TBPN Live - Where Brad Gerstner Is Investing Billions
Episode Date: May 29, 2026This is our full conversation with Brad Gerstner, recorded live on TBPN.We discuss why he believes the AI boom is still in its early innings, how companies like Anthropic, Nvidia, and Snowfla...ke are benefiting from the AI infrastructure buildout, why America must continue investing in data centers and compute capacity to stay ahead of China, and his vision for Trump Accounts, a new initiative designed to give every child a stake in the American economy through long-term stock ownership.Sign up for TBPN’s daily newsletter at TBPN.comFollow TBPN:https://TBPN.comhttps://x.com/tbpnhttps://open.spotify.com/show/2L6WMqY3GUPCGBD0dX6p00?si=674252d53acf4231https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/technology-brothers/id1772360235https://www.youtube.com/@TBPNLive
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome back. How you doing?
Great to be here, guys. Great to be here.
Fantastic.
Back to back with Kyle.
Yeah. He laid out one of the greatest SpaceX bullcases.
We're going to throw it to you to try and one up him.
He said, whoever controls space controls the world.
And for that reason you got to own SpaceX. I liked it.
But take us a level deeper. What are you thinking about in the SpaceX IPO and the lead-up?
What are you watching for?
What unanswered questions are there?
What do you think is misunderstood maybe that more people should be aware of?
should be aware of. I mean, I mean, come on, guys. We didn't even have any foreplay.
You're already trying to be down, you know, and is SpaceX IPO? I mean, first, I haven't seen
you guys. Do you sell this thing? Did you sell? Hold on. I think we're working for you now.
I think we're working for you now. Did you guys get shares in Open AI when you sold this thing?
Yeah. Yeah. Okay. So we're all on we're on. We're on the same team. Okay. Yeah. How much
how much you mind did you make? Yeah. I mean, we got to turn the tape. We got to turn the
was a little bit. Anyway, let's talk SpaceX. Well, well, well, maybe before that we can rewind a little bit,
because I do remember the last time we were hanging out in person, it was at Katzenberg's event, right?
You were basically, it was kind of this interesting moment because in some ways we were going through
a mini correction, right? Like chatbots, you know, grew incredibly quickly. Agents were just starting
to work. And it's been interesting to see how the market did go through.
this correction in Q4, but then realize, hey, whoa, agents are a thing. And you had pretty
much perfectly called that in the conversation that we were having, which, yeah, in some ways,
it's just been, it's been such a wild year for so many reasons. But I feel like you had a
somewhat of a crystal ball back then. Yeah. Well, I mean, thank you. And I recall that conversation.
And the truth of the matter is, we've gone through several many corrections over the course of
us two and a half years, right? There's been a wall of worry. I mean, on my podcast podcast with Bill,
Bill Gurley, you know, we debated this. You know, Bill was saying, will the revenue show up?
Will there be gross margins? Will there be ROI? We're overbuilding. Or we, you know, every supply
constraint turns into a glut. And we saw all that wall of worry last year. I mean, I think for me,
the turning point was when when we hit inference time reasoning and we really had this whole other
vector of scaling intelligence. And I remember having Jensen on the podcast. And he said, Brad,
inference isn't going to 100x, not going to 1,000 X. It's going to 1 billion X because agents are
going to be talking to agents. Right. And so I got very pilled. And then what we saw opus 4.6 in
the beginning of December, it was clear that we had crossed a threshold of intelligence that
offered a level of utility that was fundamentally different. And if you were paying attention
early in December, you could see that coming. But we started the year with the market very skeptical
as to whether or not AI revenues would show up. And let me tell you this. Had Anthropic not
delivered its revenues that it's delivered this year, I think the stock market would be down 10 or 15%.
I think it's that important to the entire narrative. Because the fact of the matter is, Open AI has
not blown away their numbers. Google has not blown away their numbers. Like numbers have been good,
But the fundamental driver of outperformance in terms of offtake of AI revenues has been
Anthropic, which is the fastest growing company in the history of capitalism.
So that buoyed the entire AI segment.
And it was when they started posting those numbers and then they said on top of that,
we're doing it at high gross margins in a way that in Q2 may in fact actually lead to
some positive free cash flow.
The market really ascended.
Remember, two months ago,
the market was basically down on the year.
And a lot of these returns,
we just had two of the biggest months
in the history of Ultimiter's public funds.
That's 18 years.
I mean, we're going back a long time.
But that's, you know, listen,
I think we picked some pretty good stocks,
memory logic, etc.
But I also think it's just a function of the market delivered.
These companies delivered.
You saw Dell's, I mean, listen, Michael Dell,
one of my best buds.
And you watch the act, you know,
that he's delivering with Dell.
They just had AI server revenues up 700,
50% year over year, went from a $1 billion business to a $16 billion business.
