All-In with Chamath, Jason, Sacks & Friedberg - Nico Rosberg on the Booming Business of F1 | All-In Live from Miami
Episode Date: May 29, 2025(0:00) The Besties welcome Nico Rosberg! (0:27) Nico's history with F1, what makes a great driver (6:24) The business of F1 (10:05) Teammate rivalries, why "Drive to Survive" works, future growth (16:...48) Post-F1 career, best angel investments, becoming a VC (22:16) Partner shoutouts: Thanks to OKX, Circle, Polymarket, Solana, BVNK, and Google Cloud! Check out OKX: https://www.okx.com Check out Circle: https://www.circle.com Follow Nico: https://x.com/nicorosberg 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 Intro Video Credit: https://x.com/TheZachEffect
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Former F1 driver, champion in 2016.
He's getting into the venture business.
Please welcome Nico.
They started the season with 20 drivers
and they would end the season with only 18 of them left.
Wow, what was the craziest you've ever been involved in?
Well, my rival was my teammate.
So unfortunately, it really becomes like an enemy in a way.
What were your first few deals?
11 labs, for example.
Holy shit, good for you.
This used to be an extremely dangerous sport. What were your first few deals? Eleven lads, for example. Holy s**t, good for you.
This used to be an extremely dangerous sport. You had people dying every year in these tiny little cars
with no roll cages, etc.
But over time, it's become incredibly safe.
The number of people dying went from a couple dozen a year in the 50s, 60s, 70s, and now it's
gotten incredibly safe. How scary is it to drive in those cars and how do you get over that fear of
death? First of all, hello everybody. That's a pretty intense start to the conversation.
I just, they suddenly showed me where the cars are. Good job interviewing Jacob.
No, I mean, I gotta get right to it. It seems so.
How are you still in the mood?
How are you still alive?
Yeah.
Welcome.
How are you?
Why haven't you died yet, Nico?
I looked at that car.
Justify yourself.
Why is there no canopy on it?
Why is your head exposed?
It's so crazy what you're doing or what you did.
So no, you're absolutely right.
And I know better than most people
also because my father actually was a Formula One racer.
Yeah.
And he was racing.
And a world champion.
And a champion.
I didn't want to say, but yes, he was also a world champion.
But you're, sorry, I asked you backstage, you're one of only two father-son world champions of all time.
Yeah, that's true, yeah.
Pretty incredible.
Which is very special.
So I mean, your dad's out there racing. You're at home with mom, I assume, this has got to
be terrifying to watch your dad do this.
So in his day, they started the season with 20 drivers, and they would end the season
with only 18 of them left.
So it was a 10% chance, more or less, that you wouldn't make it through the season, which
is just, that's crazy.
Wow.
I mean, what if then if you do an eight year career,
like what are your odds?
Like that's not looking very good.
So they're to your point.
Yeah, it was the death every hundred thousand miles.
Now it's a death every six, seven million miles.
I was very lucky because by the time I came in,
they had carbon fiber chassis.
They had roll, they have a roll hoop now, you know,
and this, this protection, this halo around your head, which recently saved
a couple of lives in the last five years,
because Max Verstappen, who's now the four-time
world champion at the moment, he landed on Lewis Hamilton's
head in Italy with the full car, and it was this halo
that saved Lewis Hamilton's life.
So we're very, very lucky how the sport has progressed with the safety.
How did you start driving? How old were you?
Because I didn't realize yesterday I go into the suite that we have
and they say this kid is 18 years old as a driver.
I had no idea that kids that young were driving.
How old were you when you started?
And at what point did you start to become competitive?
So it's a bit like with every sport that you have to start very, very young.
I started, I was six.
Started go-karting, I was six.
And then racing, 10 years old.
Now they start racing when they're eight years old.
So Antonelli, who was on pole position yesterday, the 18-year-old, he started racing, he was
eight.
He was in my go-karting team when he was 12.
So I know him very, very well.
And he is a generational talent,
but it's very early for him,
because he's only 18.
And he took over the car of the greatest of all time.
Lewis Hamilton left Mercedes to go to Ferrari,
and Antonelli took this car from Lewis Hamilton.
That is insane pressure. Answer this question if Lewis Hamilton. That is insane pressure.
Answer this question if you could.
You said generational power.
I'll try my best.
So if we had to design some kind of a model,
could you define the features that he had
when he was six, seven or eight years old
that could have predicted how good it was?
Like is it the midichlorian?
