Barron's Streetwise - Tik Tok and the Tech Titans
Episode Date: August 7, 2020With other tech giants facing antitrust scorn, Microsoft could walk away with a social media gem. Is that a good thing? NYU professor Scott Galloway weighs in. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit ...megaphone.fm/adchoices
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I think the difficult question for Microsoft
as it relates to TikTok is not so much what to do with it,
but what not to do with it.
There's a lot of potential.
Anytime you get that sort of attention,
you have that sort of landmass
in the attention graph of American consumers,
there's a lot of opportunity. Welcome to the Barron Streetwise podcast. I'm Jack Howe.
The voice you just heard, that's Scott Galloway. He's a marketing professor at NYU and an author
known for jarring predictions on America's big tech companies. In a moment, we'll hear from him and from Wedbush securities analyst Daniel Ives
about a wildly popular video platform called TikTok.
We'll also talk about which of the U.S. tech giants
could be first in line for an antitrust crackdown,
what form it would take,
and what it might mean for the U.S. stock market.
Listening in, as always, is our audio producer, Meta.
Hi, Meta.
Hey, Jack.
Meta, do you use TikTok?
Why or why not?
I do not use TikTok.
I don't want more social media in my life, and I don't think it's for me.
That sounds like a sensible approach to me.
I think I've gone the other direction.
I might accidentally have
become a TikTok user, and I know that might sound strange for a guy who has never tried Facebook or
Instagram and who's not exactly an influencer on Twitter. I don't post TikTok videos, but I do
watch them. Sometimes I watch a lot of them in a row, and it's definitely my daughter's fault.
She asked me if she could get
TikTok for her iPad, and I said no because it's owned by a parent company in China called ByteDance.
And in China, I said the government controls the companies. I told her that if China's government
gets our personal data and pictures of our faces, it might use them in ways we don't like. And I
realized while I was saying that that I was basically describing the business model of Facebook, but my daughter let it go. I decided to learn more
about TikTok before she asked me again, so I downloaded it to my phone. The first thing to
know is that when you open the app, the videos start playing automatically. You don't have to
choose anything. If you like a video, you can touch the heart icon, then you swipe up
for the next one. The videos are submitted by other users and they're
often around 15 or 30 seconds long, so it's not much of a commitment to watch
another one. There's an algorithm that guesses which videos I'll like. It seems
pretty accurate. Apparently, based on my history of likes, I like when a woman
asks one of her Huskies if it wants to go to the park.
You do want to go to the park.
And then it starts howling.
And then her other husky joins in.
I've liked multiple videos from a woman with curly red hair who sings Scottish songs and always starts out by saying,
Hello my wee darlings.
Hello my wee darlings, you request that I sing it, and this is a dancey one,
so get your dancing shoes on right now.
Then there's Datasaur.
He seems like a normal dad,
but whenever one of his daughters says the word Datasaur,
Datasaur.
he feels compelled to turn into a T-Rex
and attack nearby objects,
which are usually something messy like a birthday cake
or a jug of milk or a full garbage bag,
while his wife yells.
If I tried something like that, my wife would turn me into a divorce-a-saur, but she laughs when Dad-a-saur does it.
A lot of TikTok videos are short dance routines or dance instructions.
I've tried some of the moves and I look like someone drowning on dry land,
but I keep watching. TikTok has more than a billion users in total and it's growing much
faster than social media incumbents like Facebook, Twitter, even Instagram. Earlier this year,
it generated the most downloads ever for any app in a quarter. So it got people's attention
recently when President Trump threatened to ban TikTok in the U.S.
We're looking at TikTok.
We may be banning TikTok.
We may be doing some other things.
There are a couple of options.
He later said he'll give the company until September 15th
to sell its U.S. operations or face a shutdown.
And he indicated that he was okay with Microsoft being the buyer.
Microsoft confirmed that it's in talks.
To learn more about what a TikTok purchase would mean for Microsoft,
I reached out to Daniel Ives, who covers the tech giants for Wedbush Securities.
Oh, hey, Dan. How are you?
Good. How's everything?
Good.
I asked why Microsoft is in a position to do this deal.
