Conversations with Tyler - Sebastian Mallaby on Venture Capital
Episode Date: February 9, 2022Venture capital powered the tech revolution, but what powers venture capital? With his in-depth knowledge and coverage of the sector you'd be forgiven for thinking Sebastian Mallaby is a veteran of th...e Silicon Valley scene. The author of several books on finance and economics, Sebastian takes pride in understanding his subjects intimately (perhaps too intimately, if you ask his critics). His latest book, Power Law: Venture Capital and the Making of the New Future, sheds light on the small but mighty industry. Sebastian joined Tyler to discuss why venture capital skills aren't more replicable, the promise of biotech despite increased regulations, why venture capital remains concentrated in the Bay area even after the pandemic, the differences in risk-taking between East and West coast finance, the secret to Mike Moritz's success as an investor, how Peter Thiel's understanding of the power law set him apart, why he isn't interested in becoming a venture capitalist himself, his predictions for the European tech ecosystem over the next ten years, the original sin of "too big to fail," the major failure of Alan Greenspan during his tenure at the Fed, the Darwinian evolution of good hedge fund strategy, what Ray Dalio got right with Bridgewater, the finance topics he feels are undercovered, what it takes to be a good Substack writer, why he's bullish on The Information, reasons to be optimistic about the innovative and entrepreneurial trajectories of Japan, the greatest living British historians, the future of the World Bank once China stops borrowing from it, what's causing the decline in popularity of liberal capitalism, the zany appeal of The Grand Budapest Hotel, and more. Check out Macro Musings. Follow Macro Musings on Twitter. Subscribe to Macro Musings on your favorite podcast app. Read a full transcript enhanced with helpful links, or watch the full video. Recorded January 31st, 2022 Other ways to connect Follow us on Twitter and Instagram Follow Tyler on Twitter Follow Sebastian on Twitter Email us: cowenconvos@mercatus.gmu.edu Subscribe at our newsletter page to have the latest Conversations with Tyler news sent straight to your inbox.
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Hello, everyone, and welcome back to Conversations with Tyler.
Today I'm here with Sebastian Malaby,
who is the author of numerous excellent books
on economics, politics, and current affairs.
He is a senior fellow with the Council on Foreign Relations,
a contributing columnist to Washington Post, and most importantly, he has a new,
excellent and very well-reviewed book out called The Power Law, Venture Capital and the Making
of the New Future. Sebastian, welcome.
Great to be with you, Tyler.
Do the observed high returns to venture capital funds constitute a counter-example to the theory
of efficient markets?
Yes.
Why does it continue?
Why doesn't capital just flow into the sector and bid down the returns?
Well, maybe that's what we've been seeing just in the last three years or so with enormous amounts
of money coming in during the pandemic and quite possibly there will be a correction.
You're asking, I guess, a more subtle question about whether on a sustained basis money would
flow in and bid away the returns. And I think the point here is that anytime you're dealing
with alternative asset managers, whether it's hedge funds or venture capital, is the skill that you need.
and the money may be limitless, but the skills and the connections in Silicon Valley and what
have you, that is not unlimited. And so skill can continue to generate good returns.
So in that underlying mental model, the excess returns can stay more or less forever,
right? More capital coming in won't bid down the returns, much.
I think that's right. I mean, you know, the returns have been pretty good,
at least for the better venture capital funds. And here, you know, we may want to come back to
that caveat. But, you know, going back to the beginning of the story in the 60s with Arthur Rock,
the pioneer of venture capital right through to today, you do see good returns. I mean,
Sequoia, which I regard as the top venture capital partnership in Silicon Valley,
has generated returns of about 12 times investors' money this century. That's 12x. That's one.
thousand two hundred percent. It's pretty good. So why isn't that skill replicable if the returns to
replicating it are so high? Well, you know, I think there's a sort of inefficient market
thinking. There is a sort of notion that you can assume away skill and that if skill is good,
you could just make more of it and that would mean that you would compete the returns down.
I think some of the skill is so far off in the tail of the distribution that it's quite
hard to replicate it. I mean, a really good venture capitalist combines technical knowledge of what
he or she is investing in, whether that's biotechnology or computer science, plus business feeling,
plus the skill of networking with people and putting teams together and a phenomenal energy, you know,
because you've got to be out there getting up in the morning for one breakfast with one potential
person you might invest in and then doing 14 cups of coffee before you go to bed and being that
wide, you still sleep. You know, it is tough to find enough people like that. And, you know,
maybe we're going to discover that the last four or five years of boom have sucked in so much
talent that it will be completed away. That could be true, but so far it hasn't happened.
What do you think of the view that in recent years, there's been a huge consumer retail tech boom,
basically fang stocks, right? And when that is over, it might be over now. The excess returns to VC
will go away. If you look at venture capital for buying,
biotech, which has been hammered lately as we're speaking here late January, 2022.
And maybe venture capital is a limited model for one period of time, and otherwise, it just does
okay. True or false? False. I say that because in the cyclical sense, you might be right.
But I think there's a deep structural shift, which is really important. And that is that
intangible capital has become more and more important in our economy. And the nature of intangible
capital is that it's hard to measure it in financial reports. And so to understand whether a particular
software investment, for example, is worth a huge amount or really nothing, you kind of need to
understand what that software development within the company is doing. And so you need to be hands-on.
You need to have the technical skills to evaluate that software project. And the more that intangible
capital rises as a share of new GDP creation, the more this venture style hands-on expert investing
is going to be valuable. Your explanation, if I understand it, to me seems to suggest that venture
capital for biotech won't work very well. So you're portraying it as something that's very,
very hard to do, a very limited skill. So you're going to be wrong a lot of times. So that means
the times you're right. The product has to be scalable very rapidly. But in biotech, there's
regulators, right, you often need a sales force. It's not scalable in the way that say LinkedIn
or Netflix are scalable. So doesn't that mean VC will just stay limited to a very small area,
those things that are super rapidly scalable? Or if you think it's pretty easy to pick winners,
then you have to think the rents get exhausted. Yeah. Well, I mean, this is a version of actually
a wider debate, which goes beyond biotech, which is sort of the claim that venture capital is
really only good for software projects, that, you know, software can be scaled very, very fast.
