Prof G Markets - The Trump Fold & Tesla’s Brand Death
Episode Date: April 28, 2025Scott and Ed discuss Trump’s decision to invite the top holders of his memecoin to a private dinner, Boeing’s first quarter earnings, and a new report underscoring the worsening wealth inequality ...in the U.S. Then, they explore how Trump’s policy reversals are undermining America’s global reputation in the markets. Finally, they break down Tesla’s first-quarter report, why the markets reacted so positively to the terrible results, and the key moments from the earnings call. 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 @profgpod: Instagram Threads X Reddit Follow Scott on InstagramFollow Ed on Instagram and X Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Support for the show comes from public.com. If you're serious about investing, you need to know about public.com.
That's where you can invest in everything, stocks, options, bonds, and more, and even in a 6% or higher yield that you can lock in with a bond account.
Visit public.com slash prop G and get up to $10,000 when you transfer your old portfolio. That's public.com slash prop G.
Paid for by public investing, all investing involves the risk of loss, including loss of principal. From early morning workouts that need a boost, to late night drives that need I should also disclose I am an investor in public.
From early morning workouts that need a boost
to late night drives that need vibes, a good playlist can help you make the most out of your everyday.
And when it comes to everyday spending,
you can count on the PC Insider's World Elite Mastercard
to help you earn the most PC optimum points everywhere you shop.
With the best playlists, you never miss a good song.
With this card, you never miss out on getting the most points on everyday purchases.
The PC Insider's World's Elite Mastercard.
The card for living unlimited.
Conditions apply to all benefits.
Visit PCFinancial.ca for details.
Okay, Martin, let's try one.
Remember, big.
You got it.
The Ford It's a Big Deal event is on.
How's that?
A little bigger.
The Ford It's a Big Deal event. Nice. Now the offer?
Lease a 2025 escape active all-wheel drive from 198 bi-weekly at 1.99% APR for 36 months with 27.55
down. Wow that's like 99 dollars a week. Yeah it's a big deal. The Ford it's a big deal event.
Visit your Toronto area Ford store or Ford.ca today. Today's number, 283.
That's the percentage increase in viewership of the movie
Conclave, the day after Pope Francis died.
Ed, what does a priest's scrotum look like?
Oh boy.
I don't know.
I don't know.
What does a priest scrotum look like?
Come on, man.
Every child knows that. Ha ha ha ha ha. Welcome to Prof G Markets.
Rest in peace, El Papa.
Rest in peace.
Um, I just love that JD Vance killed the pope.
I absolutely love that.
It answers the fuck Mary kill, right?
We got the couch, we got his wife.
Now we got the kill.
I'm recycling everything.
I'm a walking meme right now.
Ed, I'm a walking meme.
What's going on with you?
It's time for banter.
Let's see.
What is going on with me?
I hang out with Anthony Scaramucci yesterday, which is very fun.
The mooch? Where did you hang out with Anthony?
I went to his office, went to SkyBridge,
took me around, showed me all of his paraphernalia and his books.
By the way, I learned that Anthony was a classics major.
Yeah, he has this Long Island feel about him,
but not that Long Island people aren't well-read.
But you get the sense he's kind of a blue collar guy.
He's actually very well read and very intelligent.
I like him a lot.
I'm a huge fan of his.
Let me guess, you're starting a podcast.
The rest is Ed, isn't this how they say it?
The rest is Polly.
The rest is Ed.
You're starting a podcast with him.
We're actually doing something,
a limited series called The Lost Boys.
What is that?
Your 20th podcast?
What are we at now?
Well, look, everyone I do, I make another 10 or 12 bucks in gross margin.
So, you know, baby needs new shoes and listen about, listen, how dreaming my
voice is, say, now look at me, listen to my voice.
Now look at me.
Enough said podcasts, podcasts, the moneymaker.
You know what, by the way, how was your time with your father?
It was great, I had a great time.
And your parents live in the UK?
Oh no, they live here now.
No, no, no, they're still in London.
He was just visiting.
Not that I don't know anything about you, Ed.
What's your last name again?
Wait, hold on.
You see, banter for us is just sort of like
getting to know each other, right?
We're still not quite there yet.
Been four years, but we're getting close.
They live in the UK.
Yeah, they do.
I'll have to set you up.
You can go get a drink with my dad at Kensington Gardens.
I can see that.
I'm actually sort of, I wouldn't say odd,
but I'm curious about your dad.
What did your dad do professionally?
Finance.
And you went to Princeton, huh?
Boy, it's been rough for Ed.
It's just amazing you've overcome all this adversity.
Really impressive.
The biggest adversity I've had in my life is you, Scott.
Now I'm here for a reason, my brother, and it's only getting started.
Get to the headlines.
Let's start with our weekly review of Market Vitals.
The S&P 500 climbed, the dollar hit a three year low, bitcoin rose and the yield on 10 year treasuries declined, shifting to the headlines.
President Trump is inviting the top 220 holders of his meme coin to join him for a private
dinner.
That news sent the token's price up more than 60% as investors rushed to increase their holdings and secure a spot. Boeing shares climbed 6% after the company posted first quarter earnings
that beat expectations with revenue up 18% year over year. The stock also got a boost the day
before on a $10.6 billion partial sale of its navigation business. And finally, a new report
shows that in 2024 alone, the 19 wealthiest households in America
added $1 trillion to their net worth.
That is the largest single year increase on record.
Scott, your thoughts, starting with Trump coin.
Trump is inviting the top holders of Trump coin to an exclusive dinner and also a VIP
tour of the White House.
This is great news, isn't it?
I think we are head a new low where we're selling off access to the president and dinner
based on his Swiss who puts the most money in a Swiss banking account.
And the reality is these are the amateurs or the people, the cultists who are fascinated
by him.
The most important people in terms of the Trump meme coin would never show up
because what they've done is they've bought a bunch
of meme coins, probably with his permission
or his encouragement in exchange
for geopolitical advantage from America,
it would never dare thinking of showing up.
I gotta give it to him for being this transparent.
I think the Democrats have what I call
low grade co-corruption where Speaker Emeritus
Pelosi trades stocks
for tens or hundreds of thousands or maybe your millions.
And he's like, if you're gonna be corrupt,
go big and create a vessel.
And somebody pitched him on this and he said, yes,
where you can make billions.
And that's what he's done here.
And I hope this thing gets a lot of attention
and a lot of people start focusing on what is
easily the greatest financial grift
In the history of presidents, I can't think of I mean it just cracks me up that people were pissed off about
Hunter Biden going on a board which he shouldn't have been on
We need to know what he was doing in China and Russia
While his father was vice president and Russia while his father was vice president
and or while his father was preparing to become the president.
