Prof G Markets - Project Stargate & The Rise of Oracle + Scott’s Stake in La Equidad Football Club
Episode Date: January 27, 2025Scott and Ed open the show by discussing Netflix’s fourth quarter earnings, Johnson and Johnson’s latest earnings call, and potential TikTok bidders. Then Scott breaks down the new Stargate initia...tive, explaining how it served as a strategic branding victory for the Trump administration and will likely enhance Oracle’s influence within the tech industry. Ed offers his thoughts on what the project reveals about the evolving AI industry. Finally, Scott discusses his stake in a Colombian soccer team, explaining how the deal came about and how it aligns with his broader investment strategy. Order "The Algebra of Wealth," out now Subscribe to No Mercy / No Malice Follow the podcast across socials @profgpod: Instagram Threads X Reddit Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Today's number, 55. That's the percentage of toy buyers who are adults shopping for
themselves. True story Ed, I decided to make a porno in the vintage or in the genre of
the movie Toy Story.
I call it, You've Got a Friend in Me.
I am Buzz Lightyear. I come in peace.
Welcome to Prop G Markets. Today's episode is presented by Fundrise, and we're discussing Stargate and my stake in
La Equidad, the football team in Colombia.
But first, Ed, what is the good word?
What's going on? It's time for banter.
Well, I think the more relevant question is,
what is going on with you?
Because you just came off of one of
the most popular podcasts in the world, right?
I was on Smarless. I'm still buzzing.
I'm still kind of nervous.
I was actually nervous.
I really wanted to impress those guys.
Yeah, I can tell.
I like Will Arnett.
He's very handsome.
Jason Bateman is very serious.
And I think Sadez is very talented.
So they're kind of the trifecta.
How did it go?
What'd you talk about?
I know it wasn't a disaster.
What I was worried about is they do a reveal.
Have you listened to it?
They're, they, everyone's responsible for a guest
and they describe them and they do the reveal.
And I felt like I was Will's guest.
Were you on the taping for the introduction?
Can you hear him revealing it?
Yeah, you're there.
You do a reveal.
I took my hood off.
Oh, look who it is.
They were like, oh.
I thought literally, like Will had showed up
to a party with a bag of unshelled peanuts.
I'm like everyone's like gonna be pretend it's nice. Oh, that's great.
And I guess the most important question, did Jason Bateman and Sean Hayes know who you are?
Jason Bateman guessed who I was.
Oh really?
Will Arnett said a professor and Jason went Propp G.
Wow.
And Sean also guessed before the end
was because he knows he's good friends with Kara Swisher.
So he had heard of me.
Well, look at that, you're moving up in the world.
100%.
And I was just asked to be a founding member
of one of those Tony members clubs.
I'm not gonna say which one
because it'll revoke my membership.
And I literally, I sent it to everyone I know.
I'm like, I am so big time now.
I'm a founding member of one of these very exclusionary
rejectionist douchebag clubs.
So it's been a really good week.
It sounds like a great week,
but it means you're gonna have to make me a member.
That's what I'm gonna be bugging you about now.
Yeah, I don't, I've decided the reason I don't party
with you guys or hang out with you socially
is you have this image of me
and I don't need you to see me drunk.
I've seen you drunk. I know what you're like. I don't think I've ever been drunk around you, and I don't need you to see me drunk. I've seen you drunk.
I know what you're like.
I don't think I've ever been drunk around you, have I?
Really?
I've seen you drunk.
I think I saw you drunk in,
I'm pretty sure you were drunk in Miami.
When you handed us a black card,
and we was like, go, buy a bunch of champagne, get a table.
You must've been at least a little bit buzzed.
I don't remember it.
I don't think my opinion of you would change that much.
I think you're too frightened of this.
I think it's impossible not to judge people
by the way they behave drunk.
By the way, I'm absolutely a better version of me,
a little bit fucked up.
I'm nicer.
You should want me to see it.
I'm more engaged, I'm friendlier.
I'd love that.
What do you like drunk yet?
I think there's more people out there
than what you're like when you're drunk,
because you come across as so together and so buttoned up.
I think I'm very similar to you,
that I'm a lot more, a lot more friendly.
I think I laugh a lot more.
I think I find other people funnier
and more interesting when I'm drunk.
I think that's the best thing about it actually.
It's like, I'm suddenly so excited by other people
and what they have to say.
There's a term that describes what you're laying out.
It's called alcoholism.
All right, enough of that shit.
Stop drinking, get on with the headlines.
Let's start with our weekly review of Market Vitals.
The S&P 500 climbed, the dollar slipped,
Bitcoin was volatile,
and the yield on 10-year Treasuries increased.
Shifting to the headlines.
Netflix added a record 19 million new subscribers in the fourth quarter.
That's up 44% from a year earlier.
The company also beat expectations on the top and bottom lines and announced price hikes
on all three US plans.
Shares rose more than 14% to an all-time high.
Johnson & Johnson's sales rose more than 5% year over year to hit $22.5 billion in
the fourth quarter, beating expectations. However, lower than expected guidance and
slower medical device sales sent the stock down nearly 2%.
And finally, Jimmy Donaldson, also known as MrBeast, has expressed interest in buying
TikTok.
He joins a growing list of investors looking to make a bid for the app.
Scott, your thoughts starting with this really good quarter from Netflix.
Extraordinary.
Ted Sarandos, and he has a co-CEO, his name escapes me.
