On with Kara Swisher - How Trump's Policies Will Shape the Stock Market with Aswath Damodaran
Episode Date: February 27, 2025For years, Wall Street veterans have been saying that a market correction is around the corner, and last week's jitters have only intensified concerns. To find out if the party is ending sooner rather... than later — and what role Trump’s policies will play — Kara talks to the Dean of Valuation, Aswath Damodaran. Damodaran teaches corporate finance and valuation at the Stern School of Business at New York University, and he is the author of over ten books. His latest is The Corporate Life Cycle: Business, Investment, and Management Implications. He and Kara discuss valuations, DOGE, tariffs, mass deportation, and tech stocks and much more. Questions? Comments? Email us at on@voxmedia.com or find us on Instagram, TikTok and Bluesky @onwithkaraswisher Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hi everyone from New York Magazine and the Vox Media Podcast Network.
This is On with Kara Swisher and I'm Kara Swisher.
My guest today is Aswath DeMotaran, a professor of finance at the Stern School of Business
at NYU who's known as the Dean
of Valuation. He understands how to look under the hood of a public corporation and tease
out its value, and he's able to explain those valuations as well or better than anyone else.
I actually met Aswad through Scott Galloway, who I co-host Pivot with, and it's one of
the better things I've gotten from Scott. He's incredibly intelligent. He knows how
to speak about economics in a very simple way, but not a stupid way. You get a lot of
value from just listening to him and he's so, so calm, which is really needed in this
time of chaos. Aswath has written over 10 books and his latest is The Corporate Life
Cycle. As we're entering the third year of a bull run that is starting to make some financial
watchers nervous, I want to talk to someone who can give us a sharp and unvarnished view of the investment landscape and Aswath is
that guy.
Our expert question comes from William D. Cohen, a former M&A banker, bestselling author
and founding partner of Puck.
If you need investment advice, you're not quite going to get it here, but it will give
you some insight in where we're going.
I know everybody's worried, so stick around.
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Aswa, thanks for coming on on.
Thank you for having me.
So I've wanted to talk to you for a long time. You're one of my favorite people who I met
through Scott Galloway, which doesn't, it shouldn't be negative on you, but I'm teasing.
So you're known as the Dean of Valuations. So let's start there. You recently wrote that
when it comes to US stocks, at today's prices, there is an 80%
chance that stocks are overvalued and only a 20% chance that they are undervalued.
Explain your thinking right now.
I mean, let's start by setting the table.
We've had two great years for stocks, almost back-to-back 25% years.
That's incredibly uncommon.
I mean, we haven't had that since the 1990s. So to begin with, stocks have gone up a year. That's incredibly uncommon. I mean we haven't had that since the 1990s.
So to begin with, stocks have gone up a lot. Earnings have increased as well, but they've increased about 10-11 percent a year. So prices are going up more than earnings.
And you don't have the old reasons you could give in the last decade, that interest rates were low
and they did no other place to go. I can put my money in T bonds and make close to 5 percent.
So to get me to invest in stocks,
you've got to offer me a lot more.
Right now, stocks are being priced to give me about 4% more
than that T bond rate.
And that's, I mean, you're getting really close
to historically low additional risk premiums.
So from that perspective,
I think stocks have run a little ahead of earnings,
no matter how great the stories are.
And whenever that happens, there is a catching up to do.
Either earnings have to increase substantially, which they can't do
because they're already at peaks, or stock prices have to come down.
So my rationale is a very simple one.
Stocks have run ahead and there's some cleaning up to do.
And cleaning up depending on the stock or just the market as a whole?
Across the market.
But it never is across all stocks the same way. Right. to do. And cleaning up depending on the stock or just the market as a whole? Across the market. Across the market.
But it never is across all stocks the same way.
Right.
So my guess is the cleaning up is going to be greatest where the run up was also the
greatest.
Which would be tech.
Tech companies, especially the big tech companies.
Let's face it, I mean, we've never had a decade like the last one where seven to 10 stocks
have accounted for one-fifth of
the increase in market gap of all US stocks. The MAG-7 or the Fang Ammas, as
they were before the video showed up, have essentially carried the market. And I
don't think you can do that for, you know, forever. And I think that even this
year you're starting to see them say, look, we're going to take a step back. And
when they step back, no other individual group of stock can step
in because they're so big. To make up for them, hundreds of stocks have to go up
by an equivalent amount. So, I want to get to the performance this week of the
stock market, but having just those stocks, and Nvidia in particular, right?
It's just one stock that's really been pushing it
Is that it's just there's nobody as big as these people or such as dangerous to concentrate so much in a sector
It's not just that the good economic reasons why these companies are where they are
They've in a sense dominated their businesses
They made them winner-take-all businesses Nvidia if you look at the chip business overall, the chip business overall is a pretty commoditized business.
You don't see other players benefiting like Nvidia does.
Nvidia's benefited because it's taken a segment
of the chip business, in this case AI chips,
and made it its business.
It's made, it dominated the market.
And you can say the same thing
about the other Mag 7 as well.
Even though they might not have accounted for what Nvidia did in the last two years,
they've had their moments in the sun.
It's almost like they're a rotating cast of stars.
When one steps back, another steps in.
The only point is even great dominant companies have ceilings.
And I have a feeling that many, that each of these companies is hitting a ceiling within its own space.
And when that happens, some adjustment has to happen to make up for it.
Has to be made because the rest depend on it.