So is it the what?
Well, Anakin Skywalker was really good.
I don't know, Nico, but I'm quite a specialist
on Star Wars lore.
The midichlorian defined the Jedi Knights.
Nico, do you think that you could design something
where people's kids could come and take some kind of test?
You look at your reflexes or your eye twitch speed
or the way your brain works.
And is there a pattern, do you think,
that is genetically predisposes some people
to just be exceptional?
So we've not come to that point yet
that we actually go through such tests.
But I think there are a couple of things that
would kind of satisfy that.
And one is your speed of processing.
Because in a race car, you're going at 220 mile an hour.
And you have so many inputs flying at you.
And not only visual, also sensual, everything.
And also sound with the engine and everything.
And you have to process that so rapidly.
How did you train for that?
I even had a computer program, which I developed just
for myself, actually, where I would have
all these different inputs.
So audio, touch, tactile, I had like a thing around here,
and even then visual on the computer.
And I would be catching these inputs
and trying to break my record.
And the faster I would go, the faster the program would go.
So I was trying to develop these kind of things
to train my brain to move faster and react quicker.
So reaction time is the key skill set of a driver?
It's one of the ones.
Is it also being courageous and like something
with your amygdala where like you don't have fear?
There's that, certainly, yeah.
Is it part of it?
Although I would say that I am actually
someone who's quite fearful.
Huh.
But when you're in it, you kind of also get used to things.
And you start to feel quite safe in the car nowadays,
because I'm not a crazy adrenaline junkie,
unlike most other drivers actually out there.
Like some are like-
You find that they are adrenaline junkies?
Yeah, like someone like Firstappen is fearless,
completely, or even Hamilton.
They're proper, quite nutcases.
So the pads are a little different for everyone.
Yeah, there's different, different, different characters.
To the personality type, there is a.
Then, of course, there's hand-eye coordination.
So to your point, Jamath, for young kids, probably there's a high chance
that you put a tennis racket in their hand, they'll also be pretty good very quickly.
And it's a similar set of skills.
Can we shift and talk a little bit
about the business of Formula One?
I mean, we were talking backstage
before the show a little bit
and you shared some of the anecdotes
about some of the valuations and what's happened
over the last decade, decade and a half.
Maybe you can just kind of paint a picture for us
on how this has evolved as kind of a business
and where things sit today, where they're headed
and what's driven that?
Yeah, so I'm a venture capitalist myself
and that's why I'm very interested
in the business side of sport.
And F1 has gone through such an incredible inflection
and there's a couple of factors that have come into play.
They brought in budget caps for the teams.
So the teams were spending just on their car development,
like north of 200 million a year.
And now it's like limited to 130 million a year,
just for the chassis itself,
not excluding engine drivers and top personnel.
130 million dollars on how many cars is that?
Well, there's 10 teams.
Yeah.
Nobody's the 130 million.
Those two cars, two race cars per year.
Per year.
But that's just the chassis.
You then have the engine, which is another 70 million.
You then have the top driver who takes 50 million a year.
Or a hundred.
No, a hundred, no.
That was the first stop in rumor to go to.
Yeah.
Plus marketing, plus, plus you get to maybe 70, 80.
Yeah.
So fielding a team is how much?
Fielding a team is around, you get close to 300
million. Wow. Yeah. But you're saying that the budget cap allowed everything to kind of be
constrained. Yes, so the budget cap brought in this cap for developing the chassis to 130.
Then suddenly Netflix also came in and Netflix has just made the sport so much more popular,
it's unbelievable.
Just in the US.
So that series really changed the landscape.
Just in the US, you've gone from,
in the last couple of like six years,
20 million fans to like 50 million fans.
It's more than doubled, only in the US alone.
What do you think Netflix did right?
So Netflix, the owners of F1 are Liberty,
which is a US-based company,
and they did very well.
They opened up social media.
The new generation of drivers are really social media savvy.
The fan base is 40% women in America.
How many women here today are F1 fans?
Loads, there we go.
OK, not too bad.
Are all the drivers as good looking as you or no? No, I don't
want to go into that kind of stuff. Don't be too yourself in Miami. So the audience
blew up. The audience has blown up and you asked me what did they get right? So what
did they get right? The Netflix show, for those of you who've seen it, it's like a
reality TV show. It's not just a sports documentary like, hey, this guy won here.
But they managed to capture these personas
behind the scenes.
And you really get to see the human beings behind the sport.
