Open Book with Anthony Scaramucci - The Man Who Listens When Markets Speak with Lawrence McDonald
Episode Date: May 8, 2024This week, Anthony talks with Bear Traps Report founder and author, Lawrence G. McDonald. Larry's new book, "How to Listen When Markets Speak," explores the real risks, myths and investment opportunit...ies in our evolving economy. Is there a bubble in crypto? What's really going to happen to inflation? And what should we be betting on right now? Larry gets into all of that and more on the show... Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hello, I'm Anthony Scaramucci, and this is Open Book.
where I talk with some of the brightest minds out there about everything surrounding the written word
from authors and historians to figures and entertainment,
neuroscientists, political activists, and of course, Wall Street.
Sorry, I can't resist.
Before we get into today's episode, if you haven't already,
please hit follow or subscribe, wherever you get your podcast, and leave us a review.
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Anyways, let's get to it.
Our economy is evolving and our investment opportunities and decisions need to evolve with it.
But when the market speak, it can often be hard to listen.
My guest today, Larry McDonald, can connect the dots between past, president, and future better than most.
And he joins me today to discuss his unique analysis that can ensure we're always one step ahead of the game.
Let's get into it.
Joining us now on Open Book, Lawrence McDonald.
He's one of the most respected financial experts on Wall Street.
He's the founder of the Bear Trap Report.
And he's a New York Times bestselling author.
And he's out with another book, which I predict will be a New York Times bestseller.
If it isn't already.
How to Listen When Markets Speak, Risks, Myths, and the Investment Opportunities in a radically reshaped
economy.
And what a great book.
I'll tell you what I loved about the book.
It was very easy to read.
your first book was also very easy to read.
That's how we actually met each other.
I complimented you on your first book,
the colossal failure of common sense,
which was about our exploits at Lehman Brothers.
We both shared some time there.
But this book is better in some ways.
You're smarter.
You're more experienced.
You've got more battle scars,
which you describe.
And the book makes all of us wiser.
So what is it?
Mr. McDonnell.
We've been around the block a long time,
you and men.
Do you get better as you get,
Do you get better as you get older?
You know what?
A lot of it goes back to you at Salt.
And what you told me, like 2010, I was just starting out and you invited me to Salt
Conference.
It was like 2010, 11, 12, somewhere in there.
And I was trying to build the institutional business.
And you said, you know, come to Salt and then get around the world, do the speaking tour,
meet the institutional investors.
And I met a lot of really professional investors through you.
And it's those.
And that's what I said in the acknowledgments.
The book's not about me.
It's more about the great people that I met over the last decade.
There's an old thing. You make more money on the speaking tour than you do writing the book, right?
So the first book was in New York Times West Cell. I basically met this great nucleus of friends around the world on the professional asset management side.
And what I'm trying to do in the book is democratize information out to a wider audience and really share some of the things I've learned over the last decade.
So what is it, though? What is the, like if I said to you take the crystal essence of what you learn about investing, I can tell you what mine is.
Ready? Whatever you think cannot go wrong.
Whatever you think with absolute certainty cannot go wrong will go wrong.
That's my sense. Okay. And what's yours?
Well, one is your greatest moment of fear, and I talked about this in the Tepper Chapper.
I sat down with Tepper. And at your greatest moment of fear, you've got to do the exact opposite of what you want to do.
And that's what he did in all his greatest trades. And you kind of look for those trades that are most mispriced.
and fear is oftentimes a great opportunity.
Let's talk about Dave Tepper for a second.
So he's literally one of the invest investors that ever lived.
He's fairly low-key compared to Warren Buffett, although us in our industry, no one.
He runs Appaloosa.
He's now the owner of the Carolina Panthers.
If you were smart enough to put a million dollars in Mr. Tepper's business, unless he
didn't pay, you know, you paid your taxes elsewhere, $1 million of his business worth
$270 million today, 34 years later.
What do you think about Mr. Teper's ability, his instincts, his analytical skills?