This stuff is real, but in order for it to stay real, we have to continue to see usage by consumers
that they're willing to pay for and growth in the enterprise, small, medium and large
that they're willing to pay for, and growth in the sovereign domain.
I think it will occur, but oftentimes, you know, there'll be some pockets along the way here
where, you know, where revenues won't be as strong as people think, we'll have some pullbacks.
we could have 10 to 20% pullbacks in the semiconductor stock as just like run-of-the-mill
consolidation.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Right.
Run-of-the-mill consolidation.
I mean, micron is gone from a couple hundred bucks to a thousand bucks.
Dell, this time last year was, I think, $80 or $90.
It's now at $400.
These are seismic moves.
Yeah.
Right.
And so, yeah, fortunately, we were pretty bullish when other people were skeptical.
Yeah.
But, yeah, it feels like there's, there's like this.
natural reaction. Anytime there's good news, someone has to dig up something that's like a little
bit bearish. Right now we're seeing, you know, incredible anthropic revenues. And then there's
questions about ROI on token maxing and how much is going on there. How are you processing that?
Are you thinking that we'll see CEOs and management teams on the next earnings cycle sort of start
to dig into those numbers or is it just the market? Your honor, I had AI psychosis. Yeah, well,
that's the most extreme version. The other one is, yeah, we actually did spend half a billion dollars
a month and you know a quarter billion was super effective so that's what we're doubling down on
in the coming quarter but how do you think that shakes out well i mean if i if i size up the debate
in silicon valley yeah right there are the the bears who've been barracks on AI for let's call it
a while and anything that comes out anything that comes out is actually just still married
right and so now they're saying oh all this AI revenue is bullshit first they were saying it won't
show up at all yeah and then it showed up and then they're saying oh it's all bull
shit because it's all token maxing and there's no ROI. So that's one side. On the other side of the
people who are super AI-pilled and they're like, oh no, this is perfectly, you know, Pareto-optimal.
Everybody's spending the exact right amount of money on tokens, which we also know is not true.
And the truth lies in the center. Okay. When you have millions of independent actors,
all making self-rationalizing decisions like Altimeter on buying tokens, right? I don't like,
I don't like to waste money. Yeah. I'm spending money because I'm getting a
return. Now, will we experiment with some things that don't provide a return? Of course. I actually sent you guys a slide on this. I think it's pretty fascinating. I don't know if your team can pull up, but this is independent research that we did on this question of token maxing. And what we did is we went to 300 enterprises, right? And we just asked them, are you starting to optimize your spend? And if so, how much do you expect that you're going to spend year over year over the course of the next 12 months? And
If you leave that chart up, what you will see, guys, is that in the first category,
these are all people who are actively optimizing, but they still expect to grow revenues at over
50% over the next 12 months.
The second category are people who are planning to optimize.
And even if they're planning to optimize, they say they're going to grow revenue at 90%
and so on.
So here's my point on this, right?
And this is across 300 firms who use a multiple of AI solutions.
This is what they expect of their AI solutions.
API token usage.
So what does that tell us?
It tells us that, of course, people optimize along the way.
But we are so early in the adoption curve, right?
They're barely using coding today.
They're just getting on the coding train.
And they haven't really even started on using AI for knowledge work more generally.
So we're low in the penetration of coding as a use case.
We're almost nowhere in the penetration of knowledge.
work more generally as a use case. And then remember this, there are very few enterprises,
globally, that are even using AI. So we're really early in the curve of the people who are
actually using AI. So I'm somewhere in the middle. Of course, I believe that optimization
will continue. But my hunch is that Anthropic and Open AI, these companies will continue
to grow right through the optimization because the growth curve on penetration of both
enterprise and use case is so steep. But, you know, we'll see.
Yeah. Is this a zero-sum market where every dollar spent on tokens comes out of a SaaS company?
How are you reflecting on the SaaSpocalypse? Because we all saw what happened in the market, but there's been some really good news lately. How have you processed that?
Well, I popped on CNBC for a second yesterday and was talking about Snowflake as an example.
The stock was up, what, 35% yesterday. Now, of course, just to be fair, it's only up 10% for the year compared to a
company like Micron up 200% for the year, a company like Arm up 200% for the year. But they did
bounce back. And what I think we're starting to see is the bifurcation. There are companies that
are in the token flow. So all these software companies, we just lumped together. Right? We treat
them as though they're all equal. Sure. But there are certain software companies, data bricks,
snowflake, and Clickhouse, all of which were investors in, which very clear to me, they're in
the token flow. As you consume more tokens, the amount of your database queries goes up. I
I see it at Altimeter.
In fact, our database queries are growing faster than our token usage to give you a sense.
And this is, I think, happens.
So now they've proven they're in the token flow.
So they're starting to get some love from an AI multiple perspective.
That's very different than a company, I think, like Salesforce.
And I love Mark Benioff and got, you know, if anybody can, you know, get in the token flow,
it'll be him.
