All-In with Chamath, Jason, Sacks & Friedberg - Elon gets paid, Apple's AI pop, OpenAI revenue rip, Macro debate & Inside Trump Fundraiser
Episode Date: June 14, 2024(0:00) Bestie intros: bringing up the energy! (8:48) Trump fundraiser recap (23:16) Elon's comp package approved by shareholders (40:12) Apple announces "Apple Intelligence" and ChatGPT deal at WWDC (...50:17) OpenAI reportedly hits a $3.4B revenue run rate (1:05:26) Macro debate: State of the US economy? Follow Tim Naki: https://www.instagram.com/tim.naki Follow the besties: https://twitter.com/chamath https://twitter.com/Jason https://twitter.com/DavidSacks https://twitter.com/friedberg Follow on X: https://twitter.com/theallinpod Follow on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/theallinpod Follow on TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@all_in_tok Follow on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/allinpod 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.instagram.com/tim.naki https://x.com/eoghan/status/1799161733766062545 https://x.com/bennyjohnson/status/1800979079472288145 https://x.com/bennyjohnson/status/1797086962626494840 https://x.com/elonmusk/status/1801084780035154058 https://x.com/jhall/status/1795794521604718814 https://fortune.com/2024/06/10/elon-musk-pay-package-tesla-lawyers-delaware-chancery-payout-stock-award-56-billion https://companiesmarketcap.com https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RXeOiIDNNek https://x.com/chiefaioffice/status/1801022115426009309 https://trends.google.com/trends/explore?geo=US&q=%2Fg%2F11khcfz0y2&hl=en https://trends.google.com/trends/explore?q=%2Fg%2F11khcfz0y2&hl=en https://www.bls.gov/charts/consumer-price-index/consumer-price-index-by-category-line-chart.htm https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/FEDFUNDS https://www.jpmorgan.com/insights/outlook/economic-outlook/jobs-report-may-2024 https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/CES0500000003 https://www.warren.senate.gov/imo/media/doc/2024.06.10%20Letter%20to%20Fed.%20re%20interest%20rates.pdf https://www.cnbc.com/2024/06/07/jobs-report-may-2024-us-job-gains-totaled-272000-in-may.html https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/JTSJOL https://x.com/VinnyLingham/status/1801129023168454907 https://www.reddit.com/r/wallstreetbets/comments/1aw5bbb/world_economy_on_nvidias_shoulders https://www.instagram.com/stocktradingmemes/p/C3qer-sSfb0/?img_index=1 https://x.com/jameslavish/status/1801248976911634648 https://x.com/peterfenton/status/1801300735520608529
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Nick, these guys are low energy today. You notice that? You know what we need to do? We need to gamble. Let's do it. Nick. Let's play a hand of blackjack. Let's get these guys.
Gentlemen, what an absolute pleasure to walk amongst some goddamn great. So let me see if I can put a bit of pip in your step with a one time blackjack hand to kickstart. One of the podcast on earth. It is I can't confirm this is not AI.
My you did this. We're gonna rock and roll proper today.
Let's go. All right. This guy on right now.
Mate, you are going to you are actually breaking my own rules
for you guys. I filmed today's hand day 14. But I'm going to
film tomorrow's hand for you guys right now. It'll roll out.
Hold on. Hold on. Wait a minute, Tim. You are in Kiwi living in
Calgary. Is that right? Correct. Yep. Kiwi living in Calgary. Been here since September 2022. The
Mrs. and I. Oh, my God. Welcome. Welcome to my country. Welcome to the party. Thank you.
I don't know how I stumbled across you somewhere. And I started watching all your videos on
Instagram. They were off the hook, man. Congrats. They're awesome. So much fun.
Where in New Zealand are you from?
From Taranaki. So West Coast, North Island, certainly not somewhere. It's not a holiday
destination for certain if you go in there. It's like dairy farming country. It's, it's
beautiful, but it's off the beaten path. So yeah.
And how did you, how did you choose Calgary, of all places in Canada?
Do you know what the miss-
We holidayed here, my fiance and I, May 2022.
And we thought it was just gonna be a holiday
then back to the farm.
But I guess we had that COVID cabin fever
like the rest of the world and loved our time here so much
that we just decided before we even finished the holiday
that we cracked on to get in our visas and got back, sold up my livestock and
lease the farm back to me parents and made the move. And
we haven't looked back. I don't think they'll be seeing me
pulling tits on the dairy farm anytime soon. That's colloquial
for working, by the way.
So lads, what do we want to do here? We want to put 10k and
then give it to one of Tim's mates who's stuck or something.
How do we do this?
We Mr. Beast this, we give 10k to the next time
you get coffee if we win,
and you give it to the barista or something.
What should we do?
Yeah, let's do it.
Let's do it.
Let's do a 10k free roll for Tim and his fans.
Okay, perfect.
So now do you want me to add that to my bet for this one?
Yep. Yes.
Absolutely.
We want to be in a 10k sweat with you.
One and done is absolutely the way to go about this. Yes, absolutely. We want to be in a 10k sweat with you. One and done is absolutely the the way to go
about this. Here we go. First part we've got to do here is
pick out these real dealers or these AI. No, these are these
definitely are real dealers that certainly Eastern European as
far as I know, I don't know what the quality of life is like. I
imagine their warehouse somewhere and put on the tools
now I had a fight with a with a young lassie today and she roll
bold and asked me so I'm going back to the books because I've
been good to me.
Yeah, pick a book. Somebody who feels blue collar who wants to
work for us. We need somebody who's a worker. And he's hoping
over a million followers now watching this. Yeah, crazy.
This 15,000 to 1.3 million in this entire journey. So yeah, a little bit nonsensical, but
Okay, this looks like a good, he looks like a hot worker.
What do you think of this guy?
He's gonna work for us. Are you gonna, are you gonna cop the insult live as I do it?
Alrighty, it is day 15, going to Blackjack Committee 173, or I've got, we have a $14,000 bit going on for me personally,
but I actually have some absolute legends with me today. I'm bidding for the
besties from the all in podcasts as well. They're going to bring
the luck having been rolled bold enough by young Lassie
yesterday with $34,000 goes on the line. Oh, no, no, you guys
want 10,000. All right, not 20. Jeez, I better not. Not take
it. Put a stop for 10. 24,000 is going on the line.
Our dealer looks like the kind of bloke who stops at red lights
playing GTA.
We won't hold that again.
I feel gnawed, if you will.
I need to see good guards.
Jackets!
21!
21!
21!
21!
21!
21!
21!
21!
21!
21!
21!
21!
21!
21!
21! 21! 21! 21! 21! do it! That's how we do it!
That's how we do it!
That's how we do it!
That's how we do it!
That's how we do it!
That's our worker bee!
That's our worker bee!
I knew he would do it for us!
I can't believe we've just pulled that off!
Oh my god!
Did that really happen?
Gentlemen, that has really just happened.
You've just turned 10 into 25.
Holy sh-
Holy cow.
Oh my God.
Look at Sax.
He's like, we can do this for the whole taping.
That's amazing.
Sax is ready for another round.
We turned 10 into 25.
All right, so are we going to have a separate all in balance? We just
keep rolling it every week.
Yeah. Can you come back next week? We just keep rolling.
We might have to. That is, I cannot believe we've just blackjacked. That is unbelievable.
Well, Tim, have a good day.
Tim, you are a legend. Everybody follow Tim on Instagram. Let's get him to 10 million.
Let's get, I mean, you have a future in broadcasting. You are going to make millions. You went
from the farmhouse to them. And here we go. Now you're going to be running a casino. I
think you should have Tim's blackjack. You should have your own brand. It's a whole brand on this. On Insta. I tell you, I wouldn't run anything. I wouldn't have to run anything.
If I can just play one hand a blackjack with you guys and I'd land Jack Ace every week.
That is unbelievable. And like we said, that 15 K we won. Yep. That's yours for you and
the misses. Go on vacation. No, no, no, no, we said it. We said it. We want you to do something. Go with it.
We're already cashed up. You take that 15k. You take the
misses out, you get some first class tickets, you meet in
Italy. And then let's go. That's it.
I go first class to the all in summit now that now we could
play some oh, we could do blackjack. We may or may not
have a have a fun casino night there. So this will play some. Oh, we could have a whole session. We may or may not have a
fun casino night there. So this will be fun. Yeah. You got to come on in summit for sure.
All right. Yeah. Get the Mrs. Take the 15k two first class tickets, get yourself set up in a nice
hotel and we will see you there. All right, everybody. Let's get to the docket. Well,
thank you. Thank you. See you later. I appreciate awesome. That was unreal. I can't believe they have live dealers
standing in a warehouse in front of a webcam.
I don't.
That is such a, like imagine walking into that facility.
You're surprised that facility only has what, dealers?
That's like only fans are gonna come to us.
I think there's a lot of webcams there.
I think you can choose at the door of what you wanna do.
Deal blackjack or whatever else you wanna.
Whatever else you wanna be be on a webcam.
The dealer's probably making a porno in the next room.
Above the table and below the table.
There's two different tapings occurring.
Oh my God.