The average person listening to this doesn't have those.
I don't have those.
But how do they apply to the average person?
Well, he has an ability that not many people have to play the bullish and the bearish side, which is hard to do.
What I think is amazing about him is he, you know, he's flipped from hard asset plays, say eight or nine years ago, 10 years ago.
It's a more financial asset plays, which would be, think about like metals, materials,
oil and gas companies 10 years ago. Then over the last decade, he flipped more into what we call
financial assets. That's like the fangs and the big, and he got that right. But now I think he's
shifting and I think a lot of professional investors are shifting toward a hard, like a hard asset
portfolio, more value. In other words, what worked the previous decade of more of a deflationary
decade, and this is the main thesis of the book, is probably not going to work the next 10 years.
You want to be long a portfolio that maybe has some mag 7, but has a lot more hard assets relative
to financial assets. You know, I'm blown away by your career because, I mean, you were selling
like frozen meat at some point in your life. Weren't you? I remember that from the first book,
right? Were you? I was, I got out of school during this S&L crisis. I literally tried to get a job
at Merrill Lynch. I stuck my way into the office. I dressed up as a pizza delivery guy.
And I got into the manager's office and said, listen, I want a job. I want to work with you.
And he said, listen, go out and sell something for six months. And one of the guys with the biggest
producer in the office yelled out, yeah, go sell pork chops. And they all kind of ganged up
and they said, if you go sell pork chops for six months and come back and prove to us that you had
the tenacity to do that, we'll give you a job. And that's what I did. It was great. And they did
give me their job. So there's something that happens to people. It hasn't happened to you, but let me
describe what happens. They go to Wall Street. They get rich and successful. They start buying into their
own BS. They buy fancy pants houses, fancy pants cars. They
flex on each other, they'll buy some art, and then they run into a buzzhole. Dick Folt,
Joe Gregory, others. What is it about human nature that makes us bad at becoming rich,
getting rich, making money on Wall Street? Tell me what it is. Well, you know, the Leavis
story is great, but I've seen it and you've seen it through different parts of Wall Street and different
parts of Hollywood. It's hubris, it's arrogance, it's complacency. And I think I related to like Tom Brady,
take quarterbacks. There's a guy that was never complacent. And after a good season, after
a Super Bowl, that wasn't enough. And I think it's the same thing with Wall Street, where as you
make a couple million bucks, you get the bigger house, your car, and the complacency puts you in a
framework where you lose that drive for learning, you lose that drive for looking for edge and in alpha.
And then you surround yourself, and this is what happened to Liam. Dick had actually in a lot of ways
a good heart, but he surrounded himself with a bunch of bad people. And that's what, and that's a lot
hubris and a lot of arrogance and a lot of complacency. But a guy like Depper doesn't do that.
Steve Cohen doesn't do that. Issey Englander doesn't do that. So what is the added piece of
wisdom of those guys versus some of the garden variety Wall Streeters Lair? You know, I think it's just
staying grounded. I mean, keeping it simple, having that burning desire for greatness and repeating
greatness over and over. Like, Izzy's amazing. I mean, Millennium's been a big client of ours over the
years. Like most of our business at the Bear Trap support is institutional. And,
Whenever I meet these guys, I'm just like, and over the years, I meet them year and year and year and out.
And they just, the great ones just have the ability to block everything out and want to just keep creating a better business each year.
You brought up some things in the book.
And you're an expert on this, by the way.
And I follow you for many reasons, but you always seem to be ahead of everybody on the inflation versus the deflation.
And so if you don't mind, and I'm taking from your book, let's go over errors of disinflation or deflation.
you know, following the Cold War, which you said the collapse of the Soviet Union created this
sort of peace dividend end. Then we've had errors of inflation. We had a period of benign inflation
after the financial crisis. And then, of course, after COVID, we got a fairly high dose of
secular inflation. Right. So give us the Lawrence G. McDonald trueflation, if you were,
where are we now? How do we get to where we were? And what happened after the Cold War? What happened
after COVID. Give us a sense for things. Well, so, so what would I say in the book, the Lehman
crisis brought on a fiscal and monetary response. And it was about $4 trillion. And a lot of it,
as you explained at Salt one year, a lot of that fiscal monetary response didn't really get out
of the banking system because they were trying to bail out the banks. So it didn't really get out.
