All-In with Chamath, Jason, Sacks & Friedberg - E83: Market slide continues, and how to address Uvalde
Episode Date: May 27, 20220:00 Bestie Guestie Brad Gerstner joins the show 1:00 All-In Summit recap and best moments 16:45 State of the markets, $ZM/$SNOW earnings, how much more uncertainty? 29:53 $SNAP drops after miscalcula...ting earnings targets, understanding signs of a true bottom, the end of entitlement 51:10 Down market end game, investor decisions, reasons for optimism, quick reset potential 1:05:17 Sacks explains his concept for "default investable," Besties share thoughts on proactive layoffs and course correction 1:12:27 Addressing Uvalde, legislative disappointment, potential preventative solutions Follow the besties: https://twitter.com/chamath https://linktr.ee/calacanis https://twitter.com/DavidSacks https://twitter.com/friedberg https://twitter.com/altcap Follow the pod: https://twitter.com/theallinpod https://linktr.ee/allinpodcast Intro Music Credit: https://rb.gy/tppkzl https://twitter.com/yung_spielburg Intro Video Credit: https://twitter.com/TheZachEffect Referenced in the show: https://www.google.com/finance/quote/SPY:NYSEARCA https://www.google.com/finance/quote/.DJI:INDEXDJX https://investors.zoom.us/news-releases/news-release-details/zoom-video-communications-reports-financial-results-first https://investors.snowflake.com/news/news-details/2022/Snowflake-Reports-Financial-Results-for-the-First-Quarter-of-Fiscal-2023/default.aspx https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/T10YIE https://twitter.com/zerohedge/status/1529100065331200005 https://twitter.com/BillAckman/status/1529133144540078083 https://layoffs.fyi https://www.google.com/finance/quote/SNAP:NYSE https://www.cnbc.com/2022/05/24/snaps-down-32percent-and-its-dragging-other-stocks-down-with-it.html https://www.google.com/finance/quote/FB:NASDAQ https://www.google.com/finance/quote/GOOG:NASDAQ https://nypost.com/2022/05/13/netflix-tells-woke-workers-to-quit-if-they-are-offended-culture-memo https://twitter.com/JeffBezos/status/1525309091970699265 https://twitter.com/DavidSacks/status/1529119829080150016 https://twitter.com/DavidSacks/status/1528102541723979776 https://sacks.substack.com/p/the-burn-multiple-51a7e43cb200 https://elections.bradyunited.org/take-action/nra-donations-116th-congress-senators https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mass_shootings_in_the_United_States#/media/File:Total_Deaths_in_US_Mass_Shootings_1982-2021.jpg https://twitter.com/Jason/status/1529843255176663040 https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/04/01/business/coronavirus-gun-sales.html https://twitter.com/Jason/status/1529504198974263296
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey, everybody, welcome to another episode of the All in Podcast.
It's been a crazy couple of weeks here.
We had the All in Summit, and boy, was it amazing?
Our Bestie, David Freiber, couldn't make it today.
He had some personal things he had to attend to.
So joining us again is Brad Gershner.
Welcome back to the fifth Bestie on his...
Is this your fourth appearance now,
including the all in summit?
I think you've been on four times now.
Mm.
Very good.
All right, that's about five percent of the episode.
So it's a nice, nice, nice, uh,
I think that's a nice little chip in your, uh,
in your, in your, your belt there.
I mean, unworthy replacement to Friedberg,
but I do what I can do.
Nobody can replace Friedberg, that is the truth. I'm going to win. I'm going to win.
I'm going to win.
I'm going to win.
I'm going to win.
I'm going to win.
I'm going to win.
I'm going to win.
I'm going to win.
I'm going to win.
I'm going to win.
I'm going to win.
I'm going to win.
I'm going to win.
I'm going to win.
I'm going to win.
I'm going to win.
I'm going to win.
I'm going to win.
I'm going to win.
I'm going to win.
I'm going to win. I'm going to win. I'm going to win. I'm going to win. I'm going to win. Just going around the horn here, Tremoff did you have a favorite moment on stage, a famous moment off stage?
Well, what is your general impressions of the All-In Summit 2022?
I thought the people I met were really impressive.
I really enjoyed meeting people and learning what they did.
I also thought you and your team organized really an incredible event and I forgot how
good you are at these things, but I give you a lot of credit.
I really enjoyed participating.
The only thing that I was nervous about during that whole thing, which probably limited
a little bit of my fun, was my mom was coming.
She's 81. And so I was not super psyched to really be in
the throes of all the parties, to be honest, just because I was like, I didn't I didn't necessarily
want to get COVID and I didn't want to introduce it to her and got it. Yes. You know, Nat ended up
getting really, really sick, but more like a flu and a cold. Yeah. But, you know, I've been fine, my mom's fine.
I know a bunch of folks that came out, unfortunately, tested positive.
So that was the only, that's the only downside where I would, I would have wanted to be a
little bit more carefree, but that was the only thing that was, but that's not in anybody's
control.
Yeah.
I think it was great.
I recall that when I had a Christmas party, back in the summer,
we got to take out a super spreader.
Like a week later, he called my Christmas party a super spreader, even though I tested
everybody at the door, every single person was negative at this.
So my parents went to this conference, they both got COVID.
My aunt, who lives in Miami Miami who's in her 70 she got
COVID
Are they okay by the way? Are they okay? Yeah, they're both important
It's you know, it's Omacron. It was like you know, it's like bad for two days and then get better
So they're gonna be fine. Thank God. He asked low-vit or no. Yeah, one did and one didn't so
My brother's got COVID and- So your brother's got it? Which was Josh and Jamie both got it
and then Josh's wife got it.
So she took the Pax Love and everybody's great now
but yeah, if you go to my,
a lot of people who came to the event,
it was their first time out.
Like this was for a lot of people,
I think very emotional and exciting
because it was their first venture out
and if you go to Miami to a conference,
like you're gonna get...
You're gonna get...
Especially if the event organizer
doesn't test anybody.
It's impractical to test 850 people.
Nobody would come.
Not if you wanna make a profit, right?
Nah, it wouldn't have actually been that expensive.
You could put that on the people.
They could just share their result.
But I think at this point,
even on the planes going out there, nobody's wearing masks.
I don't know if you know what you guys are flying private.
But my flight out there, nobody's wearing masks anymore.
Anyway, J. Cal, I think everybody who went to the conference
took the risk upon themselves of getting COVID.
It's not the end of the world or anything.
They're all fine, but I'm just pointing out the hypocrisy.
My heart, hypocrisy.
Yes, exactly.
It's like you're like Nancy Pelosi or something where.
All the different kinds of things.
Every time a Republican gets COVID, it's their fault.
Yes.
But when you throw a super spreader, and I think AIS now stands for all in super spreader,
it's not your fault.
It was well beyond your control.
It was the virus.
Absolutely. And in fact, it was probably just Florida. It was just into my fault. It was my, yes, it's a Santa's fault. It was well beyond your control. It was the virus. Absolutely. And in fact, it was probably just Florida. It was just my. Yes, it's a sand.
It's a small. I was going to bring it up.
That's not a lot of work. At both of you now have thrown super spread or event.
Yes. But in mine, I tested. Yeah. It's not even proven that mine was a super spread.
All right. In all seriousness, did you have a favorite moment on stage or some reflections on the event?
I thought that you wanted to say something.
I thought that you wanted to say something really good, by the way, and the only thing I'll say is the
Palmer Locky thing was pretty incredible.
Yeah.
Which we'll be releasing the Palmer Locky.
I'm excited to see that.
I think that that episode is eye-opening.
Yeah, we don't want to say too much, but I think that you were really, I think you handled
yourself really well there.
Thank you for that.
Timoth, what actually happened?
I wasn't there for that portion.
I haven't heard anything about it.
I think we give a mini summary here of it, I guess.
I'll give you the outside inversion.
He gives what I can only describe as an incredibly motivating breakdown of American defense and what his company.
You have to remember to put it in context. This is a 29 year old young man.
Who has now started to multi billion dollar unicorns so.
You know this he's going to be around for a long time doing amazing things.
But he talks about androle is his defense company, really impressive.
And then the whole, you know, everybody's kind of like rousing and cheering and applauding.
And then he said, you know, I have something else that I want to get off my chest.
And I was standing beside Jason backstage.
Jason was looking at the monitor.
I was looking at the mirror at myself.
But and check your sweater. Uh, and uh, he said, uh, you know, there's a person here that,
that has been, you know, really hard on me, you know, tried to ruin my life, attack my family.
And represents, you know, these really, this strain of very influential people in Silicon Valley
who have gotten it totally wrong, basically.
And he called out cancel culture and then he called out J. Cal.
And to J. Cal's credit, after he was done, J. Cal was the first one that walked out on
stage, shook Palmer's hand, and then we all sat down, we talked to him, and then the
two ended up hugging it out at the end.
But there were moments that were very heated in the middle of it.
The whole thing was incredible to watch.
I got to be honest with you.
It was super dramatic.
Yeah, incredible.
I would say the most shocking and surprising aspect
of the whole thing was that a person
as important as Paul Merlin lucky felt the need
to get revenge on a person that's unimportant
as Jason Calcarus.
That was the part of it.
When he was like like my career was,
when he said important people in Silicon Valley,
I initially thought, oh my God, he's talking about me.
What did I say?
I mean, that was thrown by that too,
of I'm being honest.
He's like my entire career was stopped in its tracks.
And I had to claw my way back because Jason Calcar
said this and I was like, no, actually, I'm looking forward to when you
were going to be a great episode.
It's going to be coming out next week.
Thank you to all of us.
That was a highlight.
Yeah.
And I want to give a shout out to Glenn Greenwald, Matt
Taiibi, and Antonio Garcia Martinez for appearing.
And we did two different panels.
We did one on domestic politics with Glenn and Taiibii, and then we did a debate on Ukraine, which has now been published between
Glenn and Antonio. And particularly, I want to thank Antonio because it did end up being
a little bit of a two on one at the end, which wasn't my intention, but I have my own
views on it, too, although I did try to be somewhat restrained and even handed in the
moderation. But it's a really good debate. We should have had longer. We only had about
30 minutes, but you can see that online right now.
It actually is a great example of actually how to listen to somebody else having a completely
diametrically opposed view and still be respectful. I thought those guys were great to listen
to. I think it's a new format, Sacks. And I think, you know, somebody was like, hey,
maybe you and Jake, how could you do it?
I think you and I moderating like two people
on different sides.
It could be like a really interesting format
for us for future events.
Brad, did you have a favorite moment on stage,
maybe outside of Elon?
Of course, you can mention that.
I would say, maybe both on stage and off stage.
I think, listen, I think this podcast
has taken some shots and probably appropriately so,
at times,
for being a bunch of men in a little bro culture
and the effort made to build authentic community
and diversity into that room.
I've been to a lot of conferences,
whether it's Clare Thealki,
Patty Wexler, extraordinary, you know,
minds, women, all diverse cultures, economic backgrounds.
When we walked around the floor, you know, Indiana, Kentucky, West Virginia, everywhere, right?
And who were starting companies, having authentic conversations, and frankly, we're grateful
for the community and the advice that they were being given.
These were from big startups to very small startups.
And so for me, that was a highlight.
The effort you made, I don't know, almost 40% women, both economic, I thought, as well
as geographic diversity.
And then listen, I had a moment after Bill and I got off stage.
