Prof G Markets - The Fed’s September Dilemma: Is it Really Time to Cut Rates?
Episode Date: September 15, 2025Scott and Ed unpack what August’s inflation numbers mean for the Fed’s next move. Then, they dig into why companies are holding back from going public and whether eliminating quarterly earnings re...ports could change that. Finally, they turn to the spike in youth unemployment around the globe. Subscribe to the Prof G Markets newsletter Order "The Algebra of Wealth," out now Subscribe to No Mercy / No Malice Follow the podcast across socials @profgmarkets Follow Scott on Instagram Follow Ed on Instagram and X Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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All right.
You just got back from Germany.
Today's show was produced by...
I did just get back from Germany.
I was in Cologne.
How was that?
It was great. I went to the Cologne Cathedral and did this long kind of video about the Reichstadt Fire Act and how we can descend into fascism and that institutions like great buildings like the Cologne Cathedral, which took 650 years to build, or built brick by brick, but we can tore down fast. And I thought it's probably not the moment to put out a video saying that Trump is a fascist. So anyways, that video is still in the can. But yeah, I was in Cologne, Germany.
The moment being what happened with Charlie Coke.
Yeah, yeah, I thought this wasn't a time.
I do think I'm evolving, though, and I'm being serious.
I was asked to come on a bunch of shows, including CNN last night.
And I'm like, you know what, everything is not demanding my judgments.
I don't have to express an opinion on everything.
I went on last night, and within like 30 minutes of the murder,
my DJ and my personal trainer were talking about it.
I'm like, okay, I don't have my...
to add here.
Anyways, I wasn't expecting us to go here.
I was expecting to talk about
the Oracle of Oracle, Ed Ellson.
Well, it is interesting.
We were sort of debating,
do we talk about it on this show?
Because it is one of those things.
It's just such a big deal
and such a hit to everyone.
And it's hard to talk about
issues and not recognize that.
So I'm kind of glad that we are recognizing it.
But at the same time, the job of this show is to talk about the markets and talk about the economy.
It's not really ours to talk about.
It's yours to talk about on your other show with Jesse Tollov.
We just did an emergency episode or Quick Drop with Jess.
She was actually quite emotional about it.
She was, anyways, tune in to the Raging Moderates Quick hit.
But I think you're absolutely right.
So we thought, let's get to the headlines.
to buy, I hope you will have plenty of the world at all.
August inflation numbers are out, giving the Fed one last data point before Wednesday's
interest rate decision. The producer price index slipped 0.1% from July, but was up 2.6%
year over year. Meanwhile, consumer prices climbed 0.4% on the month and 2.9% on the year. That was
the highest annual increase we have seen this year. After these inflation readings, investors are
still expecting a 25 basis point rate cut this week. So, Scott, we had two reports here,
producer price index, and then the next day we had the consumer price index report.
Let's just start with the producer price index. As I said, on a monthly basis,
wholesale prices fell. So that is probably a good thing. Interesting, we saw this very celebratory
reaction from the administration, that this is proof that there is no inflation. I'm just going to
read you these quotes here that we collected. Caroline Levitt, press secretary, she said, quote,
the latest PPI report shows there is no inflation. She went on to say, quote, President Trump has
defeated Joe Biden's inflation crisis while successfully implementing powerful tariffs, which
haven't hiked prices like the so-called experts claimed, end quote. Then Trump went on truth
social, he said, quote, just out, no inflation, too late, referring to Jerome Powell, too late must
lower the rate big right now. Powell is a total disaster who doesn't have a clue, three exclamation
points, end quote. So that is the administration's response to these numbers. Now I would just like
for us to dig into the actual numbers. So the PPI, the producer price index, this is measuring the cost
that producers are paying.
This is measuring wholesale prices.
So the PPI, it fell 0.1% month over month,
which means that wholesale prices
between July and August fell 0.1%.
Now we can call that prices falling
or we can call that flatlining.
My view, that's flatlining.
0.1%, that's not really anything.
Okay, so that happened.
Then you need to factor in the fact
that in the previous month in July,
prices rose 0.9% in one month,
which was the largest PPI increase in three years.
On an annual basis, they rose 3.3%.
So essentially what happened here is we had one of the largest jumps
we've seen in many years in July,
and then from that jump, prices basically remain the same.
So is that a victory? I don't really know.
Then you take into account the core PPI reading for this month,
which many people view as a more accurate reading of inflation,
on that reading, prices rose, month over month, 0.3%.
So in sum, there is more nuance here, and there are lots of ways to read the data,
lots of ways to sort of massage it to better fit your political narrative,
whichever one you want to go with, and we have discussed that at length on the podcast before.
But what I can say definitively right now,
to read this PPI reading and say that this is proof that in fact that,
inflation is not happening, that is either incredibly stupid and wrong, or it's just a bold-faced
lie. It's just not true at all. You cannot reach that conclusion. And so that was why I was a little
bit annoyed about the response that we saw from the administration, this 0.1% month-over-month
decrease, and then, you know, it simply is not proof of anything. And then what happened a day
later, we got the CPI number and the CPI told us consumer inflation rose to 2.9%.
So that's what's happening in the inflation picture. Scott, your reactions.
The PPI is generally a leading indicator or CPI, consumer prices lag PPI because
PPI is an indication of the cost of inputs, right? You're selling into consumer companies
from producers. And then those price increases should start to show up later in CPI.
And right now, to your point, PPI is elevated, and it looks as if CPI is fairly, you know, has jumped a little bit.
And the target, the Fed's target rate for inflation is 2%.
So if we're well above that, which were about 90 basis points above that, that doesn't, you can make a theoretical argument.
That begs for a rate increase, not a rate cut.
The market has said there's 100% likelihood of a rate cut.
I don't think it's 100%, I don't, I think we're looking at most likely, you know, 25 bips, but nothing more because you're trying to balance, you know, at a very basic level, you're trying to balance inflation versus job growth or job loss.
And it appears right now, and we talked about this yesterday with Professor Wolfers from Michigan, that we have the worst of both worlds.