In other words, when you're trying to fix the banks, a lot of times it's complicated, but
you need a lot of that money had to stay in the banking system and didn't get out.
Whereas the COVID was a, it wasn't a $4 trillion response.
It was a $16 trillion response to this date now.
So it's a $16 trillion of fiscal and monetary.
So right there, and a lot of that money got into people's bank accounts, right?
Like when people went through the hardships of COVID,
they were Uncle Sam deposited cash into people's bank accounts.
So that created this new sustainable inflation.
And the other thing is we're in this multipolar world now.
And that's what I talked about in the book around.
I sat down with James Baker in the National Bank of Abu Dhabi years back.
And he's like, Larry, when you get into this multi-polar world thing, you got to be careful.
And I said, you know, Mr. Ben, this guy is the forward Treasury Secretary.
I said, Treasury Secretary Baker, what is a multipolar world?
And he said, it's a world where you have more adversaries, where your sea lanes are not as safe
and where you can't really global, the true globalists in Davos that you know well.
The great thing about your brand is you move, you can hang with them, but you can also hang
with everybody else.
But that crowd, you know, they've made a colossal miscalculation because that globalist
agenda needs a unipolar world, sea lanes, really global stability, no wars. And what Neil Ferguson
pointed out to me is wars are very inflationary and anything that screws around with transportation
is inflationary. And this new drone technology. I mean, this is like the Terminator. We have drones now
that are taking out refineries in Russia. I mean, think about that. So if one of those drones get
into the Saudi oil fields, then we're going to have another problem. But it's that kind of
multi-polar world thing that creates a lot more sustainable inflation. And then here's the big part.
This goes back to Trump, or they goes back to Biden. If you think of the 2016 election and you think
of what elected Trump, right? We took five million jobs out of the United States, five million.
We shotgun them around the world, India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, and we raised the standard of living
dramatically. That's what we talk in the book. So if you're working in a call center in India,
Right. Say you're making 10 to 50 times more than your great grandparents. And you know what? There's a billion people in India, Anthony, that don't have air conditioning. One billion people with like 350 million families with no air conditioning. The moment you get a standard of living raise in India, you buy a moped, some type of transportation, and you get some air conditioning. So we've raised the standard of living in the developing world. And so we're increasing, we're basically creating a whole swat of new carbon consumption.
consumers and you know they need a lot of gas they need a lot of oil and a lot of diesel but at the same time because of regulation at ESG we're suppressing the capital investment of all the necessary metals mining oil and gas right so we're suppressing the investment necessary so here's a line from the book if you take the 2010 to 2014 path of capital investment right capital investment we're essentially three trillion dollars below that that growth path and since 2014 so you're
go 14 to 24, the year 2020, we're essentially 900 million people more. So we've got 900 more people
in the planet. We're underinvested. We're suppressing investment. And we've, you know, I'm sorry,
we're suppressing supply and we've got, we're augmenting demand. And that gets you a sustained
inflation regime. And that's what creates the great migration of capital. What's,
what's coming at us is like probably the most, the most impressive trade of our lives, I think,
most opportunity. Okay. And so tell me the trade. How do we make the bet? Well, if you look at the U.S.
power grid, for example. It's 50 years old in some places, 30 years old and others. It needs a lot of
copper. I sat down with a billionaire investor this week that you know probably better than I know,
and that's probably his biggest position is, in the last like years, it keeps building the copper
position. And copper goes, you know, has a lot of volatility, but you've got a suppression of
copper supply globally, and then you've got this demand that's going to come on from, think about
artificial intelligence, right, the terawatt hours that if they were used in, say,
2002 for data centers, the think of those data centers, artificial intelligence,
you're talking 160 terawatt hours in 2022 to potentially 2,000 terawatt hours in
2026, 27, 28.
