Morning Brew Daily - Nvidia Rides AI Boom to Massive Quarter & India's Lunar Landing
Episode Date: August 24, 2023Episode 132: Neal and Toby start Thursday with a deep dive into Nvidia's earnings report where they raked in billions in the second quarter thanks to their focus on artificial intelligence. They also ...discuss India's historic moon landing and why Starbucks is betting your next Pumpkin Spice Latte will be iced. Neal shares his favorite numbers and Bored Ape investors sue NFT companies. Finally, Fyre Festival 2 tickets went on sale and almost immediately sold out. Did you get your hands on one? Listen to Morning Brew Daily Here: https://link.chtbl.com/MBD Watch Morning Brew Daily Here: https://www.youtube.com/@MorningBrewDailyShow Listen to Money with Katie Here: https://chartable.com/podcasts/the-money-with-katie-show Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
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Good morning brew daily show.
I'm Neil Fryman.
And I'm Toby Howell.
On today's pod, India successfully landed on the moon's south pole, but how they did it might be even more impressive.
And a new study found the most socioeconomically diverse places in the U.S.
Then, Nvidia reported earnings yesterday.
And all I'll say is it better buy AI a fruit basket.
Plus, whether you like it or not, the pumpkin spice latte is back with Lerner.
no regard for what temperature it is outside. It's Thursday, August 24th. Let's ride. Toby, this podcast
has grown a lot in the past few weeks and months, so I just wanted to take a beat to welcome
all of our new-ish listeners. We are super glad you're starting your mornings with us. Just to give a
high-level view of what's going to go on, on this podcast, Toby and I run through the biggest news
stories in the business world in about 25 minutes. Sometimes we go a little bit longer and just try to
add context and a few freezing cold takes while we're at it. Plus, randomly, a lot of track and
field news because Toby's into that. The 25-minute number is solely dependent on what messy did last
night, what track and field news came out, and then what socioeconomic impact Taylor Swift had on her
latest concert. So, yeah, that 25-minute number flexes up and down for sure. But yes, so great
to have all the people tuning in. And it's just been amazing to see how this pot is growing.
Feels like we have our own little family.
We have a daily family.
Yeah.
So we appreciate each and every one of you.
But let's jump into our top of the show today.
Neil, we got Nvidia earnings yesterday.
And I won't beat around the bush.
They were better than the feeling of taking your ski boots off after a long day on the slopes.
Yes, that good.
13.5 billion in revenue for the second quarter, a record high.
Data Center revenue, which includes their AI business, was $10.3 billion, more than double
since last quarter. And even though its gaming unit is still down more than a billion from its
pandemic highs, it was still up 22% year over year, added all together, and it made $6.2 billion in
profit up, and this number is crazy, 843% compared to last year. It was a huge quarter driven
largely by its data center business, which includes the AI chips. It makes for the who's who
of big tech, like Amazon Alphabet and Meta. I really feel like we're running out of crazy things to say
about Nvidia at this point.
But if I could point to one thing that stood out to me about this quarter,
it's its view of the future.
It's forecasting revenue of $16 billion next quarter powered by,
you guessed it, it's data center business.
Neil, I went through a million metaphors when I was writing in this intro,
but I truly don't know what to say about Nvidia.
It's over a trillion dollars at this point and still grown.
It's a massive company.
And it's showing that the AI hype is not just hype.
It's real because Nvidia sells the one thing.
that all AI companies need, which are these graphics processing units, they have an absolute
stranglehold on the market. They own 70% of this market share. And whenever any company needs
to train chat GPT or any chat GPT competitor, like a large language model, or they need
facial recognition software, anything that AI does, you literally, the first thing you call
is Navidia and saying, hey, can I get some of these GPUs that you make? Because these
things power everything that we need. So, invidia's success is.
a really good sign that the AI hype is real and that companies are actually spending money on it.
Yeah, it truly is. I mean, and I always like to compare Nvidia to Prime Kelly Slater,
one of the best servers of our generation because they do, they ride the waves of each trend so well.
I mean, the crypto wave, they had the GPUs that did process all the crypto mining output that you needed.
