TBPN Live - Coatue's Public Market Update, Wall Street Sounds the Alarm on U.S. Debt, Nvidia's Business Booms, and Nike Returns to Amazon | Doug Philippone, Divyansh Kaushik, Aaron Ginn
Episode Date: June 3, 2025TBPN.com is made possible by: Ramp - https://ramp.comFigma - https://figma.comVanta - https://vanta.comLinear - https://linear.appEight Sleep - https://eightsleep.com/tbpnWander - https://wa...nder.com/tbpnPublic - https://public.comAdQuick - https://adquick.comBezel - https://getbezel.com Numeral - https://www.numeralhq.comPolymarket - https://polymarket.comAttio - https://attio.comFollow TBPN: https://TBPN.comhttps://x.com/tbpnhttps://open.spotify.com/show/2L6WMqY3GUPCGBD0dX6p00?si=674252d53acf4231https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/technology-brothers/id1772360235https://youtube.com/@technologybrotherspod?si=lpk53xTE9WBEcIjV(01:55) - Coatue's Public Market Update (46:23) - Wall Street Sounding the Alarm on U.S. Debt (57:57) - Nvidia's Business is Booming (01:18:25) - Nike Returns to Amazon (01:29:14) - Doug Philippone. Doug Philippone is the co-founder and General Partner of Snowpoint Ventures, a venture capital firm established in 2021 that invests in dual-use technologies for defense and government applications. He previously served as Head of Global Defense at Palantir Technologies from 2008 to 2024, where he expanded the company's defense business to support over 19 allied nations. A former U.S. Army Ranger, Philippone completed six deployments and was awarded multiple commendations, including three Bronze Stars with two for valor (02:02:26) - Divyansh Kaushik. Dr. Divyansh Kaushik is Vice President at Beacon Global Strategies, where he advises on AI, semiconductors, biotech, and data security to bolster U.S. national security and technological competitiveness. Previously, he served as Associate Director for Emerging Technologies and National Security at the Federation of American Scientists, contributing to AI R&D policy, tech standards, and STEM immigration reform. Kaushik holds a Ph.D. from Carnegie Mellon University, where his research on robust machine learning models earned him accolades from Amazon and the Siebel Foundation. (02:17:51) - Aaron Ginn. Aaron Ginn is the co-founder and CEO of Hydra Host, a platform that simplifies access to GPU infrastructure by enabling data centers to offer bare-metal compute on demand. Previously, he led growth product management at Everlane and StumbleUpon, and co-founded the Lincoln Network, a tech policy think tank. Ginn also serves on the board of the Foundation for American Innovation, focusing on the intersection of technology and national security.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
You're watching TBPN today is Tuesday, June 3rd 2025. We are live from the TBPN
Ultradome still gets me John the Temple of Technology the fortress of finance the capital of capital
We have a great show. We're going through a bunch of stuff. We're covering Co2's public market updates. We're going through
Some news about Nike some news about Nvidia earnings. We're going through we news about Nike, some news about Nvidia earnings.
We're going through, we have a couple great guests today.
And we're going to take you through the timeline, of course.
Of course.
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I
Wanted to cover this yesterday. We didn't quite have enough time
I wanted to cover this yesterday. We didn't quite have enough time
But Mary Meeker dropped the Internet Trends Report code to fill a fill a flot fired back
Very different take they're going deck for deck John. They're going deck for deck the Co2 deck is a little tighter
They use Sam Altman's face instead of instead of referring to open AI is just leading LLM company. They actually come out and say what OpenAI is doing.
But it's a great read through.
I gave it a full read through this morning
and I thought it would be fun to go through on the show.
And so this is from mastersinvest.com,
I guess is the account.
Says, Tiger Cub, Phil LaFont's Co2's public market updates.
It's too early to tell, but it's surprising how bad sentiment
is compared to economic hard data.
And so it's a good read.
There's Google.
It's crazy you can be Philip LaFont,
still be a Tiger Cub.
Yeah, I know.
Still a Cub.
Still a Cub.
I mean, Tiger Global is itself a Tiger Cub,
because they spun out of Tiger Management.
Julian Robertson's fun, which is very fun.
Still using the tiger name.
Imagine if Tyler Cosgrove, our chief intern,
spins out and just launches TB Global.
TB Global, yeah.
I'm like, wow, he fully sensed it.
Don't get any ideas, Tyler.
Yeah, yeah.
Anyway, this is an interesting fact that they kick it off with.
2025 was the worst start to the year through April 21st.
Oh, very depressing news.
You hate to see it.
You hate to see it, John.
But it's really remarkable how quickly the year just turned
from the Trump pump to the Trump dump, and it got real rough there for a second.
So in the first, what, three and a half months,
four months of the year, there was an 18% drawdown.
And that's compared to 2022, and the market drew down 16%.
2001 started the dot com crisis, 12% in 2010%.
But then they go on to, and man, 1998 was a banger year up 21%.
That's the start of the dot com boom.
It's interesting because it feels like we're in the midst of the AI boom and yet we had
one of the roughest starts to the year in terms of the market.
And this is for the NASDAQ.
Probably healthy in some way.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Maybe Trump just, you know, the 4D chess was,
hey, things are getting a little overheated,
let's let retail get another opportunity to buy the dip
before we go on, you know.
I mean, I hate to somewhat agree with you.
But there was, I do think there was this,
there was this sentiment that people were so bearish
a couple months ago that it felt like retail
was gonna look really silly for buying the dip.
Because retail over the past five years has just been trained
always buy the dip.
Always buy the dip.
And it's played out generally well.
And so far, so good.
And so that's the, I mean, that is the interesting
narrative here is like, is this a crisis or a correction?
And is this really like the end of the AI boom?
Is this the end of all the fun?
Is the party over or is this just like some slight turmoil?
And so, Co2 does a great job of kind of giving examples of crises and corrections and how they kind of
they bucket together and so for crises they highlight in recent memory the dot com crash,
the global financial crisis and covid they put kind of in half crisis, half correction.
And this was the question that we were talking about
with the tariff.
The tariff drawdown was, is this something
that's out of the government's control?
Can they pull it, and if they pull back from the brink,
it winds up looking more like a quick down and up
versus something that's, you know.
It's almost more of a reaction.
Exactly.
Versus a, yeah.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And so it's a little bit, so because it's
kind of manufactured by the administration,
they can, by definition, pull back from the edge.
And that leads to this falling more in the correction
category, potentially.
But that's the question that CO2 Centers in on during this in this presentation
So for crisis for crisis the first crisis that they highlight is the 2000 comm crisis, which was
Incredibly long and so the drawdown for the comm
crash was
133 weeks so over two years of the market sliding downwards.
And then the recovery, to get back to where they were,
took 242 weeks, insane.
The global financial crisis was similarly long,
74 week drawdown, so a little bit faster on the way down.
While Dan Z, or even young millennials,
have not experienced a drawdown like that.
Like the global financial crisis?
Yeah, really ever.
Right?
We have the entire, the new generation of investors
has only experienced sort of kangaroo market.
Yeah, exactly.
Up and down and up and down and up and down and up and down.
Yeah, and so COVID was similarly a crisis, very, very
significant.
But the drawdown was only five weeks.
But it was the craziest five weeks
where there were circuit breakers breaking on the exchanges
and there was a constant, like,
oh, the market's down another 5%,
and then the market's down another 5% or 7%.
And so those five weeks were miserable,
but then the recovery happened very, very quickly,
only 21 weeks to recover and get back
to the previous high, essentially.
And then they also highlight the peak to trough for the S&P 500.
So you can think of the dot com crisis as like a 49, 50% drawdown.
The global financial crisis was even worse at 57%.
You're thinking about like, you just bought all you own is S&P 500 index, and you're down
almost 60% of your wealth, all the money
that you've invested.
Very, very rough.
And there were also commensurate earnings reductions
in the dot com and the 2008 crisis.
So companies actually started making less money.
So it wasn't just speculative.
And this happened in less.
And this happened in COVID too.
29% dot com, 42% in 08.
Yes, exactly.
And so significant impact.
And that's the difference between a crisis
and a correction.
Like, obviously, corrections are shorter,
but they also don't hit earnings as much
because companies don't have enough time to really react
and drastically change their strategies,
actually lay people off, actually cut back on spending,
actually retool the business.
And then that works its way through the economy.
Or in the case of tariffs,
they were sort of temporarily unsustainable.
Yes, yes.
And then they got pulled back to the point of
still meaningful, but potentially less
of a broad market impact.
And so then the fifth indicator that CO2 identifies here
is the weeks of elevated volatility
in the VIX and so the dot-com crisis had 41 weeks of higher volatility. The global
financial crisis had 49 weeks of elevated volatility. COVID had 26 weeks
where the market was in turmoil essentially with elevated VIX. But then
you go to the other corrections that they highlight, Black Monday, Gulf War, long-term capital management failure in Asia crisis, sovereign debt crisis in
2011, the Powell pivot in 2018, and the inflation interest rate hike in 2022. Now, they call it
inflation, we call it the end of the ZERP era in Silicon Valley.
We call it the SVB crisis.
But that really was what was happening.
There was too much money printed during the COVID relief era.
That led to some inflation, and that resulted
in higher interest rates, which, of course,
blew up Silicon Valley and literally blew up
Silicon Valley Bank.
And the inflation correction, they
don't put it in the crisis bucket, but
it does have similar.
Obviously, the SVB crisis wasn't directly because of over investment in venture, but
venture got so ahead of its skis in 2021 and early 2022 that in some ways, the failure of the bank
was symbolic, even though a lot of their issues
was that they had a bunch of really long-term loans
that were priced well below what the overnight lending
rate was.
Yeah, mismanaged balance sheet.
So yeah, that inflation crisis, just to compare it to COVID.
It is funny that Silicon Valley Bank could not imagine.
Effectively, their balance sheet said,
we cannot imagine a world with rates higher than 3%.
I mean, I talked to people in the public markets
who had a similar sentiment that interest rates would never
go up, because if they did, the government debt would be so unsustainable. And yet interest rates had to go up at a certain
point because inflation was a tougher pill to swallow. And so the Fed had to take their
medicine and raise interest rates, which caused that correction. Now that correction was pretty
long, 40 week drawdown, 66 week recovery. 2022 was a rough year for sure and the market drew
down 25% but Cotu still puts us in the correction category not this crisis
category. Yeah the crisis just to give you some insight into 08 specifically
Apple went from a hundred ninety four dollars a share to eighty five dollars a
share, 56% decline in Apple. Google fell 55, 680. Alphabet was 685 to 307.
Those companies weren't even particularly indexed on housing. It was just that the
housing market collapsed and when people lose their homes or their mortgages spike
in payments they stop buying iPhones. And so it really was just this broad
economic sell-off and economic crisis. Whereas the inflation issue, yes we saw a 25%
drawdown in the S&P peak to trough, but the earning reduction was only
1% throughout that crisis, which is pretty remarkable because
firms were still able, and maybe that's a function of inflation, but firms were
still able to, this was like the other term that was coined by Kyla
Scanlon who we showed up on the show, was the vibe session. This idea like the other term that was coined by Kyla Scanlon, who we showed up on the show,
was the vibe session.
This idea that the market was in turmoil,
everyone was talking about how bad things were,
but day to day unemployment wasn't spiking.
It didn't have all of the trappings
of like the global financial crisis,
even though it felt very doom and gloom at the time.
And there was a question about, can we get to a soft landing?
Can we pull back from inflation?
We kind of wound up doing that, but it was still a very tumultuous time yeah and
so the big question is like where do you tariffs sit like are we in correction or
crisis territory what how long will this last what is the drawdown already we're
at 19% off of highs or you know we were in the beginning of the tariff correction.
And just to give you some insight back into venture,
in 2008, venture firms raised $25 billion.
2009, people were saying basically, whoa.
Only raised $15 billion in 2009, which then, obviously year was over 76 billion. So very, very low.
Yeah. And so Cotu goes on to kind of try and define the difference between crisis and correction a
little bit more. So crisis, the drawdown, the duration of the drawdown is long. The magnitude
is going to be more than 35%, whereas in correction it might be less than 25%.
Earnings cuts are gonna be more than 20%
with an average of 35% earnings cuts,
and corrections are less than 10%.
Capitulation, peak VIX, is more than a year for the crisis,
but just a few months for a correction.
And the sentiment?
Bearish in both cases, boo.
So the question is,
is will we look back on 2025 as a crisis or a correction?
And we've talked to a lot of people
when the tariffs were happening who were telling us
that this is an absolute disaster, this is a crisis,
this is a permanent change in the dollar,
permanent change in the global economic order.
And things looked really, really bad
as they were selling off.
We were, I mean, we saw it the whole day
is where the market traded down 5%.
But we have obviously built back up.
And so CO2 mentions here that 2025 may qualify
as a correction.
So they're tracking the S&P 500 since Liberation Day.
The tariffs came in on April 2nd,
just the day after April Fool's Day.
It's rough, rough timing.
Was this a social media post?
Yes, seriously.
Was it meant to go out a day earlier?
And so they highlight two key moments here.
Is there a market put?
Government announces a 90-day pause on tariffs.
That was the actual market bottom on April 8th.
And then on April 11th, the regional Fed president says there may be scenarios in which the Federal
Reserve would need to add temporary liquidity, saying that if the tariff situation continues
to worsen, if companies are really suffering,
we might need to stimulate the economy through the-
Temporary.
Temporary, temporary.
Always temporary.
And so the big question is on earnings per share,
on corporate earnings,
because that is one of the biggest differences
between a correction and a crisis.
In a crisis, the economy truly stagnates,
and we've seen that over the first 15 months on average
of a true crisis in Cotus' definition,
earnings per share drop by 35%.
In corrections, it's more like 3%.
And so we are now about halfway,
we're about eight months into this crisis
as they're tracking it.
And 2025 is at just 5% off of earnings.
So not really tracking with the average,
doesn't mean that we couldn't see things fall,
but that's where they're seeing that.
And then also the VIX spike was brief.
The volatility peaked and has since fallen from 52 to 23.
And if you're trying to track any of this peaked and has since fallen from 52 to 23.
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Let's see. So the question is,
where are we today?
48 days in, there's a severe
year to date drawdown, which we saw
19% peak to trough
in the last 24 days.
Rapid stabilization. We love this.
We love rapid stabilization.
So we're up 14% since
year to date low in the S&P, so the question
is, are we on the verge of a breakout
or is this a false start and we'll retest the lows?
And so they introduced the CO2 hard truth index,
a great coinage.
Love to see a coinage.
And this is economic hard data divided by sentiment.
I would actually name this the LaFont truth index.
Truth index, just the truth.
Just the truth, truly truth.
And I mean, this is a good kind of more quantitative way
to look at what Kyle Isken was talking about
with the Vibe session, because you can open up
the cover of the Financial Times
and see a bunch of doom and gloom,
and the sentiment can be very bad, even among consumers,
but when Christmas comes around,
Negative sentiment is good for the news business.
It really is, unfortunately.
Yeah, and so the question is,
what is the strength of the consumer's balance sheet?
How is the strength and the true health
of the American consumer?
And what's the state of the job market?
So they identify, CO2 identifies a few different metrics
that they're tracking.
So lagging data like job market inflation, leading indicators like consumer spending,
orders, bookings and permits, and then bleeding edge indicators like proprietary Co2 data
available on a daily basis because of course they're tracking all this stuff very closely.
Then on the sentiment side, they're looking at business sentiment.
Are businesses investing in growth or delaying capital and hiring plans?
Is CapEx increasing in important companies?
Investors?
Are investors optimistic about future returns?
So there are polls that go out to investors just to ask them about their sentiments.
And then if you aggregate all of those, you might get a picture of how the sentiment in
the stock market is doing.
And then you can decide if the investor sentiment is out of step
with the economic hard data.
And then of course consumer sentiment,
you can look at consumer spending and saving rates.
And so in terms of sentiment, it's not looking good.
25 year sentiment indicators are at peak negativity.
Across every sector, so investors,
businesses and consumers, everybody is bearish.
Everyone's blackpilled. And I'm a contrarian, John. Yeah. sector so investors businesses and consumers everybody is bearish everyone's
blackpilled and I'm a contrarian John yeah no it's funny I was having a
conversation with a buddy of mine I won't I won't name it but he started a
widely used unicorn okay and we were grabbing lunch last week and the
restaurant was just absolutely packed
middle of the day. Yeah, it felt like it was and it was a restaurant that both of us go to routinely
and we're like we haven't seen this place this pack. Yeah, in a very long time. Yeah. And it felt
like the roaring 20s. I was about to drop 20 just dropped in there and granted that's in Los Angeles
I was about to say roaring 20. Just dropped in there.
And granted, that's in Los Angeles, on the coast.
People are wealthy.
Yeah, but it still felt, in that environment,
if you asked everybody individually,
how do you feel about the economy right now,
whether they're a business owner, investor, or consumer,
everybody would have been like, ah, it feels shaky.
Yet their actions are saying something else,
which is that the consumer is
actually decently strong.
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, it is very interesting.
And I mean, it comes back, I mean,
we're going to get into this, but it comes back
to that idea of like the picking up pennies in front
of the steamroller that is AI.
So there can be like all these crazy things
that are happening that make so much sense.
Yeah, this is what we talked about when the tariffs were
initially happening. Yeah. It was like, hey, and all this stuff. Yeah, this is what we talked about when the tariffs were initially happening.
Yep.
It was like, hey, is this a distraction
from just winning in AI?
Yes, yes.
And Jensen is obviously conflicted, right?
Like every CEO, he's heavily,
he's basically an index of AI progress.
Yeah.
But in many ways, if we are entering a new type of industrial
revolution in intelligence yeah and you know probably that's the only thing that
that matters is to really yeah I mean we should probably cover this when we go
through Nvidia earnings but the like as soon as the tariffs hit and Nvidia was
hit very hard I remember there was there was this massive drawdown in Nvidia specifically, and there was huge questions
about Nvidia's China business and just overall GPU demand,
DeepSeek and Jevons Paradox stuff.
He was very much saying, no, things are gonna continue
to grow, we're gonna be fine.
And the big question is,, was that ever cope?
Or was he just actually right the whole time?
Or did he, more importantly, execute very strategically
in a tumultuous time to outmaneuver something
that could have actually been pretty bad for his business?
And so I'm sure we'll go into that during the Nvidia
segment.
But if you're speaking of widely used unicorns,
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Anyway, there are some more consumer data points
that Kotu calls out here.
One from Visa, all spend bands remain resilient
and consistent with past quarters. Overall discretionary and non-discretionary spend remains
strong we have not seen any signs of overall consumer spending weakening
says Visa on April 29th. What was that? Pump it up? That's Ben.
Okay. Capital One also says spend trends were largely stable through the end of
Q1 Bank of America says consumers are still spending money.
American Express says we're seeing our customers act as if they have acted in the past.
What's happened with the stock market or consumer confidence hasn't been associated with our
card member spend.
They continue to spend and they're not spending off what's in the market. And so consumers continue to spend
and so there's this like the vibe session narrative
is still going strong, which is very interesting.
Yeah, I mean, it's interesting because obviously
we're seeing exceptional growth in AI,
but we're also seeing pretty exceptional growth
in the core business infrastructure.
So Ramp, other companies
in the payroll space like Rippling, things like that, are seeing tremendous
growth as well and AI is also a factor in that.
So Co2 actually charted this hard truth index and they track
sentiment as the blue line truth index and they track sentiment
as the blue line here and then they track green
and green hard data.
And so the Evercore company sales report.
And so these should track very closely.
Like the sentiment should match the hard data,
but from 2021, 2022, 2023, sentiment was lagging
But from 2021, 2022, 2023,
Sentiment was lagging the hard data, which was very, very positive.
And then more recently,
Sentiment has taken a massive spike down at negative 1.4,
where the hard data is basically neutral at negative 0.3.