That's going to require a lot more electricity.
There's your natural gas trade.
Your natural gas is so, like, if you believe in Vidia's, you know, management team,
there's no road to that growth path with,
out a triple of natural gas here. And you can look at companies, you can look at ETFs,
like the FCG ETF, which is a natural gas companies. You can look at companies like Chesapeake.
But there's a lot of mistrised assets. And I think I've heard you said this over the years,
when you look at the dot-com revolution, a lot of the obvious trades, Global Crossing, JDS Uniface,
Cisco, you know, these trades worked at the beginning, but that didn't work for 20 years.
And a lot of the tertiary, the third level trades were the 10, 20, 30 baggards that nobody was looking at at the time.
So you're a bull.
I'm a bull on commodities, yeah.
What about the overall economy?
Well, right here, the economy is bounced, but the bottom 60% are a lot of pain.
The Fed told us, the Fed lectured us that the bottom 30, 40% only have $400 in the checking account.
How many times we heard that?
So inflation kills the bottom and the bottom 40%.
But if you're in Palm Beach and you get 10 million bucks in a money market fund,
you know, Powell just gave you a 350% pay raise since 2021.
So, like, that's why it's so hard to figure out the economy because if you go around Palm Beach,
you go to Toronto, any big city, the restaurants are pretty full, but the bottom 60%.
So I think the economy has probably a rough patch over the next year as we inflation.
If inflation creeps back up, it's almost like, you know what, if they think of like the 80s, right?
The recessions of the 80s, 70s days were inflation driven.
So it's like you get this blow off top in economic activity that re-accelerates inflation that hurts to the bottom 50, 60 percent, and then you go on to some type of recession.
Whereas I think a lot of people, the Lacey Hunts of the world, you know, the Roses, you know, Rosenberg, they're brilliant guys.
I think that they're looking at recessions the way 2008 and 2020 were where you get this like disinflationary trend that really helps bonds.
So it's kind of like, I think that's one of the most confusing things out there.
Well, you're a bond guy.
So let's talk about our bonds.
34 trillion of them. It seems to be growing. Deficit spending wise, we're spending 6% of our
economy annually on deficit spending. The politicians don't want to do anything to curb it. They've
been very clear. Republicans and Democrats want to keep spending. Is this a problem? Is it not a
problem? Is Dick Cheney right? Deficits don't matter. You know that we're printing money in order
to finance these deficits. It does have an impact on lower and middle income people.
The Palm Beach people, no problem.
They'll stay eating in their fancy restaurants.
But the average person's feeling it.
What do you think happens?
Well, there's a scene in the book.
I sit down with our old friend Mark Chival, who he was on Lewis Bacon's original team.
This is one of the greatest investors.
He's one of these under the radar guys, but he's a really brilliant investor.
And to be on that more capital team, that original great team, and now he's running his own money.
And he talked to me about this.
We were at Dunabins Bar in London this past summer.
And I said, how does this play?
I said the same question you just said,
because the only way you get out of that 34, 36 trillion debt hole
with 80 billion a month of interest now,
80 billion a month of interest,
which is potentially going to dwarf parts of Medicare or Medicaid,
the only way you get out of that is what he called financial repression.
And all that means is at some point they have to keep interest rates
below the rate of inflation.
So when you get a debt hole that big,
what we talked about in the book, there's two ways out.
You can do a debt jubilee.
So if you look back the last 3,000 years, many civilizations have done a reset, what's called the debt jubilee moment where they basically forgive all the debts and start over.
And it can be very painful.
And it actually goes back to the Bible.
I mean, the debt jubilee historic references.
But the other way out is what he calls financial repression.
And in that kind of world where they're suppressing rates below the rate of inflation, hard assets, crypto and hard assets do very, very well.
And I think the crypto market's picking up on that.