So it looks like inflation appears to be pretty sticky and leveling off on one dimension from an elevated level.
increasing on consumer, a consumer level, and we had the worst revision downward in history
of jobs, right? From the reported numbers, we revised it down by, I think, over like a million
jobs. 911,000 jobs, yeah. So that all kind of adds up to stack inflation, but as it relates to
the rate cut, other than pressure and the market's expecting a rate cut, if we were out of blank
screen here, and you just said, okay, if the Fed's target inflation rate is 2%, and it's a 2.9, and
okay, our jobs are down, so maybe we want to cut rates to inspire the economy a little bit,
but at the same time, our inflation is almost 90 bibs above our target rate, that to me says
you either keep it flat or you slightly increase it. But just given where we are in the narrative
and all the expectations being priced in and the president's pressure, but I don't see an
intellectual argument right now that is honest to substantially cut rates. What are your thoughts?
interesting that that rate cut probability it is 100% and to your point it's actually almost
greater than 100% now because now there are expectations for as you said a half point rate
cut 50 bips versus 25 bips I think the probability right now it's around I think it's almost 90%
for the 25 basis point cut and then 10% for the 50 basis point cut 0% for no cuts and this is all
very striking when you consider, as we just saw with this CPI reading, 2.9% year over year,
fastest inflation rate of the year. We've had 2.7 in July, and we're up. The month-over-month
increases was 0.4%. Prices excluding food and energy, so core prices, they're up 3.1% in the past 12 months.
So prices are rising.
And, you know, we can ask the question, like, why are they rising?
And the answer is simple is what we've said for months now.
It's because of the tariffs.
I mean, the price increases we're seeing are all among the most tariff-sensitive items.
And meanwhile, as we're getting the economic data from the government that is telling us this story,
we're also getting the story told to us in earnings from companies.
You've got companies like Walmart, Target, Best Buy, J.M. Smucker, Ace Hardware, they are all raising prices, and they are also all attributing those price increases to the tariffs.
Now, are we seeing dramatic price increases? No. I mean, to your point, 90 bips above the target rate is quite substantial, but having said that, we've been above 2% for a long time now.
but we're not seeing a huge, dramatic jump in prices right now,
but we are seeing an increase in prices.
And will this continue?
Are we going to see prices continue rise?
We're at 2.9 right now.
We're at 2.7 last month.
Yeah, of course we're going to see this continue.
Because as we've said from the very beginning,
this is how the tariff impact works.
It takes several months.
It's a slow and steady process,
and we are officially seeing that play out right now.
Now, with all of that in mind, you've got this potentially runaway train, which is inflation,
and at the same time, you've got the Fed, which has decided, or at least according to Wall Street,
it has decided we're going to cut rates anyway. Why? Not because they've gotten inflation under control.
They haven't. In fact, it's getting away from them. They're doing it because of this labor market issue,
where you've got a declining labor market,
only 22,000 jobs added in August.
We thought we were going to have 80,000.
And meanwhile, on the same day of the CPI report,
we got this jobless claims number,
263,000 jobless claims this month,
way higher than expected,
and the highest in nearly four years.
So we're probably going to cut rates,
but for none of the reasons we want to.
We're cutting rates because of a bad reason, which is unemployment.
And I would like to get your reaction to some quotes that we collected from guests that we've had on the show over the past few weeks,
talking about the September rate cut, which, as I say, is inevitable according to predictions.
We had Catherine Edwards.
We had a senior economist at Bank of America, Aditya Bavé.
We had Mark Zandi from Moody's Analytics, and we also had Josh Brown.
And I just want to play you what they said about this rate cut.
Granted, they didn't see the CPI number.
This was before they saw this CPI number.
But here is what everyone said so far.
I know the market is counting on it and that the market has priced it in.
I just, I worry that it's being a little premature.
Our call is still that they don't cut in September.
we still think that they are risking a policy mistake by cutting rates just because
the economy might be re-accelerating and inflation is headed towards 3%.
It makes sense for them to start cutting rates at the September meeting.
Go slow because, again, you have to be worried about inflation becoming entrenched and persistent.
I also don't think a rate cut would be so crazy.
Rates are too tight for a 1 to 2% GDP growth environment.
So we've had predictions and opinions all over the board here.
If you had to just put an opinion out there, what is your opinion on this rate cut?
Should we get that rate cut?
Well, what I think is going to happen and what should happen are two different things.
I think they're going to do a 25-bips cut just to say, okay, you know, otherwise you're kind of creating a confrontation of maybe more agitat and conflict than there needs to be.
The Fed's been politicized, regardless of how much.
which we like to think they're independent and Jerome Powell is a great leader. I just think that
there's probably some people, the Fed governors, probably trying to, you know, split the baby,
if you will, it's going to be a 25-bip rape cut. But generally speaking, economists would say that
if it's a choice between greater unemployment or greater inflation, you would choose greater
unemployment. And that is unemployment is bad, but unemployment rates right now historically are
pretty low.
inflation is how nations collapse. If inflation starts an upward spiral and you get to a point
where you have sort of panic buying where people think, oh, buy now because it's about to go up
and price, that's when you just lose, you know, you lose control and that brings down society.
So generally speaking, if you said, okay, we're equally worried about the jobs number as we are
about inflation, that means you wouldn't cut rates. So I would be willing to wager and we should.
I think it's a 25-bip rate cut, and the president gets angry.
It's angry that he didn't get 50.
Yeah, that rate cut means is everybody's upset, which probably means it's the right decision.
I think I'm with you. I think you go for the 25 basis point cut. I think that's what they
should do, and I think it's what they will do. The reason I think they should do it is because of
this unemployment problem, which is becoming more and more of a problem, especially after we saw
that revision. We had a million fewer jobs than we thought last year. And so, yeah, a rate cut to
counteract that issue, but we should be very clear about why we're doing this. And this is what I
worry about. This is why I'm so sensitive to the inflation is not happening argument. Inflation is
happening. The reason we're cutting rates is because of a separate issue, which is the
unemployment issue. And what we have essentially done with these tariffs, if we want to say
that the unemployment issue was baked in the pie beforehand, that's probably what people
are saying, given that revision downward, that this issue was starting before Trump came into
office, which I would accept. But if we had that issue brewing earlier on,
What is certainly clear is that we were getting this inflation thing under control.
That was what was happening.
Inflation was coming down.
And then we put up these tariffs, and what do you know inflation is coming back up?
So we had what was probably supposed to be one problem, which we had prepared ourselves
very well for, and we had this great mechanism called monetary policy, which was supposed
to counteract that.
Instead, what is happening?
We're still going to try to counteract that.
But then we also have another problem that's been put on our plate, and that is the inflation
problem. And I'm sorry, but this is going to get worse. I mean, we had 2.7, 2.7, 2.9. We said this
from the beginning. We're going to see the inflationary impact from tariffs by the fall.
