Acquired - Altimeter (with Brad Gerstner)
Episode Date: March 15, 2022We hear a lot these days about hedge funds becoming venture firms, and venture firms becoming hedge funds. But a decade before either of those approaches became mainstream, a tiny $3m fund in... Boston named Altimeter Capital set out simply to invest in a concentrated portfolio of America’s very best technology companies, regardless if they were public or private. Today that tiny firm has grown to nearly $15B under management and become a premier “capital partner” to founders at all but the very earliest stages — companies like Snowflake, Facebook, Roblox, Plaid, Grab and Acquired fan-favorite Modern Treasury. We sit down with founder & CEO Brad Gerstner to dive into the story behind Altimeter’s meteoric rise.This episode has video! You can watch it on YouTube.Sponsors:ServiceNow: https://bit.ly/acqsnaiagentsHuntress: https://bit.ly/acqhuntressVanta: https://bit.ly/acquiredvantaMore Acquired!:Get email updates with hints on next episode and follow-ups from recent episodesJoin the SlackSubscribe to ACQ2Merch Store!Carve Outs:Brad’s Twitter thread on Invest America: https://twitter.com/altcap/status/1347454947583950849?s=20&t=gM5zJMcq9p96GcjEHZw56wNote: Acquired hosts and guests may hold assets discussed in this episode. This podcast is not investment advice, and is intended for informational and entertainment purposes only. You should do your own research and make your own independent decisions when considering any financial transactions.
Transcript
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All right, well, hopefully AirPods don't screw things up too bad.
Can look like humans on air.
And if we ever end up in a situation with microphones that are out of frame,
it'll be game-changing.
It'll be just like we're talking to each other.
Who got the truth?
Is it you? Is it you? Is it you?
Who got the truth now?
Is it you? Is it you? Is it you?
Sit me down, say it straight.
Another story on the way.
We've got the truth.
Welcome to Season 10, Episode 4 of Acquired, the podcast about great technology companies
and the stories and playbooks behind them. I'm Ben Gilbert, and I am the co-founder and
managing director of Seattle-based Pioneer Square Labs and our venture fund, PSL Ventures.
And I'm David Rosenthal, and I am an
angel investor based in San Francisco. And we are your hosts. We've done Sequoia, we've done
Andreessen Horowitz, but we have not gone deep on one of the biggest stories in venture right now,
crossover investing. We are watching hedge funds like Tiger Global and KOTU come all the way down
to seed investing, and we're simultaneously seeing classically early-stage venture capital
firms like Sequoia completely reinvent their structure to hold on to their winners longer,
even as they become public companies. And today we wanted to analyze one of the firms that
pioneered this dual approach of
operating a hedge fund and a venture capital firm simultaneously, Altimeter Capital.
There has been so much change in venture in the last few years.
More change, I think, in the last few years than in the decade that I was doing venture
than watching it before.
And listeners, to tell the story right, we are joined today by Brad Gerstner,
the founder of the firm. And actually, to tell you the truth, he is joined by us.
We actually recorded this episode in person, even with video,
stands, microphones, everything at the Altimeter office on Sand Hill Road.
And for those of you who don't know, Brad has had an unbelievable career starting
five companies. So he's got a very different mentality than your sort of classic hedge fund
guy. On the investing side, he led the series C in Snowflake and still owns a massive stake of
the company. He's led large investments and sat on the board of companies, you know, like MongoDB and Roblox and Zillow and Plaid.
He led the SPAC that took Grab public in Southeast Asia.
And he is widely known as one of the most knowledgeable people in the world on the business of online travel after his involvement in Expedia, Orbitz, Uber, and many others.
And you forgot maybe the most important part.
I think he's the number one bestie guestie on our friends over at the All In pod.
I think that's probably right.
That's probably right.
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by clicking the link in the show notes or going to servicenow.com slash AI dash agents. Well, we will cut over to our interview with Brad now, but please do know
ahead of time that you can discuss this episode and everything else in the tech world afterwards
with us at acquired.fm slash slack. Join 11,000 smart, thoughtful people like yourself.
And we have some awesome new LP show content out there. You can search Acquired LP Show in the
podcast player of your choice. And lastly, this is not investment advice. Do your own research.
And now over to Brad Gerstner from Altimeter Capital.
Tell us about your family and your dad's experience with entrepreneurship.
Well, I grew up in a small rural town in northern Indiana near Notre Dame, first generation college.
My dad had a classic immigrant story. His parents had given up everything in order to
help put their only child through college.
He started at Northwestern.
They couldn't afford to finish there.
Ended up at Bradley in Illinois.
Got an engineering degree.
And long story short, 1977, I was born in 71.
So 1977, he becomes a general manager of the auto parts manufacturer in this small town that employed
most of the people in the town. Is it like a GM? Yeah, it was a supplier to GM, a supplier to Ford
at the time. And remember, our auto industry was under assault by the Japanese auto manufacturers.
You had double digit interest rates and inflation, which for the first time in 30 years is all of
a sudden a topic of conversation again. With the Fed under Volcker?
Yeah, under Volcker. We had, you remember, stagflation at the end of the 70s, which was
low growth, high inflation. And for some reason, so there was an acquirer that came along to buy
this plant. They needed to get my dad and the workers to go
along with the deal. My dad said he could deliver the workers so long as they agreed not to lay
anybody off. Of course, they said they would do that. Three months later, they were going to lay
off all these people. And in this small town, your words, your bond. And my dad just couldn't
live with himself with that outcome. And so in a fit of lunacy, decided that he was
going to start a competitor. He knew nothing about starting a business. There was no such
thing in that part of the world as venture capital. All he knew is that he knew how to
make these parts. And he knew he could inspire these men and women to join his cause. And it was a
crusade. And it was, you know, I look at it and I'm sure I look at it through rose-colored lenses,
but it was a valiant crusade. Unfortunately, he had to borrow money from the town bank.
In a typical Acquired episode or a typical tech story, it's like,
this is the hero's journey and like, he wins, right? And like, you grow up in this like,
amazing, you know, entrepreneurial journey. And you're like, this is awesome. I'm going to go do the
same for that. That's not what happens, right? I wish the story ended that way. You know,
for his sake, I mean, he borrowed money from the bank, mortgaged the house, mortgaged the car.
And the punchline is there are moments in time where the deck is so stacked against you,
notwithstanding all your best effort, notwithstanding all the extraordinary sacrifice
of the team, or maybe even the brilliance of the idea, it's not meant to be at that moment.
And in venture capital, if you fail, the risk is largely on the venture capitalist.
I mean, in Silicon Valley, failure is on the part of the founder so long as you conduct yourself in a way that's honorable.
It's a badge of courage that you gave it a go.
And we have an institutional structure where the venture capitalist can withstand that
loss because they have a portfolio that they can cushion that with.
So I often, young founders will come in and say,
well, I just don't know if I can take the risk.
They just graduated from Stanford.
They have no student debt.
They're getting money from a venture capitalist.
If they fail, they don't have to pay the money back.
If they win, they get a huge upside.
If they're at the stage where they're actually taking money
from a venture capitalist and they have a term sheet
and that's going to happen for them. You've already won.
The personal risk there is extremely low. There's no risk. What risk are you talking about?
The risk is have a young family, mortgage your house, mortgage your car,
double digit interest rates and inflation. The business goes under. My dad loses his health. He loses his
house. He loses his marriage, right? That's risk, right? And the beautiful thing about this country
is we have created a system where we encourage risk takers. Unfortunately, in 1980, in the middle
part of the country in a small town, my dad refused to declare bankruptcy.
He would work the rest of his life trying to pay back that money because it was his word that he gave to the people who lent him the money.
And so I think about that when I hear from entrepreneurs or when I even think about the risk associated with starting Altimeter or starting the other companies I started.
It's really not risk relative to the risk he undertook. So I grew up around an entrepreneur,
but it was not a heroic entrepreneurial story. And my grandfather, my father's father,
basically forbade us from becoming entrepreneurs. And he said to the four grandchildren, you can become professionals,
you know, doctors, lawyers, architects, but please don't become entrepreneurs. And so I,
you know, I felt like I owed that to him, even though I felt I was always kind of starting
little enterprises in high school and thinking that way, my brother did in college, but I went to law school.
And you thought you were going to go into politics, be a leader in government.
How far did you get on that path?
That was programmed pretty early. I had studied in 91, 92 at Oxford. I came back and worked for the US Senator from Indiana, Dick Lugar. He was chairman of the
Foreign Relations Committee at the time. We were denuclearizing Russia at the time. It was a pretty
heady moment in time with a senior statesman, Rhodes Scholar, incredible human being,
honored to work with him, stayed close with him. And so when I graduated from law school and I
went to work for a big law firm, I got a call from Senator Lugar asking me,
I don't know, I must have been 26 or 27, if I'd accept an appointment as Deputy Secretary of State
in Indiana. Evan Bayh, who went on to become governor and senator from Indiana, started there.
So it's kind of a known launching pad into Indiana politics. So I became Deputy Secretary of State
and faced this fork in the road that I was either going to
run for secretary of state or I was going to go try to make some money. And I concluded having
grown up around a family that struggled for money. In fact, my grandfather said,
we don't have money problems. We have lack of money problems.
I've heard you talk about this before. Is it fair to say that
you didn't want to go raise money to run a political
campaign? The idea of groveling for the rest of my career for money just didn't sit well with me.
Kind of a loon, but somebody I admired was the 1991 campaign of Ross Perot. And he spent tens of millions of his own money to go on television
in kind of a goofy way with poster boards and rail against the national debt.
And I thought, nobody owns this guy. And Perot, people forget, he dropped out of the campaign
three weeks before the election. And I think he still got 17 or 19% of the vote.
He was an entrepreneur himself, right? He started-
EDS.
EDS, yeah. Electronic Data Systems.
And I wouldn't say, you know, there's a lot about Ross Perot I don't know, and
it's not an endorsement of his politics, but it was-
But seeing that-
Yeah, it was a reminder to me. It was like, okay, I can either shake a tin can for the rest of my life.
But like others who came before me, I said, hey, I'll go back to business school.
Maybe I can make a little bit of money.
And so the plan was go back to HBS.
How did you decide on wanting to go to HBS?
Did somebody inspire you or encourage you to do that?
It's a slightly embarrassing story.
I didn't really do much research. I remember taking
the entrance exam the last day, scrambling to fill out the application. In fact, I didn't even finish
the application because I ended up getting an interview. And I remember the person who
interviewed me said, this is a unique situation. I can't say that I've ever interviewed somebody
who didn't have time to complete the application. And so
he started with, why didn't you have time to complete the application?