They're arguably, I don't want to call them underrated, but the most, you know, least
discussed.
God, I'm shocked that Trump didn't threaten them with jail
unless they came to the inauguration.
These guys are just so good.
There's all of streaming and there's Netflix,
and Netflix is worth more.
If its subscribers were a country, 300 million people
would be the fourth largest in the world
in terms of population behind the US
and ahead of Indonesia.
Its full year operating margin increased six percentage points world in terms of population behind the US and ahead of Indonesia.
Its full year operating margin increased six percentage points and net profits popped 60%
year on year.
And they're raising prices, they've doubled prices in the last 10 years versus inflation
at 33%, which is going to give them more margin and even more money to spend on more content.
So this company is just dominant.
What are your thoughts?
I think the most interesting thing
are the price hikes you mentioned.
You said prices have doubled in the last 10 years.
That's actually just the premium subscription
that has doubled.
So a premium subscription now costs $25 a month.
Double where it was around 10 years ago.
It's risen faster than, of course, faster than inflation
and faster than any of the other pricing plans Netflix offers.
But to me where it gets really interesting
is when we look at the difference
between the price of a premium subscription with Netflix
and a standard subscription,
because that difference has ballooned recently.
So 10 years ago, the difference between the most expensive
and the cheapest option on Netflix was only $5.
Today, it's a difference of $17.
So the Delta has more than three X'd.
And to me, this is a prime example
of what you have pointed to in the past,
which is, I think, what I would call inequality pricing,
where you have this growing disparity
between the rich and the poor in America,
and it's now being reflected in the pricing strategies of even almost basic products, like Netflix.
I mean, we used to see this a lot in air travel or in events,
but we're now seeing it in very standard consumer categories like streaming.
So it feels like this tiered pricing strategy is basically becoming ubiquitous.
It's like we increasingly have products for poor people
and products for rich people.
And that applies to streaming, it applies to dating apps,
which we've talked about, even clothes and even food.
There are very few instances today, it feels like,
where a rich person and a poor person
are buying the same thing.
Yeah, but Netflix is trying to have it both ways
in the sense that there's usually Android and iOS. iOS is a phone that costs three times the monthly salary of an Hungarian citizen, and Android is essentially free with a phone contract.
And the world has kind of gone iOS and Android across most categories. It's Tiffany or Walmart, right? It's Emirates Airlines or Southwest. In the case of Netflix, they said, I mean, that appetite, their appetite is so voracious.
Oh, they'll never do original programming.
They just do CDs or DVDs of other movies.
Now they go into original programming with house of cards.
Oh, they'll never do live events.
Some of the biggest live events ever streamed, right?
They're absolutely gonna go into news.
They will never go into advertising.
Well, now they have an ad-supported tier,
and I believe 55% of their new signups
are from the ad tier, which I was very skeptical on,
and I was wrong.
So they're basically segmenting the market.
Well, who could afford $25 a month?
I mean, that's only for the top, top, top.
That's right, but still a lot of people are going to pay that.
So they've basically said,
we're, I mean, we're going after,
they're going after all of media.
I wouldn't be surprised if at some point
they have a music offering.
They're looking at everything,
but broadcast television used to be,
well, Lois have sports, right?
Because we're the only ones that can aggregate
this large an audience for advertisers
so we can pay the NFL or the MLB more.
And basically Amazon and now Netflix has said,
nope, we're gonna go into live sports.
And then they said, well, we'll always have
ad supported television for old people
who don't wanna spend the money for premium content.
Nope, we're gonna give them an ad tier.
So Netflix is essentially coming for everyone's lunch
in traditional broadcast media and they're winning.
This isn't one of those earnings calls
where a chip company reports a great quarter
and all the peer group goes up in sympathy.
This is getting to the point where it's a zero sum game.
I don't think people are spending more money on streaming
and for them to add this many consumers
and to have this pricing power,
I think every, I'd hate to be the Ellison kid right now.
Like, I just don't think, I mean, granted,
I'd like to be a billionaire son.
Maybe it's, maybe I wouldn't hate to be him.
But this, these guys are growing so fast,
they're running away with it.
There's no way they aren't sucking the oxygen
out of the room for the other players.
Yeah, let's move on to Johnson & Johnson.
$23 billion in revenue, up 5% from last year.
I'd like to just quickly compare this to United Health
and their earnings, which we discussed last week.
So on the United Health earnings call,
the tone, as we discussed, was quite somber.
They addressed this Brian Thompson shooting, and then they went into this discussion about
the high cost of healthcare in America.
They argued, whether we believe them or not, that actually these high costs are not their
fault.
It's not the insurance companies.
It's the fault of the drug manufacturers.
Companies like Merck, companies like Pfizer, and yes, Johnson & Johnson. So
I went into this earnings call from Johnson & Johnson expecting them to address this.
Not necessarily the shooting, but at least the healthcare industry overall, maybe some
of the conversations that are happening around it. There was not one word on this earnings
call about the cost of healthcare in America.
They talked about margins, they talked about taxes, foreign exchange, etc., but nothing
on costs.
And what that leads me to believe is that Johnson & Johnson doesn't think that they
need to address this.
They probably think, probably correctly, that the public, well, they're not blaming us.
They're blaming the insurance companies.
They all hate UnitedHealth.
So let's not touch this.
I guess I just find this upsetting,
and I have some data that I can point to,
but first, let's just get your reaction to my thoughts here.
Shouldn't Johnson & Johnson at least be touching this?