There are network effects once you get product market fit. And you don't need much capital.
You know, the marginal cost of serving one more customer is pretty much zero once you've built
the Google search engine. And so people will argue, look, you know, that's all that venture
capitalists do. That is for sure historically inaccurate. I mean, there's a long history of venture
investing, which was more about hardware than software. It was about Apple computer. It was about
UUNet building the pipes of the internet. It was about compact computers. It was about semiconductor
firms and so forth. So we know the software version of this argument that venture capital only does
cheap to scale software. That's just wrong. Now biotech, I agree, as a tougher example, it's more
regulated. And historically, you know, there have been cases early on like Genentech, which went public in
1980 with the first artificial insulin, huge, huge venture return really set Kleiner Perkins
on the way to dominance over the next two decades in Silicon Valley in terms of venture investing.
But that's an outlier. And it's true that healthcare investing has been tougher and less
profitable. And a lot of companies have withdrawn from that. But I think the past isn't necessarily
a guide to the future. And the fun thing about venture is that you have to be watching to see
where basic science is generating innovation that can be commercialized.
And the thing that didn't necessarily do that for a long time
might be the thing that does it in the future.
Now you've had a bunch of innovations from gene sequencing to CRISPR,
which makes it faster and easier to develop new drugs.
Those drugs can have huge consequences.
I mean, the coronavirus vaccine from Moderna is a good example of this.
And I think that it would be wrong to rule out the idea that,
even a pretty capital-intensive, regulation-intensive sector like biotech, you know,
I think it might still work.
But what then in your mental model does limit the size of venture capital?
Because as a percentage of entire capital flows, it's pretty tiny, right?
Much smaller than private equity.
What at the margin makes venture capital not work?
You're right, it's small.
And the paradox is that the impact is big.
I mean, just a couple of numbers on that.
Fewer than 1% of companies that get formed every year receive venture.
capital backing. But if you look at the years since 1995, half of all the companies that go public
got venture backing and three quarters of the market cap from those companies derived from venture
backed companies. So tiny share get the money less than 1%, but three quarters of the market cap as
the result. I mean, that's the first point. Just because it's small doesn't mean it has low impact.
I think at the limit to answer your question directly, there are things which are either so capital
intensive, like building a new semiconductor fab, you know, where you're really in the billions
from the get-go, where, you know, venture doesn't do that. It's about... But why not? Capital's not
that scarce, right? Yeah. I mean, Venture's advantage maybe helps to answer why sometimes it has a
disadvantage. So one of the advantages that is the idea of stage-by-stage financing. So you give the
company a bit of money, and then if it fails early, it sales cheaply, because you haven't given it a huge
check right from early on. And something which is going to definitely take an enormous amount of money
up front, like a new semiconductor fab. In terms of comparative advantage, venture conceivably could
raise that amount of money and could conceivably go finance that. It just wouldn't be the natural
sweet spot. And it would be better to leave that to, you know, TSM or Samsung or some established
maker of semiconductors. As you know, Sequoia has changed its rules so that it can now hold investments for
much longer term periods than had been the case. If you extend this to its logical conclusion,
you could imagine a future 10, 15 years from now, where hedge funds, VC firms, a lot of other
financial intermediaries are all blended mixes of doing varying combinations of similar things.
10 or 15 years from now, what do you think will be the unique feature of venture capital?
Or do you think everything will be a blend?
That's a great question. I mean, I would say that, you know, the useful definition of venture capital
is that it is an early stage venture, an adventure, in fact.
And when you get to investing in companies which are more than about $500 million in market cap,
that's a different thing.
That's growth equity.
You know, I didn't call that venture anymore.
And the reason I picked $500 million as a number is that when Amazon went public in the late 90s,
its public market cap when it IPOed was between $400 and $500 million.
And now what's happened is that the IPO point has been delayed because,
you've got this ability to raise late stage growth capital. And more and more checks are being
written, 100 million, 200 million, 300 million, into companies that are worth 1 billion, 2 billion, 10 billion.
And, you know, that is being grafted into traditional venture partnerships like Sequoia Capital.
So I write a lot about Sequoia. And, you know, one of the amazing things is how much franchise
risk they'd be willing to take. They were a traditional early stage investment shop in 2000.
And then they grafted on this growth equity business.
They grafted on a hedge fund business.
They built an endowment fund on top of that.
And now, as you say, they've got permanent capital.
So they're going to end up with multiple business lines,
a bit like Goldman Sachs has multiple business lines.
But I think the venture capital portion of Sequoia's business
will remain the early stage part.
Even after the pandemic, it's striking to me
how much venture capital remains concentrated in the Bay Area.
The major deals are mostly done there.
What's your mental model for that?
Well, I think sort of the lesson of Silicon Valley is that agglomeration effects or pastoring effects are actually even bigger than economics as traditionally explained.
In other words, economics, when I, you know, just reading when I was writing my book about, you know,
so economic geography and that whole literature.
And the traditional story about why a cluster is a productive thing is that you get better matching between,
the skills of workers and the needs of companies, when you have a very deep labour market.
So if you're talking about coding and a company wants to hire a particular database engineer
in a particular kind of database software, in Silicon Valley, there will be the precise type of
engineer that you want. Whereas if you're in a less deep pool of labor, you won't find that.
And the same argument goes for suppliers. If you want to have a supplier that provides a particular
a kind of bespoke semiconductor, you're more likely to find that supplier locally and be able to
sort of go visit them if you're in Silicon Valley, then elsewhere.