And so, again, we're seeing more quantitative analysis
of the Vibe session, and it just doesn't seem
to be going anywhere.
And I do wonder why we're seeing,
you know, this data goes back 25 years,
and the dislocations are pretty, pretty rare.
You can see there's, it feels like there's a little bit more,
more, there's sometimes a little bit of more oscillation where the hard data is a little bit
more aggressive than the sentiment.
Actually, during the dot com boom, sentiment was more
neutral, even though the hard data was worse.
And same thing in the global financial crisis.
Everybody's like, you know, spraying champagne
in each other's faces meanwhile.
And the economists are like, this is terrible.
We're cooked.
We're cooked. You were cooked
You were valuing companies with five million dollars of revenue at ten billion. What were you thinking? It was like it's fine. It's fine
Well now now we're seeing the opposite
And so to recap co2 sums it up says this does not seem like a crisis yet more like a sharp correction
It's too early to tell but it's surprising how bad sentiment is compared to hard economic data and someone it must be wrong between Wall Street and Main Street and
so this is this is the question that we're trying to trying to dig into so
sentiment sentiment alone they say is not enough of a buy signal when business
sentiment is below the 10th percentile the S&P 500 has top 20% one-year return
35% of the time.
8% of the time when business sentiment
is below the 10th percentile,
the S&P 500 has a bottom 20% one year return.
And you don't know, 57% of the time.
More than half the time, you just don't know.
You just don't know.
So based on history, they're looking at next 12 months
price to earnings of the S&P 500
and the market still looks expensive, but of course a lot of that is driven by tech
companies that are growing very quickly.
We talked about this interesting data point that something like the Mag 7 grew revenue
in Q1 at something like 30% annualized, where the rest of the of the fortune 500 the
293 that aren't magnificent apparently they grew at like 8% less magnificent the less magnificent and so
I mean the the interesting thing here is that tech has seen a notable multiple reduction And so if you you can track the price to earnings multiple of all the tech companies which here are in
Where which one is which so the tech companies are in blue and the non tech companies are in purple and the tech companies
You know you go back to the dot-com boom
They were trading at incredible price to earnings multiples up in up at 45 X on average
credible price to earnings multiples up at 45X on average. And then post-COVID, there was a dislocation again
where tech was pulling away,
but got up into the 20s and 30s,
but is still trading at 24X earnings
where the non-tech companies are at 18X.
So there's still this spread.
So during COVID, there was an 8X spread,
AI had a 9x spread.
And the current spread is 6x.
And so AI is not the subcategory,
but the trend that kicked off in 2024 when the AI trade got
really, really heated up.
And so some tech franchise names look more reasonable to me.
We keep coming back to this, but Google is actually down 3% over the last year.
So again, despite being one of the greatest AI innovators,
just not getting any credit for that.
It should be a massive beneficiary even this year.
But of course, the stock has traded up a bunch.
And so some tech franchise names look more reasonable today.
Reddit is down 49%.
Tesla's down 40% off of the 52 week high.
Arm is down 34%.
Shopify's down 23%.
Nvidia's down 23% off the peak.
Amazon 22%.
Meta off 19%.
And so there are still some tech companies that are lagging their all-time highs. And it's always interesting to kind of go to the public filter for what are the kind of power laws,
super dominant tech companies that are still
in founder mode, still led by founders,
and investigate those businesses and see if they do have,
if they are set up for the next wave,
they could be opportunities, especially if they're set up for the next wave, they could be opportunities,
especially if they're getting beaten up
for kind of some macro trend
that you would expect a tech founder
to be able to dig their way out of the hole,
like what happened in COVID,
and like what happened during the Powell pivot
and the interest rates.
Like when interest rates went up,
Shopify, Palantir, who else?
I mean, a lot of these tech companies
got absolutely beaten up,
and the ones that really emerged,
a lot of them were founder-led,
a lot of them were willing to not really change course,
or if they needed to change course,
they did it quicker than the other companies.
And so they include a quote from Charlie Munger here all the way back from 1998.
Charlie says, forget what you know about
buying fair businesses at wonderful prices.
Instead, buy wonderful businesses at fair prices.
And so the question is, is the glass half full
or empty half full?
You know, the bull case here, AI is exploding.
Clearing order inbound. Macro will heal itself.
The half empty, the value investor,
they say there's a recession on the horizon.
They say there's tariffs.
Berkshire Hathaway has a $350 billion cash pile.
Lots of things that look not great.
And so what is Co2's view?
They believe that tokens are more important than tariffs.
And this is the AI being more important
than the global banter.
So Kotus launching a crypto coin.
No, no, no.
Don't even joke about that.
Yeah, don't we don't joke about that.
That's the one thing we will never joke about.
It's taken out of context.
There'll be a pump fun about it with you.
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process and replaces it with continuous automation
whether you're pursuing your first framework
or managing a complex program.
Some of the best businesses in the world use Vanta.
That's true. Including Ramp.
Yeah.
Duolingo, Intercom.
Very cool.
Mistral.
Really?
The French, prominent French AI company.
I love it.
We gotta get some from Mistral on.
Iceland Air.
We haven't talked to them yet.
People never think about Iceland Air
being on the cutting edge of compliance.
Have you been to Iceland? I have I have you have was it nice I
had to go there I once was in Africa okay and I was in college and I had
$400 in my account okay and I had to get back to America so you went through
Iceland and I and I charted the most heinous route from Morocco to London
through Iceland back to San Francisco, and I made it back.
What's the bull case for Iceland there?
And the flight that was going to and from Iceland was,
the chairs were like bench seats
and like almost made of plastic.
Okay, it was rough.
It was like a really, really long flight.
It's like a bus.
But I made it home.
Nice. I made it home.
I feel like the bull case for Icelandair
is probably Greenland becoming a state
or protectorate or something.
Yeah. Many people go there.
And then Icelandair probably is gonna be the one
to get you there, at least in the short term.
Totally.
They're going to have a direct flight from, where will people be going to Greenland from?
Probably Park City.
Anyway, CO2 goes into OpenAI and they're digging into this thesis that tokens are more important
than tariffs and so they ask what just happened at OpenAI the number
of monthly active users MAUs post launch and so the they're tracking the number
of months post launch for all of these companies you can see Twitter now X over
96 months they grew to 288 million active users monthly active users
Instagram's over a billion Facebook's over a billion tick tocks over a billion and 88 million active users, monthly active users.
Instagram's over a billion, Facebook's over a billion,
TikTok's over a billion, over that 96 month launch period.
And you can see that these social networks,
they grow exponentially, but it looks like a complete grind
compared to what OpenAI is putting up.
And of course, that's because OpenAI can travel
so much faster because they can leverage the virality
of the social internet and everyone already has phones
and internet, whereas for something like Instagram,
many people didn't even have iPhones yet.
And of course, Instagram launched exclusively on the iPhone
and took them a while to launch an Android phone.
And I imagine that 36-month bump is probably
them launching on Android, or maybe desktop, who knows.
But OpenAI launched deep research in Operator
just 24-ish months after they launched the original product.
And they jumped from 400 million users to 800 million users.
And this, of course, is based on a quote from Sam Altman who
says, the users doubled in just weeks.
And so it's a little bit of like they're
creating this graph somewhat speculatively.
They're not exactly sure all the numbers.
They're trying to work backwards.
And there are, of course, questions about who
are those users, where are they, how monetizable are they.
But all of that stuff is kind of something
that investors will be just digging into down the road right now.
It's very clear that OpenAI is breaking through in a massive way all over the globe, honestly.
And so, CO2 also highlights the comments of Satya Nadella from Microsoft talking about
a major AI inflection.
Microsoft says, we processed over 100 trillion tokens this quarter, up five acts a year over a year,
including a record 50 trillion tokens last month alone.
So that quote just really says like,
exponential growth in inference.
And this is gonna be very, very important
for our discussion on Nvidia earnings
because Jensen previously had revealed the ratio
between inference and training loads,
and he hasn't given as much guidance on that now,
and so there's a big question about
how fast is the shift actually happening,
how much demand is there if you can compress these models
and deliver a great product with less GPUs.
Like, basically you could see exponential growth
in token generation, but if you see exponential savings
in the amount of GPU cycles it takes to create a token,
you see flat GPU adoption and rollout.
No one's really expecting that.
Everyone's building tons of these massive AI factories.
And Jensen did actually go into unpacking the AI factory
idea a little bit more, which I'm excited to talk about.
But Jensen continues, this is from the Microsoft earnings
call on April 30th.
While we continue to bring data center capacity online
as planned, demand is growing a bit faster.
Therefore, we now expect to have some AI capacity constraints
beyond June, which is interesting,
because he was saying, maybe I'm going to be a leaser.
Maybe I'm not going to be able to.
Market clearing order inbound.
The market is definitely clear.
He's excited to be a leaser.
Yeah.
He said, you know, he said earlier this year
he was canceling some projects, but he said
he's excited to be a leaser.
And we saw actual capacity constraints at Google
in their last earnings, remember?
And so it'll be interesting to see
capacity constraints every day with you and Vio.
Throwing your phone across the room,
hitting, getting rate limit.
I need to like set a recurring reminder on my calendar
for every night.
Yeah, because if I miss a day, it's like,
oh, I can't get those back,
because I only get like three a day and I'm paying the max.
So the actual best practice is to like set myself a 15-minute calendar hold where I you know
Use VO to the back basically. Yeah, although there's probably a better way to interface with it over the API or something like that
but anyway
Satcher goes on to write with deep reasoning and agent flows like copilot studio
Customers can build agents that perform more complex tasks
and also handle deterministic scenarios.
Now, there's this interesting debate going on.
I don't think we got to it in the timeline,
but the founder of Zapier was Wade Foster,
not Mike, who's been on the show.
Wade was saying, like, we are doing a lot of stuff
with agents at Zapier, and he kind of mapped out one of his agentic workflows and
Somebody was kind of chirping at him being like this is just a workflow. This isn't this isn't actually
Like fully this is an AI because like you defined
For example, like you would have one agent that processes an inbound form and then another agent that,
so like let's say that we're doing inbound sales.
You have a website and a landing page and then if somebody's interested they fill out
a form and say where they're from, what size company they work for, that type of stuff.
You have one form that processes that and then that hands it off to an agent and hydrates
and says, hey go scrape their leaked in and see who else they're associated with, are
we affiliated with them, are we already selling to them, kind of like fact-check that.
Then you might have a different agent
that sits there and triggers,
okay, based on what we know about them
now that we've hydrated the account,
let's send them an email, or let's send them a phone call,
or let's route it to Steve
who's already been talking to somebody else at that company.
Yeah. Right?
And then on and on and on.
And so these are workflows,
but they're powered by LLMs at every phase,
but there's this question of like,
are they agents or are they not?
It almost doesn't matter, all I care about is business value.
People wanna chirp at Zapier
because they're an established large company
that's been operating forever,
but you would have to apply the same rigor and framework
to every company that says they're an AI agent right now.
Yeah, I think people are maybe overly obsessed
with the idea of, and I certainly
fall into the strap before, this idea of end-to-end learning,
one-shotting, this idea that it is creating an ensemble
approach of different models, different technologies,
some business logic, some deterministic logic, some non-deterministic AI
generating tokens and reasoning tokens
to get you the result, it's all semantics.
I mean, it does have an impact on the super long-term future
and kind of the way we design these systems,
but at the end of the day,
most businesses just care about resolution.
Results.
Right, results.
And so we're seeing that at Microsoft.
Their, the Azure revenue, their cloud is accelerating.
So Microsoft Azure's revenue growth
on a percent year over year basis
through up in March of 2021,
they were growing at 55%.
That went down to 25% in March of 2021, they were growing at 55%. That went down to 25% in March of 2023.
And then it grew to 35% in March of 2024.
It was down at 31% in September.
And now it's on an up swing again.
We're incredibly back is what Satya is saying.
He also reported in that last earnings call
that already 70% of the Fortune 500
is using Microsoft Copilot for a bunch of AI tasks.
So not- 70%.
Yeah, I mean, which is- The last 30%.
We know what they have to do.
Which is again, it's kind of like Google saying,
we already have a billion people using AI overviews
or whatever the metric is,
because they're just sort of
slotting it in because I'm sure that 70% of the Fortune 500
already runs on Microsoft Teams or whatever infrastructure
they have set up.
Or they run on linear.
Linear is a purpose-built tool for planning
and building products.
Meet the system for modern software development,
streamline issues, projects, and product roadmaps.
Linear for agents.
Check it out.
Speaking of-
If you're not on-
Agents.
Linear yet, what are you doing?
You can't do it, yeah.
They got cursor, runway,
Wow.
Complexity, retool,
Retool's on there?
Mercury, ramps,
OpenAI, scale, for cell,
arc.
Absolute dogs.
There are absolute dogs over there.
That's fantastic.
They probably wouldn't describe themselves like that, but we do.
Yeah, we do.
So speaking of agents, the reasoning unlock, this is back in the CO2 deck, agents thinking
on their own, solving problems creatively.
A quote from Sam Altman, we view this as the beginning of the next phase of AI, where you
can use these models to do increasingly complex tasks that require a lot of reasoning.
And so chain of thought reasoning is multi-step trajectory where the model thinks and iterates where you can use these models to do increasingly complex tasks that require a lot of reasoning.
And so chain of thought reasoning is multi-step trajectory where the model thinks and iterates, it writes code, it searches the web,
it creates the reports, build tables, and all of these. The model keeps asking, does this make sense?
I should verify the source. Let me edit my work. And so
all this reasoning revolution, these agentic workflows,
it feels very much like this narrative of like,
oh, we kind of capped out on the previous thing.
We need a new buzzword.
But it's actually showing up in the data,
and we're seeing it in upward revisions to Cloud CapEx
when you add up Amazon, Microsoft, Google, Meta, Oracle,
and Tesla.
Oh, we got the big six, and it's a different six.
It's a different six.
CapEx has gone from $213 billion to $310 billion, a 70% jump.
And today, the CapEx forecast is up at $365 billion.
It's pretty crazy.
But again, Tesla's up here.
Good work getting in.
Not a huge contributor to this.
Yeah.
Their expected CapEx is going to be around 10 billion.
Yeah, it would be interesting to see how Tesla and XAI
kind of partner on the CapEx side,
build these hyperscale data centers,
because you're already kind of seeing that take
shape with Stargate, where it's a separate entity and
And within Stargate there are also separate entities where who owns the land who owns the the the the
Enter the power production. It doesn't necessarily make sense to always bundle all of those in the same company
And so Oracle's projected capex for 2025 is 16.
So between Oracle and Tesla,
you still have over 300 billion,
well over $300 billion just coming from the core
for Amazon, Microsoft, Google and Meta.
Yeah, I mean, this is why we refer to the core four
as like the hyperscalers truly.
And when you look at Amazon, Microsoft,
Google, and Meta, you're seeing high double digits of CapEx in the billion, 60, 70, 80
billion dollars going into CapEx. And that's driving the majority of that 365 billion of
overall CapEx. But if AI wasn't real, if there wasn't real demand, it would be extremely
hard to justify this level of CapEx investment. And so this is all driven by actual demand for Google Cloud, actual demand for Azure,
actual demand for reasoning tokens.
I mean, Meta was in the news this week talking about how building they want to ultimately
create the ads that they run.
Well, speaking of ads, let's run an ad for Numeral, numeralhq.com. Sales tax on autopilot.
Spend less than five minutes per month on sales tax compliance.
There is a fantastic company that runs on Numeral.
Lucy.
Lucy.
Yeah, my company runs on Numeral.
Anyway, going back to CO2, they say,
tokens are greater, greater, greater than tariffs!
Exclamation point, exclamation point!
I love it.
This deck is obviously built by a crossover fund, hedge fund,
like very successful, like very serious on Wall Street.
I like when they bring a little personality in.
Yeah, I see them as, yes, they are a major player in venture,
but they're also a major player in Wall Street.
I see them as like a respected institution.
And yet, they're having some fun with the deck.
And most importantly, they're clear.
It's very clear, digestible, not too much jargon. Yes, there are some very small bullet points or footnotes that I haven't
been reading, but in general done a great job of summarizing these things. So they have
three takeaways. From a market perspective, we remain vigilant but have confidence in
the AI trend, completely agree, remaining flexible, tracking bleeding edge data carefully.
AI could be such a game changer,
we need to capture this trend.
I think that's spot on, spot on.
And so that's their conclusion.
My only, I know they can't give investment advice here,
but I wish they took a slightly firmer stance
and said AI will be a game changer
if we need to capture this trend.
They sort of leave some ambiguity there.
But yeah, I think that that's drawing it back
to earlier stage venture that feels like people are doing
rounds that they feel are quote unquote overpriced,
that they're a little bit uncomfortable with valuations
or the amount of investment that's
being made at oftentimes with just a deck and a team.
But at the same time, nobody can afford to miss AI.
Like if you come out of the next five years
and you don't have multiple bangers,
don't expect to be a serious fund over the long run.
Yeah, so the polymarket on the US recession in 2025
is down at 30%.
Still a little bit higher.
Wouldn't be that crazy if it did wind up happening.
But in general, that's looking pretty positive.
On Liberation Day, it was at 42% on April 1, the day before.
Tariff, so it was already climbing.
I think people were expecting something to happen. It was very low at the start of the year, February of 2025. This was down at
22%. Spiked all the way up to 66% post-trade war. Was kind of hovering around 50, 60%,
more likely than not to happen, recession. And it's since been dropping and dropping and basically
every day for the past few weeks,
it's dropped and is now around 30%.
But we gotta get it to zero, folks.
We gotta get it to zero.
It's a team effort over here.
It really is.
In the American economy.
Let's make it happen.
Don't, you know, next time you're frustrated
with the economy, don't be thinking,
what's the economy gonna do for me?
Ask yourself what you can do for the economy. Exactly, don't take your frustration or's the economy gonna do for me? Ask yourself what you can do. Exactly. Don't take it, don't take your frustration or your
consumer sentiment out on the economy. It's okay if somebody calls you up, hey
I'm from Pew Research, how you feeling? You can tell them the truth, you
can tell them you're not feeling good, but when it comes time to do some
Christmas shopping, just go all out. Just go all out. Just get on Bezel. Just buy the most
expensive watch you can possibly afford. Do it.
You're contributing to GDP.
Yeah, I mean, your Bezel Concierge
is available now to source you any watch on the planet.
And what could help build the American economy
more than fantastic luxury watches available on demand
at getbezel.com?
Anyway, the other side of this narrative going even broader is there's now questions about the
U.S. debt.
And so Wall Street has been sounding the alarm on the U.S. debt.
This time it's worth listening, says the Wall Street Journal.
Jamie Dimon says you are going to see a crack in the bond market and he has plenty of company
here.
So I wanted to give a little bit of a review of this because even Elon Musk has been talking about
the the struggles of the government and how some of his optimism around writing
the budget and and creating a budget surplus did not come to fruition like he
was hoping for so the big question is is the US going broke? It's not possible.
Joe Weizenthal, we print dollars.
We're good.
We have a dollar machine.
We have a dollar machine.
Yeah, the other element, this one
outright, is we were about to go live.
But Elon posted at 1031 about an hour ago.
I'm sorry, but I just can't stand it anymore.
This massive, outrageous, pork-filled congressional
spending bill is a disgusting abomination.
Shame on those who voted for it.
You know you did wrong.
You know it.
Wow.
So not mincing words.
It's rough.
And breaking rank from he's not an employee anymore.
He's not a an employee anymore.
He's just a citizen.
He can voice his opinion however he wants.
I think the bigger question is like,
this, yes, like this might be depressing to Elon.
This might not be the outcome he wanted,
but in many ways this is business as usual.