But the reality is the front-facing solutions that they offer are more competitive with the models
than something like Snowflake.
Snowflake's the enabler of the models,
whereas I think that Salesforce competes a bit more,
so it's going to be more challenging.
But I also, I've heard so much about this SaaSpocalypse.
And listen, I did a pod with Sotja, I don't know, 18 months ago,
where he caused a stir by saying software is a thin user interface
on top of a crud database.
And Benny off and everybody freaked out.
They're like, what are you saying?
It's way more than that, right?
And Bill and I did a pod, is software dead?
So it's not like this is new,
but then everybody started freaking out in December, all these multiples reset.
But the question is, what did they reset to?
Okay, and this is what I want to focus on here.
So if you show this slide that I prepared for you, fine, esteemed gentleman,
you know, what this slide shows is that the multiple correction just took software from a place
where they were way more expensive than the market multiple and brought them into the category of the market multiple.
Right. So now they're trading at about 22, 23 times real SBC included gap earnings.
Yep.
That's about where the market is trading.
Yeah.
So now just follow me on this.
Software is trading, mostly software names are trading at a higher multiple than Invidio.
Yeah.
Right?
Invidia is trading about 13 times earning for 70% growth for the thing that is the most essential thing in AI.
And they're at twice the multiple.
So like when I hear everybody crying that, hey, these multiples aren't fair, it looks to me like the multiples reset from an above market multiple where everybody thought the software revenues and earnings were impenetrable.
To now they're saying, well, I don't know.
Some of this may be three, four, five years out will be replaced.
So we're going to raise the discount rate.
We're going to lower the multiple.
They've only lowered it to the market multiple.
Let me just suggest that there's a possibility these trade well below the market multiple.
Sure. Right. I'm not wishing for that, but I'm just saying there's a distribution of potential outcomes here.
If you get on the AI train, if you get in the token flow, you're going to get above market multiple.
If you don't, if you slow down and it looks like every time that computational intelligence improves your business gets worse, then I promise you, they will trade below the market multiple and there's more room to the downside.
So for us, as investors, you know, Warren Buffett has this, you know, this old metaphor.
You know, there's the easy basket, there's the hard basket, or the yes basket, the no basket,
the too hard basket.
For me, software today is generally in the too hard basket.
It's notable because you've been saying that, I think, for months now.
And there's a lot of people now that there's been a stabilization that say like, oh, I'm, I'm smart enough.
I can outsmart the market here.
And like you're saying, even with where multiples are now, you still could be catching
a falling knife. I wanted to ask you about the potential data center moratorium and how,
you know, the likelihood of something like that in your view, how that would, if you have
less capacity coming online, that would obviously be bad for, you know, chip companies, various
companies in the hardware supply chain, but it could be great for people that are actually
have, you know, basically like have tokens to sell because they would potentially get more
pricing power. How do you... I think it's bad for everybody. It's bad for everybody, but most
importantly, it would be horrific for America. Unless we be overconfident in Silicon Valley,
let's remember the activists, a small group of activists shut down supersonic technology
and a small group of activists shut down all nuclear clean energy in this country. Okay, we have 100
Fission Reactors being built in China, we have one in the United States. It's a disaster
that happened. And so we can't take for granted that the cooks who are calling for data center
moratoriums, right, which just think about this for a second. All of our GDP growth is coming
from the fact that we are building data centers and driving AI and driving productivity
improvements in the economy. A data center moratorium would thrust us straight into a recession and
high unemployment.
Secondly, it would seed the entire global game to China.
Like overnight, we would lose to China in the global AI race, which is not just about AI.
It's about economic security.
It's about jobs.
And it's about national security.
So it literally is insane that we would do this.
I can't even believe there are people talking about it.
However, why are they talking about?
Because people are concerned.
Local communities are concerned.
I just got back from celebrating my mother's 90th and rural Indian.
Indiana, you know, over the Memorial Day weekend.
And what I'll tell you is, happy birthday.
Happy birthday.
She's incredible.
She has go incredible.
But you think about a place like Mishawaka, Indiana.
Yeah.
Where, you know, they're building a data center.
I mean, folks here, they're worried about their jobs.
They're worried about their kids having jobs.
And then they're told by these crazy activists who show up in their town,
they're not going to have any water and their electricity bills are going to go up.
So can we blame these people for being a little agitated about what's going.
going on. So I'm actually working on an initiative. I'm not prepared to announce today, but with
like everybody in the value chain, all of the cloud companies, all of the invidias and AMDs and,
you know, and off takers, et cetera, and the White House that would deliver a very tangible and
profound dividend to the communities that were building. There we go. There we go. And I think it's
there's a very elegant solution there. You're the guy to do it. You're the hero that American
capitalism deserves. You've got Trump accounts done. I feel like this is a good, good next act for you.