But that would be why the startups are clustered. Why are the venture capital deals clustered?
And furthermore, in a funny way, they're anti-clustered. Like they're not all in New York,
which is our major financial center by a long ways. San Francisco is not that, right?
So it's a mix of anti-clustering and then some extreme clustering for this set of deals that
have some particular features.
Yeah, well, I mean, I think that shows you why venture capital is fundamentally different to the other kinds of capital that are going on the East Coast and Greenwich, you know, New York and Greenwich and so forth. I mean, it's just a totally different thing. I always like to say the kind of post-war archetypical financial companies on the East Coast, the archetypes were prudential and fidelity and their names tell you a lot about their attitude to risk, right? They were about stewarding capital and not losing it. This kind of high-risk power law return, you know, grand slam.
business that emerged in venture capital in the West Coast is utterly different. So it's not
surprising that we would have an anti-cluster, a different centre for that kind of financing. But I think
it clusters because this is a business where people syndicate into each other's deals, right? So
one venture capitalists will lead the series A round financing a company, and then another one
will lead the series B and another one the series C. Often a single round like the series C will have
multiple investors in it. And it's just economical for the entrepreneurs to be able to visit a
whole bunch of different VCs and pitch to 10 of them without having to get on a plane and fly around.
So I think there are clustering effects and also just sort of the circulation of ideas,
people and money within the clusters, which is something that venture capitalists facilitate,
works better when it's concentrated geographically. And that's why, you know, at least until the
last 10 years, when perhaps we've gotten to the point with Zoom and remote work and so forth,
where this is less true than it used to be. But I think the agglomeration effects were really
very, very powerful. And venture capital needed to be clustered to be most effective. And that's
why you got the Silicon Valley dominance. When is venture capital more effective versus when
is Angel investing more effective? Angel investing wasn't really a factor until the mid-late 1990s.
Once it became a factor, and that happened because Silicon Valley had reached a point of maturity
where there were enough rich, exited entrepreneurs who had made money starting their own companies
and then wanted to turn around and fund some younger people who looked a bit like them.
That's what happened with Google.
Google could raise a million dollars in 1998 before going to any venture capitalists because angels had become a thing.
One of them was Jeff Bezos of Amazon, another was Andy Besselsohn, who had started some microsystems
some time before. So once you get angels, then I think entrepreneurs are going to want to use them
because they're kind of friendly. They're typically people who know a lot technically and that you
relate to, you look up to when you're a founder. And so I think angels are useful for the first
round of money, the first amount of mentoring. And then when you get a bit more further along in your
company, you want the series A, which means more money, a more formal company structuring, a more
a sort of tougher, clearer sense of what your next milestone is that you have to reach,
otherwise you'll be shut down. Then you go to the proper VC.
True or false? Good CEOs, make good VCs.
Not always true. So as a generalization, I would say false. I mean, the premise of Andreessen
Horowitz, the venture partnership set up in 2009, was that to be a good venture capitalist,
you had to be an entrepreneur and you had to have run a company and understood what a startup is
like from the inside. And that just turned out to be false. Andres and Horowitz has now given up the rule
that to become a partner at the company, you have to have been a former founder of a company yourself
because it just isn't the best way necessarily. It's one way you can choose a good venture capitalist,
but it's not the only way by any means. Why has Mike Moritz been so good at VC?
Wow, that's a great question. I think he was willing to do two things. When it came to company founders,
he had the ability to enlarge their sense of themselves.
He could intuit what they were doing.
He could get on people's wavelength and not only understand them,
but sort of understand them better than they understood themselves
and see more potential in their project than even they saw when they looked at it.
So, you know, the first example of this is Yahoo,
where, you know, Jerry Yang and David Philo were, you know,
in their sort of porter cabin on the Stanford campus.
and they thought they were building a hobby type thing,
and they were sort of proud of Yahoo as a directory of the emerging internet.
But, you know, Moritz showed up, listened, understood and said, you know, this is the new Apple.
You were going to make something with a quirky name.
Apple was quirky. Yahoo is quirky.
You're going to have a brand, and you're going to be the face of a new phase in tech history.
So he enlarged their sense of themselves.
And he was just great at delivering that kind of call to greatness speech.
He sat down at PayPal with one of the founders of PayPal who was resisting the idea of a merger with the Elon Musk rival, which was called X.com.
And he said to him, listen, you know, if you do this merger, I will never sell a stock in the company.
And you will build something that makes history in the valley.
And that sort of call to greatness, you know, was inspiring.
So that's one thing, that EQ to get the best out of people and make them be even more ambitious than they already were.
The other thing Mike Morris did is he risked the franchise of Sequoia.
You know, he did a bit what I was talking about before.
He was willing to go into China, which was a whole different challenge, go through a period
when he had to fire the co-founder of Sequoia, China, because it wasn't working out.
But stick with it.
And if you ask the question, what is the top venture capital company in China?
The answer is Sequoia China.
It's the same as the answer to the question, what's the top venture capital company
in Silicon Valley?
It's Sequoia.
But that's a bit anti-clustering that point, right?
It is. Yes. Yes. So China requires a whole, and in a way, it's a kind of confirmation.
You're going to say I'm twisting the argument here. But China, of course, is its own ecosystem when it comes to technology,
because the government erects these barriers, which makes it tough for U.S. companies to compete there.
And so Chinese giants have dominated Chinese tech. But they've been funded, at least in the early
phase of the digital economy in China, almost always by American venture capital companies.
So Sina, Sohu, Neti is the only sort of web directories in China, all funded by Americans.
Then you've got Baidu, Alibaba, Tencent, Sea Trip, all of these companies backed by Western VCs.
