Motley Fool Money - Metaverse Possibilities for Investors
Episode Date: May 26, 2022Nvidia and Apple are two of the biggest companies investing in the metaverse, but they're making headlines today for different reasons. (0:25) Bill Mann discusses: - Nvidia's unusual stock movement i...n the past 24 hours - The graphics chipmaker slowing hiring and their guidance - Apple targeting the same iPhone production levels as last year - Why he's more concerned for Android phone makers than he is for Apple (13:56) Asit Sharma talks with Rickey Mulvey about the real possibilities (and companies) that might emerge from the metaverse. Stocks discussed: NVDA, FB, AAPL, U, GOOGL, WDFC, IBM, RBLX, DIS Host: Chris Hill Guests: Bill Mann, Ricky Mulvey, Asit Sharma Producer: Ricky Mulvey Engineer: Dan Boyd, Rick Engdahl Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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We've got the latest from two of the biggest companies in America, as well as a closer look
at the Metaverse.
Motley Full Money starts now.
I'm Chris Hill, and back by popular demand.
It's Motley Fool senior analyst.
Bill Mann.
Thank you for being here.
A vote of one to nothing.
Which is a landslide.
So, long time listeners know that every once in a great while, I will have someone lined
up for the show, and then something happens.
intervenes. In this case, and it's not important who it was, but in this case, the person who was
lined up for today's show, their laptop melted down. So, they're dealing with bigger issues.
And so coming in out of the bullpen, my good friend, Bill, man. So I do appreciate you being here.
I want to start with Nvidia, because this is another sort of interesting day. We focus on the long term. It doesn't
mean that in the very short-term stock movements can't be interesting to ruminate on.
For those who missed that the graphics chipmaker had good results in the first quarter.
They said they're going to slow down their hiring, focus more on controlling costs.
After hours yesterday, the stock was down 10%.
You and I are talking in the middle of the trading day on Thursday, and shares are up 4%.
Do you think somewhere in between late yesterday and right now, enough people on Wall Street
realized, oh, wait, this is a really good business with a really good leader.
What do you make of this?
What are we doing?
You know, I love the way that you've introed that.
Because I think that when it dropped 10%, I think it was very much a snap judgment.
was a snap judgment based on the fact, at least partially, that NVIDIA said that their guidance
was going to be lower for the next, you know, for the remainder of the year. They're guiding
down about $500 billion. Almost all of that is in the form of loss of revenues to China and
Russia. That, I mean, that's what they, that's what they've said. So it should not have been a surprise, but I think you really
saw a form of ready fire aim. And, you know, it was a very good quarter for NVIDIA.
You're right that we don't tend to talk about short-term movements. Looking at
NVIDIA right now, it's a $446 billion company. It has been as high as $700 billion this
year and as low as $400. So you're talking about a $300 billion swing in what the market
perceives the value of Nvidia to be. Now, I don't know about you, but I consider a 300 billion
to be quite a lot of money. As do I. Okay, good, good. I don't know about what I mean, I don't
want to make assumptions about your tax brackets or anything Hill, but you know, to me, $300 billion is
a lot of money. And it just goes to show why you should not take short-term movements
seriously at all. It means that the market has literally no idea how to value
Nvidia, except to say that this company is worth a lot of money and it's done a lot of great
things and still great things are expected of it.
This is something we're going to continue talking about in a few minutes, but
Nvidia now joins the list of large, significant,
significantly profitable companies that are, to one degree or another, making moves to control
their costs. Have you seen enough, whether it's Nvidia, Facebook, Apple, which we'll get
to shortly, have you seen enough from some of the largest companies in America to give you
an indication of what the economy is going to be like for the rest of this year?
You know, I think that we are likely to go very quickly from the great resignation to the great layoff.
It seems like that is coming down the pike.
If you've got companies that have as much cash on their balance sheets as META and NVIDIA saying,
we're going to control costs, then that is obviously a place that they're going to be looking at.
That is, of course, I think, a concern for the economy.
You never want to see an environment in which people are less.
laid off. In the case of, of Nvidia, I think probably most of their cost sensitivity is going
to come in their gaming segment. So this is the first quarter, I think ever as a publicly
traded company. Guaranteed one of our dozens of listeners will correct me if that is wrong.
I think ever that gaming was not the biggest segment of revenues for Nvidia. People are actually
guiding that revenues from gaming will continue to be weak through the year. And I think that
that's specifically where they will be looking to tighten up their, tighten up the reins a little
bit. Let's move on to Apple then, because Apple is planning to produce the same number of iPhones
this year as it did last year, roughly 220 million. And similar to, you know,
Nvidia controlling costs. This is part of how Apple's being viewed right now is they're being
conservative, which I think makes a lot of sense. I'm wondering if you think they are being overly
conservative, given how much money this company has. Yeah, I'm not sure. I mean, Chris, I've done some
math to prepare for the show, and I figured out that 220 iPhone units, 220 million,
equals one unit for every 35, you know, people on the planet.
