PBD Podcast - Hormuz Blockade + RAMageddon AI Data Center WAR | PBD #777

Episode Date: April 15, 2026

Patrick Bet-David, Tom Ellsworth, and Brandon Aceto are joined by Lyn Alden as they break down NATO’s response to the Strait of Hormuz blockade, rising economic pressure on Americans, the U.S. housi...ng shortage, Mamdani’s grocery store cost overruns, gold price projections, the Sam Altman attack suspect arrest, and the rising costs of jobs and raising children.------👍 LIKE AND SUBSCRIBE!🏢 WORK AT VALUETAINMENT: https://bit.ly/4ungnZZ📗 LYN ALDEN'S "BROKEN MONEY": https://amzn.to/4tN8Baw📈 LYN ALDEN'S INVESTMENT STRATEGY: https://bit.ly/4cexTZuⓂ️ CONNECT ON MINNECT: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://bit.ly/4kSVkso⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ Ⓜ️ PBD PODCAST CIRCLES: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://bit.ly/4mAWQAP⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠👔 BET-DAVID CONSULTING: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://bit.ly/4lzQph2⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ 🥃 BOARDROOM CIGAR LOUNGE: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://bit.ly/4pzLEXj⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠🇰 KALSHI: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠http://kalshi.com/pbd⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠💬 TEXT US: Text “PODCAST” to 310-340-1132 to get the latest updates in real-time!ABOUT US:Patrick Bet-David is the founder and CEO of Valuetainment Media. He is the author of the #1 Wall Street Journal Bestseller “Your Next Five Moves” (Simon & Schuster) and a father of 2 boys and 2 girls. He currently resides in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida.

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:01 Did you ever think you would make it? I feel I'm so much like it takes sweet with the week. I know this life meant for me. Adam, what's your point? The future looks bright. My handshake is better than anything I ever signs. Right here. You are a one of one?
Starting point is 00:00:19 My son's right there. I don't think I've ever said this before. All right. So Wednesday business podcast, lots of going on. Probably the biggest story to a lot of people here. Apparently I'm sitting down talking to all. I'm saying, tell me the biggest story that you're most concerned about. And Humberto says, his biggest concern is the fact that a bag of Doritos right now is seven bucks. And I said, look,
Starting point is 00:00:44 I mean, all this other stuff, straight of Hormuz blockade, you know, gold, Bitcoin, who cares? Doritos is seven bucks guys. So we have to talk about it. And as usual, we bring some smart people here. Lynn Alden, it's great to have you here with us. Great to be here. Yes, I've seen your work. You're brilliant. You're very smart. Macro-economic. So we're looking forward to getting your insight as well. On Wednesday, days, when we started doing this, I don't know what it was, Tom, a few months back. It's purely business, economy, numbers, and we'll do some politics as well. But let me go through some of the stories that we have going on.
Starting point is 00:01:14 So tariff refunds, unlikely to benefit consumer CMBC CFO Council survey says, Trump declines to say which countries would help U.S. with Hormuz blockade. The one thing we do know is that NATO allies refuse to join Trump's Iranian port blockade, according to Reuters. U.S. begins blockade and Strait of Hormuz. warns Iran attacks ships to stay away. UK not supporting U.S. Iran blockade. As Francis Macron confirms multinational talks on the Strait of Hormuz,
Starting point is 00:01:44 I believe, Vance, Tom, when is Vance meeting with, for part to its tomorrow, right? Tomorrow, Thursday, remembered there'll be very early U.S. time because it's in the afternoon over there, but supposedly tomorrow. Yeah, I wonder, you know, what some people are saying, you know, sending Vance, was it a strategic thing to send a anti-an, you know, non-interventionist? to go and negotiate, was it a way? Because typically it should have been Marco Rubio, but you're sending Vance, are you setting them up for failure, or are you setting them up for success? Is this almost like a tryout to see how well you do on the bigger scale of going
Starting point is 00:02:18 out there negotiating something this massive? You know, typically vice president, you make them the czar of the border and you never have to show up to it. You know, we know a couple guys in the past. If you don't even know where it is. If you don't even know where it is. Yeah, you think it's in Europe. But so U.S. Iran, weighing Newtok. on January 2nd, we'll talk about the venue. Vance says U.S. acquired some knowledge about Iran talks. China says it's ready to play constructive role for peace into Gulf. Black Rock raises views on U.S. stock on belief that war is over-profits are up.
Starting point is 00:02:48 Major U.S. cities offer cash incentives to spark growth, attract newcomers. I got a bunch of numbers I want to talk to you about with the market and the economy and gold, which we'll get to. And Lynn, I want to get your thoughts on that because I know you talk about gold and Bitcoin. U.S. hospitals are emerging from bankruptcy only to falter again. Look at these parents here. Anxious parents, according to Bloomberg, are spending upwards of $50,000 to land their kids a job. It now costs $300,000 to raise a child in the U.S. really daunting situation for parents. So if you want to have five kids, that's $1.5 million you need over a span of 18 years for each one of the kids.
Starting point is 00:03:30 Americans say their incomes cannot keep up with rising prices. They're cutting back on groceries, ride shares, and alcohol. Late payment rising for buy now, pay later. Loans, survey says, we'll talk about that. Will gold reach $6,000 by the end of the year? Multiple companies are saying by the end of the year, it's going to be $6,000. And wait a year, which one of them said it's going to be $6,300 by the end of the year? Housing shortage is at least $10 million.
Starting point is 00:03:56 They said it was $2.5 million a few years ago. Then they said $4 million. now it's 10 million shortage. So what kind of a cost is that good? Is a lot of jobs? There's a lot of, if they do it in the right areas, what are the right areas? Some areas is not a good area. You know, then it goes into the blue, red state because of taxes, because a lot of people
Starting point is 00:04:12 are thinking about taxes. These eight U.S. housing markets favor buyers. And then Sam Altman, I think we need to address that. And probably on the conversation with Sam Altman, another stories about AI chatbods, misdiagnosed in over 80 percent of early men's. medical cases. And then a couple other things that we'll get into here. Nearly 40% of Americans have less than $500 in cash savings. That is scary. 40% of Americans have less than $500 to their name. Amazon to buy satellite firm Global Star in an $11.57 billion dollar deal to take on
Starting point is 00:04:52 Musk's Starlink. So having said that with all the stories that we have going on, for those you guys that follow the content closely and you see all the other stuff that we do, whether it's the business, the sports, the PBD podcast, the interviews that we do. On the back end, we are hiring aggressively in ways we've never have before. Whether it's full stack engineers, whether it's bookers, whether it's, you know, UIUX designers, whether it's consultants, whether it's SaaS sales, whether it's assistance. We're hiring aggressively right now. For some of you that maybe are looking for a job or you're out of company, you're winning, you're doing great things, but you want to find a different opportunity of a company that maybe is growing
Starting point is 00:05:35 that's got a big upside for you. Opportunity-wise, you want to learn more, Rob, if you want to play a clip of what's going on here on Valuetainment. For some of you, this is more than just a podcast. Go ahead, Rob. Many times when people think about Valuedainment, all they think about is a podcast, but it's a lot more than that. It's nine companies working together on an 11-acre campus. If I was to give virtual tour here. You'll see the HR department hiring, talent acquisition. We have full-stack developers that are working on Manak and hire metrics. We have a full-fledged events team that puts together events with thousands of people. We have a merch department designing the latest product we just launched the FLB shoes made in Italy. We have a marketing department. And if you go to the
Starting point is 00:06:14 complete opposite side of the building, 50, 60 people making calls working for bid david consulting, sales, setters. And then on the complete office side of the campus, there's a full-on production company with editors, shooters, creating content, doing podcasts. Then he can drive down a couple miles and go to our private boardroom, cigar lounge, with members only. Regardless of what it is, working at Valuetainment, every day is a surprise. You could be walking into work and right next to you is a governor, is a billionaire, as an athlete.
Starting point is 00:06:41 We are hiring aggressively, but Vittimism for everybody. For the right person, this could be the last company you ever work for. So, if you're watching this and you want to learn more, go to VT.com, forward slash careers and apply now. There you go. Whether it's for yourself or somebody else, go to viti.com, forward slash careers, apply. And if you know some very qualified, qualified people
Starting point is 00:07:05 that are currently working, that want to do something bigger, share it with them. We are paying reload for people that are coming here from New York and California, as well as Austin, Dallas. I think nearly 50% of our guys that are working here are not from here. They moved here to want to be part of the team. So, all right, with that being said, let's get right into it. First thing I want to talk about, guys, is
Starting point is 00:07:23 NATO allies refuse to join Trump on the Iranians port blockade. Now this is big news because at first it was like it's Spain. Well, you know, the Spain president, he's a socialist, even he says his family, progressive. So hey, I want to make you work with America, but you guys can't come to land over here and he says, look, we don't need you. We're going to do it by ourselves or not. Then it was Starmer. I don't want to be a part of this. Now it's the whole NATO allies refuse to join Trump's Iranian port blockade according to Reuters.
Starting point is 00:07:53 Allies said on Monday they would not get involved in U.S. President's plan to blockade Iranian ports, proposing to intervene only once fighting ends in a move likely to anger Trump and increased strains in the alliance. Trump said the U.S. military would eliminate any Iranian ships that came near the blockade that began on Monday after the weekend talks, failed to reach an agreement to end the six-week conflict with Iran. Trump initially said the U.S. would work with other countries to block ships passing through the Strait of Hormuz. but the U.S. military later specified that the blockade would only apply to ships going to or from Iranian ports since the war start of February 28, Iran has largely blocked the waterway for all ships, but its own. It has been seeking to make its control of permanent and possibly collect levies from ships that use of the blockade.
Starting point is 00:08:42 It will begin shortly other countries will be involved with the blockade. Trump said in a post on truth social on Sunday, but NATO allies, including Britain and France, have said they would not be drawn into the conflict. So he did say they will. They're not so far. Tom, what do we know about? Especially now that crude oil is at, what, 91-37, the markets reacting somewhat positively. SMP at 7,000.
Starting point is 00:09:03 So Wall Street, like you said earlier, is doing good. Main Street's maybe taking a hit. But walk us through what you think's going on here with the blockade. So there's a lot of gamesmanship going on in the world. So right now, Britain and France have a problem, and I dove into this. McCrone and Starmor have large Muslim populations. You know, 8, 10, 12, 15%, that's a population you have to deal with, and they are a very loud population.
Starting point is 00:09:29 And so publicly they're saying, we will not join the blockade. Well, what does that mean? I will not put my ships next to your ships, so I won't join the blockade. But what was interesting, Britain and France through NATO said, we are working on an initiative to open the strait. Pat, that's what they said. You know what that initiative is? negotiating behind the scenes with the United States.
Starting point is 00:09:51 So we won't join the blockade, like put our boats out there, and they say that for the headlines in their own countries, but behind the scenes, they are working with us, trying to negotiate and find a way out of it. And it's because they have to speak out of both sides of their mouth because of there. And what that is doing is that's upsetting Trump, because if you're not with me, you're against me, tremendously upsetting him.
Starting point is 00:10:12 And it's also kind of undermining the historical importance of NATO. I mean, looking back and asking, hey, do we still need this? This was created at a time where we had a cold war. We thought there was a bunch of missiles pointing at us, pointing back. Reagan put Pershing missiles in Germany, which caused the Russians to flip out, but that was all part of the NATO chess game. And a lot of people are asking, you know, what does NATO do and what are they necessary for? And Trump is playing that card in the middle of it. Okay, you're not with me, you're against me. Boom, maybe I'll leave NATO. But make no mistake. Britain and France have a two-faced thing going on here, public and private. Lent, what do you
Starting point is 00:10:53 stand with this? So I think a lot of it is symbolic and it's obviously political in the sense that no one really doubts the U.S. Navy can do this blockade indefinitely if they want to. There's no world where U.S. Navy has trouble stopping chips from going through. Obviously, the U.S. Navy is limited in terms of getting the straight open because of all the asymmetric aspects to it. But actually blocking it is fairly simple for the U.S. Navy to do. So trying to get NATO involved is more of that symbolic coalition effort rather than because the U.S. actually needs their ships in any material way. And so their refusal doesn't, of course, impair the U.S.'s ability to keep the stray closed, but it does signal, like Tom mentioned, all the domestic political aspects they're dealing with,
Starting point is 00:11:29 and it does ongoing kind of show the weakening of NATO over time, which is relevant. And it's increasing multipolar world, and, you know, we have fractures in our own backyard, let alone the world conflict. Rob, can you run a poll, and I want the poll to be, what's more likely to happen? US leaves NATO. NATO supports U.S. versus Iran and versus neither. Okay, just run that same poll on the podcast. Let's see what happens with it. Here's J.D. Vance when he's talking to Brett Behr. And Brett Behr's asking a question to see where he stands. Because we remember J.D. Vance was a non-interventionist. It's kind of like, why are they sending him to negotiate? You know, is it intentional? Because if you send Rubio, you know where Rubio stands?
