Prof G Markets - How Silicon Valley Infiltrated the White House
Episode Date: December 2, 2025Ed Elson is joined by Liz Hoffman, Semafor’s business and finance editor, to break down the New York Times investigation into David Sacks. Then Robert Sockin, Citi’s Global Economist, returns to t...he show to analyze Black Friday sales and what’s really behind the surge. Check out our latest Prof G Markets newsletter Follow Prof G Markets on Instagram Follow Ed on Instagram and X Follow Scott on Instagram Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Support for the show comes from public.com. You've got your core holdings, some high conviction
picks, maybe even a few strategic options at play. So why not switch in the investment platform
built for those who take it seriously? Go to public.com slash profg and earn an uncapped
1% bonus when you transfer your portfolio. That's public.com slash prop G paid for by public
investing. All investing involves the risk of loss, including loss of principle, brokered services
for U.S. listed registered securities. Options and bonds in a self-directed account are offered
by Public Investing, Inc., member FINRA, and SIPC, complete disclosures available at public.com
slash disclosures.
Support for the show comes from Blue Air Purifier.
In markets and in life, the fundamentals matter, and taking care of your health is a big one.
The Blue Signature Air Purifier by Blue Air is the most powerful yet compact air purifier you can get.
It quietly removes pollutants that affect focus, sleep, and longevity.
Blue Air is one of the most awarded air care brands in the U.S.
U.S. and UK. Use promo code Prop. G25 to save 25% at blueair.com.
Support for this show comes from Odu. Running a business is hard enough. So why make it harder
with a dozen different apps that don't talk to each other? Introducing Odu. It's the only
business software you'll ever need. It's an all-in-one fully integrated platform that makes your
work easier, CRM, accounting, inventory, e-commerce, and more. And the best part, O-DU replaces multiple
expensive platforms for a fraction of the cost. That's why over thousands of businesses have made
the switch. So why not you? Try O-D-O-4-Frey at O-D-O-O-O-O-com. That's O-D-O-O-O-O-O-com.
Today's number, $3 million. That's how many dollars Mariah Carey makes every year from her
hit single, All I Want for Christmas. Meanwhile, the rest of us pay a far greater price, having
to hear it. Money markets met. If money is evil, then that building is hell.
The show goes up. Welcome for Offgy Markets. I'm Ed Elson. It is December 2nd. Let's check in
on yesterday's Market Vitals. The major indices all fell after five days of consecutive.
gains. It was a cautious start to the month, with traders eyeing the Fed's decision next week.
Meanwhile, yield on tenure treasuries rose, and finally, Bitcoin had its worst day since March,
falling below $85,000. The decline also dragged down crypto-exposed companies, such as
Coinbase and Robin Hood and Microstrategy.
Okay, what else is happening? The White House's AI-Zar David Sachs is under fire after a New York
Times investigation accused him of cashing in on the job. The paper reported that Sacks has
pushed policies that could benefit companies that he and his friends have backed. Sacks then
blasted the Times on X, calling it a, quote, hoax factory, and his supporters dismiss the story
as a nothing bug. Critics, however, view the story as more proof of grift in the White House. The
debate raises a serious question, and that is, is David Sacks using his position in the
White House to enrich himself. And beyond that, who actually is David Sacks? Who is this person
who has been tasked with regulating the most important technology of our time? Well, we are going to
discuss this with Liz Hoffman, Semaphore's Business and Finance Editor, Liz. Welcome back to
Profty Markets. And? So we want to get your reactions to this article. I think there's sort of a
larger question here of who actually is David Sacks. Some people may not actually know who he is.
I mean, I can tell you that he is the AI and Crypto-Zar for America right now.
But this article came out.
It's titled Silicon Valley's Man in the White House is benefiting himself and his friends.
It has been very controversial.
Many people saying that it's kind of a hit piece.
It's a smear on David Sachs.
Others say, no, it's accurate and fair.
Who is David Sachs?
And then let's just also get your reactions to this article and why it's important.
Yeah, David's after you said, you know, is the Crypto-Zar of the White's
House. He's sort of the multi-hyphenate of the Trump White House. He's a investor. He's a
podcaster, as one is. He also has a really important job without technically being part of the
administration. He is sort of one of these special government employees and has stayed longer
than you might expect from what is sort of supposed to be a kind of a temporary way for the public
sector to tap the expertise of private sector individuals. Look, I did not write the story.