Just saying, when you say Magnificent 7, we're talking about seven stocks have been driving,
just for people who don't know, the S&Ps 500 gains, Meta, Amazon, Google, Apple, Nvidia,
Microsoft, and Tesla, although Tesla's another story.
We'll get to that in a minute. We're recording this on Tuesday, and last week was the stock market's worst week since Trump was
inaugurated. Now, he hasn't been in that long, but there was initially a lot of optimism from
Wall Street around Trump 2.0. What counts for the jitters from your point of view?
I think part of it is it's almost like you're putting the market through shock therapy,
right?
I mean, the market's been incredibly resilient for the last maybe 10 years.
I mean, it takes shocks, it rides through them, it's hard with COVID.
I think the market has amazed me, and it's been much more resilient than experts have
been in terms of dealing with macro shocks.
But I think when you shock it week after week
with something new, at some point in time,
even a resilient market says,
okay, you know what, we're getting exhausted.
So part of this is market exhaustion
with change coming at it constantly.
There's no time to absorb the change
and try to assimilate the change into prices.
So credit card debt is at an all-time high.
The University of Michigan's Consumer Sentiment Index is down to its lowest level in over a year,
and Walmart warned that its sales growth might slow down this year in part because higher prices
caused by tariffs, which we'll get into in a bit.
But the richest 10% of Americans now count for nearly half of consumer spending.
We always hear that Wall Street isn't Main Street, but also does that mean that Wall Street doesn't
need mainstream?
And must it used to, or should investors be worried about an overextended middle class?
I think it's been a problem building up over time.
This goes back almost 10 years, and you look at the ups and downs, I think that first this
concentration of spending among the wealthiest has increased,
which is one reason there's a disconnect sometimes between consumer sentiment and what the economy
is doing.
The second, I think, is even numbers like the consumer sentiment have become political.
What do I mean by that?
You look at the consumer sentiment.
The consumer sentiment among Democrats has crated since the election, but among republics.
So the reverse happened last year under Biden.
So even the economic numbers that we thought were non-political have become somehow, have
become political.
But I think that the economy, like the market, is due for a slowdown as well.
I mean, we've been promised a recession or threatened a recession for the last two years. And it's kind of, again,
the economy is kind of held out much better than economists have expected. But the reason we have
recessions is things get overheated. You needed a cleaning up process in the economy as well.
So I would argue that this too is something that's long overdue. So you might have a coming together of two forces, a slowing down of momentum in markets
and a slowing down of the economy coming together at the same time.
And it'll take a little while for markets and investors to kind of deal with that reality
because they keep expecting resilience to show up again, that things are going to bounce
back.
Right, which because they're used to that.
Yeah, because we're so used to that because we've had a decade of that happening.
So let's talk a little bit then about President Trump, because he's the new factor here and
his policies will affect the markets.
Elon and Doge haven't stopped making headlines, even though Elon's saying that Doge should
be fully transparent.
The website is full of accounting errors.
We don't know how much government spending will actually get cut.
It seems de minimis at this point, but the chief economist at Apollo Global Management
wrote the government layoffs will mean higher unemployment overall that will
affect interest rates, equities, credit market, and so on. Talk a little bit about
how you think Doge is impacting the stock market right now, besides making it
chaos. I think the chaos part is obviously there, and I think that two things can be true at the same time.
The way in which Washington runs its budget is broken.
You know, Congress is incapable of fixing the problem.
Everything is on top of a legacy system.
So part of my sympathies lie, this system has to change.
But you can also argue at the same time that the way in which
Doge and Musk are going about breaking the system
is the way you run a tech company.
You can break down a company and say,
I'm going to start from scratch.
But when you're talking about the US government,
you talk about millions of people,
many of whom depend on the government for the next paycheck.
This is an extremely dangerous thing to break
if you don't know whether you can put it back together again. the government for the next paycheck, this is an extremely dangerous thing to break if
you don't know whether you can put it back together again.
So I think the worry here is you might break something.
It's not even that the government spending might not drop a lot.
You might break something that you're incapable of putting back together quickly.
And if it's something like Medicaid or Medicare or social security, that's a breakage you kind of
afford to have if your people are dependent on it. So that might be the
tipping point. If that happens, then you worry about the effects on the economy
and unemployment and everything else kind of rippling through.
How then do you break the spending problems, which everybody acknowledges, right,
that it needs reform. And he seems to think the only way to do it is to chainsaw it, which doesn't seem particularly
sophisticated.
No.
I think that you can't go back, you can't do what you do in a company.
Go back to zero-base budgeting.
Everybody has to explain why they need the money, because in a company, you can get away
with it.
In the government, you go to zero-base budgeting.
While you're trying to get them back to base, there are a lot
of people who are suffering along the way.
So I think you almost have to do it.
Pick a department where you think those side costs are going to be minimal and try it out
there.
See if you can go to zero-base budgeting there before you start to embark on it.
You can't do it across the entire system.
Yeah.
Why are they doing it that way from your perspective?
Because I think they believe that they will window that is short,
that it's not going to last four years.
They might have three months or six months where
the shock and awe factor is enough for them to do it.
So in a sense, they're breaking everything at the same time,
hoping they can fix everything back.
That might be too much to ask of any group of people.
So Doge and Elon have essentially killed the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. As someone
put it in the Times, it's deregulation by firings. And CFPB was known as Wall Street's most hated
regulator. Talk about its demise and what layoffs among government regulators mean for financial
stocks. Is it a good thing? Or is, you know, they may not stay, these people may not stay in office if they do things that consumers like, for
example?