Starting point is 00:12:13 Rubio and Wickoff, we know what they've been doing. That's right. So do you send J.D.? to kind of get him to be a bot in and say, I didn't know these people are this extreme. So here's what J.D. had to say to Brett Berry yesterday. As soon as it can, it's being reported that you had real skepticism about this at the beginning and that you expressed that to the president. Is that true?
Starting point is 00:12:35 Well, Brett, you know, I give my advice to the President of the United States, and we all do. And I expect that when I give advice to the President of the United States, that it's going to be private because the President should rely on his seat. senior advisors without them running to the media. What I will say, Brett, is that I 100% agree with the president on the fact that Iran can't have a nuclear weapon. I've seen that just in the negotiation that we've had over the last couple of days, that these
Starting point is 00:13:00 are tough negotiators, but they're fundamentally the kinds of people where them having a nuclear weapon would impose terrible costs on the entire world. If they're willing to engage in economic terrorism on the entire world, what would it mean? What leverage would they have if they had a nuclear weapon? if they had a nuclear bomb in Tehran, that's not an outcome that is acceptable to us or really should be acceptable to anybody. So I 100% support the President's goals here
Starting point is 00:13:25 to keep nuclear weapons, to keep the worst weapons of war out of the hands of the Iranians. What do you think about what he said? Yeah, I mean, he's saying the right things. And can I hit NATO real quick, though? Yeah, of course. I mean, have we all lost to the fact that UK and France wouldn't be a country
Starting point is 00:13:43 if it wasn't for America? And I mean, with NATO, what's a positive thing that NATO has done or a positive impact NATO's had in the last 30 years? I mean, nobody remembers that Russia wanted to be part of NATO. Bill Clinton rejected that. Bill Clinton didn't reject that. No, Bill Clinton said, no problem. He called somebody and then he called back and said, not now. So wasn't he reject that?
Starting point is 00:14:10 I don't know if I put that on Bill Clinton. Bill Clinton was a gamer that he wanted to do with somebody he called, said no. And a lot of people speculate who it is, but we don't know who that was. That's a good point. And, I mean, the defense contractors led the committee to expand NATO. So, I mean, the way of I always see NATO is that we needed something to throw money after the Cold War ended, right? Because we just throw all the military money at NATO. And, like, the audacity of these guys, we give them all these weapons.
Starting point is 00:14:33 We have all of our military troops in their bases there. And, like, the whole point is to deter Russia from aggression. But I would say our expansion of NATO is what encouraged Russia to, going to Ukraine. So, no, I think we should pull out NATO ASAP, especially. You think we should pull out 100%. What's a positive thing that NATO's done? We did a hell of a job at Bosnia, Hergo Zavina, didn't they? Wow. They got in there, stop that. Not. That was NATO's back So, but if you're saying that, that means you're agreeing with them that we should leave NATO. I'm not saying we should leave NATO, but I'm saying you asked the question, what have they done
Starting point is 00:15:04 unless? Right. And I'm like, he asked the question. I'm just wondering. I'm making the point. Yeah, they've done a terrible job. Right. They let that go on in Bosnia. And so what? So I think it was Clinton finally agreed to drop Tomahawks on enemy positions to see if they could break the back of the rebel general that was committing the genocide in the fields. What do you think? Well, my focus is on finance and tech more than due politics. I'm not, don't we have a firm opinion on that topic other than I think that years ago it made sense to pressure NATO to put at least 2% of their GDP into the military, basically meeting all their ends of the bargain. Because for a long time, obviously, the U.S. is like the bulk of NATO. So the rest of NATO is kind of that longer tail of other support compared to the U.S., which is almost all of it.
Starting point is 00:15:46 At this point, there's obvious fractures. I wouldn't necessarily support going out of it because it's kind of a temporary decision that can have permit ramifications, but I'm certainly no expert on, you know. Well, maybe think about it from the economic side because you watch how the market reacts to certain things, right? How would the market react if all of a sudden say things are not going the right way, Say the Thursday negotiation gets nasty. And behind closed doors, the president's not happy with the way NATO's supporting Kim, hypothetically. He announces, because you know he's capable of announcing anything.
Starting point is 00:16:19 He announces we're out. How do you think the market reacts? My guess would be more muted than one might think. I mean, I think, you know, the market could have a sell-off that day. I don't think it would be particularly catastrophic because when the market says, okay, what does this mean over the next, let alone weeks? What does this mean over years? Are we worried about any of those NATO members getting attacked more than they might otherwise,
Starting point is 00:16:37 especially if the rest of NATO stays intact. So some of the smaller members are still defended by some of the bigger members. You know, multiple of them are nuclear powers. So I don't think anyone would seriously increase, worry about the safety of NATO countries just because the US was out in any sort of multi-year time frame.
Starting point is 00:16:54 Obviously, that has long-term implications for deterioration between the US and Europe in particular. But probably the market would just look through that, kind of like how it's been surprisingly resilient looking through all the current energy shortages. Yeah, it's interesting. You're saying that, If you guys saw that or not, Zelensky the other day said in a press conference, he's been kind of quiet.
Starting point is 00:17:12 He says, UK should come back into NATO. I don't know if you saw that or not. Tom, did you see that with Zelensky saying, hey, UK should come back and you should rejoin. Is that it? We don't know anyone's locked. I think the EU and NATO can, you partner also military. I don't know if this is it or not, but it was one of the ones, but we're just asking for UK to come back in and rejoin NATO. I mean, not rejoin NATO.
Starting point is 00:17:33 I mean, not rejoined NATO. You know what he's looking for? He's looking for a pocket. Of course he is. Yeah, of course he is with that taking place. But yeah, I don't know. I wonder, do you, how likely it is that Trump is capable of using that car to say we're pulling out, Tom? Give me a percentage. Because right now the poll we ran, here's what the poll looks like. 3,000 votes, five minutes, what's more likely to happen? 51% say the U.S. leaves NATO. That's the listeners. And we have some, our listeners are business owners. These are people that, you know, run businesses, you know, are watching the market to see what's going on. 51% thinks U.S. leaves NATO. 15% think NATO will support U.S. versus Iran. 34% say neither.
Starting point is 00:18:21 Tom, do you agree with them? Yeah, I think it's 50-50 because look at what will happen. We have bases in the Philippines. We have bases in Japan. We have bases everywhere. We would still have bases in Germany, you still have bases in the U.K. on the south coast of UK where we launch all the B1 bombers from, all of that we would still have.
Starting point is 00:18:42 So we would have regional defense alliances. So you leave NATO as a think as a group at the middle, Pat, but we would still have all those bases and all of our military presence over there. And if something happened in Germany, we're going to be there to back them up. So I think it's 50-50 to leave NATO, but it would not change our deployment of resources in each country,
Starting point is 00:19:02 the same way we've got resources deployed all around the world. You know, it would change it. It would change the fact that none of those countries have invested in their militaries in a big way since NATO got put in place because, like, they've all been hollowed out. They just rely on us that we'll have their back if they ever needed us. So, you know, they've gotten fat and happy and casual, and they would immediately stop that, I think, if we pulled out of it. Because, I mean, and, you know, we don't have to pull off it, but that's our leverage. You know, if we want them to do something, we have all the means at our disposal to encourage them to... The benefit, this is the benefit of having an
Starting point is 00:19:34 unpredictable leader. That's also predictable. That's the benefit of it. He keeps everybody on their toes and they don't know what's going to be happening. By the way, a couple clips, Rob, if you want to play it, one of them is the clip where the president says he won't let Iran blackmail and extort the world by shutting down the straight. If you can play this clip. We can't let a country blackmail or extort the world because that's what they're doing. They're really blackmailing the world. We're not going to let that happen. And you're You know, the amazing thing is we don't, can you believe this? We don't use this rate.
Starting point is 00:20:09 We don't need this right. We have our own oil and gas, much more than we need. We have more oil and gas than Saudi Arabia. Think of this. We produce more. Saudi Arabia and add Russia to it substantially more. And by next year, we'll have double that amount. So we don't need it.
Starting point is 00:20:26 The world needs it. And many ships are heading to our country right now, as we speak, to load up with the best really I guess you could say somebody said the best and sweetest I don't know exactly what sweet is but when it relates to oil it's a good thing but they're coming to our country
Starting point is 00:20:45 right now there are many boats coming to our country now it could very well be this is going to be settled before that now you can pause this right here Rob go to the clip about what this is costing Iran on a daily basis and how long they can afford for this to happen whether it's water you know their revenue coming in
Starting point is 00:21:01 this right here is a phenomenal clip by Jesse. Go ahead, Rob. The Iranian oil blockade is probably the knockout punch. The Iranians are trying to outlast us. The longer the war goes on, the longer their regime can hold off a revolution. But their economy is experiencing a crippling depression. This blockade's costing the regime almost $400 million a day. That's $13 billion a month. Plus, the Iranians can only store oil for about two weeks before they have to start shutting off wells.
Starting point is 00:21:32 The Iranians can't outlast us. The world's turning to us for energy. Over 120 empty oil tankers are on their way to the Gulf of America. Many ships are heading to our country right now. If you want to go a little bit further route to see when Jesse comes back, let him keep going. Okay, keep playing it. Keep playing it with Jesse.
Starting point is 00:21:53 Deal and petrochemical industries have been wiped out. Without oil revenue, all they can sell are pistachios to Pakistanis. It could get worse. still weighing limited airstrikes, saying a number of additional targets are very easy to hit. The Iranians are losing their cards here. And Vance, who just spent 20 hours negotiating with them, says that we're in the driver's seat. Tom. Economically speaking, we're in the driver's seat, but only if it's a rational Iran leader negotiating on the other side.
Starting point is 00:22:25 When you have irrational leaders that just want to wait you out, then anything that you would do for them, I mean, look at the rebuilding of Japan after World War II. Look at the rebuilding of South Vietnam. And look at all that happened. You don't want these guys to be rebuilding, you know, the weaponry and what they do. And so, yeah, it's hitting them and it's hitting them hard. And yes, you've got this. And yes, drill baby drill and the renewed relationship with Venezuela
Starting point is 00:22:54 and all that Venezuela oil coming out and benefiting the people of Venezuela, hopefully more and more next year than this year. That's all good. But I look at it, yeah, it is. Are they going to break? Are they going to negotiate? Are they going to give up the nuclear option? And so a rational player would, but you have to remember, these are irrational players that would allow their own people, they'd allow 90% of their own people to die before they give up the card because it's a theocratic, it's a suicidal theocracy that believes in that end game. And so in that way, they're not a rational actor. So, Lynn, I'll give you this last thoughts on here. And I know it's more, you're more economy than some like this,
Starting point is 00:23:38 but have you thought about what would be an ideal situation where the market's going to sit there and Trump comes out to winner? What could happen where Trump comes out the winner in this issue with Iran? I can certainly see an agreement like years ago where Iran agrees to kind of defer any sort of nuclear program and has observers in in exchange for letting off the attacks and things like that. That's kind of a possibility here. There's also just, I mean, they can declare themselves a winner, the U.S. can declare themselves a winner and kind of back out and, you know, to see how the optics go. I think, you know, with that clip we saw, there's some simplification of talking points because even though the U.S. does produce a lot of oil and gas, it's not as though
Starting point is 00:24:17 we have just a bunch of spare capacity sitting around. We export a lot, we import a lot, not all oil is the same because it has to be matched at certain types of refineries. And so we, I mean, we've seen pretty clearly, obviously, gasoline prices and other energy prices have spiked here in the U.S., just like many other parts of the world. We're not, you know, we're not the most vulnerable in the world. That's mostly going to be the poor per capita developing countries that have to import a lot and are now being outbid by all the wealthy nations in the east and elsewhere. But we are impacted.