I know a lot of the reporters who did, they're very good.
I think that probably the chief complaint is perhaps with the headline, and reporters will be the first to tell you that we don't usually write our own headlines.
I think it's totally fair to look around the Trump White House and see a lot of grift and self-dealing.
And I think that there's places where that's clearly true.
It's not as obvious to me that that is what is going on here.
And, you know, if you look around and say, would Donald Trump's children be in the position that they are financially if they were not adjacent to the White House? I think the answer would almost certainly no. Would David Sacks be doing as well as he is if you were not adjacent to the White House? I think he was probably doing better. And I think that AI is one of those things. And depending on how you feel about it, you know, whether you're kind of a dumer or an absolutionist or kind of somewhere in between, it's clearly here. It's
It's clearly important geopolitically, economically, for the U.S. to get this right.
And I guess I would say that that probably means bringing in people who really understand it
and having them close to the seat of power and not kind of lobbying paper planes in trying to get their voices heard.
Yeah, this question of where the line is in terms of Griff seems to be important.
And that's kind of at the crux of this conversation.
That's why it's probably important because, you know, on the one hand, he is an AI investor.
He runs his VC firm, Kraft Ventures.
He's invested, as the report talked about, in almost 500 companies that will benefit from
looser AI regulation as he is pursuing.
That is sort of the doctrine of David Sachs right now is, let's loosen up the regulation,
let AI run its course.
That's at least been sort of the stance from the administration.
But at the same time, and his argument would be this is okay, because as you say, he has this
position, which is he is a, what is known as a special government employee, meaning he's sort of
part-time at the White House, and he's also part-time doing his normal private sector job,
which he's investing in companies. And according to the law, that is okay. So I look at those
two things. I'm like, okay, all of those things are true. He's benefiting from AI and probably
benefiting from the policies that he is enacting himself. That feels grifty. But at the same time,
he's technically allowed to, right?
That's also just kind of like basic Republican governance.
I mean, I think part of what's been slightly confusing with this administration is that it's sort of pulled in two different directions.
You have this, you know, like base Republican DNA is to kind of have a light touch on regulation and, you know, tap a lot of CEOs for their advice and, you know, be pretty light touch on that.
And like, the Secretary of Energy is an energy CEO and like his entire industry will benefit from.
from deregulation, and that's also true of financial services, you know, the Treasury Secretary
had a long career on Wall Street. Like, no one on Wall Street wants more regulation. That is often
kind of tempered this administration by more of a populist, like, slightly anti-business
strain. That at the moment is a little quieter, but I think it makes it, like, if this were
happening in, like, the Mitt Romney White House, we all be like, yeah, it seems about right. You bring in
private sector people who know what they're talking about.
and believe in it.
And so you get policies that are more accelerationist.
You know, the difference is that, like, AI might kill all of us.
I don't really know.
That's not my base point of view, but it is such a powerful technology that you do need to kind
of think about who is regulating it.
But that said, there is also this strain in the AI community.
And look, I think you have to take what Elon Musk says on this with a grain of salt.
But I actually think there are things they care about more than money.
I mean, they are real idea of solutionists.
I mean, they believe so strongly in technology.
And, like, yes, they've obviously made financial bets
and they will be very rich when they all work.
But when you talk to these guys, like,
they really think it's crucial for the U.S. to win the global AI race
and that if China's not going to put Antofs on its AI companies,
we shouldn't be either.
And that's just like a broader political fight that we're going to have.
And we are having it.
We're starting to have it.
you're starting to see these kind of dueling AI donor communities,
you know, roughly sorted along the lines of,
should this thing be more tightly regulated,
or should we let it run a knock?
Yes, it's becoming increasingly a political conversation.
It's also becoming kind of just a dinner conversation.
I certainly talked about AI a lot of Thanksgiving,
which invariably means it's going to show up in politics.
You've written about this.
There are these AI packs that are emerging.
You talked about this leading the future pact,
this Silicon Valley-led $100 million AI pack.
Tell us about that.
What is happening with these AI packs and these donor communities?
