his tweet is that, you know, if they can return, call it 7 to 8x over 10 years, or in this case 5x over 10 years, you could argue that
a venture fund needs to return a significant premium, probably a 25-30% premium due to the
liquidity and the riskiness of the investment cycle there. Whereas the QQQ you can just sell anytime you want.
So you know, call it a, you know, you need to kind of be demonstrating a 30% premium to
the 5.2X tenure, which is about six and a half, seven X cash on cash.
I mean, according to this, the ventrastic class is super overfunded, so why is that then?
Gurly, do you have a point of view?
Yeah, I mean, it would be completely speculative, but I do think if you look at the structure of endowments, you know, you've, you've had a few people really leading the way in terms of a playbook with Swenson, you know, Dave Swenson, who passed away recently, but if Swenson he created the YELLDON.
Right, yeah, yeah, he ran YELLS in Domingo and is considering.
And I think, you know, the vast majority of people decided they were going to follow
that playbook, which had a, you know, oversized investment in illiquid assets, PE, venture,
real estate commodities, those kind of things. And I think it led to just a massive
like, and these things take forever to figure out if they're right or not. If your portfolio
is over 50%, a liquid like who knows what's right and what's wrong. You could do a re, you know,
you could, there were years where Yale was printing like 27%
a year.
And then in one reset, no nine wiped out, you know, a ton of that.
So it's super hard to know.
But I think that philosophy became broadly adopted.
Yeah.
Well, look at, can you pull out this chart real quick?
This is a chart from Satista that is
value of venture capital investment in the US from 2006 to 2022. And what you see is there's
basically a few different levels. Before 2014, call it, the industry was basically a $50 billion
of your industry in terms of deployments, then you had a run up where
for several years it was around a hundred billion.
And then in the pre-pandemic year, 2018, 1920, it was around a hundred and fifty billion
a year of deployment.
And then it went totally nuts in 2021.
It was three and fifty billion.
Started to come down in 2022 to about $250 billion. I think where we are right now is kind of at that 2019 level of about $150 billion a year.
The question is like what it should be.
I mean should this be a $150 billion a year industry?
Should this be a $100 billion a year industry?
Should this be a $50 billion a year industry?
It sounds like a $100 to $ fifty would have been the steady state and
Bill some portion of this is stay private longer having an impact where those last couple
of rounds were the big huge juicy rounds.
And if people had gone public in year 789 like Microsoft Google, not Google but Microsoft
and let me Google it.
What year was Google when it went out eight? You know, going out a little bit earlier would have chopped off some percentage of this growing?
Yeah, and I do think one of the most interesting things to watch is going to be how these 1000 unicorns,
private unicorns play out because not only do they have the cat structure problem,
but they lived and grew up in a day and age where they were told growth at all cost and
It it's super hard culturally to go from that type of execution to the principal type execution
You guys have been promoting over the past several months. It's just hard. It's not impossible
But it's very very Google and public in your six. Yeah. That's 23 million of total venture raised, I think,
prior to IPO.
But think about what that means.
If a lot of those unicorns are fake,
what does that say about innovation in the American economy?
We had this narrative over the last decade
that the pace of innovation had fundamentally increased
because of the availability of tools and technology.
And so you had a lot more unicorns being created. I mean, I
remember back in, I don't know, like a decade ago or 2010 era,
let's say, you know, there were maybe was like 20 to 50 unicorns
a year, maybe 20 unicorns a year.
There were arguably 10 to 20 girly,
great companies formed a year in Silicon Valley
or in the tech industry, in the West.
10 to 20.
I mean, get that said.
I remember when Andreessen kind of gave this talk
about it maybe a dozen years ago,
he said the number was 17.
There's like 17 important companies
created every year in Silicon Valley
and your goals VC is to be in one of those 17.
Then all of a sudden we had, was it like 100, 200, 300 unicorns a year?
Yeah, I mean, if you-
And so the question is, how many of them are real?
Well, I mean, Brad, we're just talking about that you're giving a 50X
multiple, 50 times top line. I'm not talking about earnings folks. I'm talking about top line.
If you give 50X to every company, then you only need $20 million in revenue to be a unicorn.
And that's unrealistic when compared to the public markets where things are trading at
five times top line and 20 times earnings of its high growth, right?
So it's just a different market.
All right.
There's a major slowdown in China.
Well, we could talk about Portnoy.
And buy that part.
I just said you want to do market.
Let's do markets.
Just real quick.
I think I've spent a lot of time on the island of Maui.
