In Good Company with Nicolai Tangen - Exor CEO John Elkann: Family ownership, Football and Ferrari
Episode Date: June 19, 2024In this episode, Nicolai sits down with John Elkann, CEO of Exor, to discuss the history of the holding company, the importance of family ownership, and the focus on long-term value creation. Exor, co...ntrolled by the Agnelli family, has companies like Ferrari, Stellantis, Philips, and the Italian football club Juventus in its portfolio. Altogether, we own shares worth 34 billion Norwegian kroner in the fund. Tune in for an inspiring conversation on leadership, legacy, and the art of building great companies!In Good Company is hosted by Nicolai Tangen, CEO of Norges Bank Investment Management. New episode out every Wednesday.The production team for this episode includes PLAN-B's Pål Huuse and Niklas Figenschau Johansen. Background research was conducted by Kristian Haga.Watch the episode on YouTube: Norges Bank Investment Management - YouTubeWant to learn more about the fund? The fund | Norges Bank Investment Management (nbim.no)Follow Nicolai Tangen on LinkedIn: Nicolai Tangen | LinkedInFollow NBIM on LinkedIn: Norges Bank Investment Management: Administrator for bedriftsside | LinkedInFollow NBIM on Instagram: Explore Norges Bank Investment Management on Instagram Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Hi everyone, I'm really lucky today because we've got John Elken visiting.
John is the CEO of Exor, which is a Dutch holding company with Italian roots.
They own things like Ferrari and through Stellantis, they also have brands like Fiat, Peugeot, Jeep and Maserati.
They are also the largest owner of The Economist Group and they even have a football club called Gioventis, so pretty amazing.
the Economist Group, and they even have a football club called Juventus. So pretty amazing.
Altogether in a fund, we own shares worth 34 billion kroner. A very warm welcome, John.
Thank you for having me, Nikolaj, and thank you for your trust with us and our companies.
Now, how do you look at Exor as a company?
Exor is a company that builds great companies with great people.
And how do you do that?
We try and do that by choosing the companies,
by committing ourselves as owners of these companies and aligning our ownership with the governance of these companies
and the leadership of these companies.
You have some other groups worldwide who is trying to do the same.
You, of course, have Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway.
You have the Wallenbergs in Sweden.
Just how would your philosophy be similar or different?
Well, those are very good examples
and very respected examples by us and admired.
And both have served as role models, as both of them are owners of many companies, engaged,
long-term thinkers, and true believers in people and leadership. How do you decide what to buy?
We end up really trying to reflect on sectors we're interested in.
And most recently, healthcare has really become the area of focus
that we have at Exor.
And we'll come back to many of these companies.
But you are a really long-term thinking group.
You own the football club for 100 years pretty much.
And few companies get really old.
I think you have mentioned that only 45 out of a million companies
survive for more than a century.
So why are you guys still in business?
So why are you guys still in business?
Well, what you need really to think about is to last, you need to renew yourself and make sure that you are as current today as you were
yesterday as you will be tomorrow. And there's that real belief and fortitude that comes with it
in trying to make sure that what you are working on and what you're working for is enduring. How do you make sure you stay current?
You are always reminded in a competitive marketplace
about what is happening by your customers, by your competitors.
And being aware of what your customers want
and how your competitors are actually behaving
is what keeps you most alert. On the
other hand, what is wonderful is also to be able to explore, innovate, invent. And that is a big
part of renewing oneself. Because you are particularly in the industries in which we
operate, and some of our companies have over three centuries of existence
and the most recently one is Philips.
Over that amount of time, it is also based on new things,
new ideas and inventions that become reality.
How important is the family ownership and family backing or commitment?
How important is the family ownership and family backing or commitment?
I think that a committed ownership is very important for an organization.
It provides that stability.
I believe that family-controlled companies and within the public markets are a very good combination between the stability that a family provides
and the long-term thinking but being a public company the stimulus that you have by having
investors john your background is is uh pretty incredible you were put in charge of this group when you were 21 22
i became a director at 21 in 1997 yeah um do you just want to tell us about uh how this all came
about because your uh you know your grandfather was uh you know the legendary agnelli and he kind of picked you just how
how did this come about i i always had a very keen interest in um in in learning and learning about
uh business and i studied engineering uh in Turin when I was 18 years old.
I lived in multiple countries.