I think for, there might be winners among the businesses. The losers here might be consumers
and people who are dependent on the services from these companies. So I think the reason
we created the CFPP was to protect consumers. It wasn't to make businesses more resilient
and more profitable, it was to protect consumers.
So the question is how much will consumers feel as pain
as a consequence of these protections going away?
So it's not as if we have to go back too far in time
to look at what a world would look like
without this protective.
It might be fixable if somebody else somewhere else in the system picks up the slack, right?
Somebody's got to provide that protection.
The way things are right now, I'm not sure anybody's in a position to pick up slack because
they're all under assault at the same time, right?
So ultimately somebody's got to play the role of cop here and if it's
not the agency that you created to do it, who else is going to do it? And for a
period there, the worst actors among us, especially among businesses, might take
advantage of a moment where there's nobody watching the store. Right. So the
other big economic story is tariffs. Trump paused his 25% tariffs on Canada
and Mexico after markets react negatively, but
the threat remains on the table and he's expanded it to include reciprocal tariffs, which could
affect almost every country on earth.
And it seems like markets are not pricing in tariffs because they think it's all bluster
from Trump.
And that means when they go from a Maserati to Rio, they get priced suddenly and you see
wild swings that might actually
convince Trump to back off again. Again, chaos. So talk a little bit about what's happening
here with tariffs and the games that Trump's playing.
Tariffs are a net negative for the global economy. I think you don't need an economics
PhD to work through that if everybody imposes tariffs, essentially it's worse for the global
economy. But like everything else, there
will be winners and losers. And in the near term, the U.S. is better positioned to live in a tariff
driven world than most of the rest of the world. Why? Because we consume so much more than we
produce that other countries are going to bend their systems to stay with the tariff system,
because they can't afford to give up on the US as a market.
So Canadian companies can't survive without the US market.
They will find ways to buffer it and live with it,
which will, at least in the short term, mean that Canadian companies
are actually more negatively impacted than US companies
by tariff that is initiated in the US.
In the long term, though, I mean, if you look at the
Mag-7 or the big companies that have carried this
market, they're US companies in terms of
incorporation, but they're global companies in
terms of how they get their revenues in the
businesses.
So if you're Tim Cook, you're looking across the
world, you cannot have growth unless you go to
Asia to grow.
So a world where countries are putting up barriers to trade,
becoming isolationist, is not great for global companies.
And from that perspective, you can argue that that effect has
not been priced in properly, but that these companies will
feel the pain over time a lot more from a world that shuts
down and becomes more nationalistic.
Most of those companies are global.
If the actually starts a trade war, will it tank the markets in the long run then, given
that most of the bigger companies are global companies?
I think in a sense markets will kind of hold off on that until they start to see that.
What will cause a sell-off is when you start to see the earnings for a company come in well below expectations and
The company is very clearly saying this is because our global revenues are suffering because of this
So once people connect that those dots then it becomes hey the tariffs are driving this decline
Where else will it go next?
So at that point, I think you will see a reality check
But I think markets are going to kind of hold off
until they start to see that evidence coming.
Do you see it as bluster?
One of the things, you wrote the tariffs are a sign
that globalization, unstoppable for much of the last four
decades, has crested and that nationalism in politics
and economics is reemerging.
I think it's too strong a force to just be bluster,
because you're seeing this not just from the US,
you're seeing this from nationalist parties in pretty much every part of the world, you know, including
parts of Asia where you think, hey, they want to be globalists, they want to export things.
You're seeing it in India, you're seeing it partially in China where you want to bring
things back within your borders because you think you can control them much better.
I mean, in a sense, we've asked for this as economists
by selling globalization too strongly
and not talking about its costs.
Here in this country.
More honestly.
Right, it has political costs.
And it's got economic costs for some people
and we told them, you know,
what I thought was pretty insulting,
learn to code, do something else,
learn to do something else.
And I think we're paying the price
for underselling
its costs or under preparing people for its costs.
And this backlash I think is not something
that'll just go away, it's going to kind of simmer
under the surface and you're going to see this show up
in maybe different governments being voted in Europe
who are just as nationalistic as the US in terms of trying to protect what's
theirs.
So, I have a feeling that for the next decade, you're going to see this force continue to
play out even if markets turn against it because while markets often kind of constrain, many
of these governments use the markets as their foil.
They view the markets as the enemy, as Wall Street as the enemy.
So I think it will be sold as markets don't like us, but it's good for you.
How well that sells politically is a different question.
Yeah, that's interesting.
So as a corollary to international trade, Secretary of State Marco Rubio is pitching
American companies on the incredible opportunities that exist in Russia right now, but investors
and corporations are hesitant, I would be too. Do you see them diving into Russia or where are the
global opportunities for them? I mean I think you got to go where the people are,
right? No matter how you dress this up, Asia is the place to go because half the
world's population is on that continent. Russia is an aging, small population.
I don't see, I mean, you can talk about natural resources in Russia, but, you know,
Russia is not going to sit by while you extract, you know, natural resource from
Russia and take it out.
It's a, it's a country that's going to protect its interests.
So I'm not sure there's much for us companies in Russia.
It's not like Apple is going to double its iPhone sales by opening up the Russian market.
It's too small a market.
There's not enough buying power.
So if there's opportunities in Russia, it's mostly natural resources.
I always call them a mob country.
Wall Street breathed a big sigh of relief when Trump nominated Scott Besant for Treasury
Secretary because they generally see him as a trusted hand and not an ideologue, although
recently he's been a little bit that way.