It's so funny.
Oh man.
Oh, it's rough.
It's rough, folks.
That was so awesome.
So what happened?
You DM'd him? That was so good. Yeah, you's rough. That's rough, folks. That was so awesome. So what happened? You DM'd him?
That was so good.
Yeah, you know what happened was somebody emailed me
and they're like, hey, that's my mate that you talked about.
He's a big fan of the show.
It turns out, you know,
this is the thing about influencers now.
This is the thing about this micro-celebrity stuff.
We all know each other by default, right?
So he was just slid into the DMs.
That was great. That was great.
That was awesome.
That was awesome. I'm so glad he won.
And, you know, he basically got smashed in his DMs.
Like a thousand people DMed him,
Oh, you're on All In.
They're bugging out to you on All In.
And so, yeah, I just said, Hey, would you do a hand?
Would you do your live hand with us?
And then I didn't, I didn't, I wanted to clear with you guys
before I put our money on it or whatever,
but I couldn't do that because I wanted to surprise you.
Yeah, that's correct.
But here we are.
I did not think that was real when he popped up.
I thought it was like a recorded thing.
Yeah.
All I could think of was,
do I look like an ass by saying more?
So that I just stay quiet?
I thought we had talked more than 10k.
I was like, we're gonna start with 50k,
let's just see what happens.
I know, you're gonna feel like when you like tiptoe into the bet with like a small amount, but you're, well, you know, start with 50 K. Let's just see what happens. I know. You ever feel like when you like tiptoe into the bet
with like a small amount, but you're,
you want to do more and then you win
and you feel like you actually lost money
because if you had made a bigger bet,
you would have made more.
I feel like I lost 60 K.
Yeah.
I should have put, I would have put 50.
No, I would have put 50.
I would have won 75.
Instead we put 10, we won 15.
I lost 60.
We made a Jake Neltsize bet.
Yeah, yeah, it's a Fielder bet.
We open source it to the fans and they've just gone crazy with it.
We let your winners ride.
Rain Man, David Sackler.
And instead we open source it to the fans and they've just gone crazy with it.
Love you, Westies. Queen of Kin Wands. I don't know what's going on.
Anything going on in your life?
Anybody been busy having some adventure, Sax?
Seems like you were busy last week.
Anything to report from your side of the world?
Well, should we take you guys behind the scenes of a presidential fundraiser?
I admit I've never done one before, so it was a new experience for me. Well, should we take you guys behind the scenes of a presidential fundraiser?
I admit I've never done one before, so it was a new experience for me.
When you host a president, it's just a whole different level of preparation.
The Secret Service was out like a week before, the president has an amazing advanced team,
they work out every detail, they make a map of your house, they really have to think through
everything.
The police shut down the street.
It's really a very involved process.
By the way, I went to dinner in the city that night and you know, I was right by
your house, so I drove up the street and they had everything blocked off on like
three blocks on both streets, like on both sides of your house, but there were
all these protesters like all throughout San Francisco, like pro-Tr Trump people had driven in from all over NorCal must have been,
because these were not San Francisco natives.
Supporters, yeah.
And they came in with these like cars and the streets were blocked.
It was a total zoom in the city for hours before and after.
I actually stayed in the city that night and I heard the people going nuts for hours afterwards.
But it definitely
like took over it took over the city. Yeah it was really interesting is that all week the
San Francisco publications had been trying to gin up protesters by writing
about that you know the president's coming to town and the protesters are
gonna show up and in fact there was almost no anti-Trump protesters and then
a huge number of pro-Trump demonstrators came out and they were waving flags and cheering along his motorcade as he was coming to the house
So the whole protest thing backfired. Why do you think?
Anti Trump protesters did not show up what happened. I think there's just a big enthusiasm gap
I mean, I think that the pro Trump people are very enthusiastic and the
Let's call pro Biden or anti Trump people are just not very motivated right now.
So it's exhausting to be against Trump for eight years like this
has been exhausting people have exhausted folks.
Uh huh. So anyway, so Owen McCabe, who's the founder of
Intercom, he was there. And I think this was actually a good
summary because
he said that he spoke with a bunch of people and none of them identify as Republican, all voted or
donated Democrat in the past. That's true for me too. Now they're backing this guy for his policies
on war immigration, crypto and more, the selections referendum on those issues. So,
Owen came out, appreciate his support. But it it's true that campaign told us that they had more
first-time donors at this event than they've seen before and that's because a lot of these people hadn't
Supported Republicans or hadn't supported Trump and they came out so we have a few photos and videos here to keep behind
So the first thing to say is that
President Trump is extremely charming. He connects with people in like five seconds.
I mean, he meets you and find something interesting and or funny to say.
And he's hilarious.
I mean, when he spoke in the living room and he talked extemporaneously for an hour, he's
speaking off the cuff.
Every speech he gives is different.
This is him coming into the living room.
He had made just a few notes about topics
he wanted to talk about on a piece of paper,
but that was it.
It was all completely extemporaneous.
No teleprompter, obviously.
And he's hilarious.
I mean, people don't realize how entertaining he is.
What were some of the greatest hints?
What did he hit on?
Did he hit on low pressure from
Showers? Did he what what because I know he's got like some things he hits on that are relatable. Was it all like
Specific crypto topics tech topics or did he go on? You know, he did talk crypto and
It was really interesting at one point
In his speech he called on the Winklevoss brothers who were there. And I'm only
mentioning this because it was already reported that they were
there. So I don't want to speak out of school. But he said to
them, he says, I know you guys created Facebook. He was giving
them credit for creating Facebook. I know he actually
created it. Yeah, but he said, but but it's okay. I mean, you
guys look like models, you were dealt a lot of cards, you know,
a lot of cards.
he said, but it's okay. I mean, you guys look like models. You were dealt a lot of cards, you know, a lot of cards.
I mean, they're very good looking, huge IQ. And I mean,
look at him.
And so I thought, okay, wow, like he must know the Winklevoss
brothers, he must have met them previously. And I found out this
the first time that he had ever met them. So think about the
awareness that he has to know that they're in the audience to
see them, point them out and then have this kind of hilarious routine with them. So he's someone
who's very sharp, very on the ball, very funny, and then his energy level is incredible. So
he had started his day at Mar-a-Lago at 3.30 a.m. Pacific time, 6.30 a.m. his time. Then he flew to
Arizona, did a Trump rally in Arizona. Then he flew
to San Francisco for our event. He spent four hours at our event. He could have left an
hour earlier if he wanted to. Then he flew to LA for more events the next day there.
So think about his day and his energy level was just amazing the whole time. Chamath, your thoughts? Before this goes on for an hour. Yeah, I'll give you two observations.
The first is that I think that there is a huge gap
between how the media tries to portray Donald Trump
and what he's like when you meet him in person.
And that gap is really wide.
And so I would say specifically to Democrats and independents,
you really do need to sit in the room and feel what it's like.
David is right. He is charismatic.
He's intellectually sharp and he's funny
And when you put that together, he can engage an audience for a long time and be totally extemporaneous
the other thing I would say that is that he is very polite and
He's kind in a way that was disarming and
Was not what I expected
And so I felt that I had misjudged him many years in the past. And so I was very glad that I had an opportunity to sit beside him and to actually interact with him one on one. It was really, really engaging. And so that's that's more about the style. And then about the substance, what I would say is, it was not just a pro America
agenda. But it was it's very clear that he was pro innovation. So he was really supportive of AI in the details
that he talked about. He was very supportive of crypto in
those details. And he's very much low regulation, low
taxation.
And so when you put that together,
it does stand very much in contrast
with what the alternative is.
And so I think that both of those things
are a reason why even if you aren't willing to vote for him,
I would encourage everybody to experience what it's like to hear him.
Freeberg, your thoughts on all this? I didn't go to this.
I didn't go to the event.
I don't know.
No, I know.
Just big picture.
I want to know why Chamath didn't wear a tie.
Who else is wearing a tie?
You don't want the tie?
Chamath doesn't need a tie.
He's a baller.
All right.
Do you want to say what Trump said to you when he met Natalie?
So it's us talking and he says, you guys are a really beautiful couple.
Uh-oh.
And I said, well, thank you.
And then he turns to me and he goes, well, you must be really rich.
And I started laughing out loud.
Nat thought he was hilarious.
So it was-
Oh, because of the disparity in the looks
between you and Nat is what he was sort of implying.
You guys sat next to him at dinner.
Yeah.
And was that like an hour just private conversation
between the three of you?
This is the other thing that he does.
He actually sits there and he says, you know, folks,
I'm happy to continue to talk about whatever you want me to.
You feel free to ask me questions or feel free to just go
around the room and just tell me what you think. And what would happen is
people would say different things and then he would start asking questions of
other people and the thing becomes almost like this roundtable discussion
of topics from we talked about Iran, we talked about foreign policy, we talked
about deficit, crypto regulation, everything.
What did he say about deficit and debt?
Well, he's very much on your side of we have to really figure out how to get
spending in order and get the deficit under control.
Well, congrats on a, sounds like a successful event for you guys.