This is corruption at its core.
Folks, this is what people hate about the swamp.
This is a part of how Donald Trump won in the first place, saying that we're going to
get rid of these sweetheart deals.
We're going to make sure that we clean up the access of power in a place like Washington,
DC. And yet we have a meme coin and he's inviting people to the White House for the dinner.
I don't know.
I find the whole thing, it's verging on comical if it wasn't so tragic.
I think that's exactly right.
I think this is the most egregious act we've seen from this administration so far.
And we can talk about the tariffs and the deportations and the threats to Jerome Powell,
etc. None of that's good, but you can at least begin to fashion an argument as to why in some
version of reality it might be beneficial to the nation. You couldn't make a good argument,
not a rational argument. You couldn't make a sane argument, but you could try to make the argument.
You could try to say we need to reshore jobs, et cetera.
There's no argument for this.
You can't even attempt to steel man this.
It is pure grift, pure corruption using the white house, using the presidency as
a vehicle to shake down regular investors, not wealthy political donors, which you
could make the argument that maybe the Democrats do, but retail investors in order to raise money.
Again, not for some greater cause, not even to fund some political campaign,
but purely to enrich your friends, to enrich your family, and to enrich your allies.
This is completely unheard of.
And I just want to highlight that lockup period, which it was a three month
lockup period, it basically meant that the insiders of the coin can't
sell until the period expires.
So this is very important when we said this, we need to pay attention
to when the lockup period expires.
It expired last week.
So is it any surprise that this bullshit incentive plan to pump up the price
of the coin, which is leading to this rat race where its winner takes dinner with the president,
that sent the coin skyrocketing up 60% in one night. Is it any surprise that this coincided
right when the lockup period expired?
Definitely not. And I think what we'll find out soon enough is that the insiders, this was
their, the Hail Mary that they threw right, right before they sell.
And I would not be surprised if we find out, you know, that they sold, that
they profited significantly off of this, not in terms of what they realized in a
gain on Trump coin,
but in dollar terms.
I think they announced the dinner and then we find out they cashed out.
And I just want to remind you again of the damage that this does to regular investors.
Let's look back to a few months ago when the coin was first launched.
You look at the on-chain data and you will find that there were 31 early traders who
made a profit of almost $700 million trading this coin.
And you think, boy, that sounds pretty corrupt.
But then you see the 800,000 other investors who lost cumulatively more than $2 billion.
And this is what we have to remember about meme coins.
And this is why this is so dark.
This is a zero sum game.
For every winner, there is a loser.
In fact, more often than not, thousands of losers.
And, you know, the losers, I hate to say it, are the ones who are dumb
enough to buy into this shit.
And that's also what I find so disturbing about this. to say it are the ones who are dumb enough to buy into this shit.
And that's also what I find so disturbing about this.
It's the fact that the Trump organization actually knows that they know that there is a certain percentage of their fan base that is dumb enough to do whatever they
tell them to do to jump off a cliff.
If Trump demands it, not the whole fan base, but certainly a percentage of it.
And in this case, jumping off the cliff means throwing away your savings to bet
on this rigged casino game that is disguised as a meet and greet with the
president and a VIP tour of the White House.
I mean, I am just still shocked and I'm with you that it's comical.
It is comical because it's so shameless, but that, that shouldn't detract us from
calling it what it is, which is unprecedented corruption.
And it is tragic.
His team also collects fees on each trade and they've earned roughly
a hundred million dollars just in January alone.
And of course, you know, I love in 2016, he was just
irate at the conflicts of interest and that, uh,
secretary Clinton was getting a quarter of a
million dollars for a speech.
I mean, in this instance, he isn't even
asking for donations.
It's worse.
He was asking for people to buy a volatile,
unregulated coin that enriches him directly.
And if I were Vladimir Putin, and if I get kicked out of Ukraine, it probably
means at some point I get thrown out of a window.
I mean, people, people who lose power in Russia, it usually doesn't end well for them.
And I'm spending 60 to a hundred billion dollars a year on this failed war effort.
I'm losing, I've lost almost a million young men, sending them into this meat
grinder, which at some point has got to take a toll on the morale and the popularity. Wouldn't he be
just stupid to figure out a secure way, maybe using signal on a phone, to call the president say, all right, price discovery is, is dictated at the margin, right?
If the Trump coin has a $7 billion market cap, you might be able to take it to 10 or 15 billion with just a hundred million, 500 million a billion in purchases, right?
What if you said to him, look, I can make this thing, I can, I really love the Trump coin.
can make this thing, I can, I really love the Trump coin.
And I'm going to make sure that for at least five years until you're well out of office, that this thing never, you know, or that at some point it's at least
worth 50 billion and your stake is 80%.
So you're about to become the richest man in the world, president Trump,
just because I love the coin and in unrelated news, how do you feel
about cutting support to Ukraine?
I mean, wouldn't Putin, one, wouldn't Putin be stupid not to make that call and make that offer?
And two, wouldn't it be logical?
Wouldn't it be the next point in the data pattern in the line for Trump to act on that call?
I mean, he started a meme coin.
What do you think he did it for?
And the notion that he wouldn't be subject
to this sort of influence,
it just doesn't look at the corruption
and the trail of bankrupt companies,
the trail of unpaid subcontractors.
And I'm incredibly disappointed that Democrats aren't putting up a better fight.
I can't believe they're not all over the press today talking about all the different
scenarios for the Trump coin and how this is nothing but pure grift.
Let's move on to Boeing and Boeing's earnings.
They had actually a really good earnings report revenue up 18% to 19 and a half billion dollars deliveries up nearly 60%.
They've also reduced their cash burn down to 2.3 billion a year ago. It was 4 billion and there was a really big pop in the stock here.
I think it was a great report. I think what really surprised to the upside
though, and what the markets pricing in here was how optimistic Boeing was and their CEO
was, Kelly Ortberg, about the tariff environment. Because, you know, meanwhile, you've got all
these other companies that are somewhat freaking out about the tariffs. 40% of earnings calls
so far this quarter
have mentioned the word recession, which is unbelievable.
By the way, 90% of them have mentioned the word tariff.
And you actually called this,
you said that tariffs was gonna be the new AI
on earnings calls, that is what's happening.
But he did not seem that concerned about these tariffs.
And he was asked upfront, what about China? China is your
second largest market in aviation. Are you concerned about that? And he didn't seem phased.