And so how can the US economy steer its way through? And how can markets
react and how can companies build through what continues to be a pork-filled spending
package as it has been for decades, right? And I think the answer we're going to come
back to again is just continue to dominate on the frontier of technology, continue to
win in AI and space
and all of the companies that Elon is already working on.
So Elon is kind of refocusing on the thing that actually
helps.
He had already shared something like a week ago
that he said, I'm not convinced we can solve our problems
politically through the government.
We need to just grow GDP.
Exactly.
And so if GDP does start growing at 5%, 10% Because of all the technology that folks are working on building right now
Well, then that probably actually does start solving the the budget deficit unless we just find ways to spend more pork
Who knows hopefully or filled hold it in hold it in so
Featuring an inner and illustrates uncle Sam with pockets turned inside out
That was the cover story of America's most influential news
magazine in March of 1972.
Sounding the alarm about a debt crisis has been great for
companies shilling gold coins and flashy financial products,
but has made smart, sincere people look silly when nothing
happened. Financial markets equivalent of Y2K.
So why are several people suddenly worried? Because the math
is getting daunting with interest on the debt blowing past one trillion dollars annually and
Washington acting recklessly even people who have issued past warnings deserve a second or third or fourth hearing and they link to something which I'm sure is
Someone who has warned many to any time so hedge fund manager Ray Dalio does have something to sell his book
How countries go broke out Tuesday. Tuesday yes so he launched this this
morning cool it's available now let's let's invite him on the show it'd be
great to have him yeah but the world's 172nd richest person is hardly staking
his reputation on royalties and his arguments are compelling again Ray
Dalio I actually did a I made a YouTube video about like like when is a like how would you quantitatively define kind of a like a
fake guru someone who talks about business but doesn't actually like like
what is the difference between like an entrepreneur or an investor that just
get talks or hat writes a book versus media is their only thing. And Dahlio, you can kind of,
yes, he has incentives around his business,
but he does not make the majority of his money
from his book.
And so you could, like the optimistic case
is that his book is less about just selling copies.
It's more about actually
Like sharing his worldview or or trying to influence like his broader business
Even even maybe like hiring at Bridgewater could be more of a more of a needle mover for him than just selling copies So I think it's worth investigating
Dalio told Bloomberg he gives America's America three years or take a year, to avert an economic heart attack.
Peter Orzog, chief executive of investment bank,
Lazard and former budget director, wrote last week,
those who bemoaned the unsustainability
of deficit spending and debt levels
back during his time in government
seem to cry wolf a lot.
Now he's worried too
because the wolf is lurking much closer to our door. The package.
Yeah, so this is what Elon was alluding to.
The package of tax and spending measures sent to the Senate
now officially called the One Big Beautiful Bill Act
could act like budgetary wolf bait.
It would add around three trillion to debt levels
over the next decade compared with existing estimates
and five trillion if certain temporary features
were made permanent according to the Nonpartisan Committee
for Responsible Federal Budget.
For perspective, the federal interest this fiscal year
already will be more than the defense budget
and more than Medicaid, disability insurance
and food stamps combined.
Moreover, the Congressional Budget Office estimates
assume that the bond market will not only tolerate
a surge in spending
but become more relaxed about it with lower yields. Consider if the yield on the 10-year
Treasury note stayed at today's level around 4.4% for the coming decade. Then the CRFB estimates it
would add another 1.3 trillion in interest costs over that period. And what if yield surge instead
in a vicious cycle? JP Morgan Chief and absolute Chad Jamie Diamond warned on Friday of the
Consequences you're going to see a crack in the bond market. Okay. Yeah, so yeah. Yeah, it's interesting. I feel like I like to
We should try to pull up. No what he was saying exactly
Before and after that because I'm assuming that it adds some important context. Please. Yeah, go pull it up
I'm just thinking about like throughout my life there's been whole news cycles around
this idea that the defense budget is so massive and it's this massive part of the federal
budget overall or Medicare and Medicaid and disability insurance.
These are huge, huge costs, and they drive the majority
of the federal budget.
And now we're at a point where people would always talk
about the defense budget or Medicaid as being maybe wasteful
or maybe unoptimized, but at least you're getting something
for that, you know?
Like with those budgets, even if it's 60% or 50%
or 20% less efficient than it could be,
at least you're getting something.
With interest, you're getting nothing.
You're just paying the debt, and that's it.
It's like, it doesn't even have the opportunity
to create any value or security or healthcare for someone.
Like it's pure just paying back for something
that you bought a long time ago.
After Jamie Dimon said you're gonna see a crack
in the bond market, okay, he says,
and this is why the journal didn't want to include it,
because he says, after stating this quote,
Dimon emphasized that this bond market fracture
is inevitable, though he is uncertain
whether it will happen in six months or six years.
He warned regulators directly that you are going to panic,
but he himself would not panic and expects JP Morgan Chase
to manage through it.
He also highlighted that current bank regulations restrict
banks' ability to hold bonds, limiting their capacity
to provide liquidity during market disruptions, which
could exacerbate the crack in the bond market.
So anyways, he's seemingly frustrated
with the new spending bill and spending broadly.
Yep.
The Wall Street Journal continues,
yet the bond market isn't exactly collapsing,
even if 30 year yields recently hit a post-crisis high.
So who are you gonna believe?
Millions of fairly relaxed investors
or some wealthy pundits?
Another hedge fund manager, Paul Tudor Jones,
calls the paradox an economic kayfabe, a term
from professional wrestling.
Let's give it up for professional wrestling.
We love professional wrestling on this show.
Round of applause.
WWE, if you're listening, I'm ready to get in the ring.
Let's do it.
Let's do it.
We could be the absolute, it's heel that everyone hates.
We'd be like, these slick tech bros,
like that tech, and then we just get destroyed
by like the-
Logan Paul.
Yeah, Logan Paul.
Great.
So he says, those who know that the numbers
aren't sustainable are happy to suspend belief
while the show continues.
Treasury Secretary Scott Bissette reiterated
this past weekend that the US will never default on its debt,
but it doesn't have to.
Rapid inflation would accomplish the same thing
if the Fed had to ride to the rescue through a measure called
fiscal dominance.
What is the tipping point for the bond market
to go for mild anxiety?
Why do they name bad things something so cool?
Sounds great.
We do have fiscal dominance former IMF
chief economist Kenneth Rogoff an authority on debt crises explained in
April that they are never a metal a matter of simple arithmetic almost every
country default either through outright default or high inflation occurs long
before debt calculus forces it to despite Dahlia's guesstimate, knowing when doomsayers
will be proven right is impossible. Consider Stein's Law. If something cannot go on forever,
it will stop. Contrary to urban legend, that line wasn't uttered by Ben Stein, who played
the boring economics teacher in Ferris Bueller's Day Off, but by his father, Herb, an actual
economist. Life comes at you fast. Very rough.
Well, if you're losing sleep over the tumult
in the public markets and the global economy,
you gotta get an eight sleep.
They have a Pod 5 Ultra, a five year warranty,
30 night risk free trial, free returns, fast shipping.
Are you about to tease what I'm going to do?
Yeah, yeah, I was going there.
I mean, we can tell you.
I mean, I don't know if we should riff it out.
John's had a good bit lately that eight sleeps are just
so comfortable that they actually, they should test them
on animals.
Well, recently, I've been doing some animal testing at home,
actually, with my eight sleep.
With your own dog.
Yes.
So my dog, obviously grumpy because there's now
kids around the house.
And I think he's getting less attention.
And also, he's just a grumpy old 10-year Newfoundland but I come home and he's always sleeping on
the bed on my bed on my sleep and I and he's doing it more and I don't know if
it's correlation or causation but I think he loves the eight sleep yeah but
he sleeps right in the middle so he's getting like warm on one side cold on
the other side he wants good you can just roll to one side yeah yeah yeah so
yeah probably you can change the temperature on either side. Yeah perfectly adjusted once he learns to use the app
It's gonna be a game. So you should get him an iPad by the bed
Not proud of it, but I was up a little bit late, but I kind of slept in a little bit
I bet I got crushed on the on the regulation the consistency consistency 82 82
Okay, would you guys I got an 87? Oh, I just need to put a little bit seven straight nights of okay
Let's see of sleep dominance. Yeah, sleep. We'll see you tomorrow and video earnings
so
From the Wall Street Journal and videos business is booming despite being shut out of China.
We've been covering this for a while.
Jensen's been running around the globe
building AI factories everywhere on an absolute tear.
And most recently, the Nvidia shares surged 5% after hours
as quarterly revenue surged to a record 44 billion.
Let's hear it for Jensen.
I think you should hit the gong for Jensen.
I mean, 44 billion. Why don't you hit it, John? I want to see you on the, can we get the gong cam pulled up?
Let's get the gong cam pulled up. Market clearing order inbound.
There we go. It just keeps ringing too. Yeah, yeah, it just keeps going. We hit the soundboard.
It's pretty quick. Soundboard's in and out in like. When we hit the soundboard, it's pretty quick.
Soundboard's in and out in like five seconds, but the gong, the real gong, you can't beat it. It's the best.
And so, Nvidia's business is still booming, even with the company effectively shut out of one of the world's largest markets for advanced AI chips.
The chip Titan has been on a roller coaster over the past few months after the Trump administration moved to limit sales on chips to the Chinese market.
We're having Aaron Ginn come on later in the show
and he'll break down kind of what's happening most recently
with Nvidia and chips.
He's the GPU whisperer.
You of course know him if you've been watching the show.
Nvidia, which has emerged as one of the most valuable
companies because its chips provide the computing power
needed in a global AI. Arms Race posted another quarter
of record-breaking sales on Wednesday.
Let's hear it for them.
Revenue reached 44 billion for its first fiscal quarter,
a 69% increase that was curtailed
by Washington's new limits on Chinese chip sales.
The company was unable to ship 2.5 billion
of its H20 processors and projected 8 billion in lost revenue for the current quarter due to ship 2.5 billion of its H20 processors and projected $8 billion in lost revenue for the current quarter
due to the policy.
So you lose a flesh wound, John.
You lose $8 billion in revenue, which is high margin revenue,
too.
We're not talking Amazon here.
And you still put up $44 billion,
and your stock goes up 5%.
It's fantastic.
Nvidia's longer term outlook in China
remains a major question mark the company admitted
on Wednesday that has limited options.
The significant thing here,
Nvidia surpassed Metta in quarterly revenue.
Yeah.
Wow.
That's insane.
Insane.
Yeah.
Yeah and I mean,
yeah absolute dominance of the Nvidia Cuda ecosystem,
the number of developers on Nvidia has been surging,
as we saw in Mary Meeker's Trends report.
And the company seems very, very well run.
At the same time, Dylan Patel, George Hots, putting the screws to ARM.
ARM seems to be, or AMD seems to be catching up,
seems to be taking that feedback and trying to solve some of the problems
that have been keeping developers off of that platform.
Even though the cost per flop has been quite good on AMD, the ecosystem hasn't been quite
there.
But obviously everyone there is well aware of the opportunity of taking a little bit
of NVIDIA's market share.
And so this is an interesting takeaway.
NVIDIA credited its new Blackwell gaming processors
part of the same family as its current lineup of AI chips
that are seeing red hot demand.
Blackwell for gaming is a home run.
Nvidia CFO, Collette Kress said in an interview,
for the current quarter,
Nvidia projected revenue of 45 billion plus or minus 2%
compared with Analyst's view of 45.84 billion.
The company expects meaningful decrease in data center
revenue from China as a result of the H20 ban.
And so this is the interesting takeaway
from Ben Thompson's post earnings analysis.
So he said, he is really focused on the difference
between the transition from training buildouts to inference
because training, we've seen the scaling law there,
we kind of know the race to get a build a 20K cluster
to a 100K cluster and that's pretty,
it's pretty easy to forecast because the CEO
of the foundation model company comes out and says,
we're gonna build a 100K cluster
and you know they're gonna buy that many GPUs, right?
But the inference is much more consumer demand based
and it's always unclear, these products seem great,
but how are they actually gonna get installed?
How many tokens are they actually gonna be generating?
And then what is the trade off within those tokens
of reasoning and heavy test time inference workloads
versus more like lower volume workloads.
And so Ben Thompson says, last year I expressed concern that inference workloads were not
increasing as a proportion of NVIDIA sales.
So he says, it's worth noting though that while the company reported that 40% of its
chips were used for inference, that is the same percentage as last quarter.
So keep that in mind, 40% of NVIDIA chips
are used for inference, it's 60% training.
I think that's the breakdown when he's talking
about AI specifically.
Granted, that is a large increase in absolute terms
by and large matching NVIDIAs and revenue increase.
And of course, training large models requires ever more GPUs
but the arrival of meaningful AI workloads
will be marked by an increasing percentage of chips
being used for inference,
assuming of course that inference workloads
will be run on Nvidia chips.
And there was always a question of like,
maybe you train the model on a big Nvidia cluster,
and then you bake it down so small
that it runs on the iPhone locally,
or it runs on a CPU or it runs,
I mean, unlikely that that would ever happen.
But people have been able to distill models down so far that you can inference them on other on other chips
That might be more affordable
But that really hasn't happened because of the kuda kuda ecosystem and it feels like in general
Most of the inference has stayed with Nvidia and we see that in their earnings
But yeah now you have the TPU and that is Artemis. Yep. And and so Amazon has has
Tranium and inferentia,
so they have a training chip and an inference chip.
There's different.
Inferentia.
I think it's Inferentia,
but both of those are in-house chips,
but for most companies,
they're training and inferencing on NVIDIA.
And so on the latest NVIDIA earnings call,
Jensen Wong and Collette Kress,
the CEO and CFO of Nvidia,
were adamant that workloads for inference were skyrocketing. And here are a couple quotes that
Ben Thompson highlights. AI workloads have transitioned strongly to inference and AI
factory build-outs are driving significant revenue. This is from Collect Crest. And so
I think we were kind of asking the question of AI
factories.
Is that just some buzzword?
Is there a distinction there?
And what I'm hearing there is the start of AI factory
means more data center that's more
producing intelligence.
Exactly.
It's more inference-focused data center design,
which I think there are specific trade-offs
that you would need because you don't necessarily
need to run the same code over the entire data center.
You can shard it up a little bit more
because one inference job can be done on the single rack
and so maybe linking all the racks together
is not as important.
Potentially, I don't know enough
about how training breaks down.
You were right, by the way.
Amazon's in-house AI chips are called
AWS Tranium and AWS Inferentia.
Let's go.
Let's hear it from my memory.
Yeah.
Still got it.
Golden retriever mode.
Yeah.
Collette Crest went on to say,
"'We are witnessing a sharp jump in inference demand.
"'Open AI, Microsoft, and Google
"'are seeing step function leap in token generation,'
"'which we saw from that Satya Nadella quote.
Microsoft processed over 100 trillion tokens in Q1, a fivefold increase on a year over
year basis.
And so she's now quoting Satya talking about token increases.
Wong says, reasoning is compute intensive, requires hundreds to thousands of times more
tokens per task than previous one shot
inference.
Obviously, the difference between 4.0,
one-shotting something, and deep research
which says they're generating tokens for 20 minutes,
wildly different.
Reasoning models are driving step function surge
in inference demand.
AI scaling laws remain firmly intact, not only for training,
but now inference two requires massive scale compute. Juan goes on and says the first positive surprise is the step function demand in
increasing reasoning AI. I think it's fairly clear now that AI is going
through an exponential growth phase and reasoning AI really busted through
concerns about hallucination or its ability to really
solve problems and I think that a lot of people are crossing that barrier and
realizing how incredibly effective agentic AI is and reasoning AI
is so the number one so number one is inference reasoning and the exponential
growth there demand growth and so Ben goes on to say that is this is all great
news for Nvidia and specifically and AI generally but what was missing was an
update on that percentage
of chips used number. It certainly sounds like it's more than 40% but it would have
been nice to receive concrete information that that number has in fact increased. And
so I don't know how we get that information. We were talking to Dylan Patel on Friday.
We can kind of see if he has a way or a methodology
to try and figure that out.
But that does seem like a very, very interesting
question to ask.
It might just be too soon to really be shifting,
but maybe the plan for the next data center
and the order hasn't hit Nvidia yet
will be more inference focused and we could see a boom in,
and we could see a shift in that number.
And maybe it just hasn't shifted yet in Q1 revenue,
but it's totally possible that Jensen has visibility
into Q2, Q3, Q4 orders and sees that demand
is gonna go crazy for inference specifically.
We're gonna be looking at 10% training, 90% inference,
but he can't say that yet because the orders haven't actually been placed and he's only looking backwards
So he's trying to kind of like, you know message that inference is picking up
You can see a bunch of public data points from such a talking about this
But but nothing to report on the actual order side just yet
Yeah, and so he doesn't want to send the message that it's not moving because then people be like well, maybe it'll never move
So I don't know that's that's my reading on that.
Anyway, let's go into Nvidia's China argument.
So the upside surprise for investors
is that Nvidia is growing just fine
without selling to China.
Although, again, although Ben Thompson says,
I'm not sure this is a surprise.
Nvidia sales have not been gated by demand,
but by supply for a long time.
I remember you making this exact statement last year.
I got it from Alex Wang.
Yeah, why do we need to sell to China at all
when there is effectively their at least for at least.
Larry Ellison and Elon Musk are getting dinner with Jensen
saying, we will buy as many GPUs as you can produce.
They are good for the deal.
You can just sell to them.
But of course, if you're a global company,
like there is a shareholder responsibility
to have some diversity of revenue.
And then there's also that interesting argument of,
is there value to-
We want them to be dependent on American AI.
Yeah, yeah.
I mean, the hypocritical thing here is that we,
I'm sure we have said, hey, it's not fair
that TikTok
operates here while Facebook operate while Facebook can't operate there. Well, now, what
would we be talking about right now if Facebook was actually in China operating? Would we
be like they shouldn't be? Like, it's a powerful tool. It's beneficial. Google is there. That's
a beneficial tool. Why are we helping them? So we're in this weird dynamic where you can't say both.
You can't say it's wrong that companies are banned in China.
American companies are banned in China, but also the ones that aren't banned
should self-ban when, in fact, most American companies for a long time
have.
But this is all part of the shifting narrative
and the shifting geopolitical equation.
So it is unclear.
Ben goes into the timeline.
Somebody is quoting a post from the Financial Times.
Jensen saying, four years ago, Nvidia had 95% market share
in China.
Today it is only 50%, the CEO said,
criticizing the curbs for spurring rivals, such as Huawei,
to develop their own AI products.
Balding's World says, this has been the story of every CEO
that has gone to China. How do these
I'm not gonna say that how do these guys not get this story yet?
I won't call a big tech CEO an idiot. Yes
I can't do it
Anyway, so Ben says what I believe balding is referring to is the pattern in which a multinational moves manufacturing to China at the cost of a joint venture or technology transfer
only to see their market share competed away
by Chinese competitors benefiting from their technology.
This is of course the exact opposite
of what is happening to Nvidia.
The company's market share in China is falling
because of the US government's export controls,
not because of Chinese government policy.
Is that fully true?
I think so.
You don't think competition has a fact is factoring in there
at all?
No, no, no.
I mean, because if you look at the cost per flop,
Huawei ascend is more expensive on a per cycle basis.
And so if it was a truly free market,
you wouldn't see nearly as much demand for that.
And also, in the same way that demand for GPUs
uncapped in America, it's uncapped in China.
They want to build 100,000 cluster right now.
They would if they could.
Yeah.
They have the money.
But I'm sure in a supply constrained market, that would
naturally help other upstarts get market share, even if
they're selling an inferior product, but if customers can't
access.
You'd rather have a Huawei GPU than no GPUs at all.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, totally.
Moreover, unlike the vast majority
of other product categories,
one would in fact expect Nvidia to maintain its market share
if it were able to compete.
The difference of course is software.
