All-In with Chamath, Jason, Sacks & Friedberg - Dan Loeb: The Lost Art of Short Selling, and Why Stock Picking is Back
Episode Date: June 5, 2026(0:00) Dan Loeb joins the Besties! (0:34) Investor journey: From message boards to a multibillion dollar hedge fund (3:15) Third Point's early days: mentors and market turmoil (8:47) Strategy shift: E...vent-driven to quality and AI (16:01) The art of short selling and a homebuilder trade (22:15) Criminal justice reform and the Ross Ulbricht pardon Thanks to our partners for making this possible! EY - Agentic AI is introducing a new investment discipline. As AI shifts to consumption-based models, EY connects spend to enterprise value. https://www.ey.com/en_us/insights/ai/agentic-ai-token-costs?WT.mc_id=3501318&AA.tsrc=sponsorship NYSE - Thank you to our partner, the New York Stock Exchange - a modern marketplace and exchange for building the future. It all happens at the NYSE. https://www.nyse.com Plaud - Never miss a moment. Plaud, our official wearable AI note-taking partner at All-In Liquidity Summit, captured every insight. https://www.plaud.ai Follow Dan Loeb: https://x.com/DanielSLoeb1 Apply for Summit 2026: https://allin.com/events Follow the besties: https://x.com/chamath https://x.com/Jason https://x.com/DavidSacks https://x.com/friedberg Follow on X: https://x.com/theallinpod Follow on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/theallinpod Follow on TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@theallinpod Follow on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/allinpod Intro Music Credit: https://rb.gy/tppkzl https://x.com/yung_spielburg
Transcript
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Legendary activist investor, Dan Loeb. He, of course, is the CEO and CIO of Third Point.
The lost art of short selling has come back, and it's absolutely critical.
It doesn't matter what you do. You have to be really selective. People talk about stock pickers market.
This is a bond in credit pickers market. When we were small, our main tool was a shame and humor.
Dan Loeb turning up the heat on Nestle over the weekend. The shift has really been more towards a dare-to-be-great message.
Activism without proxy contest is like Catholicism without hell.
You're very active on the Twitter as well.
Oh, wow.
You found your voice.
A lot of emotion brewing there.
Can we actually start with that?
Before Twitter, you were actually quite active, but they were in very different places.
I mean, you were in Wall Street beds before Wall Street beds existed.
Can you just walk us through your evolution as a public persona?
Sure.
I mean, there was this brand new technology that came out called the Internet.
And really shortly that thereafter, long before Reddit or any of these other things,
there were a series of chat boards.
There was Yahoo.
There was something called Silicon Investor, a few other ones.
And people would congregate in Kibbets.
It was done mostly anonymously.
And it was an interesting place to exchange ideas.
It was really the Wild West.
People could pretty much say or do anything,
but there was a lot of substance there, too.
It's not actually that much different than from today.
Did you engage at all in any trolling, per se?
Well, some people use the term, OG.
Sometimes I say I was the OT.
The original troll.
Yeah, no, I did.
I mean, it was fun.
I didn't know I was one day going to run institutional money
and have a big fund.
And, you know, I was just having fun.
and blowing off steam and yeah, it was fun.
I mean, investing is fun, and particularly on the short side.
I mean, there's so much humor in it when you detect these companies, especially in the 90s.
I mean, it was really unsupervised.
There were some incredibly fraudulent companies out there, and it was just fun to uncover
them and kind of taunt the management teams and ultimately,
prevail. You have one story above others that kind of stands out in that era?
I mean, there were a bunch. There was, wow, there was a company called Act Trade that I remember
run by a guy who was like a repeat fraudster, and we uncovered it. And I know, I know we
really got under this person's skin, and ultimately, it was really just a factoring company
trading at five, six, I don't remember what is that, some large multiple of book value,
and they had created a new technology called TADs. I don't remember what Tad stood for,
but they were basically repackaging factory securities and saying that they had some special
technology. They were financing refrigerators and things like that. Tell us your evolution as an
investor. When you started at third point, I mean, you started with very, very little capital. Now it's
almost 30 billion of AUM. You're multistrat. But you learned at Jeffries. I think like you learned
helping people like David Tepper allocate capitals. Just walk us through how you learned to invest.