So, whenever I think about these companies, these massive tech companies,
I begin to wonder in the back of my mind if there isn't a, you know,
kind of an efficient horizon for them, if there isn't a place at which they can grow no more
because we are just not producing people fast enough.
Now, they have absolutely guided down, or not even guided,
they're ordering less than was being presumed.
But 220 million units of the iPhone for Apple alone for one year,
that is a massive number.
And it is still an incredibly profitable device for them.
They mint cash off of the iPhone, both in the sales of the device
and in the sales of all of the ancillaries that go with having apps that they get paid for
and everything that they get paid for due to that ecology.
But it has always been in the back of my mind that at some point,
the level of growth for the units themselves has to slow down
just by virtue of the fact that we're just not creating people fast enough.
Where do you think this is likely to go?
This is, unfortunately, for you, a little bit of a crystal ball question.
Hold on, let me shake mine.
But I do wonder, you know, with all of these companies, again, huge, profitable companies
making these announcements, one of the questions that always goes through my mind is, okay,
so what's going to be the move after this?
I'm not really a chess player, but I know enough about the game to know you've got to think
a few moves ahead.
And I'm wondering where you think out.
Apple is going next.
So, it is important.
So even though the iPhone absolutely dominates the, you know, sort of the cultural site
guise when we think about these devices, they are actually in a competitive market.
And so for Apple to actually hit 220 devices, and this, by the way, this isn't a guide.
This is the amount that they have asked their assembly partners to make.
So they're not guiding to this number.
producing this number. For Apple to hit the same number that it had last year, and I think
it's pretty safe to say that the amount of spending and the willingness for people to spend
has switched from 2021 to 2022, I would be much more concerned for their competitors, the Android
manufacturers, most of whom are in China, which have already said that they're having a rough
quarter. So I think whenever you see big companies like this that have a huge amount of cash,
this is the type of environment in which they get to, in a way, extend their lead and to throw
their weight around a little bit and to make things very uncomfortable for their competitors.
And so that's what I think that we're going to see from Apple. The market has not overreacted
to this story. Apple is actually up today. It's down from its high by about 24.
25%, which is $600 billion, if I do the math right, which is, again, kind of a lot.
But at the same time, I think when you see a change like this in the environment, it actually
favors the more powerful, the more well-capitalized of the competitors.
I'm glad you mentioned the stock price, because I was legitimately surprised.
Again, Apple shares are up 2%.
That's not a huge number.
I'm surprised it's up at all because this has been the type of market environment, particularly
over the last few weeks where any type of slowdown is punished.
Is the slight rise we're seeing because the stock has come down from its highs?
Or is it because this provides a level of certainty for?
Wall Street in terms of the most profitable device, the most important device for Apple.
I think it's very much the latter. And again, in this environment for Apple to be saying,
look, we're going to be producing the same exact amount that we did last year. A huge number
of devices when we know just how much pressure and just how much their rivals are struggling
suggests that Apple is not about to give up its lead anytime soon in terms of being the most
important manufacturer of smartphone devices. And ultimately, to me, I think that's why the market
has looked at this and said, yeah, well, duh. So we aren't making people quickly enough
to, you know, that Apple's going to continue to grow smartphone manufacturing at a 10% clip. That's
not how things work. But at the same time, I don't look at this as being anything other than
Apple having the capacity to extend its lead. By the way, wouldn't you love to have some Wall
Street analysts just come out and say, well, duh? Here's my question. Well, duh. Great quarter,
guys. If they follow it up, yeah. As long as that's the one-two punch I want to hear on the next
conference call. Great quarter guys.
Well, duh.
And then just, we need a camera of Tim Cook reacting to that.
I want to see his reaction.
Bill Mann, great talking to you.
Thanks so much for helping out today.
Take care, Chris.
Thanks.
Invidia and Apple are just two of the companies investing in the Metaverse.
At this point, we don't know what the Metaverse is going to be, but that's not stopping
some investors from rushing in.
So what are the real possibilities that may emerge?
With more, here's Ricky Mulberry.
The promises of the Metaverse Web 3 and the virtual revolution are big.
One thing I'm finding challenging is trying to separate the signal from the noise.
So, joining me now is Asit Sharma, senior analyst, and a contributing learner to the Motley Fool,
Osset.
I'm so happy to see you today.
Ricky, thank you for having me.
