All-In with Chamath, Jason, Sacks & Friedberg - E92: Adam Neumann's second act, a16z's $350M bet, housing policy, Inflation Reduction Act & more
Episode Date: August 20, 20220:00 Bestie intro plus a new moderator! 7:19 Adam Neumann raises $350M from a16z for his new residential real estate startup Flow 25:32 Housing policy: Bay Area, Houston, Miami differences 45:41 China..., Saudi Arabia, Russia increase relations: should the US be worried? 1:01:09 Inflation Reduction Act signed into law: climate change impact, CBO scorecard, IRS beefed up, carbon tax, big pharma pricing, and more 1:29:47 Chamath ends his spat with Phil Hellmuth, FBI raid follow-up Follow the besties: https://twitter.com/chamath https://linktr.ee/calacanis https://twitter.com/DavidSacks https://twitter.com/friedberg Follow the pod: https://twitter.com/theallinpod https://linktr.ee/allinpodcast Intro Music Credit: https://rb.gy/tppkzl https://twitter.com/yung_spielburg Intro Video Credit: https://twitter.com/TheZachEffect Referenced in the show: https://www.nytimes.com/2022/08/15/business/dealbook/adam-neumann-flow-new-company-wework-real-estate.html https://www.google.com/finance/quote/PLD:NYSE https://www.google.com/finance/quote/WE:NYSE https://www.google.com/finance/quote/BX:NYSE https://a16z.com/2020/04/18/its-time-to-build https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-08-05/vc-marc-andreessen-opposes-plan-for-multi-family-atherton-housing https://www.politico.com/news/2022/08/16/xi-jinping-saudi-arabia-trip-middle-east-influence-00052023 https://www.wsj.com/articles/saudi-arabia-considers-accepting-yuan-instead-of-dollars-for-chinese-oil-sales-11647351541 https://www.wsj.com/articles/china-to-join-russia-military-exercises-as-u-s-rivals-deepen-ties-11660755790 https://www.reuters.com/markets/europe/saudi-pif-buys-shares-alphabet-zoom-microsoft-us-shopping-spree-2022-08-16 https://www.foreignaffairs.com/ukraine/playing-fire-ukraine https://www.cbo.gov/system/files/2022-08/hr5376_IR_Act_8-3-22.pdf https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2022/02/what-a-carbon-tax-can-do-and-why-it-cannot-do-it-all https://www.realclearinvestigations.com/articles/2022/08/18/fbi_unit_leading_mar-a-lago_probe_previously_led_russiagate_hoax_848582.html
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Jake, what's it feel like to be a guest on your own podcast today?
I'm excited. Oh god. So delightful. You did a great job, by the way. Really like
the punch up to the formatting where you actually put the questions in. Yeah, I think it's
like because I want us to all agree on the stuff we want to grok on, you know.
In a professional TV show, they would have pre-interviews with everybody,
get all their positions, then they put the positions into the document, and they, you know,
they basically do what's called a pre-interview. Or here's another idea, you could do your job.
Wow, I mean, how about that?
How about you try that?
How about that?
Or how about I turn you three miserable f**ks
into actual likable people in 91 episodes,
which nobody thought was possible.
I actually think I'm becoming less likable
the longer I'm on this f**king show.
I think that's, I think that correlates with all of us.
All of our like abilities just.
You!
We open source into the fans and they just go crazy with me.
Love you guys.
I'm Queen of kilowatts.'m going to the Lollipot.
Hello and welcome to the Lollipot.
I am your moderator for today,
out of the hot seat,
doing the Easy Beat Dave Friedberg.
I'm joined today by our esteemed panel
back from his European shopping spree,
our national treasure,
America's favorite dictator,
Jamal, Polly Havertier, Jamal. How are you feeling?
I feel great.
You're okay, you're recovered.
Yeah, I'm a little, I've got a little head cold, though.
Oh, well, sorry to hear that.
Hope it's not COVID 2.0.
No, I tested it on COVID negative.
Thank God.
Okay.
Also with us as usual, from his emergency bunker,
ahead of the US Civil War, the rain man, David Sacks.
How are you, David?
Good.
Happy with the late start this morning, I'm sure.
And of course, everyone's favorite ski bum, producer of the Woodstock of Tech Conferences,
the one and done all in Summit Miami, Jason Callikett, is Jason.
What's it like to be a guest today?
It's so delightful.
When you said you wanted to moderate, that to me was, hmm, chef's kiss, I get to, I get to comment and not be the moderator. I love it.
Yeah, so we're mixing it up a little bit today. I'm going to take the lead.
J. Cal is going to sit back. I'll say a couple of words before we start because I think last week
we got a little nasty. I definitely heard that from listeners. You know, I know, and so I want to
kind of just address it real quick and then we can kick off the show.
I think it's important to say that none of us really started out doing this pod as a job
or thinking that it would become a real regular thing, right?
We started doing it for fun, ad hoc, from time to time, and then it became this thing that
people listened to and it became this thing that we started doing every week and people
actually cared about it and suddenly it became this real obligation.
It's almost like we got pregnant and had a baby and now it's like four men and a baby.
And so, I think we all feel this challenging obligation that we never expected to take
on, of taking care of the show, taking care of the pod.
And we all have different points of view on what we want the pod to be and what we want
it to become.
J. Cal cares about getting up in the rankings
and listening to the audience and ultimately has shared
that he wants to monetize at point.
We've not always agreed on different points about that.
Tomat has the things he wants to bring to the table,
sex as things he wants to talk about.
And so it's really difficult kind of running the pod,
managing the pod with four very different points of view,
very different perspectives on what it is. We all want to kind of get out pod, managing the pod with four very different points of view, very different perspectives.
On what it is, we all want to kind of get out of this over time.
And I think it causes us to get really frustrated with each other.
We end up having real fights.
You know, you have the biggest fights with your best friends.
You know, you really let loose.
And last shout, I think last week I listened back.
I was pretty contemptuous in my kind of record to Jay Cal
about hitting up on the inflation topic
and I want to apologize to Jay Cal for doing that.
I think it was, yeah, I think it was a little rough,
but at the same time, I just want to point out,
we're going to keep doing the show
because I think as much as we all disagree,
as much as we fight and as much as we may even start
to dislike each other and not get
along. I think it's really important that we keep doing this and I think restating that commitment
and trying to do better is really important. So, you know, we're going to try different stuff out,
try and find ways to find common ground and keep doing the show, productively with each other.
As one experiment this week, I'm going to moderate and we're going to, you know, try and take it
that way. But, you know, I just wanted to say those few words before we kick this off guys, because I thought
it was important, especially after the last couple of weeks, I think it's been a bit of a struggle.
We've been having a tough time and I just want to be open about it and, you know, highlight that,
you know, as an example, you can fight with people, you can disagree with them, and you can still
keep trying. And I want to set that example. I want us to keep doing that. So anyway, just bubbly. I would just like to say apology accepted. And I thought there was a lovely opening.
One thing I would just punch up there is the real reason we did this was because we missed
each other. We missed hanging out with each other. And then this is, you know, something
that's become more successful than any of us ever imagined.
It's got an audience size that is just hard to imagine how many people are listening to this,
which then does put a little bit of pressure on it. We want it to be great for the audience.
And I just want to say, I don't take it personally when we battle on stuff,
even with politics and sacks and stuff like that.
I respect each of you. You are each brothers to me. I love each of you deeply. take it personally when we battle on stuff, even with politics and sacks and stuff like that.
I respect each of you. You are each brothers to me. I love each of you deeply.
And when we fight and things don't work out, I look at it as personal growth or progress towards some other goals that we each have. The amount of support I've gotten in my career
from David Sacks and Shema has been unparalleled. David Sachs was my
first LP. He encouraged me to create my first venture fund. Shema supported me relentlessly
in my career. I showed up for me every event I ever did and I tried to do those same
things for them. You and I haven't done much business together freeberg, but I'm enjoying
the business that we've started together. Start it together.
Yeah, start it too.
And I showed up for both of your events when you needed me,
doing some syndicates with you.
And I love doing this each week.
I love doing this each week.
Yeah, I think my point was it's a lot easier to be friends
and have wine together and play poker together
than it is to do a job together.
And this has become really a job.
And so you can have really good friends and then you try and start a company together or do a job together. And this has become really a job. And so, you know, you can have really good friends
and then you try and start a company together,
or do a job together, and you can hate each other.
I think it doesn't mean that you guys stop being friends
or that we should stop doing the work.
I think we should still keep trying to do the work,
figure out a way to make it work.
So, anyway, that was the point I wanted to make at the start.
And that's the end of my savings.
Okay.
And it was worth preparing.
Those are just a reaction to yours.
I don't know if SAC is on anything, but I doubt it. Okay, let's it's more prepared. Those are just a reaction to yours. I don't know if saxophone is a say anything, but I doubt it.
Okay, let's ask you how many motions right now?
Sacked, what are you feeling?
Yeah, I mean, Samoth, do you think grass fed is better
or the regular built on?
And oh my God.
Saxon, I were texting while you guys were hugging it out,
talking about different kinds of jerky.
Beech jerky. While we were jerking each other, I'm about different kinds of jerky. Beech jerky.
While we were jerking each other, I'm you guys were researching jerky.
Great.
I was recommending Bill Tom to him.
Oh, great.
Awesome.
Speaking of jerky, let's get into Adam Newman.
So now, hey, so first thing to talk about today, and I wanted to take it in a little bit
of a different direction than I think all the other tech media have kind of addressed this. You know,
Adam Newman is back. He raised $350 million from Andres and Horowitz. There was announcement
this week for his new company called Flow, which as we understand it is trying to develop
residential apartments, you know, in the same sort of vibe, quality, and attention to experience as
maybe was intended with we work. And flow, you know, seems to have started originated with
Adam doing a bunch of acquisitions of real estate with his own capital. And now he seems to
have turned this into a real business and raised money from Andreessen. So there's all
the commentary and joking about Andreessen putting this
money in, are they crazy, as well as all the commentary about Adam Newman, how could anyone
back him, the guy was so awful the first time around. Let me just do a quick round, the
horn with you guys, you know, initial reactions to the Adam Newman deal. And then I'd love
to talk about founders having a second act because, you know,
Adam happens to be high profile. So his failure was high profile. But a lot of founders
have a failed low profile first experience and come back and kick ass the second time
around. And investors have taken notice of that. And so I'd love to go there. But maybe
we just do a quick reaction. Jake, I know you've talked about this on your other show. Maybe you can kind of give us your quick commentary on
on the opportunity of a transaction.
And what are people talking about with respect to this, this deal happening?
You know, people are wondering why he's able to raise money.
And what I always tell founders is when you see these like weird
fundings and you can't get your heads around them, it typically has to do
with track record and credible audacity, Trump's prior blunders.
So say what you will about Adam Newman. It typically has to do with track record and credible audacity, Trump's prior blunders.
