Prof G Markets - Why the U.S. Can’t Break Up with China — ft. Alice Han
Episode Date: May 15, 2025Scott and Ed discuss the market’s reaction to Trump’s drug pricing plan, Perplexity’s latest funding round, and Coinbase’s addition to the S&P 500. Then Alice Han, China economist and director... at Greenmantle, returns to the show to break down how China views the ongoing trade war. She unpacks the current state of U.S.-China negotiations and why a deal remains elusive. Plus, she weighs in on which country she’s more bullish on in the long run. 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
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Today's number seven percent.
That's the expected year over year decline in tourism to the U.S.
in 2025.
True story. I was in Paris and saw a mime and he began masturbating.
Later, I heard that one.
That's okay.
Just okay?
Just okay.
Oh my God, it's getting so bad here.
Maybe we're coming to the end of the jokes.
Oh, bite your tongue.
Bite your tongue.
Maybe I should, I probably should go to like the cleaner ones.
Ed, how are you?
What did we do yesterday, Ed?
We did our first big branded advertisement deal, which was fun, less awkward than I thought
it would be.
Scott and I talking about some software product.
I'm not sure if we're supposed to talk about what the product actually is.
But yeah, you and I, you and I sold some ads yesterday.
Yeah, it was kind of strange.
So first off, just some tips.
And when I was your age, I was uncomfortable with that sort of stuff.
Cause let's be honest, you're a total whore and you feel like you should shower afterwards.
And so basically it was a giant tech company and they had this enormous, it looked like a
taco truck, but it's actually to demonstrate the product.
There's probably 40 people there.
And I could tell it, you're not used to that.
When you get to my age, you're literally willing to like, whore out your ass.
I mean, you're just like, oh, there's money involved?
Sure.
And I could tell you're sort of like, this doesn't feel right.
Yeah.
But it felt better than I thought it would be.
I mean, I really thought I'd feel extremely awkward talking about how great these products are,
but I ended up, I think they did a great job.
It's a good product.
It's a good product, exactly.
So I didn't have to lie, and they did a good job
of making it feel somewhat normal and natural.
So I was actually pleasantly surprised
by how not awkward the experience was.
Still awkward, but way less awkward than I would have expected.
Yeah.
It reminds me of the time I was in Paris
and I was staring at the Eiffel Tower with my partner.
And I'm like, this is the third time we've been here
and they still haven't found oil.
Get it?
Is it an oil risk?
Oh my God, Ed.
Ed.
Ed, seriously.
It's hard to follow these jokes when they have nothing to do with the preceding conversation.
Yeah.
If there was some slight link, I might have gotten it, but it sort of just came out of nowhere.
All right, get to the headlines. I'm done. Get to the headlines.
Before I do that, I want to remind our listeners, we have a weekly newsletter, Proffesory Markets.
It breaks down the key market moves with data-driven analysis and crisp visuals every Monday.
So reminder, please go subscribe now at ProfGMarkets.com.
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If you don't have time to listen to the podcast, this is a good way to sort of get your quick
hit in your inbox in the morning. So please go subscribe to that. And with that, let's get to the headlines.
Pharmaceutical stocks dropped after Trump said he had a plan that would significantly slash drug prices in the US.
However, the stocks quickly rebounded after he signed an executive order that lacked any
legal mandate for companies to bring down prices.
Instead, the order asked them to lower prices voluntarily.
AI startup Perplexity is in talks for a $500 million funding round that would value the
company at $14 billion.
That's more than 50% higher than its last valuation from just five months ago.
And finally, Coinbase shares rose more than 20% on news that the company will
join the S&P 500.
It will be the first digital asset company to be included in the index.
So Scott, let's start with what happened with pharmaceutical stocks.
First, they dropped after Trump said that we're going to have this big price decrease plan on
drugs in the US. Then he signed the executive order on the stocks rebounded again. Your reactions.
The market is essentially saying what every foreign leader is saying, and that is with respect to the
president, you are not serious people. A most favored nation status where he claimed that all our drugs would have the lowest price
or match the lowest price of any price around the world would have absolutely not decimated,
but substantially hit the profits of pharmaceutical firms who have been able to weaponize. They've recognized the
ultimate business model in America in terms of return on investment isn't investing in people,
it isn't investing in AI, it's investing in our whores that we called elected representatives.
Because the disappointing thing about our elected representatives is not that they're whores,
it's that they're such cheap whores. And when Cigna or Adenar or Pfizer give a few million dollars to different people,
they can figure out laws that make it such that we have to pay eight times for
Ozempic and Humira what other nations pay for these pharmaceuticals,
despite the fact that we invent, manufacture, and distribute the majority of these drugs.
We're number one in terms of IP for pharmaceutical development,
but we have figured out a way,
these chemists have figured out a way given Citizens United
and the fact that you can buy elected representatives,
you can buy lawmakers a way to charge American consumers more.
And then you have an infrastructure where essentially the bill is opaque
and usually your company is paying for it.
So what do we have?
We have opaque pricing that has no consumer scrutiny.
We have regulatory capture
and we have profit-seeking companies
which are doing what they're supposed to do.
So we end up with $13,000 per capita healthcare
versus $6,500.
And in exchange for that, we're more obese
and we die sooner.
So these companies had,
they come under any sort of reasonable threat that
they might actually have to give Medicare or Medicaid the ability to negotiate these prices
would have taken an enormous hit. And that's what happened right after the release. The data hadn't
been absorbed and the stocks were down two to three percent. And then people read it and said,
oh, this is the president presidenting doing jazz hands, saying
fucking nothing, trying to get in the news,
trying to pretend he's doing something
with absolutely no strategy.
This thing has absolutely no teeth.
