TBPN - Keith Rabois, Ramp's $13B Valuation, Crypto Reserve, Moon Landing, Packy McCormick and Sheel Mohnot
Episode Date: March 3, 2025TBPN.com is made possible by:Ramp - https://ramp.comEight Sleep - https://eightsleep.com/tbpnWander - https://wander.com/tbpnPublic - https://public.comAdQuick - https://adquick.comBezel - ht...tps://getbezel.comPolymarket - https://polymarket.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(01:13) - Ramp Valuation (08:45) - Crypto Reserve (51:08) - TSMC Announcement (58:29) - Lunar Landing (01:03:12) - Keith Rabois (01:29:51) - Packy McCormick (01:57:41) - "Garage Mahals" (02:30:33) - Sheel Mohnot (03:02:58) - Timeline
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Today is Monday, March 3rd, and this show starts now.
We got a great show for you guys today.
We're talking ramp fundraise.
We're talking strategic crypto reserve.
We're talking about TSM, potentially investing $100 billion in America.
Let's go.
Also, speaking of America, we landed on the moon again.
We're back.
Flat Earth is back.
We should have a flat Earth call in.
Probably not doing too well today.
Shambles.
In shambles.
In shambles.
Absolutely shambles.
Also, we're talking massive garages.
Apparently, it's a trend.
And the Wall Street Journal covered it.
And we just had to cover it.
And we had to cover it.
People are building 6,000 square foot garages,
three thousand, like four times the size of, you know,
average house in L.A., Minnesota, built different.
We're also doing some call-ins today.
We got Sheel Monot calling in at 1.30, hopefully,
and Pacan McCormick at 1230 Pacific.
And so we'll kick it off, take you through the stories.
And, yeah, break it all down.
Break it down, John.
Break it down.
Let's kick off with, I can adjust my headphones too loud.
When I get loud, it's a little bit too much.
We're bringing the energy up.
Let's go.
Because we've got some big news today.
We do.
Yeah.
Ramp reached a new valuation $13 billion.
It's a lot of money.
It's a big number.
And so Eric posts today, Ramp reached a new valuation, $13 billion.
We're not Steve Jobs or Wilbur Wright.
We don't invent the next iPhone or flying machine.
Our job is more modest.
to save you time and money so perhaps you can.
And there's levels to this.
They went with the financial times for the write-ups at this point, right?
This shows a sign of maturity, you know, skipping over the, you know, typical crunch base,
tech crunch announcement.
Very cool to see.
And I like that Eric is leading with, by being a little humble here, right?
He's saying, we are the platform in which you create the next iPhone, not calling out that
they're the next iPhone.
And I think that's what you want out of a financial institution.
You don't want them, you know, thinking that they're reinventing the wheel and making it all about them.
You just want it to sort of run in the background.
Yeah.
You can tell he's been listening to a lot of David Senner's podcast.
Yep.
Founder's podcast because he says, we got here by taking Charlie Munger's quote to heart.
Take a simple idea and take it seriously.
And Senator has literally said that to me on a phone call before.
Yeah.
About podcasting.
It's a simple idea.
But if you take it seriously, it can grow and grow and grow.
Our simple idea, save every business time and money.
In less than six years, we incorporated have saved businesses $2 billion in 20 million hours.
Over half in the past 12 months alone, efficiency isn't flashy, but it builds enduring businesses.
Sam Walton cut Walmart supply chain down from five components to three.
Henry Ford cut the time to complete a car from 12 hours to 93 minutes.
We cut the cost to buy anything from 30 minutes to 30 seconds.
Ramp puts lessons of history's greatest entrepreneurs on autopilot, ask Poshmark,
who hit free cash flow goal.
five months early or Anderol, who's able to focus fully on their mission, or Notion and
cursor who maintain momentum without sacrificing control. Most companies slow as they grow. That's
not happening at ramp. We're determined it won't happen to you either as we enter the AII age.
Finance is going from steer assist to self-driving, expenses that categorize themselves and money
that reallocates itself for higher returns. That's an interesting vision.
Yeah, I love going back to this simple idea. Yeah. I think every founder
Usually founders start with a simple idea, and then it gets dramatically more complex.
And then it's a good sign if you can re-simplify it down to just like this core, core idea.
And saving every business time and money is a fantastically simple idea that they can build for decades off of that one simple idea.
So amazing to see.
You know, I think this round from what we know got done last year.
And Ramp has just kept this ridiculous pace.
and I expect to see many more announcements like it this year.
Yeah.
Also interesting that this is not a new fundraise that goes onto the balance sheet.
It's a secondary sale, essentially.
And so the structure here is the five-year-old company hit a new valuation as part of a share sale
in which investors including Singaporean sovereign wealth fund GIC, U.S. private equity group Stripes
and venture capitalists including Josh Kushner's Thrive, Kostla Ventures, and General Catalyst
bought $150 million worth of employee stock.
Yep.
And so for early employees, they've been working for a long time.
They get some liquidity.
And Ramp gets to reprice the equity, which allows them to hire more people, show them
that they're making progress.
Yeah, notably this was above the 2022 mark, which is a milestone.
7.65 billion in April of last year.
Yep.
And, yeah, I mean, Ramp is known for being, I would say, aggressive and high throughput on value.
and marking the company, that's something that can often be very, very difficult to do for
companies because it can sometimes mean you're going down. And that's exactly what happened
years ago during the kind of the interest rate hike and the failure of SVB. Ramp was at
$8.1 billion valuation in 2022, but dropped to a $5.8 billion a year later as higher interest rates
hit consumer spending, factors that also hit rival FinTech companies such as Stripe and
Clarna, Vintech obviously went through volatility, given the wild swing in rates and spending
across businesses and consumers.
What I always thought was super interesting about this was that ripped off the Band-Aid really
quickly.
And there are a lot of companies that didn't reprice their equity.
And there was always a question of, is it a zombie corn, which is something people were
saying.
But coming out and saying, hey, yeah, look, like the market is down 50%.
We're down 30%.
We're still growing.
We're growing into our evaluation.
It's actually a very strong sign of strength.
And it means that for employees, companies that fixate on a headline number and are trying to
recruit employees based on that, you know, 2022, 2021 valuation.
Yeah, three years ago.
We were worth a billion dollars.
Really doesn't work well for anyone, right?
It's really difficult.
People will only fall for it for so long.
Employees are intelligent.
They figure stuff out.
And they're not going to, you know, they're eventually going to say, yeah, I'm going to go
somewhere else.
Like my equity is worth a fraction of what it was initially priced at.
And, you know, I can go join another company that's priced fairly, given
attraction.
And so they delivered on exactly that.
You know, they repriced.
So sure, the employees that got in at 8.1 went down to 5.8.
They were like, oh, but at least they had transparency on what that was worth.
It wasn't zero, obviously, because there was a round that happened at 5.8.
And now it's up.
And they can kind of reprice and say, okay, this is what, this is, this is where we're
going.
And so congratulations to the ramp team.
We're going to have a couple people call in and talk about where that business is and
where it's going.
Yeah, so while Packy join, he's been an early investor in the company and covered their journey from, you know, early, early days till now.
And then we're going to have Scheel on at the end to talk specifically about just broadly the state of fintech because there was a very long, you know, roughly 700 days where it felt like everybody said fintech is dead.
Yeah.
You know, this was like a ZERP trend.
Totally.
These business models only worked when rates were zero.
And it's very clearly not the case.
So we're excited to have him on and get his perspective about kind of the future of the category.
and a lot more. Specifically, the Stripe Adyan stuff, which he covered last week as well,
and we covered a bit. But looking forward to getting his thoughts there. So let's get into the rest of the show.
Cool. Well, speaking of FinTech, if you're looking to invest, you should go to public.com.
Investing for those who take it seriously, they have multi-asset investing, industry leading yields,
and they're trusted by millions. And speaking of other investments that you can make,
that the government might be making.
with your tax dollars
presenting you pay your taxes
and then the government
gambles with them in crypto
I mean we might have to put on the steel
hat for this one as well
and there might be a silver lining here
we need the steel helmet
the tinfoil hat
we need all of the hats to come out today
for the story
and the story here the funny thing is
like the the real takeaway from this
is that when Trump plans anything crypto-related, something big is going to happen.
First time he obviously launched the Trump coin, got everybody together, got the industry together
and said, all right, now I have my own token.
And you guys are all sidelined because you're here in tuxedos instead of at your computer,
you know, trading.
And this time launching the strategic crypto reserve, or at least formally announcing it.
Yeah.
So the story from the Wall Street Journal is crypto prices jump after Trump announces five tokens
for strategic reserve. And so Bitcoin, Ether, Salana, Ripple-linked XRP, and Cardano will be in the
stockpile. And so Crypto prices surge Sunday after President Trump said he would move forward
on a U.S. Crypto Strategic Reserve that would include Bitcoin and Ether as well as three smaller and
riskier tokens. Lots of fun. And the U.S. would actually be buying these. Such an odd time to
announce these things. Like most...
I mean, I guess he seems like he always announces things on like the weekend, maybe.
I don't know.
Because obviously, like a lot of companies, they announce their earnings after the market closes
so people have maybe time to process it.
It doesn't create like chaos in the markets.
Is that way to do that?
Well, it's fascinating too because there's obviously, you know, there's Bitcoin ETF now,
you know, micro strategy.
There's apps that let you trade those in off hours, right?
but ultimately the sort of traditional financial markets are closed and he's releasing this,
you know, very market-moving news on a Sunday morning, which is, you know, it's interesting to say the least.
Also, you have to look at the lead-up to this, right?
His, you know, his son, Eric Trump has been on the timeline pumping World Liberty Phi.
Yep.
Pretty much daily is telling people to hodel, to buy, you know.
So they're basically, you know, they're, they've learned the crypto game, right?
Totally.
Yeah.
Yeah.
There was an interesting to take a pomp, obviously, like, you know, super pro crypto.
But he was saying it was funny that, like, the crypto announcement happened when the market
was closed.
And so, like, the traditional, the TradFi people could participate, which is, like, kind of
true.
But also a lot of the Tradify people can participate.
Yeah.
Yeah, because they have assets that they trade with.
Yeah.
They're not completely separate.
Anyway, a U.S.
Crypto Reserve will elevate.
this critical industry after years of corrupt attacks by the Biden administration, said Trump
in a Sunday post on his social media platform, truth social, I will make sure the U.S. is the crypto capital
of the world. Trump said the crypto strategic reserve will also include Solana, XRP, and Cardano.
Unlike Bitcoin, which is the largest and oldest cryptocurrency, these tokens were created more recently
and often by smaller teams, making them more susceptible to the wild price swings and other risks.
I heard, I think it was Naval was saying, like, if your crypto has a lobbyist, it's not decentralized, something like that, which I think is a very good take.
Let's go through some price action. On Sunday afternoon, Bitcoin rose 9%.