So say what you will about Adam Newman, he is audacious and he has credibility.
People forget his origins, they only remember the Masayoshi-san $4 billion and what happened
and what he did with that.
And that was a complete clusterfuck.
It went off the rails, he did all kinds of inside dealing and it was madness.
But before that, he did green desk.
He was a bootstrapped entrepreneur.
And then he created the category defining co-working space, which to this day, when you say,
I need to get an office, the first thing people say is, get a wee work.
Just like they say, take a Uber, just like they say, Google it, just like, you know, any
other verb that we talk about.
And so it's very easy to dismiss him and say the tech industry has no more all they just
bad they'll back anybody
he has a publicly traded company
that's in the market right now he defined the category and you also put three
hundred million dollars apparently of his own money at stake to buy these
apartments
uh... so i think it's uh... i i would say the bet makes sense me, and I think it will make sense if we go into the bet,
which I'd love to hear everybody else's thoughts on.
It's an audacious bet because housing is one of the hardest industries to tackle,
and he already did it for commercial, so why wouldn't he be able to do it for residential?
Saks, did you see this opportunity in the market? Did you guys take a look at it or have any points of view on it?
No, I mean, we don't write $350 million dollar size check.
So it's just not something that we're going to take a look at.
For that matter, we don't really do non-software investments.
We don't do, you know, in the, you know, physical role type investments.
And I've kind of learned that doing anything in the physical world with atoms is 10 times
harder than doing anything with bits.
So one of my takeaways of the last few years is we tend to like pure software models,
not even hybrid or tech-enabled models because it really does take a 10x entrepreneur to do
anything in the physical world.
So software is kind of our knitting and we like to stick to that.
In terms of, you know, and recent hardweds making this investment, here's your larger topic
of repeat founders.
Look, most startups fail and most founders or good founders have an entrepreneurial streak
in them.
And so you combine those two things and there's going to be a lot of repeat second time founders,
people who are fundamentally entrepreneurial and their first thing doesn't
work out. I think that that can be a positive thing to invest in because they've gotten
some of their mistakes out of the way and they've learned from that experience. So I think
the question we would just ask is what were the learnings and did they conduct their failed
startup honorably? You know, like if they lie to investors
or misled investors, then obviously,
we don't want any part of that,
but I don't think most failures are like that.
And so as long as the founder,
I think conducted themselves,
honorably had some good learnings,
it's certainly not disqualifier for their next startup.
I mean, Timoth, you've been open in the past
about startups that waste money and do
the kind bars and red brick offices and easy living at the office.
There's no better example of over-the-top exuberance as there was at WeWork, right?
I mean, does that indicate to you that this guy doesn't have a clue in terms of how to
be prudent with investors' capital and it's not backable or how do you think about it?
I have a couple thoughts the first is that we work
is a really interesting business
but that business had been built many times before and it's called the REIT and
I think what Adam was able to arbitrage was a period of time where he pitched a non real estate investor a
of time where he pitched a non-real estate investor, a technology company that was really just a real estate investment trust.
And that's why he was able to get these incredibly heavy valuations.
I think the peak valuation of we work was like $45 or $50 billion.
But what happened, which is that when we work ultimately went public, the collective intelligence
of the public markets imposed a
re-based valuation model on rework and it is now a $3.6 billion public
company. And I don't think you can dunk on Adam for that. It's hard to build any
kind of company, let alone a $3.6 billion company and he was instrumental in
that. So he should get some amount of credit. But the reality was that he was pitching people that didn't want to hear about a business
that was a real estate investment trust.
They wanted to hear about some technology and all of these other things, but ultimately
when you stripped it away, it was a reate.
Now you started again and from the outside in not knowing anything because we don't know
anything, what it looks
like is the beginnings of another REIT except focused on residential.
Right?
So when you buy hundreds or thousands of apartments, but again, the issue at hand though
is that again, he has found a technology investor to buy a technology story.
And again, time will tell whether there is a technology business here, but if it ultimately
is an amalgamation of a bunch of apartments with some sort of interconnected technology
that helps enable a better community or what have you, those kinds of reeds have also
been built before and reeds are valued in a very structured way on this
thing called FFO, funds from operations.
And you know what the upper bound evaluation is, which is if you go and look in the stock
market, the most valuable REIT in the world is a company called Prologis.
They have about a billion square feet under management.
They're about a hundred billion dollar company.
We work as about 45 million square feet under management. There are 3. hundred billion dollar company. We work has about 45 million square feet
under management.
There are 3.6 billion dollar company.
So if you just interpolate from those two data points,
on the residential side, Adam's gonna have to buy,
you know, if you think an average apartment
is 1500 square feet, he has to buy, you know,
665,000 more apartments in order for that to be pro-logist scale.
You know, I don't know to invest at a billion dollar valuation or 1.5 or 2 or whatever the
number turns out to be, make sense if you think the upper bound is unlimited, but if you
think the upper bound is 3 or 4 billion, the only reason to do it, by the way, it still
makes sense for end reason to do it.
And this is why I think people get tilted.
Because now this comes to my second point
Which is that what Adam Newman is able to take advantage of is a very obvious powerful understanding
Of the venture capital business model that other founders don't especially the ones that dunk on him and let me just explain this
We talked about this last week. The only mistake I think that
Softbank really made was a velocity of money mistake, which is not setting the
investment cycle of their vision fund to be 10 years instead of five. While
every other fund has a five year investment cycle too, including A. H's. And so
when you have tens of billions of dollars under management, guys, guess what?
They have the same problem Softbank did, except with just a different quantum of capital.
They want velocity of money.
And so if a founder comes and asks for $350 million, it actually in a perverse way makes
her life easier.
Because now that's saying yes once versus saying five or six times to people asking for
$50 million or heaven forbid $350 times to people asking for $50 million or
heaven forbid three hundred and fifty times for people asking for a million dollars.
And so if you're in that seat, Tomock, if you're in the investor seat, are you putting
all that capital once with the one guy who's managed that money before or do you want
to find the guy who has it or the galvan has it?
You have to understand the end recent business model and recent Horowitz business model is
to become Blackstone but for technology.
It hit like 30 billion AUM now, right?
Right.
Which is still a drop in the bucket.
35 billion something like that.
So if you look at Blackstone, right?
A trillion.
Blackstone is a hundred plus billion dollar market cap company, right?
Built on three pillars.
Credit, private equity and real estate.
You can make the argument that technology is as important as those three categories.
And so, you know, if I think it's pretty obvious that at recent is trying to build a publicly
ownable security that represents all things in technology.
So again, I don't think that they're necessarily out
to generate massive returns for LPs.
They want to become a credible, reliable institution
to absorb hundreds of billions of dollars.
And so ultimately the objective, you think,
is to monetize your own.
Their ultimate goal is to, is for Andresan and Horowitz to monetize the equity of Andresan Horowitz.
Of the management company.
Yeah, that's the goal.
And that's a, by the way, that's a lot of a goal.
It's really hard to build a business.
They've built an incredible business and then they should get credit for that.
Zach, do you agree?
Well, I mean, they are, they, I think Shamaas right, that their stated goal is to build
like a larger institutional VC
type investor.
I mean, doesn't, in recent, have a portrait of JP Morgan hanging out as well or something.
I mean, they want to turn VC from being like a little craft business, something larger
and more institutional.
So yeah, I'm sure they jump at the chance to write a $350 million check if they believe
in the company.
But Kai Schiff, this this conversation just for a second?
So I've done a lot of commercial real estate investing.
I think there are reasons to think that flow, this new company could actually be better
than we work.
And let me just explain.
So with we work, if you talk to commercial office space owners, landlords, about we work
like 10 years ago, what they would have told you is, yeah, look, that model is great, but we want tenants who are high credit and sign long-term
leases. Why? Because they're not worried about what happens in a bull market. They're worried
about what happens in a recession, and they want to make sure they can cover their bank debt.
So landlords have always cared not just about rents, but also about having high credit long-term
leases.
What we work basically did is arbitrage that.
Of course, it was a much better deal for startups because if you're a startup, you don't
have to go through a complicated process side at least.
You could just go month to month at a we work and you'd be willing to pay a premium for
that.
So we work business work great during an upmarket because they would rent space for say 50 bucks a foot, lease it for a hundred and they would capture the spread.
The problem is the business was highly levered to a boom cycle. And at the first recession
or bus cycle, all of a sudden they're going to have massive vacancy because everyone can
leave. And all of a sudden their rents go below their, the rents are collecting go below
the rent. They're paying and the arbitrage
goes away. They magnified that problem by making two mistakes. Number one, they signed a lot of
top-of-market leases, right? They were signing leases at $100 plus per foot in hot markets,
and the other thing is they didn't seem to have a lot of financial discipline. You know,
I guess that show kind of makes fun of these sort of bachameleon parties they had and so forth
like that. You can get away with a lack of spending discipline if you're a 90% gross margin business
like at Google, but when you're a real estate business who's got real cogs, not having
spending discipline is actually a problem.
So for all those reasons, I think we were kind of contained the seeds of its own implosion
inside of their model and they needed to manage or mitigate those risks a lot better.
That's not to say, though, that it wasn't a great product.
I mean, for every stock, it wasn't an amazing product.
Yeah.
I mean, in the early days of sex, though, to your point, they were taking under market,
like really low cost per square foot space, like in the tenderloin, and then selling it
for, you know brionton
third street
rents right that was the arbitrage and it worked
it's only they lost that discipline
sounds like in the second half of the company's history right
but i think it's interesting about flow is that it's sort of multi-family these
apartment type buildings
those tend to be you know let's call it one year leases anyway and they're
owning them they're not leasing from a land lord. They're basically so Trimoss right. It's basically a standard apartment replay
Where Newman is gonna create a consistent experience and brand across the country
I'm not sure that's really been done before where there's like a brand for apartment living never been done
Yeah, and so actually it's pretty simple in terms of measuring if it's gonna work or not
Which is simply can Adam Newman deliver lower vacancy rates and higher rents and then, you know,
buy apartment buildings at market prices. So in other words, that's the arbitrage. Can he extract
more rent and less vacancy from apartment units by creating this national brand and this experience?
But this is definitely-
This is- I mean, you guys ever- Yeah, go ahead. But this is, and I don't really do a financial decision. You guys ever, yeah, go ahead.
But this is my point.
Everything you talked about is how we would actually do a tear down of any other reap that
was looking for money, David.
We would look at what is the FFO.
Ultimately, it's like, what's the implied cap rate?
What's the FFO?
Can you get paid for owning this?
How much do you have to spend and can you get paid?
And this is where I think like trying to then,
so if on the inside of it, what instead, it was not that, but it was pitched
as some convoluted technology play,
it's a little bit harder to believe again,
we don't know the details.
So maybe this play.
Sure, I love the one.