And if I had to paraphrase his response, it would be, we're watching it, but we'll be okay. And then
he had this line where he said that 2025 would be Boeing's quote turnaround year. So very optimistic. I think what that tells you is that he and Boeing believe that these tariffs,
particularly on China, are going away.
And we'll discuss more what's happened in terms of tariffs and how
Trump appears to be caving.
But it is interesting that these earnings came out before we heard
those comments from Trump.
And so it appears that Boeing, in my view, had some sort of inside knowledge,
or at least some, some inside feeling that yeah, these China tariffs, they look
very scary, but ultimately we're not too worried about it.
How else would they not be worried about it if they didn't have some inkling or
some real sense that,
that these tariffs wouldn't be going through.
I mean, one or two things has happened.
Either that he called the Boeing CEO and said, don't worry, don't worry boss.
Hey, do you want to come to my crypto meeting?
Um, don't worry.
Right.
We know you're a great company.
Don't worry.
And, you know, let me put out a press release saying you're hiring more people.
Just don't, don't be critical of your earnings call, obviously.
Or the Boeing CEO just said, this guy's full of shit.
Nothing's going to happen here.
Could be that we make great planes, uh, Airbus.
I mean, the thing about this is a duopoly controlled by two companies, Airbus
in Boeing, and even if Airbus for a time being makes a better plane, you know,
as the global economy
grows and demographics grows, there's always a need for more commercial aircraft and no
one of them can produce enough.
So it really is a duopoly and they have incredible pricing power and these are just, these are
just incredible companies.
And I think what he's decided is, okay, this is a fucking distraction.
And his earnings seem to seem to cement that.
And while China's threatened to reduce their order book, I would bet the order book that the Chinese, the CCP and the people of Boeing who are very smart and
hire former ambassadors have all said to each other, look, there's a non-zero
probability, a most likely opportunity that the order book and the way we do business
is going to stay exactly the same.
What we're seeing with a lot of these big corporate CEOs, companies like
Target, companies like Walmart, companies like, you know, other companies
in defense, like GE aerospace, many of these CEOs are meeting with the
White House, they're meeting with the president and they're coming out of those meetings appearing to be a lot calmer. And in fact,
this was reported by Charles Gasparino at Fox Business, the administration at the White House
is actually actively alerting Wall Street executives. They're reaching out and telling
them that they are nearing agreements on these trade deals, which is a very interesting dynamic that we're now entering into a market in a
world where actually the heads of the largest corporations and the heads on Wall Street,
they're getting a heads up and they're able to front run the largest news item of our
time.
Now you could say, you know, that this has happened in the past, but I don't think at
the level that we're seeing today.
You know, usually it would be that with very highly sensitive economic data like this,
there is a protocol and the White House comes out and they publicly announce it and you
give markets an equal time and equal footing to react to what is happening.
But it appears that there's such a level of disorganization in the White House, and they're so freaked out by how the markets are reacting.
It feels as if what is happening is the administration is having no choice,
but to call the big dogs of the Fortune 500 and say, Hey,
hey, just don't worry about it.
It's going to be okay.
And that's a material information right there. I mean, that is ground zero for insider trading.
That hasn't actually happened yet, but we all know that the line between fair trading versus insider trading is very blurry.
And we are in an incredibly blurry time right now.
And we'll talk more about that in uh, in our main story when we
really focus on these tariffs.
Uh, let's just move on to this new data on wealth inequality.
The top 19 households minting $1 trillion in wealth last year, biggest
single year increase in history.
They now own those top 19 households now own 1.8% of the entire
household wealth in America. That's up from 0.1% in 1982. By the way, the bottom 50% of Americans,
they own 3% of the household wealth. So you've got half of America with 3% and the top 19 households with 1.8%.
There are now 1,990 billionaires in America, and that number is up 45% since 2021, just four years ago.
So we talk a lot about income inequality and also wealth inequality on this podcast.
And here we have some new data, which is just telling us the same thing.
We are a massively unequal society.
Well, to speak of the moral argument, it's bad for the economy.
And that is when all of that prosperity is being crowded into the 0.01%.
One, I don't think they have as much of a vested interest in public infrastructure and
the wellbeing and prosperity of America. Do they of a vested interest in public infrastructure and the wellbeing and prosperity of America.
Do they have a vested interest in our healthcare system?
No. Do they even have a vested interest in our national security?
Because at the end of the day, they can piece out to New Zealand or Dubai or London.
So you're essentially creating a superclass of people that control so much economics and have
so much power over our government, but don't exercise the power in a means that affects all of America, because
they've basically become sequestered from America and what's good or what's bad about it.
They're literally behind gilded gates. And at some point, and I don't think they believe this,
at some point people show up with pitchforks and lanterns, right?
But if you think about third world nations, they're never able to get out of
the way and ultimately end up in revolution.
They have, what's the common feature across all of them?
Crazy income inequality.
So this is not only bad for the economy, it's bad, it's really damaging for our culture.
And what you see here is that young people are increasingly disillusioned with America.
More than four in 10 young Americans today under 30 say they're barely getting by financially,
while just 16%, one in six young people say they're doing well or very well.
One in six young Americans, the wealthiest country in the world say they're doing well or very well. Now, some of that is probably a benchmarking
problem where they think if they're not on a
Gulf stream or in St. Barts, they're failing.
But still some of that is real.
They have less money, fewer than half feel a sense
of community with only 17% reporting deep social
connection.
That is really sad.
Now is income inequality driving all of this?
No, but I've said on this show for a long time that the majority of people in the world are not reporting deep social connection. That is really sad. Now is income inequality driving all of this?
No, but I've said on this show for a long time that the majority of what
ails America can either be reverse engineered or partially correlated
to massive income inequality.
I think the reason that we're talking about this and the reason that this is
important and it relates to our discussions of markets. It also has a place in the world of
politics. I really believe that this is the defining issue of our time and of this generation.
I think this is the most important thing that we're going to see and that I'm going to be
grappling with for probably the rest of my life. And I was just thinking, you know, you're talking about the 0.1%, the 99% there.
You sound a lot like Bernie Sanders.
And this is what people used to make fun of Bernie for.
And I think back to, you know, the Occupy Wall Street days, where actually it was the same issues
that were on the table and it was the same
things that people were upset about and that people were protesting against.
And you had people like Bernie who talked about the issues, but who over time were kind
of written off by the establishment.
Many sort of wrote him off as a quack or a little crazy or a socialist or a communist. But one stat I would point you to, which blew me away.