The Metaverse Wave, they made high quality graphical chips, which was their bread and butter for a long time.
And then AI, we have the chips that power these extremely hungry data models.
So they truly do just bob and weave and ride the waves of every time you see something trending on Twitter, chances are, NVIDIA is profiting off that.
And the CEO, Jensen Huang, who wears this leather jacket, that's his signature style, kind of like Steve Jobs with the black turtleneck.
He's been talking about AI for more than a decade.
This is not new.
He's been betting everything on AI for a long time.
and it's finally coming to fruition.
But it's so fascinating reading about Navidia's products.
It's GPUs and how much better they are than anybody else.
Like I said earlier, like the first thing you do is call it Navidia to get their products
because AI startups will wait 18 months to buy a Navidia system when they could just buy
another one from another startup.
And they're like, no, I need Nvidia.
I need to wait for this one.
And so they just kind of hold the keys to the entire AI universe.
I know.
Their competitors are trying to get on par with them.
You have AMD, Intel, but they just aren't doing great right now.
And their CEOs, it's always so interesting on their earnings call where they have to say that they're building towards AI, but they also try to downplay it because clearly they're not at the same level as Nvidia.
So it is always, I always enjoy seeing the quotes that come out.
It was like, yeah, AI is important, but we're also doing all this other great stuff because they're just leaps and bounds behind in video right now.
So what a huge company.
amazing. Yeah, I mean, if we just want to bookmark it by talking about its stock price,
the stock is more than tripled already this year. It's already the best performing stock in the
S&P 500. It was up another 8% in after hours trading. Close at another record high, and it's
sitting at a $1.16 trillion market cap. A lot of stuff happened yesterday in the world from
progosion to the debate, but NVIDIA's stock was the number four thing trending on Google.
So it's hit the mainstream, this tech giant. It's also really good news for the entire
stock market because that's all the tech companies have risen a lot this year and they've been
kind of propped up on the AI hype of things and Nvidia showing it's real. So that could that could
really propel the stock market going forward. It's kind of hit a rough patch this summer.
All right. Let's move on to our next story. After Russia crashed its spacecraft trying to land on the
South Pole of the Moon on Sunday, which by the way, no one has done before, all eyes turned to India,
which was trying to do the same thing yesterday. And mission accomplished. India softly
landed. It's Chandrayon 3 spacecraft on the dark side of the moon yesterday. And for the first time ever,
I didn't find it cringe when people clapped after a plane landed because this is a huge deal for India.
It is a sign its small but growing space sector can compete with the big boys because after all,
just three other countries have landed on the moon before and none on the South Pole. Plus,
the most impressive thing about this mission was the low cost. As of 2020, the mission had a budget of just
$74 million.
And to put that in perspective, that's less than half of the money it took Christopher Nolan
to make interstellar.
So India not only landed on the moon, but showed it could do it on a Kirkland-level budget.
The thing that stands out to me is that this is not the first time India has done something
like this, because in 2014, it landed a rover on Mars for a similar budget, $73 million.
And this is also really funny.
The orbiter was designed for a lifespan of six months.
It lasted for about eight years.
So not only is India bawling on a budget, reaching these places that you wouldn't think
they'd be able to, but they're also executing.
Like, they're not just getting to the service of the moon.
They're landing on it.
They're not just getting to Mars.
They're landing on it.
So it truly is an inspiring thing to see someone on a shoestring budget accomplish things
that these major superpowers have been struggling to accomplish.
Yeah.
And compared to NASA, I mean, NASA's budget was $25 billion last year, and India's space programs
budget was 1.6 billion. Obviously the NASA guy is like, okay, but like we're doing a lot more,
you know, we're not doing kind of equivalent things. But it really is important for the space
industry more broadly to get expenses down because it's so costly, obviously, to go to space.
And the more you can bring costs down, the more activity you can do, obviously. So the whole
industry, I mean, Elon Musk has spearheaded this with his reusable rockets for SpaceX.
But if you can bring costs down from astronaut from where they were, the space shuttle,
each time the space shuttle went to orbit,
it was $1.6 billion.