Well, I'm in the mix. I'm happy to do my part. They're extraordinary people around the table.
But here's the thing. We have to build the socio-political bridge for the next three years, right? In three
years, it's going to be obvious, I think, the abundance and the benefits that AI is driving for us as
consumers. Everybody's going to have their own personal assistant in their pocket, right, for next to
nothing. Think about that.
can do your calendar, can order your food, can, you know, get you a new black t-shirt,
send mom a birthday present, all the things.
And every enterprise is going to have things that up-level us all as humans.
So I am firmly, just like, you know, John Maynard Keynes was at the start of the Industrial Revolution,
I am firmly in camp optimism about technological progress.
But I'm also not head in the sand about the disruption and the concern people have for the next three years.
So we have to give them tangible benefits that get us over that.
bridge. I think we're going to do it. I'm feeling pretty optimistic about it, but you're right
to bring it up and you're right to be concerned about it. We cannot take it for granted.
Yeah, the, I mean, this just goes back. I think it's entirely fair that individuals, you know,
if you say, I'm going to put an AI factory in your backyard, okay, is it going to create jobs
briefly and then, you know, some, some maintenance. I think it's totally fair for people to not
want it in their backyard because there's some, they perceive some risk.
and there's no direct benefits because they can just get AI anywhere, right?
It doesn't matter.
We're going to, but there's a solution.
Yeah.
How are you thinking about adoption curves?
It feels like part of the reason that we've had, you know,
these kind of like rolling corrections is that, you know,
technology gets adopted really quickly.
People assume that it's just a straight line forever,
but then there's a new capability, a new technology,
and it feels like stuff is just breaking through,
like instantly.
Where have you, like, are you adopting new frameworks internally to try to understand how
quickly new products can get to market?
Obviously, enterprise is different, but it feels like the line between consumer and enterprise,
at least in, you know, coding has never been more blurred.
For sure.
I mean, listen, I think about when I got into the game guys, 1999, 2000, and we had about
35 million people connected to broadband internet, right? We all saw what Amazon was going to be,
but where we got over our skis, right, is we thought it would come a lot faster and we forgot
that there were only 35 million people connected to broadband internet. Today we have four billion,
three, four billion. Like the rate of diffusion and the magnitude of diffusion is radically, radically
different. And think about this. We have a natural constraint on how fast we can go,
because we only have so many memory wafers in the world. We only have so many logic wafers in the world.
We only have so much powered shell in the world. That means we can only produce so many tokens.
Okay. And it's almost as though in 1999, 2000, we could only lay so much fiber.
I've said this a thousand times. When we were putting down the fiber in 2000, we called it dark fiber for a reason.
There was nobody using it, and we knew there was nobody using it when we put it in the ground.
there's not a dark GPU in the world today.
Yeah. Okay. There's not a dark token in the world today. So I think it's a very different thing. I think
it's a healthy thing. We have this wall of worry. We can't build that much supply. And I would say,
if I look at every company, what did they report on their earnings calls? Google was token constrained.
They said, if we had more tokens, we'd be able to generate more revenue. Same for Amazon. Same for
for Microsoft. Same from Open AI. Same from Anthropic. The world demands more intelligence. Intelligence can only be
produced with tokens, and we have physical limits to the amount of tokens we're going to be able
to bring online. So, yes, we will have these waves, but I think the rate, the parabolic rate
at which these new models are going to produce intelligence, I think we're going to be blown
away over the course of the next nine months. You talk independently, you know, to Michael
Trul and the guys at Cursor and now, you know, taken over X.a.i. Or you talk to the guys at
Anthropic or OpenAI, and they kind of look you in the eyes with that Oppenheimer look, and they're like,
we're here.
Yeah.
Right.
Like we're like like we are going to think about this.
Open AI and Anthropic combined to start the year had three gigawatts of compute.
Three combined.
They're going to end the year closer to 10 and end next year closer to 20.
Yeah.
We're making algorithmic improvements.
We're making massive steps up the scaling law because the amount of compute we're going to have available to us.
Think about you know macro hard and macro harder that cursor is going to now be able to train a frontier level model.
So we've got incredible competition in America.
We've got the right amount of compute coming along.
I don't worry about the bubble as much, even though I know that there will invariably be some months that revenue doesn't grow as fast.
I'm really worried about making sure that America stays foot on the accelerator, competing globally and winning the AI race.
Like, this is going to lead to a moment of abundance for our economy.
And it's only through great national wealth that we can raise the full.
floor for everybody else. Yeah. No, that makes sense. There was some reporting this week that
META is hiring FTEs. I was sort of surprised to see them going into the enterprise because it feels
like they have every advantage on, you know, consumer. They have the billions of users. They have,
they have, you know, exciting hardware, all these things. How much did you, was that, was that surprising
to you at all? Do you expect more companies that weren't traditionally, you know, enterprise
focused to say, hey, there's tens, maybe hundreds of billions of dollars of revenue here.