And that's very special.
And they tried to replicate it in other sports,
like I think golf and tennis.
And it didn't work out as well.
Because I think they got a little bit lucky also
that here, quite a few characters allowed them
and completely opened up and allowed Netflix to capture the real intense
behind the scenes moment and it's just fascinating to follow.
So that's what worked so well.
So before, if you come in as an outsider, I had this experience like what team are you,
you know, who you support, like I'm not really sure, but once you get to know the personalities,
you have a vested interest, you have a history,
there's something that you can contextualize.
Let me just end on the business part.
Yes.
So teams like 10 years ago, F1 teams were like,
worth $150 million, yeah,
and they would lose 50 million a year.
And now the top teams go for five to $6 billion
10 years later.
It's like eye watering, it's incredible.
Do you guys bump into each other
when you're driving the race?
You try to like, yeah, bump into each other, you know.
100%, it's part of the game.
You have to, unfortunately.
Explain, because I'm a neophyte, I don't understand it,
and I see like once in a while these NASCAR guys
pull over, they get out, they throw their helmets
at each other, you know, they get really upset.
They seem like, but they seem like hillbillies. You guys seem like a bunch
of Europeans and like, you guys seem like you're fancy, like a little more elegant.
What do you guys do? Do you guys like spray Vuv Clicquot on each other or something? How
do you guys mess with each other?
So we had one guy push, it was for stop and push
the other guy and he got like one week of community service.
So that was that was as far as it went. That's as far as the
physical but when you're in the car, it's fierce. It's fierce.
So take us through like what was the craziest you've ever been
involved in altercation wise? Well, my my rival was my
teammate. My rival was Lewis Lewis Hamilton at the time we're
both racing for Mercedes.
Any Lewis Hamilton fans here today?
A little bit.
OK, some here.
Good.
Actually, Nico, can you talk about that?
In that period, he's so dominant, but the car's so dominant.
And then you win.
What is it like where your teammates
with your biggest competitor?
What is that dynamic like, that psychological dynamic?
Are you friends?
Are you guys friends?
So with Lewis Hamilton, we were actually best friends when we were 14 years old.
We grew up racing together in the same team, best friends.
But when you get to F1, it's just so intense and so much is at stake.
And if it's just the two of you racing for race wins every single time.
You can't stand them, you hate them.
Yeah, it goes into hating, yeah.
Like real hate, I can see the contempt.
Do you talk during the week or you don't even really interact?
No, you don't interact much.
So unfortunately, it really becomes like an enemy in a way.
And internally, in your own team, it's a horrible dynamic.
Right.
Because also even the rest of the team then need to start
to be neutral, they can't take any sides.
So even when you win, it's not like everybody's leaning in
with you and it's really a tough situation.
So it's like two people in the same project
who can't stand each other, Friedberg.
Yeah, they keep, but you keep working together.
I wasn't gonna say it.
Yeah, I wasn't gonna say it.
How much of that fed your decision to retire
literally days after you won the, that was a little,
I think that caught some people off guard.
Can you just tell us what happened there?
I was in my prime and I won that championship,
which for me was my dream come true.
And it was extremely intense.
Thank you.
It was extremely.
Thanks, mom.
I got one clap from my mom sitting here.
Very big fan.
I'm just kidding.
Way to go, mom.
Yeah, it was extremely intense.
And for me, it just felt like the right moment to.
I had a young daughter at home.
She was one year old, family. Just felt like the right moment to... I had a young daughter at home. She was one year old, family.
Just felt like the right moment.
I was in one piece to your comment, it being dangerous.
And I just decided rationally, you know, I never wanted to exit on the way down.
That's something I definitely wanted to avoid.
I wanted to exit at the top.
And that was my moment.
And I decided to pull the trigger.
Has there been a good ROI for the car companies
that have invested in F1 in that all this money
that they spend, other than the notoriety,
are they inventing things that we all use and see
and interact with day to day in our own daily driving
experience or not really?
So you probably will be driving an AMG at some point.
I had an AMG at one point. There you go.
And there is tech from the F1 team in there now.
OK.
For the hybrid now.
So for Mercedes, yes.
Is it universally true?
Yeah, every car company will be benefiting.
But the return on investment is also in terms of marketing.
Mercedes, there's a calculated return
on investment, which is $2 billion worth for their brand annually.
And they don't actually invest money anymore because the team is profitable now.
Right.