Is there a bubbling crypto now?
Well, I think the bubble was in 21 where, you know, the percentage of the tertiary coins that were doing well was pretty, pretty crazy. I think it's, I think it's a little, I think the ratio of Bitcoin to gold's a little rich here. And it goes back and forth. I think you're better off buying Bitcoin in size when that ratio gets, I track it. You know, we track it once a month. And so I think you want to lighten up on, I think crypto relative to gold is a little rich here. So maybe you light up on crypto and buy a little bit of gold. But then again, you're going to assure as God they made little bit of money.
green apples, you're going to get a chance to buy when that, when that ratio gets in that
attractive range, you want to have more Bitcoin than gold.
But not a bubble.
A bubble in crypto.
I guess parts of the crypto market are bubbles.
Like in micro strategy, the ratio of micro strategy to Bitcoin, that's a bubble.
That's completely unsustainable.
Yeah, because it should be tracking Bitcoin and not being at a premium to Bitcoin.
Yeah.
And it's the most extreme premium, I think, on record.
Maybe there's a slightly, slightly bigger one in 21.
That's a sign of a bubble.
And I'm going to quote from the book.
You quote George Soros in the book.
He says, when I see a bubble, I rush into buy it.
Tell us the psychology of that.
What does he mean by that?
Well, I look at that.
I get to do a lot of soul searching here because I saw this AI thing, and I literally was
writing the book, and I was writing those words.
And I saw this AI thing like last year.
Like, first time I really noticed it was like, remember, the entire street, Anthony,
the entire street last first quarter was downgrading all the AI stocks,
or at least they had them in neutrals, they had cut the price target.
I mean, these Wall Street analysts are just, it's terrifying really,
because if they didn't know anything then, like we were talking to last March and last January,
these stocks were all downgraded within last like 15 months from now back.
So the first width people really caught of the potential was like in the beginning of the second quarter.
And you know what?
that's where I mean, I could have like, okay, the first thing you want to do when you see the bubble,
and we saw, I guess, Larry Summers started talking about it.
You saw Druck and Miller.
You had a lot of public statements about the AI potential in like April of 23, April, May.
And then June, they had the blowout quarter.
So, yeah, the first thing you should do when you start to see under new potential spectacular technology is by it.
And I've had ears in the headlines.
I firstly froze on it.
I was trying to process.
I couldn't process the potential, you know, a year ago today.
The feeling for me about where we are after reading your book is that we're entering a period of normalization.
I feel like your first book, we went into a 15-year period of financial healing.
The Fed basically got raised to zero.
They let the banks borrow the money at zero, lend it back to the federal government at two.
And every year, for 10 years, they improved their balance sheet by 20%.
They did it for 15 years, so they had this massive improvement, profit making to try to restore the strength of the balance sheets.
Unexed Black Swan event of COVID, inducts more than we would like to have.
The Fed's trying to stop the inflation, but it's more or less normalized us back to what you and I grew up in, which is a 3, 4, 5, 6% yielding bond market.
What did I miss?
Yeah, and the other side of that is when you suppress the cost of the cost of the cost, the cost of capital,
when you suppress the cost of capital for longer and longer and longer periods of time,
you're incentivizing bad behavior, you're enabling the Bernie madeoffs of the world,
and you're not allowing the cleansing process of the business cycle to function,
and that's been the case for a long time.
And so we need that clenting process, and, you know, the Fed's trying to prevent the business cycle from function.
But when race is suppressed that long, just look at commercial real estate.
I think the Black Swan now is the regional banks, and I'm talking about the super-regionals,
They're max long.
So I've been in meetings this week with different hedge funds,
and they're looking at oil, and they're looking at these drone strikes.
You're looking at these drone strikes in the Middle East.
And if you get like a $20-30 move in oil,
that's going to put a lot more pressure on the curve to steepen
or at least higher yields.
That's going to put all that commercial real estate,
all those mortgage-backed securities there,
and the super regional banks.