That was what we said. We're going to see it in the fall, maybe before Christmas. That is exactly
what we're seeing. And if we were to put, if I had to put another prediction out there, we're going
see an even higher reading next month and the month after that. I mean, we have officially,
the inflation die has been cost now. And at the same time, we don't have the ability to raise rates
like we used to. We talk a lot about rates, but just a clear primer. When you lower rates,
effectively think of it as you're putting more money in people's pockets. Inflation is too
much money facing or chasing too few goods. You lower the rates, you put more money in
people's pockets. So maybe they spend more, hire more. So one way to juice employment or get
economic growth is to lower rates because instead of your car payment being $600 a month,
it's $540 because the interest rate is lower. Your mortgage is lower. If you have a variable
rate mortgage, your credit card bills go down. So when we say a rate cut, we mean put more money
in people's pockets. So they'll spend more and hopefully it creates economic growth. The problem
is, is that we don't have a demand side problem right now. Consumers are buying stuff. What we
have is companies are suffering because they're suffering because of high input prices because of
these tariffs. So giving consumers more money is probably just going to create more cloud
cover for businesses and producers to keep their prices high or maybe even raise them.
So I just intellectually, I don't think you can justify a rate cut.
We'll be right back after the break with a look at why companies aren't going public.
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The number of public companies in the US keeps shrinking.
Today, there are only 3,700 publicly traded companies in the US.
That is down 17% in the past three years, and it is also half of what it was in 1997.
But last week, the long-term stock exchange, which is a new stock exchange that is trying to compete
with the New York Stock Exchange and the NASDA,
they pitched an idea to change that. They want the SEC to scrap quarterly earnings reports
and let companies report just twice a year. The exchange argues this would free up time for
executives, save millions and costs, and allow companies to focus on the future rather than
quarterly expectations. So, Scott, I find this so interesting. They're pointing out an issue which
we've been discussing on the program for a while now, which is that there are simply
fewer public companies today. I mean, 3,700 in the U.S., that is down 55% since 1997.
So there are less than half the amount of public companies in America today than there were 30 years
ago. So you've had this decline in the public markets. Meanwhile, private markets exploded.
Over that same period since 1997, the number of private equity-backed companies has gone from
1,900 to 11,200. It's a 500% increase. We've seen this explosion in venture capital as well,
explosion in the amount of money that is surging through the private markets, and nothing, to me, as we've
discussed, demonstrates this more than the AI landscape, where you've got a company like OpenAI
reaching a valuation of a half a trillion dollars, one of the most valuable companies in the world,
and yet it's still private. And as I've argued before, the reason it's private,
is because there's so much money in the private markets now, so much liquidity, that you don't
really need the public markets anymore. You might as well stay private and not deal with the hassle
and the regulatory burden of going public. And one of those burdens is, of course, these
quarterly filings and these quarterly reports. So it kind of makes sense for companies, but at the same
time, it screws the retail investor who's left with only so many investment options now. Because
if you're retail, you're only allowed to invest in public stocks. Can you invest in open AI or
anthropic? No, you cannot. You can only invest in those few companies that are going public,
and fewer and fewer companies are going public. So this proposal basically says, well, why don't
we make it easier for public companies? Instead of reporting four times a year, you just report twice
a year. And that way we can perhaps incentivize more companies to list on the public stock
exchanges. So I kind of like the idea. I think it's creative. Allow them to report less,
make things easier. What do you think? Just to be clear, this isn't an attempt to help companies
think more long term. This is an attempt to attract companies to go public on their exchange
in exchange for a lower regulatory burden. And you've been talking about this for a while,
and that is not enough great companies are going public. And the best returns are being sequestered
even further to private market investors who tend to be more institutional and wealthy people
in private family offices. So the public markets were sort of a place where at some point
when you wanted to raise more than $10 or $20 million, you had to go public because the VC
community had a fraction of the capital to invest that they have now. You would get a liquid
currency. You could make acquisitions. Other companies didn't want to take private stock for
acquisitions. You had a means of more sort of visible compensation for your employees. You know,
all sorts of good things. Almost all of those things have been solved in the private markets. Companies
have no trouble. Open AI, I think, just gave what, a $1.7 million bonus to the employees,
every one of its employees in a private company. You can do secondaries. You can raise a ton of
capital if it's a good company. And the private market investors like you to stay private
because Google, you know, Sequoia Capital, which invested in Google, would have liked to have
not taken Google public because since it went public, it was trading at $2.13.
and now it's trading at 239.
So it's up 100x since it's IPO.
It's unlikely right now the companies that are going to 100x in 20 years.
Because as long as it feels like there's juice and the company's growing, the private market
investors say, no, we'll give you everything you need.
We'll give you liquidity for secondaries, for employees, we'll give you more capital
to grow to the company, lower regulatory burden, and we, your private market investors,
get to get all the juice.
And essentially, the public markets have kind of become a place for a business.
One, it is a branding event, and two, the last stop on the valuation train when private investors have sort of said, no, we're kind of done. We don't think there's a lot of juice left here. So you're right. A lot of returns, unfortunately, are being sequestered to the private market and public market investors no longer have the same type of upside. Now, you think, well, the easiest thing to do is to do what these guys are doing, and that is vastly lower regulation and reporting requirements to make it easier to go public. So first off,
Good private companies. Every private company I've run, we have quarterly reports for our investors.
We just, it's good planning. It's good discipline. So it's not that they don't want to do quarterly
reports. It's the administration bureaucracy, communication, as investor relations bureaucracy that is so
expensive and so difficult. The CEO is now mandated to sign his earnings report. The IR committee
and the lawyers have to review everything. Parse the language. I bet in a big public company,
20 to 30 people are working, including the CFO and the CEO, for weeks and days if you're the CEO and the CFO before earnings call, and they're like, Jesus Christ, this is a pain in the ass. Because if you get a number wrong, I think like what I'd lift, they got one number wrong and it sent the stock up 30% and then down 10%. I think, you know what, I'm getting everything I need in the private markets. I don't want, I just, you know, I don't need this shit, right?