And as I started studying, I also started working
and spending more time with my grandfather and his colleagues
and being more and more involved with the company.
And he felt in 1997, as we were approaching the centennial in
1999, that it was important to have on the board a representation of the younger generation. And
he appointed me as the choice of continuing the commitment our family had with the company
at 21 years old, which by the way, was the same age he joined the board of Fiat, which was
his grandfather, my great-great-grandfather, the founder of Fiat that indicated him. And I think that it was partially symbolic to show commitment to a company that was
turning 100 years and in preparation for its next century, but also a great opportunity that he
wanted to give me as he was observing that I had a keen interest in learning.
And his advice, which remains true to this day,
was no one's going to expect nothing from you.
The important thing is for you to learn to listen
and to ask questions.
What did he see in you?
What do you think were the traits that he admired in you? I think that my grandfather
was someone who believed in freedom
and that you can't force people in choices,
but you need to enable them
in making sure that they can work to what their aspirations are. And he generally
felt as also his working environment that I had real interest and real curiosity.
So that is really at that point what he was seeing and commitment.
I was studying and I was also working.
And I was doing that because I truly enjoyed it,
not because it was forced on me.
And the combination of those two were definitely at that point because at 21 years old, you cannot say you've achieved much.
But you are now the biggest employer in Italy, right?
You have 400,000 people working in your group.
How does that feel like, a 21-year-old,
to be given that type of responsibility?
Or to know that you will get the responsibility at some stage?
Responsibility is something that you have. And I've personally always felt responsible,
felt responsible since a very, very early age as we were growing up in many different countries, and we had divorced parents and was very close to my siblings,
and always tried to be responsible in school settings, sports settings,
and taking on responsibility was definitely something that I always was drawn to.
One of the values we have at Exor
is courage and responsibility.
And difficulties are the moments
in which you can show courage
and you can show responsibility for others.
And over the course of the more than 20, getting close to 30 years
that I've been involved as a director of FIAT back in 1997, there have been many moments of time
where that responsibility was acted on. how does a family like that prepare somebody like you when you were 21
i mean how do they how do they prepare you for taking on that responsibility what do they what
kind of things do they expose you to who do they introduce you to my my grandfather he would take
me and also my my brother and my sister, we would be exposed to his life and
to people he would be meeting. What he liked to do is he'd have these phone calls, which were
professional work-related phone calls. And we'd spend time with him as we were speaking, then he'd
take a phone call and he
had that phone call but we couldn't really listen to what the other person was saying so we had to
guess and then somehow we had these conversations after about what actually the other person was
saying what type of people did he speak to he he it would be colleagues of his, would be business partners, would be different persons with whom he was working.
And that definitely was a very formative way.
My family, my grandfather, were not imposing any form of apprenticeship.
imposing any form of apprenticeship. That was more something I ended up wanting,
which is why I started while I was studying.
You mentioned apprenticeships, and you mentioned yourself, people like Sergio Maggioni, who's a phenomenal CEO in Italy.
So who have been the really instrumental people in forming you as a leader and thinker?
I was incredibly fortunate to have many people whom I worked with had wisdom and experiences.
I worked with had wisdom and experiences. My grandfather's colleagues, Gianluigi Cabeti,
with whom he worked for many decades, Sergio, with whom I worked for 14 years, and many, many of my colleagues have been incredible, particularly as I started relatively young.
I was very fortunate to be able to work at a young age
with people who had a lot of experience.
I will also say that I've always been trying to learn from others
and spend time studying what other family-controlled companies did.
And the examples you mentioned of Berkshire Hathaway or Investor have been role models.
And I was very fortunate to spend time with Mr. Buffett in Omaha or with the Wallenberg
family in Stockholm. And by asking and also
really genuinely being interested in trying to see what that could apply to us. And equally also
within the entrepreneurial world or the investment world,
my life has allowed me to be able to interact with many people who have been very helpful in helping us become what we are.
At the same time, you mentioned to me that you kind of want to reset as well, right?
You want to have a clean slate.
You are the new start of a new generation.
How do you think about that reset?
In our case, the reset was imposed, Nikolai.
It was imposed because when I came and got more involved, which was in 2003, 2004.
My grandfather passed away in 2003.
My great uncle passed away in 2004.
At that point, I was in effect representing my family in our business.
