All-In with Chamath, Jason, Sacks & Friedberg - Kamala surges, Trump at NABJ, recession fears, Middle East escalation, Ackman postpones IPO
Episode Date: August 2, 2024(0:00) Bestie intros! (0:38) Election update: Dems energize around Kamala, policy questions remain (19:33) Trump's NABJ interview: smart or risky? (33:07) Markets expect rate cut in September, but are... we already in a recession? (40:58) AI buildout causing short-term volatility (45:46) Assassination of Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh: are we inching closer to war in the Middle East? (1:06:17) Bill Ackman withdraws Pershing Square USA IPO Follow the besties: https://twitter.com/chamath https://twitter.com/Jason https://twitter.com/DavidSacks https://twitter.com/friedberg Follow on X: https://twitter.com/theallinpod Follow on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/theallinpod Follow on TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@theallinpod Follow on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/allinpod Intro Music Credit: https://rb.gy/tppkzl https://twitter.com/yung_spielburg Intro Video Credit: https://twitter.com/TheZachEffect Referenced in the show: https://www.natesilver.net/p/nate-silver-2024-president-election-polls-model https://www.foxnews.com/politics/harris-boycotts-netanyahu-snubs-israeli-leaders-wartime-address-give-sorority-speech https://nypost.com/2024/07/24/us-news/media-change-tune-on-calling-kamala-harris-border-czar-despite-giving-her-the-title https://x.com/jeffstorobinsky/status/1818722254542590012 https://apnews.com/business/inflation-general-news-31d83873be23c658d66526745482d572 https://x.com/grdecter/status/1819362069797654784 https://www.wsj.com/economy/consumers/inflation-interest-rates-wealth-loans-51d4276e https://www.foxbusiness.com/economy/initial-us-employment-reports-overstated-jobs https://www.foxbusiness.com/personal-finance/q1-gdp-slows-inflation-dips https://finance.yahoo.com/news/amd-stock-jumps-after-earnings-beat-driven-by-ai-chip-sales-202456320.html https://www.cnbc.com/2024/07/31/nvidia-stock-up-after-microsoft-amd-quell-fears-ai-buildout-too-fast.html https://www.ft.com/content/bad6ca0b-82fb-4ddb-b6b8-bd09dacd47ae https://www.google.com/finance/quote/NVDA:NASDAQ https://www.google.com/finance/quote/META:NASDAQ https://www.nytimes.com/2024/08/01/world/middleeast/how-hamas-leader-haniyeh-killed-iran-bomb.html https://archive.nytimes.com/www.nytimes.com/interactive/2012/06/01/world/middleeast/how-a-secret-cyberwar-program-worked.html?hp https://www.wsj.com/finance/investing/bill-ackman-pulls-investment-fund-ipo-after-shrinking-its-size-85ba1a17
Transcript
Discussion (0)
How good do I look? I'm so sun kissed.
How many how many buttons down are you?
Oh my God, I have three buttons.
Three buttons.
No, look, look, look, look.
Is there a button below that we can't see?
No pants.
No pants either?
Are you free buttoning and free balling it?
Is both happening or what? Let your winners ride.
Rain Man, David Sack.
And instead, we open source it to the fans and they've just gone crazy with it. Love you, Westies.
Queen of Kenwa.
Hey everybody, welcome back to the All In Pod.
This week, our hostess with the most of this, J Cal is out with COVID, getting
treated, spending the day in bed. We wish him well. We wish him a speedy recovery. We
are going to plow forward like all championship teams do.
This week, I think we're going to kick it off with a conversation about the election
update. Obviously, Harris came out guns a blazing in the media,
the accolades seem to be flying. And the polling data is starting to become worrisome, it seems,
for the Republicans. Just this week, Nate Silver released his newest model update,
the Silver Bulletin. I think he's got it trademarked as nowadays. And in the model, he tries to estimate what is the
polling data show us with respect to the Electoral College
and the popular vote in the upcoming presidential election.
Harris currently has a 42.5% probability of winning the
Electoral College, Trump 56.9%. Kennedy coming in at 0%. On the popular vote,
Harris has a 57.1% probability of winning the popular vote, 42.9% probability for Trump.
I guess I'll start it off with David Sachs. Sachs, given the momentum coming out of the gate since
the announcement of Harris as the Democratic nominee and the three sync polling data, what's your read on the landscape today?
What's your read on where we stand and what's ahead here? And what do you take away from these polls?
Well, look, I think what happened is that Biden dropped out of the race, he abdicated, Harris took over and it created a sense of euphoria on the part of the left because they thought they had a surefire loser with Biden
and they were divided.
And then once Harris replaced him, they thought, okay, now we got a shot and we can fully unify
and get behind this new candidate.
So what you've seen is over the past couple of weeks, the mainstream media has gone all
out on behalf of Kamala Harris.
And yes, this has led to a rise in the polls. But I think that the highs that Trump were at were
always a little bit artificial in the sense that if the Democrats could field a candidate who could
campaign, it was always going to be a close election. Biden was artificially depressed in the polling
because he just couldn't campaign.
He could barely read from a prompter,
he couldn't do interviews.
So I think you're seeing the race normalizing.
This is going to be a close one.
It's going to be a nail biter.
But I think the question about this honeymoon period
that Harris has right now is whether it's sustainable.
I mean, she has not done any press interviews. that Harris has right now is whether it's sustainable.
She has not done any press interviews.
She has not done any press conferences.
She's not answered one question.
She's not been asked one tough question by the media.
She has only read from a teleprompter.
She's only done scripted appearances. And yet at the same
time, she's basically been changing all of her policy positions and running from every
position she ever stood for. So for example, she said that she was in favor of single payer,
now she's against it. She said she was in favor of court packing, now she's against
it. She said she was against fracking, now she's in favor of it. On the border, she said that we should consider abolishing ICE. Now all of a sudden,
she's in favor of more funding for border patrol. On crime, she used to take kind of
the BLM position that cops don't make us safer to now she's saying that she's a cop and prosecutor
herself. She used to be in favor of federal gun buybacks. Now she's against them. It just goes on and on. I mean, in the 2020 riots, she raised money for the legal defense of
rioters. Now she's distancing herself from those positions.
My point is this, is that after spending really her whole career staking out positions on
the far left, she has now dropped all of these positions for political expediency. And the
question is, what does she stand for at all?
Does she just kind of blow with the wind
and say whatever helps her win whatever the next election is?
I mean, I think that's basically what's going on here.
And normally what happens is the press
would ask you that question,
but she's been getting a free pass
because the mainstream media has basically been operating
as a division of the DNC
and they're not holding her to account in any way.
They're not requiring her to answer any questions.
And as a result, yes, you're seeing this bounce
in the polls, but I think the question is,
can she sustain this for a hundred days?
Can she really get through the entire election
without having gone through a primary,
without ever having to explain her positions
on issues.
And she just does these short scripted appearances.
I just think that at some point over the next hundred days, that approach is just going
to fall apart.
She's going to have to do a debate.
She's going to have to answer questions.
At that point, I think the bloom will come off the rose a little bit here and you'll
see the polls normalize. Do you think that JD Vance has negatively affected the interest
in Trump that he you know, there's a lot of media coverage
about JD Vance being potentially the wrong pick for vice
president and that he's creating more of a challenge for the
president's campaign than a boom?
No, listen, anyone who Trump chose was going to be absolutely smeared by the other side
and by the media.
If it had been Doug Burgum, there would have been nonstop coverage of the six week abortion
bill that he signed.
Right.
You could go down the list.
I mean, look, what Democrats will say is we just want to see a moderate Republican.
But when Mitt Romney ran, they were calling him a fascist.
So the reality is that the mainstream media and the DNC, but I repeat myself, are going
to smear anyone who's picked.
At the end of the day, I don't think that it matters.
What matters is the top of the ticket.
Jamof, what do you think about the Harris campaign, how it's going and the momentum
that is being projected in the media and the polling data is clearly demonstrating an improvement
over Biden's stand projected in the media and the polling data is clearly demonstrating an improvement over Biden's standings in the polls.
I mean, I think we had a situation where one candidate was not real.