If you read the, if you read the executive
order, it's that he's suggesting they do it.
He's saying this would be a good idea.
And what do you know?
Stock prices ended up, pharmaceutical prices
ended up higher because what this said to the market was
Congress has the limpest dick in the world right now with their ability to go after healthcare costs.
That even if the president makes a proclamation like this, there's no fucking way
that this is actually gonna happen. This is, as you can tell I'm a little bit triggered,
if you look at our deficit,
which we have to get under control otherwise, you are just not going to have nearly the prosperity
or opportunities my generation registered. The only way we're going to get to that $2 trillion a year
is the following full stop. G7 nations pay on average $6,500 per capita for healthcare, we pay $13,350 million people times the $6,500
incremental, that's about $2.5 trillion. In sum, just the incremental cost to be more anxious,
obese, and die sooner is costing us an incremental $2.5 trillion because of regulatory capture.
capture. So, and this stock market movement reflects the fact that we have the most onerous, usurious, damaging regulatory capture in history that creates ridiculous,
opaque and insidious massive healthcare costs and a drag on the American economy.
And this was the market saying, yeah, nice try boss.
Your thoughts.
Are you saying we, we need to cut spending on Medicare and Medicaid?
What, what is your suggestion there?
And in terms of how this all relates, how deficits relate to healthcare?
I mean, if you wanted to lift up the economy and flush an additional two and a half
trillion dollars into other things, all you need to do is bring our healthcare costs in line with
other G6 nations who are healthier. So this would have a creative benefits across the entire economy,
including lower costs on social services, lower burden on government services,
more profits to tax.
This is all roads lead to the same place.
Should we tax billionaires more?
Yes.
Do we need to cut social security?
Scott Galloway should never get social security 100%.
We should raise the age.
You're gonna probably live to be like 190.
So the notion that you should start getting social security
at 65 makes no sense at all.
There are a lot of things we can do.
Nothing gets us there unless we go after this.
It just is an example of how crazy the prices are.
There's this diabetes medication I was looking at
called Jordianz.
One month supply costs $611 in America.
In Japan, it costs $35.
It's not as if everyone in Japan is
poor in the prices. I mean, that's just an unbelievable difference. And again,
the markets are telling us the true story here. I mean, Trump comes out and he says over the weekend
that he wants to pursue this most favored nation policy, which basically means that
to pursue this most favored nation policy, which basically means that drugs must be priced at their cheapest levels for the US.
If that drug costs $35 in Japan, it should cost $35 in America.
And it's such a shame because I was actually very excited to see that.
I mean, he's going after the right issues, which is we need to do something to lower
the cost of drugs and the price of drugs in America
and pharmaceuticals.
And the fact that the market was reacting and getting worried about it, and these pharma
stocks were hurting as a result of those comments, to me was a great sign.
But then of course, the whole thing came undone when suddenly he signs the executive order
and you learn actually there's nothing to do with this most favored nation policy.
All he's doing is saying, hey guys, please reduce the cost of drugs.
And then all the farmer stocks rip back up because basically Wall Street's reaction is
great.
That means prices are not going to come down.
If you simply ask a company to reduce their prices, they won't reduce their prices.
This is market dynamics.
They're only going to do it if they have to.
And the only way you can do that is by pursuing
a legitimate legal framework that forces them
to bring down their prices.
And that's not what's happening.
So it was a shame for me because I was about
to be very supportive of Trump and this move
and what he's addressing.
And I was thinking it would be one of the first things where I'm like, yeah,
he's got this right. But once again,
he just shows that he lacks the competence to actually follow through with these
things. And so it's going to continue business as usual.
You got to give the guy his due. He does have sometimes the right instincts.
Like let's ban TikTok. Oh wait, TikTok's good for me.
And I have a political donor owns. Oh, nevermind, now I like it.
Sometimes he has the right instincts,
he has absolutely no ability to execute
and thinks he's a deal guy.
But to give you a sense of how outrageous this is,
on average, we charge about four times the price
for pharmaceuticals of what other nations pay.
That's the equivalent.
So Saudi Arabia, the kingdom, they produce a lot of oil.
I don't know if you heard this, they produce a lot of oil.
Now, why is it less expensive in a kingdom?
Cause like we make a lot of this shit.
So let's take advantage and of the good work our domestic
citizens do providing the exceptional or, you know, pulling
out of the ground, this exceptional blessing blessing, sitting on this sea of oil,
so we'll give them less expensive gasoline. We produce more oil, i.e. pharmaceuticals,
than any firm in the world. Do we in fact charge less for it? No. It would be similar
to if Saudi Arabia decided they were going to charge $10 a gallon. We produce it, but I know Saudi Aramco figures out a way
to weaponize the kingdom and the leadership
and convince them that they should charge $10 a gallon
despite being the biggest producer of oil.
I've gotten off track here, Ed.
Let's go to the next story.
Let's talk about perplexity, which is raising a round
that would value the company at $14
billion.
That's up from its $9 billion valuation from just a few months ago.
Reminder, this is the AI company competing with OpenAI.
The deal isn't finalized, but I think we can assume it's as good as finalized.
These leaked journal reports are usually pretty spot on. So, assuming it is,
that would make Perplexity the fourth most valuable AI startup. Ahead of Perplexity,
we've got OpenAI at $300 billion. We've got XAI at $80 billion, though as I've discussed,
that number is kind of bullshit, but whatever, we'll ignore that. And we've got Anthropic at $62 billion. Perplexity is number four. Scott,
any reactions to this new round, this new financing round from Perplexity?
I've always thought Perplexity's core asset is it's got a really clean positioning.
It's the search AI or it's the AI search, right? I think this is example of kind of the froth here. Their annual recurring revenue has
grown from 5 million in January, 2024 to 120 million. So obviously it's going like crazy.