That's a good point. The straw man argument here is the following. I was approached by a guy who was starting a hedge fund.
in, this is like 10, 15 years ago, and he said, all we do is find fraudulent companies in China
that because of a lack of regulation to go public there, I can find companies that are literally
downright fraud. Here's a company that claims it has 3,000 gas stations, and I went to China
and did an audit, and I think they have 30. I think they're literally lying. I think they are saying
they have 100 times the number of gas stations that they actually have, because the lower the regulation
the reporting requirements, the greater the likelihood for fraud, right? So there is one of the reasons
our S&P trades at a greater multiple than any other market is because we're more risk aggressive,
our companies are better, access to capital, but also rule of law and regulation. Because if you're
a widower or an orphan and you invest in SPY, the S&P, you're unlikely to get made-offed. You're unlikely to
find out, oh, there's very few Enron's in the S&P 500. That doesn't happen very often because of these
reporting requirements. Now, what's the answer? How do you kind of thread the needle here? I would
argue that you could bring down regulatory requirements and reporting requirements for companies to go
public to try and incent them to go public such that retail investors had more access. I think the
delta here or the solution or the plug, if you will, might be AI. And that is, I think at some point,
if you say, all right, I'm going to release all my data, but maybe I'm not going to get on the phone
every three months and ask analyst questions. And, you know, I don't need all sorts of regulatory
submissions. You need to make it less expensive. I think AI is going to be able to look at every
single fraud that's happened in about one second and then ask for a series of inputs from a
company on a regular basis and then put out a fraud rating and say, this smells funny. This doesn't
feel right. And then for other ones, say, everything seems legit here. And they don't need to have
this incredible regulatory burden.
The average U.S. public listed company today spends 136 hours working on every quarterly report
and 1,720 hours working on every annual report, which means that S&P 500 companies
are, yeah, they're spending a million hours a year filling out forms, basically, to disclose their
financials. And that, to me, right to your point, you've got to AIify that, 100.
percent. So it's extremely burdensome in terms of time. It's also expensive, cost roughly
$2 million a year to comply with reporting requirements. In total, S&B companies are paying more
than $5 billion per year to auditing firms for their financial disclosures. So really expensive
too, and you would think that AI would step in here. But it does raise this point where, you know,
as the public markets have dwindled in terms of the amount of capital and the amount of activity
and the amount of companies that are listing on these exchanges, the financial disclosure requirements
and the regulatory burden, it has increased a lot. And, you know, just as an example, back in 2020,
the SEC decided to increase the reporting requirements, especially around risk. There are now
more than 30 risk factors reported on every public company report, on average now. And,
you know, as an investor, you read these risk disclosures, and it's getting pretty ridiculous.
I mean, we might have discussed this before, but the average length of just an annual report
since 1997, it's increased 200%. So these filings and these disclosure forms are getting so
so long. And it's all in the name of, you know, investor protections and informing the investor
and making sure the investors know all of the risks, et cetera, et cetera. But it gets the point
where, like, this is just way too long. I'm not paying attention to any of this. Like,
these risks are getting ridiculous. And just some of the dumbest and most meaningless risk factors
that we have collected here that our team collected. So Amazon on their recent report, one of
these risks. Quote, we face intense competition. Like, okay, got it. We understand. Thank you.
Thanks, Captain, obvious. Apple, quote, the company's operations of performance depend significantly
on global and regional economic conditions. Great. Here's one from Berkshire Hathaway.
A cyber-biological nuclear or chemical terrorist attack could produce significant losses
to our worldwide operations. Like, you talk about,
infantilizing the investor, all of those risk factors right there, that is like peak
infantilization. Like, why is Berkshire Hathaway telling us that a nuclear or chemical terrorist
attack is going to have an effect on the business? Like, we all already know this. So in my view,
it is getting to the point where, as you say, there is a balance when it comes to regulation.
You know, having investor protections, having robust investor protections is a good thing, which is why
you see this massive premium in the U.S. markets, yes, the U.S. has a lot of things going
for it. But one of the great things about listing on a U.S. exchange is that you can pretty
much guarantee, or at least you have a fair amount of assurance, that whatever you're buying
isn't totally fraudulent. And the same is not true of many other exchanges, especially emerging
markets. But then there's the other side, which is getting a little bit much. And if this is a pain in
the ask for the companies. And also, as an investor, I'll say, it's a pain in the ass for me.
I don't want to read 100 pages of risk. I don't care. I can do it on my own. I can figure it out.
It seems like there is a happy medium, and we are probably airing too far on the side of regulation
here. My favorite in terms of what the team dug up was the disclosure and the warning, and this is
in the S-1 or in an earnings report from SeaWorld, which I think is owned by Blackstone.
sea world warned investors that it's orca whales killed a trainer and might kill more that's my favorite
and might kill more tilliculum was that the same telecom is in a bad fucking mood and he's upset he's upset about
the podres losing and we just get the sense he's in him eating trainer mood i like that i want
i want proptu media to go public and just disclose risks around me he's in the midst of the midlife crisis
Yeah, yeah. What would our publicly filed risk disclosures look like at ProfG Media?
His judgment is really poor.
Oh my God, likes drugs, experiments with all sorts of substances, has no fear of death.
Even if we loosen up the regulation, I would still opt to put that in there.
We're very, very dependent on this individual.
The investors should know that.
oh my god that we should absolutely put together a prospectus with our risk disclosures and see what we
come up with claire is just about had it with scott she has just about had it oh my god i love that
ed's head is getting fucking enormous ed is getting very annoying yeah no ed ed ed's had oh my god
I love it.
But I do think, I mean, I'd be interested to hear where you ultimately land on this.
And just some quotes from some CEOs who are complaining about this.
Jamie Diamond complained about, quote, intensified reporting requirements, higher litigation
expenses, cookie cutter, board governance, and the relentless pressure of quarterly earnings.
Warren Buffett wrote an op-ed.
He said, quote, quarterly earnings guidance often leads to an unhealthy focus on short-term profits
at the expense of long-term strategy, growth, and sustainability.
James Gorman, he called the disclosure requirements of quarterly filings.
He called them, quote, asinine.
CEOs are annoyed about the amount of regulation.
And I find it interesting that I am landing in a place.
I'm usually very pro-regulation.
I usually feel that we just don't have enough.
I do feel that we've gone overboard here on this IPO question.
And so then the next question is like, okay, well, what do we do about it? So maybe we loosen the laws. Maybe we just expand access to private markets and just sort of enough with this delineation. I mean, if you were to design a solution to this problem, specifically companies not going public, what would it be?
When demand was so great for tech-related companies and companies didn't want to go through the hassle and the regulation of going public, we invented a plug and it was called SPAC.