And so Sachs is right that a lot of the polling up until basically last week is not really
reliable.
Now you have this snapback effect, which is more about a lot of people
that were coming around to this idea of voting for Trump
because Biden was such a bad option, now flip-flopping.
And so I think that's what explains the snapback.
But Sachs is right, 100 days is a really long time. And what Nate Silver's poll
essentially shows is if she wants to win, not the popular vote, because at this point now, three or
four elections in a row, that just doesn't matter anymore. If you want to win the electoral college
and be the president, you got to go and win five states and in order to do
that, you have to be very precise on about four or five
specific issues. And in the absence of her defining herself
on those four or five issues, she's not going to win. She'll
win the popular vote. But again, when people win the popular
vote and lose the electoral college, we've now gone through
that enough times where that's just the fact to complete inside of American electoral politics.
So I think that the Trump campaign and the Harris campaign need to agree on some schedule of debates. I hope that they do two and ideally three, and that they both get after it in front of each other so that those five states that are really going to decide this election has an opportunity
to make a decision on behalf of the rest of the country.
Yeah, Nick, if you pull that chart back up again, based on
Nate Silver's model of polls, where he takes all the polling
data that's been collected by different third parties, he
weights them based on the performance of those polls, in
terms of predictive power historically,
and he creates this kind of macro model.
That's the Nate Silver approach here.
He's estimating that within the 80% bound, every state on this list is up for grabs,
as you can see with the gray lines shown there.
There's a very slight margin on the average in Wisconsin for Trump, in Michigan for Harris, in Pennsylvania for Trump,
in Nevada for Trump, in North Carolina for Trump,
in Virginia for Harris and so on.
But each of those margins is so slim
that there's still quite a lot of decision-making
ahead for voters.
So pretty clearly on point
that this is still very much an open election. I'll give you guys my read.
I think that there's five camps of voters going into this when Biden was a candidate.
The first is anti-Biden, anything but Biden.
The second is anything but Trump.
The third is pro-Biden.
The fourth is pro-Trump.
And then the fifth is the other.
And I think that that entire bucket of anything but Biden
just became available once Biden dropped out of the race.
And it was a pretty sizable bucket,
that there's a large number of voters out there
that felt pretty strongly that Biden poses
such a significant risk for leadership in this country
because of the mental issues and the performance issues
that we had seen, that as much as people didn't love Trump,
they were willing to vote for him because he's not Biden.
Now that camp has an option and that option is Harris.
So some percentage of that camp,
and I would say probably a super majority of that camp
is now switching into the Harris bucket.
The pro-Trump bucket doesn't move.
The pro-Biden bucket probably doesn't move.
It sticks with Harris. And the anything but Trump probably doesn't move. It sticks with Harris.
And the anything but Trump bucket doesn't move. It sticks with Harris. So, you know, the fact that
there is probably such a sizable number of voters in the anything but Biden camp is what's probably
helping Harris at this point and creates a bit of a handicap for Trump going into this last stretch
of the campaign. That's my really, because I know know I know a lot of people with that point of view.
That's an interesting point of view. And let me, let me just
respond to that for a second. So one of our critiques of Biden,
not just in this election cycle, but probably going back a year
is that Biden had become basically a figurehead
president, almost a construct. And he was fronting for a shadow
cabinet or a group of powerful staffers
who are really running the country, basically because of his cognitive decline.
And we sort of joked that whoever the White House intern was who was running the social
media accounts or the staffer who was running the teleprompter was basically the president
because they could dictate what Biden said.
Now I think the question to ask is, has anything changed?
Kamala Harris refuses to do any interviews. She doesn't want to do any unscripted appearances.
She's abandoned all of her policy positions that have been longstanding and were the reason
why she ran for president in the first place in 2020. So the question to ask is, do we
still have a construct as the president? I mean, the Biden staffers who are
running Biden are now just running Harris. We don't know what she stands for. We don't have her
appearing in unscripted natural appearances. We don't have her being challenged by the press.
She's not willing to do what Trump did. Trump just walked into the lion's den yet again at the NABJ.
National Association of Black Journalists.
Right, exactly.
So Trump walks into a very hostile interview at NABJ.
Harris was supposed to come and she didn't come.
She would have gotten a very softball interview.
She's not even willing to do that.
I think that in substantive terms,
I don't think that much has changed this election.
The Biden staff is still running for president.
I mean, that's what you're voting for.
I would disagree on this because I think in the last two weeks, what I've seen is statements
coming out of the Harris camp that clearly distinguish her and her campaign from Biden's
policy positions and Biden's campaign rhetoric historically.
Most particularly,
sacks is on Israel. When Netanyahu came to visit the United States, she put out a very pro Israel
statement that we all know the Biden camp has largely avoided doing because of the concern
over the pro Palestinian rights movements reaction to the Biden campaign pro pro Israel.
And the Harris statement was pretty finely worded
and pretty strongly worded that she is very much
in favor of Israel defending itself.
She acknowledged that there is a loss of Palestinian life
that matters and we need to acknowledge and address it.
But she was very much in support of Israel,
which is not a position we've seen the Biden camp take.
And I think that we're starting to see what,
you know, what is a little bit more of a fracturing between Harris being allowed to be free
and being allowed to have an opinion outside of the party
line dictated by the Biden camp.
And I think we'll probably see more of that
in the next couple of weeks.
And we'll probably see her starting
to be a little bit more refined in what differentiates her
from Biden.
Because I do think that's what's going
to allow her to win this election,
is she's gonna stand up and say,
here's why I am not Joe Biden,
and here's what makes me different from that individual.
I respect him, I love him, he helped me,
but let me tell you why I'm different
and why that should matter.
She snubbed Netanyahu, Freeberg.
I don't know what you're talking about.
She snubbed Netanyahu.
I think you're an example of the people
that want to give her the benefit of the doubt.
Okay. I think there's a large
fraction of those people. That's not true. No, that's not a fair way to characterize me at all.
I'm simply pointing out that she made a statement. I'm pointing out that she made a statement that's
different than what Biden said. That's it. That's all I'm saying. Hold on a second. I think on Israel.
So first of all, she didn't write that statement. The staff did. Okay. Now, what is the staff trying
to accomplish on Israel? They actually have a genuine dilemma on the whole Israel-Palestine issue because the Democrat
Party is very much split on this.
The Democrat establishment is pro-Israel, but the progressive base is very pro-Palestine.
And even polling among youth shows significant support for Hamas even.
And a lot of these people are very much within the sort of hardcore left-wing base of the
Democrat party.
So what the Biden administration has been doing and what I think Harris is continuing
is a process of talking out of both sides of their mouth.
Biden went to Israel, bear hugged Bibi, basically supported his policy, but then gave some lip
service to the idea that he would
limit the weapons that Israel is able to use.
Harris puts out this very pro-Israel statement, but then snubs Netanyahu at that speech he
gave before Congress.
So, look, the Democrats are trying to have it both ways.
They have a base that is fractured on this issue, and so they're trying to thread that
needle.
Now, you're right that, let's just up a level.
Let's move off the Israel issue for a second.
There's no question that Harris wants to run
from her record as being Biden's vice president.
There's a good reason for that.
The Biden-Harris administration is historically unpopular.
What you have to ask though is whether it's credible.
Harris suddenly is
in favor of more money for border patrol. Why didn't she advocate for that when she
was Biden's border czar? The media is fiercely scrubbing its websites to remove references.
Hold on, they're removing historical references from during the Biden administration when
she was openly called the border czar. They're trying to memory hole that. So look, I have no doubt that the Harris campaign
wants to drop every substantive policy position
she's ever taken because they just want her
to be a construct.
They just want people to be excited because.
I do think that what you're saying is exactly
what she needs to answer to in public
in the next couple of weeks to earn credibility
on what is she different from the Biden
administration on in terms of policy? And why did she not make
that clear when she was in the Biden administration? And she
can say I didn't agree with it. Or she can say I've changed my
mind. And I think both of those might end up being where she
needs to go to. But you're right, she does need to answer
to that. I don't think it's clear she has to do any of that.
You think she can just hide out and coast?
No, right now the calculation is to get as many people
to basically move into the not Trump voting stance.