Just near the end of July, the chiefs of Apple, Amazon, Alphabet, and Facebook
received a video conference grilling from the House Antitrust Subcommittee.
So why not Microsoft?
By stock market value, it's the second largest U.S. company behind only Apple.
Dan says Microsoft has been focused on the enterprise.
He's not talking about that ship from Star Trek. He means software and services for big
organizations and not areas that are getting the most regulatory scrutiny like social media or
digital advertising. That's because Microsoft tried and failed in those other areas. Its Bing
search engine never really took off. I had to
Google it recently to see if it's still around. Microsoft tried to buy Yahoo in 2008 for $45
billion, but it failed, which in hindsight was lucky because Verizon bought Yahoo less than 10
years later, and the price was less than $5 billion. It's ironic because here it is, Microsoft that was in the midst of regulatory
in the late 90s, early 2000s from antitrust, now finds itself untethered where every other company
in terms of the FANG world are basically handcuffed as they're up to their eyeballs
in regulatory scrutiny. So TikTok essentially fell on the lap of Microsoft. When Dan mentions
regulatory action in the late 1990s, he means a 1998 antitrust case. Microsoft, with its free
web browser, was accused of contributing to the collapse of a rival browser called Netscape.
A judge ordered Microsoft to break up, but Microsoft appealed and won,
and the Justice Department settled without a breakup requirement.
Today, Microsoft is thriving in cloud computing, where its main competitor is Amazon.
Dan says that with TikTok, Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella has an opportunity to buy a crown jewel
in social media, potentially on the cheap.
That's a no-brainer acquisition, especially the fact that ByteDance has their back against the
wall. They're at the prom. There's one dance partner. It's Microsoft. And if they walk away
from Microsoft, then the service gets shut off by Trump and the White House.
I asked what the concern is exactly about China. I was looking to bolster my explanation for the next time it comes up with my daughter.
Well, right now, in the midst of a U.S.-China cold tech war, as we've seen with Huawei,
you know, TikTok, based on all that information that they gather of consumers, 100 million U.S.
users, and right now the U.S., from a national security perspective, is very concerned of that.
I pay nothing to use TikTok, and I don't see much on the app by way of advertising.
So what would Microsoft get out of the deal?
Dan says Microsoft might be able to add advertising and maybe increase the reach of its Xbox gaming business.
He also thinks that by diversifying into a more consumer-facing business, Microsoft might end up with a higher valuation.
And that's why I think you see the stock reacting positively as investors are starting to view this as a potential sum-of-the-parts valuation,
where they could buy an asset for $40-50 billion and under the Microsoft cocoon could be worth 100 billion first day. Dan points out that
Microsoft sits on cash and short-term investments worth 136 billion dollars and that it could
generate enough excess cash in one year to pay for a potential TikTok purchase. Dan is bullish
on Microsoft stock and he views the TikTok deal as likely. At this point, we have 75, 80% chance the deal happens
and I think that could be conservative.
On July 29th, as I said, the chiefs of Apple, Amazon,
Alphabet and Facebook answered questions by video
from the House Antitrust Subcommittee.
And there were substantive points raised,
but I'm not sure the day left investors fearing a crackdown
based on how those four stocks rose that day and the day after,
and then mostly soared the following day on blowout earnings reports.
I thought that there were moments during the hearing that
reinforced some negative impressions of Congress rather than big tech. At one point, a 21-term House rep tried to get tough with Facebook CEO
Mark Zuckerberg, but he seemed to confuse Facebook with Twitter. Congressman, well, first, to be clear,
I think what you might be referring to happened on Twitter, so it's hard for me to speak to that,
but I can talk to our policies about this. At another point, a 30-second shouting match broke out among House reps.
Mr. Jordan, I have the time. But this is the ranking number of the Constitution.
We're talking about people's liberties here. We have the ranking number.
One kept hollering, put your mask on. Put your mask on. Put your mask on.
Another one shouted, you want to talk about masks? Why would the deputy secretary of the treasury
unmask Michael Flynn's name? That's a subject that had nothing to do with tech or antitrust.