Last week, Bernie Sanders and AOC held a rally in California
and 36,000 people showed up.
Just for comparison, a Trump rally is on average around 5,000 people.
The Madison Square Garden rally, that was 20,000 people.
This was 36,000 people.
And the message from those two candidates,
or those two politicians, is simply about inequality.
That's the whole thing.
And it's just so fascinating that 10, 15 years ago,
when Occupy Wall Street was at its peak,
people were saying, this is a big problem.
It's only gotten worse.
Yeah, it's gotten much worse.
It's gotten way worse.
Which says to me, we need a new framing.
And that is, I think it's inspiring that AOC and Bernie
are able to turn out these many people.
There's definitely a groundswell of dissatisfaction.
I think it was more inspired by some of the illegal seizure of the
constitutional power, the idea that people are being rounded up effectively.
Some of the corruption, people being fired in sort of a reckless and cruel manner.
I don't know if this was directly about income inequality, but that's
sort of Bernie's talk track.
I would reframe it because sometimes I think he comes across,
I think the class warrior rap hasn't really resonated.
Per your comments, it continues to get worse.
I think the framing should be something along the lines
of the following and that is the greatest innovation
in history was not the iPhone or the semiconductor,
it was the American middle class.
It's created more tax revenue, it's fought wars,
it's funded everything from the iPhone to vaccines.
The American middle class is the greatest innovation
in history.
Now, how did it happen?
It happened because 7 million men returned from war
and they demonstrated heroism, they were fit,
and we put a bunch of money in their pockets.
We had the National Highway Transportation Act.
We had FHA loans, we had the GI Bill, and we
made them very attractive to women.
So they made it, had the baby boom.
And then we took a lot of that money and that
prosperity from these households that were
very productive.
We taxed it at a fair rate, including
corporations that were sometimes paying 40
and 50%, the super wealthy that were sometimes paying 70, 80 and 90%. And we not only reinvested continually in the middle
class, but we said, we need to invite more people who've been sequestered from this prosperity into
the fold. And we had legislation that advanced the rights of women and of non-whites, and we
built the greatest society in history. And it all started from a really robust middle class.
And it's like, well, okay, that's fine.
You got me there.
Most people would agree Republicans and Democrats.
Where sometimes we differ in opinion is that Republicans or the super wealthy
will try and convince you that the middle class is a self-healing organism
that happens on its own, or that if you let the most productive people in the
world, i.e. the super rich, do their thing unfettered,
that the value they create
will trickle down to the middle class.
We have so much data showing that just doesn't work.
And I think we need to come out of the closet and say,
you have to redistribute income from corporations
and from the wealthy to the middle class
in the form of education, child tax credit,
a truly progressive tax system,
maybe young people under the age of 40
or anyone that makes less than $100,000 plays 10%,
anyone that makes over a million,
an alternative minimum tax of 40%.
And here's the thing about taxes,
you wouldn't need to,
you could lower the tax rates if you enforce them.
It's the tax code where everybody gets fucked.
And until we acknowledge that the middle class is not a self-healing organism,
and there needs to be redistribution from corporations and the super
wealthy to the middle class, it's just going to continue to go sideways and
wither and actually the middle class hasn't, hasn't declined, if you will,
but it's been static relative to the unbelievable prosperity that's
been crammed into the top 1%.
And then you lay on top of that social media, which is basically an orgy of the life
of the top 0.1%. So that's the new benchmark. And what you end up with
is people who see prosperity everywhere, but aren't participating in it unless they're in the top 0.1%,
which leads to an obese, angry, depressed, anxious, younger
generation. So all of this is on a downward spiral focused on not only prosperity being crammed into
the 0.1%, but that prosperity being rubbed in everyone's face. And if people under the age of
40 in the most prosperous nation in history don't feel confident enough that they
can form a household and have a kid, then none of this matters.
We'll be right back after the break with a look at Trump's policy reversals.
If you're enjoying the show so far, be sure to give the ProfitUMarkets feed a follow wherever
you get your podcasts. podcast.
Support for the show comes from the Fundrise flagship fund.
Real estate investing is boring.
Now prediction markets on the other hand, or even the stock market, which can swing
wildly on a headline, those will keep you on the edge of your seat.
But with real estate investing, there's no drama or adrenaline or excuses to refresh
your portfolio every few minutes.
Just bland and boring stuff including diversification and dividends.
So you won't be surprised to learn the Fundrise flagship real estate fund is a complete snooze
fest.
The fund holds $1.1 billion worth of institutional caliber real estate, managed by a team of
pros focused on steadily growing your net worth for decades to come.
See?
Boring.
And that's the point.
You can start investing in minutes and with as little as $10 by visiting fundrise.com
slash propg.
Carefully consider the investment objectives, risks, charges, and expenses of the Fundrise
Flagship Fund before investing.
Find this information and more in the Funds Prospectus at fundrise.com slash flagship. This is a paid ad.
Support for the show comes from Mercury, the banking product that feels
extraordinary to use. When you're a startup founder getting your business
off the ground, the last thing you want to be doing is toggling between a dozen
apps and clunky banking services that can barely keep up with your needs. Enter
Mercury.
Mercury is the banking product made by entrepreneurs for entrepreneurs.
What makes it so special?
Well, Mercury isn't technically a bank that provide banking services through
partner banks and are able to focus on delivering well-designed software that
helps navigate some of the TDM for you.
Because when your finances are simple,
your mind is free to focus on the real work of growing your business.
With Mercury, you get the tools you need to operate at your best, scale your business,
and keep your spend under control.
Visit mercury.com to join over 200,000 entrepreneurs who use Mercury to do more for their business.
Mercury.
Banking that does more.
Mercury is a financial technology company, not a bank.
Banking service is provided by Choice Financial Group, column NA, and Evolve Bank and Trust
members FDIC. The I.O. card is issued by Patriot Bank member FDIC pursuant to a license from MasterCard. stocks, options, bonds, and more. They even offer some of the highest yields in the industry, including the bond account 6% or higher yield that remains locked in even if the Fed cuts rates.
With Public, you can get the tools you need to make informed investment decisions. Their built-in
AI tools called Alpha doesn't just tell you if an asset is moving, it tells you why the asset is
moving so you can actually understand what's driving your portfolio performance. Public is
a FINRA-registered, SIPC-insured, US-based company with a customer support team
that actually cares.
Bottom line?
Your investments deserve a platform that takes them as seriously as you do.
Fund your account in five minutes or less at public.com slash ProfG and get up to $10,000
when you transfer your old portfolio.
That's public.com slash ProfG.