They're giving as much time as possible to measure that
and see if it's a winning strategy.
But again, and I think we just talked about this, mathematically, it can win the popular vote, but it will not win the electoral college.
So she is going to have to appear and be in a position where she's confronted on about
four or five key issues. And that's where this presidency is going to get decided. Four
or five issues in four or five states, and we'll all know where she stands on the border,
on the economy. By the way, the problem is, and if you look at what's happening now, we are in a
recessionary stance. There's going to be a lot of ink that gets spilled starting in September on the
fact that X of a handful of companies were basically in a recession. So that's going to
have to get put on the feet of the sitting president and the sitting vice president. So
there's a whole set of complicated issues. I think it's
smart actually for her to strategically kind of stay quiet
right now. And just kind of see all the goodwill that's pent up
to the not Trump candidate is going to flow her way. Right. The
problem is that that's not enough to sustain yourself for 100 days. And so
she's just going to have to take a point of view.
Well, it might be if the press lesser get away with it.
No, because I think, David, I think you're right. Because when
when you go into a debate, or when you go into these places,
people will want to know the answers to these questions. And
if the media tries to memory hold this thing, I think the the thing that they most don't want, which is
another Trump victory will actually happen because of it.
Because people will come in this kind of like ambivalent group of
folks that are or independent group of folks that are looking
for very clear point of view on four or five issues, maybe will
come to a rally. And instead of that,
they'll hear Megan the stallion and they'll wonder to themselves, well, this is not what
I came for. I came to know where you stand on these four or five issues. So the media
actually in order to give her the best chance of getting elected, and this is counterintuitive
to them, which is why they probably won't do it. They'll have to confront her on these
issues.
Yeah, I think that's fair. And that's why I invite Vice President
Harrison to the All In podcast to join us for a conversation.
I think we all really enjoy that.
And just to declare my position, I am in Camp 5, the other camp.
I am not pro or anti either of these candidates.
I obviously have issues that I think
are far more existential to the longevity of the United
States and the Republic
that need to be addressed,
that don't seem to be a priority
for either candidate or either party,
as I've mentioned many times on the show,
that's where I stand.
Let's move on, Sax.
I just wanna ask, do you think that Trump
is at risk of shooting himself in the foot
by being too public, too open, and too engaging?
If we take a look at what happened this week,
the National Association of Black Journalists
had a convention on Wednesday.
It sent interview requests to both President Trump
and Vice President Harris,
and Trump accepted and went in person.
Harris said she couldn't do it in person or via Zoom.
And according to the National Association
of Black Journalists,
Harris is in talks to do a Q&A session with them
at some point in September.
There were two moments that are making a lot of news.
One was the first question. Nick, can
you play this where ABC's Rachel Scott went after Trump?
A lot of people did not think it was appropriate for you to be
here today. You have pushed false claims about some of your
rivals from Nikki Haley to former President Barack Obama
saying that they were not born in the United States, which is
not true. You have told for congresswomen of color who were American
citizens to go back to where they came from. You have used
words like animal and rabbit to describe black district
attorneys. You've attacked black journalists calling them a loser
saying the questions that they ask are, quote, stupid and
racist. You've had dinner with a white supremacist at your
Mar-a-Lago resort. So my question, sir, now that you are asking black supporters to vote for you, why should
black voters trust you after you have used language like that?
Well, first of all, I don't think I've ever been asked a question so in such a horrible
manner, first question.
You don't even say, hello, how are you?
Are you with ABC?
Because I think they're a fake news network,
a terrible network.
And I think it's disgraceful that I came here in good spirit.
I love the black population of this country.
I've done so much for the black population of this country, including employment,
including Opportunity Zones with Senator Tim Scott of South Carolina, which is one of
the greatest programs ever for black workers and black entrepreneurs. I've done so much.
And you know, when I say this, historically black colleges and universities were out of
money.
They were stone cold broke.
And I saved them and I gave them long term financing and nobody else was doing it.
I think it's a very rude introduction.
I don't know exactly why you would do something like that.
And let me go a step further.
I was invited here and I was told my opponent, whether it was Biden or Kamala, I was told
my opponent was going to be here.
It turned out my opponent isn't here.
You invited me under false pretense.
And then you said, you can't do it with Zoom.
Well, you know, where's Zoom?
She's going to do it with Zoom and she's not coming.
And then you were half an hour late.
Just so we understand, I have too much respect for you to be late. They couldn't get their equipment working
or something was wrong. I think it's a very nasty question. I have answered the question.
Sax is he shooting himself in the foot by agreeing to show up? He showed up to the Bitcoin
conference, which obviously went phenomenally well. But taxes, he's shooting himself in
the foot by being too open and engaging too much and should he lay low?
No, I mean look
What kind of president do you want?
I mean
I want the president who is fearless and willing to walk into the lion's den over and over again and answer tough questions
What you saw in that soundbite here is that Rachel Scott the interviewer that whatever she was doing is not
Journalism this is supposed to be a journalism association. She turned that interview into an ambush. It was hostile, what she did, and right out of the gate, I
mean, the first question, she's attacking him, and he pushed back on it. I mean, I think
you saw him push back on the media in a way that only Trump can do. Now, you also heard
there, I think, a really key point that Harris basically passed on the option to attend when
she was originally supposed
to. That would have been a softball interview for her, but she is not willing to do any
kind of interview right now. No questions, no unscripted appearances. She just wants
to read from a teleprompter that rally she did in Atlanta that had Megan Thee Stallion
perform. So it was a free concert that drew out a huge number of people.
Then Harris spoke for 17 minutes and people were leaving five minutes in because they're
just there for the concert.
I guess the question that people need to ask, I understand why this is strategic for her.
I mean, obviously it's better for you if you don't have to take any positions whatsoever
and you can just abandon all of your previous positions without any explanation whatsoever and the media gives you a free pass on that.
I can understand why that's strategic.
But I think that voters need to ask the question, who do you want representing the United States
right now in a world that's on fire?
Who do you want to stand up to Putin or Xi or make peace with them?
Who do you want to stand up to or be allies with Netanyahu? For example, the United States right now is in a very difficult situation.
We can't have a teleprompter president.
We need a strong president.
I appreciate the fact that Trump is willing to take on all challengers.
I just think it's manifestly clear that these are the qualities and traits you want in a
president of the United States.
Okay.
So your opinion is Trump needs to continue to engage openly and publicly,
it shows strength, and it shows a capacity to deal with adversity and conflict. Point
taken. So let's pull up the next clip where Scott then asked Trump if Harris was a DEI
candidate. And here's his answer. I've known her a long time indirectly, not directly very much, and she was always
of Indian heritage and she was only promoting Indian heritage. I didn't know
she was black until a number of years ago when she happened to turn black and
now she wants to be known as black. So I don't know is she Indian or is she black?
She is always identified as a black woman. I respect either one, but she obviously doesn't because she was Indian all the way.
And then all of a sudden she made a turn and she went, she became a black person.
Just to be clear, sir, do you believe that she is a black person?
I think somebody should look into that too when you ask a continuant of very hostile,
nasty town.
Timoth, let me ask for your response.
Did Trump shoot himself in the foot with that comment?
And maybe you can give us your read on how he's doing with respect to this, you know, active engagement with obviously adverse, let's call them,
you know, journalists and interviews and forums. Well, I'd like to, I'd love to hear from the
Caucasians. What do you guys think about that? Yeah, I'm not talking about the answer itself.
I'm talking more about Trump getting out there and like engaging in this way.
Yeah, here's what I will say.
I think that from now until the end of time with social media tools replacing traditional
media and then with AI tools that are going to create enormous amounts of very sophisticated misinformation and disinformation, I think the only strategy for politicians from here on out is to leave zero ambiguity between what you think and what you say. And so without judging the quality of the answer,
I think the thing that is going to be the most critical
for people is to know that the person that you're voting for is
in charge. And you get a great chance to vote this person up or
down. And the more content that that person puts out directly,
the less likely it is that this ambiguity exists that can then
get exploited, whether it's by internal people inside of a country or whether it's foreign adversaries.
And so my perspective is it's pretty fearless of somebody to just constantly say what they think.