I couldn't help but think that four chiefs running companies collectively valued at nearly
$5 trillion were being held to account by a brawling Congress that might run a $5 trillion
budget deficit this year,
and not nearly all of that deficit is due to the pandemic.
Now, no one is looking for a defender of big tech right now, but let me just point out two things.
First, at a time when a lot of things seem broken, these services are working.
My family has relied greatly on Amazon and its Whole Foods grocery chain for basics and hard-to-get items.
I use Google constantly as a starting point for tracking down information.
Apple is basically my IT department. Many years ago, I had lots of computer problems.
I felt like I was reinstalling my Windows operating system and programs every six months.
So I asked an IT guy if I should get a Mac and he said,
Macs are for people who are too dumb to use computers. I bought one the next day. Then I
started using Apple for everything. I might be too dumb to use a computer, but I'm smart enough
to stick with things that work. I don't use Facebook, but my wife does. She says 90% of
what she sees are pointless arguments about politics, but eight percent is useful
community information. The remaining two percent is a tense standoff between our town's dog owners
and a handful of homeowners who want to move one of the dog parks. Anyhow, Facebook has zero
political allies because the left suspects it helped swing the 2016 election for Trump,
and the right suspects it suppresses conservative thought. I've never met
someone who confessed to liking Facebook, and yet almost 1.8 billion people use it daily as of the
end of June, and 2.7 billion use it at least monthly. Those numbers are up 12% from a year ago.
I can't help but think that we treat each other horribly on Facebook, then blame Facebook for how horrible we've become,
and go on Facebook to complain about it.
The second thing I want to point out is that the fact that our stock market is soaring
amid the economic wreckage is mostly about big tech.
Credit Suisse pointed out recently that over the past year,
the five largest S&P 500 companies,
that's Apple, Microsoft, Amazon,
Alphabet, and Facebook, had returned 58% versus 1% for the rest of the market.
It attributed that to superior earnings.
During the second quarter of this year, the big five grew earnings by 19% versus a 40%
plunge for the rest of the market.
And keep in mind that the S&P 500 index is weighted for company size,
so those five companies have a lot of sway.
Now, I'm not saying that the tech titans don't have too much power,
and I'm not saying that a rising stock market makes up for antitrust concerns.
I'm saying we should hear on the matter from a more aggressive witness for the prosecution than me.
So I called up Scott Galloway.
I'll let Scott introduce himself.
NYU professor of marketing and author of the upcoming book,
Post-Corona, From Crisis to Opportunity, and Jack Howe's favorite academic.
Before Scott was an academic, he was a tech entrepreneur and hedge fund investor.
A few years ago, I noticed his lectures on big tech were getting a lot of views on YouTube,
and I sat down with him for a Q&A in Barron's Magazine.
That was around when he wrote a book called The Four,
the hidden DNA of Amazon, Apple, Facebook, and Google.
At the time, Scott compared those companies to body parts.
Alphabet's Google search was the brain, because compared those companies to body parts. Alphabet's Google search was the
brain, because that's where we ask things. Facebook is the heart because people have relationships
there. Amazon is the stomach for consumption. But Apple, it's the private parts. Let me explain by
reading a passage from Scott during the Q&A. He pointed to my Apple watch. The watch you are
wearing isn't a timepiece.
It's an attempt to signal to people that if they mate with you, their kids are more likely to
survive than if they mate with someone who's wearing a swatch. The price premium is irrational,
but we're willing to pay a lot of money to seem more attractive to other people.
So it's kind of the opposite of having ad-supported Pandora or paying with a Discover card, which
I think says to potential mates, you have bad genes.
Now, for the record, I have a Discover card, but I don't use it.
So I don't know what that means for my genes.
And although I still have an Apple Watch, I'm not trying to procreate with anyone, I
swear.
I'm not even the one who brought private parts into this.
Technically, that was Scott. Anyhow, he's always saying stuff like that, and I find his perspective
interesting. So when I talked to him this time around, I started by asking about TikTok.
Why is it such a big deal? Well, there's just really one stat that sort of distills the power
of TikTok, and that is supposedly people are spending more time on TikTok than on Instagram.