Should they, yes.
Would it have been smart for shareholders?
No.
And I'm sure what they've done is the following.
They have had every crisis expert in the world
coach them.
And then they went out and did some testing across
messaging and they found that the easiest thing to do,
they probably found that the majority of consumers
don't immediately affiliate them with what is taking
place in healthcare.
So the ultimate strategy they came away with was don't get near it.
Because it's like when Lyndon Johnson said, they said, well, he's not guilty
of that and it was like, well, make him deny it, accuse him of it and make him
deny it.
I think even bringing it up, they decided that even bringing it up or addressing
it head on was just going to raise it as an issue amongst a bunch of people
who hadn't connected them with the issue yet.
Now we'll see people, look, I think for the most part,
the analyst on the call and the investor public
wants to know what they're doing around shareholder value.
Yeah, exactly.
But I'm obviously gonna do my job as the media guy
to address it and put them in the conversation.
You mean as the whiny millennium.
Exactly, the whiny Gen Z guy.
Oh, Gen Z. That's where you are, sir.
Exactly. Don't mislabel me.
I just want to point out that the reality is that these companies like Johnson & Johnson
are just as much to blame for healthcare costs as anyone else.
And there's this stat that I find quite interesting.
Of all of the verticals in the healthcare sector, the vertical with the highest margins
by far is pharmaceutical manufacturing.
They deliver, on average, profit margins of 26%.
You compare that to the insurance companies,
it's only 3%.
So if there's anyone who's extracting this value
out of the healthcare industry,
and perhaps too much, more than they deserve,
I think you could make the argument
that it's Johnson & Johnson
and the other pharmaceutical manufacturers.
So I think my takeaway here is, if we're gonna have this criticism
of the healthcare industry,
if we're gonna engage in that conversation,
we have to make the manufacturers part of that conversation.
We have to talk about Merck, we have to talk about Pfizer,
we have to talk about Advie,
we have to talk about Johnson & Johnson.
We could talk about UnitedHealth too,
but that's just, that's not the whole story.
You know, there are other people whose feet
we should be holding to the fire.
And the fact that Johnson & Johnson believes
that they can release earnings without even addressing this,
without even mentioning it, to me, that's a big problem.
And to me, that shows that the discourse
is not fully informed yet.
I think you're being heavy handed with the wrong people.
And that is, there's always this trope or there's always this zeitgeist or expectation
that CEOs need to be more thoughtful about society.
In my 30 years of being in the business world and following CEOs and launching red phones
from Bono and talking about stakeholders versus shareholders, I find all CEOs generally speaking
are totally focused on getting a home in the Hamptons
by getting the stock price up full stop, full stop.
Almost nothing else.
They'll give some verbiage to the climate or water
or making women feel better about themselves,
whatever it is, at the end of the day,
99% of their human capital in that position
is going to getting the share
price up.
I think who has failed here-
The regulators now.
Well, is the US who has failed to elect people who will stand up to the pharmaceutical lobby
and say, look, elected representative, if you don't vote for this bill, it's going to
give us Medicaid, the ability to buy drugs from Canada or negotiate with
pharmaceutical companies directly, I'm going to boot you out of office because I'm paying
double for my health care what they are in Canada. So I think it's on us to elect people
that for some reason have let these companies, despite the fact these drugs are discovered
and manufactured and distributed in the US, that we pay more
for them. Why? Because these companies give lawmakers money who then pass laws that give
them unearned margin that raises the prices on Americans. So again, I go back to the same
thing. They're doing their job. That's what they do. That's what they will always do.
It's us that's not doing our job.
I totally agree with that. I just want to be clear. I'm not blaming the CEOs for that.
What I'm doing is I'm bringing attention to the fact
that this is happening, such that eventually, as you say,
we start holding our elected representatives accountable
and we start getting proper regulation to help ourselves.
But I think to get to that point,
we sort of need to understand the issues a little bit more.
We need to know who issues a little bit more.
We need to know who is screwing us over.
And then we need to be loud and aggressive about addressing that with our elected representatives
and to make sure that regulations actually protect us.
But let's just finish off these headlines here.
MrBeast is making a bid to buy TikTok.
He's one of many groups bidding.
So we also have Kevin O'Leary, the Shark Tank guy,
who's joining up with Frank McCourt,
who's the former owner of the LA Dodgers.
They're making a bid.
We've also seen Perplexity, the AI startup,
talking about making an offer.
We've seen Kick, this live streaming platform
that has also expressed interest.
And then of course, there are the suggestions
we heard from Donald Trump last week.
He said he'd be open to Elon Musk buying TikTok.
I don't think Elon Musk has said anything himself
about that interest, but there are rumors.
And he's also said he'd be open to Larry Ellison,
the founder of Oracle, buying TikTok.
A lot of people on this list,
a lot of rumors kind of swirling around.
Do you have any predictions, Scott,
on who is gonna end up owning this thing?
I think there's so many moving parts here
it's difficult to predict,
but the three criteria are the following.
Capital, that takes Mr. Beast and Mr. Wonderful.
They just don't have the capital.
And they're just saying, look at me right now.
It's a way to get your name in the headlines.
I would say that's like zero,
0.1% chance they're gonna be involved in a deal.
You need massive capital.
You also need massive compute
because it's not like you can spin up that type of compute
to handle that type of app overnight.
And more than anything is the third C or the third and the fourth, you need the CCP.