Well, I started really fascinated by investing and wanting to do it. I think when I, I remember when
I was 10 years old, my dad took me, my dad was a, my dad was a
notoriously bad investor himself. So he didn't give me any good examples. He's a great lawyer,
not a great investor. But he took me to meet a broker and I started investing. And then in high school,
in the 11th grade, I got a job at the branch office of Bair Stern, sorry, of Payne Weber working for a guy
named Alan Crown who let me post his books and make cold calls. And I think we broke certain
securities laws, but I think the statute of limitations is passed. I would trade options.
on Occidental Petroleum and Teledyne.
There was a lot of volatility.
And I think I had flurries of making money
and lost all of it a couple of different times.
But it was a good lesson.
I continued doing it in college.
And then my learning started really formally at Warburg-Pinkus
where I really learned to value enterprises.
It was my first job.
Kind of across the spectrum of private equity
and venture capital.
I worked at a risk ARB firm, which was really invaluable.
And then skipping forward, I had way too many jobs in my 20s.
But I got really serious at Jeffries.
I had an amazing opportunity to work on the distressed debt desk there.
I started out as a research analyst.
And I was just like drinking out of a fire hose.
There was so much activity.
The securities were so cheap coming out of distressed.
and it was, you know, the 10,000 hours, 10,000 reps, we would write up different things every day.
There are big blocks of debt to move.
And I really got, that was my real learning point.
And, you know, I stress this to people that, you know, everyone kind of sees mentorship as this
sort of hierarchical thing where you, you know, learn from some wise, older person.
But it's, I learned a ton from my colleagues, from my own cohort.
And I learned a ton from my customers.
You know, like Eric Mindich was the boy wonder at Goldman.
He was the youngest partner.
Youngest partner at Goldman.
Yeah, ran the Arb desk there.
And he had this triumvirate or quadrumvirate, whatever.
Four people, I don't want to leave them out, but Amos Morone, Dinnaker, and, you can't think,
some other guys.
Anyway, they were great.
And they really kind of brought me into their thought process, thinking about,
event-driven investing, and then, you know, I covered some of the smartest people in the business,
including David Tepper. I got to watch their thought process. And I was like a, you know,
like a Chinese corporation that was like copying and reverse engineering and taking everything
in and creating my database of knowledge and my own operating system, kind of taking the best out
of what all these different people did. And what was that style when you first started at Third Point?
What was that expression?
That was, well, I think, you know, we call it event-driven investing.
It was really less focused on the quality of business, more focused on very complex transactions, takeovers, spinoffs, risk or arbitrage, bankruptcies, privatizations, demutualizations.
And these transactions created unbelievable opportunities for Alpha because of the confluence of dislocation, opacity,
kind of time, but also this goes, and nothing changes. I always quote this Jesse Livermore
line, there's nothing new under the sun, a real focus on management incentives. So in all these
different kinds of transactions, management was incentivized to sandbag their numbers during a time
when there was an excess supply of securities where their options were being set, and we as co-investors
got to come in with these depressed projections and ride along not just,
the, well, we got to ride along a few different things that would happen.
Greater transparency and understanding of the business coverage,
companies that delivered a top line and margins and ROE and everything else
better than expectations.
So it was really a golden era for that type of investing.
And from where that started to what third point is today,
just describe that and where you want to, where do you go from here?
Yeah.
So stylistically, that event approach, it's still something we think about.
It's in our framework.
But I think what happened really when technology became a bigger force, but really everything
changed is a greater focus on business quality and innovation and disruption and more
thematic on the one hand, understanding of consumer trends, what's going on in financial services,
what's the economic macro backdrop that's supporting all this? And of course, the big topic of
this event, you know, AI is sort of the culmination of that, but all of these major technological
innovations that have really happened since. You could make money before by not being
technology savvy in the markets. You could be technologically illiterate or just say I don't do it.