What I would say building on SAC's Entremots,
if they are gonna do 700,000 apartments apartments you can actually put some numbers on this
you know
seven hundred thousand apartments you think they can get extra hundred me be a hundred fifty bucks out of a renter
I think they could for like that experience where people pay a little bit of they're not gonna pay three hundred more four hundred more
because then they would just get a larger apartment and you know they they could spend that money because it would be better spent
they have seven hundred thousand of those You're talking about a billion dollars
in revenue a year.
That's with 700,000 apartments.
Okay, 10 times profits, you know,
whatever, 10 billion dollar valuation,
if interest in hearts is buying in at 1.5 or two,
like Shamaat's saying is probably correct.
Somewhere in that range they've got 20%.
Okay, yeah, maybe they get a six or seven bag or out of this,
but it's a six or seven bag or on a big number, 350.
It's not like a 20X or a 50X.
And you also get the branding,
which I would not under value here,
of being the firm that backs bad boy, entrepreneurs,
and is like willing to go there and support.
I think it's a real positive for Andreessen.
It's like, look, you know, you just raised a ton of money.
Well, guess what?
You got to put that money out because it's not as if they're going to think
to themselves, oh, I really only want to run this fund over three years instead of two.
They're not thinking that they're like, I want to keep going out because I think their business
model works by taking as much oxygen in the room as possible, which means to be actively fund-raising
always. That's, it's tied. It's true of blackstone.
It's true of Apollo. It's true of Carlyle. It's true of KKR. Any of these publicly traded
investment managers, they live and die by their ability to constantly be raising funds,
which implicitly means you have to constantly be writing funds. The returns decay, but that's okay because now you're feeding, you're taking money from
pension funds and other institutional limited partners who are fine because their hurdle
is like six or seven percent.
So if you deliver 11 percent, you still look like a genius because you can absorb so much
money.
And recent wins by showing that Adam Newman goes and picks him.
And recent wins because they have the ability to write a $350 million check. And recent
wins because they have $350 million less that they have to actually put into the hands of
other entrepreneurs. Now they can do it with just one check. So it's a multifaceted win
for them. And it's a multifaceted win for Newman.
I think there's also brand value for the entrepreneurs that have had failed startups or issues
with their first startup in ploting and knowing that they're still a second bite at the
Apple.
I remember a survey, and I just tried to pull it up, but I couldn't find it.
So I made you wrong on this.
But first around capital years ago, surveyed or did an analysis of all the investments
they had made.
And I think one of the biggest predictors of success in a startup was that it was the
founder's second startup.
And so if you've had failings the first time around, you're more likely to have learned
from those failings to improve your performance the second time around.
And so as an entrepreneur, I looked at Andreessen Horowitz after this investment and think,
you know, these guys will still back,
you know, great entrepreneurs, even if things went sideways, or there was an issue the first time. And you've got, you know, the ultimate kind of case for that.
Okay, speaking of Andreessen, I'm going to move us along. You guys wanted to cover this topic,
not my favorite topic, just because I want to be careful about, you guys decide what you want to say.
But I'm going to bring up Andresan Nimbia's thing
in Afterton, you guys wanted to cover this, right?
Yeah, thumbs up.
Sure.
I mean, I mean, it's like, okay, well,
I mean, everybody's talking about why
wouldn't everyone's talking about it.
Okay, so, you're in COVID.
During COVID, Mark Andresan wrote an essay called Build,
and I'm gonna read next, he says, you don't just see the smug complacency, During COVID, Mark Anderson wrote an essay called Build.
And I'm gonna read next, he says, you don't just see the smug complacency,
the satisfaction with the status quo
and the unwillingness to build in the pandemic
or in healthcare generally, you see it throughout
Western life and specifically throughout American life.
You see it in housing and the physical footprint
of our cities.
We can't build nearly enough housing in our cities
with surging economic potential,
which results in crazily skyrocketing housing prices
in places like San Francisco,
making it nearly impossible for regular people
to move in and take the jobs of the future.
And then last week, Mark and his wife,
Laura submitted a letter to the town of Atherton
to fight against multi-family housing saying I'm writing this letter to
communicate our immense objection to the creation of multi-family overlay zones in Atherton. Please
immediately remove all multi-family overlay zoning projects from the housing element which will be
submitted to the state in July. They will massively decrease our home values. The quality of life
ourselves in our neighbors and immensely increase the noise pollution and traffic.
Sex.
I'm just going to hand the mic over.
Well, I mean, I'm happy to defend the residents of Atherton on this.
I'm going to take the contrarian standpoint, but is anyone...
I was going to do the same.
I thought you guys were going to match up.
Well, look, I mean, do we have a problem where housing is too hard to construct
in the state of California, yes.
And there's a bunch of reasons for that.
The permitting process is Byzantine, it takes years,
all those delays cost money.
The tenant rights movement has gone so far
that landlords basically can't,
you know, it's almost impossible to evict anybody
and that makes it so no one wants to be a landlord,
so no one wants to build these multi-family buildings
or buy them.
And then you've got like all these taxes.
So you're just in California, in San Francisco, for example,
they just passed a 6% transfer tax
where we talked about this in the show on it.
They basically just took 6% of my home.
And there's like nothing you can do about it.
So there's a lot of reasons why people don't want to invest in more housing in
California. And I think that this Atherton example is sort of cherry pick,
because what this is is really zoning. You know, there are these suburbs,
and it's not just Atherton. I mean, you got the East Bay as well, where
people live in these areas that are zoned for single family residences as opposed to multifamily.
And that determines the character of the neighborhood.
Now if you go buy a house in one of those neighborhoods with that zoning, then that's
what you expect to be the case.
I mean, you have to spend more money buying house in that neighborhood because you are investing
in the character of that neighborhood.
So it is unfair to the residents of that neighborhood
for a developer to come along and say,
hey, I'm gonna change the character of this place
so I can make money.
I'm gonna take a bunch of single family lots,
turn them into multi-family apartment complexes
or something like that.
So I can understand why the residents would be against that.
So I would differentiate between legitimate reasons
for zoning and
then things that the state or cities have done to undermine the market for housing, basically
creating frictions or impediments to the market for housing. Now, it is the case that as cities
get bigger and need to free up land, that you might need to re-zone. But the areas that
you should look at for that should make sense, right? I mean, I don't think you go off to
Atherton and change the character of that neighborhood so that you can buy five more units.
Yeah, I mean, you should you should look at the like why not look at the areas around say public
Transit like the Bart's and so forth where you could basically go up around there and it would make sense for the neighborhood
I mean the example I would give to kind of paint an extreme picture is let's say you
want a farm in the countryside, someone buys the farm next to you and then decides they
want to build a 50 story tall skyscraper next to your farm.
You would have a serious objection because I think that the, I mean, look at the town
of Venice in Italy.
I mean, Chimoff, you've been there recently,
but, you know, communities,
local communities can define the character of their community
by making zoning laws that, you know,
allow a small city to remain like a small city.
I've also always been against this notion
that we should allow any developer to build any size building
anywhere they want in San Francisco,
which has been an ardent cry from Silicon Valley progressives for years that
we need to let them build, let them build.
But at the end of the day, I moved to San Francisco 22 years ago, and it was a small, quaint city.
It felt like a small city.
And building skyscrapers made it more congested, made it less inviting, made it feel more industrial.
And it wasn't appealing to me as a resident.
And I think that residents need to have the right to define what they want their community
to be.
The question it brings up then is where do you build?
Because all residents everywhere would want to block family housing, multi-family housing,
skyscrapers.
So I mean, Timoth, I don't know if you have a point of view to counter what we're saying,
but how do we think about solving this problem at scale?
If everyone wants their local communities
to remain quaint and interesting and not be built out?
Well, I think that's true for people who can afford really nice homes in the suburbs.
Right.
But there are a lot of people that live in highly dense housing in urban environments.
And I think that's where we need to focus first.
If you look at the data, California needs to build 3.5 million extra homes by 2025.
That's a rule, right?
That's like a...
So David's right, like focusing on a town with a population of 7,000 people, is not going
to solve the 3.5 million homes we need to build.
And it brings up a bigger question, which is then who is going to pay for all the physical
infrastructure that's going to be required?
Let's just say you're able to actually double the population of Atherton to 14,000.
Well, I live near that area, so what I'll tell you is Atherton has bad flooding.
Sacks actually used to live near there too, so sacks can confirm this.
Depending on when it rains, huge pockets of water just collect everywhere,
that infrastructure is bad.
There are no sidewalks, right?
So you kind of walk just on the road.
It's a car swipping by, you know, could pick you off at any moment.
Now, those were decisions that, as David said, the residents of that town made decades
ago because of the lifestyle that it created, and they traded
away a highly dense urban environment.
Whereas if you just moved a mile south, there are parts of Menlo Park and parts of Palo Alto
that are already in a situation to absorb very dense housing where you could put that extra
seven or eight thousand people.
Pretty easily.
What do you do when those people in that neighborhood in Menlo Park say, I don't want
another apartment building here.
I want it to be down the road in Atherton.
How do you resolve this conflict?
I just want to remind everyone in September, Governor Nixon signed these bills.
He signed 31 affordable housing bills, which mandate by zip code and by city
and by town the building of affordable housing to create equity in this problem, or which
basically means all these cities and all these towns are now scrambling to figure out how
do we meet our state mandated objectives of new affordable housing in our zip code or
in our town?
By the way, look.
Yeah.
I mean, look, the, and I think exactly as you said,
what will happen now as it goes to some state commission
and I think that state commission can issue
some sort of penalty or something.
So, you know, it's,
I think that the residents will pay for that freedom,
if you will, to not have that building happen.
But again, I just go back to,
it doesn't solve the crux of the problem.
The crux of the problem is we need to solve this housing crisis in the order of magnitude
of millions of homes.
And so millions of homes can only be absorbed mostly in cities.
So the real conversation, and you know, is I have more sympathy for the residents of Atherton than I do for residents of the city of San Francisco
Okay, because there is dense housing in San Francisco. There already is an infrastructure
Social services that were designed and built there are sidewalks again simple example
There are stoplights, you know in San Francisco that a lot of these towns don't actually have.
Now again, that was a decision they made 50 years ago and they would have to change that
decision.
But my point is, there are places that are already shovel ready.
And the real question is, why can't we build hundreds of thousands of units?
And so this is a good article to write because it's a Tony neighborhood and there's a few
thousand folks, but I think the real issue won't get solved until we figure out how to greenlight
hundreds of thousands and millions because we are three and a half million home short.
J. Cal, what do you think?
I mean, are you?
Well, the truth here is that this is not about Atherton.
This is every town, every city in California is fighting all development because if you
fight the development,
well yeah, you would obviously have less traffic
and supply and demand your homes become more valuable.
The place that's fought at most of all
is San Francisco in the city,
where you cannot convert homes,
you cannot take your Victorian and make it into a townhome.
And then if you look at what's actually happening here,
what they're fighting against,
you know, this is the hypocrisy of it is,
you know, these are townhomes.