Yeah, leading the future has raised tens of millions of dollars
and more than $100 million from, among others,
Antries and Horowitz, a big venture firm and an AI investor,
co-founder of the family office of the co-founder of Open AIs in there, too.
And they basically say, look, like it is both a bad idea to try to control this technology.
Also, but just like probably ultimately a fool's errand and we need to win because if we don't China will and do you want a global AI, you know, tech stack that is built on Chinese code and plenty of people on both sides of, you know, the political aisle right now in the U.S. would say no. And so that's one camp. And there's sort of comically this local, this congressional race in Manhattan, where I am right now that is shaping up to be one of the most expensive congressional races in history because, you know,
the candidate running in Alps Bores.
He has background in computer science
and really thinks we need to regulate this stuff
and leading the future has identified him
as kind of enemy number one.
Wow.
We're talking about a New York Times story.
The New York Times also had a story last week
on a slightly looser but sort of contrarian
donor community.
Largely, it seems, pulling from the deep pockets
of anthropic employees,
which is a rival to open AI.
It was really founded on the idea
that this is dangerous technology
and we need to regulate it more carefully.
The CEO of Anthropic
is that some like really dire predictions
about, you know,
how many people will be put out of work by AI
and how, you know,
the sort of slippery slope
of what it might do.
And so these are going to be political fights.
And, you know, it's interesting.
Most conversations at Thanksgiving dinner
are kind of downstream of politics.
I think politics for the moment
is kind of downstream of this
and catching up a bit.
Yeah.
I mean, just in terms of
this is a purely political question.
You spend a lot of time
in D.C. speaking with these
people, speaking with the business leaders, speaking with the political leaders, and there seems
to be a rift right now, at least in the Republican base, on do we like Silicon Valley or not?
And I get, I mean, the perfect example of someone who definitely does not like Silicon Valley
would be Steve Bannon, who's sort of leading this, this MAGA movement away from the
technocrats, saying that these technocrats are forming an oligarchy, they're taking over the White
House, people like David Sacks, people like Jensen Huang, all the people who are, you know,
showing up to these dinners with Trump and spending more and more time in the White House,
just how do you think this is all going to kind of politically shake out? And based on your time
speaking with these people, I mean, who wins this political war? Will it be the guys in Silicon
Valley? Will it be people like David Sacks or will it be people like Steve Bannon who say that
We need to say no to Silicon Valley.
I think David Sachs has proven to be a pretty sure and effective operator.
And in fact, you know, the moment that this exact discussion,
the tension you're talking about kind of spilled into the open,
was when Elon Musk kind ofuffed his way out of the White House earlier this year.
And the sense was that like that that entire orbit would sort of lose Trump's year.
And in fact, you know, plenty of people sort of had started a clock on David Sachs at that time.
And yet he's still there.
actually appears to have been pretty effective.
And again, you can you can absolutely quibble with the sort of melding of personal, private financial status and government employees.
But, like, you know, ultimately, we seem to have, like, the framework of an AI plan and, like, industrial policy is a real thing again.
And I think that if you are looking for things to make you squeamish about personal enrichment in the Trump White House, and not just exactly where I would land.
Just a final question before you go here.
We've identified, David Sats is sort of in charge of AI.
He's the AI czar, the crypto czar, whatever that means.
But he's got a big job because AI's sort of...
I mean two very different things, right?
It'd be kind of hilarious to conflate those two.
He's the head of the buzzwords.
Yeah, exactly, yeah.
Which begs the question, like, who is really in charge of AI policy in the White House right now?
We know David Sachs has a role to play, but do we know who's really in charge here?
For the moment that, you know, he's holding the keys.
We'll see there's a slightly kind of inside baseball, but legislative fight that's shaping up, too,
that the Trump administration wants a 10-year moratorium on the ability of individual states
to sort of pass state-level AI regulation, kind of a federal preemption.
It was in the one big, beautiful bill over the summer.
It got kind of kicked out at the last minute.
I think it is back now in the defense authorization bill,
which tends to be kind of a Christmas tree bill
because it absolutely has to get passed.
And so people throw a lot of things there.
We'll see.
But again, like, should we have 50 kinds of AI regulation or one,
or is it really a question between 50 or not?
And there's not a great sense of whether the White House feels
that there should be any kind of garb rails on this.