And that did not end well for consumers. In the face of unprecedented market gains, this lower regulation, lower hurdle way of just add water in your public did not work out well for consumers who thought they were getting in quick and easy on some great little tech companies.
Now, you know, these companies just, they shouldn't have gone public. And since then, investors have really paid the price. So I think there's a happy medium here. It's a little bit like me. I wonder if there's just an exchange. And this is already sort of emerging. I mean, the problem is you have these secondary exchanges emerging, like Setter and other places where you can buy shares in great private companies. The problem is, is that they're really inefficient? A guy will call me and say, Scott, are you interested in increasing your exposure?
to Epic. I own shares in Epic. Are you interested in selling your shares in Multiverse? Whatever. They
make a market. They charge four to seven percent. Exactly. And whereas I think Schwab charges
10 to 15 basis points. So they're very inefficient. And also because there's not a mark or a
liquid market. You don't, I'm always insecure around, am I getting a good price or not? So there's
not enough liquidity in this marketplace. And a lot of market makers, people don't appreciate that a
market maker will actually make the market in and even sometimes buy your stock ahead of time,
not knowing there's a buyer because they're willing to take that risk. So, I mean, I think
we've gone overboard in terms of protecting consumers. We let consumers bet on whether or not
there'll be a Fed rate hike. We let consumers bet on everything. So the idea that we need to
protect people from stocks has gotten a little bit overboard. I'm a little bit on your side. I'd like
to see an Olympics where there's absolutely no restriction on performance enhanced drugs. I'd like to
see a woman show up who's 800 pounds in all muscle. Peter Thiel's built that, by the way.
Really? Yeah, we have the performance-enhanced Olympics. It has arrived, thanks to Peter Thiel.
I think that'll be a lot of fun to watch. I agree. I kind of feel the same way about the markets.
I think there should probably be a market, and there is for, look, if you want to have out it,
but I do think that there will be a company that builds a layer on top of an LLM that says,
all right, a we issue rating, similar to Fitch or S&P or Moody's or whatever, right?
Who, by the way, I think, rated some of the companies the week before they went bankrupt as like AAA or defaulting on their bonds.
But I think there was going to be a ratings agency that is AI powered that basically says, all right, you want to go public or you want to trade on an exchange, we need the following data sets from you, the following APIs, and we're going to issue a rating on you in about two seconds.
and it'll serve as a endorser brand, similar to a Moody's or a Fitch or whoever, or even some of the
endorser brands right now is that if Goldman Sachs is taking you public, you're probably a pretty
legitimate company unless you're a company renting out desks called WeWork.
But most of the companies that Morgan Stanley, J.P. Morgan, and Goldman Sachs take public have kind of
passed a smell test. So there's definitely a need for innovation here. I agree with you that we need
to stop and fanalyzing consumers because they're spending money on stupid or shit and taking
bigger risks now that they have a casino in their pocket and can bet on almost anything.
Why shouldn't they be able to bet on companies? So I'm with you.
I was down with the argument for investor protections, but it doesn't make any sense that we
have all of these investor protections when it comes to stocks. And then at the same time,
the crypto industry exists. Like, why is it that we're protecting people from and making sure
that people really understand what stocks they're buying? And then,
at the same time, we've got this thing called Fartcoin, which is perfectly permitted and
allowed to issue those tokens on any crypto exchange, and then you have all these people
buying Fartcoin and Come Rocket and Pepe coin and Trump coin. Like, those two things should not be
true at the same time. It doesn't make any sense. And then to your point, as well, we've got
these prediction markets, the fact that it's legal to bet on the rotten to me.
Lato score of the new Avengers movie.
Like, we need to figure out where we land on this thing.
And I think it's really interesting that you bring up this point of having some sort of
more publicly available information on credit ratings as an example for private companies.
And it's so interesting following what we've seen recently with Oracle and Open AI
and the conversation I had with Gil Luria recently, the head of technology researcher
at DA Davidson, where basically what you've got right now is the Oracle's valuation is pretty
much dependent on the how much you believe OpenAI is going to pay them $300 billion over the
next five years for their compute. And of course, Open AI doesn't have $300 billion right now,
which means they're going to have to borrow, which means that all of this is dependent on the
creditworthiness of Open AI. Now, how do we?
determine the creditworthiness of Open AI. We don't have access to those filings. Maybe Open AI's
investors do, but the rest of us and reporters, we don't really know what's going on at Open AI.
And yet what is happening there, they've gotten so big that the moves that they are making
is causing hundreds of billions of dollars of market cap to be created within basically a day
for one of the largest tech companies in the world. It has basically minted
now the world's richest man in Larry Ellison. And so all of this is to say these private companies
are so important now that we are beginning to see there is a reason why we need to know about
what is going on with them. But if they stay private, we can't know anything. So someone needs
to enter that void. Maybe it's AI, as you say, or maybe the other possibility is maybe we need
more disclosures of private companies. Maybe that's how you level the playing field here.
This feels like a technology soft for me.
People want access to great private companies.
And also, I have made, actually, my biggest gains have been buying, investing in B and C round companies and then selling them.
I'm invested in a great company.
I'm not surprised.
That's where all the returns are.
Yeah.
And by the way, but also it's risky.
The way I would say it is, and this is what I think we're trying to do in the show,
financial literacy is really important because what I've also done, I always make sure,
if I have $10 million for invest in private companies, I invest in three to five because I know one of them is going to go to zero. And the problem is I don't know which one. And so I do think that you need people to go, I just remember Kleiner Perkins. I got into my first private deal was with Kleiner Perkins. We were doing some brand work for them, my first strategy firm profit. And what a thrill. They let us invest in this thing called, I think it was called, not Delin James, but it was a wedding registry. And we were,
We got to invest alongside Kleiner Perkins.
Oh, my God, what a thrill.
Can't go wrong.
This is the best VC firm in the world.
John Doer was on this deal.
And so I called my partner,
I said, we got to back up the truck here,
borrow whatever we have.
And we managed to scrape together
a quarter of a million dollars,
which was everything we had.
We were like, I think 27, 28.
It just started profit.
Six months later, the thing is out of business.
Out of business.
But if I had invested...
And it's gone.
And thank you very much.
And everybody's gone.
That's a great South Park.
Okay, hold on.
Let me see.
And your money's gone.
Just got to put it into this.
It's fun.
And it's gone.
So I didn't understand the power of diversification because what you find with these private companies is you just don't, you know, you know, you just don't know.
You try to make good investments.