I just think the Chinese Communist Party is going to decide who gets this or who doesn't.
And so who kind of fits those criteria?
One it might be nobody at all.
It might be, all right, the US claim passed a law with 80 senators, 79 senators signed
into law, and then they
blinked when the deadline came.
They had six months.
Now I just don't see why they would feel any sense of urgency to do anything.
It's 20% of the revenue.
They might just say to the good folks at ByteDance, sorry, we're not putting up with this.
You're going to have to make, you know, grow the stakeholder value in other nations.
We're not acquiescing to this bullshit.
We don't want to set this precedent.
If they do a deal, it's going to be sold to someone
who they think they have leverage over.
Capital compute and CCP leverage,
that kind of adds up to sort of what I call
an Ellison Musk, Microsoft kind of triopoly
because people will say, oh, he's just Elon being Elon, he's got Asperger's,
he says things he shouldn't, but that's part of his genius.
You can't have a genius like that
who doesn't make these errant mistakes.
That's the beauty of him, he's so raw.
Guess what?
When's the last time you heard him say
anything offensive about China?
He doesn't.
He seems to have remarkable maturity
and self-control around China.
When Brazil stuck up the middle finger to him and said,
no, we're passing the thumb or kicking your ass out
unless you do the following things,
all of a sudden he's gone quiet on Brazil.
He is very capable of acquiescing.
He's a big free speech advocate
until he's doing Twitter in Turkey
and Erdogan says, no, that won't hunt here.
And he says, no problem, no problem.
We'll censor like fucking crazy here.
So I, and given that he has factories
and a lot of business in China,
I think that CCP probably looks at him and says,
that's our boy.
We have leverage over this guy.
And then Trump is going to get some optics
around picking his buddies, his conservative buddies,
which is again, see above kleptocracy. But I think the good money is on one of two things,
nothing, the deal doesn't get done, or it's done based on what the CCP sees as still them still
having leverage over whoever, whoever quote unquote, owns this platform or rents it or leases it.
There's going to, this is going gonna be a, if this deal happens,
it's gonna be a pretzel deal
where the administration tries to take credit for the deal
and people try to pretend the CCP isn't still involved.
I just think this is gonna be a Frankenstein.
Yeah, it does also feel that Larry Ellison
seemed like Larry Ellison could be a really good pick.
I mean, he does a lot of business with China
through Oracle.
Oracle also has that relationship with TikTok,
where they handle all of the security in Texas.
And he, unlike Mr. Wonderful and Mr. Beast,
is a mega, mega, mega billionaire.
So it does feel like, and by the way,
he's newly kind of friends with Trump,
as we'll get to in a moment.
So he does seem like a good pick.
Just one side note, wouldn't it be just so fucking awful
if Elon Musk owns TikTok?
I don't wanna go down this rabbit hole,
but like, God, it's just gonna be a shit storm
in the news about Elon again.
I mean, first it was Twitter,
and now if he were to own an even bigger platform
that has even more power and influence,
God, I just think it's going to be
really terrible for anyone who listens to the news.
I don't know. I think a guy who makes foe Nazi salutes,
I'm not worried about that.
It would be the worst outcome possible.
I think of all the outcomes,
at least from my perspective,
it would be the worst one.
Yeah. The idea of him having more power and also
controlling what goes through
the neural jack into our use head. Yeah, I don't, I agree with you. It's not a pleasant
thought. We'll be right back after the break with a look at Project Stargate. If you're
enjoying the show so far and you haven't subscribed, be sure to give ProfGMarket a follow wherever wherever you get your podcasts.
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OpenAI, Oracle and SoftBank are teaming up to invest as much as $500 billion to build data centers
in the US. This will all be under a new venture called Stargate. Trump announced the venture
while Sam Altman, Larry Ellison and Masayoshi Son stood behind him. The first data center,
operated by Oracle and utilized by OpenAI, will be located in Texas. Scott, huge move here.
They say they're going to immediately deploy
a hundred billion dollars.
It will amount to half a trillion
over the next four years or so.
Any initial reactions to Stargate?
It's brilliant branding.
Basically the Trump administration took a bunch
of efforts that were already underway
and then pretended that he owned it
and it was his idea and branded it.
It's actually, I don't believe the government's putting any money into it. These are, this is
an initiative that was kind of sort of already half-baked under the Biden administration,
but the Biden administration decided not to brand it or announce it. So Trump stepped in and said,
Stargate, you know, it's just, it's brilliant on the part of the administration. I have no idea
what the fuck Masayoshi San is doing in this.
Masayoshi San is the luckiest investor in the world.
I think he invested 20 million in Alibaba and it ended up being worth 50 billion.
It's the greatest venture investment in history.
Since then, he's been arguably the worst investor in the world.
And my theory is that he's actually a CIA officer who's been
charged with repatriating a ton of cash out of
the Gulf back to American entrepreneurs.
That he's actually this, you know,
he's a Korean born Japanese national that has figured out a way to
extract all the margin from
Gulf oil wealth and get it back to Western democracies.
Anyways, that's my theory. That's what I'm going with.
That's a pretty good skill.
I'd like to be good at that.
Right?
It's like an episode of Homeland.
But I don't know what he's doing in this.
The thing that's really interesting about it
is that I think that for the first time,
really this sort of solidifies Oracle's seat
at the big boys table at the adult table
because Nvidia is involved in here,
OpenAI is involved in here and there's golf money.
I think they're called MGX or something.