And those were times of big trouble.
And when you are going through those circumstances,
you are forced into decisions.
How dire was the situation when you took over?
Incredibly dire.
I mean, if you look between the financial
and operational difficulties
that the company was facing back then,
the likelihood of us not making it were extremely high.
So what did you do?
We were...
Because you talk about the different phases
that you've been through in XO after you took over.
So what's the first thing you do?
You come into that situation, it doesn't look great.
What do you do?
We ended up as a family investing in the company. So we committed capital, which strengthened the
balance sheet and renegotiated with the banks. That allowed us to have headroom. We were fortunate
to appoint Sergio after having appointed four different CEOs before within those two years who did not work. And Sergio gave the company a
complete projection with a turnaround we worked on. And the moment in which we launched the Fiat
500 in 2007, just 50 years after it had launched being the first time, was really a moment of
where we felt the company was actually flourishing.
And that was just when the financial crisis was going to hit. And then we had the financial
crisis. And the financial crisis led us to America where we got involved with Chrysler.
And Chrysler allowed to create Fiat Chrysler
and also to start separating the different companies
of the Fiat group who today are CNH,
which is a global leader in agriculture equipment,
Iveco, one of the leaders in trucks and commercial vehicles,
and Ferrari, which had a very different
destiny in terms of what it did versus a large car company. In the midst of that, we also simplified
the group and we had different holding companies, which we merged into one, which was XOR. And we also started rethinking what we owned
in trying to own less companies,
but more of these companies.
So if you look at the decades,
the first decade was really survival.
The second decade was stability
and really trying to find the the right construct and the third decade
which is the one we're in is the decade where we have been able to grow well an incredible um
an incredible development um since you took over now when um when I look at the group, you have really, really strong companies
with strong brands.
So what kind of ties them together?
What do you think they have in common,
these companies?
Well, Nikolaj,
the defining commonality of these companies is really through our ownership.
And we believe very much that the most effective way in which you can manage a company is a founder-led company.
And that combines the ownership, the governance and the leadership. And we have tried within our companies to make sure that that clarity of purpose is very much felt within all the companies in which we are involved.
Now you put great CEOs in place. How do you define a great CEO?
I've been very lucky to work and be working with great CEOs.
And for me, a great CEO is someone who's really interested in the job and not the title.
And who's really interested in competing in the pure sense of what it means
and really likes not only the company,
but likes the people with whom he works.
A great CEO is also someone who has the ability of thinking long-term,
but also acting now,
being strategic, but yet being operational.
How do you find them?
One of the values that define for me,
one of our values that define for me well,
the leaders with whom we work is ambition and humility.
And in some ways, I feel culture is self-select and the ground in which and the environment in which we operate is one that self-selects uh the the leaders that our companies
have and the opportunity have have really been that when you work with someone very good sergio
was leading sgs which was one of our companies And then the opportunity of taking over Fiat presented itself.
More recently, Garrett was running Iveco
and he's now been appointed to run CNH.
And I feel that having the abilities
of creating also opportunities for talented leaders
that we work with has been one
in which we have made a lot of progress.
Some grow up in the companies, some come from outside.
Benedetto, whom you interviewed,
Nikolai, who's running Ferrari, came from a different industry,
from a different world.
I was acting CEO of Ferrari for a year
and clearly understood that Ferrari needed
not someone from the car industry,
not someone from the luxury industry.
And Benedetto has given Ferrari with his enthusiasm
and also his experience,
something that was very needed for the company
to look at building something new for this century.
You also pay your people very well.
And as you know, we have voted against the pay package at Stellantis,
the car group, because we think the pay package
is not correctly aligned with our interest.
Just how do you look at executive pay?
Is there such a thing as too high a pay package for you?
Is there such a thing as too high a pay package for you?
I believe that if you are a high-performing company,
which is what we aspire to be, and if you compete within a competitive marketplace to win,
what we believe is that we need to align our compensation
with what our objectives are.
And our compensations are variable compensations.
And these compensations are completely aligned with results.
company, everyone who works in the company from the CEO to all the different participants in the company are ones that benefit from it. And if you look at 2023, where results of our
companies have been good, the overall compensation, the variable compensation has been very rewarding for everyone.
So we believe that what is important
is to be clear with your objectives
in the way you compensate, which is what we feel we are.