You're like, well, I'm Deputy Secretary of State right now.
I went through it. And it wasn't, you know, it's just, I decided late. And I was, I was working
my ass off. But I said, now's the time. And we went through it. And...
So, you know, that's a different outcome to the same story for Warren Buffett.
He wanted to go to Harvard Business School. And he was so sure. And so, you know, that's a different outcome to the same story for Warren Buffett. He wanted to go to Harvard Business School and he was so sure he was going to get in.
He didn't complete the application, was sure he was going to get in. Of course, he didn't get in.
And then he had to scramble. And that's how he ended up at Columbia. And of course,
the rest is history. When I was in high school, one of my first, you know, I worked and was going to school at the same time. And this was after this episode with my father.
And the part of Indiana that I'm from, they make all the RVs and conversion like vans in the
country. So I ended up with a job as kind of the right hand, little chief of staff, go do anything.
I asked of a guy named Pete Legal. And Pete Legal was starting a RV company, and I worked for two years for Pete.
He had me doing everything, in the accounting department with the CFO, out on the line helping
to run purchasing for the Sierra RV line in 1987.
Here's the interesting thing.
Pete went on to build the largest RV company in the world that he sold to Warren Buffett.
And Warren has written a lot in his annual letters about Pete, who's just a legend of
a human being, was a great inspiration to me.
And it was funny because ultimately, I became fond and friendly with Ted Weschler, who works
alongside Warren.
And we worked on some
deals together. And, you know, the world... We're going to talk about a deal that you worked on
together in just a little bit here. It really came full circle.
I have the same personality characteristic that you do around an aversion to asking people for
money. And in fundraising for politics, I can see how that would be especially hard. I mean,
you've raised, I think, literally billions
of dollars over the years for Altimeter. What is it about the way that you fundraise now that
hits differently in your psyche? You know, I had the feeling at the time,
and maybe it's just because at that point in time, I didn't believe in myself, perhaps the way I
believe in myself now, but it felt like a very personal ask.
Like, give me money for my campaign. Now I am a steward, I am a fiduciary on your behalf,
and I believe I'm going to make you a lot of money. And we have made a lot of money for our LPs.
And if you could see the letters we've received from university endowments, from foundations, from family offices, and the transformative things they outlined that we allowed them to do. Free education, dramatically more scholarships,
whether it's the environmental causes, whether it's immigration causes, whether it's inner city
schools. So to me, I think there is, you know, the great causes, I think, as somebody else coined
the phrase, that we can work on behalf of in a way that's great for entrepreneurs, in a way that's
great for our economy, and in a way that helps to, you know, really transform some underlying
causes. So it's an easier ask for me because it doesn't sound, it doesn't feel quite so personal.
And even though when you're running for office, it's in public service,
it kind of felt to you more like, hey, do this thing for me.
And I can't totally see the ROI for you as a citizen, but...
What's kind of a problem if you can see the ROI for you for giving me the money to invest?
I think that's right.
Listen, I've gone on to raise a lot of money for people in politics, for a lot of
other great causes. It's really easy for me to ask for others. It's a more difficult ask when
I'm a beneficiary of the ask. And at 26, even with the support of your mentor, it's not like
you had the broad network to have so many people go ask on your behalf. Okay, so you get to HBS, you get hooked
up with two guys at HBS, David and Joel, who are going to start General Catalyst. They themselves
weren't people that you were like, oh, it's obvious you're going to start a venture capital
firm, right? Quite the opposite. But I love them both dearly. Let me rewind just a little bit
before that. 1989, I really start getting enamored with email networks, working in Prodigy and following AOL in the 90s, really interested in investing. 1996, I'm graduating from law school. Now, my grandfather, who I mentioned, left me $25,000 when he passed away. And I day traded that $25,000 to put myself through law school and
business school. And I took the Series 7 because I thought, man, maybe there's something these
people know that I don't know. I want to know the dark secrets of investing. And then I realized,
wow, none of these people know anything. That's the dark secret.
Right? The dark secret is there is no secret. So 1996, when I'm graduating from law school, I also
have this aha moment like so many people did with a Netscape browser. And I said,
this changes the game on this thing called the internet, which was just these computers talking
and email networks, and it felt wonky and inaccessible. And I remember gathering in the
law school library, a group of my friends,
including the guy sitting in there who's now my general counsel. And I said, you got to see this.
So from 1996, then I go back, work for this law firm. We started getting litigation claims of
people who were doing domain squatting in 1996. Well, nobody in this 600-person law firm knew anything
about the internet or domains or anything else. So I raised my hand. I said, I'll take all of that.
I helped them build the firm website, and I quickly became known as the internet guy.
But I was thinking, so if I go back to business school, I've got to find my way to Silicon Valley.
When I was graduating from law school, I actually came out here because there was an innovative law firm out here called VLG, the Venture Law Group.
Oh, yeah.
That was taking equity stakes at the time for doing work for companies. So I literally got
on a plane. I flew out here. The office was right next to the Rosewood across the street.
I just walked into their offices and said, hey, I'm looking for a job. Now, they didn't have a job for
me, but it started to demystify this place for me. And business school was going to be my pivot,
my off-ramp to coming out here. So I go to business school in 1999. I mean, this is-
Peak.
This is peak, peak, right? And McKenzie and Goldman couldn't get anybody to show up at
their interviews at HBS in 1999.
Because all your classmates are just so gaga for internet.
Every classmate is going to start a company.
Every classmate's going to work for a startup.
Consulting firms were being started that were internet only.
It was really an interesting moment in time.
Now, again, I'm day trading CMGI out of the back of my finance
classroom, knowing that this thing's going to zero, but I'm going to ride it while I can.
And is that like E-Trade or how are you day trading at that point?
Yeah, we had Bloomberg terminals right outside the classroom. I had a Fidelity account actually,
and I would do my research on the Bloomberg and then we'd place trades. Listen, I was what's known as a poet.
I mean, I'm a lawyer from Indiana. Show up. I had never run a spreadsheet in my life.
And I show up and I have all these guys who've worked for hedge funds, private equity firms,
venture firms, Wall Street guys, investment bankers. And so all of a sudden I'm huddled
around these machines with folks who knew a lot more than me.
Is poet in finance the same thing as like a fish in poker?
Exactly. Let's put it this way. We were transitioning to taking exams on computers
and there were two of us who took our finance exam with a calculator and a pen and the rest
did it with a spreadsheet. I remember myself and a classmate of mine who was a doctor, Chris Gilligan.
And look at you now.
Look at all those chumps who use computers back then.
But I was hell-bent on coming to Silicon Valley.
1999, I start coming out here.
I was enamored with a small little search company that I had started to run all my searches on called Google.
A hot startup called Tell Me
run by Mike McHugh. Oh, yeah. And sold to, ultimately sold to Microsoft. And so I was
very focused on coming out here. One of my classmates who had eventually become my wife
was very focused on staying in Boston. And I'd met David and Joel. And so I said, okay,
maybe I can help start this venture firm, stay in Boston and see where it goes. So in 1999, 2000,
we had a launch idea for the venture firm. So a launch company, if you will, which was a
online travel concept. It was called NLG, National Leisure Group. And basically what we were trying to build was
the infrastructure, think Shopify in some ways, the infrastructure that would power Expedia,
Travelocity, Yahoo, others who were selling travel. They were selling air tickets. They
were plugged into these global distribution systems, but there was no GDS for selling
vacation packages, cruises, and all these
other things. So we said, let's go build the GDS effectively for that. And we partnered with SoftBank.
We raised, must be 50 million bucks for that business. We bought a little business to give
us kind of the kernel. We built a digital layer on top of it. And while the rest of the world was
imploding, we found ourselves in a pretty
enviable position. We built the business to over a billion in gross bookings. I think had over a
thousand employees at the peak. That was all within a year, right?
That was within 18 months because again, it worked. People were actually buying this stuff online.
And we were plugging into existing pools of demand. We weren't going out and having to create
demand. So Expedia launches a cruise or a vacation package booking engine, and the next day, a lot of people are actually
buying it. And we're kind of the Shopify, if you will, inside. And so Rich Barton, who ran Expedia,
said, hey, we want to buy the business. And then we ran into Dara Kashershahi, who was running M&A
for Barry Diller at the time
and he said, you know, I want to buy the business. And to be clear, this is pre-IAC buying Expedia.
Correct. So these are two completely different entities bidding against each other for your
company. Correct. And I said to Dara, well, we already have an interested party that we're
talking to. And so he goes, well, let me talk to Barry. And so he talks to him. And they come back and he said, well, who is it? And I said, well, I can't tell you that,
but it's one of the big online travel players. And he goes, well, I think Barry wants to buy them too.
And that's ultimately what went down between October of 2000, May of 2001, we put together a deal where USA Networks would be renamed IAC,
bought both NLG and Expedia. Oh, those were concurrent?
Concurrent deals announced together. I remember being in the back of a limousine in Hollywood on
my way to Barry Diller's house with Rich Barton, and we looked at each other and we're like,
strange world, how'd we end up here? This was the beginning of Barry transforming from a media guy into a media and technology
guy and building IAC. Yeah, it was USA Networks and it became IAC.
Well, I would say two things about that real quickly. First, Barry was early to understand
transactional commerce through a screen.
Because of Home Shopping Network.
Because of Home Shopping Network.
He also acquired Ticketmaster, and he also acquired an asset called 1-800-HOTELS,
and he also acquired some catalogs.
And what they all had in common was transaction, you know, they were all e-commerce-based
business models, and they were through various mediums, the biggest being Home Shopping Network, which is through television.
So for him to squint a little bit and to see how all these transactions were going to move to the internet was not that difficult.
And the commerce engine, the commerce flywheel that was flying the fastest for him was 1-800-HOTELS that
he would rename hotels.com. So he was doing extraordinarily well in travel, understood that
that would be a big category of online commerce. And I remember very distinctly him talking about,
you know, commerce through all the screens. And that was in, you know, 1999, 2000, before most
people saw it.
I think this is such an important thing to realize about the dot-com bubble,
because everyone looks back at it and makes jokes. But the consumer behavior was there.
It was an objectively better way to transact in all these different mediums. And the bubble burst because it was a speculative asset bubble, and capital went away if you didn't have a business model. But for those who did and who could be free cash flow positive, this is where all the
demand was going and that never went away, right? Could you feel that in the moment of like,
people still want to do this as long as... I can't say that I did. I was really worried about,
you got to remember the size of the bubble bursting, the change in risk premiums, right?