I was stopped by a group of founders and they said,
hey, we need your help.
I said, what?
And they said, we are that company.
You and Bill were just talking about and said,
was screwed.
We raised $100 million last November from Tiger
at 100 times ARR.
What do we do?
Right?
And like the fact that those conversations are going on, of course, they're not screwed
in it's a very interesting company, but it led to a real conversation that you don't
often have at conferences like that.
So I thought it was much more than just a bunch of talking heads on stage.
I thought it was a real give and take in the crowd afterwards, the parties, the in-between.
And so I really enjoyed that.
The other big thing that we avoided failing on was putting back the AMAs.
I think these AMAs are some of the most interesting parts of that conference.
And I think that we should make sure that we probably do an AMA, Jason, like both days, do a two day conference.
The AMAs were awesome. Yeah, when the audience is asking us and just to explain to people how we were able to, you know, curate the audience, we asked people, and these are good playbook for other people if they want to steal it, to, they could, they could pick the price they wanted to pay based on their station
on life. And so people said, I want to come, I'll pay 500, I'll pay a thousand, I'll
pay 2500 instead of the 7500, take a price, which was like 300 people in the audience. And
we just said, Hey, what do you love about the show? You know, what would coming to the
conference mean to you? And we kind of just sorted that and we looked for people who
were passionate about the show. And then, you know, the thing that stuck out to me and I know Freeberg had a great time as well, was the passion of the audience
and how much they appreciate what we do here every week.
And so the love that we got, people asking to take selfies, people telling us what the
show meant to us, you know, and people coming from all different stations in life, really,
it made it not elitist, but it felt like the people who were there
were all builders.
And that was really an interesting part.
What I instructed the team to do was anybody who was like a real estate broker, a money manager,
a sales executive, a business development person, I said, let's not have them there.
There are no offense to those critical functions, but a lot of people will come to the events
to sell and get customers.
But I said, anybody who's a builder and artist, they're making something in the world,
let's give them the priority for these, the scholarship tickets.
So, you know, when you met people, they were all building something interesting in the world.
And no press, I think, also created a certain vibe there.
We didn't have the media there criticizing every panel and, you know, every speaker.
And so, I think it just made it so unnatural.
Well, I think it really couldn't do it
without all of you guys in Freeberg and the besties
and Brad, you were helping behind the scenes.
So couldn't do without everybody and my team, you know,
great job.
It turned out surprisingly well, I thought.
I thought the whole thing was a J-Cow grift
and it actually turned out to be.
Well, there was some grifting going on for sure.
We've seen an accounting of exactly where all the money went.
So, hey, Jake, how close?
We'll have that accounting any day now, Sacks, any day now.
What could you have done better?
What would you change for the next time?
You know, I, this is a great question.
You know, we always do a document with lessons learned
right after the event.
So I went through my team and I had 26 people
from my team,
21 from launch, and I think five from inside came and,
you know, helped staff the event.
A little more time to work on the speakers in the agenda.
If we had a little more time,
I would have teased out of each bestie,
you know, maybe five or 10 speakers or topics
they wanted and worked backwards.
So it's just a little more time to experiment with the format.
But I took an experimental approach to it.
We did have people who did solo, dolo, like Ted style talks.
We then had people come on stage with the besties and do discussions.
But having all besties on stage all the time is a little hard for everybody.
I know David likes to focus on maybe a couple of things.
Other people like Chimoff and I like to be on stage
for everything, I think.
But the format was experimental,
and there was a couple of great moments, I think,
when we overlapped folks,
or I think Nate Silver overlapped with Keith Roboi,
you and Bill Gurley together, Tim Rubin,
I'm sorry, overlapped with Keith Roboi.
Those were magical moments, I think.
And so I have something in my brain about weaving individual talks and data points with the
besties and then having the next speaker on the stage, the next speaker.
And I would have liked to have more time to refine that format, I think.
Okay. My only question was the Palmer Lucky deal.
Was that a plant?
Did you plan that?
No.
Did you see the back story?
I had invited him on this week and started this before all and came out many times. Did you plan that? No, I didn't. Did you secretly put that in there? I'll tell you the backstory is,
I've invited him on this week and started this before all
and came out many times.
He said, fuck you basically in so many words.
I hate Jake Al.
And then when all in came out,
he's a fan of this show.
I think he's particularly a fan of David Saxx's.
And I think David knows a lot of the investors,
the investor pools, I think overlap
in a lot of different circles of ours.
And I said, would you like to come to the summit?
And I basically said to him heartfelt,
like listen, I think to work your doing,
to protect the country,
most people in Silicon Valley don't believe
in building weapons systems,
but I kinda, and with you on this,
so we probably have some common ground here.
I think the mission of what you're doing
is more important than our disagreement
from the Hillary Clinton versus Trump days. Maybe we could just, you know, put that aside
and have you speak. And surprisingly, as people were like, yes, I didn't know they were doing yes
because he had a plot to dunk on me, but who cares? You know, like, I don't mind being dunked on.
If I'm wrong about something or I'm right, it's the whole spirit of this show is to, you know,
to learn and grow and have great conversations. So with that, maybe we start the show now.
Let's do it.
All right, let's go.
Am I still allowed to do intros or is it too triggering?
Because I do have interest for this week.
Do it.
You say do it?
Okay, I got them.
Only after nice.
Well, that's the caveat that I cannot guarantee.
But anyway, here we go.
Getting ready to Galavant across the Italian countryside.
He spent 40K at all in summit on food and wine.
He took 400 selfies in three hours. Those sweaters my lord. They wreak of power. They dictate to himself his back.
Chimoff Polly Hoppatea, welcome back to the show. Thank you, Jason.
All right. His body looks like he doesn't eat cake. He's got a major steak in snowflake.
You might have heard him earlier on the week with Bill Gurley.
He's the crossover fund manager with that BDE.
Our fifth bestie, the audience hangs on every word he has to say.
The dark knight of Namaste, welcome back to the program, Brad Gersner.
I like it.
What's BDE?
If you don't know, then you don't know.
You can look that up, urban dictionary.
He's about to turn 50, but he looks like he's 65.
After 72 hours in Miami, we're not sure he's still alive.
The crib paper is jealous of the facts under his eyes.
His portfolio has been down for 35 straight days.
No surprise.
The Rayman himself is back.
David Sacks.
All right.
To rough on Sacks?
No, that's okay.
He said, okay, I felt like I might have gone to rough on sacks.
I guess we start with markets and S&P 500 down 15% year today, down 11%.
Two stocks of note that did particularly well during COVID.
Zoom and Snowflake reported their earnings this week,
and they beat expectations.
Of course, that gives them no reprieve.
Market cap for zoomed 31 billion.
It got almost $6 billion in cash,
which was a precedent move to cash up,
I guess, during the boom times.
There stock jumped 18% after the earnings.
So great for them.
Q1 revenue 2023, 1 billion, 12% year over year.
Got an 80% gross margin for that business, pretty impressive.
500 million adjusted free cash flow, 7,000 employees.
They're at almost 500,000 per employee at this point.
And stock is still down 43% year to date,
but a little bump here, so I guess we might be bubbling
along the bottoms in and just to quickly recap snowflake and get your comments after that. snowflake reported
their quarterly earnings yesterday. $41 billion market cap. They got almost $4 billion in cash.
They were down slightly at the taping of this episode today and they're down 67% from
the peak of $409 a share in November. So they're not in the 85% plus club like Coinbase and Peloton,
but still they've lost two thirds of their market cap.
$422 million in revenue,
85% year over year,
beat their expectations.
And gross margin, 72%.
Net retention, 174%.
70% growth within their existing customers to David Sacks' point
about why SaaS is so great.
They got 4,000 employees, 6300 total customers.
So I guess maybe starting with you Brad, since you're in this and the thick of it, thoughts
on, I know your major snowflake early supporter, thoughts on what's happening in the market and maybe any indication
from these two. Let's face it, strong results in the bouncing along the bottom, I think
is how we'd all describe what's happening right now.
Well, I think, listen, what makes investing hard is sometimes you have to hold simultaneous
truth, right? And the reality is there's a lot of cognitive dissonance when you see something
down 30, 40, 50 percent, but it may be still fair value.
We were talking about last October, like make no mistake about it.
Just take snowflake as an example.
The move from 400 to 200 was probably just what I would describe as normalization in a
world where rates were going back to 2.5% or 3%.
The market last October had gone too high.
We discussed it on this pod. We discussed it on CNBC.
And so I expected a return to what we call the five-year average
as we discussed at the summit.
What's been surprising to me is the negative reflexivity
that's kicked in as a result of the war in Ukraine, uncertainty
about hyperinflation, uncertainty about hyper rates.
And so now we're seeing software generally, all risk assets, growth assets, trading now
30, 40, 50 percent below the five-year average, right?
So I don't think it's helpful to say, well, none of that should have happened.
No, the reality is normalization meant that all of this stuff was going to be down 20 to
50 percent because it was way overvalued last fall.
We gaslighted ourselves in many respects.
We didn't hedge it perfectly in many respects.
But that's what happens in late market cycles.
So the question is, where are we today?
For example, why is the NASDAQ up 300 basis points today? Right? This, it feels like WIP lash. I come in one day and, you know,
you have market caps up 10% one day, down to 10% the next. And so I think it's really important to
help the people listening, understand, you know, like what happened this week and what's going on? It has been kind of a pretty mixed bag this week,
in fact, of things going down.
Shemoth, what do you get on this,
of what we're seeing in the market this week,
specifically with precipitous drops,
and then the bouncing up again?
Look, we still had some amount of rate uncertainty
from the Fed. I think people weren't sure
How aggressively they were going to hike but by early this week it was pretty clear
There's gonna be two 50 point hikes one in June and
one in July and then effectively a pause
Because then the Fed funds rate will be at around 2%. And everything from there will probably be path and data dependent. Okay, that's effectively what they said.
Now, I think the markets had actually already started to see that writing on the wall.
So if you go back to one of our favorite measures, which is the 10-year break even,
it's effectively rolled over, which meant that, which means that from the highs in sort of late April, it started
to come down, which says that they were thinking that the inflation was not going to be as bad
in the back half of the year.
And then the second is that corporate credit, which is really what matters in some ways
to the Fed because that's where
they can intervene.
What is the spread above treasuries that a company can issue debt?
When it goes crazy and it goes up, it means, oh no, the cost of capital is going up.
That's going to be hard for companies to raise money.
They may have to lay people off.
They may need to get into cost cutting mode, right?
That's what goes through everybody's mind.
But that's also now
about 35 and 40 days rolled over, which means that the gap is started to shrink, you know, between
the US Treasury price and what, you know, decent corporates can issue data. So it looks like
we are set up for potentially a decent little rally here.
The problem is, is it a rally that is sustainable or is it a rally that's basically what we call
a dead cat bounce or a bear market rally where you just get some one or two weeks of relief
before the thing spears down again.
We're not going to know, although tomorrow on Friday, there's going to be a really important
set of inflation data that gets released. I, there's going to be a really important set of inflation data
that gets released.
And I think everybody's going to be sweating these details.
So right now, we're in a moment of pause.
And there is the potential.
If this data comes back as reasonably good,
which means prices are not escalating as much as we thought,
inflation is not going to be as bad,
growth is going to be moderate,
that that gives a lot of ammo for the Fed to kind of take their foot off the gas here.