That said that the counterpoint to that is that a decentralized organization could decide collectively that we should have a lobbying arm.
Saylor is like Michael Saylor is like PR for Bitcoin, basically. And it's not for any reason.
Arguably some of the most important PR, right?
Yeah,
Pomp is a catalyst for, you know, the X audience.
Yeah, Pomp too.
Sailors going on CNBC, you know, getting Normies.
And, yeah, it has nothing.
It's still decentralized, but it also incentivizes people to do stuff.
And that was a big, that was a big push on like the Trump pump and the idea of like, you know, eventually, you know, like there are so many gold bugs in, in Congress right now.
Just because over the light.
of a senator. They accumulate gold effectively. And so stocks and health care stocks and industrial
stocks and tech stocks and eventually the assets work their way into our government organizations.
And so our representatives care about these things because they've acquired them.
And our next generation of legislators will have crypto assets.
Yeah. And one of the interesting things about this announcement is so it very clearly was
priced in pretty effectively. Because if you went back five years ago and you told
a Bitcoin maxi, the U.S. government is going to be buying Bitcoin off their balance sheet.
They would have said, oh, we're looking at a million dollars a coin, right? Like it just sounded,
it sounded like a lot of people believe this would happen, but they assume that it would come
with such a massive, you know, sort of increase in the price. And now, so yesterday it popped
significantly, popped around 10% yesterday, but today it's actually down almost seven and a half
percent. So it's almost back to 80. It's back to 87,000. It's back to 87,000.
87 today?
Which is crazy because it's basically around.
The announcement is almost round-tripped.
And it could very well.
I remember thinking just a couple weeks ago,
like what is the next catalyst for Bitcoin moving up?
And it would have to be a massive U.S.
Strategic National Bitcoin stockpile.
And I think it also has to be that cascading into every other country,
every other country saying, we also need this.
Yep.
And so just like there is gold at every Federal Reserve,
of every country essentially.
Like they're all stockpile gold.
I don't know if we have any left.
Apparently.
You got to put on the tinfoil hat.
Put on the tinfoil hat.
Yeah.
I'm a believer.
I believe it's there.
But I don't know.
I want to see it.
Yeah.
At the very least,
I hope,
hopefully they spray painted bricks.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So Bitcoin rose 9% from,
from 24 hours earlier to about 93,000.
Then you mentioned it round-tripped.
What's ETH at?
Can you look on?
Public.com?
Yeah, I'm pulling it up.
I'm sure.
Ethan is up 11% to 25%.
So Eric, we got to get Eric Trump, you know, pumping ETH a little bit harder.
It's clearly not.
That's hilarious.
Yeah, and so the dynamic here is absolutely wild.
Like so much of the, so much of the news around World Liberty Fy, Eric Trump's project,
was that they were buying Ethereum with size.
Yeah.
Presumably from the pre-sale, but it also seemed like potentially proceeds from, from
Trump coin, we're being sort of reallocate over there. So I'm pulling it up right now. I'm expecting
to see Eric saying Hodel. Yeah, he said it. So he said on February 25th, he said, buy the dips.
By the dips. And then today he says, somebody said never fade to Eric Trump. And today he says,
you're welcome, my friend. Hopefully I made someone's life just a little bit better. Now my advice,
hold long term. And Ethereum is.
down. Yeah, 12% today on, on really, really a devastating blow to the Ethereum community because
they've had a, they've had a rough go at it. Becoming a little bit of a punchline. And yeah,
this is, this is right after their conference, Eath, Denver, which is one of the biggest, you know,
events of the year for them. So tough go. But, you know, so let's give some more context and
then go into the timeline. A one-time Bitcoin skeptic, Trump embraced crypto last year and made a series
of big promises to the industry since returning at the White House. He has created a working
group on digital assets and pardoned Ross Ulbricht, the founder of Silk Road, an online drug
bazaar that used Bitcoin as its payment method. Investors and analysts said that one way to
build the reserve is for Uncle Sam to hold onto its stash of Bitcoin seized from cybercriminals
and dark net markets. The U.S. government holds more than 180,000 Bitcoin worth about
18 billion based on current market prices. Yeah, see, that would have been a
Enough, right? We could have just had the U.S. Crypto Reserve be assets that were seized from criminals.
Yeah. And it's kind of funny to be like, hey, look, like, it will effectively be burned.
Yeah. Like any, any Bitcoin that is ever seized going forward because we're probably going to be seized a lot more.
It's a way, you know, because in the past, there's been concern that the government has been sitting over the sell button, you know, going to just mark its sell.
And so it would have been a way to potentially find sort of a through line of saying, you know,
We believe the government should have some exposure to cryptocurrencies,
but we're not going to be using taxpayer dollars to do that.
Yep.
But alas, not what ended up happening.
That's great.
Well, let's go to some reactions.
We got Nick Carter.
We wanted to have it on the show, but he's tied up today.
He'll probably be coming on later this week.
If this is still in the news, if not, we'll get him the next time there's breaking news.
There will be another headline.
I'm sure something will happen.
Trump coin number two.
Let me retweet this.
Repost.
There we go.
Today feels like a good day to repost my anti-SBR article.
That's the strategic Bitcoin Reserve.
I stand by it, especially in light of the inclusion of ETH, Seoul, Ada, and XRP.
It's not the job of the government to run an Airsat's crypto hedge fund.
It's not their job to pick winners and losers.
The dismay you're seeing at the inclusion of some coins confirms.
If the government gets interested in crypto, it's not going to be, it's not necessarily going to be good for my bags.
Most conservatives and libertarians are suspicious of top-down government apportionment of resources in this manner,
preferring to let the private sector sort it out.
I wasn't a fan of Biden's massive infrastructure spending, which I felt was extremely wasteful.
And for that reason, I don't support further inclusion, incursion into the private sector by the government,
especially not via naked dollar issuance.
typically the U.S. government doesn't really intervene in markets with its monetary tools
beyond setting rates. Its role is setting the rules of the road and keeping the system stable,
not aggressively deploying government funds into commodities for day trading. And yeah,
it is fascinating. This is something that, like, I feel like it's so pro-tech. It's like,
it really should mark the end of the story of the government being anti-tech, anti-crypto,
and now the government's like so pro-crypto. But the response for,
at least our corner of X was, this is not good.
Yeah.
Yeah, well, it seems like the government is generally pro-crypto
because it makes a certain part of the voter base happy.
Yep.
The government doesn't seem to be pro-crypto.
And the government acknowledges that it's a legitimate asset class now.
And we shouldn't as a country attack it.
Yep.
Because the technology has real potential.
And if you create a positive regulatory environment
or a fair regulatory environment,
it could flourish, right? And we want that, we want that industry to flourish here in the United States.
That being said, it does seem to date that the biggest pro-crypto moves have not been, you know,
the pushback is that there's so many ways that you could argue that that they're sort of conflicted moves, right?
Yeah.
And yeah, even, even Sachs was facing a lot of blowback yesterday on Axe just because he said, you know, he came out and said, I sold, he sold his positions in Solana.
Bitcoin, Ethereum, all these different things. But you can easily kind of look through and say,
you're a major investor that has positions in a bunch of individual crypto companies,
like Bitwise is one. He still has a ton of look through exposure. Yeah, look through exposure,
basically. And somebody was pointing out, you know, I think this is later in the timeline,
but somebody was pointing out that just how convenient it is that Bitwise's top five position
and the Bitwise index are the exact assets that are in,
and I'll push, and the reason.
I don't think that's a conspiracy at all.
I don't, yeah.
So, so my, my, what I would point out there is that they just pick the five biggest
tokens by market cap.
Yeah, they're all the same.
So like the top five happened to be the ones that the index built, which happens to be the
ones.
And that makes perfect sense to me.
It's more so that it was, oh, we're making a tech index.
And it was like, Nvidia, Fang, you know.
Mag seven.
Yeah, and then, and then.
all of a sudden some some senator owns all the mag seven and then trump says the mag seven are what we're
going to focus on for like chip you know incentives i'd be like yeah that makes sense like hyperscalers
so overall i think that the pushback against sacks on specifically bitwise is a little bit misguided
yeah i agree but uh but overall it's it's hyper politicized right and yeah the other thing is that
they very clearly did this via the white house this wasn't something that went through congress
and was supposed to be something that had sort of broad buy-in from Washington.
Also, to be fair, did this isn't, they haven't done anything.
They've just announced a plan to do something.
They were like, Eric's like dad, we need a pump.
We need a quick pump.
Yeah, no, no, I don't even think there's a number yet.
Yeah.
Like, it could be, we're buying a million dollars.
Yeah.
It could be, we're buying a billion.
It could be we're buying a trillion.
Like, these are all wildly different things.
He's just saying, I'm excited about this.
Yeah.
And the number is going to be hyper, hyper analyzed because people are, we're also tracking how much does, how much waste.
Oh, yeah.
And so if Doge saves, you know, $500 billion and then we buy, you know, anything less than $500 billion doesn't seem super serious, right?
If the government went bought $100 billion with a crypto, it's like, okay, cool.
Yeah.
But, but anyways, that's going to be, this is going to be, you know, continue to be hyper politicized as everything is today.
Yeah. And so I like this analysis from Joe Wisenthal over at Bloomberg. It kind of breaks down
what it means to build a strategic stockpile. He says, conceptually, it makes sense that
conceptually it makes sense for the government to hold strategic stockpiles of any asset that
A, it could presumably have a liability in at some point. And B, it can't instantly acquire with money.
So, for example, oil, especially when we can't produce much here, made sense.
sense. Military equipment is like this as well. One could argue that in a war, we have bullet
denominated liabilities or tank denominated liabilities. And you can't acquire bullets or tanks out
of thin air with money due to the time to ramp up production. And then Sela, who we've had on the show
before, says strategic Bitcoin Reserve makes sense for the same reason as strategic gold reserve
makes sense. It's a monetary hedge against U.S. dollar hegemony, a prime export of the U.S.
other assets don't make much sense, i.e. the U.S. does not have a random basket of precious metals.
So I think that's the right take. I think a lot of people, Max Meyer had some good points along
this route. He's like he wants the government to be focused on making sure the currency of the
United States, you know, sort of maintains, maintains its value, not day trading. But as we've seen
some presidential day traders, you know, the guy from El Salvador, you know, he pulls up.
Robin Hood or whatever on his phone.
If he's smart, he's pulling up public.
And, you know, he's just, you know, basically on a mobile device, market buying, market buying Bitcoin from what I can see.
So, I mean, we were talking about this before with the Javier Malay stuff.
And it's like, it's great that that day trading Bitcoin is working for some people and the crazy stuff is working for some of these smaller countries.
But like, I need to be convinced a little bit more that this.
is like that we are in the same situation as these other countries.
Yep.
Let's go to Joe Wadsdale.