We should be in this market.
I mean, the second you start spending $100 billion on CAPEX annually, okay, you run into the
AWS problem. What's the AWS problem? Now I have all this compute, but I don't use it
every day equally. Right. Jeff built AWS because he said, I have to build my capacity.
for Christmas Day or the week leading up to Christmas, Black Friday.
But he's like the rest of the year, half of that stuff sitting idle.
It's expensive as hell.
So I may as well rent it to everybody else, right?
Turned into a blockbuster business, but it made his core business better because he could build to Black Friday.
Right.
And nobody else could because they didn't have AWS.
So that's why Elon has launched EWS, right?
Elon Web Services, you know, with his compute and signed up a big first customer with
Anthropic? Listen, nobody on Earth is better at turning electrons into tokens than Elon, right? So expect
a lot more data centers out of Elon, expect them on Earth and eventually in space. And I think that
changed the whole tenor of the SpaceX IPO, both the cursor deal and the anthropic deal. I think that went
from, you know, people being slightly concerned about it to people being quite excited about. I'm happy
to, you know, to unpack that. So I think that for meta, if they're going to be in the game of spending that much
money. Listen, Susan Lee is, you know, incredible over there as the CFO. And I'm sure they're looking at
the strategic plan and Mark is saying, I want to build even more because that guy is never going to
give up the race, right? To frontier level AI, none of these guys want to give up that race. And so
they just have to figure out ways to monetize everything that they're building. Do I worry as a shareholder
at some level that it's, you know, that's hard. That's hard to take a business. It's been 120% consumer
and say, okay, now we're going to be in the business of AWS
and maybe even in the business of enterprise level agents.
I think it is hard.
I think they're up for the call.
And remember, you suggested the merger between, you know,
product-led growth, these coding agents kind of feel like consumer adoption.
So there's a lot of shared consumer DNA with what's going on in the enterprise today.
So they may surprise them, folks.
And better, it does have links into like hundreds of thousands of businesses through the ads,
platform. So it's not like they don't have any relationship to businesses. They do.
One more that I was curious to get your thoughts on. Kirkland and Ellis is talking about
investing half a billion dollars into their own software to help run their firm. A lot of people
pushing back on that. Historically, you take a firm that doesn't have strong software competency
and they spend hundreds of millions of dollars on their own software. There's a lot of examples
where that hasn't gone well.
Yet at the same time,
making software today is wildly different.
And it's very possible that things are changing,
especially if you can get the right partners around.
And I know they have some great partners.
Do you expect more companies of that scale services,
businesses, to want to try to own as much of the stack as possible
and not be reliant on the Harvies or the Ligoras of the world?
I mean, what else are they going to do?
I mean, it's kind of like, what else are you going to announce?
Oh, just we give up.
You know, so like, they got to do something.
The competition is coming straight at them.
I don't think it's a high probability bet personally.
Like if I was a partner at Kirkland and Ellis and somebody pitched me on that,
I'd say, I'm not sure that's the highest and best outcome here.
So what is an alternative outcome?
Good friend, you know, Josh Kushner, what he's doing at Thrive Holdings, right?
Where he's buying accounting companies.
And now I have somebody who's just like deep in the weeds recruiting the best engineers in the world, deep partnership with OpenAI.
I saw Greg Brockman retweet the great, the work that they're benefiting all these accounting firms, like they're driving just huge productivity gains in these accounting firms.
So it seems to me that that's a more likely outcome, you know, a thrive holdings buying a Kirkland and Ellis and saying now we're going to, you know, take this thing and AI turbocharge.
And I think you're going to see a lot of that out of private equity.
firms out of firms like Thrive Holdings. I think you're going to see take privates where people do
that on an individual company basis. But am I confident that software has gotten so easy that a law
firm that gets up every day and thinks about writing legal briefs is all of a sudden going to
write killer legal software to compete with Open AI and Anthropic? I think that's unlikely.
That's hard. What is your thinking around the series A, B, C, these earlier,
growth rounds. Feels like a lot of investors are just kind of frozen. You know, you were talking
earlier about not necessarily frozen in terms of their activity. They're doing a lot of deals,
but they maybe don't have as much confidence knowing what will get steamroll in the future.
You were talking about being in the token flow. Is that like where you feel comfortable deploying
at this early stage where you, you know, you're betting on a, you know, a 10-year outcome?
Yeah, I mean, listen, I think we all have to have the humility in these moments to know that looking out 10 years is almost impossible.
Looking out 10 months is pretty damn hard.
But I would say if you just looked across our portfolio and I think Altimiter is performing better than it has any time in its 18 year history.
You know, our early stage team, I think is doing awesome, awesome work on the early stage side.
but if you look at the type of stuff that we're investing in, it is in the token flow.
Right?