But again, it goes back to this other strain of,
Maga that is actually, as you say, like, it's a little amorphous, and sometimes it's J.D. Vance
who kind of takes up the mantle of, you know, anti-big business and sort of anti-trust enthusiasm.
Sometimes it's Evannon, but it has a more populist built to it. And the other thing is that, like,
people don't love AI. It is starting to become a very local political issue. People see these
faceless data centers going up, which will employ no people inside of them, like doing weird things
to the water table. There's some conspiracy theory
stuff around this, but it is not like a
warm and fuzzy industry, and I think
particularly that becomes
you know, there's an impact
to people's electricity bills
and whatever it might be. I do think that
there's a popular strain that Trump
who is like fairly plugged into those
swims in those currents are going to have to listen to
and pay attention to. Right. Okay.
Liz Hoffman, Samford's
business and finance editor.
Great chatting with you, Ms. Thank you.
Thanks, at any time.
After the break, White Black Friday hit a record this year.
If you're enjoying the show, give Profi markets a follow.
Support for the show comes from Monarch.
Nothing goes together quite like the holiday stress and finances.
It's like a special kind of cocktail that gets made every year,
giving you a nasty headache to deal with.
But this year can be different with Monarch.
If you want to keep your finances under control this holiday season,
you can use Monarch, rated Wall Street Journal's best budgeting app of 2025.
Monarch is the all-in-one personal finance tool that brings your entire financial life together
and one clean interface on your laptop or your phone.
And right now, just for our listeners, Monarch is offering 50% off your first year.
If you've put off organizing your finances, Monarch is for you.
Monarch does the heavy lifting by linking all your accounts in minutes, meaning you'll get
clear data visuals on where your money goes.
You'll gain access to smart categorization of your spending, which will grant you real
control over your money. Monarch promises you'll never need to touch a spreadsheet again.
Don't let financial opportunities slip through the cracks. Use code markets at monarch.com
in your browser for half off your first year. That's 50% off your first year at monarch.com
with code markets.
Support for this show comes from Odu. Running a business is hard enough. So why make it harder
with a dozen different apps that don't talk to each other? Introducing Odu. It's a
It's the only business software you'll ever need.
It's an all-in-one fully integrated platform that makes your work easier,
CRM, accounting, inventory, e-commerce, and more.
And the best part, O-DU replaces multiple expensive platforms for a fraction of the cost.
That's why over thousands of businesses have made the switch.
So why not you?
Try O-D-O-4-Free at O-D-O-D-com.
That's O-D-O-O-O-O-O-com.
Race the runners.
Raise the sails.
Raise the sales.
Captain, an unidentified ship is approaching.
Over.
Roger.
Wait, is that an enterprise sales solution?
Reach sales professionals, not professional sailors.
With LinkedIn ads, you can target the right people by industry, job title, and more.
Start converting your B2B audience today.
Spend $250 on your first campaign and get a free $250 credit for the next one.
Get started today at LinkedIn.com slash campaign.
Terms and conditions apply.
We're back with Profty Markets.
Black Friday crushed records this year with the best day for online sales ever.
Online sales hit $12 billion up 9% from last year.
That is, $12 million spent every minute.
And Cyber Monday is on track to reach $14 billion in online sales this year, up 6% from last year.
The Trump administration hailed these results as a win.
claiming that, quote, incomes are way up under President Trump.
Thus, people are spending more.
But is that really what is going on?
Well, we are speaking with Robert Socken, global economist at City, to break this down.
Robert, thanks for joining us.
Thank you.
So we want to discuss this Black Friday.
Online sales hit $12 billion, up 9%.
Kind of a record year, at least, for online sales.
and the administration appears to be very happy about it, your initial reactions.
Yeah, and I think the first thing to note is when I look at all of the data,
which is not the official kind of read on the retail sales number yet,
we'll get that from the government much later on,
but the initial reports seem to be coming in better than I would have expected.
And in particular, that online component that you mentioned has performed quite well.
And I think there are structural reasons for that that we've seen more and more sales drifting online over time.
But there's also new technologies that are helping drive more of that business and maybe accelerate that move towards online shopping.
So net net, I would say this is shaping up to be a better holiday season than I would have expected.
especially because I was looking for the consumer to pull back some, given the headwinds that we've seen this year.