You look at the valuation and everything.
But the bottom line is the private market is more volatile.
And essentially what regulars have decided to do is they feel like they need to protect.
non, quote unquote, accredited investors from volatility.
But you can invest in Fartcoin.
Or you can bet on Kamala Harris to win the presidency.
It's a zero one game.
I get it.
You win.
I'm in.
Just what I can tell you, folks, is just spread it around
because these things, you just don't know what's going to happen.
We'll be right back after the break with the rising Gen Z unemployment rate.
If you're enjoying the show so far, hit follow and leave us a review on the ProfiMont.
Oh, this is it.
This is it, the day you finally ask for that big promotion.
You're in front of your mirror with your Starbucks coffee.
Be confident.
Assertive.
Remember eye contact.
But also, remember to blink.
Smile, but not too much.
That's weird.
What if you aren't any good at your job?
What if they dim out you instead?
Okay.
Don't be silly. You're smart. You're driven. You're going to be late if you keep talking to the mirror.
This promotion is yours. Go get them. Starbucks. It's never just coffee.
Oh, hi, buddy. Who's the best? You are. I wish I could spend all day with you instead.
Uh, Dave, you're off mute.
Hey, happens to the best of us. Enjoy some goldfish cheddar crackers. Goldfish have short
memories. Be like goldfish.
When I found out my friend
got a great deal on a wool coat from
Winners, I started wondering.
Is every fabulous item I
see from Winners? Like that
woman over there with the designer jeans.
Are those from Winners? Ooh,
are those beautiful gold earrings?
Did she pay full price? Or that leather
tote? Or that cashmere sweater? Or those
knee-high boots? That dress, that
jacket, those shoes! Is anyone
paying full price for anything?
Stop wondering.
Winning. Winners find fabulous for less.
We're back with Profi Markets. Unemployment is rising, and young people are feeling it the most.
Overall, U.S. unemployment hit 4.3% in August, the highest since 2021, but for 16 to 24-year-olds,
the rate is 10.5%. By the way, this isn't just a problem in the U.S. across the globe.
youth unemployment is climbing, with similar trends emerging in many other countries.
To give just a couple of examples, in Canada, youth unemployment is at its highest level since 2010.
In China, youth unemployment hit nearly 18%.
And in India, more than 40% of college graduates under the age of 25 are currently unemployed.
So, Scott, let's start with America here.
As I said, more than 1 in 10 Americans under 25.
are unemployed right now.
That's one of the highest rates of youth unemployment in years.
Entry-level job postings are also in decline, down 35% since January of 2023.
What do you think is happening here?
I think the economy is slowing down.
I think that AI is coming for entry-level information age workers who were sort of the
bell of the ball the last 10 or 15 years.
I mean, these companies could not hoover up.
recent grads fast enough. At Berkeley, people stopped recruiting at Haas because the kids were getting
five and six offers, and they're like, it's not worth our time because no one's accepting our offers.
So these kids were so in vogue, and now when I think about the 85 people that were in my
analyst class at Morgan Stanley, and I think about the work I did over two years, I think that work
could be done in four to 12 weeks, meaning that I'd just be curious to know what their analyst class is.
I bet for the same amount of work, it's 20 or 30 people.
Now, they say they're not checking back on hiring.
I think that's bullshit.
But it strikes me that AI is really going for young entry-level information age workers.
The consultants, the bankers, the analysts, to me, the new lawyers, my God, I would really be curious to see an honest appraisal of what is happening to the first-year classes at places like Scadden or some of the tier two firms that still hire a ton of lawyers right out of law school.
And also the employment rate is substantially higher for young men than it is for young women. But as we've seen in Nepal, when you young people get upset, it oftentimes leads to revolution. There's a variety of factors here. When you look at income inequality and the expectations it has raised for people, a lot of people say correctly, you're a life right now. You'd rather be a middle class person right now than the wealthiest person in America 50 years ago. You didn't have Novocaine. You didn't have
Netflix. There is something to that, right? But that's not how the human brain works. Young people
see the life of their parents along the lines of mom and dad got married, had a home, had kids,
could afford to have kids, right? And all this wealth porn is being shoved in my face,
convincing me that that is the life I'm supposed to have. And if I don't have a boyfriend with
ripped abs and I can take my girlfriend to Sardinia, then I'm a fucking failure. Because it feels
like everyone but me is doing it. So the expectations have gone higher, the core things that
people need to spend on to establish what I call a more meaningful life, that is finding a mate,
having kids, a house, paying, not having debt, that shit's getting more and more expensive.
And unfortunately, I think that the new technology, AI, is coming straight for young professionals.
It's really scary for young people because when you just think about it from the company's
perspective when it comes to AI, there's the incentive to,
cut jobs and use AI and get rid of your employees to cut costs. So there's the
business incentive. But because this AI thing is so powerful in Wall Street specifically right
now, there's also a valuation incentive to show, yeah, we are using AI and yeah, we are
getting rid of people. It's become almost a bragging point. And that's one interesting shift that
we've seen. It used to be that layoffs were kind of a negative indicator, like, oh, what went
wrong. Why'd you lay all these people off? It's flipped now. It's now a sign of strength. Yes,
we are using AI so well that we don't need people anymore. It's become a bragging point.
And in fact, we are already seeing that, especially in big tech right now, according to Saty Nadella,
CEO of Microsoft, 30% of the code written at Microsoft now is written by AI. That's striking
in and of itself, but also it's striking that he's bragging about that.
It's basically, there is a reason, if you want to get a nice premium,
there is a reason and an incentive to go out there and say,
look how many people we don't need right now.
Look how many young people we didn't hire.
Meta is saying the same thing.
Half of its code, according to Mark Zuckerberg,
half of the code written at Meta will be written by AI by 2026.
And so there's this very dark thing happening where the market is basically saying,
you know, we love you young people, you guys are great. However, we really need to make sure that we can prove to Wall Street how much we do not need you. And we are already seeing that right now. And then we had that Stanford study, which was so alarming, which found that young people with AI exposed jobs have seen a 13% reduction in employment.