Nvidia chips are not just about GPUs,
but about the CUDA software layer,
which has network effects.
Nvidia not only has the best performing chips on the market
matched at times in pure performance by AMD,
they also by far have the largest ecosystem
of software developers which makes them the first choice
for everyone if you can buy them.
Wang's argument is that not only does Nvidia
want to sell to China, but the US should want him
to sell to China too from the call.
This is a tough argument to make,
but let's hear him out. He says, China's AI moves on with or without US chips. him to sell the China too from the call. This is a tough argument to make, but you know,
let's hear him out.
He says, China's AI moves on with or without US chips.
It has to compete to train and deploy advanced models.
The question is whether China will have AI.
It already does.
The question is not whether or not China will have AI.
It already does.
The question is whether one of the world's largest AI markets
will run on American platforms.
Shielding Chinese chip makers from US competition only
strengthens them, abroad and weakens America's position. Export restrictions
have spurred China's innovation and scale. The AI race is not just about chips,
it's about which stack the world runs on. As that stack grows to include 6G and
quantum, US global infrastructure leadership is at stake and
yeah, it's interesting like is
like the the control over Facebook was so strong that
Because there's network effect But also all of the data is run on Facebook servers that Facebook really has an insane amount of control
When you hand over a GPU, obviously there are some value
to the ecosystem and the lock-in,
but you can kind of do whatever you want with it
because it's hardware and you're not maintaining
the software and gating access.
So there is something different there,
but I do take his point.
And so Ben Thompson goes on to say,
it seems clearly in America's interest for China
to have a dependency on US software,
on a US software platform.
Then again, it also seems to be in America's interest
to have China dependent on Taiwan for chips,
but that argument is not winning the day either.
This article goes on, it's great,
and you should subscribe to TechRe to get the full thing.
Anyway, we should subscribe to Jotetery to get the full thing. Anyway,
we should go to this Bloomberg piece that Ben highlights a little bit. NVIDIA's open
ecosystem to rival chipmakers is in global push.
They're opening AI ecosystem to these chipmakers, yeah.
So NVIDIA Corp Chief Executive Officer Jensen Wong outlined plans to let customers deploy
rival chips and data centers built
around its technology, a move that acknowledges the growth
in-house semiconductor deployment development
by major clients such as Microsoft and Amazon.
On Monday, Wong kicked off Computex in Taiwan, Asia's
biggest electronics forum, dedicating much of his nearly
two-hour presentation to celebrating the work
of local supply chain partners.
Size Gong for a two hour presentation.
Oh, OK.
Yeah.
Because it sounds crazy, the fact
that he's going and opening up this conference
and giving a two hour presentation.
It's pretty awesome.
But then I remember we come up here and do three hours a day.
Every day.
Well, he should come to the show with us sometime.
Do the whole show.
Yeah, let's do the whole show.
We'd love to have you.
Imagine ripping some timeline with Jensen.
We'll make it happen.
It's going'd be electric.
But his key announcement was the new NVLink Fusion system
that allows the building of more customized
artificial intelligence infrastructure,
combining invidious high-speed links with semiconductors
from other providers for the first time.
And so this is a little bit of what we're seeing
where there's now chip startups that are building chips
for specific use cases.
So an example would be like, etch,
they're baking the transformer architecture
down onto silicon, but you could even look at Apple silicon
as something that might benefit
from the NVLink Fusion system potentially.
I don't know if it's actually-
Yeah, this to me is they're saying, hey, we know you hyperscalers are building your own chips.
We still want you to be dependent on our software, even if you're going to plug in.
Ecosystem, yep.
And so to date, NVIDIA has only offered complete computer systems built with its own components.
So you buy all the chips and all the racks and everything wires together very nicely.
And that is very important for data interchange and especially while you're training.
This change gives data center customers more flexibility and allows a measure of
competition while still keeping Nvidia technology at the center.
NVLink Fusion products will provide customers the option to use their own central
processing units with Nvidia's AI chips.
Their CPUs now pair with Nvidia's GPUs or pair Nvidia's AI chips, their CPUs, now pair with Nvidia's GPUs, or pair Nvidia's silicon
with another company's AI accelerator,
so you can kind of do the inverse
and bring up a specific accelerator
for a specific use case.
Santa Clara, California-based Nvidia,
they love to throw in the location of these companies,
that's very funny.
Oh yeah, everybody associates Nvidia with Santa Clara. I guess. They're trying to shore up its place at the heart of these companies, it's very funny. Oh yeah, everybody associates NVIDIA with Santa Clara.
I guess.
They're trying to shore up its place
at the heart of the AI boom and keep the surge going
in the face of concern that spending on data centers
isn't sustainable.
The company relies heavily on a select group
of giant cloud providers known as hyperscalers
for much of the revenue,
and all of those hyperscalers are, of course,
thinking about building their own chips,
because if they're going to be
ordering so many the margins are so high why not just go to TSMC directly and so
this bit of news this is back to Ben Thompson this bit of news from Computex
two weeks ago is a reminder that CUDA isn't Nvidia's only moat the company is
also dominant in networking particularly the link the ability to link
multiple chips together so that they function as a single large chip.
The key to this is so, to the so-called scale up
capabilities and the link.
And so Nvidia will license its chip to chip C2C technology
to enable custom configurations.
For example, Grace Hopper was an Nvidia ARM CPU
and an Nvidia Hopper GPU.
Oh, I didn't realize that Grace Blackwell was an Nvidia ARM CPU and an Nvidia Hopper GPU.
Oh, I didn't realize that.
Grace Blackwell is an Nvidia ARM CPU
and two Nvidia Blackwell GPUs.
If you don't want that configuration, you're out of luck,
or at least you were,
because now you can license Nvidia's C2C technology,
and license seems important there,
to make any number of combinations,
and it doesn't have to be Nvidia chips
that are being combined, although Nvidia is obviously confident that you'll
choose their GPUs because yes they are the best in the business. Fascinating.
Anyway we should move on to this Nike story in the information because there's
a very very interesting chart again from Ben Thompson that I thought everyone
should be thinking about in any of their business. So the big news is, this is from the information
in May 21st, so it's a little bit of an older article,
but Nike announced that they are going to sell on Amazon
for the first time since 2019.
So it's been six years off.
So six years ago-
When they went all in on D2C.
Yeah.
They really got the D2C bug.
They did.
And they said, they read the thought pieces,
they read the newsletters.
Yep, cut out the middle man.
Yeah, they wanted, they were pissed at the middle man.
They tried to cut him out.
And now they're making a deal with the middle man.
And so six years after Nike stopped selling
through Amazon in favor of going direct to customers
through its own stores and websites,
the two companies are getting back together.
I'm sure it was super rough because tons of people
probably went to Amazon every day,
typed in Nike and just got Nike knockoffs, right?
Because they were just used to buying on Amazon.
Amazon plans to start selling Nike products
with supplies coming directly from the company.
An Amazon spokesperson confirmed Wednesday,
winning back one of the world's best known brands
as a victory for Amazon, which has long tried to expand its fashion business by wooing skeptical brands
Nike's deal with Amazon meanwhile comes as the sneaker maker is trying to revive slumping sales
So Amazon is going to buy Nike for buy from Nike for the first time since 2019
And this is this is all an effort to revive slumping sales now
and this is all an effort to revive slumping sales. Now,
Nike's revenue is down a ton.
In the most recent quarter, it fell to 11.3 billion,
down 9% from the same period a year earlier,
while wholesale revenue fell 7% to 6.2 billion.
And so, Ben Thompson calls this Nike's disastrous pivot.
He says, there's a lot that has been written by Nike struggles
over the last few years, including a LinkedIn post
by former Nike's executive.
And he outlines three key mistakes here.
The elimination of categories like running, basketball,
et cetera, a massive deprioritization of wholesale
in favor of direct consumer sales,
and a shift away from brand marketing
to direct response.
Which is funny because trying to avoid middlemen
in business is rough.
It's like, oh, we're gonna have our own retail stores.
And it's like, okay, well, you have a landlord.
So he's your middleman now.
And so, yeah, the middleman analogy.
Are you selling online?
Yeah. Okay, welcome, meet Mark Zuckerberg. He's gonna be your new middleman now. And so, yeah, the middleman analogy. What are you selling online? Yeah.
Okay, welcome, meet Mark Zuckerberg.
He's gonna be your new middleman.
It's like trying to avoid the middleman
is very difficult, right?
It's interesting because the middleman analogy
has actually worked just fine.
And Ben Thompson has this cool chart
of the CPG value chain and shows that Procter & Gamble
literally does not cut out the middleman.
In fact, they leverage the middleman and they're doing fine.
So what does Procter & Gamble do?
They do research and development and they do manufacturing,
but they don't handle the middleman.
So they don't handle logistics or retail,
but they do dominate shelf space with trade marketing
and then marketing, like
brand marketing. And so CBG companies like P&G harvested most of the value by integrating
research and development, manufacturing, marketing, and shelf space. Raw materials, retail, and
logistics were modularized and commoditized. D2C companies meanwhile saw research and development
as increasingly unnecessary and over-served markets, as I noted in the context of Dollar Shave Club, razors are a particularly salient example of over-serving.
And shelf space on the internet was effectively infinite.
Their goal was to integrate marketing, retail, and manufacturing.
And so the theoretical, if you scroll down, the theoretical D2C value chain is no R&D,
just manufacturing, no logistics, but yes, retail.
You don't have shelf space, but you do the marketing.
And so Ben Thompson says, the problem though,
is that marketing on the internet was entirely different
than the analog marketing
that previously dominated the CPG industry.
They're being good at advertising,
whether it be coupons in the Sunday paper or television ads during the evening news, was mostly a matter of the abilityG industry. They're being good at advertising whether it be coupons in the Sunday
paper or television ads during the evening news was mostly a matter of the ability to spend,
which was itself a matter of scale. Digital marketing though didn't really work at scale,
at least relative to TV. In fact, it only made sense if you could target consumers with advertising
and track how it performed. On the one hand, this was a critical factor for making D2C companies viable.
The advantage of targeted advertising is that
it takes a lot less money relative to TV
to reach customers who are actually
interested in your product.
The problem though is that getting good
at targeted advertising requires massive amounts
of both research and development to build the capability
and inventory across a sufficiently large customer base
to make the whole effort worthwhile.
In the end, no D2C company was actually good at marketing.
They outsourced it to Google and Facebook,
which both had the inventory and the capability
to spend billions necessary to develop
sophisticated targeted advertising.
The problem is that in the process of depending on Google
and Facebook for marketing, the D2C companies
gave up their planned integration in the value chain
and the associated profits to Facebook and Google.
And so the actual D2C value chain is, they're not a manufacturer, they don't do retail,
they don't do logistics, they don't do marketing.
Instead, they just do R&D and ad inventory.
And so the actual customer is just completely owned by Facebook.
And that's why you see a lot of D2C companies that have really, really struggled.
So the actual integrated players, Google and Facebook, integrate customers and research and development
to dominate marketing.
D2C may have online retail operations,
but that is a modularized and thus commoditized part
of the value chain.
And oh yeah, he calls that brand list,
the D2C kind of like roll up
that had a whole bunch of products.
And he said, here's the problem for DTC companies,
Facebook is really better at finding them customers
than anyone else.
That means the best return on investment
for acquiring customers is on Facebook,
where DTC companies are competing
against all the other DTC companies
and the mobile game developers
and the incumbent CPG companies
and everyone else for user attention.
That means the real winner is Facebook,
while DTC companies are slowly choked
by ever increasing customer acquisition costs.
Facebook is the company that makes the space work,
and so it's only natural that Facebook is harvesting
most of the profitability.
Yeah, it's such an interesting dynamic
where Meta is incentivized to make customer acquisition,
like basically extract as much of the profit from the ecosystem as possible without putting the companies out of business
Yeah, right. And so it's this infinite dance. Yeah, I mean that that's actually a very simple equation
It's take all the net profits
But not any further. Yeah, so that the company can get you to go but the equity value is effectively zero
And this is why when revenue is very high and Ridge was on the show one or two times ago,
we were talking about how historically I've seen
DTC brands benefit from net new platforms.
Like a lot of brands exploded
from cheap advertising on TikTok, right?
If it seems like LLMs are an interesting
new acquisition channel, still relatively small channel for a lot of brands,
but it's possible when ads hit LLMs that they're cheaper and that could drive, you know, a period of where brands say,
hey, let's like shift a bunch of spend over here because it's, you know, really efficient.
But who knows, Facebook is still the best marketing channel in the history of mankind.
It's the second best, in fact.
The number one, obviously, AdQuer.
AdQuer.
Out-of-home advertising made easy and measurable.
Say goodbye to the headaches of out-of-home advertising.
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and data to enable efficient, seamless ad buying
across the globe.
But seriously, Nike is the king of billboards.
Yeah, they really are.
I mean, they used to be.
They used to be.
And the billboards were fantastic
and everyone remembers a Nike billboard.
No one remembers a Nike direct response ad on Instagram.
Like I'm sure people clicked on them
and I'm sure they drove some sales
but the economic equation just didn't quite work.
Yeah, well we walked by some billboards today
that are funny.
There is a huge billboard campaign across LA
called Just Blood. Oh yeah.
I'm talking about...
Basically it's a campaign to prove that Elizabeth Holmes is innocent.
So there are effectively...
I think there's got to be 20 billboards up around LA.
So I'm interested to follow along with this campaign. If you go to JustBlood.com, it's quite a lot of AI generated assets.
And it's kind of an angry website, but I'm interested to dive deeper there.
Going back to some of Nike's errors, they deprioritized wholesale.
And then the big one was a shift away from brand marketing to direct response marketing.
So when people think about why they love Nike,
maybe sometimes it's about the product,
but a big part of it is how the Nike brand
has made them feel over time.
And it's really hard to make people emotional
through direct response advertising,
because direct response advertising
is like problem,
solution, it's not about the emotion.
And when I think about the moments in my life
where I've paid attention to Nike
and been made to feel anything by Nike,
it was these sort of bigger brand campaigns.
And brand marketing does provide a halo effect
that can reduce overall customer acquisition costs.
Because if you see some Nike
campaign that inspires you or makes you emotional. And then
you see a direct response ad later, you're more inclined to
actually click through and so big miss by john Donahoe to
just sort of not realize that so much of Nike's dominance was
around the brand. The other thing is like, you know,
you look at these upstart players in apparel,
things like Rory, Aloe, Lou Lemon, they're all,
you know, we talked about this on the show before,
Nike missed wellness, right?
They missed this trend that a huge amount of the population,
people, you know, consumers with a lot of discretionary income stopped seeing themselves as athletes and started seeing themselves as
You know yogis people that meditate people that eat healthy, but don't necessarily see themselves as I'm an athlete so big miss
That I believe they're still trying to actually get tapped into but yeah
well, it seems like they're pivoting back
to the more traditional strategy.
And probably we'll see some refocusing on brand marketing,
because they'll just be everywhere.
And they won't try and cut out the middleman anymore.
They'll just be everywhere.
And hopefully we'll see some amazing Nike ads coming up
soon.
Anyway, we have our first guest of the show,
Doug Philippone from Snowpoint Ventures joining us.
We'll let you take the intro.
Perfect.
I'll be right back.
Doug, how are you doing today?
Let's bring him in here.
I'll give a little bit of background on Doug
in the meantime.
He has a degree from West Point,
spent 17 years in the military,
and then another 17 years at Palantir,
building the defense business from nothing
into a global defense lead, so we're excited to talk to him about that and it'll be very
interesting to cover the Ukraine drone attack which we talked a little bit
about yesterday but there's a lot more that we can dig into there so Doug how
are you doing today? Great thanks for having me. Thanks so much for joining. I'd
love to kick it off with just a little bit of your background first, and then we
can go into the latest news in Ukraine.
Yeah, that's great.
Yeah, so I've been on a life journey.
I've done a lot.
Everything has been hard.
I think about everything that I've done in my life.
People have told me I couldn't do it,
and I sort of thrive in that world
It's awesome. That's always the case, right? Yeah. Well look nothing nothing worth doing is, you know is easy
Yeah, no, I think when I was a young man, I was just I went to college for just a minute and then I was like
This is stupid. I'm in the hamster wheel
And I said I wanted to join the army and went into the Rangers as a list of guy and then, you know,
got into West Point a little bit later.
While I was there, I studied math.
All my friends made fun of me.
They're like, what are you gonna do with math?
And I definitely got the last laugh there.
That's amazing.
Were they just saying like, like a computer nerd type jokes
or?
No, it was just like, I mean, basically you gotta remember I'm a little bit older,
but I, uh, in the nineties it was like,
it was before the modern internet era and so forth. And so, um, you know,
computer science was like a hobby and more than a real thing. You know,
the internet, you know, was just coming out while I was in school. And so it was,
um, it was just like the idea of like, you're going to be a high school math
teacher. And that's like the, that's the end
of what math is for.
And so look at my focus was,
I'm gonna go be an army officer,
I'm gonna go back in the Rangers
and that's gonna be my career.
But, you know, I did six tours in the war and got hurt.
And so, you know, at that point I went back to grad school
and then found a job in the very early days of Palantir.
And literally like the only reason I got hired was they were trying to start
their defense business. And, um,
they sort of thought that like a terrorist hunter mathematician was a really cool
thing. I sort of found like the perfect first job.
Yeah. How did, uh, walk me through how you actually met the Palantir folks?
What was the first day on the job like? Who was around the table?
Was Sean Sankar there?
Car, who else was involved?
That was fascinating.
So back in the day, it used to be Carp,
you know, it's like maybe 50 people there.
You know, they had a product.
But the interesting thing,
so one of my very best childhood friends, Dan Cervelli,
he was one of the best engineers at Palantir period.
He was like an alternative student. I say alternative, he's like
older again, his bachelor's when he was like 32 or something. And he was interviewing at Facebook
and Palantir. He's like, Doug, you got to see this, you got to come over. And then he had just joined.
And so when I saw like the first demo, even though it was all Intel based, it was very clear.
I just went back to my time as a commander in the Rangers.
It was just, I was just, I was convinced that if I had this, I
could have done everything better.
And I really was, you know, a lot of my friends were still going back to the
war and getting wounded or killed.
And so it was just, for me, it was about purpose.
You know, I think you probably, you probably know a lot of Palantir people,
but we're all like in this, you know, strange family that is
Palantir. Everyone is uniquely driven for a sense of purpose. And for me, it was
like I wanted to do something where I could give back. And if I, you know, if
I'm honest, if I would have stayed in versus obviously I was hurt, it didn't
matter. But like I have easily contributed honest, if I would have stayed in versus obviously I was hurt so it didn't matter, but like I have easily contributed a thousand times what I would have if I
just stayed in towards the, you know, towards, towards the
issues. So I feel quite proud of that.
So while you were in the service and you see what Palantir can
do, could you give us a more concrete example of like what
you're thinking? I mean, I often give, there's a little bit of a meme online like what does Palantir actually do in
the, and the example that I often give is like think about if there's IEDs all
over the place, some of those IEDs are gonna have C4, some of them are gonna
have nails, and if you put those all on a map you can decide, you can start to see
clusters of trends just on a map, and then you can decide okay there's a bomb
maker in this town we should go and investigate that.
That's the most concrete example I've been able
to come up with that I've read just from the literature,
but as someone who was there, what was exciting to you?
Yeah, I mean, that's definitely like,
that would be the 2010 version.
Sure.
You know, just sort of like, you know, at the core,
it's like, they make a software architecture
that helps combine a myriad of data systems.
So like all these legacy systems, if you think of the defense world, all these different areas,
whether it's commercial businesses or the military, the larger they are, the more that they all look
the same. The military might be the most complex, but it's all similar in the sense that you have
a myriad of legacy technology that's
built and modeled around information and capabilities at a certain time and
Course of history. It's like hard to get rid of those old systems So if you look at the IT infrastructure of the Department of Defense
It's like you have old mainframes on one end that's modeled certain things
You know on the edge and then you you have the most exquisite AI sensor
that's real-time data and computer vision on the other end.