What we also observe is in some ways,
the better you do, the more compensated you are. What we also observe is in some ways,
the better you do, the more compensated you are. And so there is a lot of debates about the quantums,
but in some ways we believe that if the quantums are high,
as it's a variable pay,
that is a reflection that the results are there.
On the other hand, we also think it's important
that we have an alignment and that alignment is a medium long-term alignment. And we expect
not only the executives, the leadership of our companies to own shares within our companies, but we also believe that if we can have a broader-based ownership,
which is what we have been doing in our companies,
it is really important to have that alignment.
Well, as you know, we are very transparent about these things.
And the important thing for us is that the packages are long-term,
they are equity-based, they are result-based,
and not kind of too stand out from industry standards.
So you may continue to get over against vote on these kind of things,
but we are grown-up people.
But I think, Nikolaj, that's exactly aligned with us.
You are 100% aligned. The difference is we would do more than industry
standards because we feel that if you over perform within your industry you should also
be overcompensated
talking about um uh full speed here, Ferrari.
I can see when you talk about Ferrari,
you smile differently from some of the other companies
we talk about here.
So what's so special with Ferrari?
Ferrari is about passion.
Ferrari is about being able in the free souls that the company has.
Is it a car company?
Ferrari is not a car company.
What is it?
Ferrari is a very special company.
So it's beyond great.
It's beyond a great company.
It's a special company.
And its roots in racing are very strong.
The sports cars that it does are incredible and the opening up to all different areas within lifestyle is is giving a
lot of opportunities to many people to be able to have Ferrari in their lives not necessarily all of them being able to have one of
our cars what does Rory mean to an Italian Ferrari is is pride Ness of what
our country can achieve and also a demonstration that we are a country of incredible abilities,
ingenuity, and there is a competitive spirit also
within the racing world.
We won in Monaco just a week ago with Charles Leclerc,
who is from Monaco, winning the first time in his country and Monaco
is a really important race and those are moments of incredible joy. Now you are launching your
first electric car next year and I tried to get you to show me a picture which you didn't want to
I think you needed to kill me afterwards if you did.
But what is it going to look like?
It's going to look like nothing you had expected to look like.
And for us, the electric car is a white canvas,
which allows us to use new technologies
from the electric and the electronic world
and to really be able to create and design a car
which is very different.
And that is incredibly exciting.
And I think the industry as of now
has not yet explored the realm of possible
that these new technologies can provide us.
Have you driven it yet?
I have tried it, yes.
What does it feel like?
It's incredible. In what way? In all ways. If you like to drive, the frills and the emotions that
you will have on this car are just exceptional. Does it have a sound? It has a sound. It will
have a sound, which that is even more precious to listen
than the pictures I did.
So tell me, you sat inside the car.
What did you experience?
It's a very different experience.
And what we are trying to do, Nicolai,
is to give the opportunity at Ferrari
to really take the most advantage we can.
And the spaces, particularly as you think
about more space than you can obtain,
is going to be special.
can obtain is is going to be is going to be special i can tell you different special and incredibly incredibly fun to to actually drive you have now uh johnny ives uh also working with you
at ferrari who was the famous apple designer what does he he contribute? Johnny Ive and Mark Newsome
have created Love From,
which is a creative collective.
And we are at Ferrari a very creative company
and design is very important.
And there's always dialogues
between design, engineering, and finance.
You always need to make the numbers work, as you well know, Nikolai.
And the contribution of Johnny and Mark has really been incredibly positive.
Because they've taught us other ways of thinking. They've taught us other understanding of not only hardware, but also software.
And as the architects of the Apple Watch, which has been now the most successful example
of what is a traditional mechanical analog product into an electronic and digital one.
All of that has been very, very important as we think
and we frame our actions toward building this car
all together and also working together,
working with them in California, us in Maranello,
the exchange we've had, the discussions, the dreams of what we wanted to do,
but then we can't do. It has been a very invigorating experience and one that gives a
huge amount of optimism and courage to Ferrari as we think at our future that won't only be with our great combustion engines and 12
cylinders our hybrid engines that exist today not only in in the racing with our v6 hybrid
but also in our sports cars and the electric cars that's going to be starting at Sanvio in 2025.
Some of the other car brands you've grouped together in Stellantis,
so that's Peugeot, Fiat, and so on.
What are you working on here?