I think it's really sad.
I don't know if you guys are going to LaHina, the whole town.
The whole town.
Beautiful town.
So sad.
Yeah.
It's gone.
I just wanted to make sure that we mentioned it because it's hard to
depressing.
What happened?
I don't know if you guys have seen the wildfires.
Perfect.
No, I mean, Sachs and our families, we all went to that area
from vacation. My favorite, remember that sex? Yeah, now he's my favorite code 13.
Yeah, yeah, I mean, now he's my favorite place on earth. Then a
line of so many times, it's super sad what happened. I just want to
hopefully it's a beautiful town on the water with those old buildings and
porches, gorges, and it's just all gone right now. So yeah, the
global warming thing and these fires and wind, man, what a hot summer.
I mean, we could do this in southern Iran.
Check this out.
The temperature hit 155 degrees.
It is nine degrees warmer than it's ever been off the west coast of the United States
right now.
There was 90 degree ocean temperature
is off of the Florida coast.
The sea surface temperature in the North Atlantic,
the highest it's ever been,
by I think seven years of radiation.
Is this global warming or is it all a hoax?
Look, the people wanted to debate all day long
about anthropogenic.
I'm asking you, the most climate change here.
I'm telling you with like absolute certainty, the data right now is
unfucking believable. How hot and how dangerous the earth is becoming. And we're seeing not
just the fire in Maui, the sea surface temperature, which increases the probability of severe tropical
storms and hurricanes in the coming season. It's unlivellable.
I got one in the air watching in Saudi Arabia in Dubai, 130 degree temperature, 95 degree
overnight lows.
Well, if you don't have air conditioning, you will die in a lot of these places.
So there are parts of the earth where people cannot afford the amenities and the luxuries
that we have in the world that we all live.
It's just saying.
There is no hopes.
There is no hope.
I'm trying to be an obstacle right in front of you.
Yeah.
The earth is warming.
The amount of extreme weather is increasing.
The significant effect of that is becoming apparent.
And we could debate for hours about what quote can you do about it, but there's
just a series of really awful things happening right now.
And it's becoming more frequent and more apparent that this is a pretty serious thing that
we're in the midst of.
Oh, you have to do, Gurley, as follow what you're doing down there in Texas, which has,
is it the highest renewable energy percentage of any state now is Texas, greater than
California? So one of the biggest successories, I saw some politicians from Texas saying, renewable energy percentage of any state now is Texas greater than California.
So one of the biggest successories I saw some politician from Texas saying we got
we got to get off all these regalia. There's no silver bullet. If you want to talk
about the you know the fundamental challenge that we all face in terms of whether
atmospheric carbon is driving heating or not. If you if you follow that track there
is no silver bullet. There is a lot of things that have to go right
in a coordinated way, and there are market incentives
that make it very difficult for any of those things
to actually get done all the way through.
But renewable energy and nuclear, you would say.
Are you important?
Two of the most important?
Yeah.
There's still industrial production.
I mean, the list goes on, you know,
systems and agriculture.
There's a lot of contributors.
What's the clearest path?
I mean, if you had to, if you said,
hey, put 90% of your effort on these three things,
it would be nuclear renewables, painting,
people's roofs with white paint, like this new paint,
that's reflect stuff.
I mean, what would be in your shirt?
That's not gonna change much.
No, let's do this conversation other time. We've got Brad and Bill here. I think
I would honestly I'd love to have this conversation. We should
do it. Let's put on the dock. And next week we'll do a big
thing here. So just wrapping up here on sort of macro, we'll
give you a little macro. Brad CPI. Seems like it's measured
and consumers seem like they're running out of money and starting to
tighten their belts, unemployment, still all-time low, still 9 million job openings, feels
like this is the steady state for the next year, or do you think hard landing, no landing
soft landing?
Well, maybe they can bring up the first chart.
This morning we had CPI reported.
We had the smallest back-to-back monthly gains in core CPI in over two years, back to 0.2% annualizing just
over 2% now. So on a year-over-year basis it was 3.2%. Now remember, it was only six months
ago that people were still hyperventilating about, you know, this 9.1% we saw last year
that everybody on this pod I think was largely an agreement that
was COVID stimulated. But the blue line here represents the consensus estimates of folks
like Goldman Sachs, right, which is pretty similar to what the feds own estimates are. If you go
to the next slide here, Nick, this is what people, the current market is betting will happen to the Fed funds
rate.
So the market is saying, like, you know, you've heard Chimase many times higher for longer.