Sounds like you guys are in the halls of power now
and Trump has flipped his positions on EVs,
abortion and taking away a woman's right to choose.
He's flipped his position on TikTok
and flipped his position on crypto.
I give him a ton of credit, four flips in a month
and he just sweeps all those votes.
It's pretty smart.
And for the Democrats who are listening,
he's also pro AI.
You're losers and you're not listening to people.
So you're gonna lose the election
and Biden's gonna get demolished.
Nobody wants to vote for somebody
who they think is in cognitive decline.
Jake, you think Biden's getting demolished, right?
That's your thought?
That's your bet.
I mean, did you see the video that came out this week
where he was at some event and he looks,
it looked like a Mitch McConnell moment, right?
Where he was kind of frozen.
He was like stuck.
And so I don't want to make it like elder abuse.
And I know like people have-
Is that elder abuse to say,
to be honest about what you're observing,
especially when it comes to the-
No, no, I'm just saying,
the most powerful role in America.
Yeah, he's got to bow out.
Five 38 just put out their election forecast
showing 51% chance of Biden winning,
48% chance of Trump winning as of two minutes ago.
Yeah, who knows?
I think it's all gonna be determined by the debates.
Sax, you were gonna say?
Well, I just think what other job in America
could Biden even be qualified for?
Like, what would you hire him to do? Is there any? Is there any job you would hire him to do? Is there
any physical job you would hire him to do? I'm to be your babysitter. I mean, I don't think there's
any job in America that anybody would hire him to do, except for maybe president, it's kind of kind
of crazy. And this is where like the Democratic Party parties in shambles. We should have the highest standards
for the mental acuity, sharpness,
and energy level of our president.
It's the most demanding job in the world.
We need a cognitive test,
but the Democrats need to just look deeply in the mirror
and say, hey, you're fielding a candidate
that nobody's going to vote for.
That's the problem here.
And there's not enough anti-Trump sentiment,
and Trump's a genius at flipping his position to get huge swats of voters. And so you're going to get demolished if you don't hot swap them, I guarantee you hot these issues. But I actually think what's happening is that
this is really going to be about Trump versus Kamala Harris.
I don't think Biden is gonna step down at all,
but I do think there's a chance,
a non-trivial chance that Biden wins.
And if he does, I don't think he's gonna make it four years.
And so then the real question is, do folks want Kamala?
And have they had a chance to
really figure out whether they want to vote for her or not? I think that's really where it's going
to come down to. It's really Trump versus Kamala Harris. And if you frame it as that, Chamath,
then it's even a bigger trouncing, right? Like if you put Biden, if you put Kamala against Trump,
then what would the, it would be an even bigger shellacking. Yeah.
Can you remind? I just think that without saying anything bad about Kamala, because I don't know
much about her is really what I would say is I don't know much about her. And so you can't
have somebody who gets into that role accidentally. I think there, we have to give both President Trump and President Biden a lot of credit,
which is they stood in the eye of the hurricane and withstood all the pressure and won.
And he who wins that way deserves to be the president of the United States.
She hasn't withstood that. And so I think that it's pretty unfair for a lot of voters if there is a bait and switch. And so I think that you have to look at both of these two candidates and assign a reasonable probability that both of them make it to the finish line. And from at least what I saw up close, I think it's a much
higher probability that Donald Trump does than President Biden
does.
And listen, Biden hasn't made it to the finish line of his first
term. It's obvious to everybody who's in cognitive decline, you
put up a candidate who's in cognitive decline, you're going
to lose, even against, you know, Trump, who people really don't
like these are the two most unpopular candidates of our
lifetime. I'm not sure about that. I don't think it's true that really don't like. These are the two most unpopular candidates of our lifetime.
I'm not sure about that.
I don't think it's true that people don't like Trump.
I think that-
Oh, well, he's got a core, but yeah, no, people,
the Republicans, including yourself,
were looking for a different candidate just months ago.
You said Trump was not your preferred candidate
and you were all in on DeSantis.
So let's not pretend like he was your preferred candidate.
He's the remaining candidate.
So you're-
Yeah, but I think it's wrong to say that
there's not enthusiasm and love for Trump.
We saw it on the streets.
We saw it in that room.
There's some, yeah.
Do you see Logan Paul meeting with Trump four years ago?
He was for Biden.
Now he's for Trump.
Have you ever seen Trump walk into a UFC event?
They go nuts for him.
I'm just saying there's a lot of enthusiasm
and a lot of love out there for Trump, a lot of excitement. I don't see any go nuts for him. I'm just saying there's a lot of enthusiasm and a lot of love out
there for Trump, a lot of excitement. I don't see any of that for Biden. There are people who don't
like Trump and that drives some support for Biden. But if you look at enthusiasm and excitement,
it's all on the Trump side. In this we are in total agreement. Yes. There is no enthusiasm to put
somebody in cognitive decline in the White House. All right, listen, we gotta get to the docket.
We could talk for hours about Biden, Biden, Biden,
Trump, Trump, Trump, and we will.
It's gonna be a continuing topic,
but let's get to a very full docket here.
Breaking news, last night,
Tesla shareholders have backed their guy.
Yes, there was two important votes measures that Tesla just had taken with
their shareholders. The first was approving Elon's pay package, the $56 billion pay package
that was voided by a Delaware judge. We talked about that on episode 164 back in February,
and then moving Tesla's incorporation from Delaware to Texas. This is also major.
Remember, we talked last week about the Texas stock exchange. Here's the two charts,
massive overwhelming support. There were some notable people who dissented. I think Norway's
sovereign wealth fund and CalPERS were two of the ones who were voting against it. Tesla share price
popped 6% on the news.
You don't want to lose Elon a Tesla.
That would be really bad.
So your thoughts, Chamath, on this vote
and maybe the move and what that represents.
It's kind of odd that we're in this crazy place.
Say more.
When that original package was
unveiled. There was a lot of people including me, who thought
there's no way he's going to hit this. It's just way too
aggressive. And it requires so many things to go right. And so
I think in part that's why
3 quarters of the Tesla shareholders approved it then.
73% is not squeaking over the line.
It's not 50% plus a vote.
It's a super majority.
And that excluded Kimball and Elon Sheriffs.
Exactly.
And then I think you have this very dangerous form
of judicial activism, which essentially ignored the will of
the shareholders and fight to create some administrative
ruling that threw up this big question mark. So then in in
typical Elon style, he's like, great, we're just going to get
them devoted again.
And then yet again, it passes and it looks like
it's gonna pass by around 73%.
But the problem now is that it's still not clear
what happens, I think that there's still
some question marks where this may not nullify
the judge's decision, it may actually create
more question marks.
So hopefully this gets sorted out.
He should get this stock, he never should have,
or these options, he never should have had them taken away.
And so I just hope this thing,
Yeah.
it becomes a nothing burger.
Sachs, you have thoughts on this outcome?
Is it surprising to you?
Not surprising.
And then I think the jurisdiction thing is bigger
than maybe people are thinking because
Delaware has been the standard for incorporating companies, but Elon is putting his companies in
Nevada and Texas. We saw the stock exchange last week, getting back to move to Texas. This does
seem like there's something about jurisdiction in the water. What are your thoughts, Sax? Well, I think it's ironic that the winning margin, 73%, is the same margin by which shareholders
approved his comp package back in 2018. So again, they got 73% voted for this 2018. Now
they voted to reapprove it by the same margin. And the reason why they had to do it is because
this activist judge in Delaware avoided it on the grounds that
somehow the original shareholder vote wasn't valid. And I think
this is interesting that the margin didn't change because it
shows that shareholders aren't ingrates. Elon delivered what
he promised, and now shareholders are upholding
their end of the bargain. And certainly they didn't have to
take that position. There were different groups like CalSTRS.
Who basically took the position what have you done for me lately you know you delivered but we don't have to pay you because the judge so we're not gonna pay you.
And i think shareholders wisely approve the package because i think there was some chance that if they were nagged.
That you long could leave the company And I still think he's absolutely vital
to all the innovation that's gonna come
in the future from Tesla.
And you see this, the stock is ripping on the news.
It's up about 3% today in a down market.
So clearly the market thinks that securing Elon's future
at the company was the right decision
and shareholders did the right thing.
In terms of the downstream effect on this, like you said, it raises the specter of Delaware
being an activist state.
That's not why anyone incorporates in Delaware.
The reason why you incorporate in Delaware is because you think it makes you subject
to an extremely predictable body of corporate law that's been tested and
become well approved over many many decades and now all of a sudden you have
to worry that maybe a judge will set aside a shareholder vote for reasons
that seem incredibly specious especially in light of the fact that the
shareholders just reapproved it So obviously the shareholders didn't think
they needed your protection and they voted to reverse you.
And moreover, Tesla could still be subject
to paying the legal fees of these trial lawyers
who've asked for literally billions of dollars
in legal fees that the judge still has to rule on.
So imagine this, imagine that the shareholder vote
gets set aside by the judge,
it then gets re-approved by shareholders, but the trial lawyers who brought this nuisance suit
can now get billions of dollars. If that happens, I mean, Delaware can kind of kiss its status as
the premier corporate law state away. Friedberg, is this a John Galt moment? Is this where capitalism, socialism, and the state collide and people
now start thinking, hmm, maybe we need to create a new jurisdiction, a new framework?