Starting point is 00:24:46 And, you know, right now there's, obviously Iran's on a clock. I mean, they've, you know, they've hyperinflated not for the first time. they've got severe economic issues. They've got all sorts of issues. But as Tom pointed out, they're ideological, more so than they're pragmatic. The U.S. is also on a less severe ticking clock, but I mean, just politically speaking, there's the midterms coming up right now. Consumer sentiment is a record low, lower than 2008, lower than the peak of COVID,
Starting point is 00:25:11 lower than the late 70s. Those were kind of all other low points. We hit new lows. And that's partially because, I mean, gasoline prices at the pump are up. And then even things we don't see directly, all the transportation costs. You mentioned $7 Dorito bags. Crazy. Part of that, going forward, all these things that have to move around the country, that's impacted by transportation costs.
Starting point is 00:25:29 $5 diesel. Yeah, exactly. And so the U.S. consumers being squeezed. And then that, of course, has, you know, the polls are already shifting pretty greatly toward the midterms. So I think that the Trump administration has an incentive to try to get this wrapped up sooner rather than later. And then it's a force of wills between, obviously, you know, the average Iranians a lot more impacted than the average American here. But they are a very resilient ideological type regime there. They are.
Starting point is 00:25:55 Way more than Venezuela. There's no question about it when you look at where they're at with this. But you said something about the U.S. economy. I want to kind of go through with this and come to you guys. So Americans, on Wall Street, you look at the numbers. Like, you know, the wealthy is getting wealthier. It's not like they're being impacted by it. You know, they're happy.
Starting point is 00:26:13 You're watching CNBC. It's like, oh, let me tell you, I was wrong. The market's doing great. We just crossed it. So it's like, okay, the rich are getting richer, but the poor are getting poor in the middle class is getting their assets handed to them. Let me read some numbers here to you. Americans are broke on paper. Incomes can't keep up with prices. This is a JD Power Survey, Bureau of Labor Statistics, and I want to share this with you. This is for the Survey Monkey Quarterly Money
Starting point is 00:26:37 Survey Q2, 2026. Here we go. Sixty-five percent American consumers say prices are rising faster than their income per JD Power survey of 4,000 U.S. adults conducted February of 2026. This is pre-war. Fifty-six percent Americans say everyday life has become less affordable over the past year per the CNBC survey monkey quarterly money survey. Inflation in March, 26, 3.3 annualized up from 2.4 in February. Gasoline prices are up 21.2% in March alone for nearly three quarters of entire inflation increase. Real hourly earnings rose by only 1.4% over past year. Prices are up 16% cumulatively over the past four years. Forty-nine percent. Americans have reduced discretionary spending due to a rising cost.
Starting point is 00:27:24 40% have dipped into their savings to cover daily expenses. 39% have used credit cards to pay for groceries or housing essentials. 30% are taking extra work, a side hustle or second job. 40% of buying out pay later borrowers have paid late on at least one installment in the past year up from 34% just two years ago, a 13% point jump per lending tree. 54% of buy and out pay later users say they couldn't make ends meet without these loans. 29% of buying up pay later users are now using loans for groceries up from 14%. 54% Americans think the economy will decline over the next year.
Starting point is 00:27:59 Only 28% expect improvement. And we saw a story that came out saying 40% of Americans have less than $500 in savings. 40% of Americans have less than $500 in cash in the bank, that number. So one, how did we get here? You can't put it on this administration. This has been built up for a while. And how do you address it? What do you do if you're going into midterms?
Starting point is 00:28:23 You're seeing a Mondani winning. And I'll play the clip here in a minute about the free groceries. It's going to only cost us $60 million to build seven of them. And now it's costing $30 million to build one of them. But the average middle American is watching this message. You're saying, hey, who's going to fix this? Someone's got to fix this. How do we address this?
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Starting point is 00:29:11 Yeah, obviously a very difficult question. I mean, this really has been building since the global financial crisis. You know, we had the big financial implosion. banks were more supported than the average homeowner. So we got the rise of the Tea Party and Occupy Wall Street, kind of the right and left flanks of kind of populism and pushback against what they perceived as a pretty corrupt system. Throughout the 2010s, you had some rebuilding,
Starting point is 00:29:33 but you had that kind of growing divide. And under Trump administration, I mean, the first one, he did tax cuts that were primarily aimed at the wealth, even though we already kind of had that concentration. And I think we're continuing this policy. Even during COVID, you know, everyone kind of focused. is on the stimmy checks and childcare tax credits. But the biggest bailouts went to the PPP loans to turn into grants for many wealthy business
Starting point is 00:29:57 owners that weren't really planning on even laying off anyway. There are people in the software industry or the investment industry that got big, big bailouts that didn't really need it. Mass of bailouts and billions for certain corporations. We had a board meeting that Tom, you may remember this, where one of the board members like, hey, you know, we can get a few million dollars on a PPP. I said, we just had our biggest month in the history of the company. We don't need a single penny from PPP.
Starting point is 00:30:22 We refuse to take it. And we announced that we didn't take a single penny of it. I cannot tell you how it was received by guys in the company because we didn't go take a single penny from anybody on the PPP. And that's powerful because a lot of companies in that position that didn't need it. They weren't in a, you know, they're not like a restaurant. They weren't really. Restaurants needed.
Starting point is 00:30:39 Yeah, they needed. Those guys were getting crushed. Exactly. But there are a lot of others. I mean, I know software companies that basically said, if we don't take it, our competitors are going to take it. it, and that's how they justify taking it. Same thing with investment companies and just, you know,
Starting point is 00:30:51 companies that weren't really planning on laying anyone off. So all that just drops to the bottom line to the owners, which are, you know, on average pretty wealthy. When you look at the whole kind of COVID stimulus, it comes out to something like $50,000 per household. And you say, you go to the average median household and you say, I mean, did you get anywhere near $50,000 in support? Of course not.
Starting point is 00:31:08 That diffused more opaquely through, unfortunately, kind of the higher end of the income stack. And then since then, obviously, the inflation. from all of that money printing has primarily impacted the lower two-thirds of the economy. We're in a very firm, K-shaped economy. I mentioned consumer sentiment before. Consumer sentiments at record lows while the stock market is roughly at record highs. That's pretty unprecedented.
Starting point is 00:31:31 The only time it was even close to that was kind of the late 70s. And so, you know, that's that more stagnationary environment. I don't really see relief anywhere on the way. I mean, I think obviously the energy shortage is not helping. I'm on the record not really viewing tariffs as being helpful because normally in this type of environment over the past several years you had service costs going up. That's where a lot of the inflation was. It was generally offset by lower goods prices. But over the past year or so, I mean, the Fed's done analysis of this.
Starting point is 00:32:00 Cato Institute's done analysis on this. We've had something like a two to three percent unusual boost in goods prices largely attributable to the tariffs. So the, you know, the median person's looking around and saying, you know, I thought this was America first. We have wars, we have energy shortages, higher goods prices. There hasn't really been a lot of programs supporting them, either with tax cuts or any sort of refinement. Here's a question, Tom, and I'll come back to you guys as well. But Tom, specifically you.
Starting point is 00:32:29 Is the solution to address this not winnable at the ballot? Meaning to be able to fix this, there's no way in the world a person gets reelected if we wanted to find a way to fix this. I think it's very difficult right now, but I'm going to go solution-based. We've talked about all the numbers, don't need to go through them again. There are two that I will mention quickly that are the most horrifying to me, and they're really horrifying. It's $1.3 trillion in consumer credit card debt and the balance of BNPL loans, which were taken
Starting point is 00:32:59 out because they didn't have enough credit card, credit left. And now seeing that 45%, as you pointed out in the stats, people of, those are only supposed to be the average BMPL is 3.5 payments. Remember, you bought the TV, 200, 200, 200, and now you paid for your $600 TV that you bought in September so you could watch college football. Guess what? 45% of miss one. So that means it's 33% misrate. That's horrible.
Starting point is 00:33:25 So that is on the back of the consumer. The consumer has more debt when everything else. There is one category where the government and the president can come together and help at the ballot box. And it is oil and energy, excuse me, electricity and oil, oil meaning jet fuel. to bring down air fares, gasoline for your car, diesel, which is going to be shipping all those goods and services and Amazon Prime to your doorstep, diesel, and then heating oil for the Northeast. We always forget about heating oil being such a critical part of the budget for people that live in the Northeast, and praise God that we had a pretty mild winter this year.
Starting point is 00:34:01 Lessly heating oil per home was used this winter because it wasn't a severe winter in the Northeast. Then you get down the gasoline, and guess what? Natural gas, and there's a lot of natural gas that are in U.S. electric power plants. This doesn't touch coal power plants, but if you get oil and you get all of those things down in a hurry, you can help the consumer in all those categories. And that helps them today in their budget. How do you do with electricity, Tom, with all the AI data centers we're building? I mean, when you look at the AI data centers, numbers-wise, do you know how many AI data centers we had 10 years ago in America?
Starting point is 00:34:36 Zero. Zero. You know how many we have right now? 4,000. And we showed the stat yesterday of the ones that haven't been built yet. 1,500 of them. Because people are now protesting and coming to City Hall, like we covered the Missouri protest, good citizens. $6 billion.
Starting point is 00:34:52 Yep, exactly. So that is part of a... But wait a minute. This is what I'm trying to go with you, Tom. How do you fix the electricity issue when we've committed to build all these AI data centers? The only state is that saying don't come and touch us is Maine. You have already 1,500 of them that's going out. You have Arizona that I believe they build a new plant, the TSM plan, what is it, Taiwan Semiconductor manufacturing company that they said was going to $11 billion project became a $60 billion project.
Starting point is 00:35:20 Now it's a $165 billion project in Arizona. And then in Texas, I think Oracle, Open AI and one of the banks, it could have been soft bank. I don't know which one it is. They committed to an AI data center that's $100 billion that they're thinking it's going to go to half a trillion dollars. all across the state of Texas that they're building. I think Microsoft is building one in Wisconsin for $7 billion. And every place they go to, electricity prices goes up. By the way, this whole Ramageddon war that you hear about,
Starting point is 00:35:52 we've heard the Ramageddon, Ramagetan, where... AI chips, but then the basic memory chips, RAM chips. That's right. So the DDR5, which is the latest model Rams that you... Consumer electronics, you have it in your computer, you have it in your PlayStation. Those things that we would buy for $30-40. prices have skyrocketed 200% to 300% to 700%
Starting point is 00:36:11 Then they came out and built these new chips called the HBM chips Which is 15 to 20 times more effective than the DDR5 And so these companies are sitting there saying wait a minute we need this stuff bring it to us You know 70% of all the chips now that they're producing is all going to the AI data centers 70% these chips 10 years ago that wasn't a case so these chip companies are like wait a minute priority who do I sell a to first. Do I sell it to cars? Do I sell it to, you know, TVs? Do I sell it to PlayStation? Or do I sell it to a Sam Altman that went to? What were the two companies? Sam Altman went to Heinz. Am I saying it properly? What is the company? S.K. Heinzx, right? If I'm saying it
Starting point is 00:36:55 correctly, he goes to S.K. Heinix and one other company, and he says to them, hey, I want to ramp up of needing this chips up to 900,000 a month by 2029. And there's a lot. And there's sitting there saying this is pretty amazing. So it's a non-binding commitment he makes behind closed doors that's not public. All of a sudden it leaks last month to the world. And now he's saying, I don't know if I want to do it or not because the latest Google came out with a new project. If you guys been following the Google story that came out, it's called, they wrote a paper just a couple weeks ago. Have you followed the story? I'm familiar with you talking about it. Yeah, Google just came out with a project that they wrote out saying, hey, we don't have to buy these
Starting point is 00:37:34 chips, we can save 600% and make it more effective. So some of these companies are sitting out there saying, hey, do I keep going through these TSMCs? Do I keep? Yeah, TurboQuant redefining AI efficiency with extreme compression. They leaked this. So this changed Sam Altman's decision to kind of pump the gas, pump the brakes and say, do I go through these companies and buy these chips or not? But here's the reality of it, where I'm going to. And I want to kind of get your thoughts, because this is, you know, what you guys follow closely. So, Capitalism is capitalism. Who's going to say no to massive orders?