And those costs have come down dramatically,
and India is showing that you can do space on a budget
which is going to unlock a lot of this economy.
Although I do love the director of the Indian Space Research Organization.
His quotes were so cheeky yesterday,
where he was saying,
everyone's like,
how did you pull this off on such a cheap budget?
And he says,
I won't disclose such secrets.
We don't want everyone else to become so cost-effective,
kind of tongue-in-cheekly.
And then he said,
these are very cost-effective missions.
No one in the world,
can do it like we do. So I'm totally for him kind of, because he did something amazing.
But what do you, okay, the real reason that it's so cheap is because labor doesn't cost as much
there. It is a different, yeah, different kind of playing field. We're paying, you know,
engineers three, four, five hundred thousand dollars. And just from, you know, just based on differences
in our economies, they're not getting paid as much over there. I was also very happy to see,
though, how big of a deal this was for India.
Over 8 million people at one point were tuning into their live stream.
You saw the images of people clapping and just celebrating when this happened.
So it is always a great moment of national pride whenever something like this happens in the space rate.
This is the year of India.
They become the most populous country in the world.
They get their first Apple store.
They land a spacecraft on the dark side of the moon.
First Apple store land a spacecraft.
Very similar.
But this is interesting.
It's not necessarily a guarantee.
to get you would think that, okay, it's 2023.
We can land something on the moon, right?
We can do it. We did in 1969
with basically no technology.
But in the past decade, we're only three for eight
on landing on the moon. We have a 375 batting average,
which would be good for the MLB.
The Yankees would take that every day.
But we're not that good.
And then we're also 23 for 50 overall
since moon landings began.
Gravity 27, Earth 23.
There you go.
Okay, Neil, let's move on to our next.
next story that's all about Starbucks and his disrespect for the rhythms of the season.
A hundred degrees out still, Starbucks could not care less. To them, it's fall. And fall means
pumpkin spice lattes, baby. Starting today, Starbucks's seasonal fall menu is officially live and
it's bringing back the iconic PSL latte or PSL for the 20th year in a row. Now, Neil, I know
we're not ready for summer to end and for it to be dark out when we finish this podcast every day.
Starbucks has its finger on the heightened pulse of America and has decided that it wants
pumpkin now.
Two things that sit out about its fall menu to me.
One, three out of the five drinks on it are iced.
And then two, its research and development team has definitely been watching TikTok because
one of the menu items, the iced pumpkin cream chai tea latte, wow, that's a mouthful,
is a copycat of a popular and viral TikTok order.
So, Neil, I kind of dig this strategy from Starbucks, even though they rolled it out six days
earlier this year than last year, and I don't want summer to end, but the people want what the people
want? Well, it's, what is it? A hundred degrees in the Midwest. They're suffering the worst heat dome
of the summer, so maybe this is a smart strategy. But it is really interesting to talk about the rise
of ice drinks and the popularity of ice drinks, because this was not a thing. Five years ago,
half of whatever Starbucks sold was ice drinks, and now it's 75%. So I don't know what behavioral
change is going on in the world that, or in the United States, at least.
least that means that people are favoring ice drinks, but obviously they are. So yeah, three
to five of their fall drinks are ice. Maybe it's a climate change thing. Yeah, it's also just more
cost effective for Starbucks food. If 75% of the drink is ice, so I think that might have something
to do with it. But also, we got to talk just about pumpkin spice and how popular it is. Pumpkin
size product sales have increased about 47% in the last five years. A quick Amazon search for pumpkin
spice returns more than 138,000 items. So it truly is crazy how much pumpkin spice has taken over the
world. And Neil, we read about kind of like the psychological phenomenon behind this. So tell the people
why pumpkin spice might be so popular. There's this great article in The Guardian that was kind of a
meditation on why we're so obsessed with pumpkin spice, which it seems we are. And it's, they,
compared pumpkin spice to pumpkin pie, not pumpkin. So pumpkin pie has all of the spice mix. And that's
why pumpkin spice is so popular in just North America. It's because the United States and Canada
are the only countries that eat pumpkin pie. Right. So when we eat pumpkin spice, we're thinking of
pumpkin pie, which reminds us of fall. Yeah, it's also too, like no one's really tried pumpkin
before. It's kind of like this blank slate of people's minds. And so these marketing, the forces
that be were able to create a spice blend that basically you just associate with all the good
parts of fall, Taylor Swift albums, cozy nights by the fire, and not actually with pumpkin.