We also saw buy now, pay later usage was up quite significantly, at 9%, pretty much in line with the overall online sales growth.
Any reactions to this trend of buy now, pay later, i.e. debt.
Yeah, exactly. And this has been also a trend that we've seen growing over the last few years of these buy now,
now, pay later schemes. It's an area that economists are struggling to get our hands around because
we don't have great overall data on how pervasive and big this theme is throughout the economy.
But to me, when I look at those types of numbers, it says that the consumer is still willing
to spend in this environment. It's still willing to come out for the holiday season. But there are
challenges, and they're going to lean more on various types of debts, whether it be on credit
cards or buy now, pay later schemes. So to me, there's a movement to that over time, but I think
it highlights this environment. The consumer continues to face a lot of challenges, and that
points to risks within the system, even if consumption holds up relatively well.
You mentioned that some of the tools that consumers using might have contributed to
the growth in sales this Black Friday. I assume you're talking about AI tools. I know AI traffic
has grown pretty significantly, at least this Black Friday. Is that what you're referring to?
Yeah, yeah, absolutely. And what we've seen, and then, you know, again, a lot of the reporting on this has been
quite positive, that these new AI tools coming out from major retailers that are improving the
ability of consumers to search, match with products they're looking for, fine discounts,
that really grew significantly this season. Now, it's challenging to know what is the overall
effect of that, because, you know, how much of these sales would have happened anyway without
these tools? We've seen a structural move towards more and more online spending over time,
and so it's hard to know the counterfactual of those tools weren't there. But all of the
reports are really consistent with AI acting as an enhancing tool for the shopping experience.
And it makes sense that given how many options there are within the retail space, how challenging
it can be to sift through a lot of these online retailers, that AI would really enhance that
experience.
So while it's hard to know the counterfactual, what it would be without those tools,
I view it as a mechanism that is going to push more and more sales online.
online over time. So really an accelerant of that online trend.
Yes. It seems like the big drivers of that big number are we've got prices rising,
we've got increased AI adoption, we've got perhaps some more debt that is being used to finance
these purchases. But Kevin Hassett, the Economic Council Director, he said that the reason this
is happening is because incomes are, he said, quote, way up in America.
America. You know, this is obviously going to be a political conversation, but what do you make of that?
Do you think that that's right, that perhaps Black Friday sales are up because of incomes?
I think that there are some things you can point to that have occurred this year that are supporting spending.
For one, you know, we continue to see this sort of case-shaped economy where the upper income,
consumers are performing quite well, are going out and spending. There's more strains at the lower
income side. And one thing that's powered that upper income component has been, you know, equities
overall this year are still up quite a fair amount under this administration. We can debate how
much is attributable to the administration versus other factors, but that is certainly one thing
that's supporting spending has been the equity performance. Now, when I look at the broader
economy, areas like the labor market income, you know, you are still seeing a relatively
okay labor market backdrop. The unemployment rate is still relatively low. Wages have moved
sideways this year at levels that still point to fairly solid real income. So overall,
it's still a decent labor market picture, but I would still describe it as an environment
where the stresses on the consumer I've grown this year. The labor market's in a
more vulnerable place than it was a year ago. You've seen the unemployment rate rise, even though
it's still at relatively low levels. You've seen consumers' assessment of the labor market worsened,
and you've seen the tariffs put upward pressure on goods prices, as we discussed. So overall,
there's some positives here that have helped support the consumer, but I still think that there have been
a lot of headwinds this year as well. All right, Robert Stocking, Global Economist at City. Robert,
really appreciate your time. Thank you.
So, Black Friday, the Super Bowl of the consumer economy was a success, not necessarily for in-store sales,
but certainly for online sales, up nearly 10% year-over-year.
And perhaps that says something positive about the consumer.
That is certainly the position that was taken by the president, and as expected, he made this all about him.