We're building to those compute shortages.
You know, we had the Cerebrus IPO, you know, last week.
We had been in that for nine years.
You know, investors, you know, GROC, so we're looking at a lot of other semiconductor-type businesses.
We're looking at a lot of compute data center type businesses.
And, you know, you just had, you know, your prior guest, you guys were talking about all the stuff you're doing in military modernization.
and the stuff that's adjacent to AI, but benefiting from AI,
we're doing a bunch of stuff there in modernization of the military.
So I think you find places that are either in the token flow
or benefiting from the token flow.
And then I would say in growth,
like we're just not doing a lot in what I would call inflection stage growth.
This is the companies at 5, 10, 15 billion.
You know, we've really made massive bets,
the biggest bets in the history of Ultimiter between open AI and anthropic,
which, you know, is consuming billions of billions,
of dollars. And so we think they are the principal beneficiaries. And then on the public side,
for three years now, we basically had 100% of the portfolio in AI and compute. And, you know,
as I sit here today, even though it's come up a lot, you know, Hynix is still trading at a single
digit multiple and Micron's trading a single digit multiple and Vividia's trading at 13, you know,
times. And you say, how is that even possible? Invity is up 15x, like better than a venture
market return over three years. Like, like, think about that. Like, all the venture returns
been had in the public markets, by the way, guys. But the earnings have come. But their multiples have
come down. Yeah, because the earnings have come. Their multiples have actually come down. This is the
cheapest multiple, Nvidia has traded at in a decade right now. Okay. And by the way, I think their growth is
going to continue to sustain. They're now taking 50% of their free cash flow and returning it by way
of dividend or buying back stock. I would encourage Jensen to do 70 or 75%. I think if he does that,
by the way, a prediction.
You know, look who invested in Apple.
The second they bought back,
or the second they committed to 75% of their free cash flow,
returning to investors, Warren Buffett.
Yeah.
One of the greatest investment returns in history, right?
And so once you make that cross that threshold,
and I think this, you know,
they're running that business incredibly well.
So the public markets, we've had, you know,
basically 100% in AI and compute.
We're basically there, you know, today.
So I think it is hard.
if you're a series B or series C company,
think about what we used to do in software.
If it's series A, you had a couple million in revenue,
and then series B, I don't know,
you had 20 million in revenue.
Shit, you would have a line out the door
people who wanted to do that deal.
You wouldn't have a single taker today.
Not a single take.
You mentioned something I think that resonates with everyone.
It's very hard to predict what's going to happen in 10 years.
Obviously, your job is to, you know,
look at individual trends and names.
But I want to know about the
Trump accounts and I want to know about investing for the next generation for children, advice.
Also, get me up to speed on the program. What's rolling out? What's the progress? But then what is
advice to parents in an uncertain time where setting their children up for success is maybe more
critical than ever? Well, the update is that after four years of working on this and, you know,
getting it passed into law last July 4th, the Invest America Act as part of the big beautiful
bill.
You know, it's set to launch and be funded on this July 4th.
But we launched the app, guys, yesterday.
So you can download the app every single family.
You should tell every family you know who has a kid.
Yep.
They should download the app for their kids, get their kids signed up.
There are 35 million kids in America under the age of 10, okay, who get at least 250 bucks.
Yeah.
So if you're basically born after January 1st, 2025, so I think about like under two, you get $1,000 in the S&P 500.
If you're between 2 and 10, you get $250.
Most of those kids will get $250 from Michael and Susan Dell.
If you live in Indiana, you'll get an extra $250 from me.
If you live in Connecticut, you'll get an extra $250 from Ray Dalio.
If you live in Oklahoma, you'll get $250 from the state of Oklahoma.
Okay.
And that's just for starters.
We have thousands of thousands of companies.
There's a lot of billionaires in states that you didn't name under Starlight.
I got a little of this.
They've heard from you.
I'm sure if they haven't heard from you, they're going to.
It's common.
And by the way, the generosity, this is the giving pledge 2.0.
Yeah.
We have trillions and trillions of dollars that are going to change hands in this country.
There's the single most efficient way for somebody like me to fund the next generation.
A hundred cents on the dollar goes to the kid.
It compounds for 18 years for their lifetime.
It makes them a capitalist and owner.
We know they're more likely to graduate from high school and college, more likely to
start a business, more likely to buy a home.
This societal ROI on this is off the chart.
So we launched it yesterday.
Get a rip of this, man.
It is now the number three app in the United States.
The number three app.
We just passed Google.
We're only behind Chad GPT and Claude.
It's incredible.
You're coming for your kids.
I love the app store charts.
It's in all three of the top app store apps right now.
And one of them is a government project.
It's a total.
Gerson victory.
Well, I would say, you know, kudos de Vlad and the guys at Robin Hood and B&Y and Joe Gabia at the National Design Studio.