So they literally took this food item that was a blank slate in people's minds and imprinted
upon them what they wanted them to feel.
So I always think that the psychological bit behind pumpkin spice and the fact that there's scarcity,
like it only is sold and it's only popular in the fall months.
And the rest of the year it kind of goes into hibernation.
So I think that plays a big part of it as well.
Okay, Neil, before we jump into the next part of our show,
we're going to take a quick break.
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Welcome back to Neal's numbers, our Thursday segment where I share three stats from the week's news that will make you smarter than a fifth grader.
To kick off, my first number, I want to make a controversial but factual statement.
While America is a melting pot, each ingredient rarely interacts with the others.
Rich people hang out at their golf courses and lake homes and rarely rubbed shoulders with,
lower-income people on a daily basis. People just live in their bubbles. But there is one type of
place where all of America's flavors meld together to form a beautiful, harmonious broth. The good
old chain restaurant. A new study found that affordable chain restaurants like Olive Garden and
Applebee's were the places where high-income and low-income people are most likely to encounter
one another. These chain restaurants are the most socioeconomically diverse places in the country,
according to the researchers. And even more surprisingly, they enable way more cross-class interaction
than civic spaces like churches, parks, and schools, which also isolate people by class in their own way.
And the study found that dollar stores and pharmacy chains like CVS only deepen isolation.
So maybe it's time to recognize half-priced apps as the glue holding our country together.
I think part of this study comes down to the fact that these places are so predictable.
you know what you're going to get, no matter where you're coming from.
You could be in Iowa or you could be in Florida.
If you go into an Olive Garden, you know you're going to get the bread six.
You know you're going to get the soup or the salad.
And I just think that that sort of predictability makes it a very accessible space
from people across the income spectrum.
My first thought also, when it comes to Olive Garden or Applebee's or these chain
restaurants, comes down to like sports teams and sports tournaments because everyone has a
core memory of being at a tournament and you go, all right, where are we going to
eat and it's always olive garden, it's always
apple bees. And I do feel like
youth sports is another big socioeconomic melting pot as well
where you have people from all sorts of the income
spectrum. So when I read
this study, first thought was
soccer tournaments and just seeing all the other
teams there as well. But that might just be
a me thing as well. Yeah. Well, chain restaurants are good. I mean,
they have decent food, but more often, they're just like,
it's comfort. What's your favorite chain restaurant? Well, okay, my
favorite menu item at a chain restaurant is the bread six from Olive Garden because I unironically
think they're some of the best breadsticks I've ever had. And I've been to Italy. I've been,
I've been all over the world. But I would go back to the breadsticks 10 times out of 10.
All right. For my second number, I want to let everyone know that you won't have to fight for the last
pod for the office curing machine today because there might not be anyone at work. Today, August 24th,
is the day that American workers most often call out sick, according to a survey by HR firm Flamingo.
For whatever reason, maybe it's because it's late summer, maybe people are still hungover from
my birthday party, today is the nation's sickest day. And can anyone guess what the second most
popular day to call out sick is? It's February 13th, which lines up curiously with the day after the
Super Bowl. Then the list goes October 15th, October 25th, December 15th. I don't really know. It seems
pretty random. Yeah, I have no idea what's going on here. August 24th. All I know is that we should
send this data to the U.S. government and make these days national holidays. Make August 24th
a national holiday because clearly people want it off. Definitely make the day after the Super Bowl
the national holiday because that's just ridiculous asking people to show up to work after a Sunday
Super Bowl. Yeah, totally ridiculous to ask people to show up to work after a sports.