Starting point is 00:38:09 Who's going to say no to $100 billion order orders? Who's going to say no to a $50 billion out of order commitment? Your commitment is to your who, to your shareholders. Okay. So now let's go by a bunch of lobbyists who are going to help us create these data centers, who we can sell it as we're bringing jobs to a local community. But the middle income guys, electricity prices are now going. We're not yet at a point with China that we have nuclear power.
Starting point is 00:38:30 We're still relying the old way of getting energy. they're deciding to change the wafer that, by the way, the king of waferers is apparently Japan. Japan makes most of these guys and, you know, these Rams that they make it to two different ways because the DDR-5s are kind of flat. And apparently with the HPMs, you can build it up to 8 to 16 stack,
Starting point is 00:38:50 go up like a very interesting when you look at the difference between the two. But capitalism's not going to say no to that money. So how are you going to control electricity prices? The oil prices I get, stop the war, Let's figure it out. Let's get out of it. But how do you address the electricity price? Well, yes, I have it.
Starting point is 00:39:08 So the two things that I say, the president has this pen, and we can get oil and all those things we've talked about that have an immediate economic benefit to an average consumer's budget. Now, electricity, guess what? On the demand side, it just happened. And I've been calling for it on a program that you put on Valuetainment here, number screen. We've been covering this, and we've been talking about the rate player protection pledge. It was done by the White House on March 4th, and he wanted a pledge from people to go just up rate player protection pledge. Rob, Whitehouse, got gov. I sent you the link. And they put that out as a pledge. It needs to be not a pledge. It needs to be legislation that says if you build a data center, you have to invest in the offsetting electricity, you know, needs. You have to be part of that. Oracle and Google went to the government and said, said, hey, will you support us, Gen 5, Gen 6, micro-nukes that we will put right next to our data center.
Starting point is 00:40:10 And guess what? In a natural disaster, tornado and everything, we'll we divert that power to the grid to help citizens. So we will make our own power. And if there is any excess, we'll put it on the grid at times of need. This is a rate player protection pledge, which was a PR, you know, event by the White House. The reason I call it PR, it was positive PR trying to get everybody together to pledge we're going to keep electricity down. Now turn this into legislation.
Starting point is 00:40:36 It says you're building the data center, then you have to build to offset the electricity so it doesn't affect the consumer. Oh, Tom, you're talking about price controls? No, I'm not. I'm talking about supply of electricity. These two things on the president's pen and all of this, now you go to the ballot box
Starting point is 00:40:52 with a positive message of things that you can do. Here's what you can't touch. You're not going to bring down food. You're not going to bring down milk. You're not going to bring down a lot of things. you're not going to bring on home insurance, car insurance, all those. You're not going to touch those on the inflationary scale. But you will touch this, and it will give you a fighting chance at the ballot box,
Starting point is 00:41:11 but the clouds are dark. And that was your original question, is what do you do for the election? Yeah, one of them you have to stop the war. The other one, you've got to go get capitalism to say you've got to help out the consumers as well locally. Brandon. Yeah, the biggest mistake he's making with this is acting like it doesn't exist. I mean, it's an undeniable fact that people are getting crushed with it, especially the middle class. You mean affordability.
Starting point is 00:41:31 Yeah, with the affordability. I mean, you know, he's talking, like, constantly about what his plan is for the war, what the, you know, it's almost over, this and that, but he keeps saying that inflation is gone. You know, we got past it, but the University of Michigan Consumer Consent Report was the worst of all time, like, worse than 2008. You know, that lines up with the $400 per person thing. So, I mean, first thing is acknowledging it. I think, like, that, like, even more so than the war, the fact that he's going out saying inflation is dead, I think that's his biggest pain point for the election. in terms of addressing it, I mean, the deficit spending, I think that's what's propped up, not just the stock market, but inflation for the last 10, 20, 30 years.
Starting point is 00:42:08 When we got off the gold standard, that enabled us to do the deficit spending. And I think, like, why not invest, like, this excess money that we've been pumping into the military industrial complex or pumping into the health care system or social security? Why haven't we been investing that in the nuclear energy? Like, we've built, I think, three nuclear reactors in the last 30 years in America. So, you know, we got, you know, unexpectedly hit with this massive demand for energy from the AI data centers. Like, we already were in a delicate place from an energy demand standpoint, but now we're caught off guard for it because we had this massive demand that we weren't expecting. So in the thing about oil, too, is that when that gets cheaper, I think that actually makes inflation go up in some things because it gives people excess disposable income. So there's an argument that could be made that oil going up might actually make inflation and other things go down.
Starting point is 00:42:53 Glenn? Yeah, so I mean, I think with the electricity issue, we can kind of think of it, like zoning more so than price controls, much like how residential and, you know, industrial things are generally separated at the local level. There can be, you know, these agreements, like all these protests against data centers and stuff, and the local politicians decide and let that project go forward. A lot of that can include agreements about how they're going to secure their own electricity. That when they build the data center, they also have to build the energy infrastructure around it, so they don't just come in and double everyone's electricity prices in the region and kind of benefit.
Starting point is 00:43:23 from the subsidies and other things are already there. I think that's a huge factor. A lot of the data center companies that I would consider best of class, their advantage because they've already secured a lot of their own energy infrastructure. Some of them were Bitcoin miners before. They've kind of shifted.
Starting point is 00:43:37 It's funny. A lot of people years ago were concerned throughout Bitcoin miners coming in and driving up prices. That was never a very rational concern or at least over any sort of multi-year period because Bitcoin miners need super cheap electricity. The problem with AI data centers is they actually can bid pretty high prices for electricity. they can outbid local retail buyers.
Starting point is 00:43:55 They also, you know, they want pretty low latency, so they want to generally be closer to population centers. They don't want to be out in the middle of nowhere, like Bitcoin miners are fine to being. So I think basically we are seeing, this is a pretty real issue. I think getting energy prices down is one of the nearest term fixes here. You know, the more structural issues for how to make things more affordable, I think obviously tackling health care is a big area
Starting point is 00:44:18 because the U.S. spends by far the most per capita on health care in the world without necessarily better outcomes in many categories. But that's not a multi-month issue. That's more of like a second half of term issue or the next administration, whoever that might be. But I think that doing steps to kind of get health care costs down is more one of the big structural things for this kind of case-shaped economy. But in the near term, it's more about putting out the fires.
Starting point is 00:44:41 It's more about putting out these immediate issues. Rob, can you run a poll and ask the question, how much has your electricity bill increased? And you can put, stay the same, up 10 or 20 percent, you know, maybe, what should the tears be? What should the tears be, Tom? Up what? Up 10 to 20 percent?
Starting point is 00:45:02 Yeah, I think you need to do under 10, 10 to 20, 20 to 30, 30 to 40. Yeah, just put 30 plus, okay, under 10, you know, 10 to 20, 20 to 30 plus. Curious to know how much that's happened. Now, while this is going on, here's the other story that comes. comes out, which is kind of interesting, White House, America's short 10 million homes. And we remember we read this article a couple years ago that was saying four million homes. And a few years prior to that, 2.6 million homes, right? But the White House comes out saying 10 million, the White House estimates of how many single
Starting point is 00:45:37 family homes the U.S. is missing. Party Council of Economic Advisors, annual economic report of the president, this dwarfs prior estimates. Freddie Mac, November of 2024, said 3.7 million. National Association of Realtors in June of 2021 said 5.5 million. Now they're saying 10 million. If home building had continued at its historical pace of 6,000 new homes per million people per year, the pace had held steady for decades before 2008.
Starting point is 00:46:04 The U.S. would have had 10 million more homes today. The 2008 financial crisis essentially cut the home building grade in half, and it never fully recovered. The medium home price right now is $534, up $52,000, $534,000, up 52% from Q1 of 2020, according to Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, 40% Americans don't own a home, believe buying one in the future will be impossible, according to CNBC. Only eight of the 50 largest U.S. metro areas are currently buyer markets. Half of those eight are in Florida. The rest are Atlanta, Austin, Nashville, Riverside, and a U.S. Senate passed a bill last month, an 89 to 10 vote, but its fate in the House is uncertain.
Starting point is 00:46:47 So when you look at a number like this, they're saying if we don't use the number 534, we just assume it's $450,000 per unit at 10 million unit shortages represents $4.5 trillion in housing wealth that could enter the market, could create jobs, could be good for some people. So when you see a story like this, Tom, how do you react to it? So there's a supply and demand issue on housing, and I'll give you two case studies. The first case study is Austin. During the big run-up in prices in 2022, we were about to come out of COVID. we had inflation hit the asset.
Starting point is 00:47:20 The underlying assets were hit by the inflation of printing money. So assets, prices went up everywhere, such as stock market and homes, real estate. So number one, all those went up. But in Austin, Austin was in a gold rush of construction. It started in 2018. They were going nuts. Who was going to put their headquarters in Austin? Remember this, Pat?
Starting point is 00:47:42 Everybody. Oracle, I'm going to Austin. You know, SpaceX. I'm going to Austin. All these Silicon Valley companies on the strength of South by Southwest and a favorable, you know, high tech and startup environment in Austin, Texas, hey, we're all going to Austin and we're going to have low state income tax, by the way, and it's going to be pretty cool to live there. Guess what happened?
Starting point is 00:48:03 They built, built, built, built, supply, supply. Right now, rents are moderating in Austin, and there is an excess supply of rental housing available, which is making, Brandon, it actually affordable for people. that find very affordably priced rentals in the near town areas, not downtown, but in the near town, like you don't have to live in, you know, in round rock and commute all the way down to Austin for your job. So there's, there's the supply coming together. And that's exactly what they're talking about when you've flashed back on a national basis and say, not everybody was building like that. So everyone else has a shortage of rental homes, which is why they're coming
Starting point is 00:48:43 to this 10 million number, number one. And so how do you get all that built now? Because now you're dealing with inflated materials. Austin was built since 2018 with the old material costs that started going up in 22. So now you start building homes on inflated copper, inflated concrete, inflated plywood, inflated labor costs, shortage of labor, so you have to pay construction guys more. Boom. Now to build out the supply, it's going to cost you more to do it. And the pressure, And Rob just put the chart up. Look at the gap between sellers and buyers right now. Interest rates are back up to 6.4, 6.5.
Starting point is 00:49:22 There's an estimated 1.359 buyers in America and 1.9 sellers, a gap of 600,000. So people on the existing homes can't afford to buy them. So there's the two problems. You've got to build more homes, but it's be inflated costs to do it. And the homes that are out there right now haven't come down enough. and if we all had done what Austin did back in 2018 and got too excited and built a bunch of supply, our citizens would have more affordable housing. Lynn?
Starting point is 00:49:50 Yeah, I think there's, I mean, there's two main factors here. One is Nimbism. So many, many areas don't want a lot of new supply because their existing homeowners are worried about their price disruption. Places like Austin are kind of the model to do it correctly, which is to allow new supply to come on the market when it's incentivized to do so. And so that, I mean, that's one factor. That's very, that's very region-specific. And the other one is this is this more struggle. issue that for about 40 years from, you know, 1980 to 2020, you had structurally rising home
Starting point is 00:50:17 prices, both in nominal terms and as a percentage of average incomes. So the multiple of home value to income kept increasing. But for 40 years, that was roughly offset by structurally declining interest rates. So, you know, you have higher housing costs, but you have kind of decreased financing costs. So the monthly amount that they have to pay was kind of held in check, at least relative of their incomes. The issue is that once we hit zero rates and, you know, we started to get this more of inflation wave, we don't really have that tailwind behind us anymore, and I don't think it's coming back. I mean, the best we can hope for is just industry rates kind of chop around in a sideways pattern here up and down during boom years and bust years.