And Instagram, a lot of people would argue, is the most successful social platform of the last decade. So
you have what is for the first time in a decade, a platform that feels like as if it could rival
Instagram, which is the growth engine of Facebook. So, you know, could we go from a monopoly in
social media to a duopoly? So this is a big deal.
Scott says he doesn't use TikTok and that anyone his age shouldn't use it.
And I'm pretty close to his age, so oops.
I asked why TikTok has been so successful.
You know, it tapped into something in terms of a certain level of joy.
It's performative like Instagram, but it's more around music and dancing.
Now, I've said in the past that Instagram is for weaponizing beauty or wealth, and Twitter is where the rest of us do
the best we can with snark. Facebook, as near as I can tell, is where your uncle fights with your
coworker over politics. Scott agrees that Instagram consists of, as he puts it, basically communicating
to other people how much better your life is than theirs. To distill it into very loose terms, I think when you come off of TikTok, you feel maybe good and
maybe even just a little better about yourself. And I'm not sure if that's true when you come
off of Instagram. Scott also says that the look and feel of TikTok is compelling.
The way they've structured kind of this bottomless feed, it's just
very tempting and easy to kind of go down this rabbit hole and pull your head up two hours later
and you're still on TikTok. Scott agrees that any Chinese company is effectively, as he puts it,
a loosely affiliated wing of the Chinese government. He says that China is a U.S.
competitor at a minimum and more likely an adversary, and that TikTok's data could be
used as a weapon. He says China isn't in a position to complain about that view because
of how it treated Facebook and Google. It's very difficult for China to raise any alarm
because effectively they propose the same concerns when they let Facebook and Google
into China just long enough to steal the IP and then kick them out for quote-unquote security
reasons. I asked about a potential Microsoft deal and Scott agrees that as he puts it,
the moons have lined up above Seattle, which is near Microsoft's headquarters.
Scott points to Facebook's enormous rise in valuations since it bought Instagram back in 2012.
He says Microsoft could put a lot of capital into TikTok and maybe roll its performance up
with LinkedIn and claim that it's one of the biggest players in social media.
TikTok and all of these companies could eventually one day be not only very valuable media companies in terms of their advertising revenue they garner, but also maybe give them entree into some sort of streaming video platform such that they could compete with Apple TV Plus or Netflix. So I think the difficult
question for Microsoft as it relates to TikTok is not so much what to do with it, but what not to do
with it. That's an interesting point. When my kids get time on their iPads, I try to talk them into
the kids section of Disney Plus or Netflix or HBO Max because I like that it's a curated experience where someone's in charge of appropriateness.
They'd much rather play an online video game called Roblox,
or if I let them, which I don't,
watch YouTube or TikTok.
For me, I wonder if I've been watching less TV
because if I want to casually turn something on
for a few minutes before bed,
the success ratio just seems higher
if I scroll through a few TikTok videos than if I take time to get into a new show or movie.
And I know, I should read classic literature instead of looking at any of this stuff.
I'm not a perfect person. I mean, I have a Discover card and bad genes.
Anyhow, whether or not Hollywood views TikTok as a threat, Facebook seems to.
This past week, it launched a service on Instagram called Reels,
which lets people make videos, set them to music, add filters, and easily share them, just like TikTok.
Scott says Microsoft buying TikTok isn't a perfect solution from an antitrust perspective.
It's difficult to understand which is worse, and that
is, okay, if you ban them from the U.S., then that just protects monopolies. That protects U.S. big
tech. But letting Microsoft buy them only accretes more power to big tech. So it's sort of this
Sophie's choice for antitrust. Scott's impression of the recent antitrust hearing was different from mine.
He felt it sent a powerful message.
The witnesses weren't really there to provide additional information.
They were essentially props for the committee to demonstrate or to articulate a series of
opinions that they have formed after what has been an exceptionally in-depth investigation.
And while I've said this before, and I've always get my heart broken,
it felt to me like the beginning and the end of big tech as we know it.
I think this validated a lot of the public's and a lot of lawmakers' viewpoint
that these companies have just grown too powerful.
But, I said, shares of these companies went up during and after the hearing.
