Motley Fool Money - Is the “Santa Rally” Cancelled This Year?
Episode Date: November 14, 2025The stock market has slumped the first two weeks of November as investors worry about layoffs, consumer spending, and returns of the AI buildout. We discuss what we’re looking at and how we would in...vest if the market drops 30%. Plus, we discuss the bond market’s current view of risk, the state of streaming, and stocks on our radar. Travis Hoium, Emily Flippen, and Jon Quast discuss: - Is the top in for 2025? - What bonds are telling us - The future of streaming - Calls and puts - Stocks on our radar Companies discussed: Oracle (ORCL), Axon (AXON), Zillow (Z), Spotify (SPOT), Celsius (CELH), Monster (MNST), Dollar General (DG), Unity (U), Roku (ROKU), Airbnb (ABNB), Disney (DIS), Netflix (NFLX). Host: Travis Hoium Guests: Emily Flippen, Jon Quast Engineer: Dan Boyd Disclosure: Advertisements are sponsored content and provided for informational purposes only. The Motley Fool and its affiliates (collectively, “TMF”) do not endorse, recommend, or verify the accuracy or completeness of the statements made within advertisements. TMF is not involved in the offer, sale, or solicitation of any securities advertised herein and makes no representations regarding the suitability, or risks associated with any investment opportunity presented. Investors should conduct their own due diligence and consult with legal, tax, and financial advisors before making any investment decisions. TMF assumes no responsibility for any losses or damages arising from this advertisement. We’re committed to transparency: All personal opinions in advertisements from Fools are their own. The product advertised in this episode was loaned to TMF and was returned after a test period or the product advertised in this episode was purchased by TMF. Advertiser has paid for the sponsorship of this episode. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Stocks are falling, but is this an opportunity or are we going lower?
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I'm Travis Hoyam, joined by John Quast and Emily Flippin.
There's a lot going in the market on in the market right now.
The stock market, S&P 500, down about 6% since it's high in late October.
So I want to kind of get a pulse on what is going on and ask the big question.
is the top for 2025 already behind us?
Look, there's a lot of data coming in.
We've been talking about artificial intelligence all year, tariffs,
but restaurants are weak.
Consumer spending is struggling.
We're hearing more and more about layoffs.
Housing isn't necessarily affordable.
Emily, have we seen the top for 2025?
Is there not going to be this Santa rally that we talk about?
How should investors be thinking about this moment right now?
Well, for so many investors,
it probably feels like reality is catching up
to the market because there's been this difference between how investors and consumers have
been feeling versus what the market has been experiencing. So it does feel like, to me, with so few
trading days left in the year, that it's unlikely that the market could go higher from here,
given all the headwinds that you just mentioned. One of the company that I follow pretty
closely is a business called Paycom. They manage payroll processing. And they reported earnings earlier this
week. But one of the things that Paycom noted is obviously as a paywall processing company,
they depend pretty heavily on how many times companies are processing their payroll. So if companies
are going through stuff like layoffs, that has a tangible impact on their business, and they're seeing
that firsthand as companies go through these kind of late layoffs into this part of the year, we talked
about it last week on the show, but employers typically don't like to lay people off this late into
the year because it's a bad look to do so during the holidays. But this year tends to be or seems to be the
exception, and even PayCon themselves are going through the process of laying people off. And it seems
like AI is this broad excuse for why people are doing that. It's kind of like, oh, well, we're
automating. But in reality, I have to wonder how much of that is actually true. If there already
wasn't a lot of influx of hiring coming out of the pandemic, and if companies aren't already looking to
just kind of cut cost right now, it seems like given the economic environment we're living in,
It makes a lot of sense that layoffs are happening right now.
We probably haven't seen the worst of tariffs.
Inflation is still a big question mark.
And heading into what seems to be a potentially weak holiday season,
I'm not surprised at all that the market is finally down.
It's interesting you mentioned tariffs.
One of the comments that I continue to see in earnings calls is this was the first quarter
that we really saw the full impact of tariffs.
Emily, I just want to get your quick thoughts on it.
This reminds me of the moment you change CEOs.