Yeah, this was a good take.
So Joe says taxation is theft.
It should be kept to a minimum.
It's wrong to steal my money for grift on the left.
It's also wrong to tax me for crypto bro schemes.
Efficient defense, courts, national parks, which he says should fund themselves, prison, et cetera.
Fine.
Cut it out with these schemes, guys.
I thought this was the best take.
You didn't see a lot of people that were, you know, overly pro.
Trump in the sort of election cycle actually coming out and pushing back against this,
but this is the right take.
I think we never discuss politics on this show, as our audience knows, but it's okay to
vote for somebody yet disagree with, you know, and agree with some of the stuff they do
and disagree with other stuff that they do. And if you can't, if you can't manage to do that,
then you're not sort of thinking independently, right? You're just sort of...
And vice versa. Yeah. You should be able to say, hey, I don't support the guy generally,
but like this is one thing that I like.
And there are plenty of examples of that, like the moon.
Yeah.
And so somebody, and he was quote tweeting Mayor Suarez, who says, I turn Miami into the
crypto capital of Florida.
Now we're turning the U.S. into the crypto capital of the world.
I generally agree that the U.S. should be the crypto capital of the world.
Yep.
Like 100%.
But if you actually look at the chart of Miami coin, hopefully our strategic reserve doesn't follow
the same path.
Oh, yeah.
Also, also, like, making America business friendly to a, like, a company like Coinbase that operates a very legitimate crypto exchange and having Bitcoin on the balance sheet of the Fed are two completely separate things.
One is like stop sending Wells notices, have more regulatory oversight, be very clear with Coinbase on what can they list.
can't they list? What's a security? What's not a security? What's a fair launch? All these
questions that everyone in the crypto community has. Where's the line drawn? And the other is just like,
are we pumping the price? Miami coin. The chart won't even show for Miami coin on these.
Because it's down so horrifically. But it's a good experiment. The steel man on this is that a lot
of times when people say, like, oh, the government shouldn't be spending on X, Y, or Z.
they always assume that the government spending is going to go to zero.
But there is a world where the government buys a bunch of crypto and it 10xes and they sell it and they make money.
And that's actually what happened during the housing bailout.
Like everyone was like, why are the bankers getting a bailout?
Like they're wasting my taxpayer money.
Well, those loans got repaid back with interest.
And so it's kind of like a narrative violation.
and like you might not like it because you didn't punish the people as much as possible
because, yeah, some of the people that were involved in the banks, they did get bailed out.
Yeah.
But it didn't cost the taxpayer or anything.
In fact, it made the taxpayer money, so you paid less taxes.
The disappointing thing here is that if somebody was already not a fan of Trump,
nothing about the last 24 hours would have changed their mind at all.
Right.
Like the dominant narrative on the left was that Trump is a grifter.
You know, he's using the office.
to just sort of accumulate personal wealth and all this stuff.
And now even the people who voted for him are like,
yeah,
or say,
like,
stop it with the crypto pro grifts.
So I posted yesterday,
a Nathan,
picture of Nathan for you.
A fantastic show if you need some business advice.
And I said the plan,
pay off the national debt by cutting government waste
and investing the savings into high risk cryptocurrency.
I can't even finish it because it's such a ridiculous plan.
Yeah,
We're doing.
But, uh, well, let's go through, uh, Trump's crypto schemes according to how crazy
they are.
Yeah.
So Nick,
Nick went ahead and did the heavy lifting here.
He ranked, uh, uh, Trump's six, uh, crypto projects.
And, uh, so he starts off Trump, NFT, three out of ten, low stakes, was kind of cool
at the time and started off, uh, Ryan Selkis's Mar-a-Lago arc, which I think was kind of an
important moment.
I have a hilarious story about this.
So I know someone who bought this NFT.
And they said that it was actually one of like the most valuable NFT things you could possibly get because it got you dinner at Maralago.
And yeah.
And the thing was is that the people that bought it.
So like.
But it only gets you that one time, right?
Yeah, one time.
Which is a kind of a problem for the thing.
So so it's sold to everyone.
So a lot of the people that bought were just like fans of Trump.
But they weren't like hardcore crypto people.
So they went and bought it, but then in order to actually redeem the dinner and do the NFT stuff, you actually had to have like a wallet that you could transfer.
And it was like somewhat technical.
Yeah.
And so you take the universe of like Trump supporters who are down to spend a bunch of money like supporting him and like buying his NFT.
And you narrow that down to like one percent of people that are both Trump supporters are like down with him, but also like capable of running the wallet in the way that they need you to do to cash in the NFT to go to the dinner.
And so, like the person I know that that bought the NFT went and like the dinner was like empty.
And so then he was basically able to just pitch, pitch Trump like his exact vision for crypto.
Yeah.
And it was like, this is exactly how.
And then and then Trump was like, wait, my biggest crypto fans all believe X, Y and Z.
Yeah.
When like clearly that's not true.
Yeah.
But it was able to just like swing.
Yeah.
I'm surprised that more projects didn't realize that by it.
Because it sounds extremely far-fetched that you bought an NFT for $500 and you got a dinner with the president and you could talk to him about crypto policy.
But that was probably the best lobbying dollars you could ever spend.
And so like, yeah, like the expectation was like you get a dinner, you get to go into a massive ballroom and maybe Trump comes around and like shakes your hand.
Instead, it's like him and three people.
It's like the highest leverage lobbying you could possibly do.
Amazing.
But imagine the combination of things.
You have to be pro-Trump in crypto and also like enough of a D-Gen to think that buying an
NFT is a good idea.
So you can't be like the highbrow crypto person who's like actually like Bitcoin is just
the only thing.
I'm a Bitcoin purist.
I would never buy an NFT.
But then you also have to be well like it's like all these weird things have to have to like line up.
One thing you have to give Trump's crypto team credit for is they always position these things
as collectibles like very clearly.
They were collect Trump cards.
They were trading card NFTs.
They weren't NFTs, right?
And with Trump coin, it was Trump memes.
You were just buying a meme.
You could buy a million of them if you wanted.
You could buy.
We need a strategic meme reserve for sure.
That's obvious.
Okay, so continuing through this.
So we have World Liberty FI, 7 out of 10.
We got through one.
Seven out of 10.
Kind of an insane thing to do ahead of the election,
which, you know, this started in...
Nick was very against it.
He was like telling them, like, how can we tell them not to do this?
Started as vaporware, now an extremely questionable slush fund thing
that Justin's son owns a lot of bad vibes on this.
And so they were basically doing a public sort of like equity financing type thing
that you just got tokens or something.
And now they just have this, you know, basically hedge fund.
Trump coin, he says nine out of ten completely unhinged.
Just a crazy move overall.
Melania coin, he's actually pretty harsh here.
He says six out of ten, kind of sad at this point, but it was the beginning of the end for
meme coins and introduced us to Kelsior, which was behind the Malay project, which was funny.
So there are positive.
And then he said, Crypto Reserve featuring Cardano and XRP, 10 out of 10.
I didn't even know what to say about this.
A government bailout for your buddy who gets crypto news from TikTok, silver lining at least the
maxis are upset.
sad how long this list is. So I think, to be honest, I think Nick had the best takes across the board
over the last 24 hours. We should get him on tomorrow. Even if it's slow news. So we got another post
from Jack Raines over at slow. He says, this is a great take. And it's a post from David Sacks in
2021 that says, who's now our crypto czar. He says, the problem with government as a capital
allocator is that the money goes to special interests who have the ability to lobby, but not to
innovate and it has to come from somewhere usually innovators haven't built up influence yet uh so
anyways uh and uh good good good good one to surface uh sam lesson another crypto um project guy
and gp avert slow says l-o l-l so anyways tough one uh again david sacks you have to imagine
uh if if i had to if david sacks could say what he actually thought yeah i
I would say that maybe he thinks that there should be a Bitcoin reserve in the same way that
there's a gold reserve.
Yep.
I don't think that if he could have made this policy himself, that he would have just made
it the top five projects by market cap.
Yeah, he does.
He is in a weird situation because, again, like, we have no idea how much he's actually
shaping policy.
Yeah.
He is, he is the crypto czar.
Yeah.
But what does that really mean?
Well, he's also the crypto and AI czar.
Yeah.
And arguably AI is probably.
a lot more important for him to be focused on.
Yeah.
But to date, you know, when, when, if anything goes wrong, he's going to take the blame.
Yeah.
So I remember Saturday night, Trump coin gets launched.
And I'm thinking, I'm thinking to myself is very possible that Sacks didn't, didn't know this was happening.
Totally.
Right.
And now he's in a position where he has to defend, you know, defend the actions and make up some, you know, he kind of has to say something about it.
I don't remember what he actually would have shared.
But he's definitely a long for the right.
right now.
Yeah, I mean, clearly
anytime the government does anything
like if he with crypto,
he's going to take like the brunt of the attack.
Yeah.
Effectively, even if he was not in the room when it happened.
But he has been pretty good on comms.
Like his,
he very quickly anticipated,
people are going to think I'm pumping my own bags.
Let me make it clear that I did sell all of my personal holdings.
I might have some look through exposure,
but that's a separate thing.
I'm not actively managing any,
any positions here. And most importantly, it's not like I went, I'm not front running this. I'm not
like egregiously insider trading this. And like the bar is so low that I think a lot of people
look at it and they're like, yeah, okay, like at least you, at least you're not inside trading
aggressively. Go T.A. over it alongside, uh, who we've had on the show before, uh, takes a screenshot
of truth social. Donald Trump had to, uh, add a clarification. He says, so basically he came out
and initially just said the crypto reserve.
featuring Solana, Cardano, and XRP.
And then he had to follow it up.
He had to follow it up and say,
and obviously Bitcoin and Ethereum,
as other valuable cryptocurrencies will be at the heart of the reserve.
I also love Bitcoin and Ethereum.
So coming out and just saying the meme coin network,
Cardano and XRP are,
I know.
I do genuinely,
I think the team behind Solana is fairly, like, legitimate.
I did a whole thing with them. I think they're building cool technology, genuinely. Bitcoin is
Digital Gold. Solana is payment rails for the greatest casino in history. And with the native
sort of like poker chip, right? Like it makes sense. And then Cardano and XRP. The poker chip is the is like
the immutable like instrument. It's like the fundamental unit of value on Solana is the poker chip.
But Cardano and XRP are, you know, people were joking.
like this is huge for Uber drivers.
Because it's like you ask.
Like the fake one.
Yeah.
Anytime.
Anytime somebody that's outside of tech asked me like, oh, what do you think about
crypto?
They're always like, yeah.
I'm like, oh, like, blah, blah, blah.
Yeah.
Like I have Bitcoin and Cardano.
And they're like, and the funny thing is, is Cardano and XRP.
Yeah.