And frankly, the whole team at the Treasury Department led by Luke Pettit and the Treasury Secretary,
this is the way government should be done.
A citizen had an idea.
He was able to go to Washington and actually get a law passed.
And then we put together a SWAT team of people who are experienced building these things to build them.
and then the consumers, i.e. the citizens of America who pay for this shit, said, hey, we love that thing and bid it up on the app store. So we have a lot of people downloading the apps. There are a lot of improvements coming. So be patient with us, but download the app. Get your kid on the path to compounding. On July 4th, guys, the money turns on. So every parent's going to see that their kid owns a little Nvidia, a little Microsoft, a little Walmart, right? Their little slice of all the top 500.
companies in America. And on July 6, I hope we have a joint bell ringing of the New York Stock
Exchange and the NASDAQ from the Oval Office to really signify the start of the trading
these accounts. Of course, parents don't have to know anything about investing. It all goes into the
S&P 500. Yeah. Okay. But I'm cajoling some of our friends. You would know their names.
I think it would be amazing if we had some of our friends gift a share of the most amazing
companies in America, you know, the Facebooks, the SpaceXes, the Open AIs, how about if they all gave
just a share of those companies to every kid in America? Yeah, it'd be incredible. We are going to
change and reorient how the 70% of people who have felt left out and left behind,
they are not owners of capital, okay? We need to get them on the compounding journey. They
need to feel like they're on Team America. They're in the game. This does that for every child.
This is not a 529 account for the top 10% of Americans who can afford to save.
This is for everybody.
And it's so gratifying.
I was in Durham last Friday.
I adopted a school.
There are 700 kids, $250 to every one of the kids.
Now, a lot of people say, well, how did you do that?
Well, it's $250 times 700 kids.
They made a Google spreadsheet.
They got them all signed up.
I give the principal $150,000, and she QR codes the money and to each of the accounts.
Okay, everybody in America can adopt a school.
Raise a little bit of money.
Go to your principal and say, we want to juice up these accounts for all the kids,
get all the kids signed up.
And the teachers there, this was a school that 75% black and Latino serving the rural poor in Durham,
the level of excitement.
A mom came up to me crying.
I never thought my kids would, you know, own anything.
The teacher's so excited to teach the kids about what it means to own something.
You know, I grew up in rural Indiana, and we had zero.
And as I said to the president, when you're at zero, it's a despondent place to be.
You don't know how to get to one.
The hardest move in the world is going from zero to one.
One to two is easier and two to three is easier yet.
We're going to get all of these kids from zero to one on this compounding journey.
If you start with a thousand box and you save $50 a month, it's $50,000 at age 18.
There's no reason we can't put every kid in America on that journey.
and to celebrate our second 250 years, right?
We're launching a natural, you know, we're going to launch us as a dividend for every kid in America.
So I want to make sure that they all sign up, starting in 2027, the 3.7 million kids born in 2027, it will be automatic.
Get your Social Security number.
You get a Trump account.
And then we just need to get every small, we're giving money to the, we have 80 kids, you know, to our, you know, roughly 35.
employees they're all going to get 500 bucks at the end of the year into their trump accounts i'm
just going to QR the money uh by my team into their accounts you guys should do it for all the
companies you're involved in yeah and really spread the words small medium large business
realtors restaurants everybody can do this and so we've created an open source platform
of universal private ownership where the families have the title and they have the dignity the dignity
of savings. A 401k for life for every single American citizen, I think it's a game changer for the
country. Yeah. You did it. You did it. It was fantastic. You fucking did it. Oh, shit.
No, I remember you, you, you're talking about this and, uh, and, you know, as, as much as
respect as I have for you, uh, I put it in the, in the, it's too hard bucket, you know?
I, I put it in the, like, this is a thing that is just too hard for anyone, even, even the best. And,
Unfortunately, it was not, which is fantastic to see.
It's the ultimate white pill.
So thank you.
That's amazing.
It's a, you know, it's still day one, but, you know, we're off to a good start here.
And, you know, I think in the fullness of time, as the president said, we estimate over 15 years, it could transfer three to four trillion dollars of wealth from people who have it to the people who would otherwise have zero.
Yeah.
And, you know, the president has said he thinks it's going to be his biggest legacy.
To me, I think it'll be more impactful in the fullness of time than Social Security.
Because the difference is you actually own this.
You actually own.
It's not a government program.
Yeah.
Yeah.
This is a private account and private ownership that can compel for your life.
And you have to imagine that, you know, if you get to that place where, you know, there's a whole new generation that's, you know, becoming an adult, starting a family with $50, $200,000, $200,000.
That's a down payment on a house.
All of a sudden, that can underwrite more building of houses because there's more buyers in the market.
There's a whole bunch of market forces that I think will knock on from this in 20 years that could be incredibly positive.
So I'm extremely excited about it.
Indeed.
No doubt about it.