And highly profitable. Like these teams make 200-300 million dollars in profit every year.
So they now have 6 billion dollar valuations. Have we kind of peeked from your point of view?
Is the market and the valuation curve still being climbed?
There's still a lot of upside at the moment because this
growth has just happened in the last five years.
Yeah. And there's still I mean, even America, there's still loads of growth
potential, more races, there's licensing, the sport hasn't really even tapped into
that yet.
Do you think there's something about sports that are kind of more tuned to the way our brains now operate
in a social media world, like a fast-paced world.
Like, you know, golf became live.
I mean, live really kind of changed the face of golf.
There's now, baseball's obviously dead.
I mean, MLB's been on the decline for years
in the United States.
Not saying anything negative about baseball.
I'm just saying that the viewership is going down.
But there's also these conversations about no, you're, you're, there's a lot of games.
But there's also these conversations
about basketball at the NBA.
I'll tell you this crazy anecdote.
I was a co-owner of the Warriors.
I sold two years ago.
A friend of mine, a friend of ours
is in the market for a sports team.
And he went to Europe to look at a bunch of soccer teams.
And then we were all having dinner
and his bankers produced this study
that showed exactly this problem, which is young people,
their attention span is shrinking.
As it shrinks, there are certain sports
they just cannot watch anymore.
Cannot watch.
And it's totally correlated.
The negative viewership in baseball,
the increase in the use of clips.
So people are willing to watch baseball clips,
they will not watch a baseball game to save their life. People will watch basketball clips, they won't watch basketball clips. The NBA are willing to watch baseball clips. They will not watch a baseball game to save their life. People
will watch basketball clips. They won't watch basketball.
NBA is moving to clips. Yeah. And so it's this weird
construction. But in some ways, f1 is very set up for this
already naturally, right? Do people don't really watch the
whole sport as much as they want to watch clips, I'm guessing.
It's not that long. What are you trying to say? I don't know. It's a lot of hours.
How long is this race on Sunday?
It's not that long.
Are you trying to say our sport is boring or what?
It's never boring and it's not that long.
I mean, that's the thing about it.
But you guys also have a lot of data,
telemetry, like you can feed that kind of anxious mind.
And there's no breaks.
It just goes.
I'm not sure if you have a point there, unfortunately.
But...
Pretty diplomatic. I was just trying to move the conversation.
No, what I can say is that our sport has the highest engagement rates across all sports,
even comparing to NBA and everything.
But why is that?
I think there's just a huge hype at the moment.
And maybe yes, maybe...
Okay, maybe a little bit.
It is fast-pacing.
There's incredible action scenes, like thrilling action. There's huge crashes.
Did you not want to get in the business?
Given your knowledge and your experience, you didn't want to be in the business.
Because you now have transitioned into venture capital.
How did you make that decision versus working in the business of Formula One?
Oh, great question.
Because, yeah, that's a good question. So in Formula One, what jobs would have been left for me now after driving would be, for
example, running a team.
But running a team is 24-7.
You need full commitment, you need to move to the UK, all the teams are in the UK.
It's a full life dedication.
And I've done that, been there, done that.
Now I want more freedom in my life to define my calendar and everything
and be at home more. And so that job, for example, would not be a possibility and not something I
want to do. And then beyond that, yeah, you can be a driver manager, but even there you need full
commitment. So tell us about this transition then to tech and investing and venture and
what was that journey and what attracted you to that?
I was always inspired by people like Elon Musk who obviously you were talking about
before and those achievements that you have this idea and then you achieve something which
has impacts like millions of lives.
I just found that fascinating.
So I always just wanted to pursue that path so I started investing as an angel investor.
Oh, wait a second.
Take it easy.
Angel investing.
What are you doing after the show?
Did you ever read the book Angel?
It's a phenomenal book.
It's in 12 languages.
I'll sign a copy for you.
It's a book called Angel.
It's 84 pages long.
What were your first few deals?
11 Labs, for example.
Oh, good for you.
Pretty good.
Yeah, that's gone really well.
How did that come about?
I mean, I'm really putting an effort into this community as well.
I'm spending a lot of time in Silicon Valley, meeting everybody,
and also connecting to the European corporate landscape.
So I'm bringing customers revenues, connecting, building bridges,
because there's a unique angle that I can bring, you know, thanks to my sports past.
So I've just built my way into it and built a reputation and then you start getting the
opportunities.
What themes, Nico, have you invested in that today you would not invest knowing what you
know today?