And then the events of September 11th, 2001, they were all so compressed.
It's the fog of war, right?
I think about all we really knew for sure is this internet thing wasn't going away.
There are going to be real businesses
built around it. But it was very unclear when you would have the capital required to build
the businesses, where the capital was going to come from. And in hindsight, it seems pretty
simple. But I would say 2001, 2002, 2003 turned out to be a gift. But that's a slog, right,
when you're going through it. I look at business
models today that have negative unit economics, negative gross margins, raising money at super
high valuations. I have post-traumatic stress from that period because if you are a high burn
business with negative unit economics and you fly into a world where risk premiums change, it doesn't matter how good you
are, you cease to exist, right? And they will change eventually. I mean, that's the thing that...
Just look at what's happened over the course of the last eight weeks, right? Growth multiples
are down 50%. Risk premiums have changed dramatically. There are a lot of businesses
that are in the category I just described that aren't going to make it.
So the natural thing to decide after all this
is that you're going to go be a public markets investor, right?
Like, I just, but you know, part of why we want to tell,
hey, it's a great story,
but also like what Altimeter ultimately becomes
and this, you know, you guys, I think,
maybe the purest play example,
certainly one of the first,
if not the first life cycle investor,
you know, it was just not at all
obvious that you should go join a hedge fund at this point, right? How did that happen?
Yeah. So there's a little bit more in between. So September 11th happens, which is a really
catastrophic event, particularly for our company that was an online travel company. And so we
negotiated this soft landing with IAC. I won't take you through all the trials and tribulations, but it was a good outcome for
General Catalyst.
I thought I was going to go back and join David and Joel.
I knew they were two extraordinarily special human beings and they were going to build
something really big.
But I had kind of been bitten by the startup bug.
A friend named Bejo Samaya, who now runs Lightspeed in India and Southeast Asia,
had an idea. And it effectively was, think of Yelp pre-Yelp. And so Bejo and I started this
business. We bootstrapped it, had a bunch of venture capital term sheets for a variety of
reasons, didn't take them. And we sold that business a couple years later to a public
company in Seattle. And again, in the first transaction, I'd worked really hard at NLG. And I think I walked away after being the CEO and helping
put the deal together with a million dollars, which for a poor kid from Indiana, that was
game-changing. But by Silicon Valley standards today, people would be like,
are you clueless? There was a lot of work that went into that.
The second business I started with Beige, I think I owned 40% of the business when we sold it. That was four or five X the outcome. And then when I thought about what I wanted to do,
I had two competing ideas. One was another operating business. Like if you're an entrepreneur,
you have these ideas, you have to get them out of your crawl. But what I really thought that I was better suited for was investing.
And a person who made this clear to me was Rich Barton.
And Rich one day sat me down and he said, I don't think you're a great entrepreneur.
And I said, Rich, that's so insulting.
Why?
And he said-
Especially from Rich, like the consummate entrepreneur.
Right, right, right.
And you know-
Well, he keeps it real.
Apparently.
And he said, you know, being an entrepreneur is the art of the possible, right?
You have to will things into existence.
And he said, you know, you constantly think about what can go wrong.
When you're an entrepreneur, oftentimes you have to suspend disbelief and just think about
what can go right.
And he said, but as an investor and just think about what can go right. And he said,
but as an investor, investors think about distribution of probabilities, not possibilities.
And he's like, I've always kind of observed you, like your training as a lawyer, how you think as
an investor, like you're going to make a great investor. And so I was like, you know what? He's
right. And the best investment business model
is kind of this venture capital hedge fund business model. I thought there was going to
be a lot of disruption occur in that business model. Also, when you say this business model,
this venture capital hedge fund business model, until what you and now several others have done,
that was not a business model. These are two completely different types of businesses.
Correct. I'll hit that in just a second.
But I wanted to start a business and I said, I will start, you know, I think I can build
a better version of this model.
At the time, if you really rewind the clock, Warren Buffett, right?
I don't know what year it was, 1955 when he started his hedge fund.
He did both publics and privates, right? He didn't distinguish.
He just sought out great investments. Paul Reeder, who started Park Capital, was doing private
investments before Brad Gerstner showed up. Seth Klarman at Ballpost was doing private investments,
you know, before we coined the term crossover, right? David Abrams in Boston. So I had a lot of
legendary investors I looked up to that they never thought of the world in crossover, right? David Abrams in Boston. So I had a lot of legendary investors I looked up to
that they never thought of the world in crossover, but they thought the world,
there wasn't this artificial constraint that I can only invest if you're pre-IPO or you're post-IPO.
What did private investments mean to them? Did it mean what we think of or did it mean
something else? Well, I would say for them, private investing was maybe buying auto dealerships or newspapers or textile companies or whatever the case may be.
And as you know, in value investing, which was really the rage of that couple of decades,
it was, I'm going to find a company with a bunch of free cash flow. I'm going to use that free
cash flow to go invest in things that actually have higher returning characteristics.
Paul invested in that first company, NLG. He was on the board. We got to know each other quite well.
He saw me day trading in companies like Priceline, and he thought, this is interesting, a CEO who
actually is also an investor. So I remember him saying to me, you ought to come work with me
someday. And so after we sold that company open list, I showed up and I said, hey, I want to come
work with you.
I can run the technology part of the business.
You don't have a technology business.
I'll build a technology business, both public and VC, which is consistent with historically
what you've done.
And I said, if I like the business, I'm going to start my own.
So you don't have to pay me. Make me an apprentice. All I ask is that we have lunch together every day
and you teach me the hedge fund business. Yeah, you'd made a couple million dollars at this point.
So I mean, I didn't have a lot of money, but again, like-
And did he take you on that deal? He said, oh, great. You can quote unquote work here
and I won't pay you.
You know, the funny thing is he did say kind of come apprentice.
Yeah.
And I think I was two weeks in and he said, this is ridiculous.
He said, okay, I'm going to pay you. You're going to do this. And I will say it was one
of the most extraordinary mentor menteee journeys over the course of the
next two and a half years. He's a legend. He doesn't get the credit he deserves. And he gave
me the autonomy to, on the public side, go invest in my entire book in Google and Priceline and a
couple of great companies, and then to go make some venture capital investments like leading the
series, being Zillow. And I remember at the time thinking, this is so easy. I had such deep
conviction in Google, and I didn't have to have this highly diversified book. And if it went down,
Paul would come into the office and say, what do you think? I'd say, buy more. I'm heading to yoga.
Right? It was just like... But we had a really great run together.
I didn't realize that that was with Paul when you led the Series B in Zillow, because you were
a Zillow board member from that point on for quite a long time. Did you stay on the board of Zillow
sort of as an independent even after leaving Paul's firm and starting Altimeter? No, I left the board. I don't know if it was exactly contemporaneous to that, but about that
time, by the end of 2000, I mean, listen, I learned so much from Paul. And all kidding aside,
the idea of portfolio management, risk management, Paul didn't call it essentialism, but running a simplified, concentrated portfolio around
your best ideas was something that I absolutely, I may have been constitutionally predisposed
to believe that anyway, but we were just very symbiotic in our thinking about how to manage
portfolios.
He couldn't have been more supportive.
And so I learned through some pretty heady times with him.
And then at the end of 2007, I kind of said to him, I think I want to do my own thing.
You led the Series B in Zillow as a crossover hedge fund.
The idea of crossover existed, as you said, not necessarily in tech and other domains,
but also in tech with TCV and others. They were not
leading Series Bs in companies. Because a Series B at that point in time is what, $10, $15 million?
I mean, it's not a 50 or 100. Yeah, that's right. I'm trying to think the check size. We may have
put in 20 to 30 million bucks. And if I recall, it was a couple hundred million dollar valuation. Listen to his credit and another OG, Jay Hogue, who started TCV, was already in Zillow by
the time I came into Zillow.
Wait, he came in in the A with Benchmark?
Yeah.
Maybe it's the nomenclature.
I don't know if one was a C and an A and a B.
But those were the first three rounds of institutional capital.
And Jay had a relationship with Rich from his days at Expedia. I obviously had a
relationship with Rich. We knew he was a special entrepreneur. I knew Bill as well. And so it was
a big idea. It was a special collection of people out of Expedia led by Rich and Lloyd.
But I remember at the time talking to Jay about technology, crossover, ventures.
You are the guy to do crossover.
And I remember sitting him down and saying, that's the winning model.
That's really the winning model.
Now, I was coming at it with a more, I think, clear idea of public pool of capital and venture pool of capital. TCV had evolved into almost more
of a later stage venture firm that held some public positions, but didn't have a hedge fund
per se. So I think I had a slightly different view, but credit where credit is due. Their
vision for where the world was going was ahead of their time.
Okay. So it's 2008, End of 2007, beginning of 2008.
You tell Paul you're going to go out on your own.
You just keep nailing this time.
Yeah, you're just like, really?
The whole world's going go-go,
and just in case it falls off the edge.
I wish I was nailing it.
I got married at the end of 07.
We had our first child on June 3rd of 2008.
Remember, the world cracks were shown in August 2007. Whenever you look at these stock
graphs, they look at like they're generally stable, but man, the number of days of lost sleep.
But I remember saying to Michelle, we didn't have that much money. We were living in a few
thousand square foot kind of subterranean apartment in Boston. We were having our first child.
And it was clear the world was getting tougher by the summer of 2008 and I said I think I'm starting you know I'm gonna start my own firm I'm gonna tell Paul and let's just say that when you're
nursing a baby in September of 2008 October 2008 I have CNBC It's like, you just want to find the wastebasket to get sick in.
And I'm launching with no money. Because you had a bunch of commitments and they dried up.
Right. So at the end of 07, the track record had been good. And so I talked to some university
endowments, foundations. Now, I didn't know this world at all. I didn't know the world of LPs
at all. But I talked to a few people and they're like, hey, we'll give you some money.
And so I thought I was going to launch with $100 to $200 million.
But it was clear by September, October 2008, people thought the financial world might be
over forever.
And it's hard now.
It's been a good century or two.
It's hard now to put ourselves back in those shoes.
But when you think, people thought Lehman, Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs, were all going
to collapse, right?
And nobody knew the contagion effects of that.
Nobody knew the impact on the dollar.
Nobody knew the impact.
The thought was it was going to be a very deep depression.
And so it's interesting, just to put in the mind of the founder, people say to me, oh,
you picked a really great time to launch. Okay. I can assure you.