I happen to think we'll have higher rates for longer too.
But the market is saying we're worried about an economic slowdown that's going to force
the Fed's hand.
So the market is betting that the Fed funds rate will come down either because inflation
continues to roll or because the economy
continues to slow.
And so this third slide, which I think is a really interesting one, which nobody really
talks about, but this is the reason I think Drunken Millen, other, are worried about recession.
There's a measure by the San Francisco Fed, which is called the Effective Funds Proxy Rate.
So this is not the Fed Funds Rate.
This is what they say, the total impact of quantitative tightening
plus rate hikes are.
And we're now back to the highest level on that proxy rate,
since we've been since May of 2000.
It's up over 7%.
I think that's the reason people are looking at this,
is blue line up over seven percent.
That's the highest effective rate calculated
by the San Francisco Fed since all the way back to May of 2000.
And this is the concern a lot of people.
But, Brad, can you just explain that?
Why is the effective rate 3% higher than the official rate?
Because of quantitative tightening, because there's a lot of other things going on in the
economy, the impacts interest rates, the rate at which you can borrow.
Part of it is there's just less money in the system.
It's like when a crunch basically.
Exactly.
Just because the rate's 4% doesn't mean you can get out of the tube.
You can't borrow.
Nobody can borrow at the 10-year rate.
Okay.
So if you're a company or an individual and you want to go borrow,
if you have to buy a much higher rate,
so that is where the rubber meets the road.
If you're trying to borrow to buy a house,
borrow to buy a car, borrow to expand your business,
the blue line represents a much better, you know,
calibration for the level of tightening in the economy.
So there is a very strong debate.
And I would say the market's actually betting
here that the Fed is overdoing it because of what you see in that blue line and that
the economy is going to slow the lag effects of this tightening have not yet been felt.
And so this gets back to the question we had before, which is where are we in the cycle
and whether or not we're going to continue to have growth. Now, really interesting, Jason,
Bloomberg's headline today was the summer of disinflation.
And we said on this pod six months ago, we said it's more likely by the end of 2023, we're going to be talking about disinflation than inflation.
And low and behold, not only are we seeing signs of disinflation, air tickets down 18% year over year, but China just posted actual disinflation.
Yeah, right?
So if we-
So if we-
So if we-
So if we-
So if we-
So if we-
So if we-
So if we- So if we- So if we-
So if we-
So if we-
So if we-
So if we-
So if we-
So if we-
So if we-
So if we-
So if we- So if we- So if we- So if we- So if we- So if we- So if we- as much money at this company, we got to cut salaries. I mean, we know that the Fed at the start of COVID was more like the curses of disinflation
are almost bigger than the curses of inflation.
And China just saw CPI down three tenths of one percent in the month this week annualized.
That's over three and a half percent.
That is a major problem for China.
So I think you have some some yellow flags here, right?
They say, do we have too much tightening?
If one of the global engines of growth
is experiencing this level of disinflation,
that's going to impact the global economy,
the global demand, et cetera.
So, yeah.
I think that's been the pattern of the Fed, right?
They seem to react late, and then they overstere.
This has been the theme.
And so.
There's also just to add one other cloud to the silver lining, it's the amount of death
that's out there.
Correct.
So both private debt and government debt.
Yeah, consumer debt is high.
This real estate, commercial real estate is high.
Get debt everywhere.
And people are going gonna have to belt tighten
and maybe austerity and stop spending on some yellow trips.
But if salaries keep going up,
let's bring this piece on.
This isn't a Kona Koa, who is this?
Who are you sharing?
It's not a Kona Koa link, is it?
And a great Kona Kyo.
Koba E.C. Letter.
Oh, Koba E.C. Letter.
Hold, Koba E.C. here. Koba E.C. Oh, Koba E.C. Letter. Hold, Koba A.C. here.
Koba A.C. yeah, Koba A.C.
Let's got 300,000 followers.
So we have record household debt,
17.1 trillion record mortgage debt,
12 trillion record auto loans, 1.6 trillion.
Record student loans, 1.6 trillion,
which as Dr. Kimmiller points out,
have to start being repaid, I think, as of December,
because stream Court overturned
Biden's unconstitutional debt forgiveness.
Yep.
Record one trillion in credit card debt,
that I think should be pretty worrying,
because credit card rates are now around 25%.
It's nuts.
So credit card debt gets,
the interest on that is obviously floating.
And so when rates go up to, you know to where they are now, then it gets very
putative.