Paid for by Public Investing,
all investing involves the risk of loss,
including loss of principal,
brokered services for U.S. listed registered securities,
options and bonds,
and a self-directed account are offered by
Public Investing Inc., member FINRA, and SIPC.
Complete disclosures available at public.com slash disclosures.
I should also disclose I am an investor in public.
We're back with Profgy Markets. A clear pattern is emerging in Trump's policymaking. Bold declarations followed by abrupt reversals. After posting on Truth Social that Fed Chair
Jerome Powell's, quote, termination cannot
come fast enough, Trump later told reporters that he had quote, no intention of firing
Powell.
Similarly, after implementing a 145% tariff on Chinese imports, he's now saying that
the level of tariffs could quote, come down substantially.
He also is planning to exempt car parts from those tariffs
and the tariffs on steel and aluminum. On Wednesday, all three major indices initially jumped.
However, they pulled back from their morning highs when Scott Besson clarified that Trump hadn't
offered to remove the tariffs on China unilaterally. Still, the Nasdaq closed 2.5% higher, the S&P 500 was up 3% and the Dow rose more than 1%.
Scott, you predicted that Trump would walk back on many of these issues.
It seems like that is happening. What is your take on this?
The only two things you have to remember in a negotiation are one, not to make it personal.
Don't make it win-lose. Don't create emotion on either side that's going to...
If you act like an asshole,
people don't want to do a deal with you.
They want to hurt you in the negotiation.
They're not inclined to cut you a break
or want to get a deal done.
And, and then the second thing is,
oh, sure, credible willingness to walk away.
He imposed in what was the ultimate little dick energy move.
They raised their, they keep matching
and he keeps going and he went to 145.
And then he says, those tariffs are too high and will clearly come down.
Okay, you raise them to this point and then a week later say they're clearly too high
and they need to come down.
You're the one that put this shit in. So my prediction all along is going to be that, or has been, that after all of this
noise and damage to our brand is done, the global tariff system, other than world
trade, that'll be inspired across strange bedfellows, cause we've got them to start
speaking and cooperating, but the U S tariff complex
or structure across the world will look strikingly similar to the way it looked before we started
this bullshit nonsense.
And all we have done is alienated people and massively reduced our goodwill and our brand
equity.
The weird thing is this guy is such a fucking toxic narcissist.
I think he enjoys this shit.
He doesn't care because he's going to make a billion plus dollars in his Trump meme coin.
And he just wants to be the center of attention
every day.
It's like when my youngest used to act out and
be a total asshole and you realize, okay,
they're acting out because they want attention.
I mean, this guy is acting out every day. I think he would threaten nuclear war if he were out of
the news cycle long enough and wanted desperately back in, regardless of the damage.
Will Barron So he made, he's walking everything back,
right? And one thing that I think has been interesting has been China's response.
You saw this hashtag
that went viral in China, which was hashtag Trump chickened out. However it is positioned
by this administration, the message that the public has received and the message that China
received is that he blinked, as you predicted. He folded, great leader. He's a great leader. He's a great leader. He's a great leader.
He's a great leader.
He's a great leader.
He's a great leader.
He's a great leader.
He's a great leader.
He's a great leader.
He's a great leader.
He's a great leader.
He's a great leader.
He's a great leader.
He's a great leader.
He's a great leader.
He's a great leader.
He's a great leader.
He's a great leader.
He's a great leader.
He's a great leader.
He's a great leader.
He's a great leader.
He's a great leader. He's a great leader. He's a great leader. He's a great leader. He's a great leader. 1%, the S&P was up 2%, NASDAQ up 2.5%. I think they're pricing in some positivity that Trump
is walking back the craziness, whether it comes to the tariffs on China, the tariffs
on the auto industry, or his threats to the chair of the Federal Reserve. But I do think
it's also important to keep in mind the damage that has still been done since Liberation Day, since April 2nd.
Since that day, the NASDAQ is down more than 5%.
The S&P is down more than 5%.
The Dow is down more than 6%.
The yield has risen more than 20 bips.
It's at around 4.4% right now.
I think the question is, okay, what are the markets telling us? Yes, the tariffs are likely to be, if not reversed, significantly reduced.
Um, but what, what are they pricing in right now that is worse than pre-liberation day?
And I think the answer is probably just the damage that we have done to our brand and our reputation as a safe economy, as a
reliable trade partner, et cetera.
And there were some comments from Ken Griffin, which I thought were particularly telling.
And I think he actually put it quite well.
And you remember Ken Griffin, founder, CEO of Citadel.
This is a guy who is a Trump supporter.
He donated a million dollars to Trump's inauguration fund.
He donated a hundred million to the Republican super backs in the last election cycle.
He's a pretty much a MAGA guy.
He said, quote, the US is more than a nation.
It's a brand and we're eroding that brand right now.
And I think that's right.
And I think that brand erosion is what's being reflected in the stock markets and the bond markets right now. And I think that's right. And I think that brand erosion is what's being
reflected in the stock markets and the bond markets right now. They had a little bit of an
uptick, but ultimately you look since that date, since liberation day, we're still way down. And
I think the question is, is this reversible? Is it too late or is the damage already done?
Well, I was thinking, he listens to this show.
We've been talking about that the long-term damage here is through the erosion
in our brand equity, which decreases our margin and in millions of different
ways that we'll never know directly.
I think our allies are just less likely to share information with us.
I think someone who is asked to deliver weapons to what might be a terror cell is less likely to call the American embassy and
say, Hey, I saw this.
I think people are less likely to send their best and brightest
to the U S when PhD students are being sent errand emails
asking to self-deport and those types of injuries.
It's like, it's like having a high blood pressure.
It's just at some point it creates an opportunity set
or a corpus that is just more prone to bad things to happen to that person.
And that's what's essentially he's giving us really high cholesterol or high blood pressure,
making us more vulnerable to opportunistic infections.
Can it be repaired?
Sure.
I mean, we've had really dark moments in our history.
Um, I think a democratic or a different Republican in the White House and maybe even some learning
that comes out of this and seeing Americans kind of rise up and realize that their rights
are not foregone conclusions.
And then leveraging the democratic process to change direction.
You know, I think our allies will forgive us.
I think we have will forgive us.
I think we have a longer history with them than that.
And that's the real damage.
The damage and the opportunity is that to tear up
80 year alliances and erode that goodwill is just stupid.
And it's sort of been something we've taken for granted.
The good news, the good news is I think a lot of that ill will
has been ring fenced to one man.
This guy will go down as the stupid presidency.