It's a difficult job ahead of him.
It includes helping extend the 2017 tax cuts, but lowering deficits at the same time and
creating economic growth, but keeping inflation down.
And of course, making sure the gold is still in Fort Knox.
What a ridiculous thing.
You can add Fort Knox if you want, but all those, what is the most, the toughest
thing for him?
Because he can't cut taxes and lower deficits at the same time.
He can't have economic growth without inflation.
I think that the biggest balance is the inflation and real growth balance.
I think that there's a very real chance.
I mean, we saw what inflation did in 2022. It's not just that it hurt markets,
but politically, there's nothing more devastating than having an episode of inflation. As Joe Biden
found out very quickly to his... Is inflation, I think, damages investor psyches in terms of
how they shop, how they ask for wage increases. So inflation to me, it remains the thing that you have to worry about the most.
At the same time, if you're given a mission of we want 4% real growth,
I don't see how you have both of those.
You might have to pick a low growth, low inflation scenario
if you have to find a balance.
But I don't see a way in which you can have high real growth and low inflation
with or without the tax cuts and all of the other issues.
You add the tax cuts on top of it
and a deficit that gets larger, the task only gets bigger.
But I think it's immediate task though
is to get the 2017 tax cuts extended.
And I have a feeling everything else
is going to sit in the background till that gets done. But if they're doing to do the tax cuts the
deficit issue is enormous. And the deficit issue is something the US has
kind of lived with. It's every country you go outside the US the question they
ask is how does the US get away with what it does right? If any other country
did what the US did, the world bank would be here. catastrophic. The reason the US is able to get away is the largest economy with the most consuming power.
You have a lot of leeway to do things that other countries can't do.
And for 40 years, we've lived beyond our means in terms of spending more than we bring in,
except for that brief period when the budget briefly got balanced.
We've been always at a deficit.
So this is something where the spending basically
continues to grow and you have tax cut and the
revenues drop off.
My worry is if you add to those tax cuts with more
additional tax cuts, right?
That, you know, you want tax tips, you want tax,
you know, overtime wages, whatever it is that you
add on.
Those are things which will create more consequences in terms of, you know, the wages, whatever it is that you add on. Those are things which will create more consequences
in terms of, you know, the deficit getting even larger.
Sure, sure.
But Wall Street is already priced in the tax cuts.
They're trying to figure out how to pay them,
Republican legislators, right now,
working very tiny majorities.
But how will Wall Street react
if the tax cuts don't get extended?
And alternatively, if the tax cuts do get extended and the deficit gets blown up in the process.
I think Wall Street basically doesn't even look at deficit.
They've kind of gone into denial on the deficits as a huge thing on Times Square where you
see how big our debt is.
I'm sure every banker looks in the other direction because you've got the Bank of America building,
their traders walk in, it's almost like they've become immune to this deficit question.
So I think the tax cut issue, I think if it doesn't get extended will be a big
negative surprise for markets because it's a 35% tax rate then at the end of
the year the cliff is approaching there are all kinds of other things that go
away if this tax reform act does not get extended
and those things can have significant consequences.
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So every episode we get an expert question.
Let's hear your expert question.
Hi, my name is William D. Cohen, bestselling author and founding partner of Puck.
Professor, my question for you is that everybody thought 2025 would be a year for investment banking bonanzas, but we're two months in now and
it doesn't seem to be happening in that way.
Why is that, do you think?
Why hasn't the investment banking business taken off so far this year?
And what's it going to take for the deal business to really get humming?
Thank you.
I mean, I think in a sense, you put your finger on how investment banks make money.
They get money from deals getting done.
Deals get done because companies feel secure enough about the future that they're willing
to spend 10 billion, 50 billion, 100 billion acquiring another company, raising financing.
Right now, that uncertainty that markets have kind of been resilient about is,
it shows up much more in corporate boardrooms.
Companies are run by people who are risk averse.
They don't want to take big risks if they don't know what's coming.
So I have a feeling that a lot of the deal making has gone into hibernation
while people wait to see how the uncertainty plays
out.
And that could be a long wait if in fact you're going to continue to see change happen over
the next four years.
If this is the way every week is going to play out for four years, a lot of investment
banks are going to be sitting around with nothing to do because the deals are going
to stop rolling through.
Because of chaos or feeling of you don't know what he's going to do next?
It's the uncertainty. I mean, corporate decision-making, it's less about chaos as about,
can I build in expectations that I feel comfortable about, about the macroeconomy and how it affects me.
So, it's, if you think about the decision-making at a corporate level,
it's driven more by, you know, projecting out things and saying, is this a good deal?
What is Trump doing there?
Because the expected IPO wave that was supposed to come after he took office also hasn't materialized.
What is he doing that's causing this?
Is that the IPO wave, similarly to the M&A activity?
Now, IPOs went into hibernation in 2022 and they haven't come back.
And you know what?
I don't think that's a bad thing.
Why is that?
I mean, because part of it is when you're looking at the kinds of companies going public,
many of them are companies we looked at which were bad businesses that had scaled up.
And they were scaled up bad businesses because venture capitalists.
So I think part of this adjustment is much of that IPO way was driven by companies that
really I don't think should not, were not ready for public markets.
So some of this I think is healthy, you're going back.
Some of it is just, you know, to go public, you need some incentives to go public, and
we've reduced those incentives over the last 15 years.
By paying, they get the money anyway by being private.
They get the money. There's a gray market now where you can stay private, get almost
all of the advantages of being a public company in terms of being able to raise capital with
none of the accountability.