So you fire the old CEO and the new CEO comes in.
And they just do all of the bad things that the old CEO wanted to do.
But maybe the holidays were coming up or whatever.
And it kind of gives an excuse to sort of clean the slate.
Is that maybe a way to think about this is that AI is kind of an excuse to say,
you know what?
We really wanted to cut our workforce by 10%.
But we didn't have a great excuse.
And now we can kind of blame AI.
Yeah.
these quarters of like everything and the kitchen sink. Let's just throw all the bad news off at once.
But the problem is that I don't feel like the bad news is all encompassed in these quarters.
I actually feel like it's more this trickle, true thing where I'm getting a little bit of the bad news.
And if it was a case where we're blaming AI and we're getting it all done in the third quarter and then fourth quarter is going to shape up to be a lot better, I would agree, Travis.
But I actually a little bit worried that we're going to see a continuation of this, not just in the third quarter results that we've for the most part already seen.
but through the fourth quarter and maybe into the first quarter of next year as well.
Yeah, Lou's been calling this a boiling frog economy for months. John, do you think that we've
kind of hit the top, the peak of optimism in the market at least? You know, we're kind of through
the third quarter. We're not going to get a ton of data and we may not get much economic data
from the government over the next few weeks. But does that mean that we're going to kind of be on a
risk off trade for the rest of the year? Yes, Travis. I think that's probable. I think
we have probably already seen the top for 2025. But let me preface that. I'm talking about for the
market, I think that individual companies could still see new highs before the end of the year.
But then again, we're only talking about roughly 30 trading days left in this year. And I trust
my predictions for 30 days as much as I trust a coin flip. I mean, really anything can happen over the
short term, right? But I would say perhaps we have already seen the high for 2025, just because of something
that Emily, you and I were talking on the show last week. There's the Fear and Green Index out
there, and it's been pegged on fear or extreme fear now for over a month. Even though we've had a
great year for stocks, and relatively speaking, stocks are close to all-time highs. It seems like
investors are looking for reasons to be afraid, and it can kind of become this self-fulfilling
prophecy. You start looking for everything to worry about, and there are some things out there
to be concerned about. And so then it starts to really stoke those fears. And perhaps we have already
seen the high for that reason. John, do you worry that it's not only a self-fulfilling prophecy
for the market, but also for companies. I remember in 2007, 2008, I was sitting in a meeting
that the CEO of 3M was leading, and they were just starting to announce layoffs. And he just basically
said, I don't know how bad this is going to get. So I'm going to kind of cut as much as I can. It
It almost seems like, you know, investors have been doing that at least over the past couple of weeks.
We don't want to panic over a few percentage point move.
But if this does become a snowball, not only in the markets, but also for companies,
that's where things could get kind of tough pretty quickly.
Yeah, there is a great section of author Morgan Housel's book, The Psychology of Money.
He talks about if an alien was to come down to Earth and look at the economy right before the Great
Recession and then come down again during the Great Recession, what would that,
alien actually see that was different with the economy. So many things were actually pretty much the
same, but what had changed was our feelings about those things. And that does happen in business,
where you are not feeling great about what you're seeing. And so then you start adjusting your
business accordingly. I think that that is very possible. All right, Emily, I want to start with you
and sort of how investors should be acting today. What's the actionable insight? Let's say that we have
hit a top for 2025. And we actually go through a big drop.
The market falls 30%. We hit almost 20% in April. Let's say we fall a total of 30% from the high.
How are you preparing for that possibility? Are you raising cash? Are you shorting anything?
Are you planning to add stocks? Are you in panic mode? What is your mindset going into this moment?
Yeah, that's a great question. And let me start off by saying, I acknowledge that my first thoughts when talking to you earlier, Travis, was, of course, I don't think there's going to be a rally towards the back.
half of the year. But I want to also acknowledge there could be. And that's part of the reason why my
answer to your question is I'm not actually doing anything differently. And that's part of the reason
why, regardless of what my personal feelings may be about the short-term implications for the market,
the reality is that nobody knows how the market is going to perform in the short term. If you had asked
me the same question at this point last year, I would have said the market's gotten away from
the fundamentals. I think the next year is probably going to be a week year of performance.