In fact, our kids will go, boom.
Zach, the interesting note, I think, is what we talked about here, everything was correcting
except housing.
And we're wondering when this, you know,
the increasing rates would hit mortgage rates,
mortgages way above 5% in the last two weeks.
I think it's come down a little bit,
but the mortgage rate basically doubled.
And then we finally saw it earlier in this week.
What day was it?
It was two days ago.
So we're taping this on Thursday.
So I think on Tuesday,
New Home sales, $591,000, they expected $749,000. And I think the last month before that was $763,000.
Is that indicative of the raising the rates and slowing down inflation has finally occurred?
rates and slowing down inflation has finally occurred and that maybe we the Fed may be scared too much into the turn.
How do you interpret that mass because it's a pretty massive miss in terms of home sales
in the estimate.
Well, the cost of buying a home are going way up because home loans are now more expensive.
So that's going to factor into all sorts of consumer purchases.
Anything that's finance can be more expensive. You're also seeing companies starting to slow down spending, really starting to
same on the brakes. We see it in startup land. Stops are all slashing costs right
now, but that's eventually going to percolate up to big companies too. You saw
Adara's memo, basically when he got back from Wall Street, memory published that
a couple weeks ago saying we need to start from our pencils, cut everything. What
Wall Street is looking for now is free cash flow. So it seems to me
like we're headed into a pretty serious downturn recession here. I mean, I've been saying
we're in recession for months. The tricky thing for the Fed is that they don't have
a lot of good options because we have a lot of recession indicators
blinking red right now at the same time
inflation is still high.
So they're kind of caught between a rock and a hard place.
I think what the Fed should have done
is in 2020 hindsight is,
back last summer, we first got that shock CPI print.
Remember it was like 5.1%,
seemed to come out of the blue,
because for years and years we've been talking about deflation.
Nobody thought deflation was a problem.
All of a sudden we got that 5.1% print.
They were in total denial about it.
They just dismissed it saying that inflation was transitory
and you know, Yellen said the same thing.
And so basically everyone just ignored the data for six months.
And what they should have done was stock QE right then and there.
They could have taken a little bit of time to think out, you know, a rate increase strategy.
But they were still basically engaging in QE for nine months after that, you know, first inflation warning.
And if they had stock QE there, then we wouldn't have had this asset bubble in the second half of last year, that's when it inflated the most. And we could have
had more of a soft landing. Unfortunately, now they let the, they kept inflating and really
until the end of Q1. And they've yanked away the punch bulls so violently that I think the
real economies can go into recession.
So that's where we are right now. I mean, I don't know what the right answer is now given that we're in this,
you know, almost stack-flationary position. Let's try and answer that, Brad. What is if we didn't
act soon enough, if you agree with Sachs' point, pretty hard to disagree with, and we didn't take
the medicine a little bit at a time, and now maybe we've overreacted, or maybe it's hard to disagree with. And we didn't take the medicine a little bit at a time.
And now maybe we've overreacted or maybe it's going to get worse. What is the right thing for us to be doing now? Because all these companies doing hiring freezes layoffs at the same time
that the housing market tanks, at the same time crypto tanks, at the same time the stock market tanks,
this feels like a major shock to the system. Is it time to maybe reconsider
some of these? No.
You know, for the Fed to reconsider or just slow and steady wins the race here. What's the
best option? First, we should have reached statues to Senator Manchin for saving the
Republic by vetoing Stimme too. That would have been.
Bill Batter. by vetoing Stimme too. That would have been devastating. That would have been devastating. So
we'll revisit that. Listen, the Fed said two really important things this week. They said number one,
our communications have been helpful in shifting market expectations. What that means? The Fed is
the air traffic control. They said to the markets at the beginning of the year,
your 90 degrees off-run way heading. Get your ass back on runway heading. It was a slap in the face
to markets and it was a radical adjustment. Now you hear the Fed in these little statements. This
week they said, hey, we're well positioned this year to assess the effects of policy firming
in the back half. So they're saying, we're going to hit it with 50-50 and then we're going
to take a look. So now, think of it as air traffic control. You're two degrees to the left. You're
two degrees to the right. They're steering us on runway heading. I don't think the Fed wants
to do anything at this moment to lose credibility in the inflation fight. We're going to get 50. We're going to get another 50. But they're doing what they
want to do, which is keeping markets sufficiently tight, right? They wanted to take the crypto
market down. They wanted to take all the excessive risk in the stock market down, right? You're
absolutely right. The inventory of $350,000 homes spiked
from four months to nine months, right? Use car prices are rolling over the last three
months. All the things they needed to do they're doing, right? They need to stay the course.
However, the hyperventilation this week by Bill Acman on Twitter that the Fed needs to
be doing radically more that somehow we need to be doing radically more, that somehow
we need to be raising rates to 6, 7, 8% in order to squash inflation. To me, seems highly
misdirected and totally out of touch with the fact that on layoffs.fyi, they've already
announced 750 companies that are announcing layoffs, right? The market is getting the drill.
I totally agree with this. I think we're in a pretty reasonable place here. The real
question is now, what do you need to take the market lower? And this is more of a nuance,
but when you look at companies that are now quote unquote cheap, right, let's take an
example like you, you know, while we hear a lot about Google or Facebook, right? Let's take an example like you, you know, well, we hear a lot about
Google or Facebook, right? When people will say, my gosh, this is cheap because if you run a screen
on it, it's like 10, 11, 12 times, price to earnings. Well, the price you know because you can
look on the screen, the real question is, are the earnings right? And the thing that can take the market lower is if you actually think earnings
are modeled incorrectly, right? So we saw it this week as well, snap, I mean, completely
just blew themselves. 46% down, and for day yesterday, I just want to say something about
snap.
In one day, they have the most incredible propensity to self-immolate on earnings calls than any other company I've ever seen.
There's probably been three times,
no less than three times over the last four years,
where I don't know whether it's just poorly scripted
or not well rehearsed or the people that are helping
Evan get ready for these things,
but these are disastrous calls.
You know, Facebook's had a couple in this lifetime,
but Snap consistently probably once every 18 months will do this.
Anyways, the thing just completely implodes,
the stock implodes by 48% or something.
And then it rolls over to companies like Facebook and Google,
who then are off 8% or 10%. My point in telling you the story is that if you think Facebook and Google just as an
example again, are cheap at 10 times, well, you better hope that the earnings are right.
Because the earnings are actually wrong.
That's actually 27 times and 19 times.
You know, I'm making these numbers up to give you the example because the earnings are fundamentally
wrong.
So that's the risk now that's left in the market in my opinion that could take it much,
much lower is if that, you know, all of this slow down really contracts spend and the
earnings are actually not accurate.
The forecasted earnings will need to be revised over the next two or three quarters and that's
where we will probably see the low.
If however, growth is muted and the Fed can, as Brad said, it's a really good analogy.
Now, just course correct by degrees, you know, a degree here, a degree there, we've probably
consolidated the lows.
So I said another way, we look at a company like Snap or Google.
A lot of their expected value has to do with people's ad spend.
We now see less homes being sold, so maybe people in real estate stop spending less on ads.
They're a major advertising category.
Maybe direct to consumer.
People are not buying because the supply chain issue is this stuff is too expensive and
we're not going to spend on ads.
And so all of this ad revenue, that's some of the first to come out of people's budgets.
So even as great as snaps results actually look, they were up 38% year over year.
They're generating over 100 million free cash flow.
The guide was terrible because what they said was, our E, right, our earnings
are not modeled accurately.
And so that's the risk that you now have to take
to every company.
You cannot look at a screen,
a Yahoo finance or Bloomberg,
look at a price to earnings ratio and say,
wow, seven times, that's so cheap.
It may not be seven.
You have to do your own work.
It could actually be much higher than that
because the earnings may be at risk.
The earnings being at risk is this contagion that we talked about, I don't know, maybe
you think we're going on almost a year now, SACs, we talked about a contagion happening because
we've all experienced it in the last few recessions to the dot-com bust in the Great Recession.
So what are you seeing in terms of at companies, this contagion risk?
Are people canceling SAC contracts on the margins? Obviously, people are doing hiring freezes. Obviously people are laying people off are people to sort
renegotiating
salaries, you know, what what's the next couple of shoes to drop here, SACs and that would signal to you a true bottom here like have you seen
I thought maybe one would be if somebody offered somebody an investment with a two or three times liquidation preference
Have you seen where those yet? Have you seen people say we're gonna renegotiate salaries because that's when it was really dark, right?
The last two times. Yeah, no true darkness. It's gonna take time to get to that point. I mean where you start seeing structure and deal is
in deals is when a founder is
Trying to preserve evaluation. They got last year and that can't really be justified
But they don't want to just take the down-round.
So you try to preserve the optics the last round by building all these preferential terms.
We don't like to do deals that way, but you'll start to see them happen later this year
when companies get more desperate.
That's not the first thing that happens, though.
I think that to your point about the talent market, it's definitely going to happen.
Has it happened yet.
No, what has to happen is first,
all these open wrecks get canceled,
companies freeze their hiring plans,
then eventually they do layoffs, that's coming,
and then the talent market pulls down.
That's here, both of those things are here.
Both are here.
So what's the next in talent wars?
Well, yeah, I mean, look,
but within the next six months,
the talent market's not gonna be as hot,
and in the same way that startups aren't getting
10 term sheets, now that maybe they get one or two,
if they're a good company, same thing with talent, right?
They're not gonna have 10 job offers,
they might have one or two, and that's gonna create,
that's not gonna create the same upward pressure,
continuing upward pressure for increases in comp.
To your point about like,
we'll SaaS contracts be cut.
I mean, I think software is pretty sticky.
I mean, if it's a good product,
will deals cycles get longer?
Yes, will there be more mortality risk
in the startup press and be customer bases of companies?
Yes.
I think one concept that
starps may wanna wrap their heads around
is why we're called deferred mortality risk,
meaning that during the last few years,
during the boom times, the graduation rate
from C to Ceres A to Ceres B was very high,
perhaps artificially high.
So there's a lot of companies that got funded
in advance to the next round,
where in more normal times
They wouldn't have made it so got it now if those companies haven't really fixed their issues
They've just deferred the mortality so I think all of us probably in sassly and need to be modeling out higher logo churn
for
For customer bases that are skewed towards startups or SMBs, and we don't know what
those numbers are going to be yet, but that is likely to happen.
I think that that's right.
I think the other thing is that there's a lot of companies that are going to have to get
religion on free cash flow conversion, ASAP.
And I just think that most CEOs to be very blunt are poorly educated and enumerate.
So their level of numeracy to even understand this
is pretty poor, and most board directors are equally.
Can you unpack it right now?
What does it mean to get the business to free cash flow?
What does it take?
Why is it important?
And what are the, how do those businesses look
differently to the more to spend?
Less than you make. Okay, hold on. I just want to make sure I got it correct.
You make money, but the number of the money you make is higher than the number of the money you spend.
Got it. Okay, and then there's a delta there. There's some difference between those two numbers,
and that number is important to some people is what you're saying.
I think increasingly getting that number to be greater than zero is going to be really
important. It allows you, again, everybody starts to throw out this whole thing, which
is, oh my God, you can never slow growth and the company will die. And yeah, maybe in
a vacuum that that's true. But when every other company is fighting tooth and nail to survive, the only thing that you need to do is actually survive by surviving
you win.