And so what it shows you is that just as to the same way that in Silicon Valley, the VCs came in and
built this cluster, which had great circulation of ideas.
and people and money around the ecosystem. So too, they repeated the same trick in China. And they
built a new. It's not really quite as tight of a cluster because it's split between Hong Kong and Shanghai
and even Hangzhou and Beijing. So it's not like Silicon Valley. It's multiple cities. But it is a kind
of China cluster unto itself. But interestingly, built with the same Silicon Valley DNA, the same lawyers,
incorporation in the Cayman Islands for companies, youth of American style, employee stock options.
which were just not a thing in China until American Silicon Valley lawyers showed up in China
and explained to people how stock options worked.
What has made Peter Thiel such a successful venture capitalist and angel investor?
Peter Thiel is fascinating because he articulated more fully the idea of the power law
than anybody else before in venture capital.
I mean, the early VCs I studied had the idea.
They didn't call it the power law, but they had the idea that one or two bets in a
portfolio of 10 would make all their money. But Peter Thiel not only articulated it and took it further,
but he then actually designed his investing and his company to even greater extent around that
concept. So the logic of the power law is that if all of your money will come from a couple of
outlier bets, you bet a bet on outliers. It's no good betting on something that looks normal
because then everybody else will be doing a similar thing. You won't be differentiated. You won't have a moat,
around your company, you know, you won't make supernormal returns.
Teal's logic was, if you're looking for those really crazy, you know, 20x, 30x, 40x wins,
you want to bet on people who work themselves a bit out of the box.
And so, you know, he makes a joke.
And in fact, he boasts about the fact that the majority of his co-founders at PayPal
had made bombs in high school that Elon Musk one day when he was driving him along
Sandhill Road on the way to a meeting at Sequoia, you know, trashed his supercar. I think I can
remember if it was a Ferrari or some other fantastically expensive car, you know, span it around,
you know, ruined it and was laughing his head off because he didn't have insurance.
But that strategy seems entirely replicable, right? Anyone can take a lot of chances on smart
eccentrics. Like what does Peter have that is not so easily replicable?
Then a key point is even when you decide you're going to bet on out-of-the-box people who
look as if they're in the tail, there's still a difference between smart bets on the tail and
bad bets on the tail. And to make the smart bets, you do have to have a view and an understanding
of where technology is going. You've got to skate to where the puck will be, which means
you have to think forward, you know, just think about Facebook where Peter Thiel did this, you know,
famous angel bet that is probably one of the best bets in US venture capital ever. So how do you
did he do that? Well, he, first of all, was not put off by the fact that this was an eccentric 19-year-old
Harvard dropout, who wouldn't look you in the eye, and that the business partner of this guy was
Sean Parker, who had been fired by VCs from his past two companies. So he had to look through that
stuff, but he also had to understand that with the ubiquity of the internet, new kinds of communication
would happen, and that this idea of social media, which had been tried and failed in other examples
like Friendster, you know, just because it had failed a couple of times in early iterations,
social media could still be made to work if you did it right. And that's what he bet on.
It was still a long-shot bet, but it was a very high outcome bet if it went right.
Have you ever been tempted to try VC yourself, and do you think you'd be good at it?
You're smart. You know the history of venture capital quite well?
You know, no, I think. Because I enjoy what I'm doing.
it's true that whenever I spend five years on a project, which is how long these books kind of take me.
My objective is to get into the cockpit with the people I'm writing about and fly around the landscape
and really understand how the world looks through their eyes to explain their thought process to people.
And so I wind up trying to think like them.
And my critics would say, I write as if I was one of them and I'm not critical enough of the subjects I'm trying to write.
But, you know, my feeling is there's enough anger and mistrust in the world.
I don't particularly want to add to that, but I would like to add to understanding.
So I'm happy to, you know, to plead guilty to trying to get into the skin of the people I'm trying to write about.
But it doesn't mean I want to be then.
Ultimately, I'm happy being a writer.
Well, you're happy.
They might be happy doing something else.
Mike Moritz was happy writing about soccer, right?
He has a book about Alex Ferguson.
But what's the non-replicable feature that they have and you think you don't have?
Well, look, I think it would be helpful to be more technical than I am.
I mean, most VCs have an engineering degree or something, or if they don't have that, they know.
But Peter Thiel's not very technical in that sense, right?
And he's one of the very best.
That's true.
And Michael Moritz also fits that model.
Yes.
So there are clearly exceptions.
You know, Peter Thiel had started PayPal before he became a venture capitalist, and I think that was important.
You know, he's also somebody who was deeply in that network.
You know, he just so happened to come from Stanford, Silicon Valley.
That was his roots.
And so he was embedded in the network with people.
And that's a very valuable thing.
And, you know, the PayPal Mafia tells you a lot about, you know,
some of his returns come from the experience of having been deep in the trenches with people
who were technical and backing them repeatedly.
You know, Elon Musk was his business partner at PayPal.
Also his business rival at PayPal, they would fight each other.
And there was a famous coup when Elon went on, you know,
honeymoon and he was fired from being CEO and Thiel was put in instead. So it wasn't all,
you know, love and roses, but nonetheless, Peter Thiel backed SpaceX when Elon Musk needed capital.
So that embeddedness in the network, I don't have, although I spent five years, you know,
embedding myself enough to write this book. I don't have the engineer. I don't know. I mean,
I think there are plenty of smart people who can go and be venture capitalists. I like the idea that
I spent five years getting to know one kind of business or financial specialty after another, and I'm a
sort of perpetual outside writer come tourist.
What are the cultural factors that limit the success of venture capital in South England?
Because it has not developed a comparable network.
It's fantastic for science.
It has London, financial center, at least two incredible universities, other academic contributors,
yet it hasn't really taken off.
Why not?
So my theory about this is that, you know, the lacking thing has been historically venture capital,
because you're right.
I mean, Oxford and Cambridge both have world-class science faculties in addition to strength in human sciences.
And, you know, Europe as a whole, actually, that's true as well.
ETH in Zurich is very strong.
And there are more trained computer coders in Europe than there are in the United States.