And if I had changed my investing strategy as a result, I would have potentially missed out on an
incredible year of market gains, at least as the S&P 500 has performed. So I don't mean to sound
dismissive in my response. In fact, it's actually the opposite, but I'm actually not doing
anything differently. The truth is that even if we do experience a drop of, say, 30% over the
course of the next month, that doesn't actually change anything for me or long-term investors.
I don't have any money in the market that I'll need for the next three to five years.
I don't personally recommend that anybody has any money in the market that they need for the
next three to five years.
So if the market drops in the short term, I just continue to do what I always do,
which is I get a nice steady paycheck.
I'm very fortunate in that regard.
I continue to buy as I get money.
And that means that I will buy as the market drops, which is great.
But I will also buy as the market has increased, as I have over the course of the past few
years.
So I buy on the way down the same way I buy on the way up.
John, how are you thinking about a potential pullback in the market?
The thing about personal finance is it's personal.
And for personal reasons, I don't have a ton of new money to be putting into the market right now on, say, a monthly basis.
I think that is the best approach to always be able to continue to put money into the market, whether the market is up or down.
I think that the data bears that out.
In my personal situation, my portfolio is pretty high in cash right now, relatively speaking, about 17%
cash. And I'm not saying that that is a strategy for every investor out there. Again, it's personal.
But I think that one of the, there's a psychological benefit that can come from having some cash
in a portfolio. And especially when the market is going down, you know, when the market is going
down, there are often some really attractive, compelling bargains out there if you're taking
that long-term mindset. And it's really exciting to be able to invest.
in high-quality businesses trading at a discount. If you don't have cash in the portfolio and you don't
have new money to be adding to the market, it's psychologically difficult to sell perhaps one
stock that's down to buy something that's even better. Right? So just for me, having that cash
already there, I can sit tight with the investments that I have, not panic, but I also have cash
available to take advantage of the bargains that I'm seeing out there. And that really makes me feel
good about the bear market rather than panicking about all my stocks being down. Yeah, being able to
keep your head in down markets, I think is something that we talk about a lot at the Motley Fool.
But it's so key. If you have been through a big pullback, 2001, 2002, 2007, 2008, that's really
the hardest thing to do is be just as rational at the bottom as you think you're being.
at the top. When we come back, we're going to take a look at bonds, something we don't talk a lot
about, but maybe an important thing to bring up right now. You're listening to Motley Full Money.
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Welcome back to Motley full money.
Let's be honest, the bond market is boring, but the bond market is also 10 times the size
of the equity market.
And investors think about risk when they look at bonds, not just upside.
or something we talk about a lot.
One of the things that caught my eye this week is that Oracle's two-month-old, 30-year bonds,
fell 8%.
Now, that doesn't necessarily sound like a lot if you're a stock investor,
but if you're a bond investor, that is a huge, huge move.
The yield increased two percentage points to 6.7%.
This is something that has been getting a little bit more attention
is that maybe this AI trade that is now being more fueled by debt
is maybe a little bit riskier than we thought it was a few months ago.
So, Emily, is this something, how should we take note of this?
I guess maybe is the right way to look at this?
Is Oracle a one-off or are we sort of seeing the bond market flash some warning signs
that there's more risk out there than we thought?
Yeah, maybe you guys can tell me if I'm being too blasé about this.
But my first interpretation is that this has a lot more to do with Oracle in particular than
it does with the bond market.
And this could have broader effects on the tolerance for lenders and AI ambition.
But, look, Oracle is laying a ton of debt to fund this AI ambition.
And it maybe doesn't have the best track record when it comes with capital allocation
in the past.
So I think lenders are just catching on to the level of risk associated with the deals
and with Oracle in particular.
I mean, we're talking about tens of billions and new bonds and project finance loans
with Oracle.
So, I mean, the good thing about being on the equity side of Oracle is that you have
theoretically, all of the upside of those investments actually pay out.
And yes, of course, all the downside if they don't.
but bond investors really only get that principle and interest back.
So in my opinion, it makes sense that they're demanding just a little bit more of a premium
for taking on that additional risk.