And again, I'll just go back to where I what I said before with respect to the Harris campaign.
I think that Americans were smart enough and I think you did a good job of dissecting the electorate into five groups.
Americans were smart enough to basically say never Biden because of the risk it represented to not know what one was voting for, irrespective of whatever your historic allegiances were.
one was voting for. Irrespective of whatever your historic allegiances were,
I think they're smart enough now to demand answers to the four or five questions that really matter.
And I think if Paris wants to really win this and give it a legitimate shot,
she's going to have to take a point of view on these five things.
And she's going to have to step into the lion's den and be asked very tough
questions by a lot of different people.
And she's going to have to leave no ambiguity
that can be then exploited by misinformation
and disinformation between now and the election.
So, you know, that's honestly my reaction.
Zach, final word?
Yeah, look, I would say that in that clip
and other clips from that event,
I think you should pay a lot of attention
to the audience's reaction
because what do they do in that moment
when Trump was supposedly committing a faux pas or getting into dangerous
territory?
They laughed.
When Mitt Romney spoke to this group a number of years ago when he was running for president,
he got booed.
Trump never got booed.
He got a lot of laughter.
There was a lot of appreciation.
Why?
Because Trump is always authentic.
He's always who he is, whereas Mitt Romney always appears to be scripted and frankly sort of patronizing.
So I think the audience appreciated Trump for who he is.
I think that when Trump goes into these areas, there's always a grain of truth to what he's
saying.
I think that Harris has leaned into different parts of our heritage for different audiences.
But I do think that this is ground he should get off of.
And I think a much better line of attack
is to talk about the fact that she has dropped
all of her left-wing policy positions
and refuses to answer questions
or do unscripted appearances
without having a teleprompter in front of her.
I think that's a much better line of attack.
Well, I do agree. And I think that's a much better line of attack. Well, I do agree.
And I think that's what the campaign will be about from here.
I don't think we want this campaign to be about identity.
I do think that the rise of the authentic politician,
the rise of the authentic CEO slash typically founder,
the rise of the authentic celebrity,
is definitely the trend that we're seeing, which is that
authenticity counts for more than anything, regardless of one's position.
And, you know, obviously having trust in the individual is rooted in the authentic capacity
of the individual, rather than the teleprompter CEO or the teleprompter politician, or the
teleprompter or buttoned up or image managed celebrity.
And that's definitely been a trend that's been building over the last 10 years, culminating
in a lot of these changes that we're now seeing.
I mean, look, just think about this thing about what's going to happen over the next
four years of Harris is elected.
I mean, you're going to have a prompter president.
I mean, she's just never going to be off prompter.
It's going to be like Biden.
Biden at least try to go off prompter.
Whenever he did, it was a disaster, but at least he tried.
This is one of the criticisms of a lot of higher,
large enterprise CEOs is that they come in,
they have all their words written for them by our media team.
They have all of their communication scripted, managed.
Every press interview is with the right journalists set in the right way.
And the CEOs that seem to build the greatest value
are those who are typically founders
because they're willing and able to be authentic
because they weren't hired by the board.
It's their business that they built.
And so they're willing to be authentic.
And the CEOs who operate at scale with authenticity
build the greatest market value.
I agree with you that whether you're a CEO
or you're a politician, authenticity counts,
but I think this election's gonna be a test
of what people want in their president.
I mean, do you think the president
needs to be a chief executive
who at some level is calling the shots,
or do you think it's good enough
for the presidency to essentially be a construct and to be a
Manifestation of the staff right and the team I think people I think I think voters look at policy sacks and they look at character
And with respect to character
There's a certain value that they ascribe to this authenticity component, which is typically lacking in most politicians and Trump delivers that authentic
lacking in most politicians. And Trump delivers that authentic
component in how he talks and how he's off the cuff, and so on.
He's got other character issues, which I think hurt him. And on the policy side, people really kind of look at those
objectively those points, what's your, what's your policy? And,
you know, do I trust you as your character?
Right, but I see I think it's more than that, because I think
any large organization needs a chief executive. What happens
when you don't have a chief executive or you don't have a strong
chief executive? You get drift. The organization strategically drifts.
100%. Yeah, it gets driven from the bottom instead of from the top.
Yeah, the decisions that get made are the result of bureaucracy and political infighting
and staffers. Exactly. You need someone to control that. And I think it's really interesting
that when Biden was still the candidate, but everyone could tell that he was sort of impaired, that the arguments
you started hearing from Democrat partisans and the media is that, well, you're voting
for a team. You're not just voting for a president, right? You're voting for a shadow cabinet.
Exactly the thing that we criticized on this pod for the last year. My point is that you're
still voting for a shadow cabinet. Unless Harris is willing to get out there and answer questions and be
unscripted, you're just voting for a staff. And I don't think that's good
enough. I don't think when we're in a world where we're in a proxy war with
with Russia, and we could be in a war with China, and we have these problems
in the Middle East, I want a decider. I want to know that the buck stops here, not the buck stops wherever.
Let's shift topics. I'd like to talk about what's been, I think, a lot of chatter amongst
friends of ours who are active in the market that at a policy meeting on Wednesday, the
Fed held rates steady. Jerome Powell said, quote, a reduction in our policy rate could
be on the table
in September if inflation continues to fall.
He said, we're getting closer to the point
at which it'll be appropriate to reduce our policy rate,
but we're not quite at that point.
The next Fed meeting where this race could happen
is September 17th and 18th.
And if you look at the futures markets today, the market is now estimating
a 20% probability of a 50-bit rate cut in the September meeting, 80% probability of
a 25-bit rate cut, and basically no probability of no rate cut anymore in September.
Chamath, is that your read on where we're at? And you know,
is the Fed kind of appropriately reading the economic tea leaves, given the recessionary
indicators that you just mentioned earlier? And what else we're seeing that the Fed's mandate,
obviously, is meant to support both the monetary policy, but also employment in this country?
I think we're in a recession. And I think the problem with a recession is even as inflation
diminishes, if you're purchasing power is shrinking faster than prices fall,
it still feels like prices are going up.
I don't know if you guys have been reading the wall street journal, but like
the last couple of days, they've been doing a whole series on people that have
been left behind by inflation.
of days, they've been doing a whole series on people that have been left behind by inflation.
I was really surprised as I read those articles, just the sheer quantity of impact in terms of the number of people it's touching independent of salary. And so my takeaway just reinforced the
fact that we've looked past the problem because of the stock market going up for the last few
quarters because of seven companies and now that people are
sobering up to the reality that even they don't have an answer
for all the money they're spending. The stock market's
down next to those seven businesses. And I think that
you're going to start to see some real pain in the fall. So
Jerome Powell is probably going to cut 25. And I think that if they get to him,
he'll try to cut 50. But the problem is it won't solve the problem. And I think if this is again,
where Kamala Harris has to be, she's going to have to make a very difficult calculation here,
which is she's going to have to throw Joe Biden and the economic team in the White House under
the bus here and
say that was them. Yes, they screwed it up. It was against my
wishes. And here's my vision for how we fix this. Because
otherwise, the Republicans will be all over it. And I think if
you have a bad economy, like what it looks like going into
November, it's going to be very difficult for the Democrats to
to win the White House.
Well, without bringing it back to politics, Sachs, economy, good or bad?
And is Jerome Powell gonna cut rates, 25 bits, 50 bits?
Do you agree with what the market's forecasting?
I guess what I would say about the economy
is that in nominal terms,
we're not in a recession
according to the data that's come out.
The Q2 GDP was roughly 2% GDP growth.
However, I think there's a couple of problems.
One is that what we've seen over the past year or so is that the economic data that
comes out keeps getting re-forecast down. So they put out a provisional number or an
estimate and then when they finalize the number three months or six months later, it always
seems to go in one direction. We've seen this over and over again with new jobs being re-forecast down. And we saw this with the Q1 GDP, where initially they were
reporting, I think it was like a 1.8% number and then it got restated down to 1.3%. So
the Q2 GDP number was around 2%. It was good. But again, it's a provisional number and let's
see where it actually ends up. The bigger problem is government spending.
The deficit is running at 6% of GDP, whereas economic growth is at, let's call it charitably
2%.