David, precisely, and this is, remember, we're seeing inflation roll over huge, and we
have a chip sacked in an infrastructure. We have massive government spending going on,
and we still see inflation rolling over. So I just find it interesting that within six
months, we've gone from worrying about hyperinflation to Bloomberg running a headline summer of disinflation.
The last piece of it is government debt. So at the rate that the government is racking
up deficits, the treasury is going to have to float something like three trillion of new
T-bills by the end of the year. And we're rolling something like 9 trillion
of old government debt over the next 18 months
at new higher interest rates.
So there's a lot of debt,
and we'll continue that discussion next week,
as well as the global warming one,
hearts and prayers out to the fine people of Maui
who invite us to come to their incredible paradise.
We hope you all say,
Staf, and have a great recovery. You're in our thoughts and prayers for
raggarsner, the fifth bestie for the architect David Sacks and the
Sultan of science. I am the world's greatest moderator and efficient if
you're getting married. And for Bill Gurley, Bill Gurley, you have some
anecdotes about the all-in pond. You were talking about.
Close on closing on an anecdote here. Closing on an anecdote. Closing on an anecdote here. Closing on an anecdote here. Closing on an anecdote here. Closing on an anecdote here. Closing on an anecdote here. Closing on an anecdote here. Closing on an anecdote here. Closing on an anecdote here. Closing on an anecdote here. Closing on an anecdote here. Closing on an anecdote here. Closing on an anecdote here. Closing on an anecdote here. Closing on an anecdote here. Closing on an anecdote here. Closing on an anecdote here. Closing on an anecdote here. Closing on an anecdote here. Closing on an anecdote here. Closing on an anecdote here. Closing on an anecdote here. Closing on an anecdote here. Closing on an anecdote here. Closing on an anecdote here. Closing on an anecdote here. Closing on an anecdote here. Closing on an anecdote here. Closing on an anecdote here. Closing on an anecdote here. Closing on an anecdote here. Closing on an anecdote here. Closing on an anecdote here. Closing on an anecdote here. Closing on an anecdote here. Closing on an anecdote here. Closing on an anecdote here. Closing on an anecdote here. Closing on an anecdote here. Closing on an anecdote here. Closing on an anecdote here. Closing on an anecdote here. Closing on an anecdote here. Closing on an anecdote here. Closing on an anecdote here. Closing on an anecdote here. Closing on an anecdote here. Closing on an anecdote here. Closing on an anecdote here. Closing on an anecdote here. Closing on an anecdote here. Closing on an anecdote here. Closing on an anecdote here. Closing on an anecdote here. Closing on an anecdote here. Closing on an anecdote here. Closing on an anecdote here. Closing on an anecdote here to for you guys to do this weekly, it's amazing. But I was walking down the, you guys share anecdotes
about people mentioning all in.
I was walking down the street in Austin a few months ago
and a guy came up to me and said, are you Bill Gurley?
Yeah.
And he says, you're that guy they sometimes talk about on all in, right?
So.
So the guy they sometimes talk about, that's your, that's your, that's your, I'm talking about a role in his year.
That's your, uh, there's your subtitle of your book one guy they talk about.
I'm sometimes, sometimes, there's your tips.
And to your point, Bill, it took 10 years of hard work by Jake Alphard, the rest of us,
we just walked in off the street.
Exactly.
Thanks.
I got you all on my shoulders.
That's why he thinks he deserves more than 25%.
Holding you all on my shoulders, but's why he thinks he deserves more than 25%.
Holding you all on my shoulders.
But he don't get more than 25%.
Jake, I'm already running off to you.
Why do we gotta shut this down?
Sax, Sax, and Girly and I may stay and just keep talking.
I'll be going down the world's greatest moderate.
And we'll see you all next time on the All in Poghatch.
Bye, bye.
Bye.
We'll let your winners ride.
Brain man David Sax. I'm going on. I'm going on. We'll let your winners ride. Rainman David Sack
I'm going on the beach.
And it said we open source it to the fans and they've just gone crazy with it.
I'm going on the beach.
I'm going on the beach.
What, what, your winners ride?
Besties are gone.
I'm going on the beach.
That's my dog. Take it away.
I wish you drive away.
Sit next to me.
Get it off.
Oh, man.
My ham is the actual meat.
We should all just get a room and just have one big hug.
Because they're all just like this like sexual tension.
They just need to release their house.
What, you're the beef.
What, you're the beer of beef.
Beef.
What? We need to get? Let's get good.
We need to get merch.
I'm doing all this.
I'm doing all this.