John, one of the things that Oracle could be telling us is that this AI trade,
which extends to companies like CoreWeave, Nebius, which has been,
some of these have actually dropped pretty significantly.
I think CoreWeave is down 50% from its peak.
But if investors on the debt side are demanding more,
that could make it a little bit harder to buy those Invidio,
GPUs to build out energy, to build out data centers. So is that something that you as an investor
are at least keeping an eye on? Absolutely. And I'll tell you, Travis, one of the things that
has really caught my eye when it comes to this AI infrastructure buildout is just how much
more these companies want to do. They've spent hundreds of billions of dollars already.
and yet when you look at their roadmap, if you will, they haven't even come close to what they want to deploy
and what they want to build and what they want to spend.
And so if it's already just bringing in some questionable debt for some players,
there's going to be a lot more debt coming online because there's so much more left to do.
When you think about superintelligence, this is what many of them are aiming for.
this is where AI is smarter than human beings in all domains, that's going to take a lot.
And I think that the only real plan that we have up to this point is just deploy more GPUs.
Okay, we're talking more data centers.
We're talking about more power.
Sam Altman on the record wanting 250 gigawatts of electricity by 233.
Which, by the way, is a lot of electricity.
Yeah, I think that that is as much as the country of India.
So, I mean, it's astronomically large.
That's going to take a lot of money to even approximate what they're shooting for.
And so, yeah, there could be a lot more debt in coming years to build this out.
Emily, as we look at how investors should be thinking about some of these things,
you know, the return on this investment seems to be something that is now getting a little
bit more attention.
It used to be that every announcement, a stock would pop.
Oracle, right, announced $300 billion in remaining performance obligations.
stock went up. And now, suddenly a couple months later, investors go, wait a second, are they going to make,
are they going to make money on that? How much is this going to cost? Is this going to be fueled by debt?
How does the ROI of some of these investments come into this? Because it seems like that's where this
interplay between equities and debt kind of becomes important. Yeah, this is such an interesting
question because this calculation has been centered upon what's the return investment for artificial
intelligence in particular, right? And this equation has always been, okay, we make all these
investment dollars. What am I getting out of it? And the equation is actually, what is the return
investment for the artificial intelligence investment? It's really data centers. That's what the
debt's being used to pay for versus what is the cost of the financing. And the focus has been on the
former part of that equation, not so much the latter. But maybe we should all be thinking a little
bit more about the latter part of that equation as we look at the bond markets here. Because even if the
former gets a decent return, right? Even if we're getting 8 to 10 percent, let's say, of a return
on our AI investments, is that actually more than the cost of our debt financing? And even if we're
not funding with debt, if we're funding with cash, and there's been some question marks about how
much of this is being covered with cash, I would challenge the perception that cash is actually free.
As an equity investor myself, I actually think that there's a massive opportunity cost that
exist with these big, large organizations, tech companies that are using all of their cash
and reinvesting into artificial intelligence, I, as an investor, like to see more than 10%.
What else could they be doing? Now, let's say Mark Zuckerberg, for example, what could he be
doing besides building data centers and spending money on VR headsets? Well, Mark Zuckerberg is probably
the worst example because meta has, in my opinion, performed well despite his capital allocation
skills. Because Zuckerberg has spent tens of billions of dollars investing into the Metaverse that
has effectively gone nowhere. But the Microsofts of the world, you know, the Amazon's, these
businesses that actually get a really good return on investment by reinvesting either into
their core business, but also potentially returning shareholder dollars through dividends,
share buybacks, other KAPEX expenses that are a bit more known versus data centers.
I mean, there's a million in one ways that businesses could be spending capital that have a more
clear return on investment probability versus artificial intelligence. Now, I will say more clear,
does not necessarily mean more profitable. And the leaders of these organizations see the risk
and reward proposition that is building out data centers and say, I would rather potentially be
wrong about artificial intelligence and invest the capital here because the risk of being right,
and if they don't invest in artificial intelligence and they're wrong and artificial intelligence
ends up being the future of whatever industry they're operating in, and they don't make those
investments and they could potentially just obliterate the relevance of their company.