One or two things needs to happen here. And we don't want to talk, people don't want to talk honestly about this. If you look at evaluations of AI and AI related companies, a magnificent 10,
baked into those valuations is that they're either going to be able to help companies increase their
revenues by a trillion dollars. That's the number I heard from the analyst that it was either Jeffries
or Apollo or cost by a trillion dollars. I have not heard of a company saying we're putting out a new
moisturizer we developed with AI. Oh, it's a new car developed with AI. It's all we're
finding efficiencies. It's all about efficiencies. So those trillions, those trillions,
trillion dollars has got to come out from cost savings or efficiencies from the clients spending a shit ton of money on site licenses or LLMs or Nvidia chips or have promised their shareholders that they're going to get all sorts of efficiencies. And in order to cut a trillion dollars in expenses, and given that maybe half of the half of industry is somewhat immune from AI, whether it's a chiropractor or dentist or masseuses or whoever or welders, that means the industry.
The information intensive industries are going to have to register a massive increase in efficiency, which is Latin for people being fired. So one or two things has to happen in the next 24 to 36 months. Okay, one of three things. They find an immense new world of new products from AI, which I have not seen yet that increases incremental revenue. Have not seen any evidence that's going to happen. They find massive efficiencies through layoffs of people. They
don't need or they need less up. I am seeing that everywhere, or the magnificent 10 gets cut in
half. So in the next 24 to 36 months, we either see massive destruction in human capital
across certain industry, especially at the junior levels, maybe also the senior levels, I don't
know, or we're going to see a serious correction in the valuation of these companies because
baked in to the valuation of these companies is that their clients and everyone announcing they're
spending more and more money on AI and how are they going to register a return on that investment in
AI through efficiencies, which again is not reducing the cost of electricity in their factory
or making it cheaper and easier to build a building. It's all about layoffs and people and
redundancies. Catherine Ann Edwards, who is the labor economist who we had on the podcast,
she made the other point here, which is, you know, there's the AI problem, but there's the
other side of this, which is the unemployment rate among young people is usually a leading indicator
of a larger economic recession.
As she said,
young people are the last to be hired
and the first to be fired.
So the other side to this,
and we've seen this in many recessions before,
we saw it in the 80s, we saw it in 2007.
The recession was preceded by a big surge
in youth unemployment.
The other side to this,
and perhaps AI is part of that story,
is that this could be a leading indicator
to something larger,
It could be, yeah, we're going to not hire these young people right now.
We're going to hold on to our senior people because we have a nice relationship with them.
We like them.
They've worked with us for a while.
But a year down the road, perhaps, we're going to have to let you go.
And that could be the story, too.
So we have some breaking news here, Ed.
Paramount Skydance prepares Ellison-backed bid for Warner Brothers Discovery.
No.
So you have been kind of...
of the Oracle of Oracle. You said before it was cool that Oracle was really well positioned.
Larry Ellison, 38%, what was it, gain in one day, Larry Ellison gained 100, increases net worth
by $130 billion. We don't have a sense for these numbers, because effectively, he, his son
purchased Paramount for $8 billion. He could purchase 15 paramounts with the increase in wealth
of Larry Ellison yesterday.
So, I mean, you now have basically the entire media ecosystem is being consolidated
because of the Oracle earnings call.
Like two of the most important media companies and, you know, Warner Brothers Discovery
is basically going to be soaked up.
I don't know the market cap for Warner Brothers Discovery, but I mean, tech is literally
driving everything now.
Anyways, I thought that was interesting.
Breaking news.
Breaking news, Ed.
By the way, it reminds me of my favorite text exchange in the history of texts.
What's his name and how much did it cost?
Just wait till my age, Ed.
It won't sound that alien or is that weird.
Few beers, a little more open-minded.
Sorry, Ed, go ahead.
Your favorite text exchange.
My favorite text exchange, speaking of very rich people throwing money around,
Elon to Larry Ellison during the Twitter deal.
Any interest in participating in the Twitter deal?
Larry Ellison, yes, of course.
Elon, cool, roughly what dollar size, not holding you to anything.
Larry Ellison, a billion, or whatever you recommend.
Must be nice, right?
Must be nice.
Also, Larry Ellison, 81, just married a 33-year-old, or his wife is 33.
He looks good.
We were talking about this.
He looks very good.
I don't know what he did.
Oh, what didn't he do?
I don't know if he did the Peter Thiel blood transfusion, the vampire.
strategy. I don't know what he's doing, but he does look good. Oh, by the way, well, this is
property markets. Warner Brothers Discovery just in the last hour is up 27%. So get this. All right,
God, we should have figured this out. Basically, Larry Ellison goes from a mature company,
and this is the difference between Larry Ellison and, quite frankly, Tim Cook right now. He goes,
okay, I'm a mature company, returning cash to shareholders through buybacks. Oh, no, there needs
to be a number two in infrastructure to Nvidia. It should be Oracle. I'm pivoting back to my younger
days. I'm going aggressive. I'm going to make massive investments in the cloud. It hugely pays off.
He announces that they're going to do, they have a $300 billion deal over five years with
Open AI, which is just staggering when you think about the fact that Open AI, which is making
about $10 billion a year, anticipates they can spend $60 billion a year on compute, which gives you
censor how confidence they are about the revenue growth, he announces this unbelievable
staggering corridor, and that results in Warner Brothers' discovery the next day going up 26%
because his son, who wants to go to the Academy Awards, and I'm sure he wants, you know,
his dad likes the idea of hanging out of the Vanity Fair Oscars party, goes fine, go play in traffic
with 20% of my wealth gains from today.
And to tie it back to this Gen Z unemployment thing.
this is the problem where all of the value of AI that is being created is creating a lot of
momentum and a lot of action only among equities, basically. It's only have, all of the action
is happening in the stock market and it's all shareholder gains that we're seeing. So AI is great
if you're an investor. I mean, you're crushing it right now. But as we know, young people are not
invested in the stock market because they don't have the money. And the value of that AI is not being
accrued in the real economy in terms of salaries and employment. It is, I mean, people said this
was going to happen. It is what is happening. It's taking young people's jobs. It's creating all
of this value. The value is being accrued to the richest few people in the world who are then
passing that money onto their children, David Ellison. We are seeing the inheritocracy around
rise as we speak. And then David Ellison is spending that money on ridiculous valuations for
pet projects such as the free press, because he's probably into sort of edgy right-wing content.
I'm not saying that's exactly what the free press is, but, you know, rest assured he likes the
ideological views of Barry Weiss, whatever it is. He's paying $200 million for that media company.
Now he's going to go pay a ridiculous premium for Warner Brothers Discovery, up 30%.
All of that value is AI value that is being spent in an extremely inefficient way where you have young billionaires who are the children of billionaires spending it on ridiculous things and Ferraris aren't good enough anymore. You have to buy multi-billion dollar media companies.