It's a, you know, you're going to hear a lot of us over the course of the next several months.
But it's, you know, listen, I also should mention, I've got the best partner in the world on this.
You know, Michael Dell, join me.
He and Susan joined me on this journey.
Really helped me over to get it over the last one inch line.
with the administration and then made the biggest philanthropic gift in history, $6.25 billion,
$250 to 25 million kids.
And, you know, frankly, I think for Michael and Susan, they're just getting started.
And I think their example that they've set for everybody else, you know, if you have, you, you know, you guys look at the amount of wealth that's being created here in Silicon Valley.
I mean, it's, it's really, there is no historical precedent.
There is no historical precedent.
And the fact of the matter, our charities are not prepared or equipped to take $10, $20, $50 billion.
And a lot of people want to give away this money during their lifetime or, you know, within 10 years of dying.
And targeted, too.
Right.
And in a way, in a way that there's no like.
And scales up or down.
It's like you can do the whole state.
Exactly.
You can do your county.
You could do school.
Yeah.
And there's not 30% overhead on the charity where somebody's getting paid $10 million.
and you know all this stuff happens after you pass away a hundred percent of it goes directly to
the kid yeah charity was so vague for so long it was like great okay you gave away half your money
but you're actually not transferring until you die and then it's going to go into this charity that
we'll deploy it later it gets so abstract that i think people uh all of those big donations that
happened in like the previous era sort of fell on deaf ears and they weren't didn't feel like they
were moving the needle and so this is just an entirely new way to do it i love it the chat is asking
if you have any surf trips planned.
Wow.
What do that?
Must be checking out my Twitter picture, which, by the way, was at the surf ranch.
Okay.
With Romando.
And the picture, actually, some people think it's me.
It's not me.
That was my then 11-year-old son getting barreled at the surf ranch because Romando was like
telling him how to get into the barrel.
That's awesome.
But I have to say, I'm 55, guys.
I just had a birthday.
I'm working hard.
I'm working hard.
I feel like I just can't imagine you being like, yeah, now's a good time to take a surf trip.
I feel like maybe a trip to surf ranch, but you got to stay locked in.
We ought to get together and do that.
By the way, I'm currently signing up somebody who's going to adopt all the kids in Los Angeles.
We've got San Francisco already covered.
We've got Oakland already covered.
And we're going to announce some big things.
here in the state of California.
I'm not giving up on California.
Yeah.
Right?
We're going to defeat,
we're going to defeat the unconstitutional taking tax.
Yeah.
Some people call the wealth tax or the billionaire tax.
Like this attack on success, you know,
trying to divide wedges,
drive wedges between Americans.
We're uniting people with the Trump accounts,
with the invest America accounts.
We're raising the floor and getting everybody into the game.
And this whole idea that we're going to demonize success
and drive Elon out of the state, et cetera.
Shout out, by the way,
to my junior.
uh... uh... son lincoln gersner who published his first paper this week and i i
show up at home and it's it's on the economic impact of tax policy in in california
i show up at home and he said hey dad i put i i i finally uh you know posted that that paper i was
writing he's doing it with josh row the incredible professor over at stanford he's and then he says
to me he's like has mark andreason ever retweeted you
I said, no, I don't think so.
And he goes, I think he retweeted me.
And I was like, no, he definitely didn't retweet you, but Mark did.
So shout out to my.
And that's, you know, I think that we are, what people, there's a lot of despondency in California.
I'm going to take a contrarian position here.
Spencer Pratt's going to be the new mayor of Los Angeles.
The wealth tax will be defeated.
we will pass the retirement and personal asset protection act as a referendum in California,
which will prohibit people from stealing your retirement money or your personal assets.
That will get passed, okay?
That will send a shocking message to the rest of America.
The rest of America thinks that California is as blue as it gets.
It turns out California is pretty purple, right?
And I think that common sense initiatives are going to, you know, reassert themselves in, you know, in the election in November.
And I think it's great because we're the fourth largest economy in the world.
I know some of my friends moved out and said, listen, California's got it coming to them.
My own view is this.
As California goes, so goes the country.
We cannot seed California.
It is where we're going to battle for the best ideas that are consistent with the founding of the country.
And we're going to, you know, win on those ideas.
And so I think we're seeing a lot of progress.
Shout out to Sergey and building better California
and the incredible work that they did to get us moving in the right direction.
It's fantastic.
Well, you've kept you way too long.
Thank you so much for.
Thank you so much.
Thank you so much.
And excited for your next project.
Yeah.
How much did you sell this for?
Let's go for it.
Let's go for a serve.
Yeah, we can only save far away from the microphone.
I'm going to turn this into a little BG2 and turn the tables on you guys.
I need to get some more.
Some more the other way.
It's great to see you.
Have a great weekend.
Great to see you, Brad.
Thank you.
You're the man.
We'll see you.
Cheers.