It used to be coarseness and cruelness, but he had a certain feel for the markets.
People thought he was a good business person.
The markets did do well during his first term.
A lot of people from different cohorts did well.
Now granted, did we spend $7 trillion in additional deficits or $8 trillion? Yeah,
but it would be hard to punch too many holes in the economic record of his first administration.
Now this one is just seems like, okay, how do we go out is just really stupid. But I absolutely
think we can repair this. And I think the upside is that a lot of the ill well is not towards
America. It's towards one individual. Yeah. I think we're sort that a lot of the O.L. is not towards America, it's towards one individual.
Yeah. I think we're sort of in a race against China to get the world on our side. And I think
I'm with you. I think people would be faster to renormalize relations with the U.S. than they
were with China. But having said that, China is trying. I mean, they just lifted these sanctions on the EU. They just
sent their trade delegations to Sweden, to Hungary, to Norway, to Germany. They are certainly trying to
rekindle those relationships. And I think for US investors and US companies, the question is,
can we normalize our relationships with other nations faster than China can?
I think we probably can, but it's four years.
So we're definitely running against the clock here.
And that is going to have a massive impact on US markets, especially given what we've
seen with the global rotation and the capital flows that are leaving America and, as we
discussed last week, entering back into Europe.
So that's probably the question and we'll see.
That's all I'll say on that.
We'll be right back after the break with a look at Tesla's earnings.
If you're enjoying the show so far, hit follow and leave us a review on the ProfGMarkets
feed. Hit follow and leave us a review gummy, or a prebiotic.
It's all of those things, and then some, at a fraction of the price. Their daily packs
contain 8 gummies because you just can't fit the amount of nutrients they do just into
one gummy. Generic multivitamins only contain around 7-9 vitamins, but Grunze have more
than 20 vitamins and minerals, plus more than 60 whole food ingredients. They actually provided
us with a bit of science to explain what makes Groons different.
Basically, 30% of the population has a gene that messes with how they absorb vitamins.
But Groons is methylated, which is a fancy way of saying their vitamins like B12 and
folate can be absorbed by your body.
Methylating is an expensive option for a lot of other companies, but Groons is looking
out for you.
Plus, they're vegan and free of nuts, dairy and gluten, and they're made with no artificial colors or flavors. Support for ProfG comes from Upwork. Starting a new business is exciting. You've had an idea. and off.
Support for PropG comes from Upwork.
Starting a new business is exciting.
You've had an idea.
You've planned it all out.
You've gotten it launched.
It's going well.
But then you run into something you don't know how to do yourself and can't do alone.
That can be a challenging moment, but it happens to every single entrepreneur.
Upwork is here to help.
Companies at every stage turn to Upwork to get things done.
Upwork helps you access a global marketplace
filled with top talent in IT, web development, AI design,
admin support, marketing, and more.
Posting a job on Upwork is easy.
There's no cost to join.
You can register, browse, freelancer profiles,
get help drafting a post, or even book a consultation.
From there, you connect with the perfect freelancer
for your needs.
Upwork makes the entire process easier, simpler,
and more affordable with industry-low fees. Post a job today and hire needs. Upwork makes the entire process easier, simpler, and more affordable with industry low fees.
Post a job today and hire tomorrow with Upwork.
Visit Upwork.com right now and post your job for free.
That's Upwork.com to post your job for free and connect with top talent ready to help
your business grow.
That's U-P-W-O-R-K dot com, Upwork dot com.
Support for the show comes from LinkedIn. While the latest technology gadgets and algorithms
can be useful for your small business, at the end of the day, the most important thing
is still the quality of people you hire. LinkedIn wants you to feel confident that you're hiring
the best. Based on LinkedIn's data, 72% of SMBs using LinkedIn say that it helped them
find a high quality candidate. LinkedIn makes it easy to post your job for free,
share it with your network, and get qualified candidates
that you can manage all in one place.
And LinkedIn's new features can help you
write job descriptions and then quickly get your job
in front of the right people with deep candidate insights.
They say you can even add a hashtag hiring frame
to your profile picture and get
two times more qualified candidates.
Either post your job for free or pay to promote.
Promoted jobs get three times more qualified candidates. Either post your job for free or pay to promote. Promoted jobs get three times more qualified applicants.
Find out why more than two and a half million small
businesses use LinkedIn for hiring today.
Find your next great hire on LinkedIn.
Post your job for free at LinkedIn.com slash prof.
That's LinkedIn.com slash prof to post your job for free.
Terms and conditions apply.
We're back with Profit G Markets. Tesla's first quarter results fell short across the board, missing expectations on the top and bottom lines. Net income plunged 71% year over year, and automotive revenue fell 20%. Overall revenue dropped 9%. Still, the stock jumped 5 percent in after hours trading. Part of the lift came from the broader
market rally we just discussed, but investors were also encouraged after Elon pledged to
significantly reduce the time he spends on Doge and he promised to refocus his efforts
on Tesla starting next month.
Scott, I listened in on the call.
I have a number of observations, but first just your take on these quarterly results,
as well as Elon's decision to step back from Doge.
First off, let me just go to how incredibly cynical it is for Elon Musk to show up to the government with a chainsaw.
This is the chainsaw for bureaucracy.
Chainsaw.
And then shut off $75 billion in USAID
going to people struggling with malaria,
myanomar, or soup kitchens in war-torn Ukraine.
And his company would have been unprofitable
had it not been for him reselling carbon credits.
They were saved by the regulatory credits this quarter.
Yeah.
I mean, get this, it's automotive revenue declined 20% year on year.
I can't name an automobile company, maybe at some point Jeep or I think Jaguar had a
rough couple of years that has declined 20% year on year.
Staggering.
So this company is declining faster than any automobile company in America.
You know, I bet, I don't know, Ford was probably at 4 or 6%, I'm guessing single digits.
These guys are down 20%.
While reducing prices.
Their top track has always been, we're really not a car company, we're a software company,
we're an energy company, but even if you, okay, fine, if we're a car company,
because we're all EVs,
we have dramatically fewer parts.
So we're able to have a much more robust supply chain,
much more efficient production and assembly schedule.
And we're the most American-made company.
We're the most vertical.
We own our dealerships.
We don't have this weird thing with the local billionaire
or the guy who used to make a quarterback for Alabama
or whatever opening a bunch of dealerships.
And it's Tesla's to their credit
are actually the most American made product.
The majority of products or parts,
which was dramatically fewer than going to a Tesla
are sourced in America.
All of this adds up to operating margins
that were remarkable for the industry of 20%.