Yes.
The two big winners here are Trump who got to brand it
and got a freebie.
You got to kind of take credit for it.
He's like that marathon runner who showed up in mile 26
and then ran through the tape and pretended
that she had won it.
And also Larry Ellison in Oracle.
I think Oracle being at this seat
makes them look really good.
I think this brought him up
to fourth richest person in the world.
So he's definitely happy.
Just to go over the basic structure here,
because it is a little bit confusing
what actually is this thing, Stargate.
So according to OpenAI, this will be a new company and the owners of this
company, i.e. the people who actually hold equity, they are OpenAI, Oracle, this
company MGX, which is this investment firm owned by the United Arab Emirates,
and Softbank. So that sort of explains why MasterSign is there.
I mean, SoftBank are going to be putting up the money here.
Now, they've also announced a list of their technology partners.
So these people or these companies won't necessarily be investing directly into the
venture itself, but they will be employing them and they'll be building out these contracts
to build these data centers. And those include Oracle, Nvidia, ARM, and Microsoft.
So this is a huge coalition of companies.
Most of the big AI companies are on this list, which I think is why it's quite interesting
to look at who isn't on this list.
And I think the big names that come to mind here who didn't make the cut,
they are Google, Amazon, Meta, Anthropic,
and I think we've got to mention Elon Musk in some way. So Elon Musk's company,
XAI. First off,
why do you think those companies weren't led into the club here?
Or more importantly, who do you think decided
that these companies weren't gonna be led into the club?
Was this Sam Altman behind this?
Was it Masayoshi San, Larry Ellison,
maybe even Donald Trump?
I mean, I have no idea, but maybe you could speculate.
I don't think it was Trump.
This is how kind of club deals come together,
and that is a private equity,
someone with a vision for this thing calls their buddy at,
it might've been Sam Altman.
If I had to guess, I would say it was probably Sam Altman
who said, all right, I need to bulk up fast.
I like the guy, Jensen and I get along.
We have a shared vision.
I'm buying a ton of his chips.
We get along.
And then he called Larry Ellison and said, Larry,
and they sort of said, okay.
And Larry said, fine, but I don't want Microsoft in the deal. Are they going to be in the deal?
Because I see them as my competitor now. And they said, no. And you form a consortium in
a club. And what will likely happen is this will inspire another consortium that consists
of the players you mentioned who aren't in this group. But this stuff is more informal than you might think.
It's one person has a vision and calls,
Sam Almond can get anyone on the line right away.
And he can say, I have a vision for something.
This is gonna require a lot of capital.
I'm gonna need partners.
This is the vision.
This is the role you would play.
Are you interested?
And Nvidia says, yeah, I'm interested,
but you can't have another chip maker.
And somehow Masayoshi Asan showed up
and they called him and he said,
I can get a bunch of money out of the Gulf.
I don't know, they all supposedly bring something,
but these deals are more based on relationships.
And then they figure out the strategy.
These are very smart people, but I imagine this,
you know, this didn't happen in the last five or seven days.
This has been being baked for probably six months.
But the reason why I think think was Altman was I
remember him saying, I need to raise a trillion dollars to build a compute
that's going to be required for AI. And everyone was like, whoa, a trillion
dollars. He was seriously saying, he was the first person, the first entrepreneur
to say, I need to raise a trillion dollars to do this. And this is saying a
hundred billion to get started, 500 billion down the road.
But my guess is they all know each other,
they like each other, there's a strategic fit,
mostly with all of these players.
But it's relationships.
It's people calling each other and saying, I have an idea.
Yeah, the relationships that are forming are so interesting.
I've talked before about how I believe
that big tech is sort of collaborating
to create this monopoly in AI, because all of these these companies they're investing in each other's AI companies and it's all
sort of turning into this one mega company. With this project though I am
starting to see it a little differently more as you say it feels like there's a
consortium developing and that's one team and I think we could probably call
it the OpenAI team and then there's the other the other. And I think we could probably call it the OpenAI team. And then there's the other guys.
And I think it would be fair to call that the Anthropic team.
Because what you have now, you've
got companies like Microsoft, Nvidia, and Oracle,
who have either invested directly in OpenAI
or have formed some sort of partnership.
And then you have this other insurgent AI company,
Anthropic. And Anthropic have this other insurgent AI company, Anthropic,
and Anthropic's investors are Google, Amazon, and Salesforce, and they have only invested in
Anthropic. They haven't been investing in OpenAI. The other side to this, which is interesting, is
where does this leave Elon Musk? He's not really on any team. I think that would explain
his comments on Twitter, which, talking about the fact
that they're trying to raise $100 billion, he tweeted, quote, they don't actually have
the money.
Softbank has well under $10 billion secured.
I have that on good authority.
So he's basically shitposting this Stargate project and saying they're not going to pull
it off.
Sam Altman then came back at him,
it's like a full on cat fight.
And he said, quote, wrong, as you surely know.
I realize what is great for the country
isn't always what's optimal for your companies,
but in your new role,
I hope you'll mostly put America first.
This is just fun.
I just love this.
What's your reaction to Elon and his upset
about this whole Stargate situation?
I've known a lot of billionaires,
and there's a bit of a cartoon that billionaires
are Monty Burns who own the nuclear power plant
and crawl over people and are nice people
and sell organs in their spare time.
I have generally found that really wealthy people,
especially self-made, really wealthy people
are generally really nice people,
really generous, really philanthropic,
really polite, really good manners, really patriotic.