And Europe is a big, rich consumer market.
So there are lots of strength in Europe.
What is lack traditionally, traditional lines, oh, it's cultural.
People don't take risk in Europe.
They're too keen on working for a big, safe institution.
My view is that when you get venture investors added to the mix that are willing to underwrite the risk of small startups, all of a sudden people are willing to start them because the risk is paid for.
You can take the risk as an entrepreneur with somebody else's money.
And if it fails, you'll have burnt up your energy in time and that's not to be sniffed at, but it will be somebody else's capital that underwrote it.
Furthermore, you will be helped to hire good people to help you because a venture capitalist will be on your cap table and will use its brand.
to bringing good people. I'm always struck by the story that Eric Schmidt told me about why he joined
Google as chief executive, which was a very risky move. He'd been chief executive of another company
into it before, and he was joining Google that was controlled by these two grad students who were
notoriously, you know, ornery and contrarian and might fire him and didn't particularly like people
who were over the age of 30. Eric Schmidt knew that going into Google, he might get fired.
But he did it because the venture capitalist involved, John Doer, said to him, look, if they bounce you out, I'll find you another great job somewhere else.
So that cultural thing about why is there this risk appetite in Silicon Valley is not something you drink in the water.
It's not something in the air that you breathe.
It's venture capital that is de-risking entrepreneurship and the business of joining tech startups.
But venture capital is mobile, right?
You would think it could all spread to South England, which is not a backwater by any.
stretch of the imagination very readily. Correct. And it's happening. You're asking the right question,
and the answer is it should happen. And by the way, it is happening. I mean, Sequoia has recently opened an
office in London. General Catalyst and Lightspeed to rather well-known American VC firms have also
recently set up offices. You've got index ventures, which is big in San Francisco, is also big in
London. You've got Excel, Ditto, big in London, as well as big in California. This is happening. The ecosystem
is growing. The number of unicorns in Europe is growing exponentially. And I predict that in the
next 10 years, Europe will grow a lot faster than the US tech ecosystem. Geographically,
what's the most underrated venture scene? Where would you place it? Well, it might be Europe,
as I just said. I mean, another... But would you say it's like South England, or is it Berlin, or
where exactly? I mean, what do they think about Sweden? Because that's surprisingly hot, right? You've got
Spotify based in Stockholm and all the spin-offs from Spotify, which are bound to come.
Once you've got a unicorn, which is worth 50, 60 billion like Spotify is, what that's telling
you is that there's a whole coda of people who have experienced dramatic, intoxicating
growth from the inside. They are now wealthy. They can start their own new companies. They can
become major capitalists or they can just become angel advisors to new startups. I would say Sweden
is going to set up, just like Seattle has, based off of Microsoft and Amazon, I think the Spotify
halo effect in Stockholm would be pretty big. So it's not just that it's properly rated. You think
it's underrated. Isn't Sweden, Stockholm too small to be like such a big venture scene if
network effects are so important, if clustering is so important? Doesn't it then have to be London,
South England, or maybe Berlin? I think I would say South England actually is the most underrated,
precisely because Spotify is visible.
Sweden's doing just fine, but it seems to me properly rated.
Okay.
So going on what you say about Sweden already being pretty highly rated,
then if that's right, I'm happy to agree with you.
Maybe South England is the most underrated.
I mean, you know, Graphcore is a great story.
This is a semiconductor design company.
And at the beginning, so there was a moment, I think, about 2017,
five years ago when Sequoia decided that,
AI semi-conductor chips were going to need to take a leap to a next-generation product,
that all the AI companies that Sequoia dealt with were saying,
the hardware that they were buying was just not up to scratch.
InVideo was good, but, you know, it wasn't good enough.
And so Sequoia told one of its partners to do a worldwide search
for the best emerging semiconductor company
that was going to knock it out of the park on AI semiconductor design.
And the partner who lived in Los Altos, California in Silicon Valley, began by looking at a company that, you know, guess what was based in Los Altos, California.
But he ended up by recommending an investment in a company in Bristol, South England, called Graphcore.
And that company is now doing terrifically well.
And that experience is one reason why Sequoia decided to open an office in London in 2020.
I have some questions about other topics.
You have some highly regarded books about hedge fund.
and about the Fed. In the late 90s, the bailout of long-term capital management. Was that a kind of
original sin that just set us on a path of bailing more things out at higher and higher price tags?
Should we have just let LTCM fall? No, I think the original sin was Continental Illinois much earlier in
1986, I believe, when the Fed, you know, bailed out this bank, which it thought was too big to fail.
I'm not sure it really was too big to fail, but it was a moment when the Latin American debt crisis
were still casting a shadow and the banking system was perceived to be fragile, and the Fed just
wasn't willing to let it go. That was the original thing because taxpayer money was used to bail it out.
The interesting thing about long-term capital management, which people forget, is that the Fed
convened the creditors of long-term capital management at the Fed offices in New York,
but it refused to provide any taxpayer money whatsoever to backstop long-term capital management.
And that was salutary. And I think if you look at what happened in the 2008 crisis, actually, hedge funds were not driving the crisis because the prime brokers who extend leverage to hedge funds learned the lesson from LTCM. And they didn't extend loans without taking good collateral. And so in actual fact, hedge funds turned out to be the relatively more stable part of the system in 2008, which was a time when insurance companies and investment banks and money markets, and money,
market funds and commercial banks, and all of these other players cost the taxpayers billions,
and hedge funds didn't.
What is it you understand about Alan Greenspan, having written a whole book about him,
that other intelligent educated people do not?
I think the key thing behind the title I chose the book, The Man Who Knew, the key thing was
that Alan Greensman had written a PhD thesis, mostly comprised of papers he wrote in the 1950s.
Nobody had found that thesis until I found it.