And you could also be even more or less, you know, up until the GFC, I think you could be more
less economically illiterate and make a lot of money.
And now?
You wouldn't want to be either one of those things, I mean, given how much more important.
Like the tech through line needs to be understood everywhere.
Yeah.
Even if you're like Blue Owl and you're trading, I mean, Blue Owl, obviously is very sophisticated in tech
now, but any pool of capital that used to not be correlated is effectively correlated.
I mean, yes. Yeah, you can say that. And I just want to answer your question, just to kind of fast forward and give people a snapshot of what we do today.
Rob Schwartz is my partner, and we took Kempo Karate together when we're 10 years old. It was a purple belt. I think I never made it past yellow belt.
But we reconnected at our 20-year reunion. And I'm aging both of us. Sorry to give up your secret, Rob, in 1990.
It was our 20-year reunion.
And he was working as a sales rep for wireless RF components.
And I said, wow, this guy would be great to do channel checks for us.
And then I asked him a couple years later to say, hey, you meet some smart people.
If you ever come across a really savvy engineer, we should invest.
We didn't know what we were doing.
We weren't venture capitalists, but we were getting behind a person.
There was a guy named Dave Fisher, started a company called Radio Communications.
They made chips.
He made chips that were, I still remember,
ABG compatible for Wi-Fi base stations.
And ultimately, the company was sold to Texas Instruments.
And, you know, we've, I won't go deep into our venture business,
but that we started to do within the fund.
We've done a couple of dedicated funds.
So we have that strand of activity.
We can talk about a little bit more about what we're thinking
and how we're seeing this.
But I think what ultimately what you get to is that all these things are interconnected and come together under the platform that we have today.
Because we have the main hedge fund, which does credit, equity long short, credit is both structured credit and high yield.
We have a CLO business that we acquired.
We started a private credit business.
It does traditional private credit, direct sponsor financing, direct lending, and work out.
which is very important. So credit solutions, as they call it, a lot to do there.
And then we started an insurance company a few years ago. It's not the first
insurance company we did. We did a PNC company, but this one is was wholly owned,
now we owned half of it. And the insurance company captures basically the
investment grade part of what we do. So private credit through structured
vehicles, structured credit, whole loans.
investment grade, both private and public, but we also can use our surplus capital in very
interesting ways. So what's the role of the human? What's the role of Dan Loeb in running third
point 10 years from now? Like 10 years before, Dan Loeb was 100% of third point. And then
there's now, there's agents, there's AI, there's all this learning, there's all of this data.
where do you see the role of the human,
where do you see the role of systems,
making decisions, allocating capital, managing risk?
I mean, so first of all, investing now,
like, first of all, my time is spent primarily
on managing the hedge fund,
which for now is the biggest capital pool
and the most important business that we're in.
Yeah.
The human element,
I think this is true for everyone you have here,
like the element of the social component, the human network of knowing people, being able to capture
opportunities, work with people, interact, like that's never going away.
Like, you're never having, maybe you can theorize that there will be agents that will sit
at Andreessen Horowitz and whoever else, your funds.
But I think the human will always have to be there because people like to, you know.
want to know who's making or losing the money.
Yeah, and there's a, there's a thing that I think the, the agents that they have will never
really be able to look in your eye and assess all the things that...
You've expanded your philosophy of investing in companies from cheap securities with
catalysts, I think, how you described it on a podcast recently.
And now you're very concerned about motes, defensibility, and just the quality or the
brittleness, as Chumath likes to remind us, of the revenue.
So maybe can you tell us how you evolve that core thinking about the quality of companies and then
maybe give us some examples of the companies that now fit through that filter where you feel they
have a moat, you feel they have durability.
Yeah, obviously that's everything right now.