Because in order to get to that level of success,
you have to build allies along the way.
I've never known anyone who's due for a bigger fall than Elon Musk.
I think he's pretty much alienating everybody one by one.
Sam Altman strikes me as very diplomatic, easy to get along with, and he's shitposting
him.
He's got to be alienating Trump right now.
Trump doesn't want all of this attention on a guy making faux Nazi salutes and shitposting his big announcement.
That's the last thing he wants from Musk.
You can bet everyone around Trump is going,
what the actual fuck?
What is this guy doing?
He fired Vivek Ramaswamy.
Clearly he didn't like Vivek.
Now Vivek's out.
And this to me feels like at some point,
does no club want this guy?
They're like, okay, maybe you bring capital,
maybe you bring a lot of awareness.
Nobody wants to deal with you.
Can you imagine these guys, these companies,
Jensen Huang doesn't need to put up with Elon Musk.
Larry Ellison is supposedly his mentor
and he's not in this deal.
Yeah, it's a good point.
But if you're one of these guys,
every one of these people is a multi-billionaire,
they don't need to put up with his late night tweets
and essentially.
Especially if they team up,
if they team up their capital,
you don't need them anymore.
They're fine.
And they're like every person,
he's a little bit like Trump.
Every person that comes into this orbit
usually leaves lesser scathed, humiliated.
He doesn't like you.
He weaponizes his quarter of a billion followers
to mock you.
I've been waiting for the chickens to come home to roost here.
I don't know if it's going to happen.
I keep being wrong.
But at some point, everybody's like, put the angry, stupid kid in the corner.
We've had it with this guy.
Exactly.
By the way, I thought Satya Nadella had the best reaction to this.
He was doing this interview with Andrew Ross Sorkin at Davos and he was explaining how Microsoft is doing all of this investment in
data centers and AI infrastructure. And he said that Microsoft is investing $80 billion
in data centers. This is separate, by the way, from the Stargate situation. And our boy Andrew then asked him about Elon's
comments, specifically whether Satya believes that Stargate actually has the money to pull this off.
And Andrew was kind of prodding him at this. And then Satya had what I think was the best one-liner
of the year, maybe of the decade. He said, all I know is I'm good for my $80 billion.
Yeah, I'm good for 80 billion.
That is a flex.
Ball and move.
That is a flex, yeah.
We'll be right back after the break
for a look at Scott's stake in a new Colombian football club.
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We're back with Proit She Markets. A group of famous investors recently acquired a Colombian soccer team called La Equidad.
The investor group includes names like Ryan Reynolds, Rob McElhaney, Ava Longoria, Justin
Verlander, Kate Upton, and, drum roll, Scott Galloway.
So Scott, give us the scoop.
How did this come about and why are you buying
a Colombian soccer team?
Well, Ed, I mean, it's pretty obvious that Kate Upton
and Eva Longoria demanded that I be in the investment group.
It's easy to sort of, or a lot of people I think,
cloak their personal desires and business strategy.
So the honest answer is kind of like midlife meets crisis.
We've talked about this.
I've wanted to be a part of an owner's group
for a football team.
I love football.
I'm not into sports, but I go to a lot of games with my kids.
I just went to a PSG game with my youngest.
I'd inquired, we talked about it and joked about it,
but actually inquired about investing in Rangers in Glasgow.
And it's just quite frankly, I'm just not in that weight class.
So how much is it?
How expensive is Rangers?
Rangers you would need to come up with at least,
that would need to be kind of an eight figure,
somewhat mid eight finger.
You need to come up with $10 to $50 million
to be really a legitimate part of their owner group.
And so that's out of my weight class, much less
the Premier League team, which are now going
for billions.
So this is sort of a filament of something I've wanted to do for a long time.
You know, I love football.
I'm all about experiences now.
I want to take my friends and my kids and my sons to the game.
So I'm just, you know, that's how, you know, that was the initial impetus, if you will.
And does this fit into into a larger investment strategy,
or is this pure fun, pure consumption in a way?
Well, it's mostly consumption.
The thing that, this checks a lot of boxes for me.
The way this came about was I met Rob McElhaney.
I did a show, I was on Welcome to Wrexham,
and I got to know a little bit about
the Wrexham story with Rob and Ryan,
and I really am impressed and inspired by what they've done. In addition to, you know, they're
not your typical owners just sitting looking aggrieved in the owner's box and then firing the
manager every three years. They took an interest in the community. They've kind of become these
de facto evangelists for the British working class and it brought a lot of attention and pride
to the Wrexham community.
So they're kind of the definition of stakeholders, not shareholders.
And I met this kid at an investment conference, so I met this group, if you will, and this
kid is sort of this Jonah Hill-like character in Moneyball, and he scours the world for
teams that he feels have unregistered value, whether it's a player development or they're in a great metro
or they have a great stadium or, you know, they, they are,
do a great job of maturing and then selling players.
And he found this team, uh, la equidad, and it's a great team.
It's in Bogota, which is the, you know, the, the,
the capital and the hub of Columbia, 11 million people, it's growing.
Colombia is now, I think, I don't know,
growing two or 3% a year.
But anyways, Rob, I like Rob a lot.
I would like to do business with him.
And then when this came around
and those guys were willing to be involved,
it was just sort of a no-brainer.
So I wanted to be a part of it.