Come on. It is a national pastime. Make it a national. It is a national.
holiday. I know I'm going to get support on that. There's no going to be fighting for like,
no, I got to show up to work on that Monday. Overall, February is the sickest month, though, which
checks out because it's winter and there's just more more stuff going around. Okay, my final number
is a perplexing return to office statistic. There's one city in the U.S. that has really low
office occupancy rates, the worst in the country next to San Jose. While Dallas and Austin, Texas
have up to 65 percent of workers showing up to offices, and New York has a rate of
45%. Philadelphia is hovering around 40%. Now that is a bit weird. Why would Philadelphia,
of all places, be a remote work hub? Why would New York or Boston or any other large East Coast
city have more people going to the office? One theory is that the data is wrong. Other measures
have Philly's return to work rates as much higher. And the national standard run by Castle Systems
doesn't track Comcast, which is one of the largest private sector employers in Philly.
another theory, Philadelphia has a wage tax, unlike many other major cities.
So our Philly area listeners probably know all too well that their income in the city is taxed at nearly 4%.
So this could also be keeping workers away.
But it still remains a bit of a mystery why Philly, of all places, can't get people back to work.
I think this is just a marketing campaign for its suburbs.
Because saying that not a lot of people are going into the office might mean that the burbs are awesome around Philly
and that people are just living there and maybe commuting in or not commuting in, working from home.
So I would turn this into a positive and say, Philadelphia, where our suburbs are so nice that you don't even want to go into the city.
I mean, my whole family's from the suburbs.
Exactly.
They are very nice.
And more importantly for this discussion, they have a lot of large employers out there up near King of Prussia.
And I could go on and on.
But anyway, yes, the suburbs of Philly have a lot of people.
They are nice.
They have their own little downtowns.
and they also have large office parks with huge corporations out there.
But downtown Philly is so nice.
Oh, my God, Redding Terminal Bar Hopping on the Sanchez.
Here he goes.
So I hope downtown Philly.
We'll see what happens.
They're supposed to be the big Sixers development.
They're supposed to move the arena up to 13th Street down there.
So, like, right on Market Street.
I love when it be.
I love when Neil starts waxing poetic about some of his city centers.
But I will tell you, we're going to be talking about the Sixers Arena
because it is a very contentious debate coming up about whether to put this
this arena downtown. So I'm sure that's going to be big business news coming up.
Put it down. Okay, Neil, let's move on. Our next story is about NFTs, which is weird to say in the year
23, but they are in the news again for all the wrong reasons. Board Ape Yacht Club, which is one of
the more famous and expensive NFT collections, saw the price of its cheapest ape, aka its floor price
fall 18% yesterday after news broke that the auction house Sotheby's is being named in a class
auction lawsuit against board ape creator Yuga Labs. The gist of this lawsuit claims that Suthabees,
as well as a who's who of A-lissers, like Pairs Hilton, Justin Bieber, and even Adidas,
misleadingly promoted the project and conspired with Yuga Labs to artificially inflate the prices
of board apes in order to generate more hype around the brand. Neal, the Sotheby's angle in
particular is super interesting to me because they held an auction for a collection of a hundred
board apes last year that eventually sold for $24 million, which is $240,000 an ape.
Right now, the floor price is sitting around $38,000, so a big fall from grace.
Neil, the board apes has long been upheld as the standard for the NFT world.
So is this a sign that the NFT era is finally fully winding down?
Yes, I think so.
I think we can all agree that NFTs were a low-interest rate.
I'm at home doing absolutely nothing phenomenon.
So I think NFTs will stick around for in a very niche community because a lot of weird stuff and different collectible communities are around in that sense.
But I don't think they will ever hit mainstream like they were during the pandemic.
I just it doesn't a lot of people didn't understand the value of them to begin with.
Actually, most people did not.
So they were just doing it in terms of like trying to make money.
So now that there is now that all the money has kind of been washed out of the system.
and people are just kind of doing it because they love the industry and they love the idea of it,
I think it's just going to be extremely small part of the broader collectibles ecosystem.
Yeah, and if you zoom out to the broader ecosystem, everyone is kind of jumping ship right now.