I was saying it, no, like sarcastically.
I mean, it was, in fact, one of my advisors who runs a big hedge fund.
What's a big hedge fund to you?
Oh, he ran a multi-billion dollar hedge fund at the time. And I just had an informal group
of advisors and he said,
you've made a huge mistake. Go back to Paul and see if he'll give you your job back.
And don't do this. And because I had organized my life in a really humble way, I didn't need money.
And I had started a few other companies. And when I started them, I started them basically from scratch. I knew what it felt like. I knew that feeling, that founder feeling on day one. It was exciting
and terrifying. And I was like, I got this. The horse has left the barn. I'm doing this.
And to Paul's credit, Paul was like, you got this. And he had started PAR with less than $3 million in the SNL crisis in 1991.
And I had a roadmap and I had a mentor who believed and I had a clear vision as to where
I was going to go.
And I knew I was going to do it for a really long time.
And you also had about $3 million if our research is right.
I think on my day one investors, not to out them,
but Paul was one of them. My brother was one of them. Now my brother, it's my brother,
oldest brother's about 15 years older than me. The side note is he's an architect. He had saved
his entire life a million bucks, like worked, I don't know how many years, 15 years to save a
million bucks or something. And he invested it all in a hedge fund. I don't
know why I laugh. Put it in a hedge fund in LA and the guy stole all 200 million of this money.
Oh my God.
So my brother literally worked 15 years.
Oh my God.
And his life savings went down the drain. He scrambled together another half million bucks
and he said, I'm giving it to you to invest.
Were you like, I don't want this?
And I was like, I don't know if I can take this. And I remember we were on a hike in LA and he said, I know you're going to do great with
it. And I said, well, here's the thing I promise you. I may lose it all naturally, but I won't
steal it. And I can happily say less than a decade later, he was retired and it had worked out fabulous for him.
What is it with your family and risk, right?
Like you've like gone, you know, essentially gone bankrupt, you know, a couple, not you, but you know, your dad, your brother.
The thing with our family is we're incredibly close.
We support each other, even including my father.
He was famous.
He would have given you the shirt off his back.
And, you know, to know that you have those folks. And so again, I don't want to make it seem overly heroic. We launched with very little money. The first trade I placed was-
And this is Altimeter, just for folks at home.
This is Altimeter. We launched on November 1st, 2008. The first trade I made was into Priceline
at $42 a share.
Which of course became booking after it later bought booking and booking.
I bought booking in 2004, 2005.
But that $42-
People probably didn't recognize yet
what a monster that was.
$42 a share.
I still owned it when it hit $2,000 a share.
And teach a class at Columbia Business School on it
and securities analysis class on,
you know, Graham and Dodd class on kind of like, what did people miss and what, you know, what did we see?
But at any rate, you know, that was the start. I will say that when we launched,
I wanted to be in Silicon Valley, but I was in Boston because I had no dough. And at the time,
people who had invested in commingled funds, because remember, by the end of 07,
everybody was starting to put privates in their public vehicles, right? I remember, for example, that Bill Miller of Legmation famously invested in Zillow in 2006 or 2007, and then in 2008 sold
all those shares back to the company because everybody was unwinding their private positions.
And so when LPs found themselves overly illiquid in 2008...
Side note, that is how not to do crossover investing.
By 2008, they were like, we do not want privates in public funds.
Huh.
Right? So I had the vision, but it wasn't clear how that was going to be executed because people really, crossover fund, commingled fund, public-private fund, those were bad phrases in the fall of 2008.
Why was it by 2007 that people had started adding these private companies to hedge fund portfolios. So the observation I had probably in 2004, 2005 was,
and I was a securities lawyer by training.
I had worked around a bunch of IPOs.
Maybe that helped, but I was like,
companies, the private markets are becoming way deeper,
way more liquid.
Companies are going to scale faster because the internet provides a network upon which
they can scale.
And they're going to stay private longer because their deeper pool is a private capital.
And we've made it more difficult for them to go public post-2000, okay?
And then certainly post-2008.
Correct.
And TCV was there.
Chase had started Tiger. Philippe had started Co2. So we started
to see examples of hedge funds that were really smartly, I think, starting to do
some private investing. And I thought, I want to build the best crossover fund in the world that's
based in Silicon Valley, built by a founder, right? And I thought that was my differentiator, right? That I had a
network in Silicon Valley. Most of the other hedge funds were in New York or Boston. Most of them
were stock pickers, not founders. And so I thought I can do this in a way that's really more empathetic
and more closely aligned with founders, like true venture, but that could scale all the way into
the public markets. And so it was delayed in 2008 because nobody wanted commingled funds.
But by 2010, we had a great start in 2008, 2009, 2010. And by 2010, people were like, okay,
now we'll let you start to undertake your vision. And so 2011, we started putting together
the first dedicated pool of capital. 2012, I moved to Silicon Valley. And that first dedicated
pool of capital- Dedicated for venture investing versus the single pool.
So we had a public pool of capital, which was long, short technology effectively.
We also became pretty well known for doing a lot of travel-related investments.
But in that pool of capital, we could also do a certain amount of private investing.
But we realized that for the venture and growth opportunities that we saw,
we needed a longer duration pool of capital.
The strategy makes sense, and history has obviously shown that. But how do you trade
off? If you're running a public book, you probably want to be pretty close to fully invested.
For privates, you need dry powder. How do you solve that? Is that by raising these dedicated
pools? Like any entrepreneur founder, you have to see some market changes that give an opening for a new entrant, right? Because the incumbents have
advantages, right? And so I believed that the very nature, the three things that I mentioned,
IPO is harder to do, companies scaling faster, deeper private pools of capital.
But I also believed that that was going to lead to the industrialization of venture,
right? That this thing, like the winners were going to look different than the previous generation. And this was an industry that was only a generation or two old.
Venture capital. Now, when I raised it,
there was the requisite level of skepticism. Like, how do you think you're going to compete
with Sequoia? How are you going to compete with Kleiner? How are you going to compete?
And we made very clear that I thought that the business building journey that started in that
first institutional raise was different than what we intended to do,
right? Like I raised a lot of money, three different companies, right? As a founder.
And so- Which if it's two or three raises per company or more and think 30 firms you talk to,
to get one term sheet, like you knew hundreds of venture firms at this point.
And had deep relationships with people who we had made money together.
So I assume your answer to that question of how you're going to compete with Sequoia at that
moment in time was, we're not.
We're not.
Okay.
So remember, just these venerable early stage firms, Mike Spicer and Jim White and the team
over at Sutter Hill and my friends at Benchmark and friends at Sequoia. Interestingly
enough, Andreessen, I remember March of 2009, Allen & Company conference, Arizona.
They're getting ready for fund one, right?
So the market bottomed, not in 2008, on March 9th, 2009. And we were all at the Allen & Company
conference.
Was this before or after they did skype um this was well before yeah and i remember sitting at a table with my little pitch deck and i looked at a table next
to me and it was mark and ben with their pitch deck and let's just say they scaled much much
faster and uh but yeah we were both there at the same time. They had a vision,
which was a brilliant vision for the industrialization of venture, for how they
were going to change venture. And they've done it extraordinarily well.
Well, and fast forward to today, your two firms are about roughly same, equal order of magnitude.
The AUM may be in a similar territory, but the firms are very different. We can get to that in
a little bit. But they've done an extraordinary job. I'm looking around here. I see 30 people.
That is a very different... Yeah. 30 versus 350.
And today's a full company offset, right? But we raised that first pool in 2012.
It was basically passing the hat. We had made good money for our LPs,
passed the hat around
the table. I was the biggest LP in that fund by a long shot because I wanted to get it upwards of
a hundred million bucks. But that first fund, I think I had six investments in that fund. I don't
think we will possibly have a return profile. That fund, it definitely is up there in terms of
great returning funds.
When you led the Snowflake round, do you remember what the share price was?
I don't remember what the exact share price was. I think the enterprise value at the time
was somewhere around $175 million. Okay. So that was 2012.
The fund was vintage 2012, 2013, I think.
I'm not sure when that first round of snowflake.
Yeah, that might have been.
13, 14.
But that moment in time, did you have some insight that you felt nobody else had at that moment?
Or was it the right time?
Like how?
A few things. Number one, I did have confidence that I was a decent investor, right?
So we worked really hard.
We're a blue collar.
There's different ways to prosecute the strategy.
I think there's some people who work the cocktail circuit
and we really were students of,
we're anthropologists about like where things were going
and what was going to be big.
And at the time, there was a lot of pessimism, frankly, about cloud computing.
Salesforce had some quarters where they saw more deceleration than people thought.
And there were really kind of these obstacles.
One was the cost of computing the cloud versus the cost in a data center.
But the big one was this perception that I'll never put my customer's data in the cloud.
It was really a security issue. Which then, let's just review history. Everyone that decided that
was not a tech company that they needed to maintain an on-prem data center got hacked and
leaked customer data, or lots of them. And everyone who shifted to the cloud,
do we really trust Microsoft and Amazon? They're pretty good at that.
Right.
That was a good decision.
And they had thousands of people
working on security
versus your data center
that had two consultants.
But it was really the Sony hack,
if you remember that.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, yes.
Do we ever.
The Sony board hack
where I think it was Colin Powell,
if memory serves me correct,
his email was hacked.
And in his email was the target list for
sales forces m&a uh activity whoa it was so much that came out and so like that all the snapchat
all the stuff that got leaked and so if you were a board member or you were a ceo you immediately
said what if my email was hacked and that was like a game-changing moment.
But I would say for us, we had-
For all of cloud.
For all of cloud.
Our view was it was safer, and that it was only a matter of time before the cost and efficacy of, you know, kind of computing the things you could do in the cloud would be better.
We were on the lookout. I would say one of the things that we were focused on at the time,
and this has been a, I think, theme for us over the last decade, we have this view that not all
software is created equal, right? Not all ARR is created equal. And if you rewind the clock to 2000,
like the largest sector of software was databases, right? In 2000, if you
aggregate the total enterprise value of companies that were principally driving their revenue from
databases, it's about a trillion dollars in market cap in 2000. So then if you fast forward and you
say, well, every year we're producing more data than in all years of human history combined,
it's got to find a home.
We're only going to sensor more of it in the, you know, build sensors to gather more data in the
future. Where is that home going to be? And then I remember Bill Gates saying, somebody asked him a
question. I think it was Meg Whitman asked him the question, you know, isn't all the interesting
stuff done? And he said, Meg, like, do you realize how barbaric it is the way we make
decisions? He said, in the future, right, we will have all this data stored and machines will
analyze the data and help us make better decisions about how to diagnose an illness, about how to
educate a dyslexic child, about how to maintain an aircraft's engine, right?