Chimov talks about the time-bounded value of companies, and I think that's essential.
What are the companies that are going to be around seven to ten?
to 20, like, what are the real moats that exist out there? And it's, it's, it is harder now. I don't think we can,
I don't know that we can really go out, you know, 10 or 20 years ago. By the way, I think we
diluted ourselves earlier, because I think if you ask people about the moat around, you know, IBM
or, you know, some of the other companies. AOL. AOL, Yahoo, you know, you say the same thing.
I mean, look, we're investing outside of tech into companies that have, you know, some great.
Well, first of all, it also comes back to the management because we can't really just look at a product or technology and say, oh, this is going to be it forever.
So we really look for a management team that we think will be adaptable.
And just like you guys were saying last night, you don't want to be on boards of companies.
These are things that they should be doing.
So I think that's a huge part of it, like finding management teams that you really believe in that have a proven ability to stay ahead of.
Is that quantifiable or is it still very much a subjective?
Sorry, is what?
Is it quantifiable assessing the management team?
No.
Have you built a rubric for doing that?
No, it's still very subjective, qualitative.
I think it's one of those things after 30 years.
There's like a pattern recognition.
Let me ask a question on screening.
You know, I think you've said recently publicly that there's a lot of opportunities on the short side in the market right now for the first time in a long time.
How do you start top down?
Is that a top down or is it an opportunistic, you know, something comes across the wire and you guys jump on it in kind of an event-driven way?
Or do you guys have kind of a systematic top-down approach to looking at the market and finding those opportunities?
opportunities? Yeah, there's no one approach to it. I think one thing that we've avoided is kind of a
valuation, a solely valuation based approach. I've just seen, I've seen too many people get
run over by shorts that have dumb valuations, but they get captured on, you know,
Reddit or one of these other things and they just get there, you know, or like some of these
space companies right now that, you know,
There was no rhyme or reason.
We had a really strong view on home builders from last year that there were two things going
on.
It wasn't just rates, mortgage spreads that were depressing housing prices.
That home prices, the home building industry was first structurally impaired because
of the way that they were all pretending to be NVR, which
which is they all pretending to be asset light,
but they had massive commitments to these land pools,
which in things that they said were options,
but they were really very committed in the capital
and that that value was going on.
But that the home building industry
was really the last industry
that had this post-COVID hangover
of inventory disruptions and pricing that really made no sense.
You know, all those prices went up
to unsustainable levels, but so did building costs went up, and buyers are no longer able to
pay those prices at the current financing environment, but they've also gotten squeezed
by inflation and costs. So that's been, you know, something, so we've been short and things
related to that. Let me bring Sacks into the discussion here, Sacks. We've learned a little bit
about distribution of public security
as you're famous in the all-in theme song
of this great quote,
Let Your Winners Ride.
I'm curious when you hear Dan talking about this,
how you think about, as a private market investor,
how to navigate distributing equities
and how you've sharpened your blade
about which ones have brittle
or more robust revenue.
I'm sure you guys show this.
It's one of the most vexing questions.
We were private investors in Palantir, and I think we sold all our stock in the 20s.
Huge mistake.
Gosh, I've done the same thing.
We missed a 10-X after going public.
Yeah.
Or 8X or something.
We were private.
We led the B-Round in Upstart.
That was one.
I think we learned not to go on boards anymore because it restricts your ability to be liquid.
But we're also early investors in Enfield.
phase and we sold some stock on the IPO and then took a tax hit and I think sold it under a
dollar and the stock I think had we stayed on would have made $4 billion.
So I'm not claiming to have any great expertise in knowing how to best distribute our...
Dude, markets are brutal.
It's so hard.
I mean, you're not so brutal.
We've all struggled with this.
Sacks.
Where have you wound up?
I think it's case by case.
I mean, there's some companies where, I'll be.
like I was on a board
and you can't sell
and you end up regretting that
and then there's others
where the best thing to do
is just hold on
to that stock forever.