AI made Larry Ellison rich. You gave a bunch of that money to his son to go buy these online movie studios, these iconic trophy properties. And you're going to see AI. I can't imagine.
the younger Ellison isn't going to spend a lot of time with the senior Ellison
and immediately start applying AI to all of those properties.
Just to wrap up here, you know, one of the things you pointed out
is that youth unemployment and general youth dissatisfaction
is a pretty accurate indicator of anarchy and revolution.
I mean, that is, if there's a reason why revolutions happen,
generally speaking, it's because young people are very upset.
And generally speaking, why young people are very upset?
Because they don't have money, because they don't have opportunities,
because they don't have jobs.
And right now we have all of this alarming data
about the depression of young people,
the fact that 41% of Gen Z says they're proud to be American,
compared to 75%, and 84% for the boomers in the silent generation,
the fact that a third of us are living with our parents,
I mean, we've discussed the Gen Z data many, many times before.
But as you say, it is a real problem, maybe not right now for the overall economy, but possibly
tomorrow.
And then I sort of look at what happened, I'm sorry to say it, with Charlie Kirk last week.
It feels like we're entering kind of scary territory here.
So I guess I would ask you, you know, if you agree that this is a real problem.
And then, two, what do we do about it?
And what does a young person do about it?
Well, I'm not here with a message of hope.
Like, I just did this Times of London Radio hit.
And I was at the Colon.
cathedral yesterday, as you know, and I'm just so struck by this structure. I remember going there on my
proverbial backpacking trip out of college with my friends Lee Lotus and David Kingsdale, and I remember
seeing the Colon Cathedral and thinking it was the most impressive manmade thing I'd ever seen. Have you seen
that? No. It doesn't sound that exciting. It's a big cathedral, but it's so magnificent and artisanal or
broke and just so huge, you think, how did humans build this thing? It took 650 years to build the thing.
And then in World War II, it was subject to the largest single bombing raid in history, a thousand bombers.
It was the first time a thousand bombers had been allocated towards a raid.
It was severely damaged.
80% of Colon was flat, 90% of the population was either evacuated or killed, 20,000 people were killed, and it was repaired.
And I started thinking about Germany, and basically, you know, Germany didn't start, or the descent into darkness, didn't start with camps, it started with paper, the Reichstadt Fire Act, which basically diminished the rights of free.
press, overrode privacy laws, started weaponizing private industry or intimidating private
industry in the media. And then kind of the, I would argue, the thing that always ignites
this dissent or revolution or anger is when young people have a lack of opportunity.
And I feel like we're one real economic shock. And by the way, we have not felt an economic shock
yet, not even a tremor, as far as I know, based on what I saw in 2008 and in 2000. But if we do
experience the kind of shock, I think that we're due for. I think that that would be the spark on
this kindling. America is so culturally strained right now that it overshadows some of our
incredible accomplishments. So I'm not hopeful. I think we're in very dangerous. It feels like
things are really hot and the temperature is really high and that our blood pressure is really high,
meaning that we're just more prone for a cardiac arrest or some sort of stroke or some sort of
really negative event. And what do we have here? We have a cocktail of the following things.
We have the deepest pocketed, most talented people in the world with Godlike technology
and paleolithic institutions to regulate them, all trying to pit each of us against each other
because there's profit in it. Nothing creates engagement like enragement and Nissan ads.
So what's my prediction? I hate to say this. Violence. And we aren't doing anything.
we aren't acknowledging the problem. Instead, we want to blame each other. No, if anyone was
serious, including the left, including the right, if anyone was really serious about taking
violence down, they would try and take the temperature down and the rhetoric. I don't think
that's going to happen. There's too much money in keeping the rhetoric ugly. Beyond economic
shocks, I can't predict those. Revolution, who the fuck knows? Unemployment. Okay, fine. Let's focus
on tangible solutions. We have minority rule in the United States. We have
fall into this cold comfort of believing more democracy and that a passive populace makes our
decisions no, who makes our decisions are well-funded, very well-organized special interest groups,
chief among them, the NRA and people who conflate rights with gun rights in Congress when 70% of
America wants some sort of sensible gun control. And sitting here in London, I can tell you a free
gift with purchase having moved to London, is that I do not have the same level of fear that I'm going
I'll wake up and see my kid's school on CNN. That does not happen here. So a long-winded way of
saying, I don't know, but a good place to start would be our elected leaders do what the governor
of Utah did and try and take the temperature down and express sympathy for both sides on the aisle
who are subject of violence and start to have reasonable practical discussions around gun control
in the United States. All right, let's take a look at the week ahead. We will see retail sales,
housing starts, and the import price index for August. And of course, all I,
will be on the Federal Reserve,
which will meet and announce
its interest rate decision
on Wednesday.
Usually I ask you for a prediction.
I think you just gave it to me.
More violence.
Well, no, I'll give you a better one.
I went off script there
because I can't help
the cosplay an angry Democrat.
Those drones from Russia
flying into Poland
is Putin poking
what he believes is a weakened Trump
in EU,
an EU plane
or a plane with the EU minister
on it,
was forced to do an emergency landing because of a cyber attack on the controls of that plane,
and now they are purposely flying attack drones into Poland, who I would remind you is a member
of NATO and subject to Article 5, meaning if they are attacked and this could qualify as an
attack, all 32 EU member nations are obligated to respond. What does that mean, bringing it back
to the markets? The best performing stocks over the fourth quarter are going to be EU defense
stocks because you are about to see the EU really increased spending even more than our
previous predictions around spending. This shit is getting real over there. The EU is panicked
about the fact that Putin saw fit to start sending attack drones into Poland, and there just
aren't that many places to put that increase in spending because they're not going to buy
Andorrell or Boeing or Northrop Grumman planes, missiles, and launch vehicles. They're going to try and buy
as many as they can of that equipment from EU defense contractors, and there just aren't that many.
The EU defense docs are going to see an AI-like surge in the remainder of the year.
This episode was produced by Claire Miller and engineered by Benjamin Spencer.
Our associate producer is Alison Weiss.
Weirio is our research lead and our research associates on Dan Chalon, Isabella Kinsel, and Kristen O'Donoghue.
Drew Burroughs is our technical director, and Catherine Dillon is our executive producer.
Thank you for listening to ProfG Markets from Profg Media.
Tune in tomorrow for a fresh take on the markets.
and the dark
fly
in the