Well, government spending is included in GDP.
So if you were to balance the budget, let's say that you were to make government live within its means and not have a deficit, we would have negative 4% GDP growth.
So the only reason why we're in positive GDP growth territory is because of
massive government spending that we know is not sustainable.
And at some point the bill is going to come due for that.
So I'd have to say that. You asked me, is this a good economy?
I mean, it's not the worst, but there's definitely
unsustainable things propping it up.
And I do think that the bill will come due at some point
for this.
It's not just fully supported.
It's overly supported by the federal government
in the United States.
And I mentioned this last week,
federal government spending is over two X
the sum of all state spending.
Federal government spending into next year
with the Biden budget proposal, $7.3 trillion.
That's like 30% of GDP.
And I think you guys may remember this analysis
I pulled together a couple months ago,
where I estimate something close to 30% of US employment is either
direct government employment, or indirect government employment
through government payments to third parties that are employing
those individuals. So the government is becoming an
integral part of maintaining the flow of dollars in the economy because they are such an integral buyer
and seller within the economy
and an integral employer within the economy.
And so to reverse that trend is what I worry about
more than anything as I've shared many times,
which is why I question whether either political candidate
actually solves this problem for us.
And we're almost like, you know, arguing over which marbles
I get while the Titanic is sinking,
that there is a real fundamental issue with how this economy is structured. I will tell you anecdotally,
I have a lot of conversations with folks that work in the agriculture industry and the food
industry in the industrial industry. Many of these industries that have a very different
capital flow cycle than we all deal with typically in Silicon Valley and software, and many of
them are struggling. I mean, these are businesses where some folks have told me
orders completely fell off a cliff in capital equipment,
that some small business owners that sell
whatever piece of equipment you wanna come up with,
they are not getting orders, there's no revenue.
There are massive oversupply and under purchasing happening
in the food and ag markets,
and yet folks are still trying to push up prices
in order to make the debt payments that they have to make on their high interest debt now.
And that creates a crippling condition for them. Across the economy, I think there's the habs and
the have-nots, as is indicated in this article that was just pulled up, where there are some
parts of the economy where you have low debt, high margin businesses that can continue to scale and
continue to raise pricing, have a lot of elasticity in pricing. And then there are the others that operate on, you know,
1% interest rate charges, the changes drive their profit or loss for the year in a pretty
meaningful way. And that's the part of the economy that's really suffering. And unfortunately,
the action that will be taken to resolve this isn't necessarily a free market action.
It's going to end up being some sort of government intervention, which furthers the government's
involvement in the economy and furthers the tentacles that make it much harder to ultimately
pull out of this spiral and this problem.
That's my rant on this whole point.
But
Yeah, no, I agree with that.
I agree with all that.
I've seen some reports that a crazy percentage of the job creation over the past year have
been government jobs.
All of it.
More than 100%.
So basically, there has been a net loss in private market jobs, net of the effect of
government employment or government spending on companies that then use those dollars to
go hire people.
Let's talk about the impact on markets.
So as a result of this rate cut announcement or this rate cut indication, markets have
rallied a little bit.
But to Chamath's point, there are definitely the haves and the have-nots.
AMD beat.
They were up 4% after hours on improved AI chip sales.
Their revenue was $5.8 billion, up 9% year over year.
Microsoft had so-so results. Nvidia jumped 12% on some comments made by Meta
and Microsoft that both said that there's increased AI demand
and they're gonna continue to build out capacity.
So Chamath, I know you've talked a lot about this
in the past, maybe you can give us your read
on the comments that were made this week.
You've historically said that a lot of this build out
is well ahead and there's no real ROI yet. But clearly some of the buyers of this capital
equipment are saying, hey, there is ROI, we're going to continue to build aggressively. So maybe
you can share a little bit on is anything different or we just kind of seeing folks justify with the
decisions they've made. I mean, sadly, this is another case of sell the news. These things rallied
phantom in the after hours. And if you look at them, they've all just given back every dollar of gains.
So I think that people know that we're sort of at the tail end of the hype cycle in AI.
And every time these things spike, people take an opportunity to just
massively sell.
I mean, Nvidia has turned over 308 million shares today.
Yeah, that's crazy.
It's literally, it's literally the beginning of the day.
It's trading like a penny stock.
Going straight down like a lead balloon.
Yeah.
Meta rallied.
They've basically given up all of their gains.
It's gone kind of straight down today.
But the point isn't that these companies are going to zero. That's not the case. It's just
the point is that right now people are optimizing, they're selling every chance they get to kind
of book the profits. And I think that that's fair, because, you know, at some point, nobody
knows when all of this phantom money is going to show up.
Right. So this is independent of what we would call the economy independent of
the recessionary conversation and the rate conversation.
Look, I mean, I'm in the middle of this right now with 8090.
It's been one of the joys of my career to actually start a
company in the middle of what I think is the most important wave
that I've ever seen professionally, since social
networking. And I jumped into the middle of that wave and I kind of tried to ride the
best wave I could there. I'm doing it here.
But my honest takeaway after being in this thing now for, you know, seven months
intensely,
and I'll be into it for as many years as it takes to build a successful company
is that AI is massively deflationary.
It takes not that much money and the results are really meaningful in terms of the amount
of efficiency that you can capture and the costs that you can save. And the right business people,
i.e. startups that are starting from scratch, like myself and my co-founders at 8090,
IE startups that are starting from scratch, like myself and my co-founders at 80 90, we will pass that on to our customers because it allows us to differentially price versus incumbent solutions. And so I don't see a path where all of a sudden, a multiple of the money that's been spent shows up. I don't see it. I do see a path where companies find tremendous like think about it this way. If you looked in the 1980s and said, what is the most profitable operational company that existed in the 80s? I don't know what that company was, but I suspect that their EBITDA margins were roughly in the 30 or 40% range and it was probably incredible. If you fast forward now 40 years, the most efficient company is probably sort of 50 or 60%
even to margins.
The reality is that the best AI enabled company
will probably have margins that are 70 and 80%
in the next 15 or 20 years.
Now that's an incredible thing.
That's a big prediction.
But that will again spur
the principle law of capitalism that everybody keeps forgetting, which is you compete out excess
return. And so while you will have many companies that have, you know, 60 plus percent operating
margins, they'll be in much smaller markets. And there'll be 1000s and 1000s and 1000s of them.
So I suspect what happens is that the overall market grows, but the
number of companies grows by an even order, larger order of
magnitude. And in all of that, the reality is that it's going
to be very hard for these big folks to sort of see this value
captured chip that makes any of this investment worthwhile. So I
think that you're going to have to have some sort of reset in
terms of the capex
that's happened here. I want to switch gears yet again and talk about the assassination of Ismail
Haniyeh. I hope I pronounced that right. Haniyeh. He was killed by a bomb while staying in a guest
house in Tehran, according to the New York Times. Earlier reports indicated that he was in fact
killed by a missile strike from Israel. But just this morning, the New York Times earlier reports indicated that he was in fact killed by a missile strike from Israel.
But just this morning, The New York Times reported that the guest house where he stayed
is run and protected by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps and is part of a large compound
known as Neshat in an upscale neighborhood of northern Tehran.
And the article in The New York Times goes on to report that according to several Middle Eastern sources, a bomb, a remotely detonated bomb was actually planted in this guesthouse over two months ago, in anticipation of the once he actually stayed in the guest house. This obviously represents kind of an incredible
feat in operational capacity and intelligence. I think we've
known and talked a lot about, and the media is kind of
covered quite a bit about the capacity of Mossad. But I just
want to kind of get your your guys reaction to this. I think
that there's a bigger and important story here about the
strength of Israel's intelligence and military capacity in
the region and what that could mean for their posturing and their demands and their activity
in the region in the months and years ahead, particularly with Netanyahu still in charge.
So, Sax, maybe you can kick us off with your thoughts on this article and Mossad's role
in the assassination of this Hamas leader. Well, there's no question that the Mossad established or reestablished its reputation
for extreme competence here, being able to infiltrate Iran in order to assassinate the
top political leader of Hamas while Haniyeh was a guest of Iran. I mean, that's deeply
humiliating to Iran. I think he was there, Haniya was, for the swearing in of the new president of Iran.