I read it, what it told me is that in the 50s, in other words, right at the beginning of his
professional career, Greenspan's obsession was with market bubbles, stock market bubbles,
and he was really preoccupied with the way that bubbles could drive recessions in the real economy.
Balance sheet effects were at the core of his PhD work. Now, once you understand that,
it tells you that Greenspan failed in his own tenure at the Fed to prevent the mortgage bubble from
inflating. He failed not because he didn't understand about balance sheet effects. He knew about
balance sheet effects. He was the man who knew. He knew more about them than most of the critics who
suddenly discovered in 08, oh, balance sheet effects. Gee, we better go read Hyman Minsky. This is a
big deal. Greenspan knew about them and yet he let the bubble go wrong. What does that tell us?
It tells us that the institution of the Fed was sort of trapped into a position where inflation targeting
had become irresistible.
And they just targeted inflation
and paid no attention to asset bubbles.
And I think that was a big mistake.
How was Jerome Powell doing?
Well, I think Jerome Powell is about to face a huge test
as he tightens rates.
Starting next month, history will, of course, tell us
whether he manages to stabilize inflation
without causing a major recession.
And that will determine how he's going to go down.
My guess, here's how I would frame it.
You know, having acknowledged that it's a risky thing,
to stick my neck out here. But here's how I would frame it. I would say that COVID was this
humongous shock to both supply and demand, unprecedented, and the Fed responded in an unprecedented
way with a stimulus, which as you know, was multiples of what was delivered in 2008. And that did
get us through the COVID downturn with remarkably little economic privations for Americans. And
that is an amazing achievement. COVID was tough in many ways in health terms and mental health
terms, but actually balanced sheets of households did very well. Now, that is a huge achievement.
You couldn't achieve that without accepting some risk that you would overshoot. I mean,
how do you target the right amount of stimulus when you're in that completely uncharted water?
And you don't even understand the trajectory of the pandemic, let alone the pandemic's
effect on the real economy. So they took a risk. They may have overshort and overstimulated it.
And we'll see if they exit, you know, without causing a big recession.
I think they will, and I think that history will judge Jerome Powell to have been a very brave risk-taker and actually a success.
But I have to admit that I could be wrong.
And do you think the Fed was excessively intimidated by the fiscal authority?
So there's a joint effort going on, right?
And the monetary authority, fiscal authority, they often want different things.
Do you think it's the case the Fed exactly understood the calculus or was shocked that inflation came in at almost,
or even an alternative is they secretly welcomed it being that high, or they would have
preferred it only had been at 4%, but the fiscal authority had more power?
Like, what's your mental model of what went on in the government as a whole?
So there was overshooting, but how does the Fed fit into your exact story?
Yeah.
So my sense, my strong feeling is that the story of Fed capture by the fiscal authority, or in
other words, the president, is wrong, that whatever since Paul Volcker, the mental model
of the Fed, everybody who works there, including and especially the chairman, is that
Paul Volcker was a hero. He got inflation under control. Anti-hero is Arthur Burns in the 1970s.
He let inflation get out of control. You don't want to go down in history like Arthur Burns.
You want to go down in history like Paul Volker. So a threshold level, that is still a dominant instinct.
And yes, we've been since around, you know, the early 2000s through this kind of zero lower
bound, oh, inflation is too low, worry. And so that encouraged some risk-taking with the amount
of stimulus, and now we've overshot. But I still think the dominant mental model is don't be Arthur
Burns, be Paul Volcker. And no amount of pressure from the executive branch would wipe that out.
And especially when you look at the executive brand and you ask, okay, so who is the sort of chief
economist in this fiscal authority that we're talking about? Is Janet Yellen, the former Fed chair herself,
Do I think she was trying to subjugate Fed independence? Of course I don't. I think it's a preposterous
slander. So I really think that the Fed allowed overshooting, not because they were being bullied by the
president or by the Treasury, but simply because inflation surprised them on the outside.
Here's a very easy question. Adjusting for risk, do hedge funds even yield supernormal positive returns
on net? So it depends on the period you look at. I mean, the best way to think about supernormal
positive returns is, I think, simply to say uncorrelated returns. I mean, an uncorrelated return,
which isn't driven by just the market going up, is pretty hard to come by. And a normal return,
I think, is zero if you're trying to do that. So any positive return, which isn't correlated with
the stock market benchmark or whatever other benchmark you're choosing is good. And in terms of a big
diversified pension fund or an endowment portfolio will help your sharp ratio, because it's giving
you some extra juice to your return, whilst without adding to risk, because it's not a correlated
position. And so when you net out the volatility of your hedge fund exposure with all your other
exposures, it's actually volatility dampening. That's the idea. So do they produce alpha, is the question.
And when I published my book in 2010 about hedge funds, the best research at the time said the net
of fees, there was positive alpha, and it was 3% a year, between 1995 and the late 2000s. That
was a pretty strong positive number. I think since 2010, the positive number has declined to be
much, much smaller and maybe even to disappear in some time periods. I think that happened because
of quantitative easing. If you think about hedge funds, what is it that they do, they get paid
to assess risk and price it. And if risk spreads are being squeezed and compressed and reduced
to almost nothing by the central bank through quantitative easing, then hedge funds are going to be
paid less for doing their work.
I think that's why supernormal positive returns to use your language Tyler has diminished.
I think they may now come back because of the end of quantitative easing and the rising
of interest rates in the face of inflation.
So to ask the same question we discussed with venture capital, what is the non-replicable
asset held by the very good hedge funds?
Otherwise, more capital comes in and competes that excess return away, right?
Yes, again, I mean, I think the answer to your question is partly that capital does come in
and compete excess returns away as strategies are discovered.
So as you look at the history of hedge funds,
they keep on being new strategies that get invented,
or maybe new areas of finance where old strategies can be applied.
And so, you know, now we're in a world of big data,
which means that new data sets become available to investors.