He said, the Black Friday success is a result of the consumer.
the Trump bump, and he has generally positioned this as a win for the administration,
which is maybe fair at face value, but also kind of ironic, because I don't think this is
really the win that he thinks this is, because the reason that people spent a lot more this
year, it isn't because they're buying more stuff. It's actually because prices have gone
up. Inflation is up. In fact, Salesforce data has shown that while prices rose seven
percent this year on Black Friday items due to inflation and, yes, tariffs. Remember, these are
highly tariff-sensitive items, things like electronics and appliances and furniture, etc. So while
prices rose, 7 percent, overall order volume, i.e. the amount of stuff that people actually
bought, that number fell by about 1%. So yes, America paid more, but also America bought less. In dollar
the terms it was a success, but if we would have measured the number of gifts under the tree this
year, well, we'd learn it wasn't actually a success at all. It was actually a regression
from last year. So that is the first point here. This isn't the win that the administration
seems to think it is. The second point here is that the real winner of Black Friday wasn't
the consumer, and it also wasn't Trump or the White House. The real winner of Black Friday this
year was actually AI, which turned out to play a massive role in the shopping experience.
And it also had a large part to play in why sales rose as much as they did. And here is the
data that confirms this. This is according to Adobe Analytics, which found that AI-driven
e-commerce traffic, so clicks to shopping sites that were routed via some AI tool like a chat
or a Gemini, AI-driven traffic rose 800% this year. So at 9xed. Meanwhile, if you went to a site
because an AI tool sent you there, you were also 38% more likely to buy a product than if
you hadn't used AI. In other words, the conversion rate also skyrocketed because of AI. And so
it appears that AI is actually finding its feet in the real world, in the real world of value.
It appears that it has reached a critical mass.
Over 60% of Americans are using AI multiple times a week, and it has reached a level of quality
where lots of people want to use it to shop.
And in fact, more than half of Americans are now using AI for this very reason.
So if you were to build your AI bullcase, if you were to construct a
argument as to why we are not in a bubble, or at least as to why there is more to this
AI thing than many people might suggest, then this Black Friday would be your evidence.
It wouldn't be the amount of money that startups are raising. It wouldn't be how many
data centers meta is building. Rather, it would have to be how much money consumers are
spending because of AI. And this Black Friday, we saw it in what was one of the first
real examples of how AI is actually changing the way we transact and also how the value of
AI is being captured in the real economy. Now, there are many more implications to this AI
shopping trend that we will discuss at a later date. The obvious one being, if Gemini is driving
conversions up by 40%, well, then how will Gemini capture that value? How will the recommendation
system change? How will the advertising system be brokered by these chatbots? These are all
open questions that AI has really yet to answer. However, the fact remains, AI played a huge
part in this Black Friday, and it appears that it will continue to do so as the holiday
season rolls on. And if AI is changing anything in the real economy, well, it would appear
that it is changing the way we shop. And that is certainly a big deal.
Okay, that's it for today. This episode was produced by
Claire Miller, edited by Joel Patterson, and engineered by Benjamin Spencer. Our associate
producer is Alison Weiss. Our research team is Dan Shalon, Isabella Kinsel, Chris Nodonhew, and
Mia Silverio, and our technical director is Drew Burroughs. Thank you for listening to ProfG
Markets from Profg Media. If you liked what you heard, give us a follow. I'm Ed Elson. I will see you
tomorrow. Defenders in cybersecurity are always there when we need them. They should get a parade
time they block a novel threat and have streets, sandwiches, and babies named in their honor.
But most of all, they deserve AI cybersecurity that can stop novel threats before they become breaches
across email, clouds, networks, and more.
DarkTrace is the cybersecurity defenders deserve and the one they need to defend beyond.
Visit darktrace.com forward slash defenders for more information.
Sachs Fifth Avenue makes it easy to holiday your way.
whether it's finding the right gift or the right outfit.
Sacks is where you can find everything.
From the perfect Chloe bag for your hard-to-shop-for-sister
to a prodig jacket for a fancy holiday dinner.
And if you don't know where to start,
sacks.com is customized to your personal style
so you can save time shopping.
Make shopping fun and easy this season
and find gifts and inspiration to suit your holiday style
at Sacks Fifth Avenue.
If you're tired of database limitations and architectures that break
when you scale. Then it's time to think outside rows and columns. MongoDB is the database built
for developers, by developers. It's acid compliant, enterprise ready, and fluent in AI. That's why so
many of the Fortune 500 trust MongoDB with their most critical workloads. Ready to think
outside rows and columns? Start building faster at MongoDB.com slash build.