We're talking like U.S. Bank Corp, we're talking like Zions.
We're talking to America.
There's probably three of them that if rates go up 100 bits from here,
because of geopolitical or any kind of like higher interest rates from here,
then that commercial real estate pain is going to explode.
And you're going to have another banking.
It won't be Lehman, no way.
But it'll be just like last year where the Fed has to step in, expand the balance sheet.
And then they don't have to go into some type of rate cuts,
and that gets you a much weaker dollar.
And that also gets you another move in the hard assets.
All right.
So I'm at the point in our podcast where I ask our authors five words,
And I need you to respond to those words.
And the title of the book, of course, is how to listen when markets speak.
It is a signal book.
It's not a noise book.
I recommend this to people because you explain what is going on and you're relying on experts and your own judgment.
And you just have a tremendous amount of common sense.
And this is the reason why you're going to continue to do super well.
But let's start with these five words.
And this is more of two words.
But let's stretch my own rules while I'm talking to you a lot.
Ready?
Lehman Brothers. Failure. Federal Reserve. Too big.
Inflation. Sustainable.
Okay. Meaning it's normalizing or sustainable at a high number?
Sustainable. Like normal, normalize it three, four instead of one, two.
Okay. Markets. Volatile. Bitcoin.
Rich. Is it a hard asset?
It is. And that's unfair to Bitcoin. I believe in the entire thesis of Bitcoin, what I don't like about it is, what annoys me is how it's pumped up at the highs and this,
A lot of guys like Sailor are pretty quiet at the lows.
But it has sucked in a lot of kids.
And there's some weird people that are associated with it.
But there's no question that the fundamental foundation of crypto is here to stay.
And it's going to be an asset class.
Bitcoin's going to be an asset class for decades to come.
I mean, I don't see any way around crypto.
So I'm a crypto fan.
Well, when you say that there are some weird people associated with it,
I'm hoping you're thinking Larry Fink and not me.
I mean, that's what I'm hoping.
No, no, what I mean, what I hate to say like this,
but when you have any asset class that you need strippers,
and you have a million followers,
I just have like 120,000, 118.
I have more bonds, literally like stripper buds
trying to get me involved in Bitcoin,
and then the people are sending me video.
That's weird.
Like, that tells me they need a greater fool, right?
They need, like, who creates something like that?
Well, you have a more interesting feed than me.
I don't really have that many strippers on my feed, but I got to maybe meet you for a drink.
You have to explain to me how your feed works.
You know, would that be all right?
Of course.
But it's not just on Twitter.
You know what I mean?
Like, it's all over the place.
It's like you just see that kind of element of sales push.
And you saw a lot of it in 21.
All right.
Well, I've got to mention this all this stuff to Larry Fing and Robbie Mischnick related to all this.
See what they say.
The title of the book, Adelison, When Markets Speak, it is the risks, miss, and investment opportunities
and a radically reshaped economy.
It's written by Lawrence G. McDonald,
who's a dear friend and a great guy,
and this will also be a bestseller.
And I wish another of a great success on the book.
Thanks for being such a, you know,
mentor to me,
your strength and what you've achieved
in politics and in finance.
It's just Hall of Fame status.
So thanks.
Especially politics, don't you think?
I mean, you know,
I mean, how many people can say they get fired like me, right?
So I feel like it's a big political achievement of mine, Larry.
Well, to make the statement that you made across the 2016 election and the impact that you had across all those different candidates is absolutely, who's done that on Wall Street?
We'll see what happens this time.
I'm Anthony Scaramucci and this is Open Book.
For more about me, my childhood, early career, Skybridge, Bitcoin, and yes, the White House, my new book from Wall Street to the White House and back is available for pre-order on Amazon and wherever you buy your books.