Examples.
In your portfolio
we've made great decision.
I'm not going to talk about
the ones that didn't do so well
but no, I mean look
I've owned
Meta and Palantir
as a private
as a venture investor
as an angel investor
and you sold?
And the question,
well I sold some
and held on to some.
Obviously in hindsight
you take meta.
I think meta,
IPOs, Facebook back then.
IPO did a $50 billion.
$20 billion.
Now it's...
Went down to 18.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Can you imagine how alternate universe
if Chimoth never sold
his Facebook, how insufferable he'd be?
Or if Freiburg
never sold his Google,
Freiburg would be worth $10 billion.
I wouldn't be nearly as good.
What's that?
I wouldn't be nearly as good.
It's like an analyst.
Because it created tension.
It's not real. It's not earned.
So back in those days, 10 years ago, we thought $100 billion market cap company was pretty much as big as anything could get.
Yeah.
And so Facebook at 50 or whatever, it's like the upside was to 100.
And things are just totally different now.
We have multi-trillion dollar companies.
The market's so much bigger.
And that changes.
I mean, that's a rub against InVIDIA, which is a $5 billion company.
And people feel like it's sort of a ceiling on it.
I think we'll look back at some point in time and say that was a foolish way to think about
Nvidia given its dominant position and its valuation relative to it.
Is it undervalued right now?
Yeah, absolutely.
On earnings over the next two or three years.
And is it because people are having a hard time processing the largest entity that's
ever existed in human history?
I think that and the narrative that the, well, first of all, technically, there's all this
other stuff that's growing faster and going up more. People are, and the long short pods are
structured such that they have to be short something. So, invidia feels like a safe short. By the way,
Google was a safe short. Amazon was a safe short. So, I mean, this just happens. And sometimes
they'll languish at a valuation and they break out. I think that'll eventually happen with
Nvidia. But there's probably some boundary condition discount to that, right? Like we've never
seeing evaluation like this. You can't overbent that. I want to shift topics for a second. I just
want to talk society and culture before we run out of time with you. There was this incredible thing
that you told me, which I relate to these guys, which is you're very passionate about criminal
justice reform. And specifically, you were a key person to get the pardon of Ross Ulbitt. Tell us your
views on criminal justice, why it hit such a nerve, and then why Ross Ulbricht.
What happened there that said, I must fight for this guy?
Let me take a step back and just talk about my framework for philanthropy,
which is, I think, not unlike Brad Gersner and many people in the room here,
is that I care, I would say everybody up here,
I care deeply about income inequality,
I care deeply about making sure that as many people have opportunities
to the incredible things that we've all had here.
So my interest in criminal justice reform really started earlier with an interest in education and education reform.
And I was very lucky to start supporting, get on the board, ultimately be chairman of Success Academies,
which is a charter school network in New York.
And I do think nobody talks about it, but the thing that's hiding out in plain sight for everybody is that the problems with income inequality isn't that, you know, Jeff Bates.
is going to be a trillionaire or all these other people are gaining wealth,
is that we're not equipping children,
and particularly the most vulnerable children,
with the intellectual tools that they need to succeed and compete.
And it's not because poverty is this intractable thing that can't be overcome.
We've proven that it can be.
The problem is that the unions and the basic principles that we all use in business,
which is accountability and merit,
and cultivating talent is set aside
for the benefit of adults who are part of these unions.
It's a systemic thing.
It's not a lack of money.
It's really a lack of, it's just a broken structure.
Accountability is, I think, what I'm hearing, yeah.
So I spent a lot of time on that, just leave it.
That I then became aware, and it was interesting.
I was looking for issues that conservatives, you know,
it's great to see Fetterman and McCormick up here,
Like, what are issues that conservatives and liberals, progressives can agree on?
Hopefully they can agree that we want young people to be better educated.
I think we can also agree that whenever you put the government in charge of something,
they'll f*** it up one way or another.