Looking forward to discussing some signal, hopefully.
A little bit of noise.
A little bit.
Well, in a way, this is just noise, but that's a podcast joke.
I had a conversation a few days ago with Matt Greer. He's a longtime producer at The Fool.
And he said that one of the concerns he had about the Metaverse and investing there is that he sees some parallels to the 3D printing phase from a few years ago.
There's that promise you could print a ballpoint pen in your living room.
And these everything machines would play a major role in our investment strategy.
Are you seeing parallels there? Is that analogy broken? What's your take?
I mean, it's a spot-on analogy. Every few years, we have a big theme that washes over the popular
imagination, and we have no end of investors, including myself, and probably yourself too, and
probably people who are listening to trying to figure out, okay, how do I benefit from this
trend if this is going to have such an impact on society and the way we work, the way we play,
all that good stuff. The problem is that big themes rarely live up.
up to their promise overnight. And the effect can be very prevalent. Often at times, it takes
decades and the investable effects dissipate before we can grab onto them.
Yeah, kind of to that point. I saw it was virtual real estate sales. So it's just plots of
land, apartments in the Metaverse that reached $500 million last year, which for context
is that's about how much money the WD40 company made.
And when I think about the metaverse and especially investing in it, the thing that concerns me is I see just a mad dash.
And I wonder if it's better to just be patient right now.
Patience is always a virtue in investing because our brains are so wired to think about today this week, next week, next month.
But investment results, they really play out over years.
And I think this example is so much fun, Ricky, because it shows us that human nature doesn't change.
Technology changes and opportunities change.
We had the gold rush in California, which is the analog version of this in the 19th century,
where everyone was rushing to get in byland in California, so you could mine for gold.
And the price of shovels went up.
Millions of dollars, and in those days, dollars poured into the state of California.
And they're reaping some of the effect today.
It wasn't an overnight success for tons of people.
Most people lost money in that gold rush.
So the gold rushes keep coming.
It's just where they take place.
Now they're more virtual than they are physical.
And sometimes, to use the gold rush example, it's the people who make genes who end up making
money.
Oh, for sure.
So one thing I have been thinking, though, is I want to look at these tech companies, but
I have a difficult time because they're so complex.
I mean, how are you thinking about investing in these compounders with a high growth potential?
So, for me, it's a company, honestly, it's a company I own, and I should have done a lot
more research when I invested in it, which is Unity software.
Yeah, you know, when we were talking about this segment, Ricky, when you know
are throwing ideas out at each other, you were describing Unity as a company with a high
growth potential, but a complex business model.
And I think this shows your sophistication as an investor.
If you sunk a lot of money into Unity, maybe it shows your evolving sophistication as an
investor. I mean, I think Unity is a very interesting company with a lot of potential.
But I will say this, for investors who look at complexity as a roadblock to investing, just
as you might, a real-world obstacle that a company has to face, you're like, I don't want
to invest in company A, because they have this merger coming up. I want to see how it does
afterwards. So I'm not going to go in, all in on this proposition. Today, I'll wait until
that merger completes. Complexity can be the same type of hurdle. And it's a lot of, and
In my experience, the more complex the business model, the more likely you're going to get
one of two outcomes. A, the model ends up succumbing to the complexity, so the investment
returns just aren't there. Or B, in practical terms, that complexity gets converted into a long-term
competitive edge. My favorite example is IBM, of course. I thought this was the 1950s, but
I went back and looked before the show. In the early 1960s, IBM introduced the mainframe computer,
is that decade's version of something like a Unity software, which has this incredibly broad
platform to help game designers to help digital artists monetize their creative output.
So that was a fine time to invest in IBM, but it was hard to see it in 1964, in April
of 1964.
So to me, it's almost that you invest with a starting small position in these types of
high complexity, high potential models.
And it's sort of an inverse to the complexity of the relationship.
As they become less complex and you see the business results start to merge, you can put more money in.
So generally, if you're looking like, I believe in the continued digital transformation.
Are you looking at the picks and shovels, the end products, both?
How are you thinking about it as an investor?
Yeah, I think this goes back to what Mac was pointing out about the 3D printing space.
It's hard to invest in the end products just now, wherever digital transformation is concerned,
unless you're talking about companies that are providing the structure for digital transformation.
So you're looking at project collaboration software or automating business processes.
And those look actually more like picks and shovels.
So I'm a believer in early in a big theme, invest in the picks and shovels, because you can
see those outcomes.
They're a lot more visible versus going all in in companies that I like.
like Unity, like Roblox software, nibble at those positions because it's rare for both that
pureplay idea and a profitable business model to merge up at the beginning of the game.