Like one of the reasons that you could make the argument that you should put them in the
strategic reserve is they sort of just like generally trade based on Bitcoin.
going to. So like they're all sort of like fluctuating at different rates but um uh overall fantastic and then
it's hilarious yeah people were trying to put sacks in the truth zone uh over Isaac Saul says that's a
pretty weak dodge uh David um you know calling out that um the conflict of interest here and they say first
Sachs's uh firm craft ventures has been invested in a startup called bitwise since 2017 yeah
David Sacks was a lead investor.
Right now, Bitwise is celebrating.
So the CEO of Bitwise came out the top five holdings of the Bitwise 10 crypto index fund.
Yep.
Because the main crypto coins going, the best way to out yourself is not understanding crypto is they call them crypto coins.
That's hilarious.
Not ironically.
Yeah.
Anyway, so the main crypto coins going in the crypto strategic reserve just so happen to match Bitwise's top five crypto holdings.
And the reason for this is that the tokens going in the crypto reserve are just the largest project by market.
cap,
yeah,
except for finance coin,
which didn't make it in.
But,
because that's like the Chinese
right, right, right.
Which makes sense.
Anyway, so,
uh,
so we talked about this.
It's not crazy.
Also,
there's a question about like,
you know,
yes,
he,
uh,
so Sacks
invested through Kraft.
I,
I don't know if Sacks is
stepping back
from direct control over
craft over the Tsar ship.
It could be.
Yeah,
I don't have to mention that.
But I doubt he has a board seat.
Like,
that doesn't mean that he has,
also invested in the index fund and it's like yeah there's just like there's like seven layers of like
conflict here that where it doesn't seem like that bad but also it's not great but also it's like
how could you ever find someone credible at all in to advise the government on crypto who had
never invested in crypto like that's basically impossible right well yeah and to be honest the way so
sacks is very good at the internet right he has one of the biggest podcasts in the world he's got a
hyper-engaged ex-falling.
If he was running point on the strategic reserve announcement, it wouldn't have gone
out like, hey, we're putting Cardano, XRP, and Solana in the reserve.
Oh, and also we're doing this.
It would have just been, so clearly he's not actually running point on anything or has
any impact on sort of the comms around this stuff.
Right.
That feels very obvious.
We have another post here from Joe.
He says, even prior to today, there are a lot of professional people in crypto who have been
denigrating coins like XRP and ADA for a long time.
and yet they're still here largely riding the same beta
and performing not much differently from Salana and Eth.
Why is that?
He says all the big D-Fi stuff is on Salon and Eth.
Most of the NFTs you hear about are on Salon-Eath.
I completely agree.
You would intuitively think that Salon and Eath
would have built up some gigantic market cap
over others like ADA and XRP and yet.
Laura Shin has a take here.
Yeah, it's a good point.
It's kind of interesting.
It's because their total supply is many billions,
$45 billion for $8.
and 100 billion for XRP that gives them an inflated market cap.
Even if you limit it to the circulating supply of 36 or 58 billion, respectively,
it's still many, many multiples of the circulating supply.
Yeah, other side of the coin is that they benefit from small unit prices.
Someone with a limited crypto allocation can feel like they're buying a lot of coins.
It still doesn't fully explain it.
It's ridiculous.
But like these psychology things are real.
I mean, like, even like Warren Buffett has to split shares.
I mean, at a certain point, yeah.
I mean, you can't buy Berkshire Hathaway Class A because it's like $250K a share.
Well, there was a while where you couldn't buy fractionalized shares very easily too, which is a big factor.
Yeah, totally.
But that never was the thing on crypto.
We have a post from Fat Man.
He said the whale.
So on Saturday night, there was there was a bunch of hub up on X because some, you know, all this is happening on chain.
This whale comes on and makes a, does a 50.
X long on Ethereum and maybe one of the other positions, using only $4 million in capital
to create a $200 million position.
As the Strategic Reserve was announced on Sunday, they went up, I think, about $6 million.
It says $5 million here.
Coincidentally, perfectly timing Trump's true social pose confirming United States Crypter Reserve.
So obviously some insider action here.
Who knows who it was, but it's hard to say, right?
because these assets haven't been explicitly sort of designated as securities.
You know, it's sort of a gray area, but at the same time, you know, sort of insider trading
collusion is broadly illegal.
And you'd have to hope that this kind of thing got cracked down on because it's, you know,
some serious size being thrown around.
It's a bad look.
Yeah.
Very, very bad look.
Yeah, and for what it's worth, that guy Nate Chastain went to prison.
He's in prison today for doing the same type of activity on OpenC.
You remember that?
He was the product manager at OpenC who was involved in the decision-making around what
NFTs got featured on the homepage, and so he would just buy them, they would pop, he would sell them.
And he went to jail for that.
He went to jail.
He's sitting in jail.
I think it was at least for a few years.
Yeah, I mean, the question of like, is it a security or not, blah, blah, blah.
It's like there's just something clearly immoral about having an edge on anything that has a financial asset wrapped around it.
And so I don't care if it's a monkey picture or a decentralized cryptocurrency or a stock.
Like you clearly have an edge.
You're trading on it.
You're stealing money from people.
So he's actually out of prison now.
He only had to go in for three months and then three years of supervised release.
So they were trying to make an example out of him.
But overall, I think this is enough of a precedent.
too.
Yeah.
Enough of a precedent to say whoever was, you know,
trading on insider info ahead of the strategic reserve announcement.
Yeah.
Probably.
It's kind of crazy, too, that they got a 2X in, you know, 24 hours.
They had to put it, well, you're less than a 2X, right?
I mean, 50x long is pretty crazy.
I mean, like, but the issue is.
It speaks to the lack of volatility.
It's a very low volatility asset, right?
Like, like, I feel like for something as monumental as,
like the government is going to be stockpiling this asset.
Like, you should not need to go so long just to double your money.
Like, I feel like a 50X long, like, just like an Nvidia earned, a slight Nvidia earnings beat is enough to do this.
But Ethereum is pretty sticky.
Yeah.
And then there's a funny post here.
If he was really an insider, he would have longed anything other than Ethan BTC, though, let's be honest.
Because, of course, anything else.
Yeah.
No, this is a good response.
He says, I don't know, the original poster says, I don't know if it was an insider or not,
but it's possible for an insider to know the tweet is coming, but not.
not know the exact contents of the tweet, which was again, good. Hey, this is going to happen. I mean,
the original sort of index months ago. The original way to index the crypto market,
which is why crypto indexes didn't become super popular. So you could just buy the few biggest
coins by market cap. Yeah. It basically have an index. Yeah, it is interesting. Also, when I see this,
I want to know, like, okay, yes, $4 million, 50x long. That seems like a lot. But does this type of
trade happen every single day? Because in that case, maybe this isn't an entire trading.
Maybe there's just one random person who's doing this every day, and then something big happens, and then you see it pop, you know?
This was out of the ordinary.
It also was funded by a wallet that was associated with fishing.
Okay.
Who knows what's going on there.
We can cap it off.
We have a post here from Packy, who's joining in about an hour.
He says, not to get all political, but Cardano, crying emojis.
And then another post from Atlas.
I actually don't understand.
Cardano that well because wasn't the guy
like one of the co-founders of Ethereum?
Like is Cardano not a serious
technical project or
because it hasn't been like hacked or anything right?
Like it works.
I think Cardano and XRP
are two to
blockchains. I know that they're not taken seriously
but I don't know. They were super early and they were
they were ICOs that
that never
delivered on from a
from a
product perspective or a
an adoption perspective.
An adoption perspective.
The price is really the only thing.
It's one of those things like Solana came about.
They were like, we're going to build a really fast blockchain.
We're going to build this amazing developer ecosystem on it.
And then they basically did exactly that.
And one of the things is.
Payment rails for the global casino.
Yeah.
That's the sound fight.
And yeah, overall, it makes sense that, you know, in 2022, every other week,
you'd have a new L1 blockchain.
and then it was a new L2 blockchain.
And what we're seeing now is that it seems like, you know,
developer and investor activity have sort of focused in on Solana.
And, you know, it makes sense, right?
There's no reason that there should be, you know,
a hundred different L-1s.
Anyways, last post for this one we have from Atlas at Creatine Cycle.
He says,
American Strategic Scam and Gambling Reserve with the,
Yeah, with the bald eagle.
I was so inspired by that.
Yeah, you were inspired.
We got it, we got to, uh, immediately ripped.
I'm going to pull up John's post.
He says, um, you want to read it out?
Say now that we have a strategic crypto gambling reserve, the next obvious step is to
introduce universal basic parlay.
Every Friday, Uncle Sam should send $5 to every citizen's draft king's account to give them a little
thrill going into the weekend.
Fantastic.
Obviously I'm very anti- Fantastic.
gambling.
We got to get that,
we got to get that into sexier.
You know, that's next.
Yeah.
I mean,
there's something to it,
just giving someone a little,
hey,
there's a chance.
You know,
it's like the government
already runs casinos
or like the lottery
and they give you
little stimulus.
The stimulus is giving
everyone the same amount of money,
right?
And so this is a version of that,
but instead of giving,
instead of giving everyone
$1,000,
for the COVID checks, the Trump checks, remember that?
Yeah.
What was it?
A thousand bucks?
Something like that.
I don't know.
I don't think I qualify.
I don't think I got it.
Hopefully not.
But I think everyone got like a thousand bucks.
And then they bought sneakers and Bitcoin and GameStop stock.
Yeah.
Instead of that, cut out the middleman.
Instead of giving everyone the thousand dollars.
And then they go gamble it.
Yeah.
Just give them a lottery ticket.
Yep.
And so everyone gets it.
And it's like, hey, we have a trillions.
trillion dollars in stimulus. We're going to make a thousand billionaires. So every American,
we know you're suffering, there's a one in a million chance that you become a billionaire.
Incredible. The American dream. The American dream. Yeah. The American dream.
Okay. We got Keith coming on in 15 minutes. Amazing. We got Pachie coming on in 45 minutes.
And we got Shield in an hour. So let's keep moving on. Let's keep talking. We got 15 minutes.
minutes to run through. You know what's something else that people would take a strategic stockpile of?
No, what's yeah, strategic what's another thing that the U.S. government should be getting a strategic
stockpile of? Holy Trinity watches. And you know, I want it. I would be more comfortable as a citizen
if I knew that Uncle Sam had a hundred thousand day dates. Yes. Yes. Every.
Or just Rolexes for everyone. Yeah. Yeah. Just Rolex is for everyone.
Like, I would like to know that the U.S. government could at any point decimate the watch market.
Yes, yes, by flooding the market.
Yeah, and if you really, so imagine, let's say if Trump really wanted to build goodwill,
he would buy up every single watch on the market.
And then at the end of his term, markets sell them all.
Yeah.
Drop the prices.
And then every American could buy a Daytona or an Adelaus or a day date, right?
Everybody would be walking around, you know, in style.