You can crunch new sets of numbers using new AI algorithms
and develop new insights about,
patterns that appear to repeat themselves in defiance of efficient market logic. And you can invest on
those. And the first people to do that will get supernormal returns. And then after a bit,
that technique may become understood by enough people that more capital comes in. And the returns
get competed away. But this is a dynamic Darwinian evolutionary industry. And new methods and
techniques will be invented as the old ones cease to be profitable. So let's say there are some hedge funds
that are quite special. But it seems a lot.
Large numbers are not.
Yet they're still doing some version of two and 20 fee structure.
How is that sustainable if a large class of hedge funds don't really offer the promise of beating
the market?
Well, look, I mean, you know, the famous case here is mutual funds where actively managed
mutual funds.
Last time I looked at the data had a negative return because the skill that's being purportedly
provided is less than the fee, even though the fee is just to one.
percent of assets on the management. So there you've got, you know, negative alpha. And why do people
continue to buy exposure in these money losing actively managed mutual funds? It's because hope springs
a tunnel. And people always think that they are investing in the top quintile of clever managers
who are going to defy what the average does. You know, people go to Las Vegas and gamble,
even though they know that the highest better odds than they do as punters. So I think, you know,
you know, at a basic level, it's not so surprising that people continue to invest in
actively managed hedge funds because they're a better option than actively managed mutual
funds. And the same would be true of actively managed venture capital, by the way.
So that's part of the answer. But the other part is that, you know, as I was saying,
over a long stretch of time, hedge funds have produced positive uncorrelated returns, which are good
for a portfolio. The common way that this gets reported in newspapers, which is to say, look,
The S&P went up 15% last year, and hedge funds only returned 4%.
So hedge funds are a bunch of losers.
That is financially illiterate because they are not comparing apples without apples.
You need to compare, you know, what the alpha was in the two sets of strategy.
And by definition, the alpha in the S&P 500, the S&P 500 is the benchmark.
So it's a correlative return and the alpha was zero.
What's interesting is to get some uncorrelated return that then dampens your volatility
in the rest of your portfolio, because much of your portfolio will be correlated with the benchmark.
And if you can get this uncorrelated return, that will dampen the rest of your volatility,
improve your risk-adjusted return in your total portfolio, and make your portfolio better.
How did Ray Dalio become so rich?
No, between us, I mean, I know this is a podcast, but I use the expression anyway.
Between us, Ray Dalio, the man, in my estimation, you can't answer that question.
I feel sometimes when I listen to him that half of what he says is,
obvious and the other half is nonsense to the point where, you know, it becomes a parlor game to look
at his Ray Dalio's principles and say, you know, gee, if you see an open door walk through it,
and was that the way you built the company? I don't think so. So I think if you want to understand
why Bridgewater did well for a long time, although it's done less well recently, it's not about
him, it's not about the man, it's about the machine he built, right? The machine just, you know,
patiently built a research organization that carefully built its own model of high markets worked
by scraping data, producing, you know, very precise, clear studies of relationships.
One variable does this, the other one will do that.
When you aggregate that knowledge based over time, you build an investment black box that
really did work for quite a stretch.
And I think, you know, based on my conversations with people who work for Ray Dalio,
I come away a lot more impressed, frankly, than I do by the public relations stick I've heard from
him in the last five or ten years.
As a writer, which topics and finance and investing do you think are undercovered?
I think actually that investing, if you go at it from the perspective of, you know,
how does this really make money?
What is the source of alpha?
I think that in general is a bit undercover.
I mean, the starting point amongst a lot of academics, as your questions in a way have been telling
us is, you know, there shouldn't be any returns. Alpha should be impossible to generate. And I think
to understand how it is generated is difficult. It requires a lot of getting close to the subject,
getting close to the people who work for the subject, sorting through the nonsense, as I've just
tried to do in my answer about Bridgewater. And I don't think that many people, frankly, have the
time to spend five years on one topic and try to provide an answer. And so that's how I've tried
to differentiate is to make five years of time to go look at a specialty. And I hope that is an
undercover thing. And therefore, that I'm adding value to the books which are on the bookshelf.
Putting aside family connections, your wife being editor of the economist, but what is it in
media or journalism you're especially bullish on? Is it substack? Is it old style, MSM, whatever?
I'm a big admirer of the information, which is a Silicon Valley media startup. It's been going about
10 years. And the reason I'm a fan is that I think that's the right model for media startups. In other words,
I think substack, where it's a lone writer doing a newsletter, can be excellent when you've got an unbelievably
talented and energetic and exceptional person. You interviewed Andrew Sullivan not so long ago,
and I would put him in that category of just an exceptional person. If he wants to do substack,
you know, fantastic. But, you know, he's exceptional. And I think most of the
time, somebody can be great at a substack for three years, possibly five years, but it's pretty
hard to sustain that level of focus and energy. And if you don't sustain it, you've built
up brand over three to five years and then you throw it away because you stop or you just
go off the boil. And therefore, it's more sensible to create a collective journalistic effort.
And that's what the information is doing. It's going at a particular area, which is tech.
It only covers tech. It has good people who know what they're doing. And it's
got a team, and it's building that team, and I think that's terrific.
As a journalist, you covered Japan for years.
What do you see is the economic future of Japan?
They seem to have shrinking population, fairly low growth, not much appears to change.
Is that just going to continue forever?
And there'll be a tiny Japan with hardly any people in it, or what's going to change?
I think Japan has areas of innovation that remain interesting.
It's been a while since I lived there.
I was there in the mid-1990s.
But my sense is that in areas like innovation around provision for old age,
you know, that's an obvious area where Japan has a lot of old people
and they're doing quite a lot of things to make that work for society.
So the silver economies, it's called, is something to look at in Japan.
I mean, it remains a highly educated, sophisticated, both in terms of sort of, you know,
the visual, aesthetic side of engineering and the technical side of engineering.