10 years. Yeah, they are really thinking about disruption, maybe in a way that we weren't thinking
about it 30 years ago. John, quickly, how does depreciation play into this? Because this is something
that ends up on income statements, but maybe we don't talk about it a lot. Yeah, I mean,
this is such a lively conversation on bonds. Why don't we make it even more exciting by talking
depreciation? But no, this is a question. You spend a lot of money for GPUs and how long do those
GPUs last you. And people say, well, you don't need to worry about depreciation because it's a
non-cash thing on the chart. But, hey, the thing is, once those GPUs are depreciated, you have to
replace them. So it does come into play. And so how long can we use what we've already spent
money on? That's a big question. When we come back, we are going to play a game called Calls Inputs.
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Welcome back to Motley Fool Money in honor of Michael Burry closing his hedge fund.
under, at least the outside capital that's being invested in his fund.
We're going to play a little game called calls and puts.
Here's how this works.
I'm going to give you a basket of three stocks in a theoretical trade.
I want you to buy long-dated calls, so leaps on one of them, puts on the other.
So you're betting against one of these stocks.
And the third, you can just leave out of the portfolio.
And then we'll see how things shape up.
I got some interesting categories here.
And I actually cheated a little bit in pick of the opinion.
picking these stocks, I looked at what Emily is invested in. And so I wanted to put her on the hot
seat with a bunch of these. And John and I talk stocks. I know that you're invested in at least a few of
these. But the first group is growth at what cost. The three stocks in this group of stocks,
Emily, are Axon, Zillow, and Spotify. I think we can all agree. These are good businesses.
But at what cost? So who are you taking a leverage long position in? And who are you taking a
leverage short position in. Well, I want to say, Travis, I was wondering why these stocks look so
familiar. Now I feel like you're putting my portfolio on blast here a little. I set you up a bit.
Well, I appreciate it. And we are flying blind here a little bit. Travis, you told us,
don't, don't prep too much. Come in with your organic thoughts. And now I know why. This is an easy
basket for me between Axon, Zillow and Spotify. I'm big fan of Spotify still to this day.
This is a business that I think has plenty of room to run.
So in terms of taking a long call here on Spotify, that one is an obvious winner to me.
In terms of a business that I would have to buy puts on, I think Zillow is one that I still
remain a bit skeptical of.
I purchased Zillow back when it was in the eye buying pandemic-driven craze.
Oh, so it's just a legacy position.
It's a legacy position that never quite panned out.
In fact, I think in the portfolios where we had recommended Zillow, we had since recommended a sale.
and obviously I never got around to selling it in my own portfolio. I probably should have.
Axon, always concerned about its valuation. I'll just let that one run.
John, what do you think about Axon Zillow and Spotify?
I should preface this by saying I wouldn't want to bet against any of these three.
But if I'm taking a long, dated call position, I'm doing that on Axon Enterprise.
I think that this is a company that's proved itself time.
And again, the market opportunity remains very large. And it has visionary leadership.
that really wants to expand into so many different things.
I think that that's one that I would like to have my money writing on,
even at today's present valuation.
If I'm putting a put on something, I'd say it's on Zillow.
And the reason why is I think that the real estate market is still just ripe for disruption.
Is Zillow the disruptor at this point?
I'm not sure.
So if I had to take a put on one of these three, I'd take Zillow and then Spotify.
I'm a little bit more neutral on that.
Let's go to consumers. And this round is called, are consumers all right? The stocks here,
I'll start with you, John, are Celsius, Monster Beverage and Dollar General. So maybe some
valuation concerns here, but also are people going to be buying energy drinks and going to dollar
stores? These have been pretty volatile stocks over the past year or two. Yeah, indeed.
They have. This one is somewhat easy for me. I'm just going to go based on how I'm
investing my own money right now. And so if I'm taking a call, I'm doing that on Celsius. I really
like Celsius as far as it's going to be growing its brand presence. It just acquired Alani New.