I mean, you know, you know, Fort Knox.
is filled with gold, let's take that gold, turn it into Cartier tanks, turn it into
presidentials, turn it into, you know, I don't know, what's another good gold watch?
A Santos.
Yeah.
Let's let's take our gold, ship it to Cardi A.
Every price.
And just be, yeah.
Yeah.
We'd like, we'd like one million.
Yeah.
Bernard Arnaud, no, wants to avoid tariffs.
Yeah.
Use the Fort Knox gold.
Use our Fort Knox gold to make more watches.
And then give us a cut of the.
the net revenue on the final product.
We want some of your margin.
And of course, the U.S.
government should order all of their watches on Bezell.
You can shop to 22,000 luxury watches, fully authenticated in-house, which would be important.
Authentication team is going to be busy.
Yeah, maybe we should send the Bezell authentication team to Fort Knox.
They're authenticating gold watches.
Why not, all of them authenticate gold bars?
Do the bars too.
Do the bars too.
Yeah.
Are these bricks that were spray painted with yellow?
Yes, yes.
Chrome spray paint.
Yeah.
If they can tell is this watch just gold-plated versus gold.
Have you seen that viral post that's like, like, oh, like there's like these fake jewelry
companies that sell on TikTok and no one can tell the difference because they gold-plate
them instead of making them solid gold.
And Ryan Peterson was like, didn't Archimedes figure this out 2,000 years ago?
Like you literally just have to figure out the density.
So you just put it in the tub and look at the water displacement and then you weigh it on a scale,
has existed for thousands of years.
And everyone on TikTok is like,
it's impossible.
We can't figure out if it's gold-plated or not
without destroying it, it's impossible.
It's so funny to me that he just like,
he's just dunked with like the Archimedes thing.
We've actually been able to solve this problem
for thousands of years,
but misinformation continues to be the problem.
Anyway.
Misinformation is back.
Yeah.
Well,
we have some real information for you.
real information. Trump and chipmaker TSMC expected to announce a $100 billion investment in the U.S.
It is the latest effort by Trump to persuade companies to make big investments in the U.S.
What do you got, John? It's exciting. I mean, the whole tune and the whole, the whole just,
I don't know, vibes around the chip ban and how we are playing the semiconductor strategy in the era of AI has changed pretty radically.
Like there was definitely a thought in post-chatGBT,
post-Domers having a serious say and being taken pretty seriously.
There was definitely a vibe of like, yeah, like this is going to be a weapon.
This is going to be something that's very valuable.
We need to corner this resource.
This is maybe like nuclear weapons.
We should maybe lock it down.
We should make sure that it's not just, you know, being stolen left and right.
And also we should restrict the chips that allow these models to run at scale.
And then, you know, flash forward a few years.
we've done the chip ban.
NVIDIA was able to restrict the memory bandwidth on the H80 instead of the A100.
They basically created a custom one that complied with the chip bands.
China bought a bunch of those.
Deep Seek team optimizes, winds up, building a frontier model.
We've talked about this before.
We don't think that NVIDIA has gotten enough sort of flack for sort of working around the chip ban.
Yep.
But at the same time, so many major U.S. institutions have so much, such large positions in NVIDIA.
Yep.
You know, there's actually a good, you know, you brought this up earlier.
Ben Thompson has made a good argument for, we actually should, the chip ban is probably bad.
We want China to be dependent on, you know, TSMC chips and not to build their own sort of alternatives to it.
Yep.
So that they, they sort of worry about, you know, invading Taiwan for that.
that reason. And Ben Thompson lives in Taiwan, obviously, doesn't, you know, wants to continue living
there. I don't think he would be too welcome after a Chinese invasion, given his, you know,
long history of critiquing. Yeah. And so China's rebuilding the TSM supply chain right now.
They have Smic and Smi, which are the TSMC and ASML copyc. But they are potentially a decade behind.
It's very hard to tell how close they are to the frontier.
I mean, even Intel, AMD, are not near the frontier.
And American companies have been struggling to catch up,
which is why we, you know, both every administration,
every tech leader has been like, let's get TSM to come here.
Can't we just, you know, give all those people green cards or gold cards?
We didn't really talk about the gold card thing.
But I think people would happily pay $5 million per person
to bring over the TSMXMC,
experts and manufacturing.
Yeah, the challenge there, though, is you have Taiwanese people who love Taiwan.
Of course.
And have lived there for generations.
Because there's like slight tensions between two companies that aren't two countries that
are just rivals.
Like, we're not enemies with China.
Yeah.
We're just rivals.
Like, we're not allies, but we're in the world trade organization together.
We're in the UN together.
Like, we are not at war.
Sure.
Sure.
That's a bigger debate.
But we are not geopolitical experts.
Yeah.
We're in like an economic.
TIF, but that's about it.
And I don't know.
No one's killing each other.
I mean, ask the fish off the coast of Argentina.
Okay, okay.
No, but what I like about this announcement, hopefully it goes through is that
this sort of America first investment executive order.
Yeah.
This is the kind of thing that makes that EO real.
Yeah.
And so 100 billion in chip manufacturing plants of the next four years.
In a short time, too.
Yeah.
It's not XAI speed, but, you know, certainly pretty close.
And there was news that, that TSM was making good progress at their Arizona plant.
Yep.
I don't know if it's in this article, but.
Yeah, that should give them confidence in, you know, making a much larger investment.
Yep.
To the U.S. advanced chip packaging is particularly critical for AI-related chips as it enhances
performance by integrating multiple semiconductor components, reducing size,
improving power efficiency and ensuring faster data transfer key applications for key factors for
AI applications. The U.S. has supported TSM's growth through 2022's Chips Act, which earmarked
tens of billions of dollars in grants to domestic chip manufacturing. And this is the other
criticism that Ben Thompson has always lobbied against the Chips Act is that it's grants.
It's, hey, we'll just give you money to just go try and build these instead of instead of being
demand side, it's supply side. So much better to say, hey, we want to create. Actually,
strategic reserve. Like the U.S. is a buyer of these chips at this price. If you can
domestically manufacture a chip that is competitive with a Nvidia H100 or H800 at scale
in America, boom, we'll buy it, we'll build the data center and then we'll be the leaser. And then
maybe we'll just sell it immediately. But you know that the demand's there. And that's enough for
the free market to go work and figure everything else out as opposed to, oh, there's this grant that's
going out. And so the grant got parceled up. And now, I know,
all of a sudden you have to do it.
You can't just do it in America.
You have to do it in Arizona because the Arizona guy gave more of the grant.
And like this is the taxes and this.
And all of a sudden it becomes like the government is now managing the project fully instead
of just being like, hey, we're just a buyer.
Yeah.
And so one of the, so going back to one of your earlier points.
So TSMC, the world's largest contract chip maker set down routes in Arizona in 2020 when it said
it would build a chip factory there for $12 billion.
Its ambitions for the site have expanded rapidly since with two more factories on
the same site and a total investment of $65 billion, the company's first factory began mass
production late last year. So we'd love to see them, you know, make a significant $12 billion
investment and then commit to, you know, expanding that site as well as, you know,
committing additional capital. Hopefully this announcement isn't final yet, but I have to
imagine it'll be sort of set in stone later this week. That's great. Yeah, love to see it.
Yeah, I mean, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, it is, it is, it is, it is somewhat interesting how AI has made everything. It's, like, the, you know, like, it just codes for you. You can also learn pretty much anything. Any history, you can just go and talk to it and it's your teacher, uh, except for making the chips that make AI possible. Yep. All of that knowledge is just locked away. Yeah, you have to legend. You are, you know, uh, in these, uh, what do they call them? Like, like,
mentor, mentee, you know, artisan, like, like, they don't open source any of the papers,
so there's nothing to build on. And so deep research, like, if you actually ask it how to run
an ASML machine and get good yields, it will come up very, very short. Yeah. The interesting thing
is it seems that the conversations around Intel and potentially Elon getting involved with Intel
have gone silent. I haven't heard much from that front. Yeah. All right.
all the airplanes were like encircling and we'll see where it goes.
Yeah.
Anyway, let's move on to the moon.
Let's talk about the moon.
What a shot.
The first lunar sunrise captured by a commercial lunar lander.
We tried our best to get a, you know, flat earther on the show today.
Somebody, a moon denier.
A moon denier.
We're squarely and the moon should be a state category here, which is why we're happy
to see an American private company is landing on the moon in collaboration with.
NASA.
I really want to know the moon, yeah, the moon landing denier.
Like, they have to deny this too.
And then they have to deny the next one that's going to happen.
And then space next going to.
And it's just like,
well,
the moon was a bit of a lost art for a while.
It was.
It was easy to be a denier when it was like,
oh,
that happened 30 years ago.
It's great new footage.
Kubrick was involved.
And now it's like,
okay,
we're going to be up there all the time.
And so huge,
huge news.
We have the,
we have the breakdown here.
Blue Ghost,
which is a private U.S.
spacecraft landed on the moon.
after its successful lunar touchdown,
Firefly Aerospace's Blue Ghost mission
could soon be joined on the moon
by two more commercial spacecraft.
And we have two minutes to rip through this
before Keith, I think we'll be hopping on.
Yeah, and we just have to call out
that Firefly Aerospace's comms are not
where they should be, right?
Oh, good point.
The fact that nobody really knew this was kind of happening
until they were basically on the moon.
Yeah.
and Austin's calling out a private company just flew to the moon.
I didn't hear about it until now.
Yeah, it is hilarious.
Anyone else who would do this would be like seven days until we landed on the moon,
five days until we buy merch.
Here's a documentary about it.
Here's a video about it.
They just went and did it.
It's amazing.
I mean, which is also cool.
It's cool.
It's just rare in deep tech today.
What do they call it?
Monk mode?
Monk mode.
They were just focused on themselves.
After 45 days in space,
A pulse-pounding semi-autonomous hour-long descent to its landing site at 3 a.m. Eastern standard time,
the boxy car-sized spacecraft's four-foot-tipped legs crunched into the surface of Mare Chrysium,
a vast and ancient impact basin filled with frozen lava on the moon's northeastern near side.
This marks the second time the U.S. has soft landed on the moon since the crude Apollo 17 mission of 1972.
The first occurred just more than a year ago when another robotic commercial mission,
the Odysseus lander from the company Intuitive Machines made Moonfall Lopsided but intact.
How do we not know about intuitive machines?
I don't remember that either.
So space companies, please reach out to Lulu and get your act together.
That is so, yeah, that is so crazy.
Stuff's just going up there.
Yeah, the fact that who knows what we were talking about when intuitive machines went to the moon.
but um yeah i want to know more of this maybe it's because it's not launching on
SpaceX that this is not getting enough attention
but how did they i think they went uh it says it's a suite of 10 experiments provided by
nassas part of the space agency's commercial lunar payload services
clps public private partnership so nassas effort to save cost by enlisting more than a
dozen u.s firms to ferry cargo tied to the u.s space agency's ambitious artemus program
I honestly don't know.