It takes time for both of those to synthesize and for everyone to be able to see.
This is an awesome investment.
I'm going to invest in Amazon.com.
It's 2003.
I didn't get in the IPO a few years ago, but now it's the time.
you could still make a lot of money being patient.
You had a great conversation with Matthew Ball.
It's on the podcast feed.
You asked Matthew Ball what his dream was for the Metaverse, and he talked about the decentralization,
but I think it's very easy to get caught up in the technicalities of it.
And I think that in the end, there are a lot of very cool things that are going to come
from this digital transformation, from the Metaverse.
What's one dream that you have, that you'd like to be able to be a part of?
All right.
I'm going to give mine, and then I'm going to give mine.
And then I'm eager to hear yours as well.
So I have this dream that really great novelists should be able to work with digital designers
to show us what they visualized when they're writing their works.
Now, when you read a novel, that's a really special experience.
It's an act of iterative creation.
It's someone else's consciousness that's being introduced to your consciousness.
And the story you weave, the visuals that you come up with, the mood that you interpret
out of that novel is actually more important.
I think than just the writer's conception.
So you're merging two different consciousness together.
We get a taste of this right now when great writers work with movie studios.
I'm thinking of the Harry Potter franchise.
So you get some sense of what writers were thinking about.
I don't want to replace that experience of reading a novel and having your minds
I create the story, but it would be such a fun adjunct to be able to see something as an author visualized.
And we've got a great analog version of this.
I think it's unique, maybe the only one that exists in the world.
But the Nobel Prize-winning novelist Orhan Pamuk has curated a museum in Istanbul.
It's called the Museum of Innocence that has objects he visualized from the time that novel is taking place.
You can go toward that museum now and see objects as he saw them as he was writing this novel.
So to replicate something like this in a metaverse experience,
I think it would be a lot of fun.
What's the investable take out of that?
It could go back to Unity Software or Autotest, the companies that are creating the kinds
of tools that will make such an experience happen.
Well, it's the way that great artists can merge consciousness, right?
Between writer and reader, and in this case, it can also be a symbolic and virtual environment.
For me, I guess one dream I have, it's a little bit more simple.
I'm really excited for live sports.
I think that's where you see a winner of something like Disney.
I have family in Ohio. I have family in Australia.
And I think this is a way where you could imagine sitting at a Cincinnati Reds game
or an NBA basketball game and spending time together is one thing that I'm particularly excited about.
Moving on. I guess one question. We've been talking about the Metaverse a lot, digital transformation.
What's one digital transformation that you're excited about, that you're watching, paying attention to
that doesn't necessarily have to do with the Metaverse?
So, I'm actually piggybacking off of something that you wanted to talk about when we exchanged
our notes, but that's okay, because I think it's so fascinating.
For me, I'm interested in a company called DeepMind Technologies, which is a subsidiary
of Alphabet, the parent company of Google.
DeepMind develops neural networks.
These smart networks have a differentiation from what we normally think of as like machine
learning, right?
So, machine learning is the model, because of it's a smart network.
smarter by watching data as it comes in, making its own assumptions. Neural networks
at their best, they iterate by themselves. They learn by themselves. The example that I love
to talk about, two examples. Deep Mind is responsible for AlphaGo, a Go playing computer program,
and Alpha Zero, which is a chess playing program. Alpha Zero was trained by just being introduced
with a set of rules. It then played 44 million games against itself in nine hours and came
out of that as a bad blank out of that experience challenged the best brute force computing
program of the time and one with some really fascinating examples of how to come at chess
in ways we hadn't thought of before. So this really excites me. It's the potential for
artificial intelligence to come up with insights into creativity that we just haven't considered.
It's not a lot to monetize there, but you asked outside of the investable universe, what's
attracting my attention?
Well, I think there will be investable things, especially for companies like Alphabet.
Gmail's neural network, for example, which is every email ever written on Gmail is now being
used to predict what you will write next, which is incredible.
And just because you know that's incredibly valuable, I don't know how to value that as an investor.
Yeah, Ricky, there's a very interesting long-form article I read.
I still get the Sunday print edition of the New York Times.
And in the New York Times magazine, insert a couple months ago, there was an article called
AI is Mastering Language.
Should we trust what it says?
I think you'd enjoy that, Ricky, or maybe it would just scare you a little more.
Okay, I'll check it out.
Anyway, awesome.
Great chatting with you and good to see it.
That's a lot of fun.
Thanks so much, Ricky.
As always, people on the program may have interest in the stocks they talk about.
The monthly full may have formal recommendations for or against, so don't buy ourselves stocks
based solely on what you hear.
I'm Chris Hill. Thanks for listening. We'll see you tomorrow.