Starting point is 00:50:59 But we don't really have that structural decline anymore, which means, and we still have those very high multiples of income value to housing value to income value. And a lot of that is because as you have decades of money supply growth, it finds its way toward the scarcest things, right? So things that we can get much better increasing the supply of, their price standard control, you know, grain prices, manufactured goods out of China, Moore's, anything, any electronic with Moore's Law and software and all that, all of that can be kept very low because there's not really much scarcity to it. But whether it's the best financial assets, you know, the best stocks, gold, Bitcoin,
Starting point is 00:51:36 top-tier housing, but then even kind of just normal, mediums, in housing, there's obviously a scarcity factor to that. So that's where we get more and more just people using their, you know, buying second homes as their piggy bank for lack of wanting to hold the money. And we're kind of at the phase where this really impacts the consumer because there's no structural decline in interest rates anymore. Even if the Fed does cut rates going forward, it's not necessarily going to impact the long end and therefore mortgage rates. They have extreme tools. They can do like yield curve control, but they're not very popular when you have high inflation. And so I think a lot of it's going to come down to, you know, getting out of the way of builders,
Starting point is 00:52:15 letting them build when the incentives are right to do so. But then stepping aside from that, it is just a structurally hard problem with no longer falling interest rates. And sellers are kind of locked in. They don't want to sell because they locked in a 3.5% mortgage. But over time, more of them just become forced sellers anyway, and they have to bite the bullet and sell. So eventually the market can clear, but it can take quite a while. Rob, go back to that chart that you had, sellers and buyers. I mean, look at that.
Starting point is 00:52:39 Look, we've never had this big of a gap on sellers above buyers. Like, if you go look at 2021, that was the worst time. Like, if you look at the buyer's market at that time, look what it was like. Go to the difference. If you go a little bit prior to that, all the way to the top right, you look at that. Two percent interest rates and those buyers were buying. That's right. That's right.
Starting point is 00:53:02 Go a little bit to the other peak. Keep going, keep going right there. Look at that. Look at the peak between the buyers and the sellers. But if you go prior to that with the sellers and buyers, you have to go to 2015, 2016, that gap is not, keep going back, keep going back, keep going back, back a little bit, Rob, keep going back, back, back, back, back, back right there. No, a little bit to the front, right there.
Starting point is 00:53:22 One back, okay, right there. Look at the difference between that, and that's still not as bad as it is today. So this has to be a horrible time to be a realtor and a loan officer. I mean, if you're still a realtor making money, you know, you have outlawful, lasted a lot of guys that have probably quit and left. I think, you know, we used to run our events. This last event that we had time, the sales leadership summit, every year I would ask and say, raise your, and if you're in a mortgage industry. Four years ago, it was 40 percent. We're all in mortgage and real estate. We have, we have 403 people in the room attendees.
Starting point is 00:54:01 I asked them, raise your hand if you're in a mortgage business. How many people raise their hand? A guy named Phil. One, no, he's not kidding. One guy. raise this hand. And five years ago, when you would talk to these guys, they had three rolls, Royces, two Ferraris, three homes, vacation homes, 17 Rolexes. It's a very different ball game for some of these guys
Starting point is 00:54:20 that they're going through. Brandon, your thoughts on the story. Yeah, this makes me think of some of that absolutely blew my mind and made everything makes sense a couple weeks ago when you had Richard Werner on. So I remembered when the Fed changed the role for the banks that they didn't have to have a reserve requirement in 2020. You know, it used to be 10%. They dropped it.
Starting point is 00:54:36 I thought it was that they dropped it quick and they brought it back, but I didn't realize that they never brought back a reserve requirement for loans because, you know, when money creation is commercial banks lending money. So I was always wondering, I know we printed a couple trillion, or did a couple trillion in debt from the Treasury during COVID, but I'm like, man, that's really lasting five, six, seven years out into the future. But no, it seems it's probably more the lack of a reserve requirement because that's infinite money that could be created. So that's what's pushing up the real estate market. You know, that's what's pushing up everything else in a big way, I bet, is the fact that, that there's no reserve requirement for the banks for how much money they could issue out to to borrowers. But that's one side of it. The other side of it, the other side of it is we need
Starting point is 00:55:20 to get these commodity prices down. And I mean, we do have the levers to do that. So commodity prices, zoning, I mean, any of these places that are trying to restrict home building for just the sake of keeping the prices up, and, you know, that's something that needs to be fought against viciously because your home as your number one asset, I don't think that's like a healthy place for society. I think it's more important for the younger generation to be in a position of strength rather than the older generation to maintain their number one asset. There's a quick caveat on that. They sometimes get lost in discussion. So even though it is true that reserve requirements have been eliminated, when you actually look at banks in aggregate,
Starting point is 00:55:56 they have pretty high reserves relative to their total assets and relative to deposits right now. So even though the requirements gone, it doesn't mean that the reserve ratios actually went down in any material way. In fact, in the kind of the whole post global financial crisis era, they're actually pretty high. The lowest they ever got was actually right before the whole subprime mortgage. That's when they really were extended, had tiny reserves. Regulations were very low at that time. Instead, what they have is kind of risk-adjusted capital ratios. So they actually still have a lot of regulations for how much kind of like low risk or no-risk capital they have to hold, whether it's reserves, whether it's, you know, T-bills and things like that. And actually
Starting point is 00:56:32 their ratio of those kind of like low-risk or nominally no-risk assets is actually pretty high percentage of their of their assets. So I don't really view banks as making aggressive loans as kind of the issue here in a similar way that it was leading up to 2008. I think it's those other factors we discussed. The fact that interest rates are not going down, the house that was affordable at 3% rates is not affordable at, you know, 6% rates unless we see start, we start to see more exhaustion from some of these sellers that say, you know, I've been, my house has been on the market for two years. I keep trimming prices, but I'm not getting any bites. I'm going to have to bite the mold it and materially reduce the price in order to get buyers back in and say, you know,
Starting point is 00:57:13 this house that I bought for $700,000. I'm trying to resell for $700,000. I might have to sell it for $600,000 just because the buyer's market's different now with higher rates. If it gets to the point, that's good if we get to that point. But if you listen to CNBC today, yesterday, if you listen, everything they're talking about, well, hopefully the new guy that can, you know, they're trying to sue Jerome Powell. Are you seeing this? Are you seeing the possible conversation of Jerome Powell?
Starting point is 00:57:37 Are you following that store? Yeah, over the, not bad idea. The build out of the Fed and did he oversee a construction project to beautify the Fed that just, you know, was a rip-off to American taxpayers? That's kind of the White House angle. Yeah, but they're kind of trying to force him out earlier and he's not flinching. They're saying the new guy's going to come and change the rates and all this other stuff. So who knows what that reaction to the market is going to be with that.
Starting point is 00:58:03 But can we go ahead, Tom? I'll just put one thing is what we have to keep in mind. It's fashionable to pick on interest rates. It's fashionable pick on the Fed. It's fashionable pick on boomers. I'm looking at you. I know. But you have to remember, what percent increase has homeowners insurance gone up since 2021,
Starting point is 00:58:21 since the middle of COVID to today? Five years. A lot. 46 percent. What is homeowners, HOA has gone up? A lot. 28 percent. So you have to remember, those are also chasing the consumer down the street when they're
Starting point is 00:58:33 trying to do this. And by the way, that's, not the greedy insurance companies. Insurance companies are pointing to the price of copper, lumber, and concrete. Why? Because they have to pay for that. When they rebuild your home,
Starting point is 00:58:46 if it burns down or you have a hurricane or a tornado. So the insurance rates goes up because of replacement costs, not necessarily because of greedy insurance companies, which is also fashionable. So all of it comes together to be this perfect storm and housing. I just wanted to add those, Pat. Well, I will tell you this, as we're going through this topic with affordability.
Starting point is 00:59:06 And people are like, well, you know, nothing's going to happen. You know, the conservatives are still going to win. Economy's going to be fine. Mamdani beats everybody in New York City. And he came out. He's a socialist, Islamist, that came out, and he won New York City financial capital the world.
Starting point is 00:59:22 And then he said he's going to have grocery stores that he's going to build free, free for folks who are having a hard time and all this other stuff, you know, eggs, the main essential stuff that they're going to do. People still don't know exactly what the system's going to be. And he said, for 60 million, and we'll be able to build in five different boroughs and all this other stuff.
Starting point is 00:59:37 And they just launched their first. And the first one's going to cost roughly 30 million bucks, Rob. If you want to pull up the one, the video of him announcing this of Domani with the new grocery store that's coming out. Is that the one, Rob? You just had it a, is that the one? Go for it. The first of your grocery stores will open next year. Why is it taking so long?
Starting point is 00:59:59 I feel like a bodega opens every other week across New York City. in every neighborhood, why take so long to start this issue? Well, I think for a few reasons. The first is that we are talking about building something from the ground up. We're talking about this city's first city-run grocery store in Manhattan that we need to both design, that we also need to construct.
Starting point is 01:00:20 We're also going to be constructing it using prevailing wages. And it's also one part of a larger ecosystem, not just in terms of La Marquetta, but also here on this strip, we've seen the MTA has just completed their work in this very area. This requires a lot of interagency and intergovernmental coordination that we're going to be seeing.
Starting point is 01:00:39 The store that will be open next year in 2027 and the additional stores that will be open by the end of 2029 will not require this same scale of production. The reason that we're announcing this is so that we can get started on this. So there you go. So 30 million time. You look very excited about this. Lynn, do you foresee this? One, working successfully. and two, will other markets follow his lead?
Starting point is 01:01:05 I'm not particularly optimistic on it. When you look at the major grocery stores worldwide, at least the ones that are publicly traded, we have the financials on, grocery stores run at low single-digit average profit margins. No one goes in the grocery business to get rich. You go into finance, you go into tech, running a grocery store is not the most lucrative thing.
Starting point is 01:01:22 These companies have refined their supply chains for years and decades. They have all the incentive in the world to run those as efficiently as possible because when you have multiple grocery stores in an area, if you try to overcharge, your competitor is going to come in and say, well, you're charging $7 for Doritos. We're going to charge $6 for Doritos. They're all under pressure. It's, you know, all the food that goes to, it's very logistically challenging.
Starting point is 01:01:44 They're in a grocery store. A lot of those, obviously, have quick turnover times in terms of their expiration. You need a lot of employees, which is more expensive in this labor environment. It's a very challenging business. I'm not very optimistic that they're going to come in and just miraculously run this cheaper than all the commercial operators. I think like most things today, you mentioned the cost overruns
Starting point is 01:02:04 on like, you know, Taiwan semiconductor manufacturing facilities in Arizona. I think these are going to come in with cost overruns just like almost, even in the private sector that would happen, let alone, you know, them doing it. You've foreseen more of this stuff happening.
Starting point is 01:02:18 Well, I see New York continuing with their path, probably getting some of these stores online. We'll see how long it takes. As the data comes in, I'm not optimistic that a lot of others are going to want to copy that because unless they just run at massive losses and therefore subsidized food, it's not really fundamentally addressing the issue, in my opinion. Tom.
Starting point is 01:02:39 Look, say what you will about SNAP. Snap, the problem with SNAP is we didn't regulate who received it and the wrong people received it that didn't really need it. Snap is a subsidy so you can buy groceries. It would be far cheaper to have a very tightly controlled fraud-filtered SNAP program, to let people who are in challenging economic situations have a subsidy in just going to Costco, then it would be to do this. This is going to be a disaster.
Starting point is 01:03:11 Ladies and gentlemen, Mandami's rail. There it is. You know, you've got, you know, Gavin Newsom standing under the bridge of a partially built rail. That looks like the price of oil last week, 128, 127, 131. 141. It's just going up and up and up on overruns. And it's billions. This is going to be Mondami's rail. We're going to go back and look at this. And somebody is going to put the real dollars out to build all these. And as Lynn has correctly pointed out, government doesn't do this without overruns. It's just going to happen. You've got contractors take advantage of government. There's all these things are going to happen. This is going to be a disaster. It's going to look back and they're going to close it. And they're saying, I can't wait for this. I'm so glad they're doing this. You know what I mean? Pat, we have SNAP at the federal level. We have SNAP.