That's a good question. I think it's a good example for capitalism.
And I think it should shine the light on how other CEOs are getting compensated
at public companies companies where there's
typically a multi million dollar or multi deca million dollar pay package that has no dependency
on the performance of the business. You can make tens of millions of dollars a year and not drive
shareholder value. And I think that the way that this deal was structured, where Elon effectively got 10% of the company for 10xing the stock, should be an example that
other boards should actively consider when considering both
candidates and their appetite for this sort of a package, and
their compensation packages themselves. The way executive
comp typically works at the board level at public companies,
is you hire these comp consultants and the comp consultants come in and they use comparables, which basically means let's do what everyone else does. And so you have this self-reinforcing system
of compensation and benefits for CEOs that bumps up a little bit every year
that ultimately has some degree of ownership in the stock, but fundamentally
has very little downside. And Elon had no guarantees in his pay package when he got this
comp package originally in 2018. And he got 10% of the company if he 10x the stock, which is what he
did. I really think that it is worth having this become the kind of beacon for all boards to
consider and it seems like shareholders in aggregate are applauding the concept.
And look, Elon is a special guy and he gets special treatment.
But I think that it moves the needle and should move the needle a little bit for other CEOs
and other boards to stand up and say, we should think about something that looks a lot more
like this than what we typically do. And I think you would find a very different cast
of people showing up to become CEOs and to drive performance out of these businesses
and a lot more risky and aggressive behavior than what I think you would typically see
in big companies that are in maintenance mode.
What do you guys think of the organizations that initially voted yes and now voted no.
They basically are saying, look, I mean,
if you think about it, you're a big public company.
I don't know what ISS recommended.
This is institutional shareholder services.
They recommended no both times.
Right, and so ISS basically is what a lot
of big public fund managers will follow
when they make their votes.
And so if I'm a shareholder-
That's not what I'm asking.
No, no, I know what I'm saying, but like, let's say that I'm BlackRock or I'm a shareholder, that's not what I'm saying. But like, let's say let's say that I'm BlackRock, or
I'm a shareholder, a bitch, I'm not gonna put BlackRock as some
big shareholder Tesla stock. Why would I vote to give away 10%
of the company? When I don't have to?
Yeah, very simple. Because he would leave, he would leave
morals and ethics matter. And you want to do the right thing.
And you want to incentivize capitalism to
operate properly and want to incentivize the people who take on the burden of running these
companies and the people who voted against it.
I think people should just make a list of those individuals, Chamak, and they should
not do business with us.
Because if somebody is going to double cross you, they've shown you who they are.
These are people who double cross them.
They got the benefit and then they stabbed them in the back.
Make a list.
That's exactly what they did.
That's exactly what they did.
It's worse if they voted yes the first time
and then they voted no.
No, I'm saying, and there's a one defiable proof.
Because if there were no no, then maybe you're
just against the deal.
But if you're yes no, then that's a renege.
Then you're a true scumbag.
You're a scumbag.
Is that public anywhere who did that?
Yeah, there are a bunch of folks that said that they, you know, I think it was CalPERS that voted yes. And then when they were on trying to explain, they were like, tap, tap dancing in like corporate jargon. But really what they are scumbags, Jason, you're right, they are morally and ethically void. And if they're reneging, and this is the one rule in business, you're not allowed to do And the people that do that are these penny pinching scumbags.
I'm not saying a blacklist, but I would say making a list of people who
maybe you want to consider not doing business with is how I would frame it.
These are people who are public market investors, not private investors.
They buy the stock on the open market, so they don't have to worry.
I mean, I think the question is, what are the chances that Elon
leaves the company if he didn't get the pay package?
The chances are probably risk. And I think that was a nonzero possibility think about it
yeah nonzero possibility you made an agreement with somebody and you shook
their hand yeah what why does it care whether he
would have left or not left this is like have to do the right thing
yeah you have to do the right thing you promised the guy x amount of money for
doing y amount of things. He did the y things
and then you had a judge come over the top because of somebody who owned 10 shares. And
all I'm saying is if you don't have the intellectual intelligence to look past that and say, wait
a minute, we just paid the guy to do this work and now we're going to read they're gaming
the system. I just think that like, how can anyone who is capable of doing a job, sign up for a pay
package? How could anyone and the people that will sign up are these like middling corpo
people who will accomplish nothing and will run these companies in ways that then speaks
to organizations that have just proven themselves to be totally unreliable.
The irony of the thing is that these folks thought
that they were getting a 10% free roll when they voted no.
And the reality is that by him getting the pay package,
the certainty of him sticking around at the company
caused the stock to go up by 10%.
So they actually had the calculus wrong.
That if they had gotten their way,
the stock would have declined
by more than the 10% free roll they thought they were getting. This is I think the main point 10% being
the ownership of the company that he gets. Yeah. The pay package was laughed at on CNBC by all the
experts, there is no way for him to hit this stuff. If he does hit it, he's getting a fraction of the
value of it. And this is why stock is such a valuable device. If employees get stock, and the CEO gets stock and
everybody in between and retail investors get it and endowments
get it and your retirement account gets it, everybody rose
in the right direction. Is it perfect? No, people can buy back
their stock, they can do a little gaming on the margins.
But it is the most pure system we have, everybody has a share
of the company. So if you're a socialist, you know, like
you should actually kind of appreciate how stock works that everybody has a chance to buy it,
everybody has a chance to participate. This is the model we should be using for all CEOs, they
should all get a massive package. If the stock goes up into the right, it's so obvious. And this
was so unfair. Let's see this flipper. I want to see their explanation.
The compensation is commensurate with the performance of the company.
Did you vote for it in 2018?
I believe we did vote for it in 2018. This is about long term valuation.
Hold on. Do you believe you were duped in 2018?
No, I believe we used the information we had available and made the best choice.
Okay. So here's what I find so interesting about this particular choice.
73%, I believe, of shareholders voted in favor of in 2018.
A judge has said that shareholders were not informed properly.
If you talk to most shareholders, by the way, especially big shareholders, they say, we
were not, we understood completely what we were, and we were on board with this. Now that this opportunity, almost opportunity has arrived on your doorstep to say, to actually
rethink this, if you will, there's a view that, oh, maybe we're not getting the value
we thought we should.
You thought you should get it, but he's worked, by the way, under the assumption that he was hitting the numbers and dealing with the contract. If I told you that you
were being paid a certain amount of money in 2018 and then I called you and
said actually you know what we're not gonna give you that money anymore. What
would you do? That's a great question. I would I would go to my board you know I
would talk with my board.
This woman is so smart. What is her name? Karen Frost? I don't think she's smug. Sorry, Marshy Frost. Oh, sorry, I thought
it was Karen Frost. I think like this is emblematic of the kind
of person who is incapable of actually doing the right thing.
And there's a lot of these people that run a lot of these
organizations that I mean,
what kind of an answer is that?
I mean, it was a non answer.
That's why I said it was smug.
Let me just ask each of you.
You've all started companies, some of you are still running companies, would you take
money from her and Calpers after that statement?
Hard no for me.
But remember, she's not investing in private companies.
She's buying stock on the open market.
So Calpers announced that they're an LP and they're starting to do directs.
Okay, I didn't know that. Yeah, they're trying to catch up. They've been behind on venture.
Let's call this whole thing what it is. It was a heist. You had these trial lawyers,
they find a nameplate of who's got nine shares.
And on a contingency fee basis, they go after Elon's pay package.
What are they looking for?
$5.6 billion.
How does a lawyer make $5 billion?
How does that possible?
That's what motivated this whole thing.
They don't care about Tesla.
They don't care about the company.
They don't care about shareholders.
They're looking for a giant multi-billion dollar contingency fee payment,
and they took their shot and they found a Delaware judge
to basically agree with them, even though shareholders approved it and then shareholders
Reapproved it. So my question is how much of these trial lawyers going to get is a judge going to award them billions of dollars
For what was clearly now a mistake
to avoid a pay package that shareholders
wanted to stick with. If they award these lawyers billions of dollars, which is what they're seeking,
no one's going to want to do business in Delaware anymore because it subjects you
to these stick up high spy trial lawyers. So I think that's going to be the next big
shooter drop is what do these trial lawyers get awarded?
What are they going to get paid?
Because they also wanted to get paid and tell us the shares.
No, I'm serious.
Here's an idea.
Buy the shares yourself.
Yeah, they said we don't like your management of the company,
but we will take your shares.
Yeah.
Yeah, by the way, they got their shares and then they voted to
give you on the next pay package.
So it's just a full on griff.
They secure the bag. But Delaware is supposed to protect corporations against this
grift. That's why people incorporate there. When people ask why does Delaware have this special
place that everybody decided Delaware which we were incorporated was because it was predictable.
lawyers felt this was the most predictable jurisdiction that would be the most shareholder
felt this was the most predictable jurisdiction that would be the most shareholder friendly most shareholder thoughtful whatever word you want to use they would defend the the shareholders and here
we are the last company I started 8090 we incorporated in Nevada and I just read domiciled a couple of
other companies that I own into Nevada as well it's becoming a trend we're having very big discussions about this in the startup community of where to domicile your company and
more to come on this one. Okay, let's keep moving. Apple had a huge announcement this week. Apple has entered the chat.