Right.
Uber was quasi-public for five years before it went public. It was raising money from
Fidelity and Tiro Price and the Saudi Investment Fund before it went public in 2019.
And I think you're going to see more companies choose that option because why not?
Now, why put yourself-
Why bother?
Yeah.
I've heard that from a lot of tech people, like, why bother?
Like why talk to people publicly and I can do what I want and raise the money I need
to.
But is, on the whole, do you view Trump's policy changes as truly
pro-business enough to accelerate the economy or risky enough to drive higher inflation,
ultimately hasten a bear market, or a little bit of both?
I think it's a bit of both. I mean, if he plays his cards right, no, he can make the former
dominate the latter. But I think that he's got to kind of rein in the change and the change
a week, a chaos a week, and kind of get to a point where you say, okay, we're done. Now
we're going to talk about, you know, the things that you that you elected me for
as business people, you know, the lower taxes, the less regulation. So they're
waiting for that pivot to happen and maybe the pivot will never happen. Maybe
we'll have four years of this, in which case business are gonna look back and say,
we got nothing of the stuff
that we thought we were gonna get.
What is your instinct?
My instinct is that at some point in time
in the next few months, you will pivot,
but the pivot's got to happen
before the public turns sour on the process
because you've got to pivot when you still have
some degree of voter
goodwill on your side saying we voted for change this is the pivot so if I am
not a political advisor but who are in the White House I'm
looking to see it's got to be in the next few weeks not in the next few months
that the pivot has to happen because it's almost like we're all waiting for
what's really going to happen. And the focus is on one person, which is Musk and not the president.
So speaking of which, wrapping up the section on Trump's policy of asking you about his
plans for mass deportation, they'd be both expensive and inflationary.
It would hit some industries like construction, agriculture, hospitality, especially hard.
Does that reality constrain his ability to actually pursue it or that's another wild
card sitting out here,
which still hasn't happened.
On that one, I think he will barrel ahead no matter what,
because if there's one issue
that he won the presidency on, it was immigration.
It wasn't lower taxes, it wasn't less regulation,
it was immigration.
And I have a feeling that that's something
where he is so bought into the issue,
and the people around him are bought into the issue
that they will do it no matter what the economic consequences are.
So how does that play out in the markets then?
It plays out in markets, the companies that are especially dependent on
immigrant labor or on consumers who are.
So it's more, I think that it's not going to be the luxury products, it's
not going to be big tech companies, it's going to be smaller manufacturing
companies which are going to feel the pain. So the pain again is going to be
disparate, it's not going to be across the board, it's going to be a
subset of companies where that is going to affect either their revenues, because
they don't have as many consumers to sell to or their costs because their workers have all left.
So I think those companies have to prepare for the worst because I don't think that's
something that is going to be walked back.
Is that the most dangerous thing for the economy or just a part of it?
I think it's a part of it, but I don't think it has a...
Because we're so top heavy now as an economy in terms of where we get our market value.
This is, you know, if this were 1985, I'd say, you know, that immigration issue is going
to make or break the market and the economy.
I don't think it's going to be the issue that makes or breaks the entire economy, but it
is going to have some pretty substantial cause for a subset.
All right.
So let's pivot and talk specifically about the tech industry.
We'll start with Tesla.
It's not a tech company.
It's very tech forward.
You could argue it's valued like it's valued like not even a tech company, even more.
The stock is down roughly 13% year to date, but is still by far the most valuable car
company by market cap, even though its sales are declining.
So talk about Tesla in light of your most recent book, The Corporate Lifecycle.
You said it's in a high growth stage.
When do you see it transitioning to the next stage? This is the mature growth stage, which you say is like a midlife crisis.
Last year the company had its first sales decline in a dozen years. Sales are down 45%
across Europe last month. It's gotten worse. Talk a little first about Tesla, and I'm going
to ask you a quick question about X.
I mean, there are three issues with Tesla. The first is the macro focus on everything's going to shift towards electric cars.
I said some road bumps, especially in the last year.
People are, in a sense, going back to hybrids.
People thought, oh, that's never going to happen.
Hybrids are becoming, again, more popular than they used to be.
The second is the growth of BYD.
For the longest time-
This is the Chinese company for people.
The Chinese electric car company.
Because the longest time, the question you had with Tesla
is who's going to, I mean, who else is in the game, right?
The Lucids, the Vivids of the world,
they're never gonna make it.
The legacy automakers had no idea what they were doing.
They still don't.
So there's nobody else in the game.
BYD has filled that gap.
It is actually a company that's making decent electric cars,
selling at
mass market prices and essentially going after the biggest market potentially in the world,
which is the Chinese market. So that's the second. The third, of course, is Tesla has become
a political stock in terms of you tell me what you think about Elon Musk, that I can tell you
what you think about Tesla as a company, is it undervalued or overvalued.
And that's a dangerous place to be as a business, right?
No matter which side of the political divide you're on, you don't want to get identified
too much with one side because that means half the country doesn't like your products,
doesn't like your stock.
You know, the sales in Europe are dropping, might be because they don't like Tesla cars,
or maybe because they don't like Elon Musk, the effect kind of gets mixed in.
So from that perspective, those are all things that affect the Tesla narrative.
I still think that in this market, BYD will stay with the mass market electric
car company with a base primarily in China, and Tesla will continue to be the
dominant electric car
company outside China. So is this car is this company in a mature growth stage? I
think it's approaching more mature growth. The problem with Tesla is you're never
sure what business it's in. I mean it's an automobile company, it's an energy
company, it's an automated driving company. So with Tesla there's always
another rabbit to chase down another hole.