Yes.
And if you can basically make your cash last as long as possible, even if you cut to
the bone and stop growing, if you come out the other end and you're the only company
that's left, you will win and run over the market.
You may have pushed to the right a few years
your plans of world dominance,
but they're still available to you.
It's the company that foolishly thinks
that they can continue to spend money
at the same rate or in the same ways
that are gonna learn this hard lesson.
Because I think that investors are not going to tolerate
being able to provide incremental capital to organizations,
funds, who are then misallocating that capital to basically support a poorly marked portfolio.
And I think that is going to be the real come to Jesus that actually makes all of this
thing come clean.
Like pension funds, family offices, endowments, all these organizations are smart enough to realize
that they're giving good money after bad if what those folks are going to do is not demand
portfolio rehabilitation.
And instead are just going to basically keep the marks of their old funds because they're
just in a game of waiting it out.
Where the whole thing...
So taking action greater than, you know, blind hope and just going steady doing what
you've been doing.
You got to make some changes.
Look, I love Brad's reaction.
I think that most growth-oriented funds are looking at their portfolios and they're
trying to balance two strategies.
Strategy one is get into massive rehabilitation mode.
The problem is most of these people have never built or run a company, so they have no idea how to rehabilitate anything. They're market momentum
folks, and in that they were excellent, but in actually helping CEOs build and rebuild
a business, I think that they're not as well suited. It doesn't mean they can't do it,
but they're not as well suited. That's PATHA. But I think that PATH is very painful,
and it requires you to take medicine, the bitter
medicine, which is to basically mark your portfolio down 50 or 60 percent, just like the public
market terminal valuations have gone down.
The other alternative is to basically raise enough money to do, for example, unpriced
converts into those same companies so that you don't have to remark so that the auditors
will be allowed to carry these fake valuations.
You can maybe mark it down 10 or 15 percent, but you don't have to mark it down 50 or 60
percent.
And hope, the market returns to his previous state.
But as we've all talked about, that previous state is probably unreliable because it was
a moment where we had a global pandemic where we took rates to zero
and we printed nine or ten trillion dollars of excess liquidity that inflated these things.
So I got to think that prices in 2019 were a little bit ticking up 2020,
were really ticking up 2021 was egregious in 2022 is the come is you know where it all comes home to us. We hear
free cash flow. We hear income net income. EBITDA we hear all these terms now free cash
flow is what everybody is focused on. I believe that seems to be the predominant rallying
cry in a lot of public market companies now. Can you explain to people what the difference between these things are
because people kind of bundle them together?
What why would somebody like Darryl Uber just say, Hey, you know,
we've been talking about adjusted EBITDA, EBITDA income net income, all the stuff.
But free cash flows, what we want to focus on now, or is that correct?
Yeah.
You know, our friend Bill Gurley, uh, Rails on this adjusted, adjusted.
And you know, look to your left, rails on this adjusted, adjusted, and you know,
look to your left, look to your right, adjusted one more time, EBITDA, right?
Like in markets like this, what people want to know or what's the green stuff I can take out of
the business and put under my mattress, free cash flow, distributable free cash flow.
And not only that, how much per share, I think the single biggest issue growth investors
are focused on today is the easy way out
for all these companies.
They'll tap down a little bit on their hiring.
They'll tap down on their spend.
But out of the back door, they want to give a bunch
of free stock to employees to help offset that pain.
This is really important to understand,
because stock is a real expense, right?
When a company goes public, the more shares you have, the lower your price.
So it is a real expense to everybody, the founders, the employees, the investors, right?
And so what's, I think this single biggest conversation going on in boardrooms in Silicon Valley today is, hey,
can we have a little bit more stock this year, whether
it's options or whether it's outright RSUs, to give to employees because if we don't give
it to employees, they tell us they're going to leave.
This is a real hard truth.
I had a CEO of an incredible company call me and say, listen, we pay our engineers a million
bucks ahead, but we give them stock that over the last five years has been worth
another million dollars each year. So they built their lives as though they had two million dollars
a year in income. They bought a house, they bought cars, they sent the cash to private schools,
based upon that two million dollars. And now when we tell them that this upcoming year,
the mill, we're not making a hole on that million. It can't be when when we win you win and when we tell them that this upcoming year, we're not making a hole on that million.
It can't be when we win you win and when we lose you win.
So the tough conversation is we're not re-upping you because the stock's been cut in half.
And so now that engineer is saying, yeah, but this year that means I'm only getting paid
1.2 million.
And the answer, the tough answer is yes. Right? Shared sacrifice, you
should have never assumed that that was going to be worth an incremental million dollars
a year. But that takes leadership, it takes courage, that takes a board that knows what
they're doing to explain that over the full arc of that employment. And the first thing
the mercenary employee says is, well, I'll just go work somewhere else.
And the right answer for a good leader is, okay, if you've got your approach to this business,
then you need to go work somewhere else.
I mean, you just did a great test, right? That's a great filter.
You're a mercenary, and you know, you were with us when we're up,
but you're not with us when we have to take some austerity measures.
Is this the end of entitlement across the board sacks?
I mean, we had an entitlement class.
Everybody thought they could raise a VC fund.
Everybody thought they would have 100% IRR because they were just by NFTs and flip crypto
projects that had no released product.
And the same with employees.
They just thought, I can just keep raising my salary X amount.
And now it looks like Apple said everybody comes back
to work three days a week.
And we don't see a lot of people quitting Apple
because there may not be another option.
And maybe a lot of the firings that are occurring,
I'm thinking of Cameo here,
had top three of their top six or seven leaders leave.
I interpreted that as maybe they had really big compactages.
And when they did the layoffs,
they said, you know what, the number two's in these positions can get the job done
for a third of the price
Maybe that's better for the business. So is this the end of austerity the end of entitlement?
I think so or a lot of it. There was a great article here in
Well, that was that came out recently about Netflix where Netflix they're finally getting real about their kind of entitled, their woke entitled employee problem.
And this is in the New York Post, but there's many other newspapers that covered it.
Basically, it says here, Netflix tells woke workers to quit if they're offended.
If you find it hard to support our content breath, Netflix may not be the best place for
you.
Said the memo.
So, you're had full stop.
Yeah, they're just sick of it.
They're just not going to put up within anymore.
They're sick of being held hostage by their employees who think that they can kind
of muscle the leaders of the company by starting a petition or boycott campaign.
Every time they want to drive the company in a certain direction.
And so I think companies are finally figuring out this is the only way to react
to basically being held hostage.
If you don't like it, what?
If you don't have seven a job offers, you know, and recruiters calling you constantly because everybody's on the hiring freeze,
well then maybe people will appreciate the contract of I work for you, you give me money, and then everything else is superfluous.
On that note, did anybody see the Ricky Jervais Netflix?
Yeah.
If he's on Netflix, it's on Netflix. It's unbelievable. I mean, Dave Chappelle,
you know, in terms of bravery, Ricky Jervais was like, I've already made my money. I'm burning the whole building down. I mean, he went full equal opportunist. And I mean, I think the trans issue became like 10 or 20%
of his latest special.
So it does seem like the comedians are saying,
you know what, we're gonna make jokes.
We're gonna make jokes about everybody.
We're not gonna buy into this.
You can't cancel us.
We're just gonna keep making jokes
and we're gonna keep making money.
And that whole concept that people are going to be held hostage,
I think, is over.
And independent of what you think of making jokes
of various marginalized or smaller groups of people.
Can we just go back to something Brad said a while back
about how Manchin saved the Democratic Party,
because I think there's actually just a point there.
Yeah, in packets.
Yeah, such notorious right-wingers at Jeff Bezos
have said
something very similar lately. When you see that, Biden tried to blame billionaires for the inflation
and Bezos was having none of it. He said, no, listen, it's not because of us or our companies
because you printed too much money. And Joe Biden or he said, man, he saved you from yourself because
it would have been another four trillion of spending on top of all the other trillion suspending that we had last year.
So it's absolutely the case that if the administration was left just owned devices,
remember, they were touting back in December, they were touting the idea that this four trillion
of bill backbite or spending would somehow be the cure to inflation.
Imagine if they had poured that gasoline onto the fire.
I mean, we would go to 20% inflation.
We might have had a currency,
a serious currency issue, no, Chimac.
But, but,
I mean, we just finished the point,
I don't want to just make a partisan point here.
I want to, there's a serious economics point here,
which, or learning.
I hope our policymakers learn from this,
which is what happened.
Over the last couple of years,
we had $10 trillion of money printing,
right? Why do they do that? They thought that they could stimulate our way out of this COVID
recession that they had induced with lockdowns. In any event, the point is they thought they could
stimulate economic activity by printing money. And maybe cynically, politically, they thought it
would be good for them in the midterms. What actually happened? That 10 trillion goes into the economy,
but there's no corresponding increase
in the output of goods and services.
So two things happened.
First, price levels rise and we get inflation.
And second, we get an asset bubble in the stock market.
And then the way both those things sort of come crashing
down to earth is the Fed looks at this inflation
and suddenly has to jack up interest rates.
That pops the asset bubble,
it vaporizes something like 14% of global wealth, and then simultaneously workers feel a lot poorer
because their wages haven't kept up with inflation. So this whole idea that you can just print
money as a way to create wealth and prosperity, I hope we take away from this, I think, recession
that we're going into. Is that is not a viable strategy?
The only thing that creates wealth in a society is the output of goods and services that
people want. You just can't try to play games with that by creating phantom, this phantom
money that doesn't represent a real increase in goods services or productivity.
Yeah, it's hard for people not to take this all as partisan, but if you just look at the
objective facts, the last two administrations have printed money like drunk and sellers,
and it's a mess right now.
So you can divorce yourself from any conception that this is partisan.
Trump spent a shit ton of money, and so did Biden.
And who's more qualified than Trump and Biden?
Elon, Bezos, the people who appear on this podcast. We have much more of a pulse on what's happening in the actual real economy and in entrepreneurship and capital allocating than these people.
And I love the fact that now, you know, Bezos is a shit poster. He just doesn't get, he doesn't care. I think we're having like an honest discussion now, right? One of the areas where I don't think Elon gets enough credit is when he explains macroeconomics,
I think he actually really understands what an economy is.
An economy is basically a trading system for the production of goods and services.
If you were to go, this appointment he's made, if you were to go to a desert island and
somebody just gives you
a billion dollars when you're sitting there on that island, you can't buy anything. It doesn't make you wealthier.
What makes you wealthier is the production of goods and services that people want and that's ultimately what an economy is.
Money is just the accounting system, the dollars is the accounting system. If you start printing lots of money, all you're doing is debasing the accounting system.
It doesn't make anyone richer. And yet, you know, the way that conversations
around economics really take place, the only thing you ever hear about is stimulating demand.
You never really hear anything about production. And I mean, this is an old debate that goes
back to the 1980s about, you know, supply-side economics. But regardless of what you call
it, wealth ultimately comes from our capacity to produce goods and services that people want.
It's a great point.
Traumathe all this adds up to companies and the government's balance sheet becoming tighter
and more efficient.
So the talent, diffusion across the industry, perhaps everybody being entitled and getting
overpaid, people
not wanting to go to work, people who have jobs not wanting to go to the office.
All of this seems to have actually reversed in three months.
So this medicine we're taking, we stopped eating the bad food, we started working out,
we're getting better sleep.