This isn't like a 20 story, happening here, what they're fighting against, you know, this is the hypocrisy of it is, you know, these are townhomes.
This isn't like a 20 story, you know, giant apartment building.
They're townhomes and they're going to be $3 million each.
And they're not going to be for scary people and criminals and ruining people's quality
life.
It's going to be the venture partner or the receptionist, not even the receptionist.
It's going to be a venture partner.
It's going to be a CTO and a tech company who's going to be able to buy this and then be
that much closer to work.
And so it does wreak of hypocrisy and there's a really simple solution here, which is,
you know, there are cow train stations up and down the peninsula.
There are, you know, in some places, you have other municipal transportation.
Along those corridors, they should build up,
and they should build 10 story apartments, et cetera.
Redwood City did this recently.
We've all been there and seen the apartments
of the encourages.
But, J-Cal, you're talking about the exact kind of solution
we need because instead of trying to solve 100 units here
or there, Redwood City did an incredible job.
They solved it in the scale of tens of thousands of units.
And it completely changed the downtown of Redwood City. It is job. They solved it in the scale of tens of thousands of units. And it completely changed the downtown of Redwood City.
It is awesome.
And it's awesome.
Incredible.
And so no other.
And afraid of.
So what is incredible?
This is an imbiasome at its worst.
In my mind, I'm not going to specifically make it about
Mark and Jason.
I think everybody has the right to live in the neighborhood.
They want.
They get to state their feelings.
I think what we need to do is convince people.
And I think there's two really good arguments here.
Number one, do you want your chef, your kids?
Your chef, your kids.
You're saying your convince people
to let their neighborhoods change?
Is what you said?
To let them evolve modestly, to have homes
that their own children,
where their own chefs and housekeepers and associates,
we all know people in the area
who have bought apartment buildings for their nannies,
because you couldn't get a nanny, or you couldn't't get a chef so you bought some unit in Redwood City
and you rented it for your nannies or whatever.
Like we don't know a lot of people that are not everyone who have considered it.
And so that's the way you would convince NIMBY people to evolve here.
And then there's the second one.
This has to do with work from home.
When you commute,
you know, the issues of domestic violence, depression, drug abuse, substance abuse, alcohol abuse, all of that goes way up. And it's somewhere between 30 and 40 minutes of a commute. You start
to see people's quality of life seriously deteriorates. And so if we want people to come back to
offices, which Apple just mandated last week, everybody's coming back three days a week, like it or not, Tuesday, Thursdays,
and you pick the other Wednesday you want to come to work, I guess.
If we want people to come back to work, well, you have to build some
taller homes. The CEOs, the founders of the companies, the founders of the venture firms,
it's not about market reasons, it's about everybody. They don't have to commute.
The office is within walking distance
or a bike ride of their office.
People need to start thinking about their nanny,
their chef, their firefighter, and their employees.
Jason, I may have misread it,
but it wouldn't have solved the problem
for the nanny, the chef, the teacher, the firefighter.
No, this would be $3 million units.
No, it wouldn't even be that
because the way that it read,
because I read it, said that you would have qualified it
by building what's called an ADU on your property.
Yes.
So people would have built it for their grandmother or their in law.
Oh, people are doing that.
So my point is the law, as proposed, was already hacked.
And so it was never of accomplished what you were saying.
I think the answer to what you're saying is what Redwood City did.
It's what towns all around the country should be doing, which is like in and around, particularly
like transportation hubs, you should be green lighting a lot of dense housing. But Jason, those
are not ADUs that sit on a prototype. Those are 500 and a half out. And by the way, those also
required not just the infrastructure, but it also requires the financing and all of the,
you know, the banks and construction companies there to construct it.
That's not a problem in California.
The opposition is the problem, which is why the federal, I'm sorry, the state government's
getting involved and superceding or trying to supersede what happens on a local level.
That's why Gavin Newsom is passing these things is because each town is refusing to do it.
But another possible solution is if Atherton is so good at blocking this stuff and they
have so much money, let them pay a penalty and have Redwood City or San Carlos or another
neighborhood, Millbray, that wants money. And they want to build up. Millbray is building,
because that's what the Bart station ends, is Millbray? Just to get the building up there.
Well, you're describing like are all these contortions and what should be a more free market
for housing construction?
I mean, the reality is we've done so many things to distort the market with these labyrinthine
permit processes that delay projects for years and years to all the taxes and other
rules.
Because they fight it.
They fight it with all these environmental stuff.
Zoning is a little different.
Yeah, so the nomenism factors into the permitting process.
But I would, again, I would differentiate zoning.
But my point is just we've like so broken the free market for housing
that we then come along and say, see, the free market's not working.
We need more government mandates.
Look, is this happening in Miami?
No, go to Miami.
There are cranes everywhere.
They're building...
Houston.
They're building multi-family, or exactly. So in these frankly, red cities, red states, which are
much more lightly regulated, they're building a lot more. But at the same time, it's not like...
And in New York, which is constrained, so you have to build up. Yeah. But Houston has no zoning. Yeah. New York City has always had a very non-sentimental view towards construction.
The city has always said, okay, if you want to build something bigger and better, you can't
tear it down and start over.
I mean, they have like air rights and so on, they have to respect.
But New York City is never, by and large, they don't constantly label buildings as historic
and say you can't touch them and things like that.
New York City has always wanted to keep being dynamic and growing.
So there are other places that just don't have this problem and they're able to achieve
this growth without building an apartment complex like in the lot next to you.
If you live in the suburbs and have a single family residence. So I just think like, the politicians in the California have so thoroughly broken the
market for housing.
And now what happens is you get an article like this that's basically scapegoating the
residence of a suburb as being the source of the problem when they didn't create this
problem.
They're just fighting to keep the status quo.
So they're perpetuating it, I would say.
But you know, like, so first of all, I have no special love for Ahten.
Trust me, I live there for a couple of years and it's kind of like a step for community.
I mean, I had to move back to the city.
Well, I'm like, you know, somehow I'm just more comfortable stepping over dirty needles and
excrement. You're voting with your dollar. I'm
moved back to San Francisco, but. Massacres. Scrament. You're voting with your dollar. I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I real estate of any kind, there is no downtown. So I don't know where the hook is that you would all of a sudden put an apartment complex.
I mean, you're literally going to be building it in someone's backyard.
So the character of that neighbor just doesn't support it.
And I think people coming together to form their own cities under the principle of subsidiarity
should be allowed a reasonable freedom to basically construct a city as they
will in the way that they want to live.
And there are other cities that competition, Friedberg, there's other cities that competition.
Houston has no zoning essentially.
So you can, if you have a lot and you want to make it into a school or a hotel or a restaurant
you can do it.
And then outside of Austin, you kind of have that same thing.
People build all kinds of weird compounds and stuff out there.
Are you guys following in a competition between those cities?
And I think San Francisco is losing.
Yeah, are you guys following any of the startup cities
that are being built, where there's like a new city
being built from the ground up,
and any of those seem like pale.
Call the sack, I mean?
I don't know the names of any of them,
but the sack is one, yeah.
I mean, are these real, are these real projects,
are we gonna see these emerging like next gen cities
that could be viable places to move to and live, Are these real projects, are we going to see these emerging like next-gen cities that
could be viable places to move to and live, or is it really just about transforming
some of these cities that are less regulatory, and that's ultimately what will win in the
market?
Part of why the regulation has gotten so perverted in a lot of these towns is because you've
been able to gerrymander how these public school districts get funded. And so, you know, why folks are so protective of it is,
is again, and, you know, to underscore one of Sachs's points,
this is much more prevalent in democratic states
and democratic cities where, you know, coastal elites
have really jerrymandered these school districts,
and that's a large reason why they don't want a lot of building.
They want to protect the tax base and they want to be able to funnel those specific tax
dollars into a few schools for their kids and that's it.
Yeah.
And so it's actually a really good point to people don't know this undercurrent, which is
open down the peninsula.
By the way, this is the dirtiest little secret in these dirty states. Democratic states, again, mostly Democratic, but if you look inside of California and a
couple of other states, how horrendously jerrymandered it is so that you can basically redistrict
in a way to cordon off tax dollars, to only then send to one or two public schools that
sit inside of your area, your zip code, because that's what the law says.
It's a zip code oriented scheme.
It's perverse.
It's created incredibly horrible incentives for people.
So now, David is writing, which is that there's a, there's a contortion of laws that come
together that underlie some of these decisions that then manifest in a petition like this,
and et cetera, they all need to get cleaned up.
And Chimoff, it's, it's, it's even worse than that because the same people who have rigged it so that
all their tax dollars stay in their non-development community, then they're overfunding their
public schools. They could have easily afford private, but they're using all that money
for just their private school and the one in the town next to it, East Palo Alto, whatever,
they have no money. And then these people have the audacity to fight against school choice so that those poor
people can take tax dollars and then pick a better school.
So it's hypocrisy all the way up and down.
And I think this is why people are largely moving to different places around the country.
And it's a competition between states and cities.
Okay.
We're going to go from super local to global.
This is a topic
I wanted to talk about today because I want to bring together a couple of breads and get
your guys' take on, you know, all of these things kind of coming together and what it means
for foreign policy and how things might play out on the global stage in the next, you know,
call it years to decades. Xi Jinping, it's been reported this week,
is taking a trip to Saudi Arabia.
You know, this is just a few weeks after
Joe Biden made his trip to Saudi Arabia.
I'll read just an excerpt.
He's going to end his more than two years of self-imposed
in-person diplomatic isolation.
And his first trip is going to be to Saudi Arabia.
This is from unnamed Saudi sources.
So it's unclear.
This isn't an official statement.
This is just reporting.
The Wall Street Journal reported in March that after six years of negotiations, China
and Saudi Arabia are getting close for China to start paying yuan for oil that they would be buying from the Saudis.
So there's an important kind of economic tie-up that may be emerging that could affect the US dollar and the importance of the US dollar on the global economic stage.
And meanwhile, this week as well, it's been reported that China is doing military exercises with
Russia inside Russia.
So there is an extension of China and their influence and their economic tie ups and their
military activity with both China, sorry, with both Russia and Saudi.
I also want to highlight another important point that came out this week.
Saudi Ramco reported their earnings, The largest earnings ever for a company, $48 billion of net profit in a quarter. That is more
profit than Microsoft, Apple, Facebook, and Tesla combined in a single quarter. It is the most
profitable business. And Saudis have been very public about their intention of divesting their interest in Saudi
Ramco, which is their state-owned and state-run oil company, and moving into other businesses.
Over the past couple of months, it's been reported that they've accumulated a nearly $100
billion equity portfolio, owning stocks like Alphabet, Zoom, Microsoft, and others.
It's also been reported that they own over $160 billion of US
crazieries.
So the US is very dependent in the private equity community
and the VC community and in the public markets on Saudi
dollars.