There's another story that opens up.
And for the last few years, it's not been the electric car story that's driven Tesla.
It's the automated driving and the money you can make if you can create an automated driving
car and think of all the ride sharing you could do and claim the entire 100%.
Yeah, Google's doing that.
I'm sorry, someone else is doing it.
I still haven't written in a Tesla robotaxi yet.
Still waiting.
I've driven in a Waymo.
I'm always in a Waymo.
I love them.
In New York, you don't see as many.
San Francisco, of course, you have a lot, right?
So I think that the question is whether Google
has the stomach to be a ride-sharing company.
Because that's, I mean, my end game for this
is that neither Tesla nor Google is going to be a
ride sharing company. Uber and Lyft are going to continue to be the ride sharing companies.
Yeah, and then they'll do deals with all of them.
They'll do deals. There's a big end market here. So there's always another story with
Tesla which kind of distracts you from the current story.
What's the next story then?
I don't know. Elon will come. See, that's the problem with Elon spending his time on Doge.
Yeah, he's not focused.
I think he doesn't care anymore.
There would be something else in the process, and that's what's driven Tesla.
It's a personality-driven company.
Yeah.
He's not interested in it anymore.
He's left his girlfriend.
And that's part of what Tesla shareholders feel is abandonment, which is where did our CEO go?
I know he has other things on his plate.
So I think that that's something else that needs to be ironed out of the company
as well.
If Elon's full-time job is going to be running something in the government,
even though it can't officially be a job, then who's running the company?
What's happening?
Because there's nobody else.
You can see it in the product. I always look at the product.
It's not an exciting product anymore.
That's one of the things I tend to focus on.
I have to ask about X, if only briefly.
I hate to talk about it.
Elon is in talks to raise money
at the $44 billion valuation that originally,
that he originally bought it for.
It's obvious his proximity to Trump
has affected how investors are valuing the company.
It's not a great business. It's not a great business.
It was never a great business.
It's less so now.
Even though advertisers are coming back, some of them are reporting being threatened to
come back.
What implications can you draw from that as you look at other companies and CEOs that
are perceived as being close to Trump or disfavored by him?
Is that really a thing right now?
Not yet, but it could. I think
historically in the US, this has never been a driver of how companies operate and how they get priced is how close you to the government. This is more the rule than the exception in some parts of the world, right?
Where how close you are to the government is going to determine success or failure.
I hope we don't end up with that being the end game in the US because it's not healthy.
It's not healthy because then the success of
a company doesn't come from the great products it makes,
it's who's in power right now,
and are you close to that person?
Now, I think that for the moment,
it's fairly narrowly in the US.
It's a narrow set of companies where this is an issue.
But if others take the Musk Playbook and they say,
well, I can pull that off with my company,
then I think you might see a whole host of companies doing
what doesn't make any sense from a business perspective,
but it's entirely driven by politics.
Right, and if he's on the outs, then if he gets on the outs,
then it's the other direction.
And that's the problem with any time you have
a politically connected company, you lose the connection, there goes your entire comparative advantage.
Your moat was built upon, I'm close to whoever's making the big decisions.
And that's not a great moat to invest based on.
We'll be back in a minute. Hey, it's Cara.
We're taking our show on the road alongside a number of other great Vox Media podcasts.
We'll be heading back to Austin for the South by Southwest Festival, March 8th through 10th.
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Visit voxmedia.com slash S-X-S-W to learn more.
That's voxmedia.com slash S-X-S-W.
Let's move to NVIDIA.
You bought it by accident before AI was really a thing,
but you recently sold half of your remaining NVIDIA stock.
You'd already sold half,
so now you're down to a quarter of where you started.
Talk to us through your reasoning for selling and the larger implications.
A lot of people think the run-up here has been unsustainable.
You know what?
Nvidia has become what Tesla used to be.
Every time I value Tesla, I would get this immense backlash from both sides of,
you overvalued your...
Nvidia is today's Tesla in terms of drawing very strong emotions on both sides.
It's an awesome company.
It's an amazing company.
Let's get out of the way.
Not a crazy owner though, but go ahead.
It's not a crazy owner.
It's got, you know, I'd like Jensen Wong.
It's been an amazing company.
That said though, at $3 trillion or close to it in terms of market gap, I don't see
how the company delivers enough in terms of market gap. I don't see how the company delivers enough
in terms of earnings and cash flows to justify it.
A company can be both an amazing company
and not a good investment at the same time.
And Nvidia is there for me right now.
It's a company I love.
I am immensely grateful to the company and Jensen Wong
for giving me the profits that it did from 2018 on.
But as an investor, it's very difficult to pay the price.
If I had to buy Nvidia right now at today's prices,
I would have a very tough time sustaining that decision
based on the business prospects for the company.
Right, it's just too big.
It's just too big given the potential market.
Because in spite of all of the good stuff, it makes chips.
It makes chips for the AI architecture.
And how much you spend on AI architecture
is entirely dependent on how big you think
the AI market is going to be.
And there will be competitors.
And there will be competitors eventually.
So you also told Scott Galloway,
you won't value Palantir because, quote,
you have no idea what they actually do.
It's funny when you put it like that,
and the stock has become a darling among retail investors and other sort of meme-y stock. It was up over 500%
since last January, but in the past few days it's been sliding quickly. Do you think of it as a meme
stock? If we take a step back. I think Ballinter has some really good qualities. I mean, I don't
understand what it does from people I've talked to who are aware of its products, it's one of the few companies that actually is producing
AI-related products and services that have value.