So for them to be able to target him while he was there and set the bomb months in advance,
I mean, that shows extraordinary planning and intelligence and a huge failure on the
part of Iran.
I think in terms of the larger significance of this, in the wake of October 7th
on this pod, I said that I hope that Israel did not go off half-cocked responding the way
that the United States did after 9-11. When they started bombing Gaza, I said this is going to
backfire. Boy, was that an understatement in terms of the reaction of world opinion. I
mean, Israel went into Gaza basically leveled the place, and
has alienated practically the entire world. The only country
that's solidly with Israel anymore is the United States. And
even within the United States, roughly half the people are now
against Israel. And I think what I said at the time was that
Israel could pursue or should pursue
a more targeted strategy the way that it did after the Munich Olympics. This assassination within Iran
shows that the Munich Olympic strategy, I mean, they basically shown that it's successful. They've
been able to do it. I wish they had limited their response in this more targeted way,
because I think that
the destruction of Gaza has created tremendous humanitarian suffering and it's alienated
just about the whole world.
And what is accomplished?
I don't think they've gotten rid of Hamas.
They have not been able to kill the military leader of Hamas, which is Sinwar, who was
the actual military planner of the October 7th attack. And they have radicalized
what you know, whatever part of the Palestinian population was not radicalized has been radicalized.
And they've turned so much of the Middle East and the world against them in such a strong
way that, again, I wish that they had pursued the more measured strategy. Still a tough
strategy. Still a tough strategy.
Let me put you in Netanyahu's seat.
You are leading Israel.
Hamas comes into your country, attacks, kills lots of people.
What is your measured response to that attack from Hamas?
Given the capacity you have,
the Israeli Air Force, by the way,
is second only to the United States.
Just to give you some statistics, the Israeli Air Force has 90,000 active and reserve personnel and 614 aircraft.
Israel is reported to have up to 400 nuclear weapons, and they have this extraordinary technical capacity with Mossad
and operational capacity
that is kind of unrivaled
pretty much anywhere in the world it seems.
What do you do if you're sitting in that in Yahoo seat
that provides a more kind of measured response
and how do you kind of lead your nation?
Well, first of all, I'm not obviously sitting in that seat.
I don't live in Israel
and I don't have skin in the game that way.
So I think the first thing that they would say is,
you're not us, you're not sitting here dealing with all of our enemies in the region, and they would have a point.
But what I advocated, I think, months ago was to take a more targeted, measured strategy that I think the assassination of Haneeya shows that they could have executed.
And I understand why they went into Gaza and why they felt they needed to go into Gaza, but I just,
this is not an anti-Israel statement, it's just a questioning of the strategy. I just don't see
that it's produced much good. I don't think they've solved their Hamas problem. They have
not gotten SINWAR and they've lost a meaningful amount of global support.
Yeah. Chamath, do you want to read?
I think that it was, in hindsight, a pretty big miscalculation by Netanyahu to pursue the strategy that they did.
And I would have much preferred what you're seeing now, which is a very targeted approach.
I think it preserves and it would have preserved not just world political support, but just individual people support, where instead of going into Gaza,
leveling the place, creating all of this death and destruction, and amplifying and confusing
people, where they now all of a sudden had to make a decision between these two groups and now
get confused with anti-Semitic sentiment,
that should never have happened.
It's clear that Mossad is incredibly competent and incredibly capable.
I do believe that sovereign countries have the right to defend themselves.
But then there was a bridge too far and I think the Israeli government has crossed it. In hindsight, and I
think I told you this story and I may have relayed this in confidence but I'll just say it again,
on October the 8th what was offered, and I'm not going to say by who, was sort of a meeting of
the right political leadership from the Middle East, Israel and the United States,
where they were all willing to sort of come. And the idea would have been to extend some sort of
structured solution for the Palestinian people. Now, that would have been so unintuitive and
unexpected. I think everybody would have been a little bit on their heels,
but I think what it would have done is it would have passed Netanyahu in an
incredible light. It would have passed Israel in an incredible light.
They would have still preserved the ability to go and kill the individual leaders
that they wanted to, but it was rejected.
And I think that when we look back,
these are the kinds of
decisions that hopefully history documents accurately so that folks who are in the seat
to your point free birth, the next time around can make a different calculation. I see you
see the pictures and there's just no way that you can turn them off. You know what I mean?
I think Israel's biggest asset is probably also their biggest
liability, which is their military and intelligence strength. And it emboldens them in a way that
they can be more aggressive than perhaps they need to be with respect to maintaining the security of
the state, but perhaps being vengeful and vindictive. And I know that that's a very controversial statement to be made.
I want to underscore the strength of this military and this intelligence.
Do you guys remember the Stuxnet worm from a number of years ago?
Yeah.
That story was incredible.
And then the New York Times broke this story in 2012.
Stuxnet was a malicious computer worm.
And I'm reading off of Wikipedia, cause there's a lot of reporting that has
different opinions on this,
that was first uncovered in 2010
and was thought to have been in development since at least 2005. Now this computer worm was supposedly developed by Mossad
and the NSA,
and it was a malicious computer worm that ultimately allowed intrusion
into the control systems of the centrifuges
of Iran's uranium refining systems.
And they basically were then able to make those centrifuges go haywire and destroyed
themselves.
And they did this over and over for several years and the Iranians could not figure out
what was going on or why.
They kept it completely secret.
Ultimately it was revealed that there was this operation organized by the United States called Operation
Olympic Games, that was a cyber disruption operation. And that
Mossad had a critical role in.
By the way, there are two other stories that build on top of
this there that are tangential, but related. One is that there
was a nuclear engineer that Israel felt should be unlit. And
the way that they did it was via some like remote control machine gun that they planted off of like a highway where the car egressed off the highway
and then all of a sudden the thing was shot up. A different example was there's a story
about how they figured out that Yasser Arafat was sick because they were able to collect
a stool sample from a pipe that left his home. And they were able to kind of diagnose that A, it was his stool and then B,
he had some chronic illness. My point, I think, in all of this is kind of where you're going,
which is that when you have such capability and such precision to go to the other end of the
spectrum, you really have to be sure that you're right.
And, you know, as Sak said, I think we're looking back
and it's clear that the support around the world,
it just isn't there for that kind of mass casualty
and that kind of like...
If Israel could actually destroy Hamas
and achieve its military objective in Gaza,
that'd be one thing.
But I think we've seen that that's impossible.
I mean,
Hamas basically bleeds in with the population. It's indistinguishable. And the leadership
is hidden deep underground. And the Israelis have not been able to root them out against
and war has not been found. And so you've destroyed Gaza, but you have not achieved
your objective of eliminating Hamas. And in the process, you've deeply alienated.
I mean, it's just like, and you make the situation worse,
basically.
It's like the Russians and the Americans trying to chase the
Taliban and Afghanistan forever. This is not a group of
individuals that once they're gone, everything is fixed.
Everything's just worse. I mean, you still have the same
problem. In fact, now the entire Palestinian populations
radicalized. In fact, the whole Arab and Muslim population in the Middle East is more
radicalized against you than they were before. I mean, I know there was already a significant
amount of hatred, but now it's worse. And you haven't fundamentally solved the underlying
issue. I think the 9-11 analogy is apt. I mean, we went off after 9-11, half-cocked
into all these wars in the
Middle East. I think that going into Afghanistan, I think you could, that was justified because
they were harboring Al-Qaeda. But then we went into Iraq because really members of the
Bush administration had a pre-existing agenda and then they lied us into it saying that
Saddam was connected somehow to 9-11.
And we began a 20-year process of just plunging ourselves into all these wars.
It only made everything worse.
One of the reasons why Iran is in such a strong position today in the Middle East is because
we took out Iraq.
We basically created a power vacuum in the Middle East that they ended up filling.
I recently heard that after Israel struck the embassy in Damascus a few months ago,
you may remember this, Iran launched a counterattack. And you remember there were
all these drones that they sent hundreds of them into Israel, but there was supposedly a forewarning
that these drones were on the way, there was notice given, and it was like,
this is it, this is our proportional response and we're done. That's right. That's right.