Alani New hasn't entered the Pepsi distribution system yet, but it does here in December. I think
that that is a huge upside as far as its revenue growth goes. And it's just now starting to get
into international markets. If I am neutral on something, I would say that I'm neutral on dollar
general. I think it's a great business. I think it's going to do well. Is it going to outperform the
S&P 500? I think so. But if I'm going to go neutral on one of these three, I'm going to do
dollar general. It's not going to be a huge market beater, that's for sure. And then Monster would be
my put here. So long Celsius short monster. Yeah, I like the David. Not.
not so much the Goliath if I have to pick one of the two.
Interesting that Monster has become the Goliath here.
Emily, what do you think about Celsius Monster and Dollar General?
I really, really hate this question.
I don't want to put puts on any of these companies to be very, very clear.
I've been sitting here the entire time John's talking and just heavily debating with myself.
The one that I feel very confident on is I want to go long.
So I guess by calls here on Dollar General.
And this is actually maybe a little counterintuitive.
I think Dollar General is set up really well here over the next three to five years.
And the only reason Dollar General is actually in my portfolio is back during the old
Motley Full Industry Focus podcast, Asset Sharma and I had a couple baskets going on.
And Dollar General was one of our baskets.
And the business has struggled recently, but I actually think the discount's grocer game right now is rising in relevancy.
I actually think I might be buying puts on Celsius.
Interesting. Okay.
And I'll go neutral on Monster.
And the reason I'm doing that is because while I do feel like I was broadly wrong about my concerns around the Alani new acquisition,
which I felt like Celsius was effectively just acquiring their own customer base, which I thought was potentially a waste of money.
I will say I think I really undersold just how much market share, a lot.
Lonnie New had gained, I think they ultimately end up potentially writing down part of that acquisition.
The energy drink game right now has been incredibly fatty. I follow it as part of the Dutch
Bros. Industry and Monster beverage, I think, is in a better position in comparison to Celsius
simply because their customers are much more regular purchasers versus the Celsius-alani-new purchasers.
I wish Celsius had just stuck with their core brand.
I'm still skeptical, even though the data is not backing it up.
I'm still skeptical with the large acquisitions.
So I hate doing it, though.
To be clear, like, this is the weakest pitch.
Yeah, this is the challenges.
This is supposed to be hard.
All right, round three, how are these not better businesses?
And I have questions about all of these.
I like the idea of the business, but then I have questions about valuation and why aren't they more profitable.
Unity, Roku.
And Airbnb, Emily, I'm putting you on the spot first.
This is actually pretty easy for me.
I think Roku is easy call.
I think this is an incredible business.
It's not my fault.
The market doesn't understand it well enough.
People just fundamentally do not understand the business of Roku.
They overfocus on the hardware.
In my opinion, Roku is like Spotify three years ago,
where people don't understand the potential ramp up that could happen in free cash flow generation.
that is happening actively right now with free cash flow generation. There's been a couple of
missteps by management. I'm not going to defend Anthony Wood and his push into home security systems.
You know, sometimes our founder's CEOs are a little nutty. That was a bit of a nutty move.
That's a risk reward you get there. Yes, but I will say, if you doubt Roku, just look at their
performance in the ad market over the course of the past couple of years, especially during election
years, 2026 is probably going to shape up to be a decent advertising year for them with midterm elections
coming up. So I really like Roku, especially for the long term, but even over the short term.
Airbnb is probably the one I'm calling puts on. Strong business, plenty of cash flow.
I feel like management has just been too slow to innovate. There's a lot that could have done
at their platform, but I think they were too tepid and they gave up a lot of space when they
probably could have been in land-gras. The services business that they launched, I was just traveling
internationally. And, you know, I looked at it and it just seems a little goofy. I wanted to
think that there was something there for me, but I don't know, just having a person take me around
a city seemed a little bit odd. Well, there's lots of competitors to the services division, too.
There's lots of, you know, different travel sites that actually organize unique sites,
seeing adventures. And in my opinion, that was Airbnb's space to grab. And for whatever reason,
they were not successful in getting that market share. They could have made an acquisition.
They had plenty of cash to do so. They could have came in and crushed the competition with better
advertising, better services, better marketing, but they just did it. They blew it. John, Unity,
Roku, or Airbnb. So I'm going to agree with Emily when it comes to neutrality with Unity.