By the way, the
team's been runner up during Premeco League A, they're in the top Colombian League, they've
been runner up three times. They won the Copa Colombia Cup in 2008. I even like their stadium.
It's a 10,000 person stadium versus some of the bigger stadiums, which I think is really
fun. But in terms of a larger investment strategy, I mean, if you think about it,
the US is, let's go very macro.
The US is 5% of the world's population.
It's a third of the GDP.
And right now, if you look at the stock market
as a proxy for asset values, it's half the world's value.
So I think it's reasonable to assume when you say,
well, Scott, that's just the publicly traded stocks,
but you could also probably extrapolate that to private assets too.
So this is how crazy things have gotten.
Basically the markets are saying that the US is worth as much as the rest of the world.
And I don't think that's true.
If someone said to me, bet long-term in terms of, or right now, what is undervalued and
overvalued either the US or the rest of the world, I long term in terms of, or right now what is undervalued and overvalued,
either the US or the rest of the world,
I would take the rest of the world.
As much as I love the US, as impressive as it is,
it's AI, all that.
And so the way that translates into my investment strategy
is slowly but surely I am divesting out of US assets
into foreign assets.
And then the crossover is that I love Latin American culture.
I spent a lot of time in Brazil.
I love Mexico.
Colombia is the third largest economy in South America.
And the Colombian economy is growing.
It popped 7% post-COVID in 2021.
It was up 2.2% last year.
It's supposed to be up high 2s this year, 3% in 2025.
And also just, quite frankly, it's just a be up high twos this year, 3% in 2025.
And also just, quite frankly,
it's just a beautiful country Cartagena Medellin.
The idea to be part of an investment group
where they seem like good citizens,
it's a good team that could be, I think, a great team
to be part of an owners group
that really seems to care about the community
and seem like good
guys and the chance to spend more time in Latin America, specifically in Colombia, you
know, check, check, check.
So this is super exciting for me.
And also, I think over the medium and long term, we're going to make money here.
I think this is a good team in a great country in a growing sport with an owners group that
will bring a lot of attention and thoughtful management to the club. At least that's,
that's how I'm diluting myself into buying a Ferrari right now, basically.
Well, no football's growing massively. I mean, the MLF,
if you just look at the MLS, the falsest growing sports league in America,
um, Real Madrid, just a couple of weeks ago,
they became the first football club in history to pass a billion euros in annual revenue.
I mean, this is a massively growing sport. But in terms of how this, how you come about this, like, how did this actually land on your desk?
Like you said, you meet this Jonah Hill moneyball like character. How does he know that you're interested in doing this?
How does he get connected to Avalon Gouria and all of these celebrities?
Like, how does this tangibly happen?
I think I was their diversity hire.
I think that basically,
so this group had no problem raising the money,
and they wanted people that would either add value,
they didn't need that much capital.
I think they wanted people who had,
would raise awareness for the club, who seemed to be good,
good stakeholders or good fiduciaries. And because I had met the people
organizing the group and because I had met Rob,
I think they thought, what the hell, let, let that crazy professor in.
And they, and I, you know, I know a decent amount about branding.
I'd like to think of a good fiduciary, I've served on a lot of boards. And I'm, you know, the world knows I love taking my sons
to see the beautiful games.
So maybe that'll bring some attention to the team.
And they know I'm, you know, they know I'll vote
with my feet.
I'm gonna go to, chances are in the next 12 months,
you're gonna be sitting at Metropolitan Tech,
Teco I think is the name of the stadium,
with me at, you know at a La Equidad game.
So I'm into this, I'm into this stuff.
And they were nice enough to,
were good enough to let me into the investor group.
So I'm super excited.
It's unlike, you know,
it's just weird that all the moons line up like this.
If it had been a great team in Thailand,
I just couldn't have done it
because I wouldn't have been able to go to games.
If it had been a great team in the Premier League, I wouldn't have done it because I don't have the
money. And if it had been a great team, you know, at a reasonable cost with a group of people I
didn't know, I wouldn't have done it either. So this was just like...
And the Colombians are just insane about their football. I mean, these matches are going to be
absolutely electric. I can't wait. I can't wait to go.
The stadium sold out, the Colombian people, I don't know if you've spent any time in Colombia,
it is a beautiful country
and it's sort of a remarkable turnaround.
So gosh, an excuse to spend time in Colombia
in the auspices of a football.
A great investment.
I mean, be like investing in a strip club.
I mean, how can you say no?
Yeah, exactly.
That can be a good investment.
Talk about being a part of one of these
like celebrity investor consortiums,
because we keep on seeing these show up in different investments, usually in like
consumer products, CPG space is a big thing. And I'm always a little bit skeptical of these celebrity investments.
It feels like they generate a ton of heat. They make all these headlines, then they kind of like fade out
into irrelevant. I mean, I kind of like fade out into irrelevant.
I mean, I think of like, you know,
the Kim Kardashian type investments,
all of those celebrity specs that we were seeing,
like what is the actual benefit
of having all of these A-listers in this group?
Why would they targeted specifically?
Well, I mean, the reality is we live in an attention economy
and I would imagine the Wrexham franchise is probably going to be 10 or 20 fold in value.
Even if they brought together really thoughtful fiduciaries and investors and people who understood football,
I don't think they would have registered those sort of gains without the attention that Ryan and Rob brought to the franchise.
So this group that includes a lot of celebrities and yours truly, I mean, and as in not,
but it's also the group includes some people
who really understand football and understand operations.