They announced Apple intelligence. Get it? AI. And they have included a chat GPT integration from open AI.
This was really, I think, impressive in many ways because people thought Apple was far behind.
It was a banger of a demo.
A lot of un-Apple-like future looking demos.
So none of these demos that we're gonna show
are coming to your phone this week.
They were really, I think, playing catch up with Microsoft
and it worked.
Stock is up 10%.
They added about 300 billion in market cap.
Now the top three market cap companies are all driven
specifically by the perception that AI is going to be
the next technological wave.
Microsoft, Apple and Nvidia all cruising around
about $3.2 trillion. And this top three keeps flipping back and forth.
Apple had passed Microsoft and market cap. Here's the features. I'll just give you a
quick overview of what we're seeing. It's added Grammarly like features, great product
Grammarly. I'm not an investor, but they added the ability to proof, get grammar help, AI
will transcribe and summarize
phone calls with permission, obviously double opt in, it will prioritize notifications and
iMessage and email that are super important. You can do smart replies and company where an investor
in superhuman already does this kind of stuff. And they're bringing AI to Siri. And this is going to
be the big win in my mind, you're going to be able to say things like,
you want to order something in DoorDash or Uber Eats
or Instacart, and the AI Siri will be able to dip down
into apps that are building a whole app AI interface,
much like the Rabbit device CEO talked about doing.
And I think this means that Apple is going to win
the AI consumer.
There is a deal
with chat GPT that will get your feedback on gentlemen in a moment. According to sources,
Apple is not paying open AI. It's a non exclusive deal chat GPT can be swapped out. Apple is
also talking to Google about a similar deal. Obviously, it doesn't take a genius to predict
that Apple is going to auction off the LLM integration. I think to the highest bidder,
they did that with the search deal, Google pays Apple 20 billion to be the default
search engine. That's about 5% of Apple's annual revenue if you didn't know. And it's
all profit, right? So this is a huge profit moment. I'm going to pause there for a second
before I get into more of this and just get your general reaction, Chamath.
I think you nailed it right at the beginning. The thing that I was struck by the most in this is
we went from a phase where in the Steve Jobs era,
these events were because you're about to unveil a product that was done and shipping as of that day. And then at some
point, we transition to they are talking about products that they
intend to release within a year. Now we've shifted to the part
where they're talking about software integrations from a
third party that will happen in a year. So if you just look at
it sequentially, it's a little disappointing in
that sense, because for a company this big, it's really not much of anything, you can't really
touch it and feel it. And it's going to take a year before we really know what the totality of
all of this is. Meanwhile, the economics of the chat GPT
deal were leaked, and there's no money on either side. So I don't
know, it's a little bit of like, it's really not much of anything
to be honest, because there's nothing we can actually play
with and experience.
Freebird, your thoughts on the vision here at least, and to
Trimont's point, Apple used to
release dope stuff, fully baked, ready to go. And now we are
increasingly see them talking about what's coming next year,
or at some point, do you think Apple is going to win the
consumer? Do you think Apple is falling behind? Should they have
built their own LLM by this point?
I'm not sure I think what they have shown is more of a glimpse into the future of
hardware where for the last two decades or so hardware has mostly been a portal
to access the internet and use the internet through apps or through the
browser and hardware has done a good job of enabling that.
But I think we're now going to see a much more tighter coupling where the
hardware becomes more valuable and it's less of this kind of funnel for apps to
flow through and data to flow through.
But the hardware actually becomes the value creator and you see a much more
tighter integration in the hardware OS and the AI or the software that enables
you to do lots of things.
You're no longer just going to use the hardware to access an app to do something.
So a lot of the companies that are app developers are likely going to end up
becoming services developers that enable that hardware AI to do something for you.
And this coupling between hardware and software because of the way AI works is
I think becoming more apparent, not just in consumer devices, but we see it in
the data center and in the enterprise stack as well.
You know, we've seen that obviously there's this tight integration between
the chip and the software stack that Grok built.
There's a tight integration between Google's TPU stack and then the ML
instances and the, and the tools that you can use in Google cloud that are
optimized for use on that TPU hardware.
Nvidia has got a big effort, obviously in continuing to build out their
software stack that sits on top of their hardware and works in a
more coupled way. And then Google has this ability to kind
of realize, I think, a similar outcome with Pixel phones, which
is a pretty sizable opportunity for them. And then all of the
hardware manufacturers can probably grab more value now, as
they build their own AI into their OS, and you start to see
more of this value realized by the hardware companies. So I
think that there's this really
interesting shift, where we've all thought about hardware as
being this like commodity, where there's some degree of like,
improvement or innovation made over time. But now it seems
like a lot of value might actually get captured by hardware
companies in all points in the value stack. So it's an
interesting moment. And I think that this just shines a light on
that trend that I think is going to
play out over the next couple of years.
It's clear, Sachs that right now, to enable these features,
you're going to have to have a pretty solid device. They
announced here at the keynote at WWDC that you need to have an
M1 chip or better iPhone 15 or better. So and having all this
local data
is a huge advantage for Apple.
They've got your messages, your phone, your calendar,
your photos, your app behavior,
the data inside of your wallet.
All of this gives them a huge, huge advantage.
So I guess the question is,
do you think this renews the Apple franchise
and people start upgrading their phones again
to get all these new features, David Sacks?
Well, the market definitely thinks so
because Apple was up big on this news.
And even if it was largely vaporware at this point,
the market definitely liked where they were going.
And frankly, Apple did exactly
what I said they should do last week,
which was to reinvent Siri as an LLM
with the ability to reach into apps
as an agent and take actions on the user's behalf. That's what they effectively announced. However,
Apple took a shortcut to get here. They partnered with OpenAI. And this is something that I don't
think they've ever really done before at the operating system level. Apple is famous for being
vertically integrated, for
being a walled garden, for being end to end. They control everything from the chips to
the hardware to the operating system, and they don't let anybody else in until you're
at the app store layer. This is allowing somebody in beneath the level of the app store. This
is allowing someone open AI to get access to your data and to control your apps at the
operating system level.
And I think, you know, Elon pointed out, wait a second, what are the privacy implications
here?
And I think there are major privacy implications.
There's simply no way that you're going to allow an AI on your phone to take all these
actions on your behalf without giving that model substantial amounts of user data.
And that is a huge change for Apple.
Remember, Apple in the past has been the advocate
for consumer privacy.
There's a whole issue of the San Bernardino terrorist
where the FBI went to Apple and said,
we want you to give us backdoor access to their phone.
And Apple refused to do it.
It went to court to defend user privacy.
And furthermore, one of of apples defenses to the arguments the antitrust arguments for allowing side loading and allowing.
You know other apps to get access to parts the operating system is they've always said we can't do this because it jeopardize user privacy and use security well here they are opening themselves up.
security. Well, here they are opening themselves up to open AI in a very deep and fundamental way in order to accelerate the development of these features. In other words, they took the shortcut.
They could have developed the LLM themselves. They could have developed the AI themselves,
but they chose not to do that. And I think this is going to open Pandora's box for Apple,
because again, they've proven that they can open up the operating system to a third party now.
And who knows what the privacy implications of this are going to be.
It turns out Apple has addressed this head on.
They hear the concerns and much like when you share a photo or you share your location,
it's going to ask you over and over again, do you want to let this app do this?
So they're aware that this is an issue.
They brought up privacy every single time, but people don't trust OpenAI and they do trust Apple.
So this is strange bedfellows
to be sure to mouth your thoughts.
I think that Apple really cares about privacy
when they're trying to hurt a company they don't like,
i.e. Metta.
And they're willing to figure out a way to work around it
when there's a company that they clearly support. Open AI.
Yeah, well, you're behind, you know, you behave differently
than when you're ahead and you have your monopoly freeburg, you
wanted to add anything here before we move on to the next
story. Okay, in related news, open AI has hit a run rate. And
this is kind of stunning of $3.4 billion. That means they've roughly
doubled their monthly revenue in the past six months or so. These are not official numbers.
OpenAI is denying them, but here's a chart that somebody put together based on all the
different leaks and approximations of what OpenAI is making. The reason this makes no
sense, this chart, and it shows a year, and then it shows a month, a month, a month, a of what opening eye is making the reason this makes no sense.
The chart and it shows a year, and then it shows a month, a
month, a month, a month is because it's been different
leaks at different points in time. But just to normalize this
in 2022 for all of 2022 before they really had a lot of
customers 28 million and now on a $3.4 billion run rate. Again,
it's pretty stunning number.
Well, you can you can do apples to apples here because like 2023
Jan is 200 million. That means that June is 300 million if
they're on a 3.6 billion dollar run rates.