But the automobile industry is a business of scale.
When you buy a Porsche Cayman, is that the SUV,
an Audi Q7 or a Volkswagen Touareg, you're buying the same car.
They're off the same platform.
These platforms are so expensive to build and maintain that you have to shove
a ton of throughput across these assembly lines.
And then in the case of the Toreg, the Q7 and the Cayenne,
the last 10% of the assembly line,
they take three different routes
and they put in nicer finishes and nicer leather
and nicer badging, and they charge different prices
and different, they market them differently
in different ad campaigns,
different value propositions, right?
But if you don't have the scale,
it is an impossible industry.
As evidenced by Rivian that makes a great car,
they have to sell for $80,000,
even though it's costing them $120,000
to produce these things.
And until they produce 3X the number,
they're never gonna get to profitability.
So when Tesla's automobile revenues decline 20%, it's exponentially bad to descale in the automotive industry because those
assembly lines are not being, are not registering a decrease in costs, even though you have less
throughput. As a result, their operating margins have gone from 20% to 2.1. So their operating margins have declined 90%,
yet the stock was up 5%.
And this is a company that is technically unprofitable.
They've also lost the leadership position.
Volkswagen overtook Tesla as the top EV seller in Europe.
And registrations for VWEVs increased 150%,
while Tesla registrations dropped 38%.
And yet he is able to take the stock up 5% by saying,
I am going to focus more on Tesla.
We still have this idolatry of innovators.
We're still under the belief that him spending more time
at Fremont at Tesla is somehow going to turn
this company around.
So I just think it's a case study
in meme stocks and how storytelling and our idolatry of innovators has resulted in an
irrational market where the stock price begins to absolutely disassociate from the fundamentals,
which I guess is the definition of a meme stock. What are your thoughts Ed?
Yeah, I think I agree with all that. I mean, just some observations from the earnings call.
I think my number one takeaway is that, you know, if he's trying to convince investors
that Tesla is fine, which he needs to do, I think he did a really bad job of it.
Having said that, the market appears to disagree with me because the stock jumped.
I think a lot of your meme stock explanation
might be part of it.
But what I heard on that earnings call was a CEO
who is panicked, who is confused,
and who is most importantly in a state of denial.
And I will explain what I mean there.
But the first thing to note is his opening remarks,
which were a monologue about Doge
and how important the work he's doing at Doge is.
And if you're trying to convince investors
that you care more about Tesla, your company,
than you do about Doge, you should probably start
the earnings call by talking about Tesla.
Instead, he goes on about Doge and how he's saving America
by cutting wasteful spending.
Then he addresses the Tesla protests,
which I credit him, he
should. It's a huge problem for the company. But he makes this wild claim that the real
reason people are protesting Tesla isn't because of any of his actions or any of his comments
or the fact that he saluted a crowd in what very much appeared to be a Nazi salute. He didn't acknowledge any of that.
He said the reason that people are protesting Tesla is because they're
upset that Elon is through Doge restricting their ability to get government handouts.
I mean, he really said this.
He said those protesters, they're all receiving these wasteful and
fraudulent dollars from the government.
And it's because of Elon, they're angry.
They're not going to get this free money anymore, which is just an insane claim
that completely disregards what is actually happening to the company and its brand.
And it's an extremely important thing to address.
I mean, this 20% drop off in revenue, it's almost entirely to do with the brand damage.
So you have to be upfront about it and you have to engage with that issue honestly.
He was then asked directly about the brand damage by one of the analysts and asked, you
know, what does this brand damage mean or these rumors of brand damage, what does it
mean for the company? And on that occasion, he completely deflects,
and he starts going on about the macro environment,
which didn't make any sense at all. He said,
I'll quote him, quote,
"'Yeah, I mean, Tesla is immune to sort of the macro demand for cars.
So when there's economic uncertainty,
people generally want to pause on buying.
But as far as absent macro issues, we don't see any reduction in demand.
Doesn't make sense.
And also it's completely not true.
There is obviously a reduction in demand.
Your sales fell 20%.
My favorite line though, came when he was trying to assuage investors that Tesla
is in fact, okay, and the way he does that, he's talking about how Tesla has had struggles in the
past, how they've faced issues, which is all true.
And then he says, quote, we are not on the ragged edge of death.
Not even close.
And that to me, that tells me that Elon is thinking about this thing
called the ragged edge of death.
I mean, I knew Tesla's situation was bad. I didn't think it was that bad. But if Elon's
saying that, if he's thinking about it, or if he at least thinks that other people are saying it,
well, now I'm certainly considering the possibility that Tesla is, quote,
on the ragged edge of death, because he just put it in my brain.
So I thought this was some of the worst investor relations
I've seen.
Clearly the market disagrees with me and fair enough,
but my takeaway is yes, Elon's back, kind of.
He said he's still gonna spend one to two days a week
at Doge.
So he's kind of back, but he's clearly in my view,
still in a state of delusion and total denial.
And I think he did a terrible job of disproving that.
Yeah. I mean, this just calls on so many themes. We've sort of beaten to death,
poor governance, no CEO would be allowed to do this. And just, I can't help but take the bait.
If Doge was an attempt to audit a $7 trillion enterprise, I can't think of a single enterprise of $1 trillion
that would be issued such a clean bill of health
as Doge has accidentally unintentionally
much to their disappointment
issued around the federal government.
They first, they said they were gonna save $2 trillion,
then 150 billion.
It looks like it's about 60 to 65,
although that can't be verified.
And they just, and where's the fraud?
You know, Pam Bondi is ready to take a call in
for Elon Musk and go after some federal employee
who's been stealing.
They're all ginned up to do that and announce it.
This is a clean bill of health,
or as clean a bill of health as you could hope for.
Now, some people would say that's incompetence
on the part of the auditors,
but his board, if he had a real board, they would have called them and said,
look, if you want to go play in traffic as a advisor to the president,
that's your business, but you can't be CEO of this company.
And also why are you doing this? You're really hurting us.
So I don't, this is just sort of new territory here.
The market seems to believe that he's gonna be able
to create some of that magic pixie dust.
How does Tesla come back?
A lot like America, I think the rumors of Tesla's
brand death have been greatly exaggerated.
I think if they came up with two or three amazing products
in the next three to five years, it's like,
we love you again.
I think Americans still value product over, you know, great value
products over anything else.
So it could absolutely come back.
Whether they have those in the pipeline.
I don't know.
That's the question.
That's the bull case.
And those products are, and they said this on the call, it's the
Robo taxi and it's the humanoid robot, the optimist robot.