So I've talked to commercial establishments
that have been very impressed with the kinds of,
the integration of AI.
So it's not like, you know, a lot of companies throw AI in
on a product they've had for 10 years.
They call it AI because it's kind of buzzy right now
and you can sell it.
Palantir is one of the few companies
that's actually taken AI, which is powerful computing
and dated to the next level.
So from that perspective,
I don't think it's like GameStop or AMC,
which were empty companies to begin with
that became vehicles for people playing speculative games.
That's what the essence of a meme stock is.
There's not much there.
I think Palatir is a lot more than just that name.
There is substance to company.
What makes me wary about the company is,
if you ask how big is the market for what they do,
since I'm not quite clear what they do,
especially on their government slash defense side
of the business, I can't
even tell you how big the market is. I do know I've talked to people who are
on that side who bought Palantir products, who are very impressed by what they do
with AI that can help the Defense Department, but I'm not sure what that
market is. And if you don't know what the total market is for a
young company, it's very difficult
to gauge a value for the company.
So you'd rather stay away.
That's where I'd rather stay away.
So let me move on to another.
Apple just announced a $500 billion investment
in the US over the next four years.
It sounds impressive, but it also dovetails
to what it said it was doing and what they spend
in the normal course of business.
I think it was just a press release to please Trump.
Compared to other tech companies, they're very disciplined with their spending. They're still the most valuable company in the world course of business. I think it was just a press release to please Trump. Compared to other tech companies, they're very disciplined with their spending. They're
still the most valuable company in the world by market cap. But iPhone sales are down and
there's a perception they're playing catch up in AI, although some people say they're
a great gatekeeper for AI and they haven't overspent like other companies like Microsoft
and Meta and others. How should investors look at Apple stock?
You know how they say companies are reflections of the CEO's personality?
Tim Cook is a very measured man.
He doesn't strike me as somebody who's going to go chasing after a dream.
He's an operating person, guys, not a vision person.
So, the 500 billion, I think, is a reflection of a long term shift that Apple has made,
where they want to regain control of the production processes,
which they turned over to Chinese companies or companies in Asia.
So they might have made that decision well before Trump was elected.
So this might just be a PR,
which is doing something they plan to do.
On AI though, I think they're actually playing their cards just right.
I mean, I have an Apple smartphone,
they finally added Apple intelligence.
I'm not particularly impressed with what it does for me.
But then again, I'm not a techie person.
So, you know, the fact that my emails get sorted out,
which is nice.
Now, but I could say that about almost every AI product
and service I see as a consumer, it's neat,
it's cute, but I'm not paying $10 a month for it.
But I think when I look at Meta kind of spending $60, $80, $100 billion building data centers
in AI, I'm not sure that there is a market for it.
So I think Apple actually has played its cards right on AI and with DeepSeek on
maybe you don't need the AI chips and the huge data centers to actually produce
good AI products. So on that front I think caution has kind of won out. Just
as I think caution has served Apple well for much of the last 15 years because
I've heard people say you know Apple should go out and buy Netflix, Apple
should go out and buy Tesla. I mean, it's because they had the cash to do whatever they wanted.
The restraint they've shown has always been the reason I've held Apple stock.
But I'm also a realist.
I don't buy Apple stock expecting 10%, 15% growth a year.
I expect 6%, 8% growth and a cash machine.
Of all the tech companies, which one are you most worried about?
Obviously regulatory issues have taken a back seat.
They're not as worried.
There are cases still going around Metta and other companies.
Is there any you're particularly worried about?
Not really, because I have them all in my portfolio.
I'm going to be worried about the regulator, because they're going to have...
It'll be, you know, for the grace of God go I, every tech company is going to be under
some regulators' microscope,
either in the US or outside the EU or in Asia, at some point in time. So I kind of expect that,
given how big they are and how much they're a part of our lives. So that's built into the cash flows,
the cost that they have. I don't see anything catastrophic lurking around for any of the companies. I think the biggest worry you should probably have is
when you have a company that gets almost all of its revenues from a single business, Google with
online advertising, you hold your, you cross your fingers and you say,
let's hope that AI somehow doesn't create a different model for online advertising,
but the search box goes away, right?
So if you're thinking about catastrophic risk,
it's something that can undercut a core business.
People stop buying smartphones.
Why? Because there's some other device that does what smartphones do.
Which doesn't exist right now.
So at the moment, I'm okay with where they are, but, you know,
technology being technology, I've seen things change at the drop of a hat.
That's true.
Yeah, nobody expected the iPhone.
I've got to stay connected to my kids and my grandkids because they're the ones who
are going to be at the front end of those new devices when they show up.
Nothing yet.
I can report.
Nothing yet.
Nothing yet that I see.
Good to know.
Two final questions.
If we take a big step back, American stocks are made up roughly two-thirds of the global value to some investors
That means American stocks are overvalued other markets are undervalued
But you said earlier the magnificent seven companies are the best thought of his global companies that are based on you is not necessarily
American companies. I'd love you to sort of go deeper into that insight
Explain how it affects the way you think about potentially unbalanced valuations of American stocks compared to the rest of the world.
Is there an area of the world you're very interested in?
In terms of economic growth and prosperity, I think Asia is going to see a lot more of
that partly because they have a lot more room to grow.
That said though, it's almost like the rest of the world in terms of the market cap side,
the investing side and the company side is stuck in the 20th century.