I honestly do not know how...
An Elon critic might say that Elon is intentionally sort of...
No.
No.
No.
Resilience also called Hakuto R. Mission 2 launched to the moon alongside Blue Ghost on a SpaceX
Falcon 9 rocket in mid-January.
But unlike other landers...
Okay.
So...
So I'm surprised that Elon wasn't pumping this harder.
But he's been a busy.
He's been busy.
He has been busy.
There's been a lot going on.
Anyway, one of these inward-looking instruments dubbed Lister is a drill capable of reaching a record-setting three meters beneath the lunar surface to measure heat flowing up from within deep enough to give scientists a better idea of how exactly the moon cooled from a ball of molten rock to the cold inert world we know today.
another called the lunar magnateoteluric sounder LMS will place electrodes across a roughly 700 square meter swath of terrain.
Its measurements of subtle electric and magnetic currents coursing through the moon can probe more than 1,000 kilometers into the interior,
two thirds of the way to the lunar center.
That's crazy.
Wow.
We got Keith in the waiting room.
Oh, yeah.
That's perfect.
You have to imagine Blue Ghost was running on ramp to, you know,
to make it to the moon.
Undoubtedly, you can't get to the moon.
If you're taking 45 days to close your books every month, it's impossible.
What do you think, Keith?
Is it possible?
The future's on ramp.
So all the companies that want to create the future, hopefully are saving time and money up
on ramp.
Yes, yes.
I love it.
Can you give us the update?
What's going on with ramp?
seem to be on a tear. Valuations never been higher. Actually, I would push back and say,
take a victory lap. I know the job's not done. Eric has been very clear about that, but I feel like
you can take a little bit of a victory lap and probably more this year to come, given the momentum.
Well, the amazing thing about Ramp is the value proposition, you know, it's been clear from the
beginning. We're going to save you time or save you money. And now there's empirical evidence or costs any
type of company, we can show that, you know, 5% this, 10% that. So it's very obvious. And the CFO world
is one of the most archaic worlds, parts of any business, even the most cutting edge organizations,
typically have a very archaic, call it, analog CFO function. And Ramp has the vision of we're
going to digitalize and bring the CFO function and all the finance into the modern age.
It uses the same tools, same technique, same data, same software, same SaaS tools that everybody else
your organization uses. And that's why it's such an exciting vision. Like the valuation,
you know, is somewhat art, not science. But the reason why investors all across the globe
are static about, you know, investing in ramp at any point is because we have this vision of
changing and transforming the CFO suite. And every company has this broken engine, has an old
engine from the 1800s or 1900s. And we're going to bring the engine of finance into the
22nd century, first to 21st century.
AI will probably bring us into the 22nd century with Ramp 2.
So that's why everybody's excited.
The thing that's special about the company, though, in the short term, is usually at this level of scale, companies slow down.
The product velocity slows down.
The quality of talent decreases.
We have a reversion to the mean, so to speak.
And rather than anything, aspiring at all cylinders, the product velocity is increasing.
The quality and insights of the products in the team are improving.
The intern classes for the last two years are by far.
best intern classes anywhere in the globe. So that's the future. And so that's why this round is very
exciting because it's a prediction for the future based upon a lot of savvy people who get
access to all the best companies that RAM still has the highest slope, which is, you know,
a play on their metaphor. Do you think that's because Eric and Kareem are second time founders?
Like, can you break them down as founders? Like, what makes them able to stay on the like just
insane cadence going into year six going into year 10 like how do they have so much energy great question
i wish i wish i knew the answer because i would love to invest in more yeah if you can come up with a
formula or predict a formula that's great but having worked with them now for over five years i think there's
a couple ingredients one subtle ingredient is eric has amazing marketing instincts and you really can't train
us the best CEOs or the chief marketing officer for the company and you know
Eric entered originally a space that was quote unquote crowded.
There were large incomments.
There were other funded startups.
And we're able to cut through the clutter immediately.
And he deserves the credit for being all to clarify,
succinctly, powerfully, and communicate the value proposition of RAM.
And then reinvent that every year or two to make it broader, more relevant,
more impressive, actually.
Korean is definitely setting the engineering both tempo and quality bar and has been from the
beginning. And I think the combination is really interesting. And, you know, maybe a global
point is if you look at some of the other heroic companies in people's portfolios, let's say,
strike. Yeah. You have two brothers. Um, so you're getting two executives for one. I think,
you know, in Ramp, there's like you're getting two CEOs for one. And so I think that other
amazing companies, that incredible synergy between two incredibly talented people where you're
always on the same page and you really reinforce each other is,
very rare. And so if I can find two other founders that are that much in sync, that might be the
reason to invest, actually. Yeah. What are you seeing for like young Gen Z founders? Like what,
what, like, there's this narrative like, oh, Gen Z hasn't produced. There's Zuck yet. Like,
what's your take on that? And what would be some advice for, you know, the younger entrepreneurs who
are coming in, maybe deciding between like, hey, I build a chat GPT rapper, make some money.
Maybe it's not a VC backable company, but it gets me paid versus let me take a big shot at something massive.
Like, how do you counsel people these days?
I don't think there's a formula that works for building an iconic company.
Like, as you pointed out, Zuckerberg is his first company.
Yeah.
Eric and Cream did build a company, did sell a company.
So I don't think there's a one size.
It's all formula.
I think it really comes down to do you have a vision of what the world needs?
and do you have a strategic advantage in your own traits,
your own personal superpowers that maps to that problem set?
And if you have one when you're 19 years old or 20 years old or 21 years old,
it might be a really good idea to proceed.
If you don't have that combination of a vision and your own superpowers,
then learning, building, working with other talented people
might be a really good sort of formula.
For those of you are sports fans, you know,
there's this epic debate constant in football about
you draft a rookie quarterback in the first round.
Do you start that quarterback?
and do they learn, you know, trial by fire?
Or do you sort of sit them on the bench for a year or two,
have them carry the clipboard around,
occasionally, you know, enter a game that's, you know, over, so to speak.
And I've studied this actually empirically,
and it's really interesting that people,
the, there are Hall of Fame quarterbacks of both sort of backgrounds,
career progressions.
The career progressions of those who start right away,
typically the first season,
the performance of the quarterback is miserable.
It's the worst year of their career,
almost without fail. Interception to
touchdown ratio as a specific
illustration. The people who sit
on the bench though for two or three years
and put aside the opportunity costs there, when they start,
they don't have an upside down intercept
touchdown ratio. So they do learn things.
And so it depends upon the quality of the team.
Anyway, I think it's most useful most of the time
for founders to work in an outstanding organization
for a year or two before starting their own company.
You get a feel for a taste, taste of what
great is, like what excellence really means, excellence quality, excellency driving an organization
forward. And I think there isn't, there isn't a great substitute for that. But if you're really
ready to go, there are people who learn better by being told, you know, I'm throwing in the pool,
learn to swim. I love it. Yeah. The question I have is, you know, you obviously noted earlier that
ramp was a already a pretty competitive category. People thought that it was not, you know, a lot of people had
made a bet and we're kind of ready to just watch the category play out. Do you see categories today
that are like fintech in 2020 when you made the, what I believe was your first time investing
in ramp that are ripe for a team to come in and take this sort of new approach, kind of
potentially invert the value prop in the way that ramp did? Have you identified anything there?
Is there kind of categories that you would like to invest in? Well, I was fortunate it was in 2019.
I had a fair amount of expertise in the space.
And I'd come to the conclusion that there's massive opportunity in replacing Amazon business
car, but alone this bigger vision of, you know, digitalizing the CFOs world.
But the people that were funding other operations, those founders and teams were missing
some key ingredients and were kind of naive about some stuff, underwriting specifically,
but there's other points.
So actually unusual for me, I was proactively trying to find high-quality founders
that were interested in this problem set.
And then Delian, fortunately, Interceptic Green playing a video game, having listened to me, probably annoyed by me pontificating every day.
That we need to find people to, you know, kind of compete with Brax or Amex and blah, blah, blah, blah, little divvy and all this stuff.
And then he's like, he actually walked to my office and I was in shock.
He said, like, I found, I think I found two founders.
I was like, really?
But he turns out he did.
We had actually been like pitching other founders and trying to recruit people to do this.
So I don't usually do this, but I have a lot of.
expertise in the area. So I'm not usually proactive about trying to find investment opportunities.
And then similarly, you know, when I was working at Founders Fund at the time, there's a very
non-standard Founders Fund investment in many, many ways. The most acute one being, if you have all
these competitors that are doing well, what's the monopoly story? You know, like, and there is a
monopoly story. I believe Ramp will be a monopoly. But, you know, imagine pitching the investment team at
founders fund, the Monopoly story in 2019 in a category that includes annex. Actually, SVV even
had a product in the market. Brax and DVD very well funded, you know, with quote-unquote traction.
So, you know, it took a little bit of massaging. Fortunately, Brian Singerman also saw the potential
at the time and really was alienated by some of the other founders too. So that helped correct
the anti-monopoly, you know,
that's great.
Are there any categories that you're looking for right now?
Well, I mean, obviously everybody talks about AI all the time.
And I think there are opportunities in AI that probably fit that characteristic
where people have assumed there's a winner or winners or, you know,
whether an application layer or a foundational model layer or somewhere else,
infrastructure layer.
But perhaps the right founders.
it's now five, 10 years into that story.
And sometimes it takes a lot of time to bake
before you get the next generation of founders
who have insights into what could be reinvented.
You think about this is kind of what SpaceX did,
you know, in some ways, the rockets.
It was like, the rockets were really good,
but they were invented in 1960s in the United States.
And, you know, I waited about 20 years, maybe 30 years,
to reinvent rockets.
And then Rocket Lab, which has a very competitive offering
for certain kinds of payloads,
It was another 20 years post-S SpaceX.
So sometimes you just have to let the wave, you know, sort of go on for a while
before you have a vision about how to reinvent it.
And then it's the right founder.
So I would love to invest in something that's the next generation replacement for LLM.
It's not a better LLM, but something that will transforms a pretty good double tantrum.
But that's something that would be a, you know, complete, it would make LLMs obsolete.
That would be a cool investor.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, how durable do you think the AI revenue is today?
You obviously were around for the dot-com era and companies going public, you know,
with little to no revenue, five million of revenue going public, right?
The counterpoint today is that we have, you know, great private companies with nine-figure run rates,
you know, that are growing tremendously fast.
But, you know, we've talked about this on the show before this idea of like easy come,
easy go, right?
So if you can create a bunch of traction really quickly, how durable is that?
Do you think that the companies that are, you know, adding 10 million of ARR every month are, you know, sort of durable yet?
Are they going to be leaders in five years?
What's your take there?