This is going to turn around for the companies that take the medicine, the management teams,
the capital allocators who do the hard work and sharpen their pencils as we've talked
about.
This will all result in a more efficient and vibrant economy.
Yes.
I think for the most part, I think there's still going to continue to be examples of folks
who basically run themselves into a brick wall because they don't want to make the hard
decisions.
That is going to be more exaggerated in Silicon Valley
because we have a culture of tolerance
and we have an economic business model
that supports kind of irresponsible decision-making
and supports poor governance.
You know, I've said this many times,
but a fun's job ultimately is to make a very important decision about whether
they truly care about generating massive returns or whether the fee income becomes so meaningful
so as to drown out every other incentive that they have.
And I think by and large in Silicon Valley, if you track all of the increased frequency and fundraising,
you can also probably follow those dollars,
and they generally will be the most poorly run.
They'll be held the least accountable,
and I think those will have the largest negative outcomes.
And then instead of you follow the dollars
of the real practitioners who
have discipline, they look kind of sheepish and silly for years in the middle of a rally,
but they're the ones that are able to really reset and help some of these few companies
really win. And I think that you're going to go through that cycle over the next four,
five years. And so, you know, that's super well said, Shema, because I have felt at or I've been made to
feel silly by some folks who said, why are you asking to do diligence? Why do you want to have a
board seat? Why do you want to talk to customers? Why are you asking for a month by month revenue?
Made a sub economic decision, like the idea that over the last four or five years you optimized for anything except the market beta was kind of dumb. And the worst thing that you could have done
in that period was confuse alpha and beta, meaning alpha is what you are able to do because of your
discrete skill versus anybody else. Beta is when just the market goes up, said differently, you could take
any NBA player and put them on a high school basketball team, and they would be the
college player of the year, any single one. Okay, that's beta. If you then can be the MVP
of the NBA, that's alpha. Yeah. Okay. And I think that a lot of folks were made to feel very silly or, you know, a downer or
a wet blanket in these last few years who will probably have the last laugh.
It's been unbelievable, Brad, to watch the changing of attitudes and the entitlement in fundraising and private markets in the last 60 days and it's been even more pronounced in the last 30
I literally have people we talked to last month who had really crazy expectations. They've come down by 50%
They wanted 50 now they're at 25. They didn't want board seats. Now they're okay with board seats. Information rights. They were fighting against information rights
I don't know why that's a hill to die on. Now they're like information rights. Yeah,
sure. Here's our CFO's email. We need to get money in the doors. So, I guess what's the
silver lining here? It does seem to me as a great setup right now. Jason, let me ask you a
question. Hold on. Yeah. I go to the Brad. Like, and then you're forgetting one other
keeping in the race to raise all of this money
What did these folks do they hired these middle-level kids as
Partners into their venture firms and gave them money to put into companies. What are these people know?
No mentoring. I'm not saying it disparagingly. I'm just like what do they know? How do they know how to actually invest?
Investing is just not you see it you just say okay?
Well, I think it sounds you just say, okay.
Well, I think it sounds cool.
There are some of those younger folks who are gonna turn out
to be all stars in there,
you're just like in the NBA and they're gonna be some
that proved to be writing the beta.
But let me answer Jason's question
because maybe you end on a note of optimism.
In some countries, notably China right now, they're doing a lot to prop up a bunch
of companies that should be allowed to fail. One of the beautiful things about free market
capitalism, the creative destruction, the cycle time on creative destruction in this country
has never been faster. Make no mistake about it If you took money at evaluation over a billion dollars.
Okay, last year, you're not, that's not a venture capital bet. I call it quasi-public.
Right? You stepped into the bigs and you said, I will deliver this plan.
And if you don't deliver the plan, there's not going to be a lot of tolerance.
There's not going to be tolerance for just giving away a bunch of more stock.
There's not going to be tolerance for no course correction, right?
Maybe in seed or series A, right?
There's a lot of tolerance because you sign up to a lot of unpredictability.
But the level of tolerance that you'll see out of late-stage growth investors is going
to be akin to what they do with a public company that runs them off a cliff. You know
how that is. You've been on those earning calls. So I think this is going to
shine a light on the bifurcation that we really have. We call all of this
venture capital. But the truth of the matter is, Siri, C and before is venture.
Once you're stepping into the biggs and taking money at a billion two billions the expectations are different your access to capital will be different
The expected course correction will be different right, but I take it as a
I take it as a sign of strength that we're gonna work through this we're going to have
You know the the private markets are absolutely going to work through this. We're going to have, you know, the private markets
are absolutely going to go through a reset. But we'll get through it and the winners will win and
those who failed the course correct and want to fly into the wall will do that. And we'll get on
with the next generation of incredible entrepreneurs solving big problems. The secular curve of technology
solving big problems has never been steeper, right? And the cycles that overlay that secular curve are not suspended.
We have not suspended wars.
We have not suspended economic cycles.
And so we're going to have to get through this one.
It's happening in record pace.
That's actually that's interesting.
I want to let me ask about a question about that, which is what's the potential
here for more of like a V-shaped
recession, where, to your point, the market's correct more rapidly and violently than ever? Snap, misses of, you know, issues a new forecast down 40%. Is there a possibility that this
thing gets resolved in say six months? That's not to say that valuation levels are ever
back to where they were, you know, in the second half of 2021. But in six months, That's not to say that valuation levels are ever back to where they were in the
second half of 2021. But in six months, could we have done this big reset, washed out a lot of the
problems, and again, valuations are not back, but the capital markets become unfrozen, and we're
back to a more normal operating environment. As opposed to say more of a U, where we're back to a more normal operating environment as opposed to say yeah as opposed to say like more of a you
where we're kind of bouncing around the bottoms here in this volatile state for about 18 months
You know, and then it's more like the dot com crash. We come out of it in two years
I see smart people on both sides of this I hear Jason Lemkin's been saying I think this is kind of short deep sweet six-month reset
Fred Wilson just wrote 18 months at least. I think Sequoia is saying two years. I mean,
I think our instinct is 18 months to two years. But what do you think the possibility is
that we could be in a more normal environment in six months?
Right. So let's separate public markets and venture markets because venture markets,
as you know, have a six to 12-month lag just in terms of the reset. But I would say, you know, the future's a distribution
of probable outcomes. There's a downside case and upside case and a base case. I think
the base case is by this fall will have very good evidence, right, of where inflation's
rolling over. I think it is rolling over. What the Fed is likely to do, the upward bound
on interest rates. And I think we'll be at a What the Fed is likely to do, the upward bound on interest rates.
And I think we'll be at a point where we can start underwriting to the five-year average again.
Make no mistake about it. The S&P and the NASDAQ today are still 30% above where they were in
January of 2020. 30% above where they were in January 2020. How much better is the world today than where it was in January
2020? Well, I think what the market is saying is that we've grown the economy on an
nominal basis about 15% during that time. And earnings have about doubled, right? The earnings
margins of those companies are about have about doubled. So you would expect
normal course introductory, maybe that those companies would be 30% more valuable. The problem
is, as we look ahead to Chimaz point, the earnings are likely to come down. Profit margins
are being squeezed. So I think there's a decent, decent argument. There's more pain to
come in the public markets that we haven't seen the bottom. However, I do think that the Fed is taking a good course here. I don't think
that we have run away inflation. I think that we're going to have an investible environment
come this fall. However, I think for venture, there's a six to a 12-month lag to that. So
I think you've got to add it to those six months to really get to the market clearing
prices for all these companies. But I think it's incumbent upon all of us to give really
good feedback today. And I see a lot of it, right, to entrepreneurs about making that course
correction. If they're only turning the plane 10 degrees, when they see lightning dead
ahead, they're making a huge mistake. The default action by every founder today should be a 90 degree course correction, unless
they have very good idiosyncratic reason in that business in terms of their outperformance
to state the course.
Land for the worst hope for the best.
Yeah.
You can even bifurcate the companies in private markets to ones that have strong product
market fit and the ones that don't.
There's a lot of companies to David's point that we're getting series B's without product
market fit.
You know, it's one thing to get your series A when you have this like weak product market
fit in a great story.
But when you start seeing series B's happening on momentum, it's like that to me is is is is going to be
Impossible to resolve that company has to go to zero or has to reset or give even give money back to founders
Those are the really the three things I
Would see as a true bottom like the really dark moment where people have two or three liquidation preferences people reset
Reset comp and tell people listen. We're gonna cut comp 30% across the board for management
If you don't like it leave set comp and tell people listen, we're going to cut comp 30% across the board for management.
If you don't like it leave.
And then finally, people saying, you know what, we're going to give the 60 cents on the
dollar back to investors.
Those are the three things I saw during the two down terms.
You're saying something that I think is also important that's not really talked about,
which is that there's going to be a lot of really good companies with really horrible
capital structures, really terrible cap tables,
really bad valuations, really big overhangs of preference stock that are going to have
to get worked out.
And in getting that worked out, going back to what Brad said, the person that course
corrects 90 degrees will win.
And the reason they'll win may not even be because they're being that courageous, they're
just being less stupid than everybody else, quite honestly, because you have to remember
in most of these markets over the last four or five years, we funded four or five versions
of every imaginable company.
Right.
And there's going to be two winners, 70 and 30%.
Yeah.
And and there's really only going to be one winner.
And then there's going to be a marginal second kind of also random that captures some value, and everybody else is not that valuable.
And that's roughly been true, but the reason we were able to support that was that every
company looked kind of interesting.
Anyone with traction could be competed against because the only differentiator at the time
was very cheap money that was effectively free and it was flowing in faster than you could count.
All of that has to get sorted out.
I just think that those dynamics shouldn't be ignored.
Again, I work too.
Two of the things we've been saying here, it's hard work for a board and founders to do
this, but what choice do you have?
The problem is the pro-march more sophisticated markets like the debt markets, which I would
say are much more sophisticated., like the debt markets, which I would say are much more sophisticated, okay?
Cutthroat.
Liquid.
Covenants.
When you see the people that make the money, two things are true. Number one is they're incredibly sharp elbowed.
And number two is they make money in moments like this.
Right? If you look at Apollo's great returns or black stones great returns or cerebrus, you know, these folks were the, you know,
they really were the barbarians at the gates and they made all the money in moments
of true dislocation. If you apply that construct here, you know, we've never had to go through
a period where there were some real terms and conditions attached to the incremental dollar.
And I think that if that does come to pass in Silicon Valley,
you're just gonna have a reckoning.
And I think that what it'll really do
is just sort out the winners and the losers.
And it'll sort out the folks that we're able
to get to default or close to default to live
or at least default like support.
Sacks, I mean, investable.
Default to investable.
I like that one too.
Sacks, I mean, Sacks made a great tweet.
He basically says, not default to live or dead. Investible or not. And that one too. I mean, Saks made a great tweet. He basically says,
it's not default, a live or dead,
investible or not.
And that's it.
And even finer filter.
Well, no, default, default,
default alive is fantastic.
If you can get there,
basically this means cash or positive.
I mean, all default alive means
is that you're cash or positive
or you're gonna be cash or positive
based on the money you have in them.
You don't need money.
Yeah.
Exactly.
Well, of course,
that's the best place to be is you don't need money.
But I think, you know, for early stage companies, that's almost an impossible standard.
You know, it takes time to get to the point of being couch-oppositive.