And as a commander, what you're trying to do
is assimilate the real world in real time.
So it's like you're looking at a map,
you're looking at all of your feeds
from either videos or satellite footage
to understand what's going on, what's changing.
And then if you're ever gonna go,
like to understand what's going on in the real world. So if you're ever going to go, to understand what's going on in the real world.
You're understanding things and you're making
decisions based off that data that you
might have to go without Palantir,
you have to go 100 different places.
That was like the existing paradigm that we were
replacing is how do you,
if you, an old school analyst or an operator would have
to literally go individually search
a hundred different systems and use an individual tool for each one of those systems that may or
may not be good. And then they would put all that stuff in their mind and they write it back on
PowerPoint. And then that's how you, and you'd have no legacy search and discovery. You would be
violating all of the like handling of the data, you lose all the security of it,
and it's just on a flat file and you're emailing around.
I can't tell you how long that was
the paradigm of the military and most corporations.
Can you talk about the practical challenges of that?
There's this concept of the fog of war,
and I imagine you experienced this on
your different tours where you have a bunch of data,
but parsing through it and fully understanding.
And I can imagine in many ways Palantir,
if you can more quickly and accurately process information
from more sources, you can reduce that sense of sort
of unknowing that seems to be historically, you know, common across every different type of battlefield?
Yeah, no, I mean, the short answer is like,
it will save your life,
and you can have a successful mission or not.
I mean, the historic vignettes that are like pretty powerful
for regular people to understand is like,
as the military would plan a mission to go in and out,
like forget about the real time stuff
that is obviously very relevant,
or just like knowing what's going on
and how strategic things are moving around
and if someone's attacking you,
like you have to have that side of it,
which counselor does a lot of.
But like from a historic perspective,
once you're planning a mission,
to be able to understand the full history,
if you're staring at a piece of dirt,
or you have like, hey, we think the bad guys are at this compound or there's a military a legitimate military target that you're gonna strike
To understand the whole corpus of data that you may know about that for the last ten years
so to give an example of like, you know the failures of
The Afghan War or Iraq for that matter,
just using the American experience,
but you can do this just about any war,
is that as units would go in and out of a region,
you would have these learning experiences
that would last three to six to 12 months.
And then they would, at best,
they would put all the information that they learned,
whether it's like, say I went on a mission
and I interviewed somebody and I took fingerprints,
I took pictures, I would write a little note that say,
here's the human terrain of this area,
this is what the people care about, here are the projects,
here's where we did a mission,
they usually do an after action mission report about it.
And you put on a hard drive and then the new commander
would come in, you hand it to them.
And then they would probably look at it for two seconds.
And I mean, that's literally how it was done for 20 years.
And you're like, how can this with all of our might
and all of our superiority in every way
and the money that we're throwing at this,
why does it suck so bad?
Anyway, so that was, you know,
Palantir's mission was to like,
how do we change that paradigm?
So that, you know, the interesting thing, if I give one of the compelling things, we
did this with the British, you know, with, I don't even know if I'm allowed to say this,
but think of their most sexy unit, the Brits.
And they were going into a specific area.
And what they didn't realize over the past five years,
they had every time they flew a helicopter into a region,
you know, they have this host of analysts
that are like, they work with helicopter pilots
and they do mensurated graphics.
So they understand the exact perfect
helicopter landing zone for the mission.
And what they didn't realize was that each new team
would come in and they would always do their expert analysis and then always pick the same exact place.
And so then all of a sudden when we integrated all this data for them, they saw for the first
time, holy cow, every single time for the last five years that we've gone into this
valley, we always landed in the same place.
So it ends up being like a very easy, low tech thing for the enemy to put a bomb at
the middle of the HLZ and
they're like anytime the Americans come just blow up the bomb. But that's like they call that
knowledge management which is like that's a little bit old school but it's like that was a very
unsolved problem forever. And then now if you get to like real time what we're doing now it's like
okay well now you're taking real time signals, intelligence, you're taking real time video feeds where you're
overlaying what the video of the surveillance aircraft will be
looking at. And then with the entire corpus of information,
you would know about the area. So as soon as you're looking at a
piece of ground, you're like 10, 10 reports pop up of everything,
you know, about it, you immediately have situational
awareness, that'll help say help you stay alive. That's really
important.
Can you tell us the story of a D SIGs and the distributed system?
Like how that played out and like the loss at any level of detail that you
think is appropriate.
No, I don't know. I mean, look, that was my personal Vietnam, except I won.
So it's like, it's okay. It's okay.
Congratulations.
Yeah. Think of a different long war that's that somebody won and all, and that'll be it. But it's like, it's okay. It's not like that. Congratulations. Yeah, think of a different long war
that somebody won and that'll be it.
But it was like 10 years of my life.
Wow, 10 years.
Yeah, it was wild.
And I will tell you that there's a lot of times
when I just didn't think or win.
I literally flew up to New York one time
and rode in the car with Dr. Karp.
And I was like, sir, do you still want me to do this?
You know, because it's like, I don't know if there's like any amount of hard work or expertise that is going to allow us to win.
And he had this like great moment of leadership where it was like, um, if any
soldiers are still asking, this is maybe 2012, I forget exactly, but he was like,
if any soldiers still want this,
it's worth fighting for, it's too important. And, you know, it was just that moment of leadership
that I needed. So I got out of the car and, you know, and then like just a, you know, a few,
maybe the next week I had some massive win on Capitol Hill. But it was, I mean, look,
I credit that, I mean, it's the reason I started Snowpoint and, um, like the, the
modern defense tech landscape exists because Palantir was able to break that
paradigm.
And, you know, if you think of the new executive orders, kind of like really
focusing on, uh, acquisition reform.
So, you know, it was like an old nineties thing.
Um, the lawsuit was about this, but there's an old 90s.
It was called the Federal Acquisition Streamlining Act,
I think, in 94.
But it's during the Clinton days.
I don't know how old you guys are,
but it was basically there were these scandals
about the $400 toilet seat and the $200 hammers.
That sounds cheap by modern standards.
Every day I see a soap dispenser.
There was a soap dispenser that was like $50,000 or something.
No, but it's the same BS. So the interesting thing is, so before
1994, and I might be screwing this year up by a year or two,
but before then, there was this old term called milspec. And the
milspec idea was that the preference of the US government
was to buy custom things as the priority.
And so all of those scandals turned it on its head and created this idea where you have
a commercial item preference.
And so this is sort of like the, when I talk about the invention or say that the start
of the modern defense tech era, it was the winning of the
lawsuit, which I think was 2016 or so. It was the first time
since a lot of in passing it actually been enforced. So our
lawsuit was like the precedent setting thing. And all we were
finding out they have like, there's protests all the time,
like almost every major contract gets protested. So that part of
it wasn't unique, What was part of that
was unique about this was we weren't it was a called a pre award protest. And so normally
a protest is like somebody else wins and then Lockheed gets pissed at Raytheon and then
they just argue about who's better. And then the court decides. Our protest was that we
thought we were getting screwed by the army, which we were,
where they specifically wrote the contract, where I had put so much pressure on the army
to expose all the flaws of D6.
Like D6 was simultaneously failing while they spent billions of dollars on it,
while over half of the army's brigade commanders were requesting urgently Palantir.
So there's this huge battle where, you know, it was like units would request Palantir,
the Army would block it, I would go to Congress, expose it, and then there was just this back
and forth.
And I was like enemy number one for years.
And this is where all my war fighting skills came into play.
It was like, in many ways, fighting bureaucrats was just as hard as fighting terrorists.
And so I had that like, it was good that I had the ability.
This is why people call you a boardroom general, right?
Yeah, I was on the front lines though.
But anyways, yeah, so in this particular case, so the lawsuit, it was interesting because
this is another experience of like, you know, between Peter Thiel and Carp, it was like,
they trusted me. And I couldn't have done it like, it's very unique in the Palantir world that
like, they would that everyone said we're gonna lose period. And I think like
statistically, they weren't wrong. I think the the chances of winning these cases
are like 3%. So it was like clear. And then if we want it, so basically this is
so everybody's like, you guys are crazy. And they're like, don it was like clear. And then if we won it, so basically this is, so everybody's like,
you guys are crazy. And they're like, don't just do this. And but it was like, we were uniquely
driven in the sense that we had the moral high ground, we had all the evidence, it was, it was
the perfect setup. But, but anyway, long story short is, we did end up winning. And then we won
the appeal three to zero. And so it sort of set up this thing where, you know, at the end of the day,
when we won, we didn't get any money.
It was like basically we just burned three million, three to five million bucks in the hallway on legal bills.
But then we had to go compete for the original D6 contract.
So I wasn't sure. Like I was halfway terrified.
We had to throw all this trouble and then the army would blackball us, which could have happened.
But long story short is, that was sort of the real
legitimate beginning where it was no longer
a guerrilla campaign for Palantir,
where we were just winning enterprise contracts,
on the run, and then on the merits.
And it's just, the software is 10 times better.
I mean, it's just, it's so impressive to watch.
I mean, obviously I'm officially retired,
but it's like, I'm in the mafia for life.
Yeah.
Yeah, so can you talk about like the long-term build out
of the defense business at Palantir,
where it is now, and then where you're seeing
opportunities in defense tech,
whether on top of Palantir with their AIP program,
or just generally outside of the,
it just seems like the Army is modernizing
and the DoD is modernizing generally.
So companies won't need to go through
the same 17 year journey necessarily.
No, I mean, look, that's the whole reason
I started Snowpoint was the idea was like,
during my journey, say I did a hundred things right
and a thousand things wrong.
It's like, how can I help other companies
accelerate through that cycle
and ultimately
help our whole society?
It's like having everyone succeed, including for the services, it's a win for everybody
in long or short.
But I think it's interesting because during early years, I got the seed corn in across
SOCOM and JSOC,
and then a few initial army units,
and then that was kind of growing,
but we were still searching
for the elusive program or record.
And then we went across,
there's like 17 different countries
that we kind of got started in the military business.
I was flying on airplanes everywhere.
And we got the seed cord done.
And then there's like NATO,
it was kind of the inside joke of like,
that's never going anywhere.
And then now, you know, of course, this is 18 years later.
It's like we finally won this huge contract with NATO.
I'm like, you know, it's taken forever, but it's it's it's been fascinating to watch.
And I think that like.
What I what I determined, you know, again, this is rewinding a little bit, was like we have to win in the
US.
And then once we won in the US, it was sort of like the dominoes started falling where,
and this is a deep history with Palantir, and I tell a lot of my portfolio companies
the same thing, is this idea of like exiting crises is that many different companies with
a lot of different technology,
well, they all look similar on paper.
And so it's like, how do you prove it?
And one of the like defining things
that I believe about Palantir in particular,
but a lot of my, I hold my portfolio companies
the same standard is this idea that
when there is a moment, an exigent moment
where it really matters.
And so in the military context, that means that like a commander is doing something, an exigent moment where it really matters. And so in the military context,
that means that like a commander is doing something,
people are dying, you have to win.
Then at that point, all the bullshit goes away
and you have to have something that actually works,
that's real.
And that is something unique in the sense that like,
Palantir has never screwed that up.
And it was just sort of like knowing that it's like you got to obviously it took us forever.
But it's like we're past that we're way past that, you know, say by a couple of years,
but past that momentum point where you know, you were always fighting like the biggest barrier to entry was like some.
Loser CIO or CTO inside a corporation or the government
saying, don't worry about this.
I have this PowerPoint slide and I can build this cheaper, faster, better.
And then all the incentives are wrong.
And then they would slow roll you and you wouldn't make anywhere.
And, and so the, the challenge where we would always say is that the open
door was around who cares.
And are you actually talking to the profit loss owner, like where it actually matters,
where the bottom line matters.
And in the military, that was like the operational commander.
Like if you got buried in the Pentagon, where they're talking about programs, you can't
walk four feet without running into like a $300 million disaster.
They're all in denial about it. And it's like because it like either tests out on paper or they're like,
it's coming. It's going to be here. It's going to be so awesome.
Just don't buy Palantir. It's too expensive. We're going to do something.
You know, I mean, dude, don't even get me started.
We'll get you started.
We're getting you started.
Let's flip to something much more concrete and timely.
What's going on in Ukraine?
What's been your reaction?
And what is the solution or impact
to the defense tech ecosystem?
Yeah, it's interesting.
I traveled to Ukraine in the very early,
when Palantir was just getting started there,
in the very early times of the war.
I went to Kyiv just to see what was true
and what wasn't true as we got kind of started.
And, you know, it's fascinating to think there's like a,
there's a deeper political thing,
and then there's obviously a military
and technology thing about this.
But it also applies to NATO and like what's, you know,
the defense tech market in Europe versus the United States,
and what the hell is Europe gonna do
now that they have to do something real
and stand up their own capabilities.
I think this is like a fascinating time of accountability.
And I think it's good for the world.
I do believe that the world is better
when the US is the hegemon.
I believe that deeply.
It's like we can argue about whether or not we can afford it.
But I'm like a firm believer in terms of like what I'm doing in the defense tech market,
but it's also good for Palantir.
All the companies, it's like with less budgets, I mean, it's always good with more budgets,
but it's like with less budgets or trimmed budgets, it's like if you need something real and you have like a short timeline, that's the perfect
environment. There's no free chicken like the the entrepreneurs still have to actually
deliver on what they said they're going to do. They have to deliver. But that's the time
when you can really succeed because when it's like you're kind of doing nothing and you're
just like talking about these like five year programs, the tendency is just to waste money.
So going back to the Ukraine example, you know, in many ways, like Zelensky single handedly
saved NATO, you know, because it's like Biden's plan was to get on a helicopter and get out
of it.
Like it was just on the heels of the failures in Afghanistan.
And then it was like, it was clear like enemies
of the United States, this is your time.
Screw with America as much, do whatever you want.
Biden's not gonna do anything.
So it was a very tricky time.
The fact that he decided to stay and fight,
you know, was super impressive.
It definitely saved NATO.
And you have to think also initially,
and this kind of goes to like the deeper
problem of like, what's, how are, what's the resolution of this and what can we
learn from it?
And I'll try to go faster.
But, um, think of this initially is Ukraine stopped Russia by themselves in
the beginning.
That's something to like really pay attention to.
And there was, there was a few scenes early on, because I used to model this of China versus Russia,
is the Russia was the real military,
and China is this paper tiger.
And I just kind of flip-flopped all that in my head now.
But it's like, Russia could not have screwed it up
more than they did.
And there was those scenes of,
I was like, God, if we only had a squadron of A-10s on board,
we could have, I don't know, you have this like trail of tears of like, it was literally
just like the first Iraq war, where it was like a, you know, a 10 or 20 mile convoy of like every
military vehicle in Russia was stuck on one road. I was like, please, baby Jesus, where is an a 10?
Who does all we need right now? But look, there's
That's all we need right now. But look, there's a very deep asymmetry with Russia versus Ukraine.
I think the truth is, I don't have a good filter here, but it's like the truth is that
both armies suck, both militaries suck, and they've devolved into some sort of
World War I BS thing.
If you look at the numbers, it's like,
in terms of people-
Pushing back there, when you say-
Yeah, this drone attack seemed extremely sophisticated.
This did not seem like it could devolve.
You're not wrong, you're not wrong,
but that is, it's a brilliant move.
Will it have any impact on the course of the outcome of the war?
Untold. Does it also mess up the peace?
Yeah. It's a strike deep in Russian territory. It could be seen as aggression.
Look, you can talk about this. It is a massive and
incredibly laudable tactical
victory.
It's impressive in every possible way.
I love it, you know, because you sort of think of the, you know, again, this is a very asymmetric
fight.
If you look at like, you know, people, it's like 1.3 million on the Russian side, or actually
duty 200,000 on the Ukraine side. But they've just kind of
devolved into this like frontline thing. And so like, is the deep attack going to actually change
the front lines or the course of the war? I'm not convinced of that at all. It definitely,
the challenge here is like, how do you degrade the ability of Russia? because they have a huge like production problem like they have they
outnumber if you look at tanks and armor it's like you know 17 000 but so I you know it's like
one of the interesting statistics here is that Russia has like 17 000 things but they've lost
during the war they've lost 8 000 tanks the US only lost 8,000 tanks. The US only has 4,600 tanks.
Just to put it in perspective,
but it hasn't made Ukraine win.
You know, like they're still stuck with this sort of like,
hey, how do we do?
So there's this incredible like-
But tactically, is this return to World War I style,
almost trench warfare that we're seeing,
is that a byproduct of new technology
coming onto the battlefield that is asymmetric
and generally both armies don't fully understand
how to deal with yet?
Yeah, the interesting thing is like,
if I say to my military colleagues,
it's like, there's a lot to learn from what's going on, but don't learn too much.
Because this is a very unique thing in the sense that Russia in particular, but Ukraine
as well, have have completely failed to be able to execute a joint combined arms fight.
And so this is the thing that the United States
is uniquely the best in the world at.
In a sense where like, what does that mean?
It means that you integrate space, air, land, sea,
artillery, all into one, like you have a decisive point
of the battle, you have a bunch of shaping efforts
in the battle, and then you can succeed and you can pour troops into and accomplish something.
The US, this is the most complicated thing you can do. And it's super expensive. That's why we
have a 800 plus billion dollar budget. And that's what the US is like, a thousand times better at
than anyone else in the world. And what I can tell you is the Russians, the reason that they lost
against the Ukrainians
by themselves is because they don't know how to do that.
They were treating Air Force as like artillery.
None of it was combined.
They totally failed like in terms of communications,
the ability to communicate and command control,
like all of that stuff, total disaster.
And here we are four years into it or whatever.
It's like, what's the outcome?
I'm curious how, I'm curious what Russia's early stage
defense tech market even looks like.
I imagine it's a lot of it is government directed,
but how are they adapting?
Are there private companies?
Yeah, like the thing about Russia is like,
Yeah. What you see, yeah. Like the thing about Russia is like,
again, they've been very good at advertising, specifically, like very low production or one production type things where they're like, exquisite systems, exquisite systems, and then
they have two of them. And then the majority of their stockpiles are Soviet-era bullshit that's horrible.
And if you think about it like this, think of the Soviet Union back in the day.
And they're still not good at this.
Or even you go all the way back to World War II.
It's like they've never been good at manufacturing.
Think of how many cars are made in the Soviet Union
or the Russia, right?
How many real planes do they make, right?
And so like all that stuff is like,
they can build one or two off,
but they're fully reliant on the West for all of this.
They've never been good at it.
What they've been good at is like,
can we stamp out thousands
of really cheap, attributable systems?
And do tanks fit into that category?
Are they disposable?
Yeah, but they're not fighting with them because then you could argue that because of the tactics,
how relevant are they on the modern battlefield?
And I think Ukraine with a ridiculous underdog approach has been able to use cheap drone
warfare.
And to be clear here, I think that Ukraine is probably the best in the world at drones.
And they have really, at a tactical level,
again, it's not changing the outcome,
but they're at least holding the status quo.
And there are millions of them.
Like they figure out what it's done.
And they're legitimately good.
Yeah, I mean, that part is fascinating to watch.
I just don't know that like,
the way that we fight,
if you were to put the U S if you take away the nuclear
component of this, which always makes it tricky.
The reason we have nukes is to make it tricky, right?
So you don't do these things.
Um, but I'm just not convinced that we would do it this way
at all and how quickly would we, would we win?
Um, that part's fascinating.
How do you think about counter UAS technology right now?
You have to imagine that Russia's thinking about every and any and every response to make sure this never happens again
Yeah, and look I was I was I apologize for being like too bearish about like how much does this matter?