Saudis have been large holders of US dollars.
And now, through China, it looks like the Saudis may be
having a tie-up that brings them closer to China through
this trade relationship with the Yuan and the visit from
Xi Jinping. While China is actively exercising their military inside of Russia.
Is the future a China, Russia, Saudi axis, and should we be concerned and should we be
changing any of our tactics on foreign policy, David Sachs, as this set of threads plays out over the next
couple of months and going.
Yes, I think we do need to make some changes.
Biden's backing away from this now, but in his first year, he declared the Saudis to
Pariahs and he did push them into China's arms.
What was the point of that?
Biden recently had to go to the Middle East to basically beg Saudi Arabia to increase their
production of oil.
So he's already acknowledged that policy didn't work.
And one of the reasons it didn't work is because simultaneously with declaring these allies
to be enemies, he basically restricted US energy production, which is strategically
undermined.
And the US has military bases in Saudi Arabia, very strategic assets for the US military.
Yeah, listen, listen.
And we sell them weapons.
The US relationship with Saudi Arabia
is always can be complex.
They're a complicated friend to have,
but it's much better to have them as a friend
than basically drive them into China's arms.
And the reality is,
whatever you think about the regime there
and how impressive it is,
first of all, we don't get to choose
the people running these countries.
That's the lesson we should have learned
over and over again from all these failed
regime change operations.
Second, do we have any reason to believe
that if that regime got toppled,
it would get replaced with something better.
I think we all know that if the regime there fell,
it would probably be replaced with something fundamentalist
that we would like even less.
And certainly if another nation were to basically dominate the region like Iran, that would be
worse for us as well.
So our relationship with them is complicated, but ultimately they should be, I think,
allies of the United States, and we should not be working over time to push them into China's
arms.
And I think similarly with Russia, we've basically declared ourselves to be engaged in this proxy war with Russia, which
strategically there's just nothing in it for us.
You can sympathize with the people of Ukraine all you want.
But it's dangerous.
You've said that in the past. I mean, I think the question is, does this China military exercise in Russia indicate an escalation of our
conflict with China to you.
Or is this something that is just kind of par for the course in terms of neighbors conducting?
Mayor Scheimer just said an article in Foreign Affairs talking about
the Ukraine war reminding us that it's still going on.
I think people somehow think that this war is just stable and it'll settle into
forever war status, like Afghanistan, these conflicts in Middle stable and it'll settle into forever war status, like
Afghanistan, these conflicts in Middle East and it's went on forever.
It's actually very dangerous.
It can always escalate out of control.
And as long as it's going on, I think we just have to remember that it's going on.
It poses a huge global risk.
And I would say that one of the things that, again, we should be aware of is this idea
that even though we have problems and conflicts with multiple nations, we should be aware of, is this idea that even though we have problems
and conflicts with multiple nations, we still don't necessarily want to push them into
each other's arms.
Again, the Soviet Union and China during the Cold War being the key example.
I mean, this principle of geopolitics goes back thousands of years to the Romans, right?
A Davidate at Emperor divide and rule.
You do not want to unite your enemies.
And what we've done here is we keep pushing them together.
You know, China and Russia historically have not been friends.
They share long borders together,
neighbors generally have problems with each other.
These are nations with serious conflicts
or differences of interests.
And we've made it really easy for China
to turn Russia into the junior partner
in that relationship.
Tomov, do you think US foreign policy needs to change
and that we're setting up this, you know,
access of conflict, this access of allies
that we don't want to have the allies
and, you know, would you kind of advise?
And also, you know, do you get concerned
about this oil you aren't trade where there may And also, you know, do you get concerned about this oil
you aren't trade where there may be some, you know,
economic tie ups that really could affect, you know,
the dollar as a reserve currency?
Look, a couple of things.
I think it's really dramatic to kind of paint it
in these dark kind of like bipolar terms.
I think we are post all of that. So I understand how in the stark kind of like bipolar terms, I think we are post all of that.
So I understand how in the Cold War,
it was easy to fall into binary definitions
of good and evil one and zero us versus them,
teammate versus team B.
But in 2022, I don't think that's how things work anymore.
We are in a highly interconnected, highly global world.
It's very complicated.
Dollar flows are real time, they're massive.
Cooperation is real time. It's all over the world. It's with every country. So it allows
every country actually the first chance that they've ever really had to maximize their
own potential for their own citizens. And that's really what every country's goal is.
Right. And so, and that lens, look what just happened today. Gasprom said they're
going to shut off Nord Stream 1 just for a few days, right? But as a result of that EU
net gas has just gone absolutely nuclear and just closed at all time highs.
14X, 14X where it was pandemic, right? You know, price unit for a year ahead. So if you
take a step back, we are at max energy production
with all of the capacity all around the world,
a hundred plus odd million barrels a day.
Okay, global productivity absorbs that.
There is very little room right now
to expand that without pushing the date
in which that capacity is available
out until, you know, 20, 28 to 2030.
So effectively, a decade from now.
So if you're in this situation in your country
with vast natural resources,
of which I'll just remind us America is one.
I think the most important thing you can do
for your own citizens is to monetize these petrochemicals now.
Get it out of the ground in a reasonable way.
Sell them in the marketplace because there's demand for it.
Take that money and reinvest it in your people.
And I think if you look at it that way,
the best run countries are responding to this moment in time
like any company would.
How do you maximize demand and sell the product you have to the
most number of customers globally? And so I think the Middle East is doing an incredible job, the US,
by the way, by passing the IRA, finally I think is on the right footing because we can talk about
this in a moment, but the path to permitting and the path to clean up, and by the way it puts
fossil fuels on a level playing field with clean
energy alternatives, emerging alternatives. Yeah. The best thing that could have happened.
Okay. So I think we're all behaving in a very rational market focused way. And so I would
focus less on trying to dramatically kind of resolve these things as a few countries
versus everybody else.
I don't think that's what's happening.
Now, much more complex.
Much more complicated than that.
But I think the simple explanation is,
people with resources in the ground of the country
in which they rule have a responsibility
if they believe that there's market demand to absorb that
so that they can take the revenue that comes from it
and reinvest it in their people. That is true for the United States. It's true for Saudi Arabia. It's
true for every country in the world.
Yeah, I mean, Saudi Arabia is clearly making these investments, right? Not just on, yeah.
And by the way, I mean, like, but also housing and new industry and education.
And then what do you do with that much money?
And Saudi Arabia is becoming much more liberal as a result too, right?
By the way, if you look at the investment, like, you know, you didn't need to go to Dave Swenson
and understand portfolio allocation, although I think the guys in Saudi are smart enough
to have probably done it.
But if you have a lot of money coming from one kind of business, and you need to make
sure that you can diversify so that you can
reinvest over a long period of time. If you look at countries that had huge petrochemical-related
revenue flows, the Nordics, what did they do? They stood up these huge sovereign wealth funds,
and those sovereign wealth funds went abroad, and they bought all kinds of non-correlated assets
to those petrochemicals. That is the same thing that Saudis doing now.
Financial security for their people. But it's like, what is the furthest
uncorrelated asset from oil? It turns out it's Apple, Facebook, Meta, and Google.
And you have tried to raise your Uber. Hey, Jacob, let me ask this
contrarian question for you because you often talk about the authoritarianism
of these states, Saudi, China, Russia.
You know, it seems to me as we observe what's going on
in Saudi and maybe the case could be made in China
to some degree, although there are steps taken back,
but also in Russia, that the US influence,
the economic and the political influence associated
with these foreign policy conversions, could
they maybe be driving these countries to be more liberal?
We're seeing in Saudi now that women can drive, that there's new industry, that there's education,
that there's a technology industry booming, that you don't need to have a turnover of government,
an turnover of what is often classified as authoritarian
regime for the operating model to be influenced by the West in such a way that change happens
more slowly and you do see liberalism emerge in these countries with better educational
standards, more equality, more human rights.
And so do you think we're kind, because you often kind of paint a picture that it's bad
guys versus us, you know, do you not think that we're making an influence on these places
locally and that we're seeing that?
Well, I would take exception to like, it's bad guys versus us.
I don't think we want to create a legion of dictators in order to, I think that's what
this is.
I would actually agree with SACs.
We should be embracing these folks and having strong relationships with them, even though
we are fundamentally different
operating systems for our country's democracy.
Do you think we should be embracing our terms?
You think we should have a relationship with Putin?
Just a hundred percent.
I mean, and we did, right?
I mean, Obama was making some progress on that, and we did some great work when, and obviously,
Trump has a very, very longstanding, very deep,
we don't exactly how deep relationship with Putin.
And we did great work with, we did,
I mean, they did the, he did his pageant over there.
I'm making some jokes, they brought on apartments.
Yeah, that was a joke, okay, go on.
Just a little joke, they put on a little joke.
We'll find out over time, I suppose.
But we did great work with China
in terms of containing North Korea's nuclear
ambitions, right?
And so there are things we can collaborate on.
I think the most important thing, though, is that while we are embracing them, building
fabric between them, communication, trade, whatever it is, we are not relying on them.
And that's really what we have to look at when it comes to the kingdom, because if not
for the fact that the kingdom won the, you know, born on top of, you know, oil fields, lottery, we would not be in a deep relationship
with this country. They're living under a 10th century, you know, rule in terms of how
they treat women, gay people, etc. and the human rights is an important issue. And we
wouldn't have a deep relationship with them if we didn't have to do what they owe, but
we do. And so what I think we really need to be focusing on here is maintaining great relationships
with them.
Yeah, we don't want to drive them to each other's arms, but to Schermott's point, I don't
think they're creating the Legion of Doom to take on the U.S. I think they're just doing
what's in their economic interest.
And we need to do what's in our economic interest, which really is investing in nuclear, investing
in solar, batteries, wind, and even rituals.
And that gives us the interest of the free world, and Europe, exactly.
And if we are independent of them, then we don't have to go over there and kiss the ring,
like Biden had to do.
We don't have to deal with excuses when they do horrible things like murder Kashoggi or just this past week, they put
Samal Shahab in jail, she's a PhD student from the University of Leeds. She's now going to go to
jail for decades because when she went back to Saudi Arabia on vacation, this happened last week,
gentlemen, because she retweeted people. And so these human rights violations, the murder of
Kashoggi, all these things add up, the weagers, et cetera.
And we'll have a better ability to negotiate and lead them as the shining city on the hill
when we work on being that shining city on the hill and we're not dependent on them.
And that's really what I think we have to focus on.
It's reducing the dependency on these countries.
I think we all agree.
Whether it's medical devices, PPE, drugs, making our iPhones or oil to keep us.
And then sort of you're up.
And that's where nuclear comes in.
Speaking of reducing dependency, you know, Joe Biden signed the inflation reduction act.
Some people have said this is the most important bill signed in years, if not decades, past decades passed by US Congress, signed by a president, because it touches on so many points
that folks believe will really move the needle with respect to climate change.