It will all be decisions made by machines looking at data.
And so that was, you know, we did have a strong view that the entire database market was going
to be remade.
It was going to be remade in the cloud, purpose-built for the cloud.
And so for us, that infrastructure layer in the cloud, purpose-built for the cloud. And so for us, that infrastructure layer
in the cloud, all the enablement that would be required in order to get enterprises in the cloud
was something we focused on, I would say more than probably anybody else, and that proved to
be a rich vein. This is an interesting thing to talk about here because it's kind of a second
pillar of Altimeter. If I think about where you were first successful, it was really realizing
that the internet is an
amazing place to transact. People want to transact there and they want to buy stuff.
And overwhelmingly, they're originating that journey on Google. And you sort of went down
the list and said, okay, what interesting businesses could people buy stuff from when
they click through from Google? And so you've got Expedia, you've
got Priceline, a lot of travel, Amazon. But then there's this second, I don't know if it's still
an emerging thesis since you did Snowflake in the mid-2000 teens. When was this?
2013, 2014.
It's totally separate. It's this B2B, we're going to need the rising tide to power all these businesses. Are there other sort of core pillars of areas where you look for where you're like, oh, this is, you know, multi trillion have an architecture, unless you have, you know,
unless you deconstruct what's going on in the world and try to understand the theme, the human
behavior that's driving these events, then you just have a bunch of data points that are
disconnected. And as an investor, our job is to look at these complex fact patterns and try to
make sense out of them. So one of the things that was very clear to me in early 2000s is, you know, the internet
is the most fabulous thing in the history of the world.
It connects all these people.
It unleashes all this productivity, but it's chaotic.
How the hell can you find anything, right?
And so those who could organize it.
So if you think about that decade, that decade was the decade of search,
horizontal and vertical search, right? Booking.com was a vertical search company,
Kayak vertical search company, Zillow vertical search company, Google horizontal search business,
Baidu horizontal search business. And then there were these e-commerce businesses that were the
beneficiaries, right? They learned how to tuck into the underbelly
of the discovery engines, right? So that was an investable theme for a decade, right? Google's
desktop search, I think, didn't go negative until 2012, maybe the fall of 2012. That's when there
were fewer people searching on desktop, you know, on a year-over-year basis because people were
switching to their mobile devices, okay? Which has a totally different entry point. 100%. So what, as the anthropologists,
what did we do in 2010? I said, whoa, this whole search thing is going to get disrupted
by this phone thing. Now, I don't know exactly how this is going to go down, but like the way
that we enter these phones is not through search as our principal
metaphor, right? And so then it became, how do I become one of these icons, right, on the front of
this iPhone? There was, as you recall, you know, Facebook famously, you know, building, you know,
an HTML5, not building their, you know, not building an app. I remember Facebook became our largest investment in 2012
when it went on the cover of Barron's at $17 a share post IPO.
When it broke through its IPO price.
Yeah, because everybody said they'll never be able to monetize this. And if you did the work,
and I remember being at Google Zeitgeist in Arizona at the time talking to all these CMOs,
and they were like, oh my God, the sandbox for Facebook, like they're crushing it. Like this is going to monetize better, not worse.
Right. Mobile device, the stream on the mobile device, targeting on mobile devices, you know.
And so if you had a decade of search, you had to understand all search, all the companies that
benefited from being in the underbelly of search,
the Yelps and TripAdvisors, by 2012, they had to be in your too hard bucket.
Right.
Right.
Because their principle, they had it too easy. They acquired customers, millions of customers
effectively for free, and they monetized them out the back door. Well, the free game was over.
Right.
Right.
It's famously hard to start an OTA these days because, well, you're going to compete again
to Expedia, bidding on the traffic from Google. Good luck.
Right. Then we started looking at who are going to be the beneficiaries of the switch to mobile.
So that was an architectural change. And I think if you connected the dots, you probably,
you had some things go your way. Who are the winners? Who are the losers? Software was similarly situated. And so, you know, we had been investing in software,
in and around software for a long time, but it really started getting interesting about that
period of time. Because if you believed... Do you mean like B2B SaaS when you say software?
Like what specifically is interesting to you? Today?
Yeah. Or as you were starting to develop this thesis?
Well, I mean, if you just look at it at you said there's a trillion dollar enterprise market trillion dollars of annual enterprise spend spend
and it's all going to shift right so like in investing a you need these market dislocations
you need things changing right to create these opportunities for new entrants um but then the
second thing was you know you asked a question was it obvious or whatever in 2012, 2013? I mean, when David Cheria took over, you know, Mongo, I mean, it was famously hard for him to get that last private round of financing done at a billion dollars. And, you know, it had taken longer, it was moving slower, but we looked at the product pipeline, and we understood what the company was doing. And it takes a long time for those companies to spin up. But when those developer communities get going, they're incredibly sticky.
You know, as Buffett has said, the best investments, you have to be non-consensus and right.
The problem is being non-consensus is most often wrong.
Yeah, right.
Right? Consensus is consensus for a reason.
And there's a zillion things in your life telling you you should be uncomfortable or in pain when you're doing something non-consensus because you got all these smart people telling you you're wrong.
Correct.
And if you're a founder of an investment firm, but probably one of the best known firms, Silicon Valley, who passed on that rounded snowflake. You know, the partner said to me, like, I wouldn't do it. And here's why. And we ended up doing it. And by the way, his argument was a good one. It was pretty compelling at the time.
One of the things we did in that story was over Christmas that year,
we were aggregating a lot of data for our own hedge fund.
So we were crawling web pages.
We were buying data.
You were building.
We had a data warehouse.
And we punted Kevin, who's my partner know, kind of a young analyst at the time, computer scientist out of MIT, said, how about if over Christmas I'll replace our data warehouse with this, you know, a Snowflake, which was non-GA at the time, right?
It was in beta with a couple companies.
Wow.
And so we did that and he's like, this is going to win.
Like, this is the winning arc.
This is good stuff. This is good stuff.
This is good stuff.
Yeah.
But he also wrote a bug report, right, of like the 10 bugs he found.
And he sent this bug bashing report to the founders, to Benoit and Thierry.
This is in the dictionary under how to win a deal.
Yeah.
And let's just say, they said, no other investor has done that.
Certainly no hedge fund.
Yeah, exactly.
Just to contextualize this for listeners, because I know people think like, oh, Ben and David, they have like great investors on
the show. And I'm sure they get into like, you know, they have some great investments.
Just to throw out some numbers. I think that round you mentioned was at $175 million valuation.
They IPO'd somewhere around $4.4 billion. And this trading in a window, anybody know what their market cap is-ish today?
100-ish billion, I think.
100-ish billion. So the cool thing about what you're doing is you can hold for a long time,
including when these things become public companies. I'll just say it so it's coming
from me. I think Snowflake is still over half, or as at the end of last quarter was still over half
of Altimeter's public position. It is unbelievable, both from a returns perspective, but from a
conviction perspective to stick with founders with that sort of founder mentality and this longevity
this long. I mean, I think that's the unique thing about this kind of capital platform.
Yeah. So I would say a couple of things. One is, you know, it was an extraordinary investment,
but it's also just an extraordinary partnership, right? Its founding CEO, Mike Spicer,
Bob Muglia, Frank Slootman, Mike Scarpelli. I mean, these are deep relationships that become
really important
friends. You work really hard through a lot of tough issues. And when it's all said and done,
the incremental dollar isn't going to change the answer. But working side by side and building
something that you're extraordinarily proud of, it's what motivates me. What I would say about
that investment is for our venture investors, I don't know what
it was at the peak, but I talked about two different pools of capital.
On the venture side, those are 10-year funds.
Last year, we distributed an extraordinary return and a game-changing return for a lot
of our partners.
But at the same time, on the public side and personally, we think this is going to be a multi-year compounder. I
think this company can be worth over $500 billion over the course of the next five to seven years.
They think it will be extraordinary. And we have one of the best management teams in the business
going against one of the biggest TAMs in the business and delivering a really beloved service.
And so it's kind of a tragedy if you can't continue to participate in that. But you have to match, right?
Like, that's not the bet that the folks who invested in my venture capital firm made,
that I'm going to hold this forever, right?
And so you want to make sure that you match and you align the interest of the LPs in the
product that they're buying with the duration and the nature of the investment
that you're making.
And so, you know, listen, Sequoia's innovated, you know, in a really interesting way around
this permanent fund in this regard.
We have a structure that allows us to continue to, you know, partner and compound and continue.
I think you'll see more and more of this.
Rewind the clock, you know, I started investing in Priceline when it was less than a
billion dollar enterprise value. Today, it's upwards of 130 billion. So they went public,
or you could buy them in the public markets for less than a billion.
Yeah, that would never happen today.
Right. Salesforce went public at 850 million.
Amazon, I think, was sub 500 million.
And so I wouldn't say never say never. In fact, I hope that we start to see
a return of earlier IPOs. It's great for the public. I think it's great for retail investors.
I think it's great for companies. They need the discipline. Having companies running around with
billions of dollars on their balance sheet and, you know, decacorn valuations and not the discipline
of public markets, to me, is not a great thing for
the company, for the employees, for the founders. It's not to say that they're undisciplined,
but this idea that you can't innovate in the public markets is nonsense, right? Jeff Bezos
innovated plenty in the public markets, Facebook in the public markets. Look at what Mark Benioff
has done in the public markets. And so I think that the public markets. Look at what Mark Benioff has done in the public markets. And so
I think that the public markets not only is an important source of capital, but it provides a
source of discipline. Scarcity leads to ingenuity. I hope that one of the things, we'll talk maybe a
little bit about our capital markets business, but I hope one of the things that we bring back
to the IPO market is that companies don't feel like they have to wait until they get to 100 million or 200 million or 500 million of revenue in order to go public, right?
I mean, just look at the crypto market if you want to know myself through business school investing in CMGI
while it was still venture risk in terms of its orientation. But we've largely deprived the public
markets of that today. And we may say that that makes it safer, but it also means that you're not
going to see those 100x investments. So if you have a pool of capital,
if you're an LP or you're a GP, and you want to think about this. ByteDance, we invested in at
$10 billion, okay? Today, it's marked somewhere between $350 billion to $500 billion, depending
on which crossover fund you look at. Imagine that. Over $300 billion of value
creation that goes to the Sequoias, the Altimeters, the GAs, et cetera, of the world. And
no retail investor has access to that. That's not a level playing field. That's not a great
outcome for folks. And it's not to say that we should force companies to go
public earlier, but we should reduce the friction, give them access to the capital markets,
and give retail investors the opportunity to participate in the upside of these companies.