They've got, they registered 160 million visits compared to open AI's 5 billion. So what is that
about 30 times more in Google's 85 billion. So as a multiple of revenues, it's getting about 140 times ARR whereas OpenAI trades at 25.
So I think this is, I think if OpenAI gets public, which I believe they will, I think this is a tuck
in acquisition and they rebrand it as the more pure place search component of open AI or of anthropic. I don't think this is, let me ask you,
because you and the team understand AI
and the consumer facing applications better than I do.
What's to stop open AI from launching a perplexity killer?
I would argue that they already have.
I mean, my gut reaction,
seeing just the 14 billion number was that
it's actually seemed quite small. I mean, 14 billion for this AI company we keep hearing
about and then I compare that to open AI at 300 billion. So open AI is 2000% more valuable
than perplexity. My sort of gut reaction was, oh, I wonder if that's small. And I think
the question is, you know, is the valuation accurate?
Is the valuation fair when you compare it to just how gigantic open AI is?
My sense is yes, it is fair.
When you look at the numbers, it's very obvious just how far ahead open AI
is compared to perplexity.
I mean, perplexity, they're getting 350 million monthly visits.
Chatchi BT is getting 14 billion.
You look at the monthly unique visitors,
perplexity is getting 17 million.
Chatchi BT is getting 374 million.
You look at the amount of time that people
spend on these sites.
For perplexity, it's about six minutes.
For Chatchi BT, it's seven.
So I think on the surface,
it might look possibly undervalued
just when you compare it to OpenAI,
but I think it's a reminder again
to look at the underlying numbers,
which would tell you that yeah,
OpenAI is miles and miles ahead of perplexity.
If you were to read the headlines,
you'd get the sense that it's a little bit of a race,
that it's OpenAI versus Anthropic versus Perplexity.
But I think what's happening is OpenAI, as I've said for a long time,
I believe they have for years been running away with it.
I don't see any real indication that Perplexity can catch up.
I appreciate your comment that they were early to say,
this is AI for search,
but I think the whole AI game has developed so much
since then to the point where everyone now recognizes
ChatGBT is taking on Google.
If I had to invest in one AI startup,
it's no question for me, even at 300 billion,
it would be OpenAI.
So the question is, what is the point of differentiation?
And the point of differentiation has to do with perishability
or kind of real time versus legacy. And that is, if you think
about ChatGPT, it's a generalist platform for content creation, writing code, producing
visuals, whereas perplexity as real-time web search. Chad GBT has that now.
I mean, Chad GBT started out with, and it was a big problem.
Like you couldn't get up-to-date news, but they've solved that now.
Because it's funny to say that because my brand perception is when I say,
can please distill and give me a sense for if there are winners and losers
in the proposed UK trade agreement.
I think of perplexity because I assume it's going to have more up-to-date information and you're saying that's not
accurate.
By the way, I don't use perplexity myself.
So I think we just have a difference of use case.
But if you're using ChatGPT today, I will tell you personally, I use it in the same
way I'd use Search.
This is a capital race.
They're going to win.
Let's move on to Coinbase. Last year it was fighting these investigations by the SEC.
This year, suddenly the SEC drops all those investigations under the Trump
administration.
Now it is in the S and P 500.
As of this week, it is replacing discover financial.
Scott, your reactions to this news.
Look, I was a hater and I like to think I've evolved as a human and I'm open to learning.
I think Coinbase, consumers have decided this is for them, a legitimate asset class.
And they get to decide that.
I do think the lack of regulation here is somewhat frightening that on April the 9th,
just a few weeks after Trump
launched his Trump coin, they decided to shut down the unit of the Department of Justice,
investigating crypto fraud. So it's a bit of the Wild West. To be in the S&P 500, the S&P 500,
it's a committee that selects companies based on a blend of quantitative and qualitative judgment.
companies based on a blend of quantitative and qualitative judgment.
And you're supposed to have at least a market cap of 21 billion, a lot of liquidity, a public float of greater than 50% shares available to the public.
You're supposed to be profitable.
And I do think that the S&P it's a really interesting construct, the synthetic
grouping, if you will, because it essentially says we're going to do a lot of diligence on what are the
best American companies and then index funds can come into it.
And there's something sort of simple and magical.
And that is they kick out a company like discover and say,
you're no longer one of the best 500 companies.
Which got acquired. So that's why they're doing this reshuffling. But yes.
They got acquired by capital one. Is that right? Yeah.
Yeah. So it's sort of when you invest in an S&P index fund, you're not only getting
diversification, but what you're getting is you're benefiting from this committee's attempt to be the
arbiter of what in fact are the best companies. So when you buy an S&P company, the natural
assumption is you are getting companies that are
not only great companies, but quite frankly,
they're still either maintaining their greatness
or on the upswing.
And then they kick out companies, which I really
like.
Uh, so this is a big deal.
This is a, you know, when you're especially this
kind of legitimate to a certain extent, this
fairly unfairly legitimizes in my view, the asset class or
one was that they announced ETFs or JP Morgan or some black rock last year. So this is yet another
kind of signal of them legitimizing it. Now at the same time, this could create,
it'd be inflating the bubble even more. I mean that if this does fall and become the ultimate
Ponzi scheme where there's no underlying cash flows to justify any of this shit or no real asset, it just means more retail investors are going to get hurt because the assumption is that if it's an S&P company, there must be some credibility to what they're doing.
So I'm sort of, I'm lukewarm on this.
I don't know how to feel about this.
Add your thoughts.
I'm pretty staunchly cold on this.
I think this is really bad.
I love that the young guy hates crypto.
Who would have thought that?
Who would have thought that?