The the attack is like stunning. It's it's almost it's not quite as good as the Hezbollah beepers, but it's pretty close
Okay attack is like stunning. It's almost it's not quite as good as the Hezbollah beepers, but it's pretty close. Okay. Hezbollah beepers, I did my master's thesis on Hezbollah. So it gave
me like, you know, specific joy, but I, you know, the the idea
that like, the uncertainty, and kind of a step back that it
would take within Russia. So basically, now they're searching every single truck,
you know, they're like super heightened security.
This has caused mass chaos across Russia.
Now they can't mass those jets together anymore.
So you have to space them out.
So this has like serious consequences
to their like strategic capability,
let alone their ability to just go bomb Ukraine.
Do you think that going forward various militaries,
Russia in particular, will seek to place strategic bombers
and aircraft like that in hangars
and provide some type of defensive mechanism?
Because the fact that they were just sitting out in the open,
we had to go on yesterday.
No, I actually think that there's like,
there's I don't know specifically this off to look it up but there's like there is like it's part of like the
There's a part of a nuclear treaty is that so it mostly got rolled back
Russia rolled it back at the beginning of the war from what I've seen
But you can imagine but you can imagine they would say hey, we're not gonna participate anymore
But they wouldn't necessarily build all the structures
Necessary to actually adapt.
Yeah, no, I mean, look, all this stuff takes time too.
I mean, that's the biggest thing is like,
you know, for the, a lot of those plane, I mean,
first of all, they're gonna have to do that.
Whether there's a treaty that says they have to be
in plain sight or not, they're gonna have to do that.
I mean, so this is like,
this attack has caused a strategic impact.
Whether that gets Russia to the table faster or better,
or it gets land concessions for Ukraine, or it gets them,
I'm not convinced of that.
But it definitely is like a very successful thing.
And we also don't know the ramifications.
Like, does this up the ante?
Does this get us towards World War III? I don't know the ramifications. Like, you know, does this up the ante? Does this get us towards World War III?
I don't know.
That part scares me.
I do want the war to end.
And it definitely gets into the Trump,
like Trump administration is trying to end the war
and neither Putin or Zelensky are like playing ball.
It's like, that's kind of the disappointing part of this.
Well, I mean, we have to have you back on.
I feel like we could go all over the world
and talk about
geopolitics for four hours. So
expect to get another calendar invite because this is a fantastic conversation. Yeah. Thank you for jumping on. I really appreciate it. Thank you both.
We'll talk to you soon. Thanks so much. Bye.
And we have our next guest already in the studio. So we'll bring him in. We're gonna talk we're gonna recap some of the Middle East AI deals talk about
Geopolitics in AI some of the chip stuff. I still have yet to figure out what the horse means
Why I just love horses John just love horses. I grew up. I wasn't a horse guy
I have an extreme so backed admiration my mom texted me after the show last night.
She said she was watching the show.
And because you were playing the horse sound,
her dog was running around looking for a horse.
So give the dog some horse.
For all of the dogs that are listening,
you're now on the hunt for a horse.
For all the dogs.
Anyway, welcome to the stream.
How are you doing?
Good, how are you?
Great. Welcome.
Thank you so much for joining.
Would you mind kicking us off with a little bit
of introduction on yourself for everyone who's listening?
Yeah.
So Divyanush Koshchak.
I am at Beacon Global Strategies for a national security
advisory firm.
So basically what I do is work with US industry
on how to be better national security
partners to the United States.
Great.
And I wanted to have you on to kind of look at a retrospective on what
happened in the Middle East. We saw Jensen Wong go over there. I think Elon
and Sam and Alex Wang and all the big tech CEOs went over. What is your
read now that we have a little bit more distance from how those relationships
are changing, what we should expect, what the actual trade deal came,
how everything netted out basically.
Yeah, I think it's a very interesting thing
that happened over there because you look at
what the Biden administration did in January,
they tried to approach AI diffusion
with three key strategic objectives.
They're like, we want to prevent offshoring to the Gulf.
We want to prevent these chips being smuggled into China,
which is mostly a Southeast Asia problem.
And the third one, we want to prevent remote access,
where Chinese entities are just using these chips
through the cloud.
There are hyperscalers trying to build big data centers
for Chinese companies and Malaysia and all.
Using this technology as a tool of economic state craft,
I think, was a secondary objective, not a primary.
Whereas I feel like what has happened,
what we've seen with the Gulf trip,
is more of an upside down.
Where we're using this technology
as a tool of economic state craft.
We're trying to get concessions.
Like, we're going to give you these chips,
but we want reciprocal investment in the United States, we want one to one investment.
And we want certain security conditions.
Now, a lot of that is yet to be cleared out, right?
We haven't finalized, it seems, for media reporting on what the security conditions
are, whether they apply to specific entities or whether they apply to the UAE government
or the Saudi government as a whole.
Do they get to host Huawei chips or Huawei infrastructure
in the same data centers where they're hosting US chips?
Right, there are reasonable concerns
that some people have raised and those are things,
obviously, I think the security details
will probably be figuring out.
Because if you remember, Microsoft and G42 did a similar deal at a company level last year in April. That was accompanied by an intergovernmental assurance agreement, which required G42 to do
certain things like not have Chinese hardware in a certain number of years, just restrict access for military or intelligence purposes.
Like that deal was really well drafted.
There were a lot of things that people pointed out
that could be done on top.
So I think we'll see how this shapes out
in the next coming few weeks,
how we see the security guarantees coming together.
But overall, I think this is in line with what the president has said, that we'll give you our technology, but what will you give us in return?
So that's the theme that I expect to continue to see.
Art of the deal.
How important is LAMA in this emerging geopolitical narrative around AI?
We're hearing that these, I've been calling them like kind of jump ball countries,
they're countries that aren't full allies and they kind of could do business with China
and that's kind of the geopolitical backdrop for all this.
If they don't do a deal with Nvidia, they're probably going to run Huawei Ascend
and DeepSeek and Manus on top of that.
Is an open source stack important
to some of these countries?
Yeah, now I think there are two questions in there.
First, whether China can even export,
which there are actually, the data suggests,
China has enough dyes that the SMC shipped to China or TSMC shipped to Huawei
in violation of US export controls, like about 2.9 million dyes, enough to produce a million
910Cs or 900 910Bs.
Now that's a lot of GPUs, but they also have a lot of domestic demand.
The question becomes, will they be able to lot of domestic demand. The question becomes, will they be
able to meet their domestic demand, let alone export?
I don't think that they have the capacity
to produce domestically at scale to export.
There was this announcement from Malaysia
recently, which the minister walked back afterwards,
which made for a splashy headline
that Ascend data center is coming
online in Malaysia. But if you look at the details, it was 3000 ascents by 2026.
Yeah, it's nothing.
So they can't meet that. That's one thing. It's like a jinty-er point. Some of these
countries have worked with China a lot.
Yeah, of course.
Well, one of the things of bringing countries into our fold is
that we have to work with countries that are in China's court right now. Yeah. That is a precursor
of bringing them into our fold. Yeah. But you have to be realistic what the risks are and how do we
mitigate them. So these countries have been doing joint military exercises in Xinjiang,
of all places are hosting military bases.
And Saudi Arabia, I believe like a month or two months ago,
their national telecom champion did a strategic announcement
with Huawei.
And so you have to be realistic
and put in place those mitigation agreements.
But separately to your point on open source,
I think we should be flooding the zone
with American open source, I think we should be flooding the zone with American open source stack at the expense of Chinese models.
I think we're not paying enough attention to what can happen when a state controlled company to some extent.
Now, there are a lot of PLA ties that DeepSeq has been scrubbed from the internet. Now, if the state wanted to,
there was a great anthropic paper last year, not sure if people remember, but on sleeper agents
that can be embedded into models. If the Chinese state really wanted to, you know, cripple us infrastructure or get into your phones.
Why wouldn't they just put in sleeper agents that would activate
in a year or two years?
Yeah.
If it runs into critical infrastructure, it changes the way it reasons.
Exactly.
And so we should be bearing ICPS action, right?
Like we're doing a lot of export controls on American tech,
not going to China.
But where's the import actions on preventing
this Chinese tech from coming into the United States
or helping other countries deploy American tech?
Like, look, come on, let's be real.
Nobody in Kenya is gonna pay $200 a month
to access advanced AI models.
We should be deploying American open source.
We should be incentivizing companies with like loan programs from the development finance corporation, exit bank.
Yeah. Kind of a new AI belt and road strategy, something like that.
Makes a ton of sense.
Yeah. Do you, do you think we'll see something to the,
to the effect of a Stuxnet within AI in the next
10 years, 15 years?
I'd be surprised if there are not zero day attacks that have already been exploited.
Yeah.
That we don't know yet.
Yeah, that makes sense.
Might, there's been a lot of talk around NVIDIA's earnings, around the shift from training to
inference, and we saw with DeepSeq some really, really creative engineering around distilling
models and switching to, I think, FP8 and Floating Point, and just a whole bunch of
optimizations to get a really great result out of
less significant hardware.
And so I wonder if there's, is there any risk that the,
as pre-training plateaus, we wind up with a scenario
where the distillation process continues
and inference shifts onto lagging edge semiconductors
and all of a sudden the gap between
TSMC's leading edge three nanometer
and China's ability to produce in mass at seven nanometer,
even beyond 10 nanometer beyond,
that actually changed the dynamic.
Yeah, and I think, you know,
right now we have the lead there.
It's possible that that happens.
And the answer I would tell you
that many people in the US government would give you
is we should not be complacent about it, right?
We should not be providing components to Chinese companies
to build semiconductor manufacturing equipment there
to produce these semiconductors.
Right.
Yeah, so what is your take on the chip ban
and this idea that like you kind of either need to be
all in or all out, like it's either,
don't just worry about the chips,
but also worry about the entire supply chain?
Or is there a creative argument
that you could potentially make
where there is value to the American semiconductor
and I guess Western semiconductor stack,
ASML, TSMC, actually having a benefit in China?
It feels very counterintuitive,
but I was just remembering a decade ago,
everyone in technology was making the argument that Facebook and Google should be allowed to
operate in China. And now we're making the argument that the other tech company should not be allowed
to operate in China. And I kind of agreed with both of those, but they do seem at odds.
Walk me through that argument. Yeah, I think, look, there are two point technologies,
right, where we do not want the PRC to gain access. Like, there are choke point technologies, right, where we do not want
the PRC to gain access. There are multiple arguments for why you should not get them,
but the effectiveness really depends on whether it's a choke point technology or not.
ASML machines, when we export controlled extremals for wildlife lithography, then well, China has not been able to produce anything
domestically, they are still stuck on seven nanometer
dual node pattern, multi-patterning, right?
And I think that set them back by seven to 10 years
at least, but so export controls are not about the point that they will never develop that
technology to find time and space so that we can extend our lead.
And that is what matters.
So if we say tomorrow decide, you know, further tools should not go to China or
aside, you know, further tools should not go to China or
other semiconductors should not go or as it happened, EDA software should not be sold.
We also need like some promote agenda
to really extend our lead.
So Huawei ascend versus Nvidia,
is this a quality or quantity battle?
How, like what is the shape of that differentiation? I think it's both quality first
Mix yields, you know, they're at about 20% or so
When producing the dyes for a sense so just cost
It's extremely caught and you know inefficient and so without state subsidies
The latest Huawei server that came out,
it is using technology that NVIDIA was using seven years ago.
Wow.
Right.
It's putting more GPUs on the same server to come up at the same amount of memory
and interconnect bandwidth and whatnot.
Yeah.
Now, yeah, can they, they have a state controlled economy.
They can do a lot of this.
It's not sustainable at the end of it.
So that's one thing.
I think there are a couple other things with regards to, should we be okay, for instance,
if it turns out that many of these technologies, like, look, to be real, China is an economy that has an art.
It is a system of government with an explicit civil military fusion strategy.
Every research and development project that happens for civilian purposes is and will be used for military purposes.
The Vice President of Research for Shingwa said that explicitly, like, so are we okay with them developing technology that may be
used to kill American soldiers or threaten America's allies in the South
China Sea or, you know, take over the Taiwan Strait. So those are questions that are, you know, they're very nuanced questions and hard to answer, but the
normally, but in this scenario, I would say
perhaps not.
Perhaps it's not okay for us to
benefit PLA's modernization.
While we can do what it is doing right now, I don't think it can scale.
I think the US export controls to much extend our working.
The question is, how do we extend our lead further?
So reviewing this year so far, do you think we're in a better position than we were last
year or are we trending in the
correct direction, I guess?
Yeah, I think overall we would, yeah, depends on how do you define the strategy here.
I think the strategy is to win.
I mean, yeah, the goal is to win.
The strategy is to stop their development of the technology altogether.
That's not going to happen, right?
Technology races never stay one. The Soviets learned that. So the Chinese have learned
that too. But if the idea is to maintain a lead, then AECOM second, VECOM first. Yeah,
I think we're headed in the right direction so far. Now, and I have tried to weaponize,
like to try to mimic what BIS does with export controls
through their own export controls,
but their export control system is just like five years old.
Their law passed in 2020,
the nuts and bolts rules for dual use items,
they did not arrive until December of last year.
So they're very much in an amateur state over there
with regards to this.
So the US does have a lead on that as well.
Very cool.
Well, thank you so much for joining.
This was fantastic.
Super insightful.
We'll have to have you back and talk more soon.
Awesome.
Thank you very much.
Have a great rest of your day.
We'll talk to you soon.
And next up we have Aaron Ginn,
the GPU Whisperer himself,
to take us further into the discussion around
AI chip controls, geopolitics,
and all of the fun things that go along with that.
Jordy, I'll let you take the intro
and I will be right back.
Perfect.
Aaron, welcome to the studio.
Play some soundboard.
Let's go, let's go. The GPU Whis GPU whispers back. It's great to have you. What's happening?
Why I come visit you I'm gonna bring you this
Wow, is that a door is that for the gong?
No, it's not gone. No, it's also not a sexual toy. So so it's called a talking stick. So in Indian culture
I got this in Kenya,
the basically the person that would represent the tribe
would carry this around.
And whenever you'd show about a tribe,
you would show them this and they're like,
so they're like, hey, I'm coming to the TBBN tribe.
Who should I talk to?
Right?
And then you find the guy with the talking stick.
Because you know, yeah, you find the guy, right?
And so yeah, if you represent your sort of head of your tribe,
your head of your family, you carry that around.
And then, and the great thing is like you can,
when you're in tribal meetings,
it's like, you know, someone's arguing,
you hold the talking stick, right?
And you're like, hey, what's up?
Yeah, so it's like, you know,
so we can span two different continents.
You have the Gong, represent my Chinese heritage,
and now you have something from the African continent.
So you have something from Europe.
I like that.
Maybe we could make it the,
Sam Lesson from Slow was on the show
talking about the potential of the E-Cane,
sort of a smart cane device.
Maybe that could be the American equivalent
of a talking stick. It's a smart cane that the leader of an organization carries
What's on your mind this week? I know you've been busy
publishing
Also scaling hide your host. What's what's going on in your world? I
So today video released its numbers. I I frankly was surprised they still beat expectations despite having a lot of regulatory headwinds
for at least a quarter.
And of course, as you all have covered, those rules changed.
And now we're back to sort of October 2023 rules, which still had restrictions, but it
was a little bit more friendly to some of the countries that were trying to form deeper relationships with, aka Europe.
So like previously half of Europe was on, you're on the crap list, you're a bad boy.
Basically anything.
Switzerland.
Yeah, Switzerland was bad, Austria was bad, Greenland was bad.
We can buy the country but we can't sell them to the US.
And Mexico as well which is 90% of all of our GPUs.
So that's all gone. So a new
Era has or just a return to the old era
Which is one two three and we have this kind of new thing which I talked about previously on the show
Which is the sovereign AI with America?
Being deployed into regions. The biggest one was the G 42
Saudi Arabia to build out GPU capacity within
regions.
And this will, I think in the next coming years, Americans will see gradually over the
course of time how important both this infrastructure is to the world, but also how we ourselves
will most likely become a default exporter like Boeing, like a default exporter of this
technology, not necessarily like exporter of this technology,
not necessarily like we're always using it,
but the rest of the world is using it.
And they deeply rely on our infrastructure.
That's the trajectory of this is heading.
And what was surprising from the NVIDIA numbers,
which I know that John mentioned was that
Jensen has jumped more headfirst into politics. Under Biden, he was very hands-off.
He was just like, I don't support this stuff.
But now he was meeting Trump and Mar-a-Lago.
He's basically proactively advocating both at conferences and in earnings calls, an actual
posture about how the world should work
and how the world should operate
according to the video preferences.
But Americans then accept that,
NVIDIA is our champion.
They are a national champion.
If they lose, we lose.
We're tied together at the hip.
And if they go down, we go down with them.
There's not like, AMD is-
It makes sense that he's getting involved with politics
when, or geopolitics, There's not like a D. It makes sense that he's getting involved with politics when
In you know or geopolitics when?
Nvidia is valued at the GDP of the United Kingdom. Yeah, I was thinking about that
Many ways just a function of the size and scale of that company because you don't see the same
Yeah, you're not seeing the same behavior from like the other of the stack, like the DRAM supplier or the transformer supplier
or the energy provider, I mean, to some degree,
but certainly not getting as much face time,
because it's just a less critical piece of the economy.
And one of the important things he said
in the earnings call was that Nvidia lost
50% of its market share in China for the last four years. And he mentioned the acceleration of Huawei from 7 nanometer to 5 nanometer
processes. So when we as Americans think about GPUs and export controls, we're kind of battling
two different metaphysical complexes that we don't fully accept or understand. We have one which is generally
was part of the Trump train back in 2016. China Hawk, they're a threat, they're taking our stuff,
you know, they're breaking into Jordy's house stealing his watches, you know, they're following
John trying to take a couple inches off his height right now, like Chinese are everywhere,
they're new to our cities, they're taking our a research that was like Trump, Trump 1.0, Trump 45, we got to be aggressive and he changed America's view on
China. He had him alone like he was the lone Republican on stage and in fact Rubio and Rand
were saying that he's uh saber rattling uh and the whole stage was like no they gotta engage them
but then there's this new version which has co-opted itself into, which is part of the
accelerated altruists, people mixed with anti-trade, mixed with protectionism, who took that, laundered
it and are using it as justification to be China hawk.
And this goes to my most recent piece, which we must return to, which is that America has
to be an AI
exporter. I'm like OG, trying to hug. I'm like, we got to win with commerce, the dollar,
free trade, sell to as many people as possible, like Boeing. As many Boeing aircraft in the
world, because it's a point of leverage, it's a point of us being able to spread human rights,
freedom, Western values, and not have to have bombs attached to it on the airplane, right? It could be passengers rather than bombs.
This other wing, which is small, but very loud, they've co-opted themselves into the
altruistic, you know, basically deceleration people, kind of like protectionism, anti-trade unions,
and China hawk people. They're the like abandon Taiwan, don't sell to anybody.
We, if giving it to the Gulf region
means giving it to China, which is bizarre,
it's 12 hour flight away, I don't understand that.
And it's also insulting to the Saudis,
they're like, they actually will use it.
It's them saying, there's just an arm of China.
It's like, it's all this complex kind of vagaries
around patriotism like
after that earnings fall, people call Jensen unpatriotic where you got put, profits, you know,
a ball of patriotism, right? And it's this really bizarre like world that these people live in,
where they think that like well if we just don't sell them in, there's no harm, right? They can
just wait. They can just wait for us. When Huawei is like, please do. And the customers in China, that they were part of the information, they had this
information on the publication. The customers of GPUs in China, they said that like by the export
controls, they created the market for Huawei. So we only have two options as a country. We either
win or we lose.
Like that's it.
There's no way between.
There's none of this like we'll just choke you off, right?