What I heard was that Netanyahu did not want to stop. He wanted to escalate after that
response from Iran. Now that coupled with what's going on in the West Bank right now,
That coupled with what's going on in the West Bank right now, where there is a restricted movement of Palestinians within the West Bank, and continued development of Jewish settlements, I think really represents a major risk to the region, the Middle East region that we could see an escalation beyond the response that may be mandated or necessary to secure the state that makes things much, much worse in the region and could isolate Israel even further and ultimately draw a
lot of powers to that region to try and figure out what side are you on and how do we resolve
this?
And that could lead to something much bigger and much nastier.
So I think while we all observe this and watch this, the behavior of the targeted attack in Hamas,
for me, it's not the issue as much as
indicating the capacity of this military and this intelligence
that means that they probably feel highly emboldened
to take whatever steps individuals feel are necessary
to secure the state for the long run,
which could mean an increased
escalation in conflict.
And that's, I think, a real kind of point of concern.
And that's the one of the Black Swan events, I think, that's still outstanding right now.
Because if that does happen, if there is, for example, an unraveling of the West Bank,
you could see one of these sorts of events that everyone gets brought like a magnet to
the Middle East.
And you end up with a major global conflict that becomes a problem for markets, it becomes
a problem for the world. And that can be the catalyzing event that I don't think any of
us want to see.
To use your logic from before, the thing that may plunge the world into having to have a
point of view on this may actually be a political calculus
that Netanyahu has to engage in, which is around keeping small factions of his coalition government
in place, which may not actually represent the full view of the Israeli people. That's what's
even more tragic. So it's not obviously the Palestinians don't want it, but many Israelis
may not want it either. And there may be no avenue if he wants to remain in power. And that's what's
so scary. Look, I think there's no question that we're on a path here where we could have a regional war in
the Middle East. Remember that after Israel hit the Iranian general in Lebanon, the Iranians
responded two weeks later with that massive drone and missile attack. Most of the missiles were
intercepted by Iron D dome and I think America
participated in that as well.
I think one or two of them got through.
And then Israel launched kind of a weak missile attack on Iran.
And that was kind of the final word on it.
There were people in Netanyahu's cabinet, like Smotrich and Ben
Gavir, sort of the more hardline, radical right-wingers, who
I think publicly tweeted that they thought Israel's final word on it was weak, and they
clearly wanted to do more.
So I think the point is just that when we had this last exchange between Israel and
Iran, it felt like it was on the verge of tipping over into a regional war, but I think
partly due to the efforts of the United States,
we were able to help tamp that down. I think now Iran's promising revenge for what just happened
in Tehran, and this could set that escalatory spiral off again.
Totally.
If you were to place odds on this, I'd say it's at least 50-50 that things escalate into a regional war.
It's not as much of a black hole. Yeah. And by at least 5050 that things escalate into a regional war.
Yeah. And by the way, there's no such thing as a regional war in
the Middle East. Because every one of those countries has
significant allies in Russia, in the United States, in China,
what is Saudi Arabia going to do? You know, Jordan is going to
end up in a situation where they may end up having to defend the
Palestinians in the West Bank, which puts them across the shooting field
from the Israelis and the United States
as an ally to both Israel and Jordan.
What are we gonna end up doing?
And that's why this whole situation
is not just about a regional conflict,
it actually draws the whole world back to the Middle East
and this is what kind of escalators go.
This is why the counterfactual of what could have happened on October 8th is so important
because that would have been UAE, United States, Saudi, and Israel.
No just those four.
And let's put Qatar in the mix as well.
But my point is like, my gosh, like that, it could have rewritten world history in such
a profound way, it would have just taken some restraint
and proportionality.
Turn the cheek the other way, kind of.
Yeah, it would require incredible forbearance on the
part of a population that just been attacked, attacked, attacked
and attacked atrocities on civilians.
But not just not just this attack, like under attack, for
generations in a region that has
been all about conflict and secularity and all of the kind of you know identity drivers
that make this so deeply personal and rooted in history, not just in a moment or an event.
Look when it happened to us on 9-11 we lashed out you know.
Yeah exactly.
But the results were not good.
Yeah well look let's move on. I'm not
trying to judge anyone's behavior. I'm just trying to shine a light on the strength of Israel's
capacity and what that may mean for their proclivity for escalatory behavior, which is
really scary given that this is not just a regional issue, it becomes a global issue when
it does happen. Sorry, go ahead. I thought you were going somewhere else with it, which is, I was just going to say in any other simulation, the capability of the Masad is fodder for incredible
movies. Like it's out of a movie. Right. You read these articles and they just don't seem like they're
real. It's like, what do you mean you smuggle the bomb into the safe house in Iran, where all the VIPs stay two months ago,
two months, two months ago. How does that happen? What does it mean that you actually develop?
Yeah, and sit tight. What does it mean that you develop the virus that you're able to get into
the actual working computers of the Iranian control units? By the way, the control units?
Yeah, the control the control boards, which means that made by Siemens of the equipment made by Siemens shipped to Iran.
Yeah, that's not, that's not like you tell that into something. You know what I mean?
Like that means that there was a person physically there that then found a way to essentially
get this firmware implanted. And it's like, no, this is insane.
I remember the story. They actually did not. What happened was they let the virus
circulate in the world for years
before someone randomly had it on a USB drive
that didn't know they had it,
randomly plugged it into a computer
in the center of each facility,
then infected, sent out a notice, I'm in here.
And then after years, it was finally in there
through the random movement of this virus that no one is that incredible?
Anyway, that's incredible.
Yeah.
Well, let's wrap up with the Bill Ackman story.
Sorry, before you do that.
Yeah, I hate to make this political, but I just have to observe.
I mean, look at this situation in the world.
I mean, the Middle East is on the verge of regional war.
We could be in a war there.
I should say there could be a regional war there by January 20th when the next president is sworn in.
You've got the United States in a proxy war with Ukraine.
You have major tensions with China in East Asia.
I mean, is this really the time where you want to put in place an inexperienced president
whose policy positions are unclear, who's untested, was never even tested by a primary,
who the media refuses to test now.
There's basically a media construct. This seems to me like a really bad idea.
All right. So political pitch in from David Sacks. We don't have Jake out here to give the other
side, but let's keep going. So Bill Ackman's withdrawn his plans to IPO, pushing Square.
You know, Chamath, do you want to just give us kind of the background on what he was trying to do? And obviously, this was
an attempted $25 billion raise as an IPO. He recently reduced
the raise target to 2 billion. And when the order book came in,
I believe it less than a billion, he scrapped the plans
entirely and just announced yesterday that he's pulling the
IPO. So can you just explain a little bit about what this IPO
was? And then we'll talk a little bit about why we think it fell apart.
I can only repeat what I read, but I'll try to kind of like translate it into non Wall
Street speak.
So basically, he has a company.
But what that company does is it gets investors to give it slash him money.
And then they invested in all kinds of things that they deem worthwhile, it could be bonds, it
could be stocks, it could be currencies, it could be
derivatives, they generate a return, and then they give those
returns back to their investors. So that is a hedge fund. The
Holy Grail has always been trying to figure out how can an
organization that is
sorry, those funds are raised and distributed back, right? I
mean, I think you should.
I don't want to interrupt, but yeah, but just go ahead and say that.
But the holy grail for someone who runs those businesses is when they realize, well, listen,
I get paid a great profit share from those funds when I'm successful.
I'm also allowed to take a 2% per year management fee, But I believe I'm building equity.
And can I get somebody else to recognize the fact that I'm building equity? And that's no different than a startup, right?
So, you know, Freeburg, you're building a hollow, you believe
that you're building all kinds of really interesting things
rooted in science. And you want other people to judge the value
of that as measured by your equity, right? independent of
your revenues and profits
today, they want to project into the future. The problem is that hedge funds have not found a very
elegant way to demonstrate that they have any equity value. And there's only been a few and
the formula has been the same. So companies like Blackstone, companies like KKR, companies like Apollo, what have they proven? They've
proven that they can raise enormous amounts of money. So most of these organizations now
are approaching a trillion dollars of capital raised. And they tell investors, well, look,
don't worry about the returns anymore. Worry about the 2% because that's like our revenue. And we're
generating $20 billion a year of revenue that'll grow at some
rateable proportion, we'll manage the teams will compensate
them well, but there'll be lots of profitability and people have
bought that story. So I think a lot of smaller organizations who
aspire to be like a Blackstone or an Apollo have tried to get
people to buy into this story.