Look, I think it's one thing that we have a market that
is predicated on assets that have no underlying
or fundamental value.
And for the sake of this argument,
let's just ignore Bitcoin. And let's just like, let's ignore Bitcoin.
And let's just focus on all the other stuff,
the $1.2 trillion worth of non-Bitcoin crypto assets
that are floating around out there
that are being traded on Coinbase.
So Ethereum, Tether, Ripple, but also the meme coins,
Dogecoin, which is the eighth largest cryptocurrency by MarketCap,
one of the most traded coins on that platform.
Trumpcoin, Pepecoin, Cumrocketcoin,
which I know you love, Fortcoin,
all of these things exist on Coinbase.
And the way Coinbase makes money
is it takes a little fee when you trade this crap.
So look, it's one thing to have a marketplace
for these assets and I don't have a real problem with that.
I think it's dumb, but I don't think it's wrong.
I don't think it's morally wrong.
It's an entirely different thing in my view
to push that marketplace and those assets
into the retirement accounts
of practically every investor in
America.
I mean, no one doesn't own the S&P 500.
Everyone owns the S&P 500, which means everyone owns Coinbase.
Not a lot, but a little bit.
It's going to be around 0.1 to 0.2% allocation, which is going to translate to around $10
billion in net purchases by these
index funds.
Now, the reason I think this is such a problem, it's really reminiscent to me of the 2008
financial crisis, because if you look back at what happened there, the problem wasn't
just mortgage-backed securities and these mortgage-backed security derivatives and these CDOs.
Those were actually like in real terms, it was a very small slice of the economy.
The problem there in 2008 was the institutional adoption of those bullshit assets.
It was the fact that the banks were embracing them and aggressively marketing these CDOs.
And that's what led to the investment world building
this giant infrastructure around these shitty assets.
And that's what caused all the pain in the end.
It wasn't the assets themselves,
it was the fact that we built all of this up
and we got all these retail investors
and these regular people tied to these assets.
So I look at what's happening here.
I look at MicroStrategy entering the Nasdaq,
now Coinbase entering the S&P 500. I really see no difference. I mean, these are like
highly financialized, highly derivative assets that offer no real value in the real world. Again,
we're just going to exclude Bitcoin for the sake of the argument. Still $1.2 trillion in assets there.
And now you have these institutions embracing them, which means that the rest of America
is coming along for the ride now.
So if you own the S&P 500, you now own Coinbase.
And that's very similar to 2008.
I'm not saying we're going to see this 2008 crash, but the dynamics that are at play here are basically the same.
So, you know, as you know, as everyone knows, I have my issues with crypto.
I've talked about why I don't like it personally, but thus far it's not been a
huge problem for me because thus far it's been opt in.
Like if you don't want to own this stuff, you don't have to just don't get involved.
But that's no longer true now.
Like I don't like crypto, I don't want to own Coinbase, but I now own it. And to me,
that's a massive failure of leadership on the part of the S&P 500 who I believe should
hold different levels of standards for that portfolio. I think they have a unique level of responsibility in the investment
world. This has to be grounded. This portfolio has to be grounded in fundamentals. It has to
be grounded in value. You can't just sling these very precarious assets into people's retirement
accounts. I was against crypto before. I didn't think it was that systemic of an issue.
Now that this has happened, combined with micro strategy in the NASDAQ, I believe this
is systemic.
To me, it's now turning into an actual problem.
I think you're the problem of the Democratic Party right now.
And that is, you're more interested in acquiring social status or political orthodoxy than
increasing the material or emotional well-being of Americans. Do you think that, are you still worried about every American owning fossil
fuels?
No. That's a real business. That has real value in the real world.
Are you cool with tobacco companies being in the S&P?
People like to smoke. That's real, that's actual value in the economy. Actual value. So your issue here is that there's no underlying cash flows
or you believe is it's not an income producing asset.
Yeah.
My issue is that we are now attaching the value
of people's retirement accounts to a company that makes money
on trading cum rocket and fought coin.
That's a good point.
I literally respect the fact that when you go to parties, you're like the guy,
the aunt, you're like the 26 year old that doesn't like crypto.
Literally that.
The guy who sucks.
It's like, no one knows what to make of you.
You're like, you might as well like start singing show tunes and sing.
Does none of what I say resonate with you?
Or do you think I'm being pedantic or what do you think?
resonate with you or do you think I'm being pedantic or what do you think?
I like what you're saying because I find that I'm a little
bit taken in by, you know what it is?
I think that people my age and because I desperately
want to reach young men and I'm going through a midlife
crisis so I want to feel younger than I am,
that I try to be a little bit hipper and younger.
And I mean, look at me, I'm dressed like an aging skateboard be a little bit hipper and younger.
And I mean, look at me, I'm dressed like an aging
skateboarder right now.
I look fucking ridiculous.
But I think a lot of people want to be seen as younger
and hipper, and so they embrace crypto
because it makes them feel young.
Yeah, for me, it's like a combination of that
and Beanie Babies.
Like, we're just buying and selling Beanie Babies and driving up the price.
And again, I don't want to outlaw Beanie Babies, but I don't think Beanie Babies and platforms
that whose main way of making money is by taking fees off of Beanie Babies being traded.
I don't think that should be in people's 401ks.
Let me put it this way.
If this shit ends really badly,
I think a lot of us are going to have our head in our hands and go,
well, of course it did. Of course it did.
Which again, feels so 2008 to me.
And most importantly, this whole conversation has inspired my favorite line from a song in the
Aughts and that is, I'm so 2008, you're so 2000 late.
I love that line.
Was that black eyed peas?
I don't know.
That's boom boom pow.
If it's not Tom Petty or Tom Petty, I don't care what it is.