So the funny thing about the announcements was,
I'm the and guy.
It would be like Ryan,
you have a picture of Ryan and Rob.
Then it would say, and Kate Upton and Justin Berlinder,
her husband who's an amazing athlete himself,
and then Ava Longoria, and then it would say,
also joining the group.
I was the Anne.
But in the seventh paragraph.
Yeah, almost like, almost like, I don't know,
again, I'm their DUI hire,
is the way I would describe me.
Yeah, it's, but I'm super excited about it,
but I feel like it could be one of those things
where the happiest days in a boat owner's life is when they buy it's, it's, but I'm super excited about it, but I feel like it could be one of those things where the happiest days in a boat owner's life
is when they buy it and sell it.
So we'll see, but right now I'm enjoying the honeymoon phase
and I'm planning a bunch of trips to Colombia.
I personally cannot wait.
I'm gonna have to do some live podcasts there.
And I think we should do some football themed podcasts
there as well.
Or it's just you and I just-
100% my friend.
Shooting the shit. Like we died.
It'll be amazing.
We are taking this team to the top. We are literally, we're going to win the Copa
Columbia Cup. We're going to win the league for the first time.
That's right.
And we're just, we're going to have a ton of fun and we're going to try and add some,
bring some awareness to a great city, a great country, and hopefully a great club.
Absolutely. And we need to make friends with all of the most powerful people in
football before the World Cup. That's a really important thing here. So we need to become very influential. And then when 2026 comes,
we need to have, you know, access to the box and, you know, all the good stuff that's going to happen
in 2026. Oh, yeah, I'm clearly getting access to the finals of the World Cup when I say I'm a minority
owner just behind Kate Upton in the second biggest football club in Bogota. Yeah, we're a shoe in for the World Cup. Let me put it this way, if I were you I'd
kiss the ass of some product manager at AVM BEV or McDonald's or sponsor if you
really want to get to the World Cup. I'm not sure I'm your in. You're all
good and laquidad. You are at some point, at some point you can wave at me in the
owner's box. I'm not sure I can get you box. I'm not sure I can get you in.
I'm not sure I can get you in, but yeah, I've world cup.
I'm not sure.
I'm not sure we're, uh, I'm not sure we're money good there.
Well, we'll, we'll work on it.
Let's take a look at the week ahead.
We'll see data on the personal consumption expenditures index for December.
And we'll also see earnings from Microsoft, Metta, Tesla, and Apple.
Huge earnings week coming up.
Scott, do you have any predictions for us?
I think the markets or equities are moving on two things.
One is interesting, one is a shame.
The thing that's interesting is what we referenced before,
and that is attention and perception
as opposed to underlying fundamentals.
And it's always been perception and
the level of attention something has is always played a role,
but it's playing an increasingly outsized role as evidenced by
the CEO Palantir going on Bill Maher and live streams of earnings calls.
CEOs are figuring out you just want to be in people's brains as much as possible.
And then, even if you're a manufacturing company,
just use the term AI over and over and your shares will pop two or 3% instead of flat.
The second thing is proximity to power,
which is kind of the fundamental metric for a kleptocracy.
And that's a shame, but that's increasingly important,
especially over the last, I don't know, 10 or 11 days,
as evidenced by one person's wealth going up $140 billion,
despite the fact that he had, you know,
his firms have not registered any tangible improvement, but the assumption that we are now,
the market says we're in a kleptocracy and being close to power will help your companies.
Anyways, the chocolate and peanut butter this right now, I believe is Oracle. And that is,
they are, the perception is they're getting closer and closer to the center or the epicenter of
where the greatest value creation in history has probably been, and that is AI.
And them being invited into the Stargate group and being a key or a key pillar of it, sort
of says they're at now the kind of the adult table or the adults table, whereas they were
sort of hanging around the hoop, but now they're in the center of AI.
And I think the marketplace will respond positively to that. In addition, Larry Ellison is very close to Trump, see above kleptocracy, and if you look
at Oracle, it trades at about eight times sales, Microsoft's about 13, NVIDIA's I think
in the low 20s, and then you have your OpenAI's at 40 and your Anthropics at 60.
So I think that you're going to see this kind of nitro and glycerin explosion in the multiple
on Oracle.
I think its earnings will probably improve, but more than that, it'll register multiple
expansion based on its proximity to power and to the epicenter of AI.
So I believe the prediction is simply put that Oracle is going to outperform the market
over the next six to 12 months.
Do you think it'll be considered part of big tech by the end of the year? I mean, it's
around half a trillion dollars right now. The big tech companies are, you know, hovering
around two trillion or at least they're above a trillion dollars market cap. Do you think
it could reach big tech status?
It'll either replace or it might become the 11th of the Magnificent 10, right? That it's going to join, that's exactly the right analogy, I
think it's about to join the executive washroom of tech companies and
valuations. I think this is, it's a great company, great management, and they have
strong cash flows plus with their existing kind of database business and they're going
to get some, I don't know, some salsa on that ship with all this AI and attention they're
about to get.
This episode was produced by Claire Miller and engineered by Benjamin Spencer.
Our associate producer is Allison Weiss, Mia Silverio is our research lead, Jessica Lange
is our research associate, Drew Burrows is our technical director, and Catherine Dillon is our executive producer. Thank you for listening to ProfGMarkets from
the Vox Media Podcast Network. Join us on Thursday for our conversation with Robert
Armstrong, only on ProfGMarkets. You held me in kind reunion
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