And I think the other explanation for the reaction from the stock market is that they
did say that they are on track for the robotaxi pilot launch in Austin in June, which is what
the market has been waiting for.
So, you know, according to them, it's going to happen.
I think I believe them at this point.
The question is, what does a pilot launch actually mean?
Like, is it a fake PR event?
Like we saw last year in LA with the CyberCab show.
Is it just one or two cabs rolling around and you have to book like months in advance?
Or does it mean you can actually go to Austin, you can open your phone and order a ride in Tesla, just like you could a Waymo in San Francisco?
And that's the question. One thing that made me a little bit bearish is that Elon's response to
what it would look like. He said, quote, we're still debating the exact number to start off on,
on day one, but it's like, I don't know, maybe 10 or 20 vehicles on day one.
So 10 or 20, I thought that was a pretty low number. And given he has a track record of
over-promising and under-delivering, I could see it being even lower than that. You compare it to
Waymo, which has 700 vehicles operating on the ground right now. But that's the question. It's
like, do we think the robotaxi is going to be legit or not? That's the question. It's like, do we think the robot taxi is going to be legit or not?
That's the opportunity. My view, let's just wait and see. I mean, why buy this company if you don't
know what you're actually buying? I mean, people say, oh, it's a robot taxi company. It's an AI
company. It's a humanoid robot company. Well, okay, show me the robot. Show me one taxi ride, ship one ride.
And I'll believe you,
but they haven't generated a single dollar off of this yet.
And so until they can do that, yeah, I'm not buying.
And I'm not gonna have an argument with you
about whether this is a car company or not.
As of today, April, 2025,
it's a car company who sales are down 20%.
That's what it is.
Waymo is I think gonna be in 10 or 11 cities
including Tokyo by the time Tesla hits Austin.
So what is the competitive, okay.
We'll believe you this time.
You said in 2017, it was a year away that didn't happen.
We'll believe you this time.
And 2010.
What is your advantage when you have Waymo's out there with cars and they're
launching in the biggest cities and then launching globally.
What, how are you going to compete?
Or is this just going to be a race to the bottom or is there?
His response is it's cheaper.
That Tesla's are less expensive and that's their advantage, which I'll take.
But even until then, ship the product. Okay. But that's their advantage, which I'll take. But even until then ship the product.
Okay.
But that's one of two things that's either you have scale, uh, software
that's better.
I don't, once the fixed investment is made, I don't, it's all about.
And software that's about, they're driving the same goddamn car is
approximately the same dollar volume.
How would it be cheaper?
It would have to be scale, which means they would
take a penetration strategy and lose a shit ton of
money and alphabet has a much bigger balance sheet.
I just don't, I don't see how they're going to
sustain, uh, I mean, alphabet or Waymo will match
their price, whatever, whatever Tesla claims
they're saying.
And given that Tesla does not have the most profitable
toll booth in the world,
i.e. Google to subsidize that market share
or penetration strategy,
I just, they're going up against,
they're a squirt gun against a bazooka
when they're talking about capital and scale.
Exactly.
Unless Alphabet says after all of this money
and all this time in establishing market leadership, we're just going to give it up because
Elon's decided to engage in a price where they're going to say, fuck you,
bring it on.
And then these robots, I mean, everybody has to put something crazy out there,
I think, to give people excited.
Fine.
The concept cars you see at auto shows, none of them are going to be in the
showroom.
And I'm personally really excited to get home from work and ask my Tesla
robot if it took the meat out of the freezer.
I just can't wait for that moment.
Um, but robots, I just don't.
I mean, robots have huge commercial applications.
It's called robotics and automation, but I don't, what is
the use case for the robots?
I just find the whole thing kind of, uh, kind of comical.
They asked Elon about the humanoid robot, asking a similar question.
They said, could you confirm if it is currently operational?
If so, what is the current production rate per week?
And Elon said, quote, I want to emphasize optimist is still very much a
development program. This is sort of the play with this. Just talk about it. And then when
they asked for the specifics, just sort of delay and obfuscate. That's how he's handling it. But
the market likes it. We'll see. Let's take a look at the week ahead. We'll see data on the personal
consumption expenditures index for March. And we'll also see earnings from Microsoft, Meta, Apple, and Amazon.
Scott, how many predictions?
Essentially, Donald Trump is about to get Mark Carney elected as prime minister of Canada.
This was a foregone conclusion that he was going to lose.
I'm not sure I'm saying his name correct, but the conservative candidate, Polly Evry,
I believe, I'm terrible at this,
he was going to win. Trudeau was so unpopular and entering into this trade war and who Mark Carney,
his current prime minister, has been very kind of forcefully dignified. This will be the greatest
comeback in probably political history, 25 points down at the turn of the year.
And it's all because of Trump.
So anyways, my prediction and I interviewed prime minister
Carney on the prop G pod as almost a million views, I think on YouTube.
And he's very likable.
He's very, he comes across as incredibly thoughtful schooled in the
U S went to work for Goldman stacks was the first non-Brit to head the bank of
England.
So he's incredibly.
Probably the best resume of all time in the world.
Yeah, it's just hard to argue with his credentials
and he's tall, he's handsome, you know,
he's out of central casting and he's just handled this.
He's what you would want from us.
You would want someone forceful and dignified and not having an emotional
reaction, but you know, saying this is not adequate for us.
We look forward to reestablishing relations, but until that point, we're
obviously going to stand our ground.
Anyways, prediction is Trump is about to elect a guy who was 25 points
down just four months ago.
The next prime minister of Canada will be Mark Carney.
Are we political insiders in Canada then if he wins?
I expect to be invited to at least a hockey game.
I want to tag along.
Just CC me on the email.
He grew up in Edmonton, so he's an Oilers fan.
So we're going to have to go all the way out there.
Maybe we'll go to for the Calgary stampede or something, but yeah,
he and I are good, good friends now.
We're very close, very close.
I'm gonna be the secretary of something in Canada.
Secretary of hockey.
There you go.
How's that?
I like it, I'll take it.
This episode was produced by Claire Miller
and engineered by Benjamin Spencer.
Our associate producer is Alison Weiss,
Mircea Varrio is our research lead,
Isabella Kinsell is our research associate,
Dan Chalon is our intern,
Drew Burrows is our technical director, and Catherine Dillon is our executive producer.
Thank you for listening to Profgy Markets from the Vox Media Podcast Network. Join
us on Thursday for our conversation with Mark Mahaney only on Profgy Markets. You've helped me in kind reunion And the blood flies in love, love, love, love