Yeah. And so if we were to even look at, you know, the number
of people who work there, 770, if you put that at 500,000 a
person, some engineers getting a couple of millions, some people
may be getting less, they're probably only got a half billion dollars in salaries
a year. Who knows what they're spending on the infrastructure for this. If you were to
do evaluation on this, everybody knows they sold a bunch of shares in secondary at around
80 billion, which means they're trading at, if numbers are true 25 times for revenue, which is close to what Nvidia is
trading at right now, obviously, they're two very different
businesses. So your thoughts on this as a SaaS company, obviously,
the majority of this revenue is consumption based, some portion
of it is SaaS space reoccurring like subscriptions we pay for
at launch my venture fund, we pay for 6,000 a year
to have all 20, 25 people on ChatGPT as a corporate account.
Maybe it's 250, 300 a year per person.
So what do you think of this business, Sachs,
and how fast it's growing?
Obviously, some of it's API consumption-based,
not reoccurring, some of it is reoccurring.
First of all, let me say that, you know,
we've talked about AI general hospital
and all the soap opera issues around OpenAI.
Yeah.
And Judge Sachs had opinions on that.
Yes.
But putting that aside, I mean, everyone acknowledges that their products are awesome.
I mean, OpenAI makes really great products with the Chad GPT-4 turbo to 4.0 at Glue, the speed and quality went up
at least 2x and it felt like 10x.
So they have the best language model
as of this point in time.
And they also have other products that are really great,
like the Whisper API, which does transcription.
I mean, there's a whole bunch of tools they have
that are great for developers. So nobody's taking anything away from them on the product side. And I think
you're seeing that in this revenue number. Now, if I was to try and take apart this business
as an investor, I would separate the B2C business from the B2B business. The B2C is a consumer
subscription plan, people paying $20 a month. I'm one of them, I paid the 20 bucks
a month. It's probably the only LLM that I would pay 20 bucks a
month for.
How often you use it? Daily, weekly, monthly?
It's a handful of times. It's not to be honest, it's not like a
daily use for me. But I probably use it every week, I would say
at least once. Yeah, so I still use it every week, I would say at least once. So I still use it.
I have to say though that the other LLMs are catching up. And if Gemini ever gets good enough
or when Grok gets to the next level, am I going to stick with that $20 a month plan? I'm not sure.
It depends whether OpenAI can really maintain the leadership it has or the perception of leadership.
Okay. So that's half the business.
And then the other part of the business is the B2B,
which is the API products that effectively they're selling to developers.
And that's where I would place the future value of this company.
I mean, as somebody who invests in SaaS,
when we see a business that has B2C subscriptions and B2B,
we place all the value on B2B.
And the reason is because historically,
the churn rates in beta C are too high.
Yep.
5% to 10% churn rates are common.
50% a year.
Per month.
Per month.
50% churn a year, very common.
OpenAI may not be experiencing that yet,
but it's very hard to avoid the downdraft of consumer churn. And, you know, on the other hand,
on the B2B side, a good B2B business has expansion, 120%, 150% expansion year over
year from same customers. In other words, they're ordering more.
So you would compare this business to Amazon Web Services, Google Cloud,
Azure. That's really the business here.
Yeah. The first thing I'd want to know is how much of the 3.4
billion is consumer and how much of it is developers.
We'll find out eventually. Chamath, your thoughts on OpenAI's
surging revenue.
I'm kind of in David's camp, which is I think to the extent that the
business has a large terminal value, it's going to be because of the
enterprise cash flows. The thing to keep
in mind is that I still haven't seen enterprises building production level products using AI.
It's all experimentational, right? It's all experiments now.
That's nothing against open AI. It's just a commentary on the fact that we are
And OpenAI, it's just a commentary on the fact that we are at a very, very early part of the cycle where when you use this term blast radius, what are you referring to?
You're referring to this idea that you're stringing together elements of a model or
multiple models that each have some non-trivial error rate.
And by multiplying all these error rates together, you get your final product.
But the unfortunate reality in most AI workloads is that you end up with something that's not very good.
And that's not the fault of OpenAI nor is it the fault of Llama. It's just the nature of how these models work and the fact that, you know, you've gone from something very, you know, deterministic to something that's very probabilistic.
that you've gone from something very deterministic to something that's very probabilistic.
And we have not found a way to create extremely high quality
experiences, we as an industry, that make this cost
justifiable.
So right now, as you said, Jason, most of that
is toy apps and a lot of experimentation.
Will we get there?
I absolutely think so.
But we're not there yet. So I suspect that most of the revenue
then is on the consumer side right now, actually. And so I
just looked at Google Trends. And I first looked at the United
States, and I just wanted to understand how is the traction.
And what's interesting is, is that the traffic in the United
States is down about 2526 26% since the end of the school year,
which I think reinforces this belief that chat GPT has definitely over indexed in that
young people's cohort where they rely on it to write essays or what have you.
But then I looked outside the United States and worldwide.
And what's interesting about that is that's actually still growing up into the right. So I have revenue per user, ARPU per
year is single digits, maybe it hits double digits, as opposed
to the states where it could be triple digits, right? So then I
don't know, I would just wrap up by saying that I think that
it's just if this number is right, it's just an incredible
testament to what they've been able to uncover and create in a
short amount of time. That is legendary
stuff.
Yep.
But what I can tell you, in working with enterprises around
these AI experiences through 8090, we have not yet seen
production quality models being deployed in the wild that are
dealing with very, very important business processes, which means
that most of the revenue right now is probably consumer oriented.
Okay.
Freiburg, I don't know if you got to see Sonny's talk at liquidity last week, but he talked
about how many of the CIOs, CEOs are looking for open source solutions here.
80% of them want to go open source.
They don't want a proprietary model to invest in. But the best model right now is a proprietary model. So what do you
think about open AI's revenue surge? Is it sustainable or are there 20 better open source
projects that are going to be death by 20 open source project cuts? And Tramot's general
feeling here that, hey, it's not ready for prime time yet. It will be but we're
in the AI dial up era. To use an analogy here. Hey, you can see
the promise but it kind of sucks in terms of reliability.
Maybe open AI is a well, right? Like, I think that there's going
to be a Google that'll show up that'll maybe it's Google,
they'll grab a large part of the value here.
Or, you know, ultimately the cost comes down so much with the open source tools. I do believe that these open source tools are incredible.
I mean, the, the open source llama instances are like, they get you
85 to 90% of what you're looking for.
So if you're an enterprise user, why would you pay thousands of dollars
for the open AI platform when you can
use llama, and you can tune it and you can build your own front
end to it, your own integration with your own data, etc, etc.
It's just early days for enterprises figuring out how to
do that. But I do really believe that the future is enterprises,
companies building their own LLM driven tools for both internal and
external products that leverage smaller open source models.
And that we're kind of in this, you know, dearth of people's understanding and
ability on how to actually execute against that, which makes the default to
be go to the chat GPT interface.
I will also provide a counter.
I just did a big project at work this week. We had a, like a big offsite with 20 people involved. makes the default to be go to the chat GPT interface. I will also provide a counter.
I just did a big project at work this week. We had a, like a big offsite with 20 people involved and everyone
used chat GPT to get ready for it.
So there was a ton of analysis, a ton of data gathering, a ton of
reporting needed for the offsite.
And rather than hire a third party or have people go out and source data
themselves, a lot of us, including including myself I prepared like maybe a quarter of the material just use chat GPT and pulled the sources to make sure it was all
She did pull sources and check facts, right?
You do have to hold the sword and there was a lot of wrong stuff just to be clear
But for our sentences you're at a ballpark percent
I would say 25% of it was like wrong and then you have to clarify but the truth is for this particular
application it didn't matter we were making some approximations on markets and sizes and,
and various facts that we were kind of using to do some strategy stuff, but
in some product development stuff. So I would say like it wasn't useful. You found it 100%.
And I would say it saved us hundreds of hours, hundreds of hours. And were you paying them an
enterprise license or a consumer license? 20 bucks a month. What is that?
It's the same thing for the enterprise to mouth, you can
just sign up and for 20 bucks a month, you can have your whole
organization on it. Yeah, no free bird like you're just
paying it yourself or you pay for everybody at Guaola. I
think everyone has the right to pay for I think other people at
the company pay for it too. I pay like I have my I don't have
like a corporate thing set up. So we took the time to pay for it. I think other people at the company pay for it too. I pay, like I have my, I don't have like a corporate thing set up. So everyone basically.
We took the time to set up the corporate. It's really easy. And then anybody with your
domain can sign up and let you track it, but it doesn't consolidate. That's what I'm looking
for, Chamath, is the ability to consolidate all the searches in one place and everybody
can share their searches.
But like I said, the application is what Boo's doing, right? In some way, the sacks.
Yeah. Collaborative AI.
It's an application today. Meaning like we go to the app layer is doing right in some way, in Saks, collaborative AI, it's an application today.
Meaning like we go to the app, we ask questions, we get answers and we use that.
And I actually had it pull tables down and I dropped those tables in like all
sorts of great stuff. It could do, you know, do some analysis,
pull out the stuff with analysis showed understanding unit economics on various
businesses, all this sort of stuff that it consolidates for us.
Definitely makes everybody bionic, I agree.