So therefore, I was trying to propose a standard that I thought was more actionable for founders
because it was, because it wasn't impossible.
And I call it default-investable, which is, here are the metrics that you need.
At least I can tell you what they are in the SaaS world.
Here's what great metrics look like.
Here's what good metrics look like.
Here's some danger zone metrics.
You need out of the five key metrics, you really need three or four great ones and one
or two good ones to raise in this environment and no dangerous metrics.
If you don't have those, you need to give yourself the time to fix the problems in your
business to get to those metrics.
On that note, you know, Sequoia had a really good chart
called Survival of the Quickest that illustrates this concept of giving yourself time and I threw it in the chat.
But basically what it shows is there's a green line and an orange line. The green line is the company that
orange line. The green line is the company that realizes in May of 2022 that we've gone into a very different environment and they slash their burn in half and they'd basically
double their runway. And then there's the other company that just keeps going along the
same path they were at until they realize, oh wait a second, you know, and then that,
you know, some point in the future they realize there's been a change. They make a small
cut, they make another small cut and they're always behind the eight ball
And I've seen this so many times before that the company doesn't make cuts until they're forced to
And so they never really like to their runway
And then when they finally do make the cuts they go into a desk spiral and die
Now they're over the Atlantic and there's not enough fuel to get to a landing strip
And you just plunge into the cold ocean and die.
Founders really have to think about the asymmetry
of the risks that they face, right?
Which is, let's say that you cut too much
and the environment is better than you think it's gonna be.
Well, you can always hire back.
I promise you.
A low price in all likelihood.
I promise you you'll be able to hire back, okay?
But on the other hand, if you don't cut it enough and the situation is worse than you think,
then you just die.
So this is why Andy Grosset,
only the paranoid survive.
You've got to think about the downside risk
and be more skewed towards the bad scenario
than sort of the wishful thinking scenario.
Hey, so David, I just one final point here,
because we have all these decks flying around now
by venture capitalists telling founders
to go make these really tough decisions.
Being a little self-reflective,
where were we all six months ago?
Where were we in October when we were putting more money in
and they were hiring like crazy? Where were we in November? we were putting more money in and they were hiring like crazy?
Where were we in November?
I remember some of the conversations that we were having, but I look, I posted in chat,
layoffs.fyi.
The number one company on that list gets here.
Sequoia company.
Are they making a course correction?
You bet you're asked they are.
They're laying a 4,500 people, 15% of the workforce. The second company on that list, Lacework,
an altimeter software company that's doing terrific, growing hundreds of percent, laying
off 300 people, 20%. A 90 degrees turn of the plane. That company will never need cash
again, but it's not just flying toward the lightning.
They're making the tough decisions because that's what leaders do in businesses that are even good businesses.
There are a lot of companies that are shit businesses that should be on this list,
but they're bumbling along and not making the tough decisions. We need venture capitalists that instead of, you know,
this being a popularity
contest, venture capitalists need to look inside as well and say, what about our firm?
Didn't, didn't work, right?
Why weren't we issuing these course corrections and telling people to tap the brakes a little
bit when we knew markets were overheated last year, right?
And so I think there's think there's a lot of responsibility
that sets on both sides of the table.
But there's 714 startups on this list.
By the time we're done,
there are gonna be at least 3000 startups on this list.
I'm not gonna say add a zero.
Add a zero.
That's another reason I say the Fed is getting what it wants.
This labor market was cooling down very quickly,
at least in Silicon
Valley. Well, I mean, and the fact that people felt like they didn't need to take a job
and they could live off credit and there would always be jobs for them. I think people
are going to have to rethink. Like, can I be fun-ploid forever? And, you know, do I need
to take my career seriously, do I need to pay down my debt? Do I need to have a balanced
balance sheet? Do I need to, my personal balance
sheet needs to be in order as well? I think that's what individual workers need to think
about.
Yeah. I mean, Brad's right that there's certainly enough blame to go around in the ecosystem
and, you know, VCs bought into these frothy evaluation levels last year. To some degree,
we're all gassed by the Fed and these low low interest rate policies. I wrote my post about burn multiple and how to measure capital efficiency two years ago.
It's getting a lot more retweets now than it did back then.
But look, do VCs have some self-reflecting to do it?
Definitely.
I'm seeing a lot of tweets going around, basically saying, people objecting to this advice
on the ground, so you'll hear something like,
if you VCs wanted us to operate more efficiently,
then you should have invested more efficiently.
Or if you wanted us to be disciplined,
you should have been more disciplined and you're investing.
And to me, that's kind of missing the point.
It's kind of cutting off your nose despite your face.
The reason we're giving this advice is
because we just want our companies to survive
and we've been through. We don't want to zero. We've been through multiple down cycles and the
truth of matter is unless you've been in the business world for over 14 years, you've never been
through a down cycle. I mean, that means that no founder under the age of what, like, 36 has even
seen a down cycle before. They don't know what it can be like
when you go into a two-year nuclear winter. They probably weren't the pilots at that time anyway.
So it's more like people who are 40, 45 have this scar tissue because they were in the pilot seat.
Totally. Totally. So the reason you're hearing all these VCs, all of a sudden say,
get more disciplined is mainly because we've seen this movie before. Now we don't want to be surrounded
on a money and die.
I think you can say it would be short if you could. The stock of all of these Rando peanut
gallery CEOs tweeting their disdain on Twitter. If you're right, that would be a great index
index down fixing stuff. Just write that company to zero. Yeah, just turn your fucking Twitter and just sharp
Get it out. I we would be remiss if we didn't talk about at least for this last segment
About the tragedy in you Valdee, you Valdee, Texas
80 miles west of San Antonio Tuesday 19 elementary kids
To adults were murdered
How are we gonna talk about this without losing our shit?
It's really hard, I think, maybe the roadmap,
I did give this a lot of thought.
I was like, why is this first segment on the market
trundling along on fucking life support for an hour
and 10 minutes, and I think part of it is because
none of us can really talk about this
without losing our cool.
It's really hard, but I do think we did good work,
Tremoth, I was thinking about the good work we did in the episode
of Roe v Wade.
And we actually came to a point where we said,
here are the extreme positions.
And then you were like, hey, wait a second,
I found this data point.
I found this data point.
And we actually figured out, hey, 80% of people
want this definition of abortion in the United States.
So I'll throw it to you, Tremoff,
we're all outraged, we're all frustrated,
but maybe we could start there.
Is there a consensus of what could be accomplished here
that you've come to?
I've started to think about it a whole bunch,
but we're all outraged, we could all yell and scream here,
but a path forward is where my mind goes.
I'll just tell you what I have been
thinking about. Okay. This is just a random stream of consciousness. Let's do it. I think
that the Democrats will not make any progress because they try to make this, unfortunately, a moral virtue signaling issue.
The Republicans will not make any progress because they become sort of very binary, adamant,
absolutist about constitutional rights and the interpretation of that right in a very
specific way.
The truth is in the middle.
If you go back, before we talk about Evalde,
Peyton John Drung, who is the kid that shot up
at tops, supermarket in Buffalo, and killed
umpteen black shoppers, lived in a state
where there was a red flag law.
For those that don't understand what red flag laws are David
You know tweeted some stuff about it as well, but essentially it allows a community member or a family member or a school
teacher or a police officer to essentially put a restraining order around an individual that they think could
haus harm and use that as a way to confiscate their weapons people have talked about red flag laws as being possible while he lived in a state, the
kid was put under a cycle a year ago and it all just falls through the cracks.
Now Ted Cruz or somebody else had let's spend $10 billion and only have one door into a
school and put an armed guard there.
Well then you find out that you've all the, you know, doubled their security spend over the last two or three years.
They actually had a person that may or may not have just kind of like stepped to the side
or something to let them in. The police, according to the AP showed up and stood around
for 40 minutes before they were able to actually breach the school.
You know, so much so that the quote in the AP article was that there was a parent that tried to get other parents to for 40 minutes, they were standing there.
You know, in California, you have, you know, very restrictive measures, but we've had, you know, in San Bernardino and other places, we've had mass shootings here as well, because the guns can just get transported across state lines, and there's no real way to stop this.
The NRA, I find out just so if you guys are interested,
Mitt Romney took $13.6 million from the NRA. This is the moral fingerwagger
of the Republican side, who, you know, last time I checked is a multi-centi millionaire, but somehow still needs to take
$13 million when these folks rich bird took seven million Roy Blunt
4.5 million Tom Tillis 4.4 million Cory Gardner 4 million Marco Rubio 3.3 million
There's no effective counter lobby that says
How about we have a more moderate and restrained pro-gun set of rights and field candidates on the left and the right?
That could Jason find this middle ground.
And so, you know, we're in this two or three day period, it seems like where folks will get extreme and then nothing will happen.
Here's one thing that I think we can all agree as well.
If you look at the underlying family situation
of all of these mass shooters,
there is a really disturbing theme
that I think is worth putting out there.
These are all universally young men, 18, 19, odd years old.
They come from broken families,
this individual Salvador Ramos, father was absent.
Again, according to the Times and the Wall Street Journal article, I read, mother, intermittent
drug use issues lived with the grandmother.
Bullied.
They're unemployed, barely graduated, if graduated at all in high school.
They harbor these deep resentments towards women or minority groups. They then
project a lot of their frustration. They were bullied
potentially in high school growing up. And all of the, they
were posting all kinds of very challenging content, you
know, apparently this kid had a one tick talk of where he sat
in a car with a dead cat in a paper bag, you know, he would post on
Instagram of assault rifles and nothing happens. So I just think that we have to acknowledge that there's a
complete failure of our politicians. And at this point, I think they should all be replaced, writ large
every single one. Nobody has added value to this solution.
Nobody has really tried to figure this out. But then also like, parents have to do something
incrementally more from the perspective of the community because these kids are going to
school with our kids. And the red flags are there, the red flags are there.
So just one last thing and I said, Brad, I said to my kids, when you interact with your friends,
I just want you to understand when you're on social media
and you encounter this content.
I hope you're never like either scared or embarrassed
or unsure enough to just show somebody
when this stuff is happening
so that you can let somebody with a little bit more maturity
and judgment try to figure out what to do
if anything at all.
But these communities are completely failing these kids as well.
Brad, you have some data.
I would say that every fucking country on the planet has kids
with mental health disorders.
But not every country on the planet has kids getting shot up
in schools and supermarkets and churches.
That is a unique feature of the system that we
accept. The system we created. Right? I'm not against guns. You guys know, I took my kids
to a shooting range last weekend. But the idea that we let, you know, assault weapons be sold
in this country with no background checks, that we let assault rifles be sold in this country with no background checks that we let assault
white rifles be sold in this country with no limits on magazine sizes.
That you can just replace magazines.
It's total insanity, right?
So I think this is a country that does a lot to self-help, but we are not self-helping here. After the assassination attempt
of Ronald Reagan, amazingly Republicans found their voice. And they said, let's have an
assault ban on assault weapons, or let's have a ban on assault weapons that expired. And I asked my analyst, I said plot the number of shootings
since the expiration of that ban.
And it's terrifying.
Yeah, it's obvious.
And it should be something that we just like don't accept.
Like the middle ground, Jason, I saw what you tweeted.
There is an obvious middle ground.
It's obvious. There's about whether it's background checks that Steve Kerr. I mean, he's gone viral.
Feeling the same way we all feel, but there are also technical solutions.
Why the hell do we let assault weapons?