So I know Larry McDonald forever. We worked together at Lehman Brothers. He smelled the worst side of risk taking there, let out a Clary on call. It's got to be now almost 16, 17 years ago, but nobody listened. And it's interesting about markets and life. It's like a few good men. We can't handle the truth. So lots of times we want to live in denial about situations. And the reason I love Larry so much is he tries to,
cut through all the data, cut through all of the biased interests out there. You know, a lot of people
talk their book in the marketplace. So if they're long something, they speak favorably about it.
Even if something's going bad, they like to speak favorably about it anyway. That's not Larry.
Larry's analysis is always crystal clear. And even if it's against some of the things he's
invested in, he's a very, very honest guy. And I'm sure you got a lot from the podcast today.
And I hope you go out and buy his book.
All right, so my guest today, Ma, I spoke with a guy that I work with at Lehman Brothers.
His name was Larry McDonald, and he is a market prognosticator and a market analyst.
And so, Ma, you've witnessed my career on Wall Street.
You didn't want me to be on Wall Street, though, right?
You wanted me to be a lawyer, didn't you?
And your job can do that.
Okay.
But, I mean, you were telling people I was working out of law from when I was working at Goldman Sachs, though.
You're not?
I know.
You were embarrassed for me, right, that I was working at Goldman?
You could tell me.
No, I wasn't embarrassed.
I just thought that since you had super good become, you know, a real powerful lawyer.
But I think you were bragging to you.
I know what you were doing.
You were in the nail salon bragging to your friends that I was a lawyer,
even though I was working at an investment bank.
That's okay.
Right.
Yeah.
Do you remember when I got fired from Goldman the first time?
You don't remember that?
We tried to forget that.
Yeah, but then I got rehired, right?
That was sort of crazy, right?
No, go-googe.
Did the wife?
Right.
And then we had Sam Bankman-Fried.
You liked Sam, didn't you, ma?
Yeah.
You did.
You liked them.
I thought bad.
You know, the kid was, you're talking about the kid, right?
Yeah, I'm talking about the kid.
Yeah, the kid that I sold a piece of my business to.
Yeah.
No, I know.
I feel bad for the guy.
Trust me.
You know, he hurt.
He's got accepted by not 25 years.
I think that was over the top.
Yeah.
Yeah, that's because you're an Italian mother, my.
You're looking after everybody.
He hurt me, but I do have a soft spot for him.
I do feel that he's got something wrong with him.
Or like you would say, go-goots.
You know, you got something wrong with his brain.
Yeah, go-goots.
Go-goots, yeah.
He's a clone.
Did I say what I think?
He's a clone of my nephew who has problems, but he's a clone and looks.
Right.
No, I know.
That's why you had a soft spot for him.
I remember all that.
So, Ma, let's talk about your stock picking before I let you go, because this is a show.
Today was on Wall Street.
You want to tell everybody about bed, bed, and beyond, or no?
Me?
And it failed.
Well, it went out of business.
You sold it on time.
You don't remember, right?
You bought it.
Yeah, I sold it on time.
Yeah, I put the money in.
I had to give you the money because, you know, it went up a lot.
Then you told me to take the profits, and now it's out of business.
But you like that, right?
I know.
Yeah, but you like to gamble.
You like to gamble, though, don't you mind?
When you go to, like, the casino, you like to put some money in the slot machine?
His name was Uncle Sam, and he would take me to the track.
And I was young, and so I kind of had that bug of me a little bit.
I'm not a compulsive gambler, but I do like to take chances.
And I think you do, too, because your chance with Bitcoin is special.
You're very, very smart, and you study things, and you're very well ready.
And I should be president, too, right, ma?
Absolutely.
You're the best, man.
Yeah, I mean, core, yeah.
Don't have a change, ma'am.
Why change now at 87, right?
Why would you change, right?
Why change perfection, mom?
No need to change perfection, all right?
Right, thank you.
When we do a Mother's Day podcast, I'm going to ask.
skip at your boyfriend, then we can really get into it, all right?
My first love.
All right, ma.
All right, I love you, Mom.
All right, I love you.
All right, bye.
Thank you.
I am Anthony Scaramucci, and that was Open Book.
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