And so with Unity, of course, you can use its create solutions to create, say, a video game app.
And then with its monetized solutions, you can then run the advertising. That seemed like a good
one-to punch. If you're creating the game with Unity, why not monetize it with Unity?
What went wrong a few years ago was that its algorithm for monetization messed up,
and it wasn't providing its customers with good value.
And so it lost a lot of market share.
Now, AIs come into the picture.
Supposedly some good things are starting to happen.
We're starting to see some momentum.
So maybe this is something that pays off.
I'm always leery when it comes to turnarounds.
So Emily and I agree with our neutrality with unity of these three.
But we disagree when it comes to what we're putting calls on
and what we're putting puts on. All right. All right. You can just sell to each other.
So, in fairness, I own both of these stocks in my portfolio. Airbnb is my call. I really love this
business. I think it's just an unsinkable brand. It's just generating so much free cash flow and
the CEO, Brian Chesky. He's just got big ambitions, right? Always trying new things. Not all of them
are going to pan out, but I think eventually one of them will be a big idea that really carries this
business hire. So I just like that optionality that it has. When it comes to Roku, I don't deny that
streaming is the future. I don't deny that Roku is the number one player in the space and has done
a good job getting into homes. What I haven't liked in recent years is that the hours that people
are engaged on the Roku platform are going up at a faster rate than its monetization. And so for me,
it's just not, I would expect those advertising, that advertising demand to increase those prices
so much. And it's just not, it's just not at the same rate. Do you know why? Yes, explain this to us,
Emily. Because they're gaining a lot of international viewers. They monetize out a lower rate.
Even still. This one, we should do a whole show on Roku because I think I would fall on John's side.
But maybe, you know, Emily's obviously has strong opinions here. I think it's interesting where you both
both disagreed.
And that is kind of the consumer side of things.
And you both dislike Zillow, you know, such a huge market if they can get it right.
And maybe with a long-dated Michael Burry-type bet, I guess either puts or calls is probably
right.
It's probably going to go up exponentially or down to much lower levels.
So I do want to get to our next topic after the break.
That is going to be the streaming wars.
They're continuing.
And I think Emily has thoughts here.
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One of the big topics of the week that I wanted to get your thoughts on was Warner Brothers Discovery
has essentially put it up for sale.
That's what the reporting says.
Paramount Comcast and Netflix are all reportedly interested in their assets.
Disney actually on their conference call said,
we're going to back out of this one after their Fox acquisition.
Maybe they're a little bit more leery of taking on debt to add these kinds of assets.
Emily, who needs Warner Brothers discovery the most and why?
I think there's a reason why Paramount Skydance was the one to kick off this conversation for Warner Brothers.
They really want to buy the company, and maybe the other players are being a little bit more defensive.
And I think that explains a lot.
And I think that tells you an investor's everything you need to know about who probably needs it the most.
Paramount was the first bidder.
They have this old linear TV business, and in my opinion, they're offering with Paramount Plus
is just some of the weaker streaming offerings. So getting Max and HBO, that would just be
a value addition that could actually potentially drive profitable growth and subscribers.
So in my opinion, I think Paramount needs it the most, but I actually think it would be such
a genius, defensive move for Netflix to get this win. And if I was Netflix, I know they've been
skeptical of large mergers. They're understandably all about organic growth as opposed to acquired
growth. But in my opinion, this would be about crushing the competition. And for Netflix to get HBO,
obviously there's a great content library there, it would be pushing out competition from the
market, a good reason to charge more, potentially add an additional tier without a lot of added
complexity. So I just, I think it'd be a really smart move by Netflix. I hope Netflix goes for it
as a shareholder and as a viewer, but Paramount obviously needs it.
Obviously, Paw Patrol is not playing a lot at Emily's house.
Unfortunately not.
We are definitely using the Paramount app quite a bit here.
John, the interesting company here, I think, is Comcast, because Comcast is the one company
with Peacock.
It seems like they have everything going for them.
They have all the infrastructure with cable.