Well, there's a quality of revenue and it's different.
Like, for example, OpenAI, most of their revenue comes from chat TPT subscriptions.
That's pretty durable.
Consumers are people using it, you know, for business applications, but on an individual basis.
There are revenues you can get that are more like pilots.
Yeah.
And, you know, those are completely non-dural.
And then there's somewhere between, like if you sell to an enterprise and they roll out to the entire organization, this AI-based product, the chance that they're going to swap in any short term is very, very low.
So if you get through IT, you get through procurement, you know, you have a champion and you change business processes within a very large 14,000 organization, that's pretty damn, you know, scalable, durable revenue sustainably for probably five plus years.
And so those kind of companies, those AI companies are pretty damn good shape in my opinion.
But you do see people adopting something as kind of like a trial.
Like, you know, my board told me there's this AI wave.
I need to test out this, this and this and have an answer to my board.
That revenue is very precarious.
Another set of revenues is around training and post-training.
I think the advances in AI are so fast that the way we build models today,
with fine tuning and different kinds of training,
maybe also obsolete a year, two years for now.
So there may be models that are built
that don't require any human training.
So revenues that are built on,
and companies that are built on that kind of revenue
may not be as durable as people think either.
Yeah, while we have you here,
what's your take on one of the hotter categories
in deep tech, humanoid robots?
Everybody's got to take because I think they
Rightfully should, but I'm guessing you have something spicy for us.
Well, spicy is that, look, Chinese are ahead of us, and it's very dangerous politically.
Geopolitically, I think the administration is going to have to take some action there.
I think you have large companies like meta, you know, publicly embracing this and their CTO is responsible for this.
So it's a very top-down initiative.
You have a lot of startups.
We funded several at KVs, probably the hottest sector among VCs right now is robotic startup, you know, walks in.
And it's like, okay, how much money do you want?
And the value is going to be hundreds of million dollars.
So, you know, and then Tesla has had a lot of progress.
Like, actually, I think some of the private progress is better than the public stuff.
So it's very impressive.
So I think the sector will be successful for somebody.
I think as a VC right now, it's really hard to invest in the sector,
given the proliferation of startups all with high potential, the prices you'd have to invest that.
Also the monopoly.
a way to make money?
It's unclear that there will be monopolies,
yet some of these companies are being priced that way.
One of the concerns that I have is I think we need to learn from DGI.
We need to understand that they were able to flood the market
with products that they were selling for less than it costs them to produce.
If you just take apart some of these products and you understand the component costs,
it's actually more than what the retail price is.
And Unitree is doing the same thing right now, right?
You can go on Unitree and buy a humanoid,
and you imagine they're pretty happy with how the DGI rollout went and they want to do the same thing again.
No, this is why I think geopolitically the Trump administration is going to have to address this.
I think robotics have military applications too.
So not only have this like imagine the data collection potential, but the military applications of a robot that can run 17 miles an hour.
So I would be shocked of this administration doesn't figure out a way to ban Chinese,
robots before it's too late. Yeah, with DGI, there's this idea that you're not too worried about
the drone in your closet because it's like zippered in, you know, the box that it came in and
there's the idea that like, okay, like in this doomsday scenario, the drones take off and,
you know, become these sort of weaponized devices. But a humanoid who's doing your laundry and then can
turn around and, you know, take you out is a totally different story. So I think that you have a
good point there. Also training data. I mean, there's, there's a lot of dangers. And I think this is a real
political issue that needs to be top of mind.
Like once we get through TikTok, which will happen sooner or rather later,
I think robotics and humanoid robots are particularly severe,
particularly severe threat.
And so that said, we will need an American competitor one way or the other.
Like the world is going to develop at some point.
Yeah.
Humanoid robots that are effective.
And be better if American competitors are great.
Yeah.
But we really need to slow down the Chinese progress.
especially the involves subsistation by a CCP.
Yeah.
Yeah.
One thing that's been interesting is seeing how Uber's been positioning themselves
in the context of autonomous driving, right?
They're basically DARS positioned the company to be like a booking.com for autonomous
vehicles, giving you an opportunity to potentially talk your book a little bit.
Does Traba, and I don't know if you can speak to this, but does Traba have a position where,
you know, today they're using sort of human capital across the sort of network of
customers that they have is their world where, you know, I'd be curious if you could speak to
sort of long-term potential of a humanoid through Trauma. Well, I think not immediately. I think if
you look at the tasks in light industrial warehouses where Trava specializes, a lot of those
tasks are not yet ready for a robotic intervention. However, but 10 years from now, if Trauma is
succeeding in running, in running, you know, the most sensitive part of a light industrial operation is
to human labor in your action, quality control, reliability, all of those things.
If you get the credibility of making a business more successful, you may be a great pathway
to introduce more and more technology.
So you may not obviate humans, you may supplement humans, you may introduce a combination
that does some humans and some robotics, but some company from afar that doesn't understand
how a warehouse works, that doesn't understand real workers and what real workers, you know,
needs are and tries to run a mixed system without having any understanding of real people,
I don't think it's going to be very successful.
And I don't think we're ready to rip out in the long-tail fragmented sense,
light industrial, the investment required for robotics to rid about all the humans
isn't going to be economically feasible.
Amazon may be able to justify, you know, the R&D plus the fixed cost.
But like, no, and we had, we had Ryan Peterson on the show last week talking about how the
bar, the bar to clear if you want to replace human.
is so high because we're actually, we're pretty good at what we do, right? We've got, you know,
all this, you know, ability to an agency. And it's, you know, very clearly going to be the same
type of situation within, within warehouses as in ports. But over 20 years, I can see Trava
introducing more and more technology to their current customer base. Like, say, you know, look,
look, we've already satisfied you. We're delighting you. Trust us. This is going to make you more
efficient, more competitive, more scalable, et cetera. And so that could be a long-term strategy the next
tons of sense for the company and for their customer base.
Yeah, how do you think about the rollout of humanoid specifically around depreciation
and the EV space?
We've seen massive depreciation on the consumer side, right?
Somebody buys a model Y.
It's worth, you know, 30 grand less a few months later, right?
This sort of extreme depreciation.
Do you see that as potentially a headwind for the rollout of humanoids where, you know, factories
basically say, hey, look, I think your tech has potential.
But if I just wait a year, I can get a much better, you know, robot.
for, you know, the same price?
Well, I don't think anybody really knows on the decay curve, you know, because what is
wearing territory to these robots?
Like, and what functions, too?
It may be very different.
Like, if you ask robots to do this versus this versus this, but like a year, are they
completely dysfunctional?
Like, imagine a simplified metaphor.
You, if you have weights, like a gym at home, you probably last for a decade easily,
like your squat rack and your waist.
You throw up in a commercial gym.
Those things are going to show wear and tear in the first year.
Yeah.
Especially you and Barry.
You and Barry's, they got to change the treadmill out every day after you at Barry's, I'm sure.
Literally, literally, like, to wear it.
So it does depend upon the use.
You use.
And I don't think anybody knows really what that, like, curve looks like.
And then that affects the economics, like how fruit and just on a purely rational basis is using a robot to do X, Y, or Z.
Because you don't, you don't really understand that trade right now.
The only way to really do that is you have to throw some robots at some problems and then monitor what breaks why and how.
how fast and how expensive are replaced from parts.
Yeah.
What about the strategic Bitcoin Reserve?
Do you have a take prepared for that yet?
Yeah, I'm probably not the biggest fan.
I mean, I'm very supportive of the Trump administration.
I think almost everything they've done has been really good and really strong.
I've been very impressed.
I probably, if I was going to do it, would have done it, Bitcoin only.
I don't think we need to do it.
But if we're going to do it, I don't think, kind of stepped in the middle of a bunch of messaging,
problems by like including a bunch of other cryptocurrencies.
But I'm not the biggest fan of like the government doing performing business functions,
period.
So I don't like the sovereign wealth fund either.
I mean,
I'm happy to manage it.
If they need KV wants to,
if they want to eat KV,
if they need professional managers,
we'll probably do it.
That's great.
The reality is I don't think mixing business function in politics is a good idea.
I think you should separate those.
And,
you know,
free enterprise works really well.
Capitalism works extremely well.
And the government should do,
you know,
protect the American people, defend, defend the border, you know, et cetera.
And I don't, I don't see any, you know, the only argument for the Bitcoin
Strategic Reserve is obviously we do have gold reserves.
Yep.
You know, and if you believe the metaphor that the future of store value is like cold,
you can talk yourself into it.
I don't think it's the most compelling thing, you know.
Yeah, there was a good point.
Like the strategic reserve could just be Bitcoin we seize from criminals, right?
Yeah.
And it just goes in a fund.
We just don't trust for that, too.
Yeah, I mean, obviously the FBI and other people, Treasury winds up getting their hands on a lot of valuable assets.
And, you know, that could be a good way to fund it without taking American tax dollars.
You know, I think the burden, and I think Doge is showing this, you know, is really setting a great example here.
The burden for taking a dollar from an American family should be increased by an order magnitude.
The justification should be go up.
Not that there's never a justification, but we need to raise that bar.
The dollar belongs to the people who earned it, barring the most extraordinary justification for it.
You can't have these frivolous soft justifications or low RRI justifications.
It really belongs to the people who create the value.
Interesting.
Well said.
You're spending more time in D.C.
Do you think that there's a potential for startups or specifically like defense tech startups, like to move offices there earlier or actually like build companies there?
I don't know.
I think for non-defense startups, I would recommend starting.
an early stage company in D.C.
Obviously, the people who are already successful are spending more time in D.C.,
which is valuable to me to some extent.
But I think if you're an early stage company that's not really targeting the government
as your first customer, federal, in some way, then I think it's probably a mistake right now.
That could change in five or ten years, and maybe there's a better ecosystem there.
I don't know the defense landscape and how fast the Defense Department is going to innovate.
We'll see.
I mean, there are people in the administration who believe that,
reform is going to be fast and furious in the defense of Mormon and that we need it from a budget
perspective we have to the defense of our needs to do more with less yeah and so but until the proofs
in the pudding I don't know how vast the opportunity is right now we have time for maybe one more
question I'm curious to get your take on on Sundar do you think he's still got a job in a year
from now that the rollout of AI across the Google ecosystem has been atrocious from my
of you and I think consumers feel this. John always jokes. He's like, I pay for Gemini. I don't know
where to find it. But it's cool when it pops up. He seems to be underperforming dramatically in the
context of Satya. You know, what's your what's your take on that whole situation?
Well, it seems to be outperforming Tim Cook, which you've read the latest.
Yeah, yeah. At least they have models that they've trained that are good. Yeah, for those that
missed it, Apple just said we're delaying our Siri. Two years. Two years, something like that.
Yeah, two years is like, you know, as other people have pointed out, two years in an AI world is an eternity.
It's a eternity.