Tommoth, I think you made an interesting point in our group chat, and I think maybe we should
start there, which is, at the end of the day, the systems of industrial
production on planet earth were made in such a way that we never accounted for the costs of
the external output of these systems, meaning we can burn fuel, put CO2 into the atmosphere,
or put methane into the atmosphere in the case of animal agriculture,
and we get a low-cost product that we consume,
and ultimately no one specifically pays for the cost of the carbon going into the atmosphere,
which I, and many scientists would argue,
is having an anthropogenic effect on the warming of the planet and more catastrophic weather,
and all these other risks that we're now facing.
And so the idea was, first principles,
you should tax people for tax industry,
tax businesses for the production of atmospheric carbon
that causes an effect that we're all gonna have to pay
to repair over time.
So, is that a point of view that you hold Chimoff?
You kind of brought this up in our group tax, but that's the, that would be the, the ideal
scenario to resolve climate change. As if you just tax carbon, we kind of, you know, have a, have a real solution here, and that this whole bill is ultimately,
you know, meant to kind of resolve the fact that we simply cannot find a way to a carbon tax.
I actually think that what this bill did was kill the idea of a carbon tax.
I think it makes it completely unimportant and it'll never see the light of day.
Why?
I think it's because in the absence of what we did in the IRA, there wasn't a clear way
of doing exactly what you said, which is letting people figure
out what the equivalent trading price would be for burning a pound of coal versus generating
the energy needed to run something off of nuclear.
There was no market clearing function for that.
And the reason is because you couldn't get an equivalent amount of capacity effectively available online so that they could compete one for that. And the reason is because you couldn't get an equivalent amount of capacity effectively
available online so that they could compete one for one. What we did through this IRA was
essentially use money to create so many subsidies and then to also green light the way that
incremental fossil fuel projects would come to market. So that now they actually going to be put on a level playing field
in the broad open markets so that they can compete.
When that happens, I think you will make those trade-offs better yourself.
And as a result, I don't think that there will be a necessary offset
mechanism that'll be required.
Because this plan will still get us to about 40% of the way there
where we want it to be by 2030, which is still a pretty decent leap forward.
There is no plan that gets us to where we all need to be anyways. And I think that the appetite
to go from this plan to where we need to be doesn't really exist. So I think that we're just going
to have to kind of grid our teeth,
get through the implementation of the IRA and realize that this is the beginning of a
probably a hundred plus year project. Nothing's going to get solved by 2050. Maybe you'll
see something done by 2100, probably not. It'll probably be a 2150, 2200 kind of an
objective. And in that lens, I think like a whole bunch of business models got turned upside down.
So I think carbon markets and carbon trading are not going to be the thing that we thought
it was going to be.
I think stuff like direct air capture again are going to be toy projects off to the side.
I don't think that those are not those are not going to be credible businesses.
Totally.
Like we thought they were going to be instead the raw tonnage of dollars will do what America
was able to do for solar and PV over 2000 to 2022, which is just crushed the cost per
watt into the pennies so that it can be equivalent to hydro, coal and nuclear and put everything
on a level playing field and then allow the
market to figure out.
Yeah, I mean, there's a lot of other stuff in this bill.
I want to highlight for you guys.
I don't know if any of you looked at the CBO, so the CBO, the Congressional Budget Office,
any time the bill is being voted on, they do an accounting analysis on how much spending
and how much revenue there
will be as a result of this bill for a ten year.
This is actually awesome.
Yeah, I checked it out.
Yeah, if you look at every year for the next ten years, the CBO score for this bill is that
we're going to spend an incremental, we're going to increase the deficit by $330 billion
for the next five years.
And then we're going to decrease the deficit by 320 billion in the five years after that.
So the net effect over 10 years is we're only spending 17 billion dollars on the bill.
And then on the revenue basis, the expectation is we're going to generate 67 billion in revenue
in the first five years and then another 20 billion in the back five years.
So this is actually being accounted for and presented as deficit reduction.
And that's because there's 87,000 new IRS agents being hired to go out and audit people and
find new revenue. And there's a 15% corporate minimum tax being imposed on all companies. And what
this means is that companies, public companies, private companies doing over a billion in revenue
historically pay taxes on a book basis. Now they're paying taxes on a financial statement basis, meaning the actual accounting that
they present to their shareholders.
Can I ask you guys a question?
How much was given to the IRS?
80 billion.
Yeah, tens of billions.
Yeah.
80 billion.
How much do you think it would cost?
I don't know, pick the most excruciatingly expensive third party outsourcing firm you could.
To build an entire system to basically automatically review every single tax return and throw exceptions.
And machine learn, what fraud look like or what misrepresentation.
Let's say $5 billion.
It'd be the most expensive piece of software ever written.
And this is what was so kind of like,
that was the only part of the build that made a less sense to me.
I think like if you put really smart computers on the case
or gave it to DeepMind and Google and said,
can you guys build this system with machine learning and AI?
You've done.
And a simpler tax, which I guess this is trying to do, but you know, freeberg, when I looked
at this and you sent it, my initial reaction was, you know, this old adage.
It'll be impossible for these guys to find 87,000 humans that want to work at the IRS.
Number one.
By the way, there's a funny video on the recruiting that's been going on for that.
But yeah, go ahead.
Yeah, it's pretty good.
But I mean, you know, because they were asking for people who were ready to like have
guns and like be put their body in harm and is like at the ice crazy.
I was like, that can't be real.
Anyway, the greatest, this is what I got from this Excel spreadsheet.
The greatest tool for writing fiction is not Microsoft Word.
It's Excel.
Like, there is no way this thing is netting out to zero.
Like, this thing's going to cost us a fortune. Government is in sh this thing is netting out to zero. This thing's going
to cost us a fortune. Government is in shambles. We don't know what we're doing. I thought that
the links you sent for the podcast with the pros and cons of the carbon tax was really interesting
because it is so complicated. When I heard these tax experts explaining how you would implement
a carbon tax and the import and export and then how often it would have to be tweaked and then who decides
What your carbon footprint of your watches and and where did the minerals come from to make the watch and who gets paid on carbon
It just seemed to me. There's a fool Zaryn. It would be much better to just what if your watches made from diamond and not carbon
Well in that case you should just pay a million dollars
Well, in that case, you should just pay a million dollars because you are the greatest coastal elite. We should just start with yachts and watches. What I realized was what we really need to focus
on. And you tell me what you think, Friedberg, instead of doing this carbon tax, which seems
incredibly elegant, but we all know is impossible to get consensus across hundreds of governments
and localals to negotiate this.
It will never happen at least not effectively and in real time.
Wouldn't it be a much better technique to do what we do in venture, which is, here are
the biggest problems in the world.
Here are the, in this case, would be the biggest emitters.
Here are the best solutions.
Here are the teams working on the best solutions.
Let's give the teams working on the best solutions.
Money to walk down that list, and if it happens to be,
you know, ships coming from China, you know,
with a bunch of containers on them and container ships,
we measure that.
And you know, the thing I've learned after the first six months
of investing in carbon,
because we have a syndicate now at Molly Wood,
who's working with me on this climate syndicate,
we couldn't find a lot of great investments,
that made sense, that weren't asset heavy,
but then we started to find,
we found two great monitoring companies
and they're monitoring air pollution
and they're monitoring ship pollution
and we made investments in both of those
and that seems to be where we're at
is we should be monitoring and figuring out
where the carbon is and then trying to solve it
based on which ones are the easiest to solve. Let me just say two things on that. Bill Gates has
done a great job of this. You can read his latest book or go to Gates Notes and he's done exactly
what you described, which is break it all down, show what we should do. And that's actually how he's
investing his own money. He's putting his money where his mouth is. So there's a really good blueprint
for this. He's done the best job of anyone I've seen. The issue with the carbon tax is you have to
come up with a consistent, reliable way of measuring the carbon
and then you have to do it consistently and broadly.
How do you miss, you know, if you miss one factor or another,
then you have to ratchet up the price over time.
So first thing is the challenge
of how do you agree on measuring.
Second is how do you agree on broad accountability.
Third thing is how do you ratchet the pricing over time.
Fourth thing is how do you deal with the offshoring problem.
As soon as you start taxing companies in the US for carbon emissions,
all the production is going to go offshore where they're not taxing for carbon emissions.
And there's no way to account for what they're doing off-shore.
And this has been the challenge with China and India. There is.
There is. There is because it's part of your first problem.
Yeah, sorry, let me just hit the final one. We'll come back to it. But the final big one is just
the equity in carbon tax. People have said that the ultimate increment in cost of production is going to adversely affect lower income people because they cannot
afford the price of some stuff going up by 25 to 50 percent.
It's really a luxury good, a luxury privilege to be able to pay for the incremental cost
of stuff to account for the carbon offset needed.
That's the set of issues that have been pushed back against the carbon tax, and it's
why it's been impossible to get implemented and to really get into markets.
Sorry, Chimoff, go ahead.
I was just going to say, part of the problem in all of those issues, if you offshore, is
still that there's people pushing for what's called the scope three accounting, which is
like, you know, you got to go back to your supplier and your supplier supplier when your
supplier supplier supplier.
Where does it end? It's impossible. Where does it end? It's not credible. like, you got to go back to your supplier and your supplier supplier and your supplier supplier.
And it's impossible.
Where does it end?
It's not credible.
So I think that the bill has actually cleaned up
a lot of future question marks about what we have to do
as a country to go about doing our part for climate change.
And I think it probably creates a reasonable blueprint
for everybody else.
And now they're going to have to do some version of the same thing.
And what's amazing is that if we actually pass this framework,
which is still yet to be written around how to make permitting more seamless
and efficient for these hydrocarbon projects, it will really unleash
a massive torrent of both revenues back to the United States.
It'll increase our national security and it'll allow us to really kind of put a dent
in this thing because it'll pull forward the amount of competition that it creates to
actually get off those hydrocarbons, which is a counter-true.
I got a notice from someone who's an investor.
So there's a lot of climate tech funds now.
A lot of funds, Jake, you said you got a syndicate in investor. So there's a lot of climate tech funds now. A lot of funds, J.Ka, you said you got to syndicate and carbon,
but there's a lot of funds and a lot of investors that are putting a lot of capital
just into early stage climate technologies, which travels everything from energy to materials
to food, to industrial and manufacturing and so on.
And I got a note from one of these companies, a startup that highlighted that the $1.25 per
gallon tax credit for a clean production of fuel, which has to demonstrate a 50% emissions
reduction in the manufacturing process, will now make this startup profitable.
And by the way, you get an extra penny per gallon for every 1% reduction
in emissions below that 50% threshold. There is a lot of start-ups that I'm hearing
about that their unit economic models were questionable before, now because of this
bill, they are flipping profitable. I personally think we are going to see a significant influx
of venture capital and support for a lot of these climate tech and new
energy material and manufacturing projects that otherwise may have been held back because
the subsidy will kickstart.