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I want to get your opinion on an interim moment. Back to that first fund in the 2013-2014. Feel
free to argue with me on this, but you said in fundraising, I'm not competing with Sequoia. I'm
not competing with Accel and the like not competing with excel and the like and you
weren't they that snowflake round that manga around those firms weren't leading those rounds
in the intervening years now of course they are and they're doing it in their own companies and
that part of is contributing to stay private longer and all this how did you think about
those years and like you're you know you? And that first month, that's amazing,
right? And then you saw, of course, you knew you had the publica guys, the go-tos and the tigers
and the like, but then you saw the venture guys also coming into this space. How did you view
the market at that? Has that happened? I mean, listen, what's happening is this happens in all
markets, right? The venture market is maturing.
I might argue the venture market has over-earned for many years, right? And so the market's going
to become more efficient. It's going to be more competition. With more competition, that means
founders are going to have better access to capital. They're going to have more efficient
markets. So it means they're going to be, you know, presumably get a better price, less dilution for the work that they do,
which presumably is an incentive to invent more shit that's going to make the world a better
place. So like, I'm down with being part of the competition that makes venture more efficient.
Listen, I wasn't invited into the venture party, right? There was a club out here on Sand Hill Road. And, you know,
but this club respects meritocracy. We come out here, we work really hard, and we add value to
the companies. And if you do that over a long period of time, right, then I think you're going
to be, you know, have a shot at being part of this ecosystem. We collaborate as much as we compete,
okay? And when we compete, we're going to go at it. We're ecosystem. We collaborate as much as we compete. Okay.
And when we compete, we're going to go at it. We're going to lay out why we think we're the
best partner for the company. But we're also going to collaborate. I know that what we're
collectively doing makes America the best place on the planet to start a company, right?
It's amazing for our founders.
There is no vibrancy.
I mean, we talked to a bunch of your founders in preparation and they were like,
well, it's wonderful. Like, this is great. This is like vibrancy. I mean, we talked to a bunch of your founders in preparation and they were like, well, it's wonderful.
Like, this is great.
This is like the best thing. And so I got, you know, rewind to my dad's story.
Like, what if a venture capitalist had handed my dad 5 million bucks, right?
He wouldn't have lost the house, right?
We, like, that's who we should encourage.
The risk takers, the bold ones, the ones who get into the arena.
And so I think it's an incredible honor to be able to do that. But at the same time, I don't think I'm entitled to be able
to run the table on the crossover business model. Everybody is going to compete for these different
rounds. My job, just like any other founder entrepreneur's job, is to build the best product.
Like what is it that we do different for entrepreneurs than these other
partners might do, right? Or how do we fit into the system? Actually, let's not make that rhetorical.
What is it that you do different than other? Right. And so I would say with total respect
to all those others, first, I don't want to compete in that first round of institutional
capital. You know why? Because Chaitin at Benchmark and
Mike Spicer at Sutter Hill or the folks at Sequoia or the folks at – they do an incredible job.
I mean, I started at GC, right? Like, I've been a day one founder. I know what that first two to
three years of gestation looks like. And those firms, why does Andreessen have 300 plus people? Because they
really have built the infrastructure to help those early entrepreneurs win. Same with Benchmark.
They're extraordinary. And that's, it makes sense what you say, but that is a contrarian view
today. Well, I would say like, listen, the jury's out. Tiger did, I don't know, 70 or 80 Series A's and, you know, Seeds and Series A in
the back half of last year. I have, again, like Schleifer and Chase are great friends,
lots of respect for those guys. Ultimately, entrepreneurs get to make the choice,
right? And the story will be told down the line, right? Are the entrepreneurs that take money
from Roloff or from Chaitin or from Eric Vistria or from, you know, from Mike Spies,
or ultimately do they have a higher hit rate in terms of building successful and big outcomes
than companies that take money from folks who raise their hand and say, we're probably not
going to be as value add, right? This is more a new, we're more just a source of capital.
I think that Tiger's building an extraordinary business.
I just am, maybe I'm of the minority belief that early stage venture,
those first two to three years is craft building.
And we like to partner with founders who are wise enough
to put around that early board table people who
have been through the trenches. And so that increases our probability of success and reduces,
you know, we think the risk inherent. And so we come in and partner then at that stage. So you
ask like, what is it that we do that's special? I think that Altimeter has a founder's mentality.
We have the empathy of an early stage founder or venture capitalist,
but we have the scalability of capital. So some people I've heard say, hey, they bring the best
of, you know, Tiger, but also the best of Sequoia. If we ever get that compliment, and I think about
our NPS among founders all the time, right, that's the highest compliment. That's what I want to do.
We want to increase their probability of success. And when we start moving in that direction, we want them to know that we're
side by side with them on the important issues they face, recruiting a CFO, building their board,
getting the company public, helping them raise capital, and that we'll be first in line to write
the check. You're a reasonably concentrated portfolio. So it's kind of like the benchmark mantra, but applied to later stage. And that discernment ends up
accruing value to companies because you have such a deep pool of capital. So like take a modern
treasury, for example, it does show up as value to them in the way that they can communicate to
their customers. Like, yeah, we're only a four-year-old startup, but look, we're with Altimeter. And it doesn't mean that the capital
in your fund is on their balance sheet, but because you do have a reasonably concentrated
portfolio, that brand power actually can accrue to the company in a way that shows up to their
customers. A couple of things. First, I would say that the level of concentration on portfolios, I think it's pretty consistent with the history of venture,
right? Like the reality is if you don't have deals in your fund that on their own can return the fund,
then you're probably overly diversified. If you're overly diversified, you're going to provide
vintage returns, which, you know, I'll just leave my money in the public markets, right? If all I'm
going to do is invest in, you know, the top 10, 15% of venture is going to take 80 to 90% of the returns, okay?
So yes, I am in the business of finding the best companies in the world and helping them succeed.
I'm not in the business of taking the average of vintages and building a big fund around that.
That's a different game. That's an asset gathering game. And it's not a game I find particularly fun. Not to mention, it's never been a great idea for more than one vintage to just be
the median of all venture investing. That's not something you want to index. Right. You know,
listen, I think it depends what you're promising your LPs, right? I'm the largest LP in our hedge
fund. I'm the largest LP in our venture funds, right? I'm only going to
put my money into venture if I think I'm going to earn a superior return to having my money in
a liquid security, right? If I didn't think I could beat the return on Snowflake over the course
of the next decade, put all my money in Snowflake and go surf with my kids, right? But I actually
think there's like a noble service being provided. I think we can deliver radically superior returns. And so,
I would say it's not the concentration that leads to that value add for those investors. It's because
at Modern Treasury, we help Dimitri bring other investors to the table. We help him bring the CEOs
of big banks to the table. We help them with recruiting. We're there during the high leverage
moments in a company's history that can really help, you know, add fuel to the fire. early stage guys are adding later stage operations like that you can really bring in a way and have
for Roblox, for Plaid, for so many, you know, others. How did that start? And what is that
business? Well, I think it's, you know, so I'm talking to a, you know, well-known venture capital
firms LP meeting tonight about capital markets, what's going on in the public markets, what does
it mean for, you know, their venture portfolio, et cetera, that's just fundamentally different, right?
And I'm an IPO lawyer, spent 20 years in the public markets.
We've worked on and participated in over 100 IPOs, right?
When the equity syndicate desk at Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley need to sell an IPO,
they call us, right?
They call long onlys.
And so we've been in and around that
market for a long time. Bill Gurley and Rich Barton and I, going back 20 years, were fascinated
with how inefficient that market was, with mispricings in that market, with, you know...
It's crazy. It's just like when you step back and look at it, it's nuts.
Right. Hombrecht and Quest were innovating with, you know, the modified Dutch auction around the
Google IPO.
I mean, lots of fascinating stuff.
So if you're just like, if you're a student of this game and you're an IPO lawyer like
I was, like, you pay attention to it.
I helped Bill put on the Direct List Conference a couple years ago, which, you know, we've
seen a lot of progress on.
Again, just giving choice to entrepreneurs.
At the end of the day, right, if there's competition for the bank IPO, the bank IPO will be better. And now there is,
right? The direct list is an alternative for some companies, a better fit for some companies.
And the reason SPACs were interesting to me is if you really just close your eyes,
it's just a third door into the public market. And we go help you build a book. We help you
price the security. We help
you sell it to Capital Group and Fidelity and T-Row. All three of these things are the exact
same exercise. You're selling 10% of your company. You hope to sell it to great public market
investors. And you hope with the least amount of pain and distraction to step into the public
markets, right? And so I think this innovation in the public markets is a terrific
thing for founders. It's fun to be a part of. But last year, we participated. We anchored direct
lists like Roblox. We anchored IPOs like Confluent. We anchored our own IPO like Grab by way of SPAC.
I saw your website. Yeah, you don't call it a SPAC. You call it the altimeter.
Yeah, altimeter IPO. I mean, part of what we're trying to do is we're trying to demystify
the transition to the public markets for CEOs and boards. Because frankly,
I've done it over a hundred times, but most founders will do it one time in their life.
Right. And they just don't want to mess it up. Like at that point, it's their baby,
why on earth would you ever do anything but the standard?
Right. And again, I think Goldman and Morgan Stanley is maybe where my friend Bill Gurley
and I have slightly different religions on this. At the end of the day, this is really about pricing.
And if we price these things efficiently in any three of these doors, then they can be great
outcomes for the company. And if you have a bad sponsor, if you have a bad bank and an IPO and it goes poorly,
then like that's a busted process, right?
If you have a bad sponsor in a SPAC,
you know, and you shouldn't be public,
that's just a busted process.
If you try to take a company,
you know, if you try to direct list a company
and you have a reference pricing round
that's too high for where the business at,
it's going to be a busted process.
So we spend a lot of time.
I hired Chris Conforti out of Goldman. He ran the equity syndicate desk at Goldman. So he was the
one selling all the IPOs for Goldman for a really long time. What we said we want to do is just as
a value add for all the private companies that we talk to, that we look at, is to really be able to
give them the inside scoop, right? Like we're not a bank, but we'll tell
you all the dirty secrets, right, about a traditional IPO, a direct list, or a SPAC.