We'll be right back after the break for our conversation with Alice Hahn.
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Welcome back.
Here's our conversation with Alice Han, China economist and director at Greenmantle.
Alice, where does this podcast find you?
I'm in London, but the weather is getting warmer, which is nice.
I'm going to head to Ibiza and a couple of warm places for conferences, which is good.
That's fun.
Yeah, I've heard.
Unfortunately, I leave just in time for the nine days of nice weather in London.
I know.
So let's bust right into it.
I'm just curious to give us sort of the state of play in China on the ground, the citizens,
businesses and government officials and their response to the trade war and tariffs.
And what is the general vibe, if you will, and their response
and perception of what is going on?
Well, it's a great question, Scott.
And I was actually in China a month ago at a track two dialogue between Australia and
China.
So I had the chance to meet with government officials and talk to people on the ground.
Barring obviously what has happened in the last 44 hours, I would say that when I was
there in the midst of the huge tariff hikes, 50 and then 100%
on top of the 30% or more after liberation day, what the vibe was on the ground was that China
will defend its position at all costs. There was a revival of Cold War II Korean War rhetoric about
being able to defend against US hegemony, But more importantly than that, there was a confidence that they had
the fiscal monetary capacity to offset some of the shock.
Now, with tariffs risking at the height of 145%,
this was gonna be a very daunting task,
but I was struck by the fact that,
A, the policy makers had spent the last eight years
not only aggressively rerouting trade
through third-party countries,
but finding ways to cushion
the blow as they saw in trade war one.
And secondly, there was this feeling on the ground that there was going to be more policy
support, especially for the private sector, for the tech sector.
I saw tech executives being more positive and abullient about the future pathways more
so than in any time since 2018.
So that was the feeling on the ground.
Obviously, I would say in the last 24 hours,
we're seeing remarkable improvement in sentiment,
I would say, because we now have a complete diminishing
of the risk that was being held for Chinese companies
as well as the Chinese macro situation,
which was these exorbitant tariffs.
So I would say I was struck by how confident China felt.
And comparatively speaking, when I'm in the U S would speak to my American
counterparts, uh, the reaction is very dismal on the ground.
So it's been a tale of two very different stories.
Well, it's just to that point.
Didn't Trump blink?
Isn't, I mean, at the end of the day, didn't she basically say, bitch, I'm on
top for lack of a better term and win?
I completely agree with you, Scott.
Even though I always like to be contrarian, especially in conversations
with intelligent people like you and Ed, I would say that China has become
James Dean and that film, Rebel Without A Cause, it won the game of chicken
because it had escalation dominance and it had more political appetite
to increase the tariffs.
Trump clearly didn't.
He had to listen to the Bill Ackman's, the billionaires of the world, who were reminding
Trump not only was this going to hurt his base, but shelves would be completely empty.
And I think that he caught on to that and he was very much convinced by that.
So the Chinese, I think, feel very vindicated in their strategy, which was to do tit for
tat tariffs, like for like.
And then last 24 hours, that position has been successful for China.
We've seen Trump obviously blink on these tariffs.
And I could foresee even more negotiations downward if these fentanyl talks move swimmingly,
which Bessert, for instance, thinks they will.
The reductions that we're seeing on these tariffs, 145% to 30%, the US tariffs on China,
China bringing theirs down from 125% to 10%, those are supposed to last only 90 days while
talks continue.
And the thing that I can't really figure out is like, what are we even talking about with
China?
What deal is supposed to be made?
What are we trying to get from China? And what is
China trying to get from us? Can you give us some color on what these talks are even about
and what the goal of these talks would be?
Trump ultimately wants a big, beautiful deal. He was pen pals with Nixon back in the 80s. He
immedies the fact that Nixon went to China and made this big beautiful deal. So he ultimately wants to see a deal. The people around him, I would
say Jameson Greer for instance, really cares about trade imbalances and market reciprocity.
He will want to reduce the deficit. He will want to increase segmental or sectoral specific
tariffs on certain Chinese products, especially in dual use or very tech competitive industries.
I could see that happening up to 100% or more in some of these sectors.
And similarly, he will want market reciprocity.
Besson is in the same camp, I would say.
He would want to see China reducing its restrictions on foreign, especially American investments
going into China, allowing more equal participation for US investors in China, and similarly, China buying
more American products. So it's not a surprise that Besant said, we had a great deal in phase one.
I think that they will go back to aspects of that, ask China to increase agro purchases and
purchases of energy products, and similarly, find ways for China to reduce the subsidies on certain
goods which they believe to be unfair trade practice.
Elsewhere I think that Trump really cares about fentanyl.
He will want to see some kind of cooperation on China reducing the subsidies for the precursors
to fentanyl.
I'm a bit more optimistic now that there could be some kind of cooperation that would
enable that discussion to happen.
And on the Chinese side- Could you break down, sorry, I just want to, because the fentanyl thing is so,
is confusing.
Could you explain to us like, what is the actual connection between China and
fentanyl? Like in what sense is China propping that up?
So China subsidizes industries that produces the precursor chemicals for
fentanyl, effectively creating these cheap fentanyl products
that then get flooded into the American market. Now China says
it's cracked down on fentanyl itself exports to the US but
the precursor chemicals are still being produced by China.
So I could foresee more collaboration on that front for
China to again reduce or even cut off all exports of those
chemical components.
And that would be seen as a win for Trump and for his political base.
On China's side, all that they care about is that they want to achieve a degree of supply
chain self-sufficiency, especially when it comes to the harder areas like semiconductors.
They want to keep growing and not have these huge trade risks that Trump poses.
And they want to extract geopolitical concessions potentially
in the long term over Taiwan.