Why not put a scrambling device on these weapons so that you can't fire them in schools and churches?
If somebody says that's a breach of their second amendment rights, I'm sorry. rambling device on these weapons so that you can't fire them in schools and churches.
If somebody says that's a breach of their second amendment, right, I'm sorry.
I'm also not going to allow you to drive into the school yard with nuclear material.
There are some rational limits we can agree to.
So I don't think this is a partisan thing at this point in time.
Nobody's saying ban all guns right in fact
I think there's a plurality among gun owners
They too what reasonable limitations on these things which are killing machines not hunting machines
sex any thoughts on this yeah, I mean I so I think we're looking for solutions
I think these red flag laws and building on them
is the way to go.
The problem with background checks,
and I'm not against them.
I mean, I've gone through background checks to get my guns
and I'm in favor of them,
but they wouldn't have done anything to stop
the Buffalo shooter.
They didn't.
I mean, the Buffalo shooter was in New York.
They've got the toughest gun control laws in the nation. The background check didn't stop him getting the gun because he bought it
lawfully to never criminal record. So, you know, it doesn't, that by itself isn't going to do it. So,
I think where these red flag laws are useful is that we've seen with these, all these school
shooters, they have a similar kind of profile, right? They are disturbed young men like in their, who are still school age 18, 19,
early 20s. Exactly. Now this shooter in you've all de I mean,
there are reports coming out now that he had been cutting his face that he had
aimed a BB gun at people. So he was clearly idioting towards this idea of shooting people. He had posted
violent
fantasies basically of mass shootings on
Social media and he told his classmates he wanted to kill him. I mean there's almost always a call for help
You almost say with the Buffalo shooting. I mean the people who these like psychos go to school with are the least surprised
They all know because these people have been warning.
They've been saying that they're going to do it.
So I think we have this problem of we've got these young psychotic people.
And I think the reason why it happens young is when somehow they get into adulthood, whatever
this mental illness they've got basically takes hold and they snap but they become
psychotic and it doesn't take long for them to act on those fantasies, those violent fantasies.
So the simple solution here I think is to prevent those people from getting guns.
If you threaten mass violence, you shouldn't be able to get a gun.
I personally don't think that's an abridgment of second-member rights because, look, felons can't get guns either. If you commit a felony, you can't get a
gun. These people haven't committed a felony yet, but I don't want to wait until they do. If they
have these kinds of red flags against them, then there should be a way to file to basically get a
protective order. We don't let 12-year-olds drive cars, we don't let them drink beer.
Because we don't want 12-year-olds drunk driving, right?
And then at some point, there's a licensing that occurs.
I think a lot of this is framing.
I think it's just once again very analogous
to this abortion issue, where most people are pro-choice
and want restrictions on abortion,
where they don't occur after a certain number of weeks,
just like you're up got to. And I was just, you know, ideating on this. And I think replacing the NRA
to your point, you know, they have funded people. They've become a key funding source for a lot of
folks and they've been overfunded themselves. What if we had Americans for reasonable gun safety?
And we have this organization raised a ton of money and they just outbid the NRA for Republicans and for people who are against background checks.
And we just have a question. But look, Mike Bloomberg started every town for gun control
after Newtown and it hasn't really had, I think, the impact that we wanted. I mean,
I think part of it is, what you said, so let me just give you my little For for bullet points here and have your react
It you you are right that people are absolutists know abortion
You know no restrictions and no guns or no restrictions on guns background checks
We all agree on make them in more intense and make them
proportional to the caliber of the weapon if you want one of these weapons
Why don't we have you go through a training course?
So for a pistol, you've got a two hour training course,
for an AR-15 or something that's more powerful,
how about an eight hour course, a four hour course?
Then you could actually see the red flags emerge,
and with somebody who has this red flag issue,
go through that.
The red flag laws should be national,
and they should be very strong.
And then finally, what if we introduced insurance
for certain classes of weapons, not all?
If you want to get a rifle, you know,
to go hunting or a pistol for self-defense,
maybe you don't need to have insurance.
Or maybe if you have one, you don't need to have insurance.
But once you get to high caliber,
once you get to having clips that are of certain size,
what if we just had some basic insurance
because that would force then somebody to underwrite
the danger of that weapon?
Bicke, I mean, look, the trick here is to figure out a system that has the least possible impact
on law-abiding Americans. There's maybe a few thousand of these mentally, highly mentally disturbed
young men. Like I said, their schools know who they are.
What we need is a process where that doesn't turn into the no-fly list, where
all of a sudden everybody is on it, or training, or in-
Or content moderation or something like that.
This is the plot.
Look, this is what the NRA is afraid of is that you create a red flag process, and all
of a sudden thousands or millions of people could be on it.
Right?
So you need a- Right, but that's not true because you had,
do you have this kid who could have been put on it in, in New York?
He wasn't.
Right. No, no, no.
Look, I think we need to, I think we need to figure out how do you
create do you process around this?
And I, I think, I think if a school, they know, I mean, you get multiple
affidavits from a teacher, they should be put on the list.
Yeah.
School is an oberander.
A problem isn't a brand.
The problem isn't that these, these kids aren't identifiable because as you say, David, they're
hiding in plain sight in these schools. The problem is that there's no mechanism or
incentive for any of these kids, parents, educators, teachers, community members to do something
about it because they don't know what that something is. And this is where these kids
are left to fester, fester, fester, and then it boils over
and it's all of us that have to pay a collective price.
David, can you respond to that?
It's even worse than that, Jamoth, because in the Buffalo case, the Buffalo shooter was
referred to for psychiatric evaluation because they thought he did have mental illness.
And then they released him after a week and then he got the gun.
And then he got the gun.
And then he got the gun. So he should have been put on a red flag list and that should have been the end of it.
And then you should be a database, like a federal database, which they are the NRA fights
too.
I also want to say something about these technology companies.
There is an explicit decision that technology companies can make to be able to review content from certain kinds of accounts and start to build a cluster
and a distribution of risk.
It is possible.
I help build one for one of these companies, so don't tell me it's not, and I will not tolerate
some non-technical person telling me it's not possible.
It is absolutely possible.
These technology companies should have a mechanism to be able to say, you know what?
Here are these thousand accounts, David, in the United States of these thousand individuals
that are sort of getting to a red line here and decline, whatever.
But it's also, it's not just going to be what they post on social media.
It's although in both cases, Buffalo and Uvalde, they both posted that they were going to do what they did.
But in addition to that, you've got a bread crumbs.
What are you saying?
It's just a really warning system.
You're a warning system is a great idea.
With Uvalde, the cops were called out multiple times for violent disturbances, you know.
And you combine that with what he's telling people in the schools and what he's posting
on social media.
There's an identifiable profile here.
It's not one red flag, it's multiple red flags.
This is where these corporate social media companies need to take off all of this for-profit
focus.
That's extreme at this point.
Be willing to degrade margins to hire the tens of thousands
of people to manually review content.
Okay, there should be a mechanism that allows these folks
to plug into some system that law enforcement can use.
There is an early warning system that can be built
with layer, human review before this stuff gets out
of control, David, to control people's individual civil
liberties, okay?
But that is a big step forward from where we are today,
which is nothing.
There is zero leadership in America.
Can I just ask David one question?
David, you use correctly pointed out,
I think it's a stoot that we can't penalize people
who are legally getting guns
or create too much friction for them, I understand that.
Would you consider training or insurance, and just take each one individually, for high
capacity, these deadly assault rifles, would you consider, what would you consider each
of those in terms of realistic, you know, having some basic training, a four hour training
class?
I mean, like you do for driving a car.
Should we have that for assault rifles and then should insurance be required?
What training does is prevent accidental shootings.
Okay, that's right.
I'm not against training.
I love training. I do training.
But, but look, what should be mandatory,
what training prevents is accidental shootings,
buffalo and you've all the school shootings,
they're not accidental shootings.
They're going out there and killing as many people as possible
and they know how to use these weapons.
I mean, the problem is what their objectives are.
So I don't think training solves it.
Well, let me ask you this.
If you were in training for four hours and you're an instructor and you were trained to
look for red flags and it bred in some friction from this person going and buying it and doing
the next day, wouldn't that help?
And then going to have to buy insurance?
The Buffalo shooter cased this grocery store for like four months.
I mean, they are patient.
They are methodical in how they go about.
So they would have gotten to the train.
I think so.
But we don't even necessarily need that filter, J. Cal, because I'm just telling you that the
profiles of these psychos, it's so dramatic when you go back and look, I mean, again, multiple
red flags are killing animals.
I just saw one of BB guns at humans.
I guess they've been, the cops have been called out on them. They're pointing BB guns at humans. They've been the cops and they're called out on them.
They're posting on social media.
Their classmates are all terrified of them.
Their own families are terrified of them.
So we just need to basically,
we need an incentive to Jamal's point for schools
I think to create these profiles
and file the right forms, the affidavits in the database.
Now do insurance for high capacity assault rifles.
Would you be in favor of, and do you think it's a viable?
What does that do?
I don't understand what that does.
Well, it means you would have to apply and say,
hey, I'm Jason Callacannis, I'm 18 years old,
I'm in this school, I would like to apply to own an AR-15,
and then some insurance company would say,
okay, you're 18 years old, you're a male, you live in Texas,
your bill's gonna be $600 a year for this gun.
Okay, you're a 45 year old mal.
And why all mean your bill is going to be $100 for this because we've done some actuary
tables on the actual risk.
Would you be in favor of insurance?
Look, I think the key to solving this problem is to create the minimum disruption on law
abiding Americans, okay.
Tens of millions of them who like their jobs.
So you're doing insurance.
Look, I don't know what that would do exactly. I want to stop the basically that I think what are a relatively small number of psychos,
young psychos.
Okay.
Maybe there's only a few hundred or a few thousand sort of candidates in the entire country.
I don't want to wait for them to become felons to basically prevent them from going
to the government.
And by the way, there's a bunch of study about this.
There's been a lot of social science studies about the individuals that own guns legally
and those individuals that sort of break and commit these crimes.
And whether we want to admit it or not, there is a definable archetype.
It starts with gender, then there's socioeconomic conditions, then there's, you know, home
situation. These are knowable things. These can be built into a combination of software and
human review. And we need to create incentives so that these kids can get some kind of help or
intervention. And the worst case is we kind of, you know, do something
with them in a way that helps us protect everybody else because. Sorry dinner. We do this every day.
We turn this country on its head after September 11th. We started profiling everybody. And
to sacks is like minimum standard of disrupting other people's lives.
The Department of Homeland Security disrupted everybody's lives.
Take off your shoes, go through the security before you get on a plane.
We changed everything in months because we said we're under attack, but there we're under
attack by a foreign presence, a foreign terrorist presence.
Here we're under attack by sick kids who need help, okay?
But we need to disrupt our lives.
We need to change things, right?
In order to save these innocent kids who are being shot up in schools where they're supposed
to be safe.
And so I agree, let's profile them.
Let's get these companies doing their jobs,
helping us identify these kids, get these kids help.
But we need to raise the volume
and raise the urgency in DC,
the way we did after September 11th, 2001,
that this is a national crisis,
as opposed to going back to the normal, right,
distribution here.
By the way, after 2011, I was on a no-fly list.
And I think I've told you guys a story before,
but I would have the triple S on my boarding pass
for years until about 2007 or 2008.