It will just hold you on the inside.
You can see this using a non-technology example is when we've done this with food aid, when
we've done this with other semiconductors, like when the first semiconductors came out,
we started to do it in China.
All of them produce their own industry.
And in fact, there's a famous episode between,
I think it was Johnson and Gandhi,
whenever she was prime minister,
when Johnson was like, hey India,
you gotta back us on Vietnam.
Otherwise, we're gonna gradually send this food aid.
There's massive famine going on.
And Gandhi, she said, publicly,
I will never depend on America ever again.
And after that, she spent all of her money invested in agriculture improvements that
became self-sovereign. So this is not a weird abstraction of, well, this is only unique
to this situation. When they have the engineering horsepower, they cover 90% of all rare earth
mineral production, not ownership, but just production. They build their own boundary program. It's already active. We don't have one. And it's the focal point
of all the accessory parts of a server, like fans, cables, things like that. And we're
like, well, we just try to go off and just wait whenever we want to give it to you. It's
like, no, why would they ever do that? They just build their own and they show the can.
So in that world, the gold stargates, we should have a South America star game, you know, the European star game in Africa.
We have to own footprint. Otherwise, Huawei will just go out,
sell its cheap gear, own the footprint, own this rare, like, you know,
day center space is not prolific anymore. Own that. And then all the government data
in those regions will be running on Huawei stuff, which is, which is,
which will hurt our natural screen interest.
Yeah.
What about actually selling to the Chinese directly?
Like should we be building a Chinese star gate?
There's this like weird like thread we've been pulling on.
China gate doesn't have a great,
I know it is different, but I want to kind of unpack all the different ways it's different.
Because for years, tech was being the drum of Google should be able to operate in China.
Facebook should be able to operate in China.
This would be a net win for the United States if we could operate there.
GPUs are different because it's more than the supply chain and there's different things you can do with it.
We may be powering adversarial dual use technology.
But is there a world where these two situations are more similar than they are different?
Yeah, the dual use argument is an argument of backing. It's an argument from ignorance. We don't have any example of what this dual use could be.
And there was a response to Jensen in some article I read somewhere where like they could use AI for missile targeting. You're like,
they don't need AI to do missile testing or they have perfectly fine missile
technology to target.
What about, uh, wait, wait, w what about just the, the idea that like,
you know, large language models, chat models, they increase productivity.
And so, you know, if you give a,
if you give a soldier on a base chat, GPT,
they will be able to inventory the rations faster and that will increase
military productivity.
Oh, heavens, right? Like it's a,
so like one is that by us not entering in the Chinese market,
we created a tech dog problem. Yeah. We created an olive olive oil.
We create a like, like maybe it's because I am unpacked
that because I feel like we,
we definitely tried to enter the social media market in China.
We were blocked and then I don't understand how we created that problem.
Well, it's because like we want it to enter on our own terms. Oh, sure. So,
so like, yeah, like I'm not saying we have to do business with them always.
Like that's, that's not what I'm saying. I don't want to sell up 35. I don't want to sell 22s
Like logical like things when we sell it triple 7
It should logically have our GPS technology or made anything that's aligned with like kind of our connectivity sure like we were do that today
That's fine. They but when you when it comes to actually core platforms GPUs is not just the card because just because
You know you own a G63 Mercedes,
doesn't mean I can build one. There's just this misunderstanding of like,
Jitson is pursuing a three nanometer, two nanometer
sort of direction of this company,
they don't have the ability to do that.
And just because I own a G-Wagon
doesn't mean I know how to build one,
doesn't mean I can build one. And there's ability to do that. And just because I own a cheap wagon doesn't mean I know how to build one. Doesn't mean I can build one.
And there's a disconnect between that.
So one is that we should restrict
anything that is on the supply chain level.
I'm totally cool with that.
But if we want to target founder equipment,
if we want to target data center equipment,
totally cool with that.
Problem with that, we don't build any of that stuff.
Other countries do.
Yeah, but we have American IP,
so we actually do have a point of leverage over ASML equipment if I remember that correctly. Yeah, yeah, foreign
direct role, right? So yeah, so it's a stretch because Japan can still do what it wants.
It doesn't have America has limited like the regulatory framework. Yeah, the regulatory
framework, the commerce is limited to its ability to basically tax authority.
So if you have money in America, then they could do something.
But if you don't have money in America, and you say foreign direct role in Japan, it
does like, they're like, okay, that's nice.
Thank you for your memo.
So, but again, it goes to like how we treat GPUs that if we want to create a point of
leverage between the Dutch and Japanese over founder equipment, we should probably not
cut half of the Dutch economy off from GPUs, we should probably not cut half of the Dutch
economy off from GPUs, which is what we did.
So if we want to be allied with them, we should realize what's important, what's not important.
To me, supply chain production is important, not consumption.
Consumption is not very important, mainly because there's another risk factor which
is significantly more important, which is like, is it worse for the world if Huawei
is everywhere, or is it better for the world if Huawei is everywhere or is it better for the world?
That Nvidia is everywhere and and when you're talking about the dual use question
It's like they don't even think about that
Well, if we if we don't actually engage them our own platforms
We finance their current platforms and we encourage them to do that. They will still do it
Like I I think we have to understand that it's a both and framework in China. If we sell them a fighter jet, they'll buy the fighter jet and
make their own fighter jet. But the point is to starve and to use, like doesn't starve
the local economy as much as possible and to create dependency on us. The more dependency
on us, the less likely the war. Also also we can maybe gain leverage on other trade issues like cheap goods, fentanyl, Taiwan. There's a whole other layer of additional
things. And just saying dual use, which again, we don't know what that means. We'll just say it.
And they do it, we don't, I don't know what I mean. And as well, you can still do it with Huawei. So
what does it matter? It's this kind of vague bigories around it
without understanding the clear differentiation
between production, consumption, title ownership,
cloud consumption and building net-o-limb.
All those are commingled around Nvidia
when each of those are distinct different things
that shouldn't be commingled.
Cause then you confuse what to do.
Can you give us an update on the Biden administration
in January was focused on remote access.
Is that a wide scale problem today?
You can imagine it's a lot easier to access GPUs remotely
in another country.
If you wanna train a model,
then it is to smuggle them in across different borders
and things like that.
Yeah, the January controls assume two things
that ended up being a hundred percent wrong. One, the January controls assume two things that ended up being 100% wrong.
One, how close was Huawei?
They assumed like five years, totally wrong.
It was like basically 12 months.
The other one is that LLMs are remote and they're not.
So like, what does it matter?
They're like, if DeepSeek is the number four, right?
Because mainly because it's open source,
that's the main reason.
And it became a brand name so people know it. But there's lots of alternatives to DeepSeek.
There's lots of different reasoning models.
There's lots of foundational models and multimodal models.
So it's not a mode, but what does it matter?
They make their model, OK, we make another model.
It's not an innate, just use a different model.
So we're not going to prevent them from making models.
They're going to do what they're going to do.
The question is, when are we going to be better? So technically, if you're not gonna prevent them from making models they they're gonna do what they're gonna do The question is we're not we're gonna be better. So it's a technically if you're like a racing a car
I'm going to have one race in Canada
Next week if they have one driver was staring at the guardrail. Is he gonna win?
But and that's what we're doing. We're like looking at it. They're like, oh my god
Right, are we looking at the finish line that we looking to win because we win
It doesn't matter because we choke at the finish line? Are we looking to win? Because if we win, it doesn't matter. Because we choke off the local industry,
we become the global dominant player,
and then they become Comac,
which is the Chinese version of the airline,
their alternative Boeing and Airbus.
It's gonna be decades before they get anywhere
with that airline.
And it's because Airbus won, Boeing won.
And market penetration is a moat.
And not everything that happens in China
is just because they copied us or they stole something. They're legitimately good at engineering.
And this is what the point of Jensen's been making, is that when half of all AI researchers
are Chinese, we can't just be like, can't see it, can't see it. We got to engage with
it because at least it's better
That it's on our platforms and if there's a federal government wants to spy on that like why not like I?
It's like we can't even appreciate the asymmetric style of that of like I imagine we sold them the video stuff
It would just spy on it like it's like let's do what they do to us
But it's there was no right like dual use like a military or it's a it's bizarre to me
What's been your reaction to the Russia Ukraine development?
I've always been struck by the fact that Russia has produced so many incredible
mathematicians and yet seems so irrelevant in the AI conversation.
Uh, any chance that that changes, uh, you know, you talk about dual use,
seems like they can barely,
you know, deal with any technology over there. Yeah, they make a few drones, but like they're
years behind the AI race. We're certainly not testing the limits of artificial intelligence
in the battlefield over there. The let me do this that so with our with our company being international, we come across all sorts of characters. So
in Riyadh, I met a Russian who, Russian, I should have brought our caucuses, so he speaks
Russian, but not really Russian. We were at the data centers in the region and he was
telling me that about like what Russia was doing and he said that like don't underestimate
them being quiet doesn't mean they're not doing something. And this goes to the Stargate thing and proliferation is
like when somebody does something bad with this, which is going to happen without a doubt
is going to happen. The Ukrainian attack on Russian planes wasn't AI, it's just fancy
remotes and there's no evidence that had a model that was, I don't even know why you
need a model. He didn't look at the plane and look like, yeah, like it was a very bizarre way of kind
of reading that situation was very clearly like remote control.
But the, if when someone does something bad with this technology, which is inevitable,
the world will be very woken up to how one,
the powerful this technology is,
but two, how lazy they've been on some of these things
that we're talking about,
where it matters if we're everywhere.
Because if we're everywhere,
and let's say someone does something bad with us,
what does that mean?
That means that we have the ability to project influence now
across the 100 countries that have our infrastructure.
That could be everything from utilizing infrastructure in a way to bring along allies to counter
something but as well as create a new type of NATO, a new type of framework which is
the defense of the next century.
There is China will pursue, it's almost like a known quantity.
China has been China.
There's very little things we can actually can do
to impact the directory of 1.3 million people
outside of the natural entropy of China itself.
China has imploded seven times in its whole,
basically, 6,000 years of history.
So, yeah, exactly, cheer, please, right?
So communism is just the next iteration of whatever revolution, the Qing dynasty, the
Shan dynasty, the Shang dynasty, the Mongols, right?
All those were different iterations of the same millions of people die, build a new regime,
billion people die, build new dreams.
The ability of us externally being able to influence it is very limited unless we do
what we did to Japan and South Korea,
which is we totally obliterated the entire society,
we built spaces there, we gave them democracy,
and we gave them markets.
Then you can influence and they can be part of the order,
but they don't wanna do that.
So China's gonna China.
Well, what we have to do is we do best,
which is win trade, commerce, be the best,
make, give us, us as much money as possible
into Nvidia products.
With their recent announcement,
I don't know if it's selling in Computex,
but they're at this, basically,
Nvidia Link as a platform,
it's the best way to understand it.
Yeah, break that down for us.
So yeah, so because all of this new GPUs are coming out,
like the Broadcastrons, Huawei,
the most viable parts of
Nvidia's infrastructure is its interconnect.
And interconnect is both software-defined and hardware-defined.
Nvidia is the king.
On the GPU level, Huawei is getting closer and closer, as is AMD.
But from an interconnect level, Jensen's in the stratosphere.
The key is so far beyond.
So as an effort to keep them in the CUDA system, which is this most significant software
mode.
He's releasing Indolink as a platform to where you can plug in other GPUs and you can work
through Nvidia Fabric.
As John just said, the commerce is going to foreign direct rule the outside of that thing.
So it's probably not going to make it into China.
And that actually has a legitimate claim.
We made the software, we produced it, and it goes.
Japan has a much looser claim.
Uh, and so I don't think it's going to make it in China, but that's the premise is that
he's trying to protect the Kudomo.
The Kudomo is the mode of Nvidia and if Huawei continues to accelerate open source frameworks
accelerates the videos mode declines, which means more wide web product, uh, basically
gets released into the wild. More models are defined by YY.
Is that NVLink licensing more relevant to international companies that want to combine
different CPUs and GPUs together, or is it more relevant to just maintaining dominance
in the American market?
Yeah, with hyperscalers that are developing their own chips, things like that.
Yeah. Yeah. The pitches do hyperscalers,
but the actual target is, is China. I'd say that that is the,
that's the goal.
I mean, you're predicting that it won't make it to China. So why,
why even like pitch that if it's,
it has a very low shot of actually getting through.
I mean, they, they have 75% Martins, so they could do lots of things that don't go anywhere.
And also they view that there's two risks to Jensen, just as putting on Jensen hat.
I'm not an investor.
I'm not talking about book.
I'm not Trimoth.
I'm not talking about book.
So the is public cloud with their GPS, which goes to this ambient link platform in
Huawei.
Those are the two risks. So he's targeting to both, but the issue with what public cloud's doing
is that they are trying to de-leverage from them as much as possible, which is why most of the future deployments,
I suspect in public cloud, are going to coreweave. Coreweave is like a third party just reseller into cloud. But his real angle is to Huawei gear
where they do not have the ability to build this interconnect
via the Huawei products.
Cloud mainstream is closest and it's still pretty far behind.
As well as you look at the networking expense
like in terms of the margins in the public reporting,
it's still growing in revenue,
like significantly on networking side,
but they're not making much money.
It's because they view networking as the boat.
So they're really just trying to push something into the Chinese market so they can retain
that CUDA advantage.
Because they do think that China is accelerating on the most important models which are the
open source models that Nvidia sees the more and more open source accelerates the farther
further it gets ahead the more that it's going to basically cannibalize the video's footprint.
Because if it is only selling to closed source models, that again limits their ability to
sell widely and to keep our platforms.
America has to realize that, I'm not just talking about the video, that's our national
champion.
So it's like Lockheed, it's like a Boeing, it's like, it is our expression into the world of what the future should be and the village are, are
have like, or have our values built into technology, which is privacy, security,
Western values, freedom of thought, freedom of information on the
internet. And so I'm fine with the product idea, I don't think it's a risk
really much to anything, but most likely commerce will restrict it
because if they're already restricting
founder equipment, which I generally agree with,
because it's founder equipment
cost $100 million in the inside of the house.
So like you can regulate that.
We export control airplanes, well yes,
because you have to put on a shipping flight over there.
That's not something you can go buy at Best Buy
and put in your backpack.
And-
I mean, Nathan Fielder was able to buy an airplane
recently for a show.
I wanna switch gears for a second.
There was some news this morning
that Metta is partnering with nuclear energy company
Constellation Energy to power some of its AI,
I guess AI factories, data centers for the next 20 years.
Post these new executive orders on nuclear energy, do you expect to see a lot more
deals between hyperscalers or foundation model companies
and various nuclear players?
Unfortunately, not. I I'm a big fan of fusion.
I'm a realist when it comes to politics.
I'm conservative through and through.
Adam Smith, Milton Friedman, Thomas Sowell, they're my heroes.
But I'm a realist when it comes to DC because DC is ideology is an excuse for decisions
that are self-serving.
That's the way DC works.
Nuclear, I love the technology.
I think it's immensely safe.
I don't believe in this irrational phobia related to it. It has, you know, the third party
or the existential causes of the pollution or whatever,
if the energy is put in a barrel, put it on the ground.
It's like so amazing.
But, and even that, the recycle,
making recycle like 98% of it now.
But power generation is very different than energy.
America's really good at energy. It's really bad at power. Because power is a different than energy. America is really good at energy, is really bad at power,
because power is a federalized decision. And I just don't see a significant amount of willingness
to change about that. I hear lots of talk, but the talk is also a little bit like Doge, which is
the operational mandate of Doge is discretionary. And even that, it has to get the deference of the
secretary. It doesn't have a lot of power. You have to have mandatory spending, you have Congress, is discretionary and even that it has to get the deference of the secretary it
doesn't have a lot of power you have to have mandatory spending of Congress do
something because the way it works thing with power is like Department of
Energy can't just say do it right like it like the state it does it's federalized
that that's the whole point of freedom is that if the state says no they're
gonna say no it is not gonna happen so maybe on federal lands maybe Indian
lands that stuff makes sense
But but it's it's I think extremely unlikely. I think it's more likely
The like Stargate is essentially a sovereign power infrastructure where they're buying natural gas turbines
Which we have significant amount of natural gas
They build it in deregulated energy environments and they attach to the data center. I think that that's more likely because that doesn't require
deregulated energy environments and they attach to the data center. I think that's more likely because that doesn't require 10 years of approval and people who
have degrees who have never done anything in the world showing up and telling you how
to do business.
It doesn't require any of those things.
It's natural gas.
It's fine.
And their pipes are everywhere.
So what we hear on the data center level is much more of a stretch toward natural gas
and that nuclear, while there's entertaining, I want this stuff to happen,
I understand the real estate, I think it's,
you shouldn't bet on it.
And many of those contracts you see,
they're more like LOIs if you like dig into it,
because the Amazon, the Microsoft,
the Facebooks of the world,
they know the regulatory hurdles
of doing this stuff is yours.
And so they're basically using the announcement
as a means of trying to press through the regulatory cycle
to get stuff done.
Well, just to give you some more insight, this deal in particular
is for a power plant called the Clinton Clean Energy Center.
So it's from a different era, right?
It's taking an asset that we've already had,
and then doing a net new deal.
It's not as exciting as, hey, some new nuclear company just signed a 20-year deal with Metta.
So at the very least, hopefully-
But then you have to have a double-digit approval of putting servers in the building or putting
it around the building.
Like, that's not something that's going to be easy.
Yes, exactly.
Like, the fear around nuclear is unfounded.
Yeah, but it's still real.
It's real. And this is democracy. Like you don't get everything you want.
And if people don't want it in their backyard, they don't.
And it is what it is. So like, uh, but yeah, but I'm pro those things.
I'm pro clean fusion, uh, like low heat,
like coal nuclear reactors.
I think all those are super cool technologies that we should embrace.
Yeah. like low heat, like coal, nuclear reactors. I think all those are super cool technologies that we should embrace. Yeah, this thing is interesting
because the reactor at this site
was going through a decommissioning process,
so they're effectively bringing it back online.
Oh, great.
Similar one to the deal that Constellation did
with Microsoft in Pennsylvania
with the Three Mile Island plant last year.
So, yeah, at the very least,
it's great to see plants
that are clean and functioning, staying online and serving a purpose.
Anyway, thanks so much for stopping by. This was fantastic. We'll talk to you soon.
It was a pleasure.
Yeah, see you next time.
Cheers.
We'll talk to you soon. Let's close that with some timeline. There's news about perplexity.
Apple is reportedly planning to adopt perplexity
as an alternative to Google search on the iPhone
as well as a replacement for chat GPT integration with Siri.
This is kind of rumor mill at this point,
but apparently perplexity is also in talks with Samsung,
could become a default installed search provider
on Samsung Galaxy phones and Android phones.
So.
Arvin's cooking.
Arvin's cooking. Arvin's cooking.
Yeah, it's interesting.
Obviously, the product is not completely broken through.
But sponsored an F1 team.
Maybe.
Maybe it's not.
Didn't they do a Super Bowl ad?
No, they just did a really cinematic ad.
But they've definitely been out there sponsoring stuff.
And complexity sponsored Ferrari.
Ferrari, really?
No way.
That's awesome.
They just fully sent it. That's amazing. Tim Cook. Saw that? He goes, OK. Let No way. That's awesome. They just fully sent it.
That's amazing.
Tim Cook.
Saw that?
He goes, OK.
OK.
Let's talk.
Time to talk.
Yeah, I mean, certainly smart to break through.
And I mean, a lot of these companies
win on these default installs.
It's always tough when there's another company that's
going viral and just growing like crazy like ChatGPT.
But you've got to get creative and figure out
where the value is and who's hurting
and Apple and Samsung seem like they're at the top
of the list for needing a partner
to really keep up with Chachi PT in some ways.