Not the ones that have born.
Yeah, that's the flying taxis, the Vittels, for example.
Germany was leading the way on those.
You have Joby, for example, Joby Aviation, which is probably currently best position
in the U.S.
But Germany was leading the way with two horses in the race, and both of them have run into
trouble.
One is bankrupt, one was both bankrupt, I think.
So that's something that then in hindsight, you of course-
If you had read the book, you would have known hardware is hard.
Right.
I would have avoided that.
I should have listened to you.
You should have gotten that chapter.
I should have listened to you.
You got a highlighter out.
Hardware is hard.
It can work.
And hardware is even harder now with the tariffs.
I'm hearing now, like I have a...
I invested also in a cyber e-scooter here in New York called Infinite Machine.
And now with the tariffs, because the supply chain is so...
So brutal....concentrated in China. It's just a complete mess.
Yeah. Nico, what about the political landscape in Europe? There was a pretty important election
in Germany. It seemed to kind of go down the middle. What goes of Europe? What's happening
in Europe? The investability of Europe, the ability to do business in Europe. What do European
industrial businesses do? There's a ton of skill.
There's a ton of cash.
When you talk to those folks, what do you tell them?
I know you are very, very bearish on Europe.
You wouldn't put a dollar there, but is that correct?
Well, no. For sweaters and wine, he puts much more than a dollar.
That's true.
Pretty prolific.
It's a really good question.
I actually think industrials...
And yacht chargers, right?
Yes.
Industrials, I would.
Industrials, I think there's tremendous skill.
Outside of industrials, I think it's hard.
Yeah.
So we have the problems with regulatory frameworks being way too cumbersome.
We have the geographic fragmentation in Europe, which is very different to the US.
Politically, it's really, I mean,
quite in a bad place at the moment.
And so, yeah, I understand.
But at the same time, as you said,
talent density is insane.
The universities are some of the best in the world.
So that's where our hope is
in the next generation that's coming now.
Stick to the Nordics.
And the Nordics are very powerful, yes.
But also Germany.
Modify.
I'm German.
Yeah.
A little bit in Germany.
There's a lot of hope still.
Yeah.
Hey, what's your daily driver?
Daily driver is a Porsche.
A Porsche.
And then when you're with your daughter,
I don't know how old she is, but you ever like pull some tricks
and like, is she like, hey, dad?
No, she shouts, drive slowly, daddy. Really? I'm not allowed to
drive fast with her. No. Terrified. She's just fine.
Which is fine. You don't want her to get into the family
business. No, no, no.
What? Okay. What are some investments that you're really
excited by?
Beyond 11 Labs, they would be applied intuition. Another one.
Oh, great. Where I'm, where I'm in.
That's a really, really interesting company.
It's a company that supplies software primarily
to all the legacy car manufacturers that have not
managed this transition to being software first.
Like Tesla has shown the way.
And this startup.
It's like scale AI for automotive in some ways, right?
For part of the business, yeah.
Nico, you're going to fit right in.
Have you learned to play poker yet? I'm a
good poker player. You're a good poker player. We'll see you on
Thursday. Excuse me. Hold on. Give it up for Nico. Thanks for
coming out. Thanks to our new bestie Nico Rosberg for joining
us in Miami for f1. And thanks to you the audience for tuning
in. If you want to come to our next event, it's the all
in summit in Los Angeles. Fourth year for all in summit, go to
all in comm slash events to apply a very special thanks to
our new partner, okay, x, the new money. Okay, x was the
sponsor of the McLaren f1 team, which won the race in Miami,
thanks to Hyder and his team, an amazing partner
and an amazing team. We really enjoyed spending time with you and OKX launched their new crypto
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And special thanks to my friends including Shane over at Polymarket, Google Cloud, Solana
and BVNK.
We couldn't have done it without y'all.
Thank you so much. I'm going all in And instead we open source it to the fans and they've just gone crazy with it
Love you Wesley
The queen of Ken Wives
I'm going all in
What your winners line?
Besties are gone
That is my dog taking an audition for your driveway sex
Oh man
My habitat sure will meet me at once.
We should all just get a room and just have one big huge
orgy, because they're all just useless.
It's like this sexual tension, but they just need to
release them out.
What?
You're the bee.
What?
You're a bee.
Where are your feet?
Bee.
What?
That's going to be a, we need to get merch.
Besties are back.
I'm doing all this.
I'm doing all in I'm doing all in