Stellantis has 14 and now 15 brands with Leap Motors,
which we recently announced,
which is our fully electric car company in China.
We're working very hard.
Stellantis is very committed to be able to be cost competitive
at scale in electric vehicles.
Do you think you'll get there?
I mean, is it possible to beat the Chinese in EV?
I think we're getting there.
And I think it's a very exciting challenge.
And we also believe that with LIMOTORS,
we are also now within the Chinese electric vehicle,
which by the way, is the electric vehicle market.
More than two thirds of the electric vehicle cars
have been sold in China in 2023,
and even more have been built in China.
Can the Europeans compete in battery technology?
I think the Europeans have to compete. And the way in which the car is composed is of
many different components, of which also batteries.
Who is going to do well in Europe on the battery side?
Batteries are an important component and one of the most
expensive one. So the importance is really to try and make sure that as you develop these new
technologies, both in chemistry and actually in assembling these batteries, you're able to find cost competitive solutions. I believe that there's
going to be a very broad offering. Stellantis has ACC, which is a joint venture with Total Energy
and Mercedes, which is building batteries in Europe, in Germany, in France, and in Italy.
And we have strong partnerships with LG and Samsung in North America.
So we think it's important in this stage for an OEM to have access to batteries that they control,
in addition to the ones that they buy.
I feel that building an electric car is more than the battery. And that's where
a lot of the concentration should be going, both in terms of engineering, manufacturing,
and the overall product is one that we're starting to see with great excitement. The Fiat 500 Electric, which is built in Turin,
has been incredibly successful.
Smaller cars like the Citroën Ami,
the Topolino, Fiat Topolino, which is a two-seater,
which you can drive in urban centers, is very successful.
And if we think about the muscle car that we historically
have with our Dodge brand that are also going electric, that was a big demonstration of what
we can do in terms of our range of brands. What do you drive?
of brands. What do you drive? I drive the Fiat 500 electric. Um, that that's a car that I enjoy driving. I also have a bigger car, which is a Jeep, uh, which is a Jeep Grand Wagoneer. And I,
luckily I also have the opportunity with my wife to drive nice cars like Ferraris or Alfa Romeos and Maseratis.
Well, good for you.
Now, staying in the fast lane here, you also have a football club.
So Juventus, you owned for 100 years.
Why do you own a football club?
Juventus was acquired by my great-grandfather.
And he was very passionate about football,
very passionate about his community.
And he felt it was important to,
and he spent a lot of time with Juventus.
And in the 30s, there was an historical moment
where Juventus won five championships in a row with an incredible team, which is when my grandfather was young and he got incredibly passionate by football.
a true passion that we've had,
a responsibility that we've had as a family for more than 100 years,
and a passion that my family shares
with the many families that love Juventus.
Do you go to all the matches?
I go to many matches.
And my children were very fortunate
to grow up in a period
where Juventus won nine championships in a row. So as my
grandfather, they actually ended up growing up with Juventus having extraordinary results.
So they're incredibly passionate. Do you learn anything from running a football club
that you can apply in other parts of the business? A club is is made of people a football club is made
of competing a football club is made of resources that are limited and that you need to try and use
in the best way there are many leadership traits that sports and particularly football club have
sports and particularly football club have. And so as our companies aspire to be high-performing companies,
you definitely learn in high-performing environments
like professional sport is.
John, you are less represented in some of the high-tech industries
and IT, AI, and so on in terms of direct investments,
but I gather you are investing through venture capital systems?
So I studied engineering.
And when I was studying engineering,
internet and mobile were their nascent technologies.
And I actually, among the other things I did during those years,
I also founded a company, a startup back then, which was a portal. So I've
always been very inclined and attuned with innovation and technology. And we actually
are involved directly in investing. We have over 100 companies, particularly within the fields of our interests like mobility and healthcare.
And we also host the largest tech conference in Italy, Italian Tech Week.
And we have now a program which we're very proud of, which is called Vento.
And we are trying to really help with seed money, any Italian entrepreneur or any Italian
company within the early stage space
and have become the largest investor within that area.
And it's very promising.
We also...
So you give them a tiny bit of money and see how it goes.
Yes.
And then what do you do?
And we also have a specific program
which we learned from Y Combinator and others.
Which is Sam Altman's setup.