The question for me that I still don't have a good answer to is, are they sustainable?
Over the long run, if this bill gets shut down or repealed and the funding sources stop
and the subsidy stop, do these businesses survive or are we simply creating regulatory capture models like we did with other energy products in the past and with food?
If you're not a contribution margin positive today, free this bill in climate change, and
the bill is the only way that you get there, you're DOA, you just don't know.
Great point, yeah.
Sacks, the biggest line in this bill is the corporate minimum tax.
I don't know if you saw this, but 15% minimum tax
applied to the accounting profit reported
by any company over a billion dollars.
And they're estimating it'll generate 313 billion
of incremental tax revenue over the next 10 years.
Do you have a point of view on whether this corporate
minimum tax is gonna cause an issue with startups
and companies going public
or the valuation in the public markets.
Or is this just, hey, this should happen, it doesn't matter.
I mean, I don't know if you spent much time on this.
Well, no, I think the issue here is that why is it that these companies are able to
pay so little taxes?
Well, the reason is because there's a zillion loopholes and incentives and tax breaks
in the existing code that they're taking advantage of.
I mean, these large companies have lots of accounts
and lawyers, they're not deliberately violating the law,
they're scrupulously adhering to it
and taking advantage of it.
So it's all these tax breaks that they're able to use
to pay no taxes.
Well, what does this bill do?
You talk about the spending on climate,
the 386 billion.
Most of it is tax incentives and some block grants.
So this is now the preferred form of,
quote unquote spending in these bills
are tax credits and incentives.
This is the way they're going to change people's behavior.
So in other words, the bill on the one hand is complaining
that corporations don't pay enough taxes because there's too many tax breaks. While the other hand creating a
whole slew of new tax breaks. So there's a little bit of a contradiction there. Again,
why do all, why are companies paying no taxes because of the last 10 bills tax breaks
that were supposed to move the behavior of businesses and consumers in a certain direction?
So just recognize that that's the case.
I think you also made a really good point about the phantom deficit reduction here.
So like you mentioned, when we see this in lots of bills, all the excess spending, all
the deficit spending occurs in the first five years and all the deficit reduction occurs
in the last five years.
Something always intervenes to prevent the savings
for taking place.
It's like start a projections, right, sex?
Yeah, it's like we're a lot of my sales guy.
We're cut the budget next year, you know?
And so just to give one example of this,
so this ACA subsidy extension,
so this is the Obamacare subsidy,
it's about 60 something billion a year,
they're extending it for three years,
but they're assuming it's just gonna die at that point as opposed to keep being extended and no one's gonna want to vote to make that
Go away in three years just like they don't want to vote to make it go away now
So if you extend that subsidy three years from now just that one item alone
Makes the deficit reduction of this bill go from
305 billion over the 10 year period to negative 155 billion.
So just that one item if you continue it and don't sunset it, just that one thing makes
this a hugely deficit, not reducing bill, but deficit increasing bill.
And so you wonder what problem is this bill really solving and they can't seem to agree
on that.
I mean, first they're telling us, is it deficit reduction bill, then they're telling us it's a climate bill, then they're telling us
it's an inflation reduction bill. It seems to me that if they're really proud of this and believe in
it, they would choose a name for the bill that actually reflect it what it was. Well, all bills would
be named something for everyone's sex. I mean, like, that's how all these bills get in order to pass
a bill, bipartisan bill, you got to give something to everyone. I mean, you know.
But this is mostly, you know,
this is mostly a climate-related bill.
You know, this is mostly tax breaks
and block grants, relates to climate.
I mean, there's a huge tax issue with the IRS agents
that are corporate minimum tax,
but there's also a huge component on prescription drugs.
Timoth, I don't know if you spent any time looking at this,
but it's only the IRS agent. Yeah, kind of say we'll add one detail on that. Yeah. huge component of prescription drugs. Timoth, I don't know if he spent any time looking at this, but.
Sorry, just on the IRS agent.
Yeah, kind of say we'll add one detail on that.
Yeah.
So the claim of the administration and the sponsors of the bill
is that this would not increase taxes
on anyone sort of middle class.
And so the Republicans, I think,
this is one of the few politically smart things they did.
The interest in amendment, basically prohibiting
these new 87,000 IRS agents from conducting
audits of anyone making less than $4,000 a year, which was what Biden said, you know, he
wouldn't increase taxes anyone below 400,000. That amendment was rejected on straight party
lines. So this idea, yes, it's called the Craypo Amendment. It was 5050 and Vice President
Harris had to come in and make the tie-breaking vote.
So obviously, they know that there's going to be a lot of net new audits on people making
less of the work.
Yes, exactly.
So the next slide.
My understanding of this is it's like small business owners, people who run a small business
and a service business.
And are they really accounting for their books correctly?
Are they really expensing the right things, etc?
Are they accounting for all of the new-
They're going to get whammed.
Yeah, they're getting whammed by this because, look, let's face it, billionaires are already
getting audited. You know, Elon had a tweet saying, listen, I get audited as a matter of
course every year. You know, these people already have-
Dude, I use a big four accounting firm.
I mean, this is the amount of-
I have a partner. I have a partner like Anderson
that is literally like, you know, covered. You know, it comes a fortune. Five hundred fucking
companies might as well be in your office. Put them in your, your, your, put them in your
United States unit. It's to many people. I mean, by the way, sacks, sacks is right. Like,
if you look at them, you know, the ultra wealthy, I think it would be shocked if any of those folks
were actually evading taxes at all, because it's impossible the way that this infrastructure
runs.
You're getting K1s from Blackstone.
What are you going to do?
Can you change that?
Do you guys even know the pin number of your bank card?
I have no idea.
It's So complicated. Yeah. Okay. So so my point is I don't think that if there is, if there is
cheating of taxes, it's happening at that level.
What's happening at that level are much more structural issues like carried
interest, which they decided not to touch or trust in a state law.
Trust in a state state.
Those are those.
No, I don't think that this is my point.
It's not mistakes.
There's nobody with a pencil really filling out a K1
for Bill Gates, dummy.
That's my point.
No, I know, but people can make mistakes.
What if a K1 gets left off?
That's what I'm saying is when they start,
it's usually easily...
Okay, it doesn't happen.
Jason, Jason, I'm aware of my tax return.
It's done by an accounting firm and I just signed it.
I don't, I don't know what I'm talking about is
what are the IRS people gonna to find is, you know,
I tell you what they're going to find.
They're going to find a lot of.
I guess they're going to find a lot of middle class and upper middle class folks.
And they're going to have to focus on them because individually, it may not represent
a lot, but when you multiply it by the number of people inside the United States, and this
is what the Wall Street Journal and a bunch of other folks have been saying now, when you apply 87,000
people and task them incrementally with doing a job, it's not going to touch these folks
that are already audited. It's going to touch the folks that are not audited and by and
large, a much, much larger majority of middle income and upper middle income people are not audited, which is why I think you could spend a lot less than $80 billion and just
build software that guarantees only those that should be audited are and uses machines
to help figure out these leaks.
Or start simplifying the tax code because when you add this 15% minimum, Friedberg, what
is that going to do to the strategy of a public company?
Okay, so we should show less earnings, put more to work.
Oh, we're not going to be able to depreciate this or whatever.
I mean, it's going to create all these sectors of third order impact.
Impact, no, we don't know.
Well, I think SACS' point is important, which is one that we don't yet have insight into,
which is what is this going to cannibalize?
Because ultimately, if there is a minimum tax, it doesn't make sense to pursue
incentives that create a tax break today. And therefore, those incentives won't be invested in.
Whatever those incentives are, I don't know what they are, low income manufacturing,
zone development or whatever, who knows what they are, come and build your business here and
get tax breaks, etc. Local, state and federal tax breaks. your business here and get tax breaks, et cetera, et cetera,
local, state, and federal tax breaks.
If those start to get written over, then there's going to be really adverse effects, and I think
that that's something to watch.
I don't understand it well enough.
Certainly, I'm not an accountant, but I would be kind of worried about and keeping an eye
on that front.
I do think the bigger question, which is a biotech one,
the prescription drug price cap minimizes the profit
that a number of pharmaceutical companies will be making.
It gives authority to go negotiate prices.
This is the second largest line in the bill.
And there was a survey done by healthaffairs.org
on an R&D survey, which said,
will you guys reduce your investment in new drug development?
And I think that they came based on this bill,
and I think that they came up with some estimate
that there would be two, the number two fewer drugs
that would be kind of made available per year because of reduced spending
as a result of the price cap, which basically reduces revenue, which will, in essence,
reduce R&D investment.
Guys like Bernie Sanders will say, hey, that's not true.
All that money is going to share buybacks and dividends and so on, but it is a fact
that those share buybacks and those dividends will
still continue.
If they are reduced, so will the R&D expense.
If the R&D expense is reduced, fewer drugs will come to market.
There's also a question mark, and people will debate this for the next decade, which is
how much will this prescription drug price cap actually have an effect on R&D investment
and ultimately on new drugs that come to market.
So my personal opinion, sorry,
let me just say my personal opinion,
is I don't think that this will have a huge effect.
I think this is an excellent part of the bill.
I think that the government should have authority
to go and negotiate there the largest buyer of these drugs.
And typically when the US government,
the federal government steps in
to be the largest spender on a particular line,
the cost of that line balloons, like we've seen in
healthcare, like we've seen in education, and like we've seen in military and defense
spending.
And so I'm hopeful that this will actually provide a more effective market force in
allowing the biggest customer in the market to negotiate prices, and that the VCs, instead of making 48% IRR, they'll ultimately
make 28% IRR on the investments that they're making in biotech startups.
That's just my point.
Well, what exactly doesn't mean for the government to negotiate prices as opposed to the government
just to fix prices?
I mean, is this price fixing?
Well, in this example, if they're in this example, anything's the right answer if they're
the single largest customer, SACs, right? I mean, meetings the right answer if they're the largest,
single largest customer, SACs, right?
I mean, you know, and then they are the market.
I mean, what's the right thing to do?
Well, I mean, you're saying that these drug companies
are gonna make a lot less money.
Well, obviously that's gonna have a downstream impact
in the willingness to fund new drugs.
New investment, new R&D.
Yeah. Now, no one R&D. Yeah.
Now, no one likes farmer companies,
so I'm not defending exorbitant profits or whatever,
but I don't really know what it means
for the government to say they're negotiating.
I mean, the government just tells you what it's gonna be.
That's price fixing.
And these companies are gonna adjust.
Yes, the government will pay less money in the near term.
In the long term, there could be reduced investment in R&D.
I think there'll be a balance of, you know, do you,
do you all have governments?
You know, all governments,
don't all governments, I know that you're close
to some of these drug companies.