I want to give you guys a shout out, though, for not f***ing up this private public partnership
with the investments in the private sector.
Because I think this administration has done enormously good job at backing companies.
But let's put that aside.
It's one of the rare instances where I've seen that.
Can you give an example of that that's standing out in your mind?
We have a company in our portfolio called Adam Computing
that with many other quantum companies has gotten money from the government.
And we were just super impressed that they,
how they contracted with us to engage with them in cryptography
and to meet the government's needs,
but also in the financial component,
they drove a really tough bargain.
The government, the taxpayers are going to make a ton of money on this,
and their involvement also will contribute meaningfully
to the value of this business.
It's just like a win all the way around.
So they're an investor and a customer.
Right.
And they are capturing part of that value as a customer
for the American people, which I think everybody deserves.
Okay, so back to the...
So criminal justice reform,
First of all, there's a lot of bad people in jail.
I'm not one to, you know, I think the criminal justice movement has been undermined by
folks who see it as an opportunity to not prosecute, not deal with bad people that are out there.
But there's also a lot of people that are rehabilitated.
Well, there's really three different categories.
There's people who are falsely convicted.
There are people who have shown contrition and rehabilitation.
And there are those who just had a really disproportionate sentence relative to what they did.
There's a case right now of a guy named John McGrubman,
who was a dealt in gray market diapers and formula.
He got an 18-year sentence for dealing these goods.
In the case of Ross Ulbric, I was approached by someone,
And this just seemed, Ross, as people may know, probably this room knows.
He was sort of a folk hero because he had this sort of cat and mouse game with the government.
He ran Silk Road.
Silk Road was one of the first, like, crypto-based exchanges.
He acknowledges that he did things that were illegal that he should have done.
He regrets it.
Drugs were dealt on the exchange.
But that's what he was accused of.
The government later said that there were murder for hire incidents.
He was never prosecuted for that, and he denies that that ever happened.
But in any case, he was sentenced to a double life plus 40 years.
Who knows how he got the extra 40 years on there and how he would spend that after he'd been there for two lifetimes.
And there's a woman I met through Intel named Rivetaz who alerted me to this.
He's friends with Olaf, Carlson Wee, and sort of the crypto insiders.
And I thought about this.
This guy's got no way out.
There's no recourse through the system to get someone with a life sentence out of jail.
This will only work with a presidential pardon.
And we worked on it.
We had some familiarity with the pardon process.
Worked on it.
Then I approached Charlie Kirk about this.
And Charlie really embraced this and embraced this individual as someone who had been falsely,
or not falsely, but unfairly sentenced.
He took it to the president.
Charlie had a, also had an attorney named David Warrington, who's currently the,
White House Council.
White House counsel.
I just found out a couple days ago
because I was talking to him
that he was his lawyer for a decade.
So I'm not taking credit for this.
I'm not saying Charlie does.
It takes a village.
But David had been working on it.
And on the last day of
Trump's
45th term,
we were certain that he was going to get out
and the Justice Department
for whatever reason said
if you commute his sentence, we're going to go after you to the president.
So he, as I understand, he withdrew the commutation.
So four years went by and really Charlie took the lead on this.
This was his only ask of the president.
And the president, to libertarians and to the crypto community promised to deal with this.
not only was sentenced commuted, but he's pardoned, and today Charlie is married, not Charlie, sorry.
Ross is married as having a child and living a free life after spending a decade,
which is probably argue whether that was the right amount or not.
And you feel like you should, is there a role for you to play in doing more of this?
Was this a one-off?
No, I continue to work on cases.
There's an organization called Aleph, and we work.
you know, constantly on different people.
And I think it's, you know, look, I feel like as philanthropists,
it's great to do, to work with organizations.
And there's a lot of great organizations I work with.
I do a lot fighting anti-Semitism and supporting Jewish identity also.
But I also think that we can help people one at a time.
I think it just really nurtures the soul.
And I think it just good thing to do.
All right, let's give it up for Dan.
Dan Logan.