That is a long-term game, but I think the two first priorities are how do we grow
stably and how do we maintain supply chain dominance and resilience?
Does rebalancing the trade deficit really get in the way of those goals for China?
Like, I'm just trying to think about what a big, beautiful deal looks like for America.
And it sounds like we sort of rebalance the deficit in terms of trade.
China just buys more of our stuff.
They also get their act together on fentanyl, whatever that would look like.
In what sense does that get in the way of China's goals?
I actually don't think it gets in the way of China's goals, because I think it is in
China's interest to rebalance.
They've said this for over two decades now, but when push comes to shove, they've been
faced with some kind of slowdown or economic crisis, be it JFC, be it COVID, be it trade
war one, and they've walked back on some of these
rebalancing efforts. So I think it's in China's interests and policymakers are
realizing this when I was in China a month ago, they were starting to say that
over capacity was an issue and that they needed to do more to rebalance. I had
never heard them say that before. In previous days, they were saying this was
free market competition, and the West should be so happy to have cheap Chinese
renewable technologies, green technologies. That the fact that they're This was free market competition and the West should be so happy to have cheap Chinese renewable
technologies, green technologies.
The fact that they're saying that seems to me to suggest that they need to rebalance,
they realize that.
And that actually this is an opportunity for China potentially to buy more American products,
to address some of that trade imbalance that the US is rightly I think complaining about,
and find ways to maybe even invest in the US if Trump and the Republicans is rightly, I think, complaining about and find ways to maybe even invest in
the US if Trump and the Republicans allow it, to create manufacturing jobs in the US
because China has the logistical, the manufacturing know-how.
So I think that the Chimerica relationship has the ability to have a second chapter in
its relationship and not go through a full-scale divorce or decoupling.
But again, it all comes down to politics, Ed.
And that is where I'm not so sure.
Yeah.
I was going to say, I mean, the way you lay it out, it sounds like a kiss and makeup between
the US and China is actually very easy.
I mean, based on everything you've just described there, our goals are not really at odds with
each other.
So I guess my main dumb question is what's getting in
the way? Like what's the problem? Why can't we just figure this out? The problem on the Chinese
side is that they cannot countenance a massive slowdown in the economy. So instead of going
through the, I would say the American model, for instance, sort of 1930s depression, when you, or even World War II, where you saw a massive crisis that then enabled
the consumer share of GDP to continue to rise,
rather than the manufacturing share of GDP,
which is why America is now a consumer
and services led economy.
The Chinese are unwilling to countenance that.
They don't even want to have a Japanese style,
lost decades, which is a slow version of what we saw in the America. So instead, they want to walk
on this tightrope between rebalancing a little bit here and there through subsidies for consumer
goods like the retail, the trade-in appliances. And at the same time, they will increase Chinese
exports, increase potentially infrastructure spending on certain infrastructure. And this
means that they have this impossible task of balancing the two, because ultimately they
don't want to go full on in the rebalancing mode, which is something that they recognize that they
need to do. That is a structural bug in the system, and it's going to be very hard to shake for
political reasons. On the US side, why they can't kiss and make up is because we have different
parties with different interests. As we mentioned, Trump wants a big, beautiful deal. As I've said reasons. On the US side, why they can't kiss and make up is because we have different parties
with different interests. As we mentioned, Trump wants a big, beautiful deal. As I've
said before, he's the biggest dove in a house full of hawks. Besant wants to make sure that
people around him and Wall Street are happy, that the markets are happy. Jameson Greer
wants to have a more level playing field. People like Navarro and Lutnick are a bit more
crazier, I think, and don't really know what they
want to do, which is why we saw the April 2nd
tariffs.
So we have really heterogeneous outcomes coming
out of the U S which again is deeply, deeply
confusing, not just for us, but for the Chinese
as well.
My sense is, I mean, it's pretty clear what my
bias is.
I'm not an enormous fan of the
current US president. But when I have spoken to some, I have some data here, I've spoken to,
or anecdotal evidence, I've spoken to some European companies who are contemplating working
with not only Chinese companies, but divisions of these Chinese companies, including their cloud
units, and working with their, these units that they would have never considered before.
So, distinctive how this trade war calms down, isn't this just an enormous opportunity and gift for Chinese companies
who are now getting meetings they otherwise wouldn't have had the opportunity to get in Europe and Latin America?
I mean, I completely agree. I think Latin America was always going to be under Lula in China's camp. It's not a surprise that Lula is now in Beijing signing a trillion dollars of deals in Chinese
investment in Brazil and purchases of Brazilian agricultural products as China again tries
to diversify away from the US towards Latin America.
But I think the real winner is going to be the ability to launch a successful trauma
offensive with Europe.
I think Europe was very sickened
by Trump's treatment of Zelensky in the Oval Office and its behavior towards Europe, not
just Trump, but Vance, their behavior towards Europe since then. And I think Europe, as
is its historical want, is going back to strategic autonomy. It's trying to hedge between these
two superpowers, China and the US. And I think in this current climate, it is probably
veering more towards China on trade, because it sees China as the adult in the room. And I think
what's going to be interesting, Scott, at the end of June is two really important meetings. We could
have NATO at the end of June, and then the China-EU summit at the end of June, now in Beijing, not in
Brussels, because they ultimately wanted to show respect to Xi Jinping, who originally couldn't make it.
So I think this is going to be a real stress test
for transatlantic relations.
And it could mean that we see further reduction in trade
and non-tariff barriers between the EU and China come end of June,
which is something that Trump won't be very happy about.
He's already saying that the EU could be nastier than China.
So I think that the EU is next in the firing line, so to speak.