Don't all governments negotiate the purchase
of these drugs and then if they don't like the price,
there are alternative drugs and they'll say,
hey, listen, your drug is too expensive compared
to these other two solutions. So we're going to buy this one primarily for our universal
healthcare. There's this interesting thing that happens, which is that there's these drugs that
are proprietary and under patent, okay? These could be chemical drugs or they could be biologics, okay?
And eventually what happens is when they go generic, then folks will step in and make lower cost versions
of those generics.
I mean, I'm on a stat, and I think a couple of you guys
are on a stat, and I don't, it's lipitor,
but it's not lipitor, right?
It's a torvostat, and it's like some generic drug
that I just take, okay, as an example.
And there's a lot of folks that make that,
and the cost of those pills basically go to zero.
But there's a bunch of categories, particularly for biologic drugs, where it's very different,
it's very difficult to make up what's called the biosimilar.
This is a generic drug.
So long and short of it is, there's all these classes of drugs that kind of like stand
alone without enough competition.
And I think there are two ways to solve this problem.
One is where the government steps in, which I think is good,
but the better way has already been happening in the United States.
So, you know, there's a nonprofit, which is a collective between a bunch of hospitals called Civic Up.
And I think that's a really interesting example.
And what those guys do was they said, we're just going to create our own generic drug manufacturer.
And we're going to make the drugs we want. We're just going to make them super cheap.
And you know, they're in the midst right now of completing a massive facility, I think
it's in Virginia, where they'll be able to make as much insulin as is needed for the entirety
of America for no more than 35 bucks a dose.
That's gangster.
That's gangster.
It's super gangster.
We'll make our own. And by the way, when California said they're going to make their own, what
they really meant was that they're going to go and RFP it out. And my hope is that they
end up going with somebody like Sivika, who has the experience of actually building it.
Otherwise, it's just going to California is just going to waste hundreds of millions
of dollars. We're a proposal if you don't know what RFP is.
Request for proposal.
Yeah.
But there are these emerging nonprofits that are basically doing the work of the government.
I think that's a better solution to what SACS is actually.
Great competition, right?
It's gonna create competition.
Yeah, competition.
We gotta move along because I think...
We're doing a great job, Fred Bergeride.
Just one moderator to another, exceptional job.
You know, I appreciate it.
I think one of the interesting things sitting in your seat,
Jake, is you see everyone else's face,
and you see the boredom and the annoyance
that people experience during the podcast.
Watch the eye roll, leave for a drink.
I think Chimab is eating funnions, sacks,
and you're doing that all.
Jerky, I'm being joking.
You should be joking.
Don't tube in on the podcast, please.
Yeah, no, and I think that the... Don shouldn't be, don't tube in on the podcast, please. Yeah, no, and I think that the,
Don't what?
Don't do the Jeffrey tube in on this podcast.
What is that?
I told you,
Jeffrey tube in was a CNN anchor who on Zoom
accidentally jerky, no,
he masturbated on a Zoom call with his,
what the fuck does that have to do with beef jerky?
You said jerking and I just,
No, I said I was eating jerky, dummy.
You said you were jerking something, that all I'm sorry. Oh by the way
So I am no longer fighting with Phil Hamuth. I oh my god guys still blocked
No, so I was so mad at him
Okay, so you know I finish I finished this
I finished I finished the fucking transaction to sell the warriors, you know
This is this is a six month or deal, okay?
I started in November, right?
I'm starting to sell things.
I decide I'm gonna sell the warriors.
I sell it to a large private equity fund in November, December,
and then we had to wait for them to close the second fund
and then we sold the rest of it.
And it closed in June or July.
And then I put out this tweet, right?
Like thanking everybody and thanking Helm you for
the same line in which I, I'm like, I thank Peter Tiel and I thank Joe Lake.
Everybody is happy except for Helm you who calls me and is angry.
And he's like, I, you know, he had this issue with how it was characterized that how he
had introduced me or something where he wanted credit for having the first treat of the
tweet storm. He should have been higher up. Or you know,
and I was like, well, Phil, what if it hadn't made me money? Would you have just
made me whole? Like what would you have done? Like it's like you were like the
architect of this thing. Anyways, I was so mad. I just said, I'm not talking to
this dipshit anymore. I'm done with him. I'm done. I'm breaking up with him.
And he would call me when I was in Europe and I would ignore and I would
get this incredible enjoyment from just pressing to to voicemail. He would send me text messages
ignored. And then I mean, this has always happens this way. I didn't want to knock
out me. She's like, why did you ignore his phone call? And I said, I hate Phil. I'm done
with it. Help you. I told her the story. She got so fucking mad at me. And then I had to
send this text. I'll just read you the text because I think it She got so fucking mad at me. And then I had to send this text.
I'll just read you the text because I think it's just so fucking hilarious.
I was going to ignore you for the rest of my life
based on your tantrum with me earlier this year.
But Nat has convinced me to see where you are coming from in part.
Oh.
Anyways, we're good. Call me later.
He called me once.
I can't let that.
He was waiting. He had your textx of it open. I get this picture
nat. Me a more. He's your friend. Why do you got to be such a jerk? He's a friend. You
have no friends. All your friends are going the way.
Anyways, I'm back in the good with news. I'm back in the good. Okay. You got to play poker.
We do need to get a brother game. Before we wrap, Sacks is going to give us,
instead of doing science corner,
we're going to do a Mar-a-Lago corner.
Tell us what it's like, Sacks.
Yeah, what does Mar-a-Lago like?
You've had your membership now for 18 months?
Never been there, never been there.
But, no, I wanted to give a shout out to this article.
Last week I took some heat
because somehow I guess you're not allowed to question any
more the rectitude of the FBI.
The J.A.G.R. Hoover's FBI, we're not allowed to question any more.
A lot of people feel that way.
There was an article that came out in real clear investigations just I think yesterday.
And what it exposed is pretty amazing.
The group, the unit within the FBI that conducted the raid on Mar-a-Lago, is the same group that
conducted the investigation into Trump back in 2016 that lied to the FISA court that had
its members, its leaders, Peter Struck, were fired for basically wrongdoing whose members
are actually under investigation right now by the special counsel
John Durham.
And you've got people who are on probation right now.
So this is the same unit that basically conducted the raid on Mar-a-Lago.
So I think there's still more to come out about this, but it's just amazing to me actually
that Christopher Ray, the head of the FBI, American Arlen, the head of the DOJ, thought that
this wouldn't create the appearance of a conflict
of interest or impropriety, the fact that you've got the same unit that previously was
disciplined for wrongdoing in an investigation of Trump is the one conducting the right
on Mar-a-Lago.
So pretty amazing.
J.Kale, retort.
I'm sorry, but we're talking about that.
No, I'll tell you.
I'm so brutal. No, I'll tell you. I'm so brutal.
No, I just want to make, I have a couple of child actors.
Oh, look at these props.
They're on camera right now.
Look at these props.
Amazing.
Oh, good work.
Nice props.
Oh, beautiful.
And then you're seeing there, hold on, sax.
Before you get back to Trump, what you're seeing there is a family unit.
This is when a family gets together and expresses love towards each other, but continue
about Mar-a-Lago. No, that's wonderful. That's wonderful. That's wonderful. family unit. This is when a family gets together and expresses love towards each other, but continue about more logo.
That's wonderful. That's wonderful.
That's wonderful. You could take a picture of this and you could send it to your friends
on Christmas.
All right, Jason, you are, you do not accept the real clear investigation report that maybe
there is some long term.
I have actually some feedback. It's nothing to do with Sacks. I just think a lot of times I get positioned
as sometimes when I'm moderating,
I like to challenge Sacks.
Last week I chose to stay out of it.
I let him go.
And I think one of the reasons people
didn't like your comments last week, Sacks was other than,
you know, J.R. Grover being dead for 50 years,
putting that aside and it being irrelevant,
I think the reason people didn't like it was because I didn't come back at you and question some of the things
you were saying.
And so I think they felt it was an unbalanced discussion.
They expect me to do that, but I don't want to be pinned as the adversary to to
sacks his positions in every case because I'm an independent.
I'm a moderate.
I voted for probably a vote.
I voted, uh, Democrat my whole life.
I voted for both of those parties. But I do think
that what's happening here is, you know, Trump is under five different investigations.
He's got a career of doing disgraceful criminal fraudulent things. And I feel very bad for
GOP friends. I feel bad for Republicans because they have to carry water for him. And
it's, they put themselves in this really difficult position of defending
him. And we've talked about in this podcast about January 6th, we talked about voter fraud,
my good friend, one of my best days, David Saxon said he doesn't believe that the election
was, there was election fraud and he doesn't, he thought January 6th was disgusting. I'm
not speaking for you, that's what you said. And so I think, the fact that the Republicans
feel the need to defend him constantly is one of the big you said. And so I think, you know, the fact that the Republicans feel
the need to defend him constantly is one of the big problems here. And I think on the
other side, the fact that the media is forcing Republicans to defend him and creating this
narrative and this hysterics like, oh my God, CSB, SBN Ajax, he's doing SBN Ajax. This
might be very simple. Trump lied cheated stole his whole career from Trump University to what's happening
with the Trump corporation now with the CFO and his nonprofit.
This is his life is a history of griffs and crimes and unethical behavior.
What the GOP needs to do is stop defending him and just let him go off into the sunset,
as Stax pointed out last week, and that's what this podcast needs to do because there's no reason for me to sit here and
do the left wing talking points or for, you know, SACS to do the right wing talking points.
The fact is, first principles, Trump's a grifter.
He's a Democrat.
He's a GOP.
That's it.
My point is not to defend every shady deal that Trump's ever done or even to defend
Trump at all.
My interest is having a DOJ and FBI that's not politicized and is not used as a political
weapon or to pursue political targeting or vendettas.
And the reality is, at some point, we're going to move past Trump as a country, but the
press incidents that are created now are going to stick with us for a long time.
And the reality is, we should not have an FBI and a unit within the FBI that is pursuing
these political vendettas.
And in this article by Real Clear Politics, the amazing thing is Christopher Ray prohibited
this unit from seeking warrants from the FISA court.
So he knew there was enough misbehavior last time to basically prohibit them.
But it seems to me, that's a very narrow takeaway.
It seems to me that the takeaway should be we don't allow this unit to pursue Trump again
because they committed so much wrongdoing.
Yeah, it would be cleaner to have a clean unit, right?
Why wouldn't they do that?
Yeah, I mean, if it's true, because that is from a biosource.
And if it is true, that would be good.
I mean, real clear policy is kind of like a political.
Look, guys, this has been a lovely one. Love you, man fun. Jake. How thank you for letting me sit in your seat today
Yeah, good to great, you know, I appreciate that it was it was a lot of fun
Maybe sacks would like to have a run in the seat at some point here. He doesn't
But for your as your guest moderator for today. I'm Dave Friedberg and this is your all-in pop. Thank you. Bye-bye
Brain man David is you're all in pop thank you bye bye What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? We just need to release our album What your, that be, what your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, you