Starting point is 01:04:04 We just need to put a tighter collar on SNAP so it doesn't get defrauded. So the people that really need some economic assistance maybe can get it. And they can go to Costco and they can get food and live. But trying to do it this way. Oh, capitalism didn't work and there's too many poor people. Government will do it. Oh, yeah. You know what?
Starting point is 01:04:25 It's all the memes on Twitter where the guy flew. flips out the folding chair and says, here we go, or the guy walks up with the popcorn. We have those memes everywhere. Guess what? Here they come. Yeah, I mean, this is the way that it goes is the journey that the middle class goes on when it goes from being the middle class to you get inflation, bad inflation, then the middle class becomes the lower class. Then they get socialist because a lot of people don't understand what's actually happening, and then somebody comes along gives the nice sounding message of, oh, you're being ripped off by, you know, greedy business owners. Don't worry. I'm going to come in and I'm going to make things free and make things fair.
Starting point is 01:04:58 And a lot of people buy that because a lot people don't understand what's happening. So, I mean, New York's small case study of that. California in other ways it's a case study of that. But, yeah, I know we're talking about anticipating somebody crazy becoming the president because of that type of situation. I think that's what this cost-living situation is going to facilitate potentially, right? So that's the scary thing. And then people never end up understanding what's actually happening.
Starting point is 01:05:22 That's the unfortunate part. You know, like 80% of the population will never understand why it's actually happening, why things are getting unaffordable and, you know, the impact of things like this, which is going to make things more expensive. Yeah, I mean, listen, though, I'm telling you right now, this is why I say there is the chances in my eyes, if this continues, an AOC is a bigger chance of winning in 2028 if affordability becomes a top issue, because she's going to hit this nonstop, and she has more credibility in this topic.
Starting point is 01:05:55 at least she's been honest with this for her career. She is a socialist. Some would call her a communist. I don't know if she's a full-blown communist. I think she is a socialist, through and through, but, you know, this topic won't be going away. Let me get to the next one here, which is very interesting. Will gold reach $6,000 this year?
Starting point is 01:06:14 Top three prediction about gold prices. Okay. So one, gold will surpass $6,000 this year. I think that is by J.P. Morgan Chase. They're assuming that gold will hit. $6,300 in 2026. Of course, it's been very volatile, Rob. Can you find out what it is right now, exactly right now what's gold prices as you're going through? So what drives gold prices? Inflation is one. The change in prices, according to Yahoo Finance, goods and services,
Starting point is 01:06:43 one of the most significant drivers for gold prices, instability, geopolitical issues affect gold rates, even like wars, higher tariffs, trade disputes can trigger surge in gold prices, economic uncertainty, recession, stock market fluctuations, and higher unemployment. And while we're going through this and we're looking at these numbers, more stuff came out. I want to kind of read this to you because, you know, to find out what percentage of Americans own gold, I was surprised by the number. Gold rose 64% in 2025, one of the greatest single year performances for any major asset class. It set 53 new all-time highs in 2025, surprised, surpassed 5,000 in central bank hold. The annual price of gold in 2025 was at 3431 ounce, up 43%.
Starting point is 01:07:29 Right now, I think it's at 48, 49. The high it hit was 5419. 14% drop in three days is what it had recently. J.P. Morgan said it's going to hit $6,300. UBS says $6,200. Deutsche Bank says $6,000. Morgan Stanley says $5,700. Goldman Sachs says $5,400 as you're looking into this.
Starting point is 01:07:49 And only 10.8% of the U.S. population currently invest in physical. gold bars, billions and coins versus 62% who own stocks. Do you think it's going to hit $6,000 this year? That's a little bit above my base case, but I wouldn't be shocked if it did. I mean, I've been structurally bullish on gold since 2018. But even as a bowl, I would not have guessed we would have seen $5,000 as quickly as we did. I think this consolidation has been healthy. I started getting pretty nervous when it's going vertical, even as a bull. There's a number of factors here. You know, I'm not as bullish at these levels as I was when, you know, gold had a one in front of it, you know, the 1,500, 1,500 back then.
Starting point is 01:08:26 But I don't view it as a bubble currently because I think what we've basically gone, if you've gone from structurally undervalued, to write about a level that makes sense. I mean, it can grind higher from here. I wouldn't be surprised if it corrects a little bit, but I think it's more reasonably valued now. And there's a number of factors. One is when you print a ton of money, it finds its way eventually into the kind of the scarcest assets.
Starting point is 01:08:47 Like I mentioned before, some things were way better at making the supply of when there's a big mismatch. with gold, almost no matter what price it goes to, overall production doesn't really grow by more than like 2% a year based on most estimates compared to the amount of refined gold we have. So you can pour a lot of money into it, and that supply angle still very, very slow to change. And two, we have seen over time more and more kind of central bank interest in gold.
Starting point is 01:09:11 We had this long period where they were, for decades, they were buying less gold and more treasuries. We started to see that kind of bottom out. and while they're not, you know, they're not like going out there rapidly selling the treasuries, but around the margins they're saying instead of adding to my reserves and treasuries, I'm going to add some tonnage of gold because that's money they can hold in their own jurisdiction. It can't be, you know, frozen or sanctioned with a stroke of a pen. It's got that inherent debasement protection.
Starting point is 01:09:35 You know, they don't want to have T bills earning 4% when, you know, money supply is growing in a much higher rate than that. They'd rather have gold, at least as a higher percentage than they did at the bottom. So I think, yeah, there's a structural bid. and I think it's going to grind higher over time. You know, $6,000 is a little bit above my estimate, but it can always move faster than time. Well, as you know, I'm not a deep gold guy like a Peter Schiff. I recognize it as an inflation hedge.
Starting point is 01:10:03 But what I look at is I look at why are people putting the estimates? I don't just look at the headline numbers which get put out there for people to snack on. I really read into them. And J.P. Morgan made a very, very compelling case that Lynn just kind of touched on one of her sub points here. And that is central banks buying creates demand for the scarce asset. And that's going to drive the price because central banks tend to be more long-focused. So they're not as sensitive to the inflation of price that they're creating by their demand as maybe the others in the market would be that are short-term trades in and out.
Starting point is 01:10:40 So if central banks go to gold because of the dollar and the euro and global currencies, you know, having issue and uncertainties in the economies that support those, then I could see it going to 6,000. But if it goes to 6,000, I don't like what the rest of the economy and the rest of the world looks like. If it goes to 6,000, because I would assume that central banks are reacting to a difficult situation. but I'm not as structurally deep on gold as sheer leadership. Yeah, I think a lot of it, too, is that they just classified gold as tier one capital. The only other thing aside from treasuries, it was treasuries for a while. So central banks have been collecting it for that reason. I think China's been hoarding a lot of it, too, because they're trying to make a move as the next reserve currency.
Starting point is 01:11:32 I don't think that's possible because I don't think people would trust them enough for that. But with all the economic instability, the question of the dollar and the petro dollar thing, that's being put in question too. I don't think it's a coincidence that this start happening when the tariffs were going into effect when we start having problems in the Middle East. And when it happens, it happens fast because there's such a small amount of gold in the world that just the sheer narrative of it going up fast creates the reinforcing effect of it. But I mean, the M2 money supply grows like 8% every year.
Starting point is 01:12:01 So I think that's like however much the M2 money supply has grown since we got off the gold standard, like that's probably where gold should be, which is much higher than it is. right now. Even much high, so you think can hire even more than $6,000. If we were to match it up to like the amount of money that's been put into the economy, it's probably higher than it is today by a lot. But that would be unstable. This is an interesting poll. Rob ran a poll. Where are the majority of your investments? Gold, silver, crypto stocks. You know what percentage is gold? 10. 14%. Hmm. Excuse me. 8% silver, 16% crypto, 62% stock. So some people, majority is
Starting point is 01:12:40 crypto and gold, silver is the lowest. It's interesting. It's interesting seeing what's going on with some of the people out there when it comes on to that much in gold. I have gold. I have hard asset gold. Like I like the bars. I like having that set aside. And every, you pick a few up and set it aside and you don't know what's going to happen, purely long term. If you're doing short-term investments, you want a time to market, it's the wrong investment. You're buying gold the similar way you buy life insurance. It's a different kind of an asset you're picking up. All right, let me get to next story here. Next story I'm going to get to, I got a couple directions to go to, but I'm to go to this one here. Sam Altman's attack, suspect, charged with attempted murder. This is
Starting point is 01:13:20 Wall Street Journal's story that comes out. Rob, I think you have a video on it. So if you want to go to the video first, then I'll read the rest of the stuff. I think this 20-year-old Daniel Moreno Gamma was carrying an anti-AI document that included the names and addresses of parent board members and chief executives. Is this the clip, Rob? Yes, sir. Go for it. who prosecutors say was trying to kill Open AI CEO Sam Altman. The suspect they say through a Molotov cocktail at his home. That suspect is currently in custody facing a list of charges. Brooke Taylor is live on the ground outside the suspect's home in Spring, Texas.
Starting point is 01:13:59 That's a suburban community just north of Houston. Brooke. Hi, Harris. Well, Fox News exclusively here right now as FBI is, agents literally just swarmed the home of that 20-year-old suspect accused of trying to kill the CEO of open AI by throwing a Molotov cocktail at his house. Now we have the Harris County Sheriff's Office here and again the FBI. I want to say over a dozen federal agents and law enforcement officers. You could see his garages open here. Now sources tell me the suspect was driven by strong anti-AI views and he was. He was a arrested in San Francisco carrying a document that he wrote attacking AI. That document is a three-part series and includes a list of names and addresses of other AI CEOs and investors. So, by the way, when you're hearing this guy, 20 years old, two counts of attempted murder, he's going to face five plus a 20 years mandatory minimum at 3.37 a.m. Friday, the time he allegedly threw
Starting point is 01:15:06 a lit a maltop cocktail style insidiarity. device at Altman San Francisco home igniting a fire at the exterior gate three miles the distance he then walked from Altman's home to open Iowa headquarters where he retrieved a chair and smashed glass doors then told security guards he'd come to burn it down and kill anyone inside found on Marino Gamma at arrest incendiary devices a jug of a kerosene a blue lighter a handwritten AI document described by the FBI the FBI raided his home potential domestic terrorism charges. U.S. Attorney Crick Misakian stated that if investigations show the attack were executed to change policy or coercive officials, federal prosecutors will treat them as domestic
Starting point is 01:15:48 terrorism. Tom, your thoughts on this. So here we go. You have somebody that has a bit of a screw loose and a vendetta, and then you get this. And you've got, you know, low tech, you know, a Molotov cocktail is basically gasoline in a jar with a lid on it and some sort of a, you know, a few are a flame. And so it doesn't take much to be a domestic terrorist. And I think you've got a lot of people out here where, and I'm just leaving out the whole trans discussion because so many of these young men have been trans and had mental issues, you know, perhaps, you know, interrelated to that. I'm talking about you have men that are troubled, that are reaching out to lash out and, you know, believing that to go out and commit murder, you know, it's kind of like Luigi and United
Starting point is 01:16:42 Healthcare. It's like, you know, what led you to be so upset and so compelled and so touch that you could go out and commit something like this? I think it's part of a wider issue. What do you think? Yeah, it's a tragedy. Obviously, I haven't dived into that person's specific issues. But, yeah, the broader trend, as we have more kind of wealth concentration, as we have more of this polarization that's happening. Unfortunately, these things are likely to increase. People generally feel the social contract's broken. They don't, and then, you know, mental health issues kind of take over. And so I think security is going to be a really big factor. I mean, that's kind of living in a polarized economy makes everyone feel unsafe, ironically even even those that are
Starting point is 01:17:25 benefiting from it, because what is, what is wealth if you just have trouble being safe, moving around. There were some statistics a while back that are still true even before this whole kind of current AI wave, which is that young men in particular, basically men in their young 20s, they were some of the most dislocated from employment at the current time, generally speaking. Dislocated? Yeah, although we have overall pretty low unemployment levels, it was young men in particular that were kind of becoming a more problem area where there's this pocket of unemployment showing up. It's not really affecting young women. It's not really affecting older men.