But what it's what it doesn't do yet, is take all of our internal
data and all of our internal tooling and kind of reconfigure
how we use that. So we're still paying for a whole bunch of
enterprise software and SaaS licenses for things that we know
we don't want to be paying for in the future. And we're now
starting to figure out how can we build our own AI based
software to replace a lot of the dependency we have on third party
software that uses our internal data for our internal consumption.
So there's a lot of that's still ahead of us.
And that's why I know, and we're pretty progressive.
So that's why I know it's early innings because I see the way we're going to use
it and I know that we're probably well ahead of a big enterprise companies
that are more traditional. And so I can see like a couple of years from now, all these
big enterprises are going to figure the same thing out. And then you're not necessarily
going to need to pay for the chat GPT stuff. If there's an internal tool and an internal
LLM that you can run.
I tell you, young people are really getting dependent on this and they use it constantly.
We're on our investment team meeting, we were evaluating a
company for real estate brokers, we're evaluating a company for
therapists and like tools and SaaS products for those type of
people. And when I asked them, well, how many what's the total
addressable market? Boom, three or four researchers and
analysts on my team are doing that search, finding sources and
saying there are this many therapists, this many social
workers, this many real estate brokers, this many buys. And then I'm saying, well, did you source
them? Like, yeah, of course I asked. And like, one of them was like, well, I asked Claude,
I asked Gemini, I asked chat GPT, I asked them all for sources, I cross-referenced them.
So they're like, you have three of these things open. And so just everybody's knowledge level
goes up, but you do have to check it because one out of four facts is probably wrong or
cited wrong.
And so it's going to be.
I think one out of four is about the right number.
Yeah.
That's interesting.
So you use multiple LLMs to find the hallucinations.
Yeah. Basically you cross reference.
That's actually pretty interesting.
I jump on Gemini too.
So I use Gemini.Google and I use ChatGPT
and I just make sure that stuff lines up,
just sanity check things because I'm
These right how many would you be willing to pay for I?
Five you'd pay for five different. Oh, well think about it
If somebody's salary is a hundred thousand and these cost a thousand dollars to have five of them, of course
I pay for five. It's one percent of their size. It says a work tool, you know
I guess I guess there's three categories to their business now that you're raising this.
There's sort of the consumer subscriptions.
Then there's the business descriptions,
which are basically the consumer product,
but a company's paying for it.
Correct.
And then there's the developers paying for metered API usage.
Consumption and metered API usage, yeah.
That enterprise is really powerful.
Yeah, it's kind of like Microsoft Office or Google Docs,
where consumers use them for free
or want to use them for free and then companies will pay for it and that's where the real money is.
Anyway, this is going to make people bionic. I think all organizations will have the same number
of people for the next couple of years and then just individuals will get better and better at
their jobs and so efficiency is going to go way up. Speaking of efficiency, the market is ripping.
We're going to get a little macro here in three acts.
Inflation has been broken.
I think it's safe to say we're down at 3.x, 3.3, lower than expected.
And hiring wages are surging and stocks are surging.
So let's go through it here and get the besties take
on the vibe session.
I actually disagree with that framing, Jason.
Yeah, I agree.
I disagree as well.
You disagree with it.
Let me go through the numbers and then you can all disagree.
That's how this works, folks.
Inflation print came at 3.3%, lower than expected.
Here's your 10 year chart.
Super easy to explain what's happening here.
Rates were low for a long time.
Inflation cruising at about 2%. And then lunatic spending during COVID. And we added a trillion to the
national debt. And then Biden added a bunch, everybody getting those STEMI checks and PPP
loans. And so if you look at inflation here, we were just cruising along at 2% massive
spike up to 9% year over year inflation and now coming back down to 3.X. And the question is, can we get
to a two handle? And the rates went up faster than in ever in history. Here's the Fred chart.
You can see there in the, and this goes from the 80s. So you see that massive spike when they try
to break the back of inflation previously. So this is the fastest ever gone up. And here we go. The common sentiment here is that savings has been burned off and people are starting
to have debt. And so now we are in Act 2, the lowest unemployment rate of our lifetime
continues. If you believe those numbers, smashing, crushing the 190,000 estimate.
And then Act 3, average hourly wages up a massive 4% from last year at $35 an hour.
That also topped estimates. So if inflation is at 3.x and hourly earnings are at 4.x,
maybe consumers will start feeling
better about the economy eventually.
They obviously have been pretty shocked by that 9% inflation and only 4% growth.
Here's your chart from Fred, the hourly earnings of all employees.
And you can feel pretty good about that.
Everybody's wages keep going up.
The question is, do they go up faster than inflation?
Okay.
So there's my framing of the situation. Freiburg, tell me what I got right. Tell me what I got wrong.
I think there are three numbers that matter. The inflation rate, the growth in GDP, and the cost
to borrow. The growth in GDP in the first quarter of 2024 was a lousy 1.3% on an annualized basis.
And even if the rate of inflation came down,
we are still inflating the cost of everything
by north of 3%.
So the economy is only growing by 1.3%
and it costs more than 3% more each year to buy stuff.
So that means everyone's spending power is reducing
and our ability and our
government's ability to tax is declining because the economy is only growing by
1.3% and the most important fact is that the interest rates are still between
4 and 5%, 4 and 4.7%.
That means that to borrow money costs 4.7%, but the businesses, the economy
on average is only growing 1.3%.
So just think about that for a second.
We have a tremendous amount of leverage on businesses, on the economy, on, on
the federal government, that leverage, the cost to pay for that debt is more than
four to five, four to 5%, but you're only growing your revenue by 1.3%.
So at some point, you cannot make
your payments and the rate and the goal. And that is true. That is true for consumers. That is true
for enterprises. And it is true for the federal government. Just to point out here, what you're
saying the goal was to in fact, increase the interest rate to cool the economy, right, which
they got too late. But that was the goal. That was the explicit goal was to cool the economy, right, which they got too late. But that was the goal. That was the explicit goal was
to cool the economy. Yeah, the whole purpose of raising rates
is to slow the flow of money through the economy. And by
slowing the flow of money through the economy, there is
less spending, which means that there is you're reducing the
demand relative to the supply. So the cost of things should come
down, you should reduce the rate of the increase in the cost of
things. Now, if you click on this link, Nick, that I just sent you, in response to the condition in the economy today,
Elizabeth Warren sent this note to Jerome Powell three days ago saying,
Dear Mr. Powell, or dear Chair Powell, we write today to urge the Federal Reserve to cut the federal funds rate
from its current two-de decade high of 5.5%. The sustained period
of high interest rates is already slowing the economy and is failing to address the
remaining key drivers of inflation. She goes on to point out the fact that consumers are
suffering, businesses are suffering, and the strain of these three numbers is really starting
to show on individuals, on businesses, and obviously on the power of the dollar.
Well, the dollar is a different story.
The condition of the economy and the rest of the world.
And we're in a very unique position.
But I think that things are not as rosy.
Now there's certainly a shift in the market
because what this tells us is that the timeline
at which the Fed will cut rates is coming in a little bit,
relatively speaking.
And so the market is saying,
okay, let's adjust to lower rates.
The 10-year treasury yield has come down a bit. But we are still in a difficult situation for
people and for the for businesses. And you have Elizabeth Warren, who I think is the voice of
small businesses and consumers. She's, she's trying to be the voice of those groups.
Yeah, that's, that's, I'm sensing this is very hard on people.
Chamath, what's your take on this? We have a slowing GDP growth.
We have inflation going from nine down to three.
We have wages going up 4%.
How do you make sense of all this?
Do you feel like-
Sorry, Friedberg, are you saying
we're gonna have stagflation or?
We have stagflation right now, definitely.
But what I'm saying is that it's not a rosy picture
just because labor rates are going up. If the labor rates aren't going up, and you can see this,
ultimately, the best number for this is the sum of GDP growth. So in aggregate, if the revenue of
everything combined, which is GDP, isn't going up faster than the increase in the cost of everything,
people, businesses, and the government can't afford their stuff.
And that's fundamentally what's going on right now.
What we need to see is a normalization where GDP growth is greater than inflation rate.
And as soon as that happens, then we have a more normalized and stable economy.
So right now things are not stable.
There's a lot of difficulty and strain in a system.
I will put myself on the other side of that trade if there was
one. If I had to simplify the United States economy, remember,
GDP is 70% spending by individual people. And so people
can spend two things savings that they have or credit that they have.
And what's interesting is that we have finally burned through and this is what this shows.
All of the money that folks had in their bank accounts.
And so what does that force people to do it actually forces people
to re enter the workforce so that they
can start to make money. But the problem is that companies have been shrinking and have
been on a defensive posture. And so as a result, which you started to see this past unemployment
report, unemployment is now ticking up because when these people re enter the workforce,
there are no jobs for them to have people are filing incremental unemployment insurance claims states like California. In fact, the state of California was the worst off this past month. So I think what we're starting to see is that for the large portion of the economy, we've run out of cash to spend. And as a result, I do think that we are going to see
an economic slowing.