You can't have credibility telling those secrets unless you've lived them, which we have in each
of those doors. And now we can offer what I think is the best insights to these founders. And we
have no economic finger in the scale, because I can partner with you.
If you want to do traditional IPO, great. We can anchor it or just participate. Direct list,
we can anchor it or participate. You want to partner with us and we'll build the book for
you? Great. We'll do a SPAC. And there are different prototypes, different archetypes
for which each of those fit. And I think among the folks who are
doing this, we're probably, you know, might be first among equals in terms of our insights into
how to get public. That's the old mongerism, right? You show me the incentive and I'll show
you the outcome. And in this case, you coming from the perspective of, hey, you realize when
the banks are trying to sell an IPO, they come to me to buy the IPO.
So having sat on that side of the table and not yet having an incentive, I can talk to you about
how this would get marketed to me so you at least have that transparency. And then I can tell you
how I want to play in that process and you can give me feedback and tell me where I belong in
your process. Yeah. I think, listen, I see it. Banks are getting more efficient, the direct list product, like the competition is leading to more choice and better outcomes.
Free market's a great thing.
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Okay. So as we move into the kind of the analysis section here, there are two,
we of course want to do grading and ask you to paint, you know, the, what is your, you know,
when you go to bed at night and you dream your best dreams of an A plus scenario for Altimeter
in three to five years versus, you-minus of we survived, but we
missed some stuff. We'll get to that. Maybe first, if you have thoughts on a bull versus bear case
on the lifecycle investor model, and that probably leads into grading, what are the risks to what you
have pioneered and are doing? Listen, yeah, well, listen, I think that I certainly,
I appreciate the credit as a pioneer.
I don't think of myself as a pioneer.
Like I said, in many ways, it's back to the future, right?
Warren Buffett was my hero.
If you asked him, why do you do private investments?
He'd just say, I do great investments, right?
He didn't know he was not private versus public.
In many ways, it's the LP community
who wanted to put people in buckets, right?
And so I think in order to generate alpha and above average returns in probably the
most competitive market in the world, okay, you have to be extremely passionate, right?
There are big sacrifices and trade-offs to be great in this business.
And for me, if you said, Brad, you can only do public market investing, that wouldn't
scratch my itch. If you said you can only public market investing, that wouldn't scratch my itch. If you said you can only do venture investing,
that wouldn't scratch my itch. And so for me, it starts from the premise like,
what do I want to do? What can I be most passionate doing? And the reason I think
we attract some of the best analysts in the world is because most analysts don't want to leave their
thinking cap at the IPO door, right? They're like, I spent all this time on this company,
and now you're telling me I can't make any more money on it? I can't bet on it? I can't invest
in it? Like, what's that about? I think that the maturation of the venture growth business model
is here to stay. We saw it in LBO. We saw it in private equity. That was a highly fragmented
industry. You now have a handful of global platforms,
right, that are prosecuting that strategy. In venture, highly fragmented industry.
We're still in the middle of a lot of creative destruction. You got solo GPs attacking,
you know, venerable early stage firms. You got a lot of firms that are vertically integrating
upwards. You got hedge funds who all say this venture capital stuff is easy.
I'm going to go do it.
You know, at the end of the day, what I love about this business is there's a scoreboard,
right?
And the hedge fund, it's a painful scoreboard, right?
It's like every day.
And in the venture business, there's a lack.
But at the end of the day, your reputation among founders, I say a two-sided marketplace, right? What's my NPS score among founders? And what's my NPS score among
funders? The people who entrust me with their capital. And I get up every day thinking about
how do we build the best product for both of those folks? Because if we do, and we deliver the
returns, then we have a great business that I actually think is serving a really important part of the capital process.
It's really interesting the analogy to...
Hey, totally agree.
But the analogy to the LBO business and market, you're absolutely right.
I mean, I remember coming up being an investment banking analyst as you were starting Altimeter
in those same days.
And the LBO market was vastly more fragmented than it is now.
And it has consolidated around some major players.
And they're niche players.
And there's lots of strategies that can work.
But yeah, we are.
I hadn't quite thought about it.
We are, I think, seeing the same thing in venture.
Right.
And if you think about what's happened in the private equity LBO world, right, you have
some global, now public platforms,
their cost of capital goes down, and we've seen a compression in terms of returns, right? Because
the market got more efficient. And as the market got more efficient, returns went down. Like,
what do I expect that, you know, will happen over the full arc of time in venture, right? We're
going to compete away returns. We've already witnessed it over the course of the last couple of years, right? But that just means the returns that go to the premium
players, the players who truly see the best stuff, that truly convert the best stuff,
are going to be even more unique. And the average return is going to be a much worse place to be
for both LPs as well for the people prosecuting those
strategies. So to me... And for the founders who are backed by those firms, right? Too. I mean,
because there is a, as we've been saying, talk often on this show, there is a brand transfer
and halo effect that happens in the venture markets. For sure. The signaling effect is
profoundly important. And I think probably underestimated.
Which is amazing considering how high it's estimated.
I'm with you, but- Right, right.
And I think when you have the best partners,
not even the best funds,
it's the best partners at the best funds
who do things together repeatedly.
It's because there's a shorthand around trust.
There's a shorthand around business building, right?
That increases the probability of successful outcomes.
And the signaling impact of that, like I underestimate it as a founder.
I don't underestimate it now.
And so it's not to say that folks who bootstrap, take solo GP, take passive capital, it's not
to say they can't build big businesses,
right? But I don't think that that makes it easier for them, right? At the end of the day,
like I think, you know, I said go public earlier because having that discipline and that scarcity,
right? Having some great early business builders that see those different patterns,
they create the conditions that I also think drive success.
Well, and what's different now is you can go public early and you still have Altimeter or
Benchmark or Sequoia or whoever has your shareholders. It's not like you have to
check your hat at the door.
Sure. I think we're in the early phases of industrialization, five years. So how do I
score myself? Our returns for our partners, right? Like we got to deliver excellent returns for our partners.
I say to my team, is our NPS score with founders higher or lower at the end of the year, right?
That is really important to me, right?
That's the durability of the brand.
That's the love for the brand.
You know, lots of software companies can increase revenue selling a shitty product with an aggressive sales force.
But ultimately, that will not be a really valuable software company, right?
You show me a software company where the product is flying off the shelves because the people on the other end really need and want the product and love the product, right?
That company, even if it has lower revenue, deserves a much higher multiple.
I think the same is true when I think about our business and what we intend to deliver. And, you know, I guess this is a segue as well to a bigger issue, you know, which is,
what is this all about? We are all part of one of the most fortunate systems at one of the most
fortunate times, right, in the history of modern capitalism. And I intend to use this platform to
do things that matter, right? And I think founders care about that. And I think funders care about that. Because at the end of the day do, right, which is increasing the velocity of
innovation, right, allowing Moderna to build an mRNA technology that can, you know, help solve
a pandemic, right, to transform the way software works so that, you know, that is the infrastructure
that powers all discovery, right? Like, those things I think are intrinsically good.
But increasingly what I see is people who are using these platforms to drive diversity, right?
To use these platforms to tackle things
like the wealth divide, which you know I care about
with the Invest America initiative that I've talked about.
So the people who work here, right?
I think if you did a survey, they would say,
you know, I worked there because, you know, great brand, fun, love doing venture, love doing public. But we also care about like
the impact of what we do. And I'm lucky to be able to lead that.
I really want to talk to you about Invest America because I think it's a fascinating concept. And
you mentioned we chatted about it when we were sort of preparing for this. What is the idea there? So rewind the clock.
I was definitely on the outside looking in, right?
I was not part of the ownership society.
You know, I didn't know what stocks were.
And, but, you know, all else being equal, you know, I never really felt deprived.
The industrial revolution in many ways was a great equalizer, right?
My grandfather was a welderizer, right? My grandfather
was a welder. He worked on the Manhattan Project. He was a brilliant guy, self-educated, read
textbooks, but he could earn a wage and save that allowed him to leave $25,000 for a grandkid who
had gone to put himself through law school and business school. The technology revolution will
have even more positive impact on humanity, but it naturally
tends toward concentration, right?
It is not an equalizer in terms of wealth, so far as I can see.
And the data, I think, works against that.
It doesn't seem to have played out that way, certainly.
Because if you think about it, it's logical, right?
Mark Zuckerberg can have three or four billion customers for his product.
Even Carnegie and Rockefeller couldn't have billions of people.
The software and then the internet on top of that kind of compounds that advantage.
And so, you know, to me, you know, the social contract that we're going to have to have
is going to have to evolve, right? And I think this country is better positioned to evolve that
social contract than just about anyone. But part of it is first just making people feel,
right, that they're part of the game. And, you know,
the start of COVID really drove this home for me because we had massive government intervention.
I went on CNBC on March 26, the bottom. I remember watching your interview.
I wish I knew that was going to be the bottom.
Yeah, it was like an extraordinary day. But at the end of that day, I literally had grandmothers, fathers, doctors, lawyers, just
email our website, generic email saying, will you protect me?
Will you take my money?
Will you do this?
Right?
There's just extraordinary fear in the world.
And I'm from Indiana.
Most of my friends didn't go to college in this small town.
And what happened
when the government intervened is the stock markets ripped, okay? Because the Fed went all
in, Congress went all in. But a lot of my friends working in those RV manufacturing plants were
unemployed, right? Lost their jobs. And so we can't have a system where the owners win,
right? Because of the government intervening, but we only have 30%
of people who belong to the ownership society. And that's the public stock market. That's not
even like accredited investors, which is this tiny slice you're talking about earlier. Yeah.
A small percentage of America that owns any equities.
Right. So a very simple idea that I floated, Chamath and I were on CNBC. I'd been thinking about it for a long time.
I've abhorred the accredited investor laws for as long as I can remember, because as a securities
lawyer, I remember studying securities law in law school and saying to myself, hold on,
you mean to tell me that we've rigged the game so only rich people can invest in the best companies?
They have to be protected, Brad.
Right?
And so like, what's this all about?
Because the proxy for intelligence was money, right?
Jason Calacanis has talked about having an investor test,
but I knew, I knew.
J. Cal loves that investor test idea.
By the way, like I've seen dumber ideas.
I think he's onto something. I appreciate that on principle,
he has the same allergic reaction. And maybe it's because he also grew up poor
on the outside looking in. And for those of us who did, now that we're on the other side,
we say we got to fix that. And so set aside a credit investor, there's some
ways we can attack that. But one way we get everybody into the game, okay? We have, I think,
7 million children born a year in the United States. If you gave every single one of them
an Invest America account, so think of that as a Robin Hood account on their parents' phone that
would eventually be on their phone. That that just shows up from the government.