So although the macro in Japan often looks underwhelming,
because with a declining population and, you know, restrictive immigration,
policies, you're going to get a negative path in terms of macro growth. Nonetheless, there's some
interesting things that. If you think about the role of Japanese culture and possibly discouraging
risk-taking, is it like South England where you think venture capital can step in and get
people to take the risk or just there's no way through that barrier? Because there don't seem
to be that many new, truly excellent Japanese companies at a large scale. And Sony mostly sells
insurance at this point, right? So what's gone wrong with risk-taking in Japan?
Matti Yoshisun, of course, is Japanese. Now you'll point out correctly that he's Korean
Japanese and that might make all the difference. He felt marginalized growing up because he was
Korean, because he felt marginalized, he left Japan in his teens and got a degree from UC Berkeley.
And so he's a different kind of Japanese person, but he did go back to Japan and build
this huge software distributor called SoftBank and then he paladed that into this sort of tech
investing holding company. So it shows that entrepreneurship is not entirely.
highly impossible in Japan. I think it could happen, can happen, and not close enough to it
to understand why more of it hasn't happened. Who's the greatest living British historian?
Oh, gosh, that is a great question. I would say the most entertaining is Neil Ferguson.
There are historians of early modern Europe. Peter, I think I'm going to say Peter Goodwin,
but the fact that I'm blanking on his name shows me that I'm not hugely confident about the answer.
I'll stick with Neil Ferguson. He's always a wonderful writer and provocative to read.
What's the economic future of the World Bank once China stops borrowing from it, which, of course, at some level, has to make no sense?
Yeah, I mean, China for a while, let's say between 1990 and 2005, generated just a vast amount to the World Bank's success, both because, you know, it reduced poverty hugely.
and that made the global statistics on poverty reduction look good,
which made the World Bank look good,
and because it just borrowed money and paid it back unfailingly,
and that was great for business.
You're right that with China graduating, it creates a problem,
and it also is a problem because China as a shareholder is problematic.
You know, part of the reason why the World Bank and IMF worked well for a long time
relative to other multilateral institutions,
is that you had this lead shareholder in the form of the United States,
which basically called the shots.
And that provided some clarity of direction
for both the bank and the fund.
I think now with China being pretty big
and influential within the World Bank,
it can disagree with the United States
on something like, you know,
where China should be ranked
in the Doing Business Report
that the World Bank produces.
And this was a famous case
where China seems to have put pressure
on the World Bank president
and as a result or indirectly
or something we don't exactly
know, China got re-ranked in that ranking of where to do business. And so that's the kind of thing
that undermines the World Bank credibility. So China is problematic, both because it's graduated and because
it's a tricky shareholder. And I think that it needs to find its way. And until the U.S.-China
economic relationship goes better at a macro level, the World Bank risks becoming the UN Security
Council, where the P-5, the veto-wielding big powers, where it log-aheads,
on great power politics and therefore just froze the UN and couldn't agree on things.
So if you could pick someone now to head the World Bank, unconstrained, whom would you pick and why?
Well, that's another great question. I think you need somebody who would be good at this great power
politics. I think Bob Zellick, when he was head of the World Bank, a few years back was a good
choice because he was an American, but he was also close to China and understood China.
If you had to pick somebody now, I guess you would go down the list of Americans,
who have been ambassador in China or maybe vice versa.
But I think it would take somebody like that as the stature.
I don't have a name that pops into my head.
But a young Bob Zellick is what you want.
A young Bob Zellick, yeah.
Why does classical liberalism seem to be dwindling today?
Admittedly, you may choose to challenge the premise.
But many countries are going in reverse.
Democracy is not more popular.
There seems to be less tolerance of other people's ideas.
What's going on?
What's your most fundamental account of that?
I think there's, you know, there are lots of strands to this debate, and I would just highlight two of them to sort of set up my answer.
I think the fact is that liberal capitalism has declined in popularity enormously since the 1990s when we thought that, you know, it had won.
And that, you know, Fukuyama's statement was blunter than other peoples when he said the, you know, history was ending.
But it wasn't different to most peoples.
And, you know, it really did feel as though other countries were converging around that model.
Now, you know, you poll young Americans and they prefer or they say they prefer what they call socialism.
What they quite mean by that is another debate.
But anyway, liberal capitalism is clearly falling out of favor?
Now is that because capitalism wasn't as great as we thought it was in the 1990s?
Now we're kind of spotting the floors.
Or is it because it was great, but now it's gone wrong?
And I think there's some truth to the second that it was great, but we've allowed some things to go wrong.
In particular, we need more competition to prevent both monopoly and monopsony.
We need to do more about state capture by lobbies.
We need to do more about inequality because it's all very well saying you only care about
equal opportunity, but income and wealth inequality is okay.
But we know that the latter, the income inequality, bleeds into the former because once
you've got really severe inequalities of wealth, people can transfer that advantage to
their kids. And so I think, you know, things that happened in the 2000s, like the virtual
elimination of the estate tax are a really, really bad thing. And we need to undo that because
it's one thing to say we want strong incentives for entrepreneurship. And I'm all for that
because I've just written this book about venture capital and I believe in disruption in the
economy and I believe in risk taking and I believe people should be compensated for taking
those risks. But at the same time, you need to reset to safeguard some equality of opportunity.
and I think things like the estate tax ought to bite, and that's really important.
Last question. What's your favorite movie and why?
Let's see. I think the Grand Budapest Hotel has a kind of zany,
surrealistic charm. It is irresistible. So I'm going to pick that as my favorite movie.
And that is an example of venture capital also, right?
Yes, that's right. Sebastian Malaby, thank you very much.
Again, I'm very happy to recommend to you all, Sebastian's new book,
all of his old books as well,
but the new book is
the power law,
venture capital,
and the making of the new future.
Thank you, Tyler.
That was a lot of fun.
Thanks for listening to Conversations with Tyler.
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