Anyway, we should tell you about Fond, Wander.
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And report back.
We also have some cool, probably AI images
from if Tesla was made in the 1980s.
I don't know how I found this
in only five likes and 220 views,
but I really like this.
I thought it was a cool design.
Looks kind of like an Aston Martin Bulldog,
or there's a lot of Aston Martin in there.
But yeah, I hope with Elon spending more time at Tesla,
we get some crazier designs.
I wanna see a convertible.
I wanna see something that competes with a Jeep,
a full-size SUV, the Cyberban,
the Cybertruck converted into an SUV.
That'd be awesome.
I mean, we've talked about this.
A sedan with the aesthetics of the Cybertruck would-
Super cool.
Rip.
The Cyberacon, the Huracan version of the Cybertruck,
like the new Roadster with the Cybertruck aesthetic.
I mean, I still think the Cybertruck aesthetics
are really cool, but it's just like,
not everyone needs a full-size truck
You never see somebody with a cyber truck using it as a truck. I've never seen anything in the bed
Also in LA so most of the cyber trucker influencer based
Semi analysis breaking down Tesla's optimus speaking of Tesla ever wondered how those humanoids are dancing in the videos check out Tesla
optimists here hitting a smooth shuffle
Let's dive into one of the methods they may have used in the paper ASAP aligning simulation in real-world physics for learning
Agile humanoid whole body skills the researchers did train the humanoid to perform these actions in simulated environments
But there's more to this so we've been talking a lot about
simulation in the context of robotics.
It seems to make a lot of sense that you could model
all of those joints in a physics engine,
run that in Unreal Engine or something.
I mean, it does look remarkable.
I don't know if you can see that, Jordy, but the,
I mean, the dance is definitely not the Biden walk, right?
So the problem-
Wait, play it, let's see it.
Yeah, yeah, here, there you go.
Okay. What? What are you thinking? Conspiracy time? Yeah, yeah, here. There you go. Okay.
What?
What are you thinking?
Conspiracy time?
No, no.
No, no.
It's pretty good, right?
I mean-
It's definitely a unitary level.
Yeah, I mean-
And I don't see why they'd be any farther behind unitary,
but obviously there's a lot of-
I think Gen Z would say the robot low key has aura.
Aura, yeah.
The problem, the robot policies like guidebooks
for performing an action trained in simulations
often stumble when transferred into a physical robot.
This is called the SIM to real gap.
We'll have to talk to more folks in robotics about that.
Many complex interactions can occur in real life
that are difficult to model.
ASAP decides to train their policy in simulation
by using retargeted human motion,
like Ronaldo's SUI celebrations motions,
but mapped onto a humanoid
so that it can produce the same motions in its own body.
However, to mitigate the issues
upon transferring to real life,
they then deploy the policy
onto the Unitree Robotics G1 humanoid,
this is from a researcher,
and train a delta action model.
The model watches and learns what the differences are This is from a from a researcher and train a Delta action model the model
Watches and learns what the differences are between the desired simulated motion and the real world
This is Delta Correction particular. Yeah, this jumping motion. It's wild is wild wild
Jumping because you is that's using the same
Effectively the same physics same physics as a human
to do that. And it just feels a lot more human.
So they do a bunch of simulation,
they transfer it to the robot,
then the robot does it and messes it up
because there's all these fine details
that emerge when you're crossing that SIM to real gap.
That delta correction is then fed back into the simulator,
effectively aligning the virtual simulated world and robot with
reality.
The result is significantly improved agility and coordination and now fluid
reproduction of famous celebrations. ASAP is a major leap forward for humanoid
robots, but there still remains some challenges in simulations and semi-analysis
says, what do you think? And so it's interesting because it's basically creating
a real life feedback loop for humanoid robotics
based on simulated data.
So you go and simulate the robot to get it like 80 or 90%
of the way there, then you run those simulations
on the real robot and let it make a bunch of mistakes
and then feed all of that data back in
so you're generating a lot of robotics data
and you can actually have like a
learning loop to improve this. So, uh,
still unclear how close we are to like fully,
re fully usable, fully useful humanoid robotics,
but it does seem like more and more algorithmic progress is being made more and
more like AI training strategies are being made to really make this stuff
valuable and then of course here about getting closer to
The the robot games where they're gonna have these robots do surfing at jaws cliff diving
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There's a new company launching.
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Yeah, this is interesting.
I have the website pulled up.
They do deep diligence.
You can imagine some type of deep research product.
Watchlist monitoring, anti-portfolio analysis,
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memo drafting, exit exit planning customer diligence
Autosourcing market mapping team evals meeting prepper pretty extensive. It's cool
Well, the timeline wasn't turmoil as Megan Niveau kind of sort of anonymously called out Alex Lieberman for
Co-founding too many companies. Oh, wow, that, I saw Megan's post. You saw that post. I had no idea.
I had no idea who it was either.
And Alex kind of self-docs himself here.
And he says, someone called me out publicly
for co-founding five businesses.
What, a man can't co-found five businesses?
Come on, I think I've actually co-founded
maybe four businesses at this time,
although I kind of moved on.
Well, I wasn't doing them all at the same time.
You were doing one at a time.
It was one at a time, yeah.
But I love the reaction and it makes total sense,
so I thought I'd explain, says Alex Lieberman,
the business barista.
He says, I very much don't recommend people do what I do.
History has proven time and time again
that relentless focus on one thing for decades
is how you build anything of consequence.
I didn't set out to build a startup studio
and co-found five companies.
It was the result of trying to optimize
for my two highest order goals post exit,
be an A plus entrepreneur and an A plus family man.
Read, have full control over my schedule and time.
Spend 90% of my time in the negative one to one of business.
Early stage businesses make me feel
like a kid in a candy store.
I do not work 120 hours a week.
I work about 50 hours a week.
Most mornings I start drinking coffee,
walking the dog with my wife.
Most days I finish eating dinner and walking the dog with my wife. Those
moments are sacred for me. I have an amazing co-founder and CEO for each one
each of my businesses. So he's not the CEO of these businesses. That would be
very very difficult. Who I trust deeply and gives me space to focus time. I view
myself as a media company that creates surface area for an array of
opportunities. So yeah a little bit of an uncommon decision, but he's certainly enjoying it,
and so hats off to him.
Build your life however you want.
I think the thing that matters is ultimately
having a CEO that is a regular founder
as incentivized as a traditional founder,
or over time you'll get cooked by a truly founder-led company.
Totally, totally. So yeah, there's a big question about like,
you can be a small angel that owns 0.1% of a business.
You can be a VC who owns 20% of a business
and uses the word we when describing the company.
Then you can be an incubator or a silent co-founder,
or you can be the co-founder CEO, the founder CEO.
And these are kind of a spectrum
and everyone kind of plays in different roles.
But historically it's served to work
at kind of the fringes of those,
but there's different models that work for different folks.
This is an interesting trend that I wanna dig into,
kind of the future of Hollywood.
We've been joking about this,
but there is something interesting
with what Tony Lashley says.
Sequoia investing in Essence and Mubi and Thrive investing in A24 in the past four years.
I'm proud of you for pronouncing Essence properly, John.
Yes.
So just sense.
And Thrive investing in A24 in the past four years is quite fascinating.
And so apparently the Essence investment maybe didn't do so well.
Definitely they're clearly struggling, but the model works.
And so Sequoia is getting into the independent movie business.
Thrive is already in with A24.
And so very, very interesting to discuss,
like the impact of AI on Hollywood and independent moviemaking as these movies.
It feels harder and harder to get the power law outcome in movies,
the Avengers moment, the Avengers moment,
the Avatar moment, the Top Gun moment,
but A24's clearly made a different strategy work
and they're breaking through all the time
and so it's justifying increased investment.
Another perplexity news, they did the thing
that we've been talking about,
like you can now travel, search and book on perplexity.
No scrolling, 847 hotels and photos,
trying to spot a decent gym.
I asked, find me a hotel in Amsterdam with a serious gym,
walkable to conference venue,
use under 300 euros per night.
Result, perfect recommendation,
the exact hotel I actually use.
Could you actually click book?
I think so.
I think so.
And so they're definitely working on it.
And this is like an obvious agentic workflow. But Simon Taylor, let us
know. Did you actually book and did you go through with the booking? And
was it easier than just going to the website or was it merely better
search? Because I think people won't be fully satisfied until it's an entirely
chat-based workflow and they don't need to do anything and they never get routed
to another website.
Yeah.
David Sacks' little review of Mountainhead,
he says Mountainhead costume designer,
Susan Lyle on the All In Pod.
It was very good source,
it was a very good source for research for me.
One of the hosts, Chamath Palahepatiya,
went to the inauguration of President Donald Trump
and he showed pictures of all the things he wore.
I couldn't believe it.
He had a Loro Piana jacket here
and a Brunello Cuccinelli there.
He obviously really knew his stuff.
So that's off to-
Very cool.
That said, it shouldn't take too much research
to understand that capital allocators
enjoy Loro Piana and Cuccinelli.
Yeah, it's good stuff.
This is an interesting post by Ashe Sanghvi.
So Anthropic just went from 1 billion in annualized revenue to 3 billion in annualized revenue in five months crazy growth at the scale and
Ashes is I remember the days when snowflake doubled at 500 million ARR in a year and people lost their minds
And yeah, the numbers have gotten so big in the AI race that
Going from 1 to 3 billion is like what have you done for me lately Claude step it up
But yeah, congrats everyone at the anthropic. We're having some other topics on the show this week. Yes, extremely impressive, but I don't know why
That is
super surprising
It's impressive but shouldn't be surprising if you're paying
attention. Given the actual technology. You mean that? Just how useful these tools are?
Yeah if you just look at trailing open AI, they have less of a, they have less
significant of a consumer business but it's still very big in enterprise.
Loved by developers. Yeah.
Yeah.
What else do we want to go through?
Yashio Bengio has a new nonprofit research lab
called Law Zero.
Sharon Gaffrey has the story in Bloomberg.
She's coming on the show soon.
And I thought it was interesting because I was wondering
if like, has anyone in AI safety actually just tried
to use Isaac Asimov's
three laws of robotics to design a safer AI system?
Like, it would be very ironic and hilarious
if that was the solution all along,
which is hard code in, don't hurt humans,
which is basically what the Isaac Asimov
three laws of robotics are.
But of course, the premise of the Asimov movies
and books is that even though they try to encode that,
it still goes wrong.
So there's still a little bit of an AI doom scenario,
but he raised $30 million on it.
So congrats to Yahshua,
and hopefully there's some good AI research
that comes out of it.
And as we've seen,
even if you don't believe in the AI doom scenario,
the paper clipping,
there's still a ton of other ways that AI can go wrong and have negative effects, even if it's just creating overly addictive products or dual use technology. There's a bunch of interesting,
the Manchurian candidates and the sleeper agents that Anthropic discovered or hypothesized.
AI sucks net.
Yeah. And so I think this is worth funding. I think this is worth researching, but you have to take it with a grain of salt and you have to realize the the full picture and the full
dynamics of of geopolitics in the AI race before you actually go and execute against what one of these nonprofits is saying.
I thought this post from Justine Moore was hilarious. Have you seen the new Google AI feature? It's on Gemini.
It's literally on AI studio. You can probably find it on Google Ultra One. Dude, it's on Flow. It's
a search labs labs original. You can find it in Google Docs. It will appear as a
pop-up when you least expect it. It's so ridiculous and so true. Just put it in
the Google search bar if you care so much. They just want to test their
product market fit. They want to see how hard they can make people work for it and still get adoption. Yeah, you know, they're all different. Yeah
We have some news
Separately Toma Bravo. Oh, yeah is announced this morning the completion of fundraising for new buyout funds totaling more than
34 billion that's got a
out funds totaling more than 34 billion. That's got it.
We gotta hit the gong for that.
Yeah, hit the gong.
Can we get the gong view, please?
Can we get the gong view?
There we go.
Nice hit, John.
Swing in for Telma Bravo.
Nice hit.
And notably, they soft circled 1.8 billion
out of the 34 billion for Europe.
Oh, interesting.
So, you know, not.
Get ready if you're a software company over in Europe. Oh, interesting. So, you know, not. Get ready if you're a software company over in Europe.
You might have a bio offer on your desk soon.
If your growth is good but not great.
Yeah.
Get ready to meet Orlando.
If you're in need of transformation
on optimization, get ready.
Good to see private equity finally raises some real money.
Yeah, yeah, getting some real size.
In other news, OpenEvidence,
the Sequoia-ia backed AI medical assistant is
Reportedly raising a hundred million dollars with three billion dollar valuation just months after its seventy five million dollar series a at one billion
GV and Kleiner Perkins are in talks to lead the round though details are still being finalized soon as it's finalized gotta have the CEO
On the show let's do it some of the investors would be interesting
I am very interested in this like the the the vertical it's like it. Some of the investors, it'd be interesting. I am very interested in this, like the vertical,
it's like vertical SaaS, right?
The niche verticalization of the platform layer.
Everyone's agreeing with like value accrual
at the application layer.
The question is like, how many applications will there be?
Right?
Will there be five or 10 or 50 or 100?
There seem to be a lot of companies getting
into the unicorn territory.
How many will make it through and win?
But it's all exciting.
Also Chime has just launched their IPO Roadshow.
Dan Primack has a story, Axios.
A 9.1 billion dollar market cap if it prices in the middle
versus the 25 billion market cap valuation.
VC, back to unicorns, are maybe,
are finally done clinging to their Zerp era valuation,
seeing this more and more and we covered this.
They're taking their medicine.
Yeah, they're taking their medicine.
Hari calls out, I think they bid it up to 12 billion or so
during the road show and pops up to 15 billion on IPO day.
Fair value is in the high teens, is his point of view.
Yeah, but we saw this in the information.
A lot of private companies are done with their venture
journeys.
They're ready to go out into the market
as soon as the IPO window is open just enough to get through.
And so they might take their medicine.
They might take a slight down round
when they're going out.
But then, historically, that hasn't
been that bad in letting them actually perform once they
get into the market and go public.
So good luck to them.
We should have lesson on.
Yeah, just to discuss.
Talk about this next one to discuss.
This next post from Buxate, very exotic sounding.
He says, clearly intern son or VC scout daughter.
Mm-hmm.
Which is.
I love that Roy is in the comments immediately.
Let me get both.
Roy's immediately in the comments.
He wants both. wants gotta have Roy
We gotta have right back on to get the update because he and the team seemed to just be wild and out right now
It's insane actually insane. I see
Again, I'm starting to feel like a bit of a boomer because I see some of their exchanges and I'm like
Yeah, I'm like there's no way this is real. Yeah, there's no way
There's no, you know, it can't possibly be, but I don't think they ended up hiring 50 interns
Yeah, but it seems like they have a lot got to have them back on. Yeah to break it all down
We should have all the interns on we should have him with all the interns standing behind him and they can just shout answers
Over each other loudest intern wins. He had an interesting so
The loudest intern wins. He had an interesting, so he had a post
that went fairly viral yesterday.
He was quoting somebody who said,
what genuinely pisses me off about younger founders
are just new people getting into startups
is how obsessed they are with raising.
Goes on and on.
Roy said that?
No, no, no.
Roy quotes that and says, hot take.
Founders need to focus more on hype chasing.
Startups don't live and die by a product being 5% better.
They die because of lack of money or delusion.
Hype chasing helps with both.
I don't know how hype chasing helps with both.
Yeah, you still got to build a product,
but distribution is really important.
And so you can say the least.
He said inflated revenue is still revenue.
Users who pay out of curiosity are still users.
And good engineers who are down to interview
after a cool launch video are still good engineers.
Viral moments are not so easy to come by,
and the potential upside of making the most of them
is higher than you think.
I like this, because it's a debatable point.
Roy, his story is clearly gonna break one way or the other.
It'll either be a breakout success
or kind of a learning lesson.
He had another post that I saw where
he said he's paying founding engineers
like hundreds of thousands of dollars in cash
because he said that he can just raise
infinite amount of equity, which is.
Built different.
He's just built different.
And yeah, I'm just interested to follow on.
I'm rooting for him despite him being controversial.
I want to see him succeed.
I think he is.
He's very good at causing controversy.
Like that, even just that, the idea of like,
oh, we're not giving equity, we're giving all cash.
Like that's a controversial approach.
Some equity, but it's just like, I value equity way more.
I'm just gonna pay.
Yeah, but he's selling the equity at a high value. It's like you could do that with the shares
It's very odd, but it's like good bait
No, I mean if he says my if he believes that his equity is worth a multiple of what you'd be selling it to pay
The cash he's not me. Yeah, he has cash in his bank account today. Okay. Yeah
Sure, I'm gonna for sure sure sure sure sure sure a couple months. Yeah
today, because he says, I'm going to 4x my valuation in a couple months.
Yeah.
Makes sense.
Anyway, interesting post from Epirus.
We haven't had them on the show yet,
but we have to at some point.
So quoting Defense Index, unstoppable China
can produce 500,000 FPV drones every month
and scale up to 700 in wartime, which actually feels like
roughly the same scale as Ukraine,
maybe within an order of magnitude, which is,
it's actually kind of lower than I expected,
but it's obviously a lot.
And Epera says, this is not unstoppable.
Yeah, so Ukraine is doing just under 400,000 a month
right now at their current rate.
Okay, so they're doing that basically in a cave.
They have to.
With scrap.
You know?
Like China has all of the on, you know.
So I imagine China could actually do well beyond this.
Yeah.
It's also a weird narrative because in what scenario,
are these FPGV drones, can they get over the Taiwan Strait?
Because I believe they're pretty short range.
And so it's more for like, what is the trench war
scenario that would happen over there where these
would be super relevant?
Yeah, it's interesting to think about.
They could have basically a bunch of floating docks
that the FPV drones could.
Yeah, I guess that's it.
Yeah.
And just boats that take you closer.
I mean, especially if you can just
put them into a shipping container
and then move the shipping container.
So it's like, instead of an aircraft carrier,
you just have a shipping, like a cargo ship.
Yeah, the interesting thing about, so with EPROS,
I'm interested to see how EPROS is actually doing
against these FPV drones.
Soren yesterday said he hadn't seen
an American electronic warfare company
reliably take down FPV drones.
I'm sure EPROS can in certain conditions,
and it should be a part of a broader system.
Yeah, so they say that their mission
is to overcome the asymmetric challenges inherent
in the future of national security.
And so good luck to them.
We want everyone to win here who's working for America.
And we should note earlier today Chamath
was sharing an image of a, I forget what machine.
It's not a scale.
I think you hold these devices that-
Like an in-body.
Yeah, that sort of track your body fat.
He says, hot girl summer, bring it.
She's putting up 11 and a half percent body fat.
Pretty good.
At allegedly six, two.
And Deleon responded and saying,
are you trying to get your body fat percentage
as low as the IRR of anyone that invested in your?
2021 specs fortunately that would be I don't think it's possible to go negative
on the body fat
Front but then Chamath made a very lewd comment
Deleon fires back
Said brothers this conversation is unbecoming of the high technology industry
I propose we shift the conversation to what really matters capital I said, brothers, this conversation is unbecoming of the high technology industry.
I propose we shift the conversation
to what really matters capital.
Would you both like to join TVPN today?
And Chamath, unfortunately, turned it down.
So we didn't get here.
But he's busy podcasting.
I don't like when capital allocators are fighting.
I like everyone working together to maximize returns
at all times.
Yeah, I think we need to work on our pay-per-view format get the boxing ring set up
Imagine hitting this imagine smashing the soundboard as two allocators just do it to that. I mean, yeah
Yeah, no better entertainment. It'd be spicy
But that'll have to be for another day. Anyway, thanks for watching. This has been a fantastic folks
We will see you tomorrow looking forward to it. Have a great afternoon. Bye Cheers