People can bundle with broadband or with their cable service.
but they kind of need to be the number three player or why in the world are they in streaming
in the first place. Number one is obviously Netflix. Number two is Disney. So is that a company
that we should keep an eye on as well? For sure. And whether or not it's important to be number
two or number three, whether or not that's good enough, it's really going to depend on what
this space looks like in a decade. And personally, I think we're heading towards streaming cable,
essentially. And I know that that's what we tried to get away from, the cable package. And we thought that
we would do that with streaming. And the idea that I think a lot of people are stuck with is that we went to
streaming because we wanted to pay less money by only paying for what we watch or what we use.
And for me, that's only partially true. I switch to streaming so that I could watch what I want
when I want. The fact that you can just watch it on demand, that's something that you didn't
get with the old cable system. But I think that, you know, we're finding more and more that we have
all these services. They're trying to make us bundle this, bundle that. I think essentially we're
heading towards a streaming cable in the future. And so maybe it's not so important to be the number
three streaming individual service because you're going to wind up in the bundle, the cable package.
It will be interesting to see how this plays out. And we're considering getting rid of YouTube TV,
which has been kind of a go-to, but now you can get almost all of that content elsewhere on streaming providers.
As always, we end the show with stocks on our radar.
We're going to bring in Dan Boyd behind the glass to get his thoughts.
Emily, I'm going to have you go first because this is a stock I wanted to talk more about
when we ran out of time today.
What is on your radar?
Disney is actually on my radar.
The ticker is D-I-S, of course.
And the recent Disney is on my radar is because, similarly to Roku,
I feel like this is kind of a misunderstood business.
reported earnings earlier this week. And a lot of the headlines overfocused on both their linear
TV business as well as streaming. And that seems to be the narrative driving the story around
Disney right now. But the reality is that the vast majority of operating income for Disney are driven
by parks, experiences, cruises, and actually stuff like ESPN and sports. And those segments of Disney's
business continue to just kill it. And so while the narrative is all around Disney Plus and streaming,
which, by the way, Disney Plus is dramatically improving in terms of profitability.
I actually think quietly under the water, Disney is just steadily improving its profitability picture
in terms of its highest margin segments.
And while they can't continue to raise prices forever, Disney World, Disneyland,
they're getting very expensive for the average family.
And obviously, that will suffer if we enter into any sort of like recessionary environment.
But Disney itself, in terms of its relative average valuation, I think is going underappreciated here today.
Dan, are you a fan of a company run by Bob Eiger?
I'm actually a Disney shareholder, so you could say that.
But Emily, what's your favorite Disney movie and why is it The Little Mermaid?
I have to say it's a Little Mermaid, Dan.
And the reason is because I don't watch Disney movies.
And I think I'll get your vote if I say The Little Mermaid.
Pandering.
All right, John, what stock is on your radar?
Yeah, Travis, my stock on my radar is,
C Limited, ticker symbol SE. This is a business that's headquartered in Singapore, and it has
three main business units. It has Garena for digital entertainment, so think video games,
has Shoppy for e-commerce, and it has Mone for financial technology. This is stock that soared
during the pandemic era because it was putting up incredible growth numbers, just quarter after
quarter after quarter, but eventually it dropped back down to Earth because it was putting up
some big net losses as well. Management responded by balancing profitability with growth.
And so it's been profitable, strongly profitable now for about three years. As we look at it right
now, it's down about 30% from its highs here in 2025. Third quarter profits didn't live up to
expectations, but look at this in perspective. It had a 6% profit margin even still, and it grew
revenue a whopping 38% year over year. I think it's C-limited. It has plenty of long-term runway,
about 10.5 billion in net cash and about an $80 billion market cap. But I think it could be bigger.
Dan, what do you think of C Limited?
Digital companies a lot of the times are notorious for having terrible names, but I feel like
money and shoppy are amongst the worst. No argument.
All right, Dan, we have C. Limited and Disney, what stock is going on your watch list?
Look at this stuff. Isn't it neat with this one stock.
My portfolio is complete.
Didn't have Dan singing on the show, but here we are.
All right, folks, we are out of time.
We'll see you tomorrow.