Yes, Scott said, but lately, other stocks aren't participating, and that's a bad sign. I think the market is starting to
figure out that when four companies can increase their market cap by a quarter of a trillion
dollars in one day, that in a low growth economy, it's become a zero-sum game. And what's good for
those firms when it's that good is likely bad for everybody else. And now you're starting to
see the rest of the market decline. The same way when Amazon announces an incredible quarter. Retail stocks don't trade
up in sympathy. They go down because the assumption is they're taking share from everybody else.
Okay. So if there's regulatory action, which companies will get hit first?
Scott says Facebook and Alphabet. Well, the most disliked and easiest target is Facebook
because the CEO is perceived correctly as an oligarch who is basically corrupt.
So I think the least likable is Facebook and likability or lack thereof plays a huge role in politics and antitrust action, even when it shouldn't.
Realistically, what it looks like in terms of signals out of the government, it looks like Google is probably going to get the first antitrust lawsuit filed against it sometime in the fall.
Google is probably going to get the first antitrust lawsuit filed against it sometime in the fall.
When I asked about tech companies getting hit, Scott said that way of thinking about it isn't ideal. Right now, consumers are faced with this, what I call this empty question or this false
narrative of are these companies bad and should we punish them with antitrust? And that's the
wrong way to think about it. These companies have accomplished incredible things. They've aggregated incredible power,
and whether you think they've done that legal or illegally, they have gotten to a point where
the entire economy would benefit from the oxygenation of breaking these companies up.
Scott points out that some past breakups resulted in higher aggregate market values
five to 10 years later.
If Facebook can acquire Instagram and WhatsApp, it can divest them.
And I believe if you spun YouTube from Google in the first corporate strategy meeting that YouTube has as an independent company,
they decide to go into text-based search and Google decides to start their own video search company.
And overnight, we have two competitors or four competitors as opposed to two divisions cooperating and coordinating. How might that help consumers? Scott has an example.
If you're Facebook or Google and P&G says, you know, it kind of bothers me that there's a lot
of evidence. And when young women or girls spend time on Instagram, they're more prone to self-harm
and self-cutting or, hey, Google, it bothers me that
there appears to be a lot of evidence that young men are being radicalized on YouTube.
What motivation or incentive do they have to do anything but put a very earnest person in front
of them and nod their head and take notes and say, we need to do better when the person on the other
end doesn't have any choice? One last point. Scott says it's a mistake to think
of these services as free. He says if parents are worried about their kids on these platforms,
the cost of parenting rises. And that if citizens are worried about elections or foreign governments
weaponizing data, the cost to society is going up. If you really start to think more broadly by what we mean by prices,
our prices have skyrocketed at the hands of the density and consolidation of power across fewer
and fewer firms. Meta, it's listener question time. Who do we have? We have a question from
Dom. He's from the UK. Hi, Jack and Meta, Dom here from Cambridge United Kingdom. So Dom
mentions an earlier episode where you told the listener to stick with his S&P 500 fund rather
than shift more money overseas. Why isn't it the case that you recommend tracking a world index?
Is this because the questions were coming from US based investors or do you expect the US market to
outperform the global market? Would your advice
be that investors internationally also favor the US market? Many thanks for your time.
Thank you, Dom. And thanks to all of our listeners in the UK. Yes, especially you,
your Royal Highness. Now there's something in investing called home country bias, and I'm as
guilty of it as anyone. I don't think a
little home country bias is such a bad thing if you live in a country with a
stable financial system and a robust menu of investable assets. After all, most
of us also have a high home country weighting when it comes to our future
obligations, like spending for retirement. And more than 40% of revenue for S&P 500 companies comes from outside the US. So it's not entirely a US
investment. But you make an excellent point, Dom. For many investors, especially those outside the US whose future obligations are
denominated in other currencies, a World Stock Index might be more appropriate.
Thank you, Dom, for sending in your question. And everyone,
please keep the questions coming. Just tape on your phone, use the voice memo app and send in
an email to jack.how, that's H-O-U-G-H, at barons.com. If you send us a TikTok video where
you're dancing while asking your question, Meta promises to give it priority review.
Thank you for listening. Meta Lutzoft it priority review. Thank you for listening.
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That's at Jack Howe, H-O-U-G-H. See you next week.