And just moving to the broader Chinese economy, there were reports that felt legitimate that China,
this came, the threat of a trade war came at a terrible time for China. China has some real
structural economic issues. Distinctive to the Tariff War, talk about the state of the Chinese
economy right now. I would say, Scott, the state of the economy is a story of two really divergent Chinese pathways.
Number one is what I would call a structural macro slowdown,
and that is driven as you mentioned Scott by these challenges,
the real estate sector being one of them,
but also the fact that private consumption remains remarkably weak,
only 40 percent of GDP compared
to 70% or more in the US. And it's structurally going to be very challenging for the government
to try to rapidly rebalance and increase the consumption share of GDP, which I'll get to in
just a bit. But its over-reliance on exports, I think, will remain a theme moving forward.
It needs to have that export engine, the overcapacity engine, to maintain growth. As long as it has these
GDP targets, it will need to have a degree of overcapacity. And I think that in this
environment of weak and low interest rates, which are favoring the exporters, this is going to
continue the financial repression story that we've seen for households for decades.
What I would say though, in sort of counterbalancing towards this is what I would say is a bullish tech story or bullish tech side to China's growth. And I think that this is going to potentially increase some of the rebalancing towards
consumption. The reason I say that is because not only are we seeing more services, some of this geared towards AI and the usage of AI in healthcare, in elderly care, in retail and manufacturing.
But we see these tech companies come up with really inventive ways to create new markets.
I'm optimistic that Chinese tech will be very, very resilient and it will find more
ways to be even more self-sufficient and have supply chain resilience.
But it could create more products and services that again could boost consumption, reduce
the cost of certain services
and goods. So I'm bullish on some parts of the tech story and bullish on some parts of
the consumption boosting story. But I see these structural challenges still in play
and that means a net disinflationary environment for the rest of the world because China needs
to produce more. And if the US is going to go not going to buy it, then it's going to
have to export to other economies, maybe the European market, for instance.
So it's two very different pathways for China.
But I come out from this trade war feeling that the Chinese policymakers have more resolve to, again, expedite some of these structural trends towards consumption.
And in case of backlash against overcapacity to reroute through these third parties, we saw 20% year on year increases to exports to ASEAN.
I think that this will continue to gear up as they try to avoid any future tariffs from the Americans.
Stay with us.
We're back with Profit She Markets. My sense is that China even before this tariff or trade war was divesting away from the US.
I believe the percentage of their exports had fallen from 24% to 17%.
Is that a concerted strategy that we just,
they're not good partners and we need to divest away
from the United States?
Is that, is it, is it,
which I think is a terrible thing.
I think the less, the less inextricably linked we are,
the more likely we are to declare war on each other
or take bigger risks with each other.
But could we see that 17%
number drop to single digits in the next few years? So Scott, I love this question because I think we
always need to look beyond the data. So back in 2018, we saw the US share of Chinese exports being
20%. It's now around 14%, if not under. That is not the full story because the Chinese surplus,
trade surplus to the US has increased
quite a bit since 2018.
So what we've actually seen is that China is rerouting its trade through other parties
in Latin America and Southeast Asia to, again, they call it tariff washing, to avoid some
of these tariffs or restrictions that the Americans have put into place.
So that number, I think, again, is a bit of a misleading number. And again, we shouldn't
forget that if we just look at the trade imbalances, China is a bigger trade surplus
running country with the rest of the world and the US than it was in 2018. Again, it's a sign
that it doubled down on this export engine because as you mentioned, Scott, consumption wasn't doing
well, local governments were debt ridden and needed to pay their debt burdens and the real estate
sector was suffering. So I think China-America has become even bigger, the divorce settlement has
become even bigger, but what Trump has shown today or rather yesterday is that it can't afford this
divorce settlement because China keeps increasing the stakes.
Coming out of this war, we tend to talk about
who loses or gains more.
And I think a lot of people are coming to the conclusion that over the medium and the
long term, China's probably going to get the better of the deal.
But distinctive what's good or bad for the US or China with respect to this tariff war,
who do you think are the other big winners and losers?
It feels like Europe will be a big winner because it seems like the Chinese are excited
or ambitious to establish better relations with them.
But are there other nations in Southeast Asia that vis-a-vis this trade washing or I think
that's the term used are just sort of unnatural winners here are going to do really well,
like trade off of selling bullets to the warring parties, so to speak?
Yeah, that's a great question.
I think in Southeast Asia, it has to be India because Apple and other companies are going to continue to
diversify the supply chains and find alternatives for their components outside of China. And this
is already happening. I think this wraps up quite exponentially the plans to, again, move some of the
factory processes to India. I think Vietnam and Indonesia and Malaysia, again, when it comes
to final assembly or even manufacturing, will be beneficiaries. We've already seen massive greenfield
investments from Chinese companies. I think that that continues in those countries in particular,
so we should see a ramp up of their manufacturing output going to developed economies, including the
US. And in Latin America, I think Brazil is going to be a huge
beneficiary. It's not a surprise that Lula is in Beijing
signing that deal. We've seen in the last few years, Brazil
overtake the U.S. in terms of being the biggest exporter of
wheat, soy, and corn to China, which is their biggest market.
So I think some of the Latin American agro producers are
going to be beneficiaries of this as China again tries to diversify away from the US. And similarly, I think that Europe
could extract certain concessions. This is why I'm bullish at the end of June that there could be
some kind of a deal over EVs or even Chinese investment in Europe. There's been discussion
about potentially launching price minimums to get rid of these tariffs, this 40% and onwards tariffs on Chinese EVs that the Europeans have imposed. And similarly,
I could see the Chinese being more lenient on some of these tech transfer details for Chinese
companies to effectively enable IP transfer to the European counterparts and partners when they
establish factories in Europe, especially relevant for batteries and other EV components.