And I think what Bill Ackman was trying to do was some version of that, which is to say,
I'm going to build an enterprise here.
Pershing Square is going to be a standalone business.
It's going to have enterprise value.
And you're going to measure that based on the assets that I manage.
And it's going to be much greater than what I managed today.
And I think he manages roughly 10 billion today,
but he thought he was going to raise another 25 in this IPO.
And then in very short order, be a 50 billion.
And so he got people to invest in that business on that premise.
And I think folks put in around a billion dollars and they valued that entity at
10 billion. And so he tried to go and raise his fund. He thought it was
going to be 25. And it turned out, I thought it was two, but
Freebird, you just said it's less than one I didn't I did, I
guess, or around one, I just heard that I'm just hearing that
from you for the first time. So I guess what is the takeaway?
Like,
to mouth real quick, you know, this, this was a this was a
closed end fund he was trying to raise. No, but he's I
think he's also said that Pershing Square eventually has
a path to go public. That's how we sold the billion of equity
at 10 billion in the master LP. Yeah, but this IPO was just for
a fun. It was just there was there. It was the IPO of the
fund and then they were planning afterwards. The IPO
planning afterwards. Yeah. Yes, which he didn't do. My only
point was that that the fund was basically it's launching a fund
and then the goal is not the fund itself. The goal is to
buttress the underlying logic to take the whole thing public the
manager. Okay. And that's what I mean by taking a company public
in finances next to impossible. Yeah. So the whole point is
like, what are these businesses in the business of doing their
they're in the business of making bets.
The problem is that those bets are short-term anomalous events. Sometimes they work, sometimes
they don't work. And the problem with that is that investors who are trying to underwrite 20 or 30
years of returns don't know how that's predictable over that period of time. Like, for example,
you're genetically engineering all kinds of produce that we are going to ingest. If that stuff works at scale,
you will have built an enterprise that theoretically has the potential, unless it's
disrupted by something else, to make revenue for 20 or 30 years. So people can underwrite that.
Google makes a search engine, it's going to last for 20 or 30 years. Facebook makes a
social network, it can last for 20 or 30 years. Facebook makes a social network. It can last for 20 or 30 years.
The business of making bets is typically something that can only be measured in days or weeks,
maybe months at best.
And so I think what he ran into was that realization.
It's very hard to get people to value an institution in this way.
And so the thing did not work.
He'll go back and he'll retool.
The thing that I give Bill Ackman
an enormous amount of credit for
is he is one of the most resilient individuals
I've ever seen in high finance,
but generally as a business person.
This guy has, he surfed some really big waves.
He's landed some really good sets.
He's also gotten crushed a few times
and the guy just keeps coming back
and he seems to be getting more and more refined
and capable as a business person.
So, you know, he'll probably figure out a way.
This is not the first time he's publicly dealt
with things that have not worked.
But I think it just goes to show you that in finance,
these entities that try to sell a piece of the quote unquote
general partner, as a company, I just think that it's, frankly,
that it doesn't work. And this is just, you know, an example,
yet another example that there's not a lot of equity value in
these businesses.
Sex, some reports indicate that investors pulled out of the
Pershing Square IPO because of the current market conditions that a lot of market indices have
stormed higher and that there is now less upside and it's not a great time to be entering the
equity markets. Other reports indicate that investors lost interest in Acman's fund because of
his activity on X or Twitter. Have you, do you have a point of view?
Do you think that folks pulled out, investors have pulled out,
you're obviously a fund manager who is very active and opinionated on X and
your slice of order. Like, you know,
do you think has this affected your relationship with
with raising capital, if you're willing to talk about it, or maybe just comment on the Ackman,
you know, issue that he ran into? Why did this fail?
I just don't know. I honestly haven't followed his IPO process at all.
I would say that the market we have right now, it's not the best it's been, but it's also not
the worst. So I'm always reluctant to blame macro conditions
without having a more specific explanation. Give a point of view on investors having an issue
with Ackman because of his outspokenness on various social and political issues over.
I can't imagine. No, I can't imagine. I don't think so. Investors care about making money.
And Bill Ackman is a moneymaker. That's undeniable. The guy takes some losses,
but his wins are way bigger than his losses. And he is a proven moneymaker.
The problem is that I think the way in which he was trying to monetize the
business is just a hard thing to do.
You have to have an organization of hundreds approaching thousands of people that
are raising all manner
of funds. And those funds just deliver very consistent returns, not great, but they never
lose money. And that's how you get towards a trillion dollars. And that's how you make
it a company and not a great hedge fund.
Pete Slauson Yeah, let me also just say, I think he's very
thoughtful on Twitter. You know, I've gotten into some disagreements with him on Twitter,
other things I've agreed with. But overall, I think he makes a thoughtful on Twitter. I've gotten into some disagreements with him on Twitter, other things I've agreed with,
but overall I think he makes a strong case for himself.
I haven't heard him say anything out of bounds on Twitter,
whether you agree with it or not.
So I can't imagine that's a problem.
Some people would disagree.
They think he's had a lot of comments on wokeism,
as he would call it, and DEI topics, and Donald Trump. Well, I agree. And Donald Trump, and I think the vast majority of the country
agrees that woke has jumped the shark.
Yeah, but I think some people highlight if woke is so great.
Why is Kamala Harris trying to distance herself from every
previous comment she's ever made about woke ism or dei?
The point is more about like what we talked about earlier,
which is kind of having an authentic voice
and speaking what you believe
and speaking what your opinion is,
versus remaining buttoned up
and not speaking what you believe and toeing the line.
He's in the only industry where his performance
is measurable every day in precision.
So what I would say is it's irrelevant
what he says on Twitter, meaning the quality of
his decisions are independent of what he says, because they're measurable and they are not
something you can gain.
And the reality is that over the last few years, particularly starting in COVID, he
has gotten better and better and he's played a very good hand.
I think he's an exceptional risk manager,
and he's toned it. And so the people that say that to you, to be very honest, are somewhat,
they're, they're portraying their lack of financial sophistication.
Yeah. And actually, can I go further? And I actually think that Ackman's presence on Twitter
X is a huge positive for him. It's an asset because he has a gigantic followership and
he's able to speak directly to his audience in the way that we do. And I think the reason
why people say these things is because they don't have a direct strategy. And so they
want to basically badmouth people who do. But again, if you don't go direct to your
audience, then you have to go through the media and then they get to define you.
And it creates ambiguity. Exactly.
So I think the fact that he's got what, like a million plus followers and,
you know, everything he puts out gets tens of thousands of likes, it's a huge positive.
Huge positive. And I think that the part of his business that he hasn't gone back to,
which if he does in this chapter of his career with the following that he has,
is the activism part. And I think there are two people who I think are incredible at this,
and where both the written and the spoken word, they have such a mastery of.
Ackman is one, Dan Loeb is the other. And I think that, you know, in this world where you have the ability to go direct
in a way that you've never had before
is actually the realm of a different form of activism
that I think could be extremely economically rewarding
and valuable in society.
All right, gentlemen, this has been a great episode of the All in Pod.
We missed our comedian in residence, Jason Kalakiannis, Nostrallanus.
We miss him.
We wish him well, speedy recovery.
This has been an episode without the usual humor and flamboyancy that we've all come
to know and love.
But I think it was great to chat this afternoon and we will see you all
next week. Bye bye. Love you boys. I got you. and they've just gone crazy with it Westy the queen of Kenwa
I'm going all in
What your winners line?
What your winners line?
Besties are gone
That is my dog taking a notice in your driveway
Sex
Oh man
My habitat will meet me at the end
We should all just get a room and just have one big huge orgy Cause they're all just useless
It's like this sexual tension that they just need to release somehow
What? You're a bee?
What? You're a bee?
What?
We need to get merch
The keys are back
I'm doing all in
I'm doing all in