And I think that that will create
not just enormous empirical justification for Jerome Powell,
it'll be exacerbated by what Friedberg just showed,
which is the political pressure
that he's going to be under to cut.
Will it cause him to cut more aggressively than he would have otherwise? On the
margins, I actually think yes. But my perspective is that I
think that we've run out of money, individual people. So I
think unemployment is going back up, I think GDP is going to
shrink. Yeah. And so I kind of tend to be in this camp that
we're going to see more than one rate cut.
So here is TotalJob.
Openings to your point, Shamath, they're getting burned off.
We peaked at 12 million.
Again, if you believe the numbers or not, they obviously have some value and we've burned
off a ton of those.
So, Sax, what's your non-political, non-partisan take, first principles of what's going on
with the economy?
Well, look, we just had this inflation report.
CPI was 3.3%.
The market was expecting 3.4%.
So that's a teeny bit better than expected, but it's still persistently sticky inflation is.
And furthermore, Powell's comments were very hawkish.
He basically said he could not commit to when rate cuts might begin.
And we're already, remember at the beginning of the year, we entered the year with expectations
for seven rate cuts this year.
Now we're down to an expectation of one rate cut, and we can't say for sure when that's
going to happen.
So honestly, I think your introduction overstated how positive this news was.
And that's why I think if you look at the markets right now, it's very mixed.
Most tech stocks that I'm seeing are actually in the red and a few of them like Tesla and
Apple and Nvidia are up, but the vast majority are in the red.
So I think the market is taking this in stride.
I think the big picture here is just we don't know when rate cuts are going to begin.
And I think that Vinny Lingham had a really interesting take on this actually where
he said, look, could Powell cut by a quarter point with that matter that much? No,
it wouldn't matter that much. But the point is Powell doesn't want to say that the rate
height cycle is over. If he were to cut by a quarter point, that by itself wouldn't do much,
but it would be a huge statement that we're out of the woods on inflation. There's not going to be any
more hikes coming, and we're beginning a new rate cut cycle. And Powell is clearly unwilling to say
that. We're still in this limbo where he is saying that we don't know when rate cuts are going to
begin. Beding markets had a 70% chance of two rate cuts before Powell spoke. Afterwards, now it's one rate cut Dow record high again
this past week and NASDAQ record highs each of the last
like month or last four months.
So the market putting aside individual stocks
has broken records almost every month
for the last three free burger months.
On the back of like two stocks.
I mean, Nvidia is holding up the whole market.
There's a lot of funny memes about this.
Nvidia, Microsoft, and Apple.
The AI stocks are holding up the whole market.
Correct, yes.
Record stock market.
What does Jerome Powell have to gain or lose
by bowing to political pressure?
So a lot of folks mention and references kind of there's
political pressure for him to do something. But why would he bow? What does he care? What do you
think the motivation is for pal individually? And what is the political process that will ensue
future job prospects about the political pressure? I think it's the legacy and the perception that
he leaves behind. I think had he not over promised the perception that he leaves behind. I think, had he not over promised and
under delivered at the end of last year, remember he was
promising as sack said six or seven rate cuts, and he's
delivered bupkis. And the markets were none too pleased.
And so now I think he's just swung the pendulum to the other
side, which is he's going to massively under promise, and
then over deliver if he can. And so as a result, I think he's being much more
measured and guarded, I don't think he wants to be wrong here. So I think he's
thinking about what most folks think about when they're at the tail end of
their of a job like this, he's not going to get reappointed, he's going to go off
into the sunset. It's roughly about how history will write how he handled the
transition from that to the next phase, whatever that is.
So I think he's probably very interested in making sure he doesn't break the economy.
And also that he doesn't seem like he's constantly waffling and unpredictable.
But isn't he just an autonomous agent that is meant to respond to the data?
I guess I'm not quite understanding the degree of judgment and discretion that everyone seems
to think he has.
They have the dual mandate, right, Freiburg?
They have a mandate, but again-
If you're asking what his incentives are, I agree with Jamal.
I think his main incentive at this point is concern for his historical legacy.
And specifically, he wants to be thought of like Volcker, not like Arthur Burns in the
70s.
Volcker basically crushed inflation even at the cost of recession, and he is worshiped
today as the best Fed chair ever. Whereas Burns
let inflation slip the leash in the 1970s and he's not thought of very highly. So I think that Powell's
main concern here is with his historical legacy at this point. I don't think he's expecting to
be reappointed. He's wrapping up his second term already. Now, I think if you go back to 2021,
the incentives were a little bit different. Powell wanted to be reappointed by Biden. And remember that in the summer of 2021,
that's when the inflation began. We had that surprise 5.1% inflation print. Powell was up for
renomination and confirmation in November of 2021. And I think what happened back in that year
is the administration downplayed the inflation report.
They called it transitory.
Yellen did, Biden did.
And so Powell had to get on board with that message if he wanted to get confirmed by the
Democrats.
And he did get on board that message.
He repeated the whole transitory point.
And for that reason, they didn't begin the rate hike cycle until March of the following
year.
And from that May inflation print to November, they kept doing QE, even though we
had inflation back in the system. So I think that Powell was actually intensely political in 2021.
He knew who was going to reappoint him and who was going to have to confirm him. And he got on board
that message. And that's why they were so slow to react to the inflation. And I think it was
disastrous. And that's one of the reasons why the rate tightening cycle was so steep is because he
had to catch up with all this inflation that he had allowed for nine months longer than he should have.
But if you ask me, what's his incentive now, I think it's purely about legacy.
And he does not want to let inflation come back after cutting rates a little too soon. So his incentive I
think at this point is to to make sure that he's not wrong again about
inflation. And to remind everybody maximum employment stable prices
moderate long-term interest rates is the mandate for the Federal Reserve. They're
supposed to be independent famously Reagan push Volcker to get rate cuts.
And there is a lot of politics involved in this.
And so legacy does seem like the organizing principle here.
I would agree with Chamath and Sachs that it's legacy, but there's
always political pressure here.
As you can see, Elizabeth Warren is trying to push him to make
cuts for obvious reasons.
Well, no, there's politics when they're up for appointment or for reappointment, for confirmation basically, because they want to get that vote.
Yes.
But once they're in-
Yeah, but there's also subtle pressure, and then there's letter writing like Elizabeth
Warren's doing here, right? So the pressure can be there. The question is, do they bow to it, right,
Sax?
Yeah, they don't have to.
I mean, the Fed's independent.
What do they stand to gain or lose
by the pressure is my question.
And I'm not sure I really, like this concept, exactly.
And I think that's really where there's a important point
to note here that you can identify the guy's motivation
and how he's going to operate.
This year, because there is no political pressure.
There wasn't 2021,
and I think that's why he was slow to react.
Yeah, right.
Listen, if Powell can stick the landing here, then his legacy comes out intact.
But if he screws this up and then he was slow to react to the inflation
back in 2021 and 2022, his legacy is going to be mud.
So I think he's going to be more concerned
about erring on the side of tamping down inflation
than erring on the side of the economy not doing as well.
I think those are the incentives.
My position is I think he might have already stuck the landing.
I think the fact that we've burned off all that savings
to your point, Shamath, that people are going back to work
and that these businesses are doing
fantastic and efficient because of AI and other gains. It feels
like all the record that he I think he's already no, no,
they're, they're trying to go back to work, but the jobs don't
exist.
I think they're going to take jobs, they just might get the
job they want. And that's what I think people have to recognize
is they have to take a job
and they may not be the one that they want
working from home.
We could have a negative recessionary print
going into the election cycle.
I think that's very possible.
Yeah, exactly.
I don't know, Jason.
Look, I'm hearing a lot of happy talk right now.
And I agree with you.
Just looking at the facts.
You had 1.3% GDP growth rate with a 6% of GDP
deficit by the government. If the government wasn't
printing so much money wasn't overspending. That's right. You
were to have a balanced budget. It would be a recession. Yeah.
Think about that to subtract negative GDP growth, if not for
the government's program stimulating the economy.
And a lot of the jobs you're talking about are government
jobs, the government is creating jobs like crazy, not in the
private sector, but in the public sector, because it is an
election year. So there's a lot of political forces, propping
things up. And I wonder what happens after the election.
Find out. All right, everybody. This has been another amazing episode
of the All In Podcast.
Just one last thing, guys.
This is really important.
So friend of the pod, Peter Fenton,
who's a famous VC in Silicon Valley,
tweeted that his sister has been diagnosed
with a rare sarcoma,
and they are searching for lookalike cases
to do a study at Dana-Farber.
If this works, it will change the future of cancer.
But they are seeking this researcher, William Gibson, who he's retweeting, is seeking patients
with myoxoid-liomyosarcoma featuring a PLAG1 fusion. So if you are somebody out there who has a case like this,
then please reach out and let us know
or let Peter Fenton know this could save a life
or many lives.
His sister is also the wife of a good friend of ours,
Pete Brigger.
So our thoughts are definitely with you.
And if there's anybody out there who
has this type of varicarcoma, please let us know. And we can refer you to Dana Farber. And
this is a very important study that may save some lives.
Pete and Peter are great guys and our thoughts with Devin. Hope you guys find a cure.