So I'm bullish that there are some beneficiaries in all these different regions.
But again, I think that America had its chance, Trump under Trump, to really squeeze China
when it comes to trade and even some of these tech sanctions.
But again, because Trump blinked, I think he rendered that null and void. So Alice is the Chinese analyst for Green Mantle and advises people at the highest level
around their investments and their strategies.
I've been actively looking at European and Chinese stocks, and I'm absolutely fascinated
with BYD.
I just can, you know, I see these TikToks of every single, you know, I see the performance of a car
that seems to be superior to cars
that they're cost four times more.
I'm curious what you think of BYD,
what it says about Chinese manufacturing,
if it has the same, talk about the BYD phenomena,
what do people locally think of the brand
and what does it say about the state
of kind of Chinese manufacturing right now?
And I'm fascinated with this company.
I would love to get any color you might have on it.
Well, Scott, you should, you know,
I've got people in the region,
so you should definitely go and visit.
We can get you into an EV if you want in China very soon
and give it a test drive.
But on the ground, I mean,
it's one of the huge success stories.
And I think that they've pressed play on autonomous driving, which is potentially going to give
them even more upside when they begin to roll that out in China and then globally. And beyond
that, I was reading an interesting diagram of the way in which BID is involved in so
many different industries. And this is a way in which I think Chinese manufacturing can be seen as more
competitive and advantageous is the fact that you've got companies like Huawei and BID,
that don't just produce cars or smartphones.
They're involved in LiDAR, they're involved in AI, they're involved in semiconductor
R&D. The fact that you have companies that are basically like the Intels or even the Fords
or the Teslas of the world doing many different parts of logistics and components, I think
is deeply, deeply impressive.
And I could see them being extremely competitive outside of China in other countries outside
of the US.
Obviously, the US will continue to have restrictions on China, but I could see definitely more
upside for these companies
like BYD moving forward.
And to your point, Scott, if you look at the forward multiples, I was looking at it today
on Chinese companies, they're around 12, still very low by historical standards and
much lower than Japan and India.
I could see a lot of upside in Chinese tech companies moving forward.
Last question from me, Alice, sort of similar to Scott's question. The predominant
theme so far this year has been basically sell America question mark. And that's sort of the
economic geopolitical markets question every investor is asking this year. It just brings
up this question, like how is the world order going to shape up and how do the tariffs going
up and then coming down affect all of that? Given everything you've seen this question, like how is the world order going to shape up and how do the tariffs going up and then coming down affect all of that? Given everything you've seen this year,
the election, the tariffs, the fact that the tariffs just came down, what's happening in the
markets, if you had to put your money on one country, and we'll call it over the course of
like 20 years, between America and China, which country would you bet on?
Well, at the risk of being facetious, and can I say Chimerica if that country still exists, because the two, again, back to this relationship in which they just
reinforce each other because one side's strengths is the other side's flaws.
When I think about Chinese tech manufacturing capacity, China is undoubtedly
the leader and I think it will continue to be so. Basically, it's astounding that China has quietly
met or even surpassed all of its made in China 2025 goals, even though it's not talking about
it anymore. I remember back in the day in trade war one, there was a huge backlash. China silently
achieved many of those goals. Meanwhile, in the US, I still think that
the US has a degree of exorbitant privilege. It's going to be very hard to fully rotate out of the
US. The fact that stocks now, the S&P, are above April 2nd and maybe even will come up to an all-time
year-to-date high suggests that people are trying to get back into the US. It's not fully convinced that this is the end of US hegemony
and that there's still an appetite for US assets.
I'm still bullish long-term about the US
in terms of its knowledge economy,
in terms of immigration.
When it gets its act together like with the COVID vaccine,
it does it very, very well.
And again, remains a strong consumer-driven economy in the way that China isn't. So at the risk again of signing facetious, I would say I'd put my money on Chi America. It's hard to see any other economy, even EU competing with that. I think the Europeans, even all their people were saying buy Europe earlier this year have faced a big hurdle with Mertz's fiasco.
He finally got elected, but it showed underlying weakness in Europe.
And I think Europe is next when it comes to tariffs.
So I would say China-America, if that's at all possible.
That works for me. Alice is a China economist and director at Greenmantel,
a global macro and geopolitical risk advisory company.
She graduated in history and economics from Harvard
and holds a master's in
East Asian studies from Stanford University, where she focused on Chinese political economy and
fintech. Alice, always learn so much from you. Thank you for joining us.
Alice, just one quick thing. I think it's really important to
point out that we discovered you. We discovered you.
I know. I was going to say, can I make that publicly known somewhere?
I've got so much,
I'm against the digital equivalent of fan mail on LinkedIn and whatnot.
Thanks to you guys. So I really appreciate that.
Where I'm headed with this is when Ed needs a job and Scott needs help finding a nursing home.
Remember, we discovered Alice Hahn.
Lily, your views, we have these like old white guys
with all these credentials on the pod.
They get like 15,000 views and Alice Hahn comes on
and you get 200,000 views.
No, but I thank you guys.
I mean, I'm used to being in the rooms with old white men
who are twice my age.
It's the norm now.
It's the norm.
Yeah.
Anyways, congrats on all your success and thanks for your great work on this show.
Yeah.
Thanks so much, guys.
Appreciate it.
This episode was produced by Claire Miller and engineered by Benjamin Spencer.
Our associate producer is Allison Weiss, Mia Silverio is our research lead,
Isabella Kinsel is our research associate, Dan Chalane is our intern, Drew Burrows is our technical director, and Catherine Dylan is our
executive producer. Thank you for listening to ProfGMarkets from the Vox Media Podcast Network.
If you like what you heard, give us a follow and join us for a fresh take on markets on Monday. Lifetimes
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