Shows up from the government.
You get your social security number, you get an Invest America account.
We fund the account based on means.
If your parents make over $200,000 a year, maybe we put $100 into the account.
Your parents can fund it up to $5,000.
So it's like a FAFSA type.
Right.
If you're under a certain threshold, we put $5,000 in it.
Okay.
Can't take the money out.
Compounds at 6%, 7% for, you know, 50 years.
It's worth a million bucks, okay?
But much more importantly, the behavioral psychology,
the behavioral economist knows the propensity of somebody
who actually has a savings account, an investment account,
to save goes up dramatically, okay?
So because you actually have a savings account, an investment account, to save goes up dramatically, okay? So because you
actually have a little snowball, you understand the law of compounding, right? So if we want to
educate and include and make everybody feel like the system isn't rigged against them,
then they actually have to be part of the game, right? We have a way to do this. It doesn't cost
a lot of money, right? In the scheme of things,
like this is less than $20 billion a year for the federal government. This is a drop in the bucket
relative to trillion-dollar stimulus plans, trillion dollars of defense spending. And this
is a game changer, psychologically and otherwise, for everybody in the system. Because now,
over a period of 20 years, you've effectively
gone from 30% of the people being owners to 100% of the people being owners. And I think that that's,
you know, again, I'm sure there are other great ideas. But that's one that I really believe in.
Do you think it should be a discretionary account and people should be able to,
like an IRA or a basket of...
So my, again, like, you Again, what I intend to do is-
When you're running for governor of Indiana.
What I intend to do is to fund people to push this idea forward.
There will be a lot of debate.
We've debated baby bonds for 30 years, and we've never done anything.
A bond is, so far as I can tell, right, is spiritually connected,
but it's stuck in the old legacy of like the war bond. Like it's safer, therefore we'll give you
a bond, but it doesn't appreciate. And the recipient doesn't learn much, right? And so
hopefully we can harness the energy, the power, the lessons of that. And make sure that every child in this country
owns their tiny little slice of Apple, of Walmart, of Tesla, of the future SpaceX, right?
And I think if they do, think of how elegant that Robinhood app is or your Schwab or your
Fidelity app. You open it up and they see all of these names, their tiny little ownership of
all of these names, and they
see that grow over time, we know how often they'll be looking at those phones. We know how their
parents will feel. What I would say is they can't take the money out, right, until a long way down
the line, okay? That ensures a retirement program for basically everybody. But you can add, we could build adjacent accounts,
right? You could stick a 529 side by side with that, that they could pull out at college.
I don't like the idea of a government program where we'll give you a little of this every year,
right? Give me title and ownership, right? To something. This is mine.
And then let me benefit from American innovation.
Compound and benefit and be part of the system. So that when, you know, I have two sons in fifth and seventh grade, right?
They're both interested in investing.
They both want Robin Hood accounts.
They both want all this.
Now, I love it.
Asking for the Robin Hood account is the new, I want my driver's license.
But think about how privileged, right, that position is, right?
We should have a standard curriculum in this country
for sixth graders. Where it starts, they walk into their math class or whatever the class is,
and they say, open your Invest America account. Everybody's on the same page. You teach sixth
graders in an inner city school today about stocks, you may as well be teaching them Mandarin.
They're not participants in the game, right? And so to me, I talked to Seth Klarman from
Bowpost. He said, I'll write the curriculum, right? I'll take that curriculum.
You know, I talked to David Solomon at Goldman, the folks at Schwab, Fidelity.
Everybody sees this as a challenge. This is a simple, simple idea that we could get behind.
And literally in a single term could change over a period of a decade, the trajectory of every
child born in this country. Well, what's kind of cool is like you've, I think you've basically
already seen evidence that this works with Robin Hood. Robinhood is not a... People still had to have the means to
put money into Robinhood and then decide to do it. But it activated so many people to become
investors in America and around the world over the last couple of years that otherwise... And
some of those people will prove to not be good investors. Some of them will prove to be amazing
investors. And some of this... Listen, I mean, part of the challenge here is everybody says,
oh, you're letting people invest in the stock market. What if it goes down?
So here's the deal. We have 100 years of history, right? Owning your slice of America is a good bet,
as Warren Buffett likes to say, okay? So I don't know if it's going to go down in the first year
or up in the first year, and it doesn't particularly matter to me.
I know if you give these kids a slice of America over a period of 40 or 50 years,
it's going to be worth a hell of a lot more in the future than it is when they get it.
But way more important is every day of their lives,
they will feel like they belong to the system.
They're not on the outside looking in.
And the power of that psychologically to that child will dwarf the amount of money that's in that account.
Brad, before we wrap here, anything that you want to point listeners towards? Or where could they find out more about you or Altimeter on the internet? I encourage all of our analysts to be on Twitter. I think they're incredible brains and thought leaders and, you know, being online and sharing
content.
Like, I don't like to be a cheerleader on Twitter, but I do like and encourage our analysts
to pressure test their ideas, right?
Whether it's, you know, Jammin talking about what's going on and, you know, in software
or whether it's Vivek talking about what's going on in, you know, internet marketplaces or crypto or Frida talking about what's going on in software, or whether it's Vivek talking about what's going on in internet
marketplaces or crypto, or Frida talking about what's going on in China.
And so I think I always say to people, if they're interested in learning more about
Altimeter, just follow this incredible group of analysts on Twitter.
But all of this said, we're truly lucky to be doing what we do.
You guys are doing this incredible podcast about founders and
entrepreneurs. This is a rather new experiment in the history of the world. And I think it's
yielded. You read the Bill Gates annual letter at the end of every year, and we live in the most
peaceful, notwithstanding Ukraine. We live in the most prosperous. We live in the healthiest period
of time in the history of humanity. And one you know, one of the things that scares me is, you know, that people during periods like this, they'll turn against capitalism or they'll turn against, you know, technology or they'll turn against whatever.
But it's very clear to me, like, I'm going to fight for that and fight for those founders.
And I think when we look back at this system in 10 years, it's going to be more vibrant, more capital, more access, more ideas. And I think the secular curve around creative destruction and innovation
has never been steeper. And the ideas over the course of the next 10 years are going to dwarf
the size of the ideas that emerged over the last 10. So super optimistic.
In a way, Ukraine, I think, has, for me, at least helped remind me of that. Ben and I were
talking at dinner last night. The old saying that I think has become forgotten a little bit in recent years is
that capitalism is terrible, is the most terrible system, except for every other system that has
been tried in the history of humankind. I think it's about democracy, but it definitely applies
to capitalism too. Right. Well, I don't think it's the only thing, right? I don't think it's
the only thing in life, but I think it's an enabler for everything. Somebody reminded me the other day, Julian
Robertson, after an incredible track record in 1999, obviously got hit hard, money redeemed,
and they said, are you bummed to no longer be in the public markets?
And he was the founder of Tiger Management.
Founder of Tiger. And apparently he's reported to have said, I didn't want to die looking at a quote on my Bloomberg for the end
anyway. So yes, in this firm and in my life, my friends, my family, my kids, there are a lot of
things that resonate as more important. But I am a staunch defender of this beautiful system. I tell you, it's a hell
of a lot better than having to mortgage your house. You think about the velocity of money,
if the risk you run, if you start that auto parts company, you lose your health and you lose your
house, there's not going to be a lot of risk-taking. And risk-taking is the engine that
moves humanity forward. Business creation and experiments without personal guarantees are an incredible thing.
And it's amazing that we have a system that actually allocates a big slice of capital
to go toward that.
But think about that.
That's a modern experiment.
I don't know.
Modern capitalism has been around for 500, 600 years.
That's a 30-year-old experiment.
But you think about the impact
that global sovereigns who are trying to effectively take fossil fuel dollars and
turn them into technology dollars, we have more dollars moving into this. You mentioned we have
very few people who have access to the private markets. I heard this statistic the other day,
endowments and others have reaped the benefit, which makes me
happy. But retail investors and the average investing public has not. A 1% increase in
penetration of the retail investing public to alternatives, I heard is a trillion dollars.
Like I haven't run the math myself, but it's an extraordinary number. And if you look at the
retail channel,
the accredited investor retail channel through Goldman, through Morgan Stanley,
through these other aggregators, as a percentage of the fundraise for Tiger, for Kotu, for Altimeter,
it's going up dramatically relative to traditional LPs. And so we'll do another episode and we'll talk about how we're going to unshackle ourselves
from the accredited investor rules. Would you ever consider a future for Altimeter where your
LP capital is more directly from people? For sure. For sure. I mean, our aspiration is not
to be the biggest, but our aspiration is to have the scale, to have the level of impact that we can to drive the highest
NPS among founders and funders.
We want to deliver for both of those folks in that network.
And I think it's inevitable that an increasing percentage of these dollars can and will and
should come from willing retail investors who want exposure to this incredible asset class.
All right, listeners, hope you enjoyed our interview with Brad. He is unbelievable. I mean,
what a journey the last 20 years have been for him building Altimeter and really helping to
shape this industry. Totally. And personally, I'm pretty excited about his sort of idea with Invest America,
and we'll definitely be watching to see where that goes.
Totally, totally. Well, listeners, to round us out, you know the drill. Join us in the Slack,
acquire.fm slash Slack. We're going to be talking about this episode and everything else.
We've got the Limited Partner Show, where recently we've had awesome episodes with the folks
from NZS Capital coming back to talk about the state of the markets. David, Christina,
Melas Curiazzi joined us to talk about fintech. We've recorded two more episodes that we haven't
dropped yet to the general public that are rolling out to paid Acquired Limited subscribers.
And those folks can join at acquired.fm.lp to get
two weeks early access. We've got a job board and some really great stuff on there. I just added a
couple the other day from Vanta after we got to spend time with them at their office, met their
head of engineering, spent some time with the team. So really cool companies. Go check those out.
And lastly, if you enjoyed this episode share it with
a friend you don't need to shout super loud from social media hilltops we like that high affinity
one-to-one stuff so uh share it with a friend think of someone that has kind of talked about
some of these concepts with you and see if they'll uh take a listen and they may enjoy it just as much. With that, thank you so much to Vanta, Vouch, and our friends at SoftBank Latin America
Fund and listeners.
We will see you next time.
We'll see you next time. Is it you, is it you who got the truth now?