Sega and Disney abandoned their Web3 plans earlier this year, and META is also winding down its NFT efforts.
So all the blue chip, big companies that we are seeing jump into the space are now jumping out of the space, a lot quieter.
I should add, like you don't hear about these announcement.
And then also another big, if we want to go a little more inside baseball into the
NFT industry, OpenC, which is one of the biggest exchanges for NFTs out there, they are
getting rid of royalty fees, which was once like the core tenant of the NFT culture.
And royalty fees are every time a piece of collectible internet art changes hands, the original
artist would get part of that fee.
and that was supposed to be like this new wave of how value is accrued by the artist.
Every time a secondary sales made, they still get a piece of it.
And that was what they hung their hat on.
But now it's like a race to the bottom on NFT exchanges.
And anytime someone lowers fees, someone else has to react.
So OpenC is kind of going back on really what the core of NFT ecosystem was about.
So a lot of people are mad.
And it just feels a little bit like an end of an era, getting rid of royalty fees.
All right, moving from one potential grip to another.
Billy McFarland is back.
The fraudster who created Fire Festival,
that influencer-hyped music festival down in the Bahamas,
that turned out to be a total scam,
is out of prison, and he's bursting with new ideas to rehabilitate his career.
On Sunday, McFarland announced FireFest 2,
the sequel that no one wanted.
Actually, people might want it.
Tickets for FireFest 2 went on sale for $4.99 this week,
and on Tuesday, McFarland announced that they had sold all of them out,
a hundred of them. More tickets will be released soon between $800 and $8,000, if anyone
listening to this is interested in going. In true Billy McFarlane fashion, we know very little detail,
except that it's going to be in the Caribbean again, but it won't be in the Bahamas. The tourism
minister there said, fool me twice, shame on me, and declared there's no way his country is approving
another fire fest. Toby, are you going to the second edition? Okay, this might be a hot take,
but I'm kind of bullish on Fire Festival too
because if he's selling tickets with no lineup of artists,
no exact date and no location,
that means there's definitely some demand there.
Again, it was only 100 tickets and it sold out,
didn't sell out in an hour,
it sold out over the course of a day.
But if you can convince enough 100 people
to fork over $500 with literally no details again,
that means there's interest.
There's going to be demand,
and I think he'll pull it off.
What percentage of people are going ironically, though, or that actually want to go to a music festival?
Because we talked about this in the office yesterday, and a lot of people were like, yeah, I would go, but like just to see it, you know, just to say I was there.
So I think there is some element of that.
Yeah, definitely, but it's more not ironically because you have to pay money, so the joke would be on you if you're going ironically.
But I think curiosity is definitely playing a huge, a huge factor in this.
Because also, what if he does pull it off?
Because, again, he went to jail last time,
so you would think that he might have learned from his mistakes.
And he does owe his debtors $26 million.
So he has to make money off this thing.
So I don't know.
I think Billy might pull it off this time.
If not, we are going to get a heck of a Netflix documentary.
So either way, it's a win-win.
And did you know that he went to solitary confinement for participating in a podcast?
And he also he wrote his 50-page plan for Fire Festival 2 in jail, which is again, probably what I would do if I ever went to jail for a podcast, is just pen to paper, write a 50-page manifesto on how I'm going to do it better the second time around.
Okay, that is our show for today.
Hope you all have a great Thursday.
Thanks to the hundreds of you who wrote in and let us know you're interested in the dumb money screening in September.
We will definitely be sharing more details with you, including how to get tickets soon.
so just hang tight. Very excited for our first live event. If you want to get in touch with us
about that or write about anything else we discuss on this podcast, our email is Morning Brew Daily
at Morningbrew.com, and we love to hear from you. Let's roll the credits. Emily Milliron is our
editor and producer. Evan Frolov and Raymond Lou are associate producers. Yuchinawa Ogu is our
technical director. Billy Minino is on audio, hair and makeup called out sick today. How original.
Devin Emery is our chief content officer and our show is a production of Morning Brew.
Great, show today, Neil. Let's run it back tomorrow.
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