Starting point is 01:17:59 But that pocket of young men was kind of impacted. That's where some of these issues are forming. You know what I would call it like the Joker mindset. Remember that nasty Joaquin Phoenix Joker? Hated the movie. Yeah, terrible message. But that's what that's what this is though. Like this guy, Luigi Mangione, they have that victim nasty mindset where it's like somebody's oppressing them
Starting point is 01:18:23 and they need to like be the hero and take somebody out because of that. But I mean, that's what I think of when I think of. But do you think it's them or do you think it's the teachers, the society, streamers that are injecting that hate in them for them to want to take action like this? What do you think it is? Yeah, no, I definitely think that guys, I guess, who are like unexceptional guys have, like, a tougher time, like, especially with being influenced by certain things in society, especially if they're dealing with pain. So I think that there are people in certain situations are, like, more susceptible to being influenced like that. And like if they get enough of like a nasty hateful message and then they could be influenced to do something like that. So yeah, definitely society.
Starting point is 01:19:01 But then certain people are more susceptible to it than others. Yeah, I mean, you know what is big business right now? Executive protection. It's a very big business right now. Guys are spending money on executive protection like never before because they're seeing stuff like this. Like, look, I got to protect myself. So they're setting aside a cost just look at this guy. Look at him.
Starting point is 01:19:20 Walks up with the chair, throws it against the glass. So he's going to kill anyone. he sees inside. Now he looks like he's 5'3, so I think it's going to be hard because, you know, he's going to need some stuff to, is this guy really 20 years old? He looks like he's nine. Yeah, he looks, he looks, he looks, and he needs to do some legs. Well, you know, you've, we've spoken to Prof. G. Galloway. Yeah. And he has written some very insightful articles on the state, state of men in society. And when you have, you have a lot of, and have isolation, indoctrination in the school. You know, all these people are bad. You're a victim.
Starting point is 01:20:01 You're a victim. You're a victim. And then you have isolation through what Galloway correctly points out is a lack of dating. And it's not just about guys going out getting laid, but it's a lack of natural relationships being formed with other people. And then economic desperation, they feel economic desperation. Yep. You take indoctrination, isolation, economic desperation. You take. You know what you get? This guy. And, you know, we could do a longer podcast with people like Galloway and others and just talk about this. Along with the FBI profiler that you talk with Pat, you know, this is what aims the gun.
Starting point is 01:20:40 This is what pulls the trigger. This is, you know, there's a sequencing. Yep. Genetics loads the gun. Personality aims the gun. Experiences pulls the trigger. Life experiences. So what do we know about this kid?
Starting point is 01:20:55 What do we know about his parents upbringing? What facts do we have on him? Well, you know, who is he? What does his mom do? What does his dad do? What do we know about this guy? Is there anything we know about the guy? Because the report so far, I'm not seeing anything that's telling me what this guy's all about.
Starting point is 01:21:10 Did he go to a specific school? Is he a UC Berkeley guy? You know, um... There's indoctrination. If it was that. Well, I mean, I'd want to know, you know, what other things are tied to somebody like just to get to this point and make a decision like this. Okay, let me get to next door here
Starting point is 01:21:28 and then we'll wrap up here fairly soon. Let me get to the next one. Okay, we already talked about this, but I'm going to get to it anyways. Anxious parents are spending $50,000 to land their kids a job, okay? Landing your kids a job, spending $50,000. Let's talk about it, career-wise. So business is brisk for coaches like Beth,
Starting point is 01:21:50 is this the coach, Rob, or what is this video? Bloomberg video about this. About this. Go forward. It's tough out there for the class of 2026. Hiring has slowed overall and companies have pulled back on entry-level hiring as AI takes on more tasks, leaving many recent graduates stuck in their parents' basements. How to avert that fate? The answer for many parents is to hire their kid a career coach.
Starting point is 01:22:15 Years before, they even have a career. Most of these packages run a few hundred to a few thousand dollars, things like application strategies, interview prep, that kind of thing. But some coaches charge upwards of $50,000 for intensive support and subject matter expertise. For coaches, business is booming. In 2019, about 5% of career coaches focused primarily on college students or new grads, according to the International Association of Career Coaches. More than a quarter now consider that group of core segment, according to its latest surveys. For parents who have already spent years paying for SAT tutors and college admissions consultants to get their kid into school,
Starting point is 01:22:54 these services feel like a natural extension. And for those that are paying six figures for tuition, a few thousand for coaching can feel like a rational investment if it helps their kid and live that first job in a really positive. Is this a, is this a real right? Oh, it's to real. This is from Bloomberg News. Tom.
Starting point is 01:23:12 Oh, my gosh. Where's my bong? Oh, my gosh. But how do you process this? I'll tell you how I process this. you know what? They're connecting dots here that are being intentionally,
Starting point is 01:23:25 I think, warped. And I'm not saying that about this particular writer, but I don't think there's correct interpretation here. When you enable your kids and you let them grow up in a limited consequence like Special Olympics, and I'm not criticizing children, the sweet children of Special Olympics.
Starting point is 01:23:43 I volunteered there. I am not besmirching them. But when you take that attitude that everybody gets a medal, and I'm going to prevent you from failure by giving things to you, you end up at the end with a kid that doesn't have the life skills. And where are the parents and all this? You know what? This reminded me up.
Starting point is 01:24:01 Remember Operation Varsity Blues? It happened in 2019. 33 parents took $25 million to bribe their way to get their kids into USC and other schools. And there was a lot of celebrities, the most famous what I think was. as William H. Macy and Felicity Huffman, that that ended up doing time and to falsify scores, bribe coaches to say,
Starting point is 01:24:25 oh, I need this kid to be a scholarship there. And so parents are now, it's all coming home to Roos, Pat. If you are going to be a parent that doesn't seek to get your kid fully prepared for life, get ready to keep writing checks. And by the way, she says, well, after the tuition that they paid for,
Starting point is 01:24:46 you know, 50,000 more doesn't seem like such a crazy example. What did you pay tuition on? Did you get a liberal arts degree in something, you know, unusable like European art history? Or did you get an English degree and say the child wants to be a teacher or something? You know, not all degrees have to be stemmed to be really useful for jobs. But I just get revved up, Pat, because I feel like, where are the parents? Why aren't you equipping your kids to be ready to go out there? and it may be a tough job market, yes,
Starting point is 01:25:16 and you may have to go to New York or somewhere else for the job compared to your hometown or where your school is. But good Lord, you know, paying a coach to instill the things that already should be instilled, it just flips me out. And it kind of reminds me of all those imprisoned parents on Operation Varsity Blues had to pay their kids' way into school because they weren't ready to get in the regular way. Earn it.
Starting point is 01:25:40 What do you think? I graduated college during the global financial crisis. I was looking for jobs at that time. Where did you go to? Where were you? Penn State. Really? Yeah.
Starting point is 01:25:49 And then I had to be valid. What year was it? I graduated in 2010. So you were there when the culture was going through the mess? Yes. Wow. Was it a strange time? It was a strange time.
Starting point is 01:25:59 My God. Yeah. Yeah, it really changed culture there. But the point is, I mean, I was in that kind of group that just had a grind for everything. And we see everything from kind of like some of these really elite child care centers that have lower acceptance rates than like Harvard, for example, that are super expensive and then going all up to tutors, going all up to now like these coaches.
Starting point is 01:26:19 It's as part of this very complex, you know, kind of way to spend money. And I mean, right now, obviously the catalyst is AI has come in. We don't see like mass layoffs or anything. Obviously, some companies report layouts, but in general, companies are slower to hire because it said, let's figure out first how we can do more with less before we just bring on more people. Yeah. And so when you have a rapid tech change like that, there are these people,
Starting point is 01:26:41 They have a lot of student debt. They invested in a degree that will give them a historically what has been a pretty lucrative white-collar job. And now AI comes along and says, well, maybe we only need half as many people doing that job because each one has all this support from AI going forward. How can we optimize for that? So I think part of it is just this rough transition that's happening. But then, you know, some of it goes back to that other factor
Starting point is 01:27:02 that when you have that kind of widening wealth divide, people will invest almost anything to try to get to the higher end. And it doesn't always pay off. I mean, if anything, like Tom pointed out, sometimes it can be, it can, you know, come back and hurt you. I think obviously there are pockets of time where getting a tutor or getting a coach can fix a problem. But nothing really beats just grinding and, you know, having that motivation. And part of what motivated me at that age was I came from a very poor family. So, you know, everything was on me.
Starting point is 01:27:31 It was like there's the fact that there was no safety net. Where'd you grow up? I grew up around Philadelphia. You know, when I was young, I was actually homeless for a little while. and then I grew up in a trailer park. So I kind of had this no safety net. It's kind of like in dark night rise where you have to make the jump without the rope.
Starting point is 01:27:46 Obviously not that extreme, not that extreme, but it was a similar situation. What did mom and dad do? My mom, I mean, she had challenging issues. My dad was a cop for a long time, was a detective, and then he worked in an alcohol rehab center. He was first helping people detox
Starting point is 01:28:01 and then managing a lot of it. And, you know, he was an elderly single father when I was, he raised me by himself at that point. point. So your father raised, your mom was in the picture. After age seven, yeah. How, siblings? I have, my father has siblings from an older marriage. They're all old enough that they could be my parents. I have four or half siblings. Got it. So effectively a single child. But yeah, the whole point of that is that, you know, a lot of times the strongest motivator is need. Sometimes all these other things are bandages where students just either not super motivated,
Starting point is 01:28:37 not grinding at the age that they're able to grind. But I'm not a sociologist. It's not my area of focus other than just relying on personal experience and seeing some of these inflated numbers. It's actually we've seen similar dynamics out in East Asia where they're obviously a very hyper-competitive market and you'll have a lot of parents really push their kids super hard to a way that even gets unhealthy at times.
Starting point is 01:29:03 Yeah, I agree. I think there's a part of it, Tom, that my thoughts are different. What I would say to you is, I think any parent who wants to find a way to get their kids perform better in school ought to enact you. I think any parent, and I'll tell you why. I think this money is actually good money spent if the coach is the right coach. I watch Tom with his daughters. Your daughter got a 1560 on her SATs. She got 1530, no, 1530 on her SATs. Am I saying it correctly or 1560? 1560. 1560. 1560. 1560. By the way, she had a 1515 the first time, and they were like, yeah, we got to go improve the score.
Starting point is 01:29:45 I'm like, what the hell are you talking about? Okay, 15, 15, you want to, yeah, we got to improve the score. I think we can do better. And then she goes and takes it out of the award. When we got the score, we were somewhere in the world, we were celebrating. We were in Bermuda. We were in Bermuda. And then his youngest daughter has got a 5.12 GPA.
Starting point is 01:30:01 By the way, do you think it's worth to know how they raise their kids that gets them to perform the way that they do, probably. And then if you're going through college planning, like right now, if your kid wants to play professional soccer one day and finding out the route to go through IMG, to go through university, to go through MLS, to go through Premier, I think that's a business model. I think that I think there's a lot of value to that. I think for somebody that doesn't make those investments for the right people,
Starting point is 01:30:32 I actually would be the one for my career, I've paid for people to go. and ask these types of questions. I've paid so much money for my sons for their career with soccer, with sports, with politics, because I want to find out what do you want to pursue? So number one is what is the kid most interested in? What are their talents that they naturally are interested in? And then from there pursuing it and getting hacks and strategies from different people. I'll never forget.
Starting point is 01:30:56 First time I was 29 years old, Tom and I met at a restaurant in Topanga called Black Angus, which by far the worst name for a restaurant in history of mankind, And he told me you should go do an executive health testing. So what are you talking about? He says it's one day you go, you meet eight doctors and they check everything on it. So you're serious. He says, yes. So how much does it cost?
Starting point is 01:31:17 I don't know what it was at the time. Four or five, six thousand dollars, UCLA, I went to it. And you literally, a nurse comes at six o'clock and she takes you, takes you. You get your eyes checked out. Heart, cancer, skin, throat, everything. One day, I said, I'm going to do this for the rest of my life. I can't tell you how many times I've done this. And then they give you a book.