Which is, yes, and was sam's uh setup and we and we have different
batches of uh to be founders and we we go through that and and it's a very rigorous process and it's
a very good team that is doing that in turin and i was with them just a couple of actually last week and it's very very promising
every every year there there is more courage to really innovate and there's more courage to
want to actually build companies based on on technologies and do you do this because you
want to you want it to be to be great or you do this because you want Italy to be great
or you do it because you think it's good business?
We do our contribution with Vento and Italian Tech Week
because we fundamentally believe that a country needs a future
despite its great past.
And we believe that that's a very effective way
in stimulating that future,
which goes alongside the work we do on philanthropies,
particularly with our foundation on education, where we provide many different programs around
education, starting at schools with maths and physics and around all the different stages within education.
On the other hand, we also think that it's important not only to transform and to renew 19th century companies
within old industries,
but also to start 21st century companies.
And that's something which we are very keen in doing
and working with entrepreneurs
who really believe that our purpose
of building great companies with great people
and our values are very aligned
with what they're trying to do.
You increasingly are also active in the healthcare space
and you bought a big stake in Philips.
How did that come about?
We believe healthcare is a critical industry and we've become much more aware of it after what we
lived through during the pandemic and how frail we are as humans and how healthcare is so important to be able to sustain us in the future.
And particularly if you look at the increasing cost that we have in providing the right healthcare,
we believe that these problems are going to require solutions.
And we've been focusing very much within the enablers.
And we believe that Philips is an extraordinary company
in really addressing those issues.
And Philips is a company that has an incredible history.
So we were very taken by its history.
And also one that is in a phase of really renewing itself
with the focus it has had
over the last decade in healthcare and technology.
And it's a very determined and ambitious company in solving important factors.
So we truly believe that healthcare is not only a place where we do think there is a
big impact one can have, but we also believe that there is going to be a lot of solutions
that ultimately will result in good commercial applications.
Tell me about your interest in sailing.
You've had a monohull with Maserati.
I gather you're now doing a Ferrari project within the sailing area. What is that
going to look like? We announced that we were going to do a Ferrari boat and it was going to be
a boat that would not have an engine. And it was really important for us to do an internal project where we could use our capabilities in aerodynamics and also looking at how we can fly.
Because the new boats that are coming up are all with foils.
And also creating a spirit of competition.
a spirit of competition. Giovanni Soldini, with whom I've worked over the last decade with a monokeel, then a multi-keel, and now with this new project, is someone who has incredible experience.
And the level of internal excitement of trying to build something from new that doesn't exist,
something from new that doesn't exist and that is going to be flying and not powered by engine is also very important in terms of how we as a company at Ferrari are thinking about the future.
When is she going to be launched?
We want to launch it when we will launch the electric car.
All right.
In 20, the actual year will be 2026.
Right. How do you relax do you relax that's a good question i i tend to um i i'm i'm very i'm very fortunate to really love what I do. And I like to spend time with my family. As a family,
we like to travel. We used to do a lot of cultural traveling. And then at some point,
our second son said that we ought to also explore nature. And there was a lot to be learned by
nature, which we have been doing. And one of our most recent trips was
not far from here. We went to visit Iceland, which was an incredible, incredible trip.
And we enjoy sports. We enjoy practicing sports. We enjoy watching sports together as a family.
And personally, sailing has been a big passion of mine. I'm not able to sail as much as I would like,
but in the last decade, I've been able to sail competitively
and doing incredible adventures.
Cape Town to Rio, Los Angeles to Honolulu,
and the most recent one was Hong Kong to Vietnam last year. And those are moments of
where you are in a very small environment as you being a sailor, you know, which creates a very
strong camaraderie and intimacy. And you are in these extraordinary scenes where you live with nature and the wind takes you or there's
no wind and you need to wait and you are within the ocean. And those are really magical moments.
Now, John, what is your advice to young people?
The advice to young people is, first of all, they need to be optimistic about the future
because the future is theirs and they have the responsibility of building that future.
And that's not daunting, it's exciting. On a more practical, I think the advice that my
grandfather gave me remains true, to listen and ask questions and in some ways curiosity and learning
are really what you need to start young at well um john it's been great um hosting you here in
in oslo uh i think italy is very lucky to have you and i think we need many more people like you
in europe generally so all the best of luck with everything. Nikolaj, thank you. Thank you.