Constantly profiled, put in the back room,
the whole nine yards, but in the end, did it make me feel kind of like less than
a lot of other people? Yes, but did I do it
because I think it was on the broad strokes,
the right thing to do? Yeah.
So you would take a little friction.
And so if I needed to basically turn over
all my kids social media, or there was a mechanism
where as much as we try to teach our kids, social media, or there was a mechanism where, as much as we try to teach our kids,
all of these other things that allow us to make a socially progressive society, if the
guidance council are also sat around and ask these kids anonymously, hey, is there anybody
in your class you think needs your help?
Why don't you do that, too?
There is friction because that I think we're all willing to take because the counterfactual
is too horrible to bear.
And this is an example of one of those things.
Would you be in favor of insurance and training, Tramon?
I don't think...
For these hot rifles.
I don't, I think these are good ideas.
Okay.
I don't think they will curb the issue.
I do think what David said is right. There's a level of evil or mental illness in these people that cause them to be incredibly
methodical.
And I think that we shouldn't underestimate.
So they would get through the insurance screen, they get through the training screen.
Well, I think, I think, you know, look, there's a lot of people that drive cars without insurance,
right? You can drive off a it. I can't be sure. And you know, so I think that those are good ideas, Jason.
Where it will falter is we have a
political system where the primaries for both sides are dictated by the looniest 10% of the left and the right.
Yeah, we got a vote in our primary.
It makes practical gun control just like abortion an impossible task.
Unless we completely turn our political class upside down on both sides of the aisle.
Okay.
So I think these are good ideas, but in the meantime, I think parents have to do something
because nobody's coming to our aid.
And I think the most important thing we can do
is just say the truth out loud.
There is an identifiable archetype
of these we should profile these kids.
We should profile them.
There's no doubt there.
The politicians who are making this
about lawful gun ownership, they're not helping.
They're actually hurting because you are activating
millions of Americans who lawfully own guns and believe
in the Second Amendment to oppose reasonable measures like, like I'm saying, hyper-targeted
measures like these red flag laws, right?
And so if we make the whole issue about gun ownership in general, you're not going to
get any reasonable changes.
You're going to get the opposite.
The sales go up every time we have this happen.
My kids, and I'm sure your kids as well, have now gone through multiple active shooter
drills in our school.
But at no point have my kids been sat down and taught some of the warning signs of their
fellow classmates and a mechanism to raise their hand and say, you know what, this is actually
really worrisome here. They don't have that training. They do have training on how to lock
the door, how to flip a desk, how to go into a closet, which is a horrible thing to have to teach
a child. But if we're already there, I just say, take the extra step and teach the kids,
because they're living on Instagram and TikTok every day. They see their friends and their classmates every day,
and we need to start figuring out an early warning system
because what is happening continues to happen?
These politicians are ineffective.
They do nothing to help parents.
Right, that's true.
I like the early warning system because you're right.
So first of all, the red flag laws are something
that's done on a state-by-state basis.
Something like 19 states have red flag laws,
including New York, but it didn't work in New York
with the Buffalo shooter because of the one.
Got to be federal.
No one used the system.
Not only must be federal, I just think that people
actually have a whole thing.
I think people just have to use the system.
So you had in the Buffalo shooter,
the kid was referred for psychiatric treatment
and they still didn't read flag him.
That's his bonkers.
So people have to, the school systems have to learn how to use these laws.
And so to trust point, we need an early warning system.
We need that translating into red flags that go on someone's record.
And then they can't buy guns after that.
It's really simple.
At least till maybe they turn 30 or something.
I mean, it's, it's, the problem is that about half the states don't have this mechanism.
And then the half that do aren't using it effectively enough.
I just shared with you guys a chart, the most prenicious part of this debate, and I think
this was a pretty solid debate we had here.
So thank you to the gentleman for all participating in it.
Is every time we have one of these, gun sell spike.
If you look at the chart and the New York Times,
I just shared a neck, you can share it
on the YouTube channel.
Too many guns.
In the January after Obama's reelection
in the Sandy Hook shooting, we hit peak guns.
Obviously during coronavirus,
people got scared and bought a bunch of guns.
After September 11th, they bought a lot of guns.
But these moments are sadly going to drive a 15 set,
because people have to be here.
Because all the conversation is about banning guns.
And what we should be doing is preventing
psychos from getting guns, known psychos.
Reasonable gun control.
Increased by 50% in the last 10 years.
The last 10 years have been the safest 10 years in our lifetime.
Yet for some reason, people feel the need to arm themselves more and more and more.
Now, I, as an immigrant into this country, accept the rules of the country that I come to.
There is a constitution. There is a second amendment. I respect people's rights to own
gun. I've held the gun once in my life. I had a panic attack and I had to put it down.
So it's not for me, okay? But I respect your right to have them.
I think that we need to teach people
how to think about the precursors
before they get the hold of these things.
Really sadly, what's killing our kids?
It turns out I just put the tweet in the chat
for you guys to take a look at New Amendment Journal
and medicine.
Massive upttake. Now,
gun deaths combined. It's all gun deaths. Cludes gangs include suicide and includes mass shootings.
But firearm related deaths and injuries now exceeds motor vehicle crashes and so does opioids.
So we have a crisis after a new England journal in medicine just to be very honest.
So we have a crisis after a new England Journal of Medicine just to be very honest. It's no it's not necessarily only about kids because they included 18 and 19 year olds in that chart. So those are adults. Okay, young adults and kids. And so drug overdoses and firearm related are spiking massively. This is my point about having this debate. This is being armed by the
This is my point about having this debate. This is being armed by the left.
And then the right says, well, hold on, it doesn't include 18.
And then everybody gets caught in that whole...
Absolutely.
These shootings are being done by people 18, 18.
But putting them all this aside,
I just want to make a bigger point about our children.
In the last two years with this COVID,
the spike occurred during COVID of drug overdoses and firearms.
So there's a lot
of suicide in here as well. So we should think holistically about, you know, how kids are dying.
Yeah, and one other thing to that, which is we have plenty of gun laws on the books that aren't
enforced right now. In San Francisco, you can't get Jason Boudin to enforce a gun charge.
A young kid named Kelvin Chiu got killed because his killer, a guy named Zion Young, he was arrested
weeks before on gun charges, and Chase and Boogie just let him go. And in LA with Gascon,
he dropped all gun enhancements to charges. So, he got all his progressives for prosecutors who
aren't even prosecuting the gun laws we got on the books. That's got to change. And Ted Cruz thinks this is about the back door being unlocked. I mean, the stupidity
across the board left to right. Everybody in between the competence is stunning and it
has to stop.
Yeah, but Jake, I look, I mean, if you make this about people's lawful gun ownership,
they're going to oppose what you want to do. We got to make it a bit of a...
Well, that has to be some incremental controls. Don't you agree? There has to be some. The controls are basically preventing known psychos
from getting weapons.
Okay, so you want to focus on that,
but typically are no additional gun control for you.
Background checks or anything?
Or just for background checks or not.
I just want to be clear.
Red flag laws and background checks are good.
I know we have to wrap.
I think the consensus was around red flag. There's a known profile,
Chimath articulated it well. David, I don't think we helped the cause to build the consensus by
calling a sick 16 year old kid struggling with self identity, a psycho. And because they're
kids who live all around us, this isn't about lecture. This is about building consensus.
I think we can profile those folks.
They clearly have psychotic challenges, right?
But there is intervention to help these kids.
I know a lot of kids who frankly had challenges
during high school who turned out to be great human beings.
So these are kids at a very vulnerable age.
We should profile them within the community
Social networks should help us identify these folks and we should get them help and I think you can build a reasonable consensus around that
Yeah, I agree just to explain myself
I'm by when I use the word psycho. I'm referring to the the ones who actually became shooters
You know, I'm referring to those ones. You're right that if we're talking
about people who haven't done anything yet, who are mentally ill, yes, we should get them help.
I mean, mental illness, you know, this is, and this goes to healthcare as well. We should have
national mental health services available freely to every American. We are in a mental health
crisis between COVID and just modern life and suicide is becoming the number one cause of death. Sadly, for many demographics now, including
our kids. And so while we do a great job, making cars safer and creating life-saving drugs
and emergency rooms and medical attention has gotten unbelievable and we're making all these
created advances. Mental health, we're not making
the advances we need. I'm so so so sorry to all those families. Yeah, this is just heartbreaking.
I can't talk about it. I get emotional. Yeah, that's very understandable. But I'm just so sorry for
all those people dealing with it. It's heartbreaking. Yeah, heartbreaking. Let's take some action here,
enough with the thoughts and prayers. Let's actually come up with a fucking plan and just execute on it.
I've been compiled for years.
I put up with it, sorry for the indignity.
It's okay, I said, my honest perspective is,
there is a clustering and a technology component
to this that can meaningfully help.
And we need to start knowing that there are these patterns.
We need to say the words out loud.
They are patterns for these school shooters,
for these mass shooters.
Those patterns can be written down.
They have been written down.
And we need to do something about it.
They need to be codified in some form of algorithms.
And if we've already taught our kids how to duck and hide,
I think we can also teach our kids how to raise their hand
well before they need to learn to duck and hide. Identify who's also teach our kids how to raise their hand well before they need to learn
to duck and hide.
Identify who's being bullied and into your point of mouth about being profiled.
If we profile somebody and they're not a mass shooter candidate, but they're just depressed
or they're being bullied, well, that's where they did their health as well.
So there's no downside to profiling somebody who's struggling.
You're profiling them with the intent of getting them help.
So let's just profile the kids who are struggling.
Profile them for good.
And you'll have some.
You know who's struggling a priority.
My point is that you actually know.
Oh, they're being bullied.
They're going to probably be struggling.
I mean, you know the kids getting bored.
Psychographic and demographic profiles of the 99% of the cases that we've seen over
the last two decades.
And all I'm encouraging politicians and technology companies to do is come together, create
some standard.
You know, what's the downside?
What's the downside?
None.
Zero.
Have mechanisms like this, by the way, where these technology companies already do these
kinds of profiles on other kinds of situations.
You know, typically you need a physical request and other kinds of legal interventions in order to unlock this
data, but it's not as if this is antithetical to what they do in other situations.
They certainly do it for fraud and advertising.
It's not as if the technological prowess of these companies cannot be applied to a
k-means clustering of this issue, just to use a simple machine learning context.
Like this is...
They put a lot of effort into finding click fraud, right? This is Just to use a simple machine learning context. Like this is they put a lot
effort into finding click fraud, right? This is going to be a similar problem. Yeah. We don't allow
angry young men who've been emailing with the Middle East who are citizens of this country who've
been posting online that they want to run a plane into a building to go get their pilots license.
Right. We profile them after September 11th
and we said no boss. And all Chimalt is saying is use your fucking common sense. Identify these folks
that we know are struggling to need help. And pretty much a list and say they can't buy an assault weapon.
Period. Yeah. All right everybody. It's time to go. Thank you to Brad Gerson for sitting in. Thanks again to the dictator Chimoff Palai, Hapateta and
Thanks, Saks and thanks to everybody who spoke at the all-in summit. We've been releasing all of the videos
Freeberg will be back next week as well the homer lucky explosive episode. So look for a great week all-in content next week. We'll see you all next time. Bye bye! I'm going to the toilet. I'm going to the toilet. I'm going to the toilet. I'm going to the toilet. I'm going to the toilet.
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