Starting point is 01:31:36 Yeah. So that is the benefit of having consultants that are proven track record. Like if you want to find out somebody that's raised $2.2 billion in his career and sold the business for $680 million, how valuable is that to you? That's Tom Ellsworth. So to me, I don't know. You know, if somebody's kid right now wants to get a national security major, a bachelor's, and a master's, I would say, go ask this guy to see if it's worth doing it or not,
Starting point is 01:32:03 because now he's in business. He may give you better feedback. We can't be cheap on advice. I'm not, I'm actually going to support it. I just thought that commercial, the way they put it, was a little bit of a weird commercial. And I'll get to this last one. We'll wrap up.
Starting point is 01:32:17 The average cost of raising a kid right now is $300,000. We saw the numbers. The average cost of raising a kid right now is $300,000. Okay? And it used to be a lot less, apparently according to the story. So, Rob, if you want to play this, go for it. It's expensive to raise a child. How expensive means it?
Starting point is 01:32:33 It's gone up 30% actually, nearly 30%. over the past three years. It costs more than $300,000 to raise a child in the United States nowadays. So apparently it's all about where you live in the most expensive places are Hawaii, Maryland, and Massachusetts. Of course, the South, you get a break. $17,000 in Mississippi, Alabama, $18,000, and South Dakota, $18,000. So that's over the course of 18 years, right? For the first five years. Right. But since 2023, they say the cost of raising a kid is is up 27%. So just so you know, just keep track,
Starting point is 01:33:10 they will pay you back. Right. If you just keep that invoice, you just invoice. You know, is coming from the child care costs that is impacting. Gosh, everything is so expensive.
Starting point is 01:33:23 Go back to that number, Hawaii was 40K a year. No longer you buying things. Go back a little bit. Hawaii was 40K year, Maryland 36, Massachusetts 34, and the lowest is what? South Dakota.
Starting point is 01:33:33 That's what, 18,000 first five years? This is the first five years. This is the first five. years that they're saying the cost is. 40K, so first five years, $200,000 if you want to raise them in Hawaii. Tom, what do you think about this when you see these numbers? I think that we've got a definite crisis in America. That is one of the most joyful things you can have in life is having a child.
Starting point is 01:33:58 And as I like to say, you want to raise them and watch the flower bloom. And I don't put weights on the shoulders of my girls. I told them and says, look, if you do good and you work hard, you can have the choices in life. If you want to choose any university, then you've got to go get your SAT and you've got to have things. And I put it in terms of choice, not in terms of, you know, your grandpa was a doctor. I'm a doctor. You're going to be a doctor. I don't put that weight on my kids.
Starting point is 01:34:25 Some people do, you know, tiger moms and things like that, which we're not. But when I see this, you know, it makes me sad because one of the most wonderful things in life, is to have a child. It's the one thing that a very good friend of Pat and mine said that just when you're really, really good at it, they all go to school and they wish you had had more kids. Because you get really good at it after the first one or first two. I'm like raising them. And then you wish that you had just, you know, kind of had a bigger family.
Starting point is 01:34:54 And I think it's tragic that it costs this much. And most of the first five years is not medical. Most of the first five years cost apparently is in daycare because, The assumption is that mom and dad both work. So really what they should be talking is the daycare cost to raise a kid, incremental daycare costs, because diapers and everything else are going to be nominal because the price of diapers in Hawaii is marginally higher than Los Angeles, Pat. But at Costco, they're very close.
Starting point is 01:35:23 So there are regional differences to food and clothing, but they're not huge. Instead, this is really the daycare cost. And so how do you get the daycare down so that the daycare down so that the daycare. parents can have the child, get proper care for them before they go to school. That's what I sit there as an entrepreneur saying, how do you figure that part out? Lynn? So some of it is going back a long time, a lot of it's structural. The historical arrangement is you kind of have these more multi-generational families
Starting point is 01:35:53 where the grandparents can help more directly with all that experience that they get from the prior generation. And in the kind of the, you know, for decades now in the U.S. environment, people move for jobs. they end up kind of isolated. And so a lot of it has to go into expense. As you have two income households with no parents or no grandparents around, like the parents' parents, the only option is child care, which is extraordinarily expensive,
Starting point is 01:36:16 and it's only getting more expensive over time. And so a lot of that is that, you know, over the course of many years, especially as these kind of economic pressures continue, all this stuff we talk about with housing, all the stuff we talked about how expensive is there as a kid, you'll probably see a gradual shift a little bit more toward that, multi-generational house for largely from economic reasons, the more optimistic side of that is that as,
Starting point is 01:36:40 you know, remote work from home or kind of remote work or just kind of like flexible working environments can allow some of these more customizable options to kind of, you know, allow someone to work while also keeping an eye on the kids. But there's no doubt about it. I mean, that's a very challenging structural problem. It's an issue in the U.S., but it's also an issue globally. This episode is brought to you by Tell Us Online Security. Oh, tax season is the worst. mean hack season? Sorry, what? Yeah, cybercriminals love tax forms, but I've got TELUS online security. It helps protect against identity theft and financial fraud so I can stress less during tax season or any season.
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Starting point is 01:37:53 Find your advisor at IGPrivatewealth.com. Yeah, you know, child care is interesting. And I mean, you guys are totally right that that's the biggest expense with it. But, I mean, it's fascinating that there's such a huge supply of it. And there's not child care facilities popping up left and right if there's an infant supply and very scarce demand. I think it's a tough thing with margins because it's kind of restricted on how many kids you could watch based on how many people are there as caretakers. And then it's like regulated. But maybe with technology, there would be some loosening up with that.
Starting point is 01:38:23 I mean, that's definitely the biggest thing with that is the scalability of it. You know, it's crazy with life. Like, for me, when I see what's going on right now with the youth, nothing is more important to me than making sure the youth grows up, having a chance to have their dreams become a reality, whatever that may be, whatever you want to do, if one of my kids wants to go into military, guess what? I'm supporting you if you want to go in the military.
Starting point is 01:38:51 If one of my kids wants to play sports, going to business, going to sales, start a bakery, do whatever you want to do. I'm going to support you. Of course, you want to encourage them to get in the right direction. You're going to give your feedback. Here's what I suggest. Consider this, consider that. But I remember when nothing was going right for me financially,
Starting point is 01:39:08 and it's interesting when you're sharing your story, typically it's the other way around, right? Mom raises dad's not in the picture. And dad's in the picture, not mom. And I'm working on a book right now with fatherhood because eventually the publisher got me to be thinking about it for the last five, six years. I'm like, you know what, I'll think about it. I put 30, 40 pages of notes and so interesting.
Starting point is 01:39:30 Seeing the data of what not having a mother does to a young boy or a young girl, the impact of it versus not a father being in a picture, it has very different reactions, right? And everybody has their own stories of what they're going through. You don't have any, we had a guy in our church. Tom, if you remember this guy, we had a guy in our church who, his testimony was, You can say his first name. I don't remember the whole thing.
Starting point is 01:40:00 He was raised to lesbian mothers, and he became a pastor. You can say his first name. Oh, yeah, because he wrote a book. His name is Caleb. And we can say his whole name. He wrote a book that biote it. He wrote a book called Messy Grace
Starting point is 01:40:14 and his pastor Caleb Kaltenbach. Yeah, nice guy, funny guy, edgy, a little bit awkward, but he was a great storyteller. This guy right here, messy grace and he's a pastor now and he had lesbian parents growing up you're not that's not your fault
Starting point is 01:40:32 you you were you were born in a family that you were born in it it is what it is and from there you got to figure out a way to make it work you know but I remember coming up thinking of myself man what am I going to do what's going to happen with me do I have a shot do I just go back in a military and do 20 years I don't know but for me the one thing that was a saving grace
Starting point is 01:40:52 for me till today as crazy as it sounds. You know what book is sitting on his desk right now? It's called what? Selling Microsoft. So I still order books that are older books. This is a book written by guy. I'm not recommending it. You're not going to be able to find it because it's not published anymore. No, literally, you only buy him used. It's called selling Microsoft. You know what was my saving grace? Reading books. I'm like, man, I got to find a skill set. I got to find, I didn't have, I didn't go to Penn State, so I didn't have the grades you had. You seem like you're brilliant when I'm looking. Listen to you speak. You guys, Tom as well, Tom went to a C-SON, and he got his MBA and eventually became an adjunct professor at Pepperdine and Biola, a couple different places, yes.
Starting point is 01:41:34 So, but for me, it was I'm going to put my head down. There was so much negativity around. I said, I'm going to pick up books, and that's going to be my edge. And every time I read books, I'm like, man, what if I try this? And you know what? I wasn't good in sales. I'm going to sell like this and negotiate. I'm going to do with them. I'm going to go learn. I'm going to become mentally tough.
Starting point is 01:41:53 I'm going to become emotionally tough. I'm going to start a business. I'm going to do this. And then next thing you know, the rest is history. So because eventually we do have to get to a point where our youth believe that their dreams can become a reality, getting married, having kids, putting them in schools, if public or private, buying a house, traveling the world, enjoying the small things and life. life, and I'm not talking about being a millionaire or a billionaire and any of that stuff.
Starting point is 01:42:19 Just being able to live a good life where you feel you're bringing value and experience what it's like to have a child that calls you mommy, that calls you daddy. There's something very special about the juice of life. And naturally for me, I am always optimistic about the future. Guy asked me a question, he says, did you really tell your ACL? I said, yeah, why are you walking around and not having the crutches and not complaining about it? I said, my entire life I've been telling people to stop bitching and making excuses and feel sorry for yourself. I'm not feeling sorry for myself right now. Indeed. It is what it is. I got to go out and figure it out and we got the surgery scheduled and I got to go get it done and the right doctors are out there. There's so much advancement and everything that's going on. But at the end of the day, if you join the community of being a victim and feeling sorry for yourself and making excuses, just so you know, that is a massive community. You're going to make a lot of friends that are going to agree with you.
Starting point is 01:43:13 And they're going to say, me too. It's unfair. It's all this person's fault and that person's fault and the government and the but if you can find that smaller minority community of people that don't want to make excuses that makes you a little bit uncomfortable, challenge you a little bit. Kind of like, man, I feel like I got to do more. And if you can hang around that community long enough, then eventually good things can happen in your life as well.
Starting point is 01:43:37 Lynn? One optimistic thing I would add is that obviously the topic of AI is concerning a lot of people today. had that story about the person attacking the, you know, the AI CEO. Altman. Yeah, Altman. But the, you know, the, the, demerism aspect is all it's going to steal all their jobs. Whereas the optimistic aspect is that as it, it makes us way more productive in a lot of things, it kind of reduces the complexity and the cost of multiple services.
Starting point is 01:44:02 It frees up labor. Like, you mentioned the supply and demand mismatch of child care. If there's all this demand for, there's these low acceptance rates, why aren't we bringing on more supply? And part of it is that as technology frees us up from certain types of work, obviously raising children is a very human type of work to be doing. It's something we want some of our best people doing it. And so I think that over time, that's the optimistic side of technologies that can reduce a lot of the burdens and allow us to shift more resources to things that are, one, hard to automate. Two, we wouldn't really want to automate.
Starting point is 01:44:35 And three, that we freed ourselves up to put more resources there. Yeah, great feedback there. I'm with you. And by the way, for those of you guys, I want to learn more about Lynn. We have Lynn's latest book here, broken money, why our financial system is failing us and how we can make it better. Click on a link below. Support Lynn's book. Over 2,000 reviews. I highly recommend you go if you enjoy the things that Lynn had to say. We're going to put the link below if you don't mind signing that for me as well. That'll be great. Lynn again, for your time. Thanks for coming out here. Amazing to get your perspective.
Starting point is 01:45:14 Thank you. Everybody tomorrow, we have podcasts going up of Sadguru. If you guys know Sadgudo, the guy who gets billions on top of billions of views who is from South India. And, you know, very, very interesting guy. We had a deep conversation together yesterday for a couple hours. That podcast will be going out sometime tomorrow. Very funny, very interesting, very insightful. And there were moments where we debated faith. It was very, very, very interesting. It was very interesting. Having said that, take care everybody. God bless.
Starting point is 01:45:43 We'll see you guys tomorrow and Friday. Take care. Bye bye, bye-bye, bye-bye.

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