One of the things I do is I take the top indices in every market, I go to the Sensex in India,
the BVESPA in Brazil, and I look at the companies in the index and what I see are old time manufacturing,
mining, financial service companies, even in countries which are high growth countries
like India.
For whatever reason, the systems within these countries don't seem to allow entrepreneurial
young companies to scale up and become one of the largest players.
It's got to be structural.
It can't be cultural.
It can't be that Indians are not entrepreneurs because when they show up in the U.S., they
manage to become entrepreneurial and build these big companies.
So there's something structurally in much of the rest of the world that causes young companies,
once they start to scale up, to either have to sell to bigger businesses or hit caps.
The US does not, in spite of all of its faults, the US allows young companies to not just grow,
but scale up to become the largest companies. Think about it, Meta is 13 years old as a publicly traded company.
That's a child by corporate age standards, but it's one of the largest companies in the
world.
And you take the Mag 7, Apple and Microsoft might be the ancient ones there, but even
they're 50 years old and they're companies that have found new lives with new products. So I think that the fact that US companies are such a high percentage of market cap,
some of that might be overpricing, but a lot of that has to reflect the fact that the US
is where the 21st century companies, the companies that are delivering the product and services
were dependent, is being produced.
So much as the EU might point at these tech companies
and say, you're terrible, you're violating privacy,
I'm looking for the next great European tech company.
Yeah, good luck.
And they'd say, Spotify, and they'd say,
if that is your definition of the next great tech company,
you've set your standards really low
in terms of what you think as big tech companies.
That's right.
100%.
And China had a chance, right?
In 2019, you had Alibaba, you had Tencent, JD, but then the Chinese government broke
their knees because they're worried about the threat they would be to control.
Yep, that's correct.
So in a sense, China kind of handicapped itself in this race, leaving the big tech companies
and the universities.
And Israel is sort of all, is in a real flux right now in terms of politically.
Yeah, there isn't a, there isn't a, the US dominates, which is interesting.
Is there an industry besides tech you're super interested in that you're like, huh?
Healthcare, because there's a lot of shaking out to do.
I mean, it's not good, it's not, I'm not interested because there's growth and
prosperity, but the system we have just doesn't work.
I'm talking about US healthcare in particular, but you could probably say the same thing
about much of global healthcare.
We have a system where everybody is unhappy.
Doctors are unhappy, patients are unhappy, insurance companies are unhappy, even when
they make money.
Governments are unhappy, politicians are unhappy.
That's my definition of a system that deserves disruption.
And the question with healthcare is why hasn't it happened yet?
Why hasn't there been an Amazon healthcare?
Mark Cuban is a startup, but it's still a very small player in the game.
Amazon did buy one medical.
Yeah. And I have a feeling that the next decade is when you're going to see the disruption hit.
Because the amount of disappointment, of anger you see among every layer in healthcare is so
great that something has to give you.
So I'm keeping my focus on healthcare and trying to figure out who the winners of this
disruption will be.
Remember Google Health?
Google Health?
That didn't work.
Anyway, last question.
Now, most people are in these larger funds, right, of the market, market basket, markets,
they don't have the time and intelligence that you have to individually pick stocks.
So if there's an 80% chance that American equities are overvalued, what advice do you
give to people?
When do you expect prices to come back down and what should people do?
I mostly ignore everything, Aswath, I just ignore it.
I do too and here's why, because a few years ago when people were talking,
because this notion of a bubble, markets being in a bubble,
especially with US equities, has been around for the last decade.
Yes, indeed.
And I took the Schiller P, which is every market timing person's
favorite device to show your markets are overpriced.
You know, look at the P, it's much higher than it used to be.
And I ran an experiment,
I went back to 1871, which is when Robert Shiller started looking at US data. So I took
his data so I couldn't be accused of playing with the data. 1871 through to 2017, and I
said, I'm going to play a game where I'm going to buy stocks when you tell me the Shiller
P.E. is low. So they have this range between 12 and 16.
This is for people who don't know.
If it gets out of whack, that's something they will...
It's a metric you use to say markets are overpriced or underpriced.
So you buy when the PE is low, you sell when it's high.
And I said, okay, I'll put this into play and let's see whether I can beat the market
by trying to sell when that timing indicator tells me to sell and buy.
And it turns out that I actually underperform the market,
unless I can predict a correction within six months of it happening.
It turns out that the cost you pay of going out of markets and waiting for the cleaning up to happen
is far greater than the benefits of actually being
out of the market when the correction happens. So if you went out of the market in 2005 expecting
a correction and in 2008 it happens, it doesn't do you much good because you gave up too much money
waiting for the correction to happen. So my advice to people is you say markets are overpriced,
I might agree with you on that
because that's, you know, I value the market and I said it's 12% over value. So what should I do
about it? Nothing. My advice is do nothing unless you have some special conduit that tells you the
correction is going to happen in the next two weeks. Right. Or you need the money. Or you need
the money. If you need the money, of course, this is the time to take it out. You made a lot of money
over the last four or five years cash out. But if you don't need the money, you course, this is the time to take it out. You made a lot of money over the last four or five years, cash out, but if you don't need the money, you're going
to be sitting on cash for a long time waiting for the market to come back.
Yep. Very good point. All right, Aswath, as always, you're a genius.
Not quite. Thank you.
Thank you so much.
Thank you.
On with Kara Swisher is produced by Christian Castro, Rassel, Kateri Yocum, Dave Shaw, Megan
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