You might as well say something for 20 years or, you know, like, two generations at this point.
And so I think that's a serious problem.
And I'm an Apple fanboy forever, you know, how big forever.
Yep.
So I think it's pretty devastating that they're so far behind.
I think Sundar made several miscalculations.
And I actually do think that Microsoft and, you know, Sotcha got a lot of credit.
But I think they're seeing some of the downsides to some of their strategies.
now. Like, I think they are going to wind up not having quite as much of a strategic, like,
lock on AI as they thought they were. I think that said, they maybe played the cards the best
they could. You know, we can't always control everything. But I think the world is changing really
rapidly and the people who control the future of AI may not be at Microsoft. Yeah, that makes sense.
Right. Well, thanks for stopping by.
Pleasure.
I love having you. You're welcome anytime. Anytime there's breaking news, well, I'm sure I'll give you a call.
This was fantastic.
We're going to hop on.
Keep talking about Ramp.
We're going to Pachy McCormick yet next.
Oh, awesome.
Thanks for stopping by, Keith.
We'll talk to you soon.
Great to chat.
Have a great day.
That was great.
Good questions, Jordy.
I like keeping the humanoid question going across all of these.
We got to ask Pachy that too.
And then eventually we can put together a super cut.
Here's every important capital allocator,
every Silicon Valley person talking about humanoids.
Well, while we are waiting two minutes to bring Pachian.
Let's talk about Wander.
Find your happy place.
Let's go.
I got a hat for this one.
Throw it on. We got a hat.
Book of Wander with inspiring views, hotel grade amenities, dreamy beds, top tier cleaning,
and 24-7 concierge service.
It's a vacation home, but better.
I've been looking at one up by Yosemite.
Thinking about taking the kids up there.
It's snowing.
here. Yeah, it's snowing and we wanted to go to the snow, but we didn't want to do crazy hotel. We didn't want to do
some, you know, Airbnb thing. Wander was just like the perfect middle ground. Perfect middle ground.
And they have this really nice UI feature where if it's snowing at the Wander, when you're going to be
booking at it, it will drizzle snow over the web page while you're on it. It's amazing.
Amazing. It's a really, really nice touch. While we're, you know, buying some time until Packy joins,
Packy did an entire deep dive on Wander.
Oh, fantastic.
And we got Paki in the waiting room. Let's bring him in.
Let's bring him in.
I wish he was here in person.
He could do that.
He could do the Wander.
Oh, there he is.
Oh, there we go.
Ramp day.
Hello, brothers.
Hello, welcome to the show.
Good to have you here.
Oh my God.
It's great to be here.
Long time.
Long time.
First of many.
First of many.
First of many.
Yeah, break it down.
What happened today?
Why are you wearing?
wearing a ramp hat. Take a victory laugh. No, I always wear a ramp hat. I've heard that
TVPN is just unbiased journalism and so I wanted to join you for an unbiased conversation.
Exactly. Unbiased. Zero bad holders here. Yeah. Yeah. Guests and hosts of this podcast may hold
securities by the presenting sponsor of this show. Anyways, great to have you on.
I wanted to go back to March 21st, 2022 when you, this was like probably your second time covering when they announced their $8.1 billion valuation.
That's important.
Was that the back to background, the double round or whatever?
I mean, every single round for a minute there was you basically would, you would read a ramp fundraising announcement.
They were speed running.
You'd close the information.
And then they'd get a notification on your phone that said scoop.
ramp is raising another round.
Yeah, it was wild.
Yeah, that was the eight point.
That actually might have been the third piece.
I think the first time I wrote about them was December 2020.
I think we didn't talk about evaluation,
but I think they were valued at 300 million at the time.
So like something just pathetically low.
I think it did like C in Series A at that point.
Yeah, that's like a personal kind of net worth type number.
And then the next time I wrote about them was when they had raised back to back rounds.
I think it was like $1 billion and then $1.6 billion.
So I have it here.
The first time.
And I spent a lot of the time in these pieces, one, just being like, you know, praising ramp,
obviously.
And then two, kind of justifying that, you know, if you're growing this fast, like,
these valuations kind of end up catching up.
I think there was a period in between.
They took a down round.
They took their medicine in 2023.
But now they just kind of continue to grow fast.
And we're back way above that $8.1 billion dollar valuation.
Yeah.
I think about thinking about the ramp down round was directly tied to the market, not business performance,
which is why they're back above that last financing, just given that they were taking that down round
while still putting up ridiculous numbers.
And also, I mean, downround is like, I mean, Facebook did a down round at one point.
But downround can mean so many different things.
And like I saw some down rounds during that year that were brutal.
like pay to pay to play total cram down yeah it's a hundred million dollars on 50 pre so the new investors are taking two thirds of the company yep and then yeah there's a 10% option pool for the executive team or something like that that's like gonna get rolled out and literally anyone who touched the company for the first half decade that they were running it is just gone wiped like didn't exist never thing you got paid w2 wages i hope you i hope you put some in v vio stock because
because you got nothing now.
It was like, that happened all the time.
And it was like terrifying, but, you know, it happens.
Yeah.
I was on the other side of a few of those.
But I remember reading about the ramp piece,
the ramp down round when it happened.
Yeah.
And that's when I really knew.
Like I think, you know, in 2020, 2021, you know,
you can be impressed by a company,
but a lot of people are growing fast,
a lot of valuations are going up.
Yeah.
When you read a story about in, you know,
this terrible market, a company doing a down round,
and it's like pretty much gushing and all of the commentary around it and Twitter and everything about them doing a downround was gushing commentary and how how smart it was for them to kind of just take the hit and keep going.
That's when you know you got a company that's pretty special on your hands.
Yeah.
So you're talking about ramp safety?
Yeah.
So this is John's.
So, yeah.
So Packy, like obviously like ramp's moving really quickly.
We're worried about a future where ramp is like closing the book so fast that like you go to ask ramp to close the books and it thinks like if we didn't have any.
humans, we would never need to close the book. So it just kills everyone. Yeah, ramp AI. Yeah,
kind of like a ramp dumer scenario. Like should we pause ramp? I've seen some people
throwing out open letters, maybe trying to lobby the government to slow down ramp. What do you
think? What's your take? It's tough. I mean, I think it's a real risk. I think pausing doesn't work
though, right? Then the Chinese are going to start. Yeah. Yeah, yeah. You can't do that. The thing that
I get worried about is that you run out of atoms in the universe at some point.
True.
If you're an investor and you're thinking, like, can they continue to double every year?
Yeah.
Like at some point, you run out of atoms in the universe.
And so that, to me, is kind of one of the bare cases, I guess.
Yeah.
I think of Ramp generally is what they're doing is like they're building a machine god
that lives in your CFO's Chrome tab.
But ultimately, it will be a beneficial, benevolent machine god that lives in your
CFO's Chrome tab.
That's focused on saving you time and money and it knows it's lame.
Exactly.
Exactly, exactly.
In a post-Ramp society, kind of like a post-AGI post-Ramp society, I think humans will be doing
fantastically.
I think it'll be great.
At least the CFO sweet will, right?
They're going to get all their time back to be able to think strategically about the business,
about life.
So I think that's one of the things.
You know, my dad is a CPA.
And so like I just think, you know, when I write about ramp, I think about my father, right?
and like how much how many basketball games, you know, he could have been out of mind,
had Ramp existed.
Oh, wow.
At the time.
I mean, the guy was, you know, he was a business consultant who was traveling, you know,
all the time.
He'd fly to Germany for the day and fly back and like, imagine, you know, Ramps A.I just does
that for him, right?
And like, we're hanging out.
He knows me better.
I know him better.
Like, and I love him.
It just suddenly gets super dark.
That's amazing.
He's like, my dad never made it to games in the first 15 days of the month.
No, he actually did.
It was pretty incredible that he would like fly back.
he would take the early flight back to make it to my stupid game.
So good on him.
I just mean he'd be like a lot less tired had ramp existed.
I'll give a personal anecdote.
I got to hang out with my kids this weekend because we're on ramp.
And it just, the books close themselves.
Pivoting a little bit, John and I were talking this morning.
There's too many top signals to count right now.
Everywhere you look, you got Trump coin, you got Cardano going in the reserve.
You got, you know, only fans, competitors doing something.
You know, we don't know.
And we got humanoid robot companies with one customer raising it 40 billion.
What is BMW's valuation, by the way?
Yeah, that's a good question.
Oh, my God.
If it's less than 40 billion.
You know, Ford is less.
It's 53 billion euros.
53 billion euros.
Okay.
So, yeah.
So what's that in USC like $12?
We're maugging.
the euro these days. But it's probably 50 billion. Yeah. So, yeah, there's definitely,
there's definitely a bull case to be made of why figures should be worth as much as their customer,
their first customer. But anyways, how do you think as an investor right now? We're clearly
living through one of the greatest times in history, right? We just had a private spacecraft,
land on the moon. Elon's launching rockets every day. There's, you know, austerity in the government,
which is potentially bearish for GDP short term, but probably good for the dollar long term.
Yep.
How do you think as an investor and even a writer and somebody who's called a lot of trends early,
what do you think the next talk to us about the next five to ten years?
Oh, the next five to ten years.
You know what I found really fascinating is that a lot of the stuff that I'm not investing in
has been super overvalued.
And then a lot of the stuff that I've been investing in has been undervalued and underappreciated
and I think it's going to be worth like a lot more in the next kind of year or two.
So that that's kind of my take.
I'm not a figure investor, a big fan of their videos.
And actually my daughter loves figure videos and was like really psych to see two of them,
two of them together.
I don't know.
I mean, I think like there's a lot of probably overhype and AI.
There's probably going to be like a couple of $10 trillion AI companies that are going
to pay for the whole thing.
Humanoids scare the hell out of me as an investor because it's like this really
impossibly hard thing to do with a lot of really, really smart people working on it
where like if you pull off this impossible thing,
then you're competing against these 10 other companies
and like who wins,
a big consumer surplus event.
But there's,
you know,
like human labor doing things.
There are some people I've heard who don't just kind of podcast and write
who like,
do you like you make cars or whatever physical labor.
Yeah.
I think like,
you know,
human salary and wages and all of that,
it's like $45 trillion.
It's like half of the world's GDP.
And so like if you underwrite robots is like some small person,
I mean, I think figure already got like 0.1% of that GDP got credit for 0.1% of that GDP,
which is pretty, pretty amazing.
But like there will be like massive, massive, massive companies built here.
And I think there's also going to be a lot of people who lose a lot of money.
We could talk about what's happening in venture.
I think it's like a really, I think like the big funds are actually super well positioned.
And there's going to be a lot of these like emergingish funds who try to compete,
who I just think it kind of like wiped.
out. I don't know. I think there's going to be a few. Do you have a take on General Catalyst going public?
That's a good one. I don't have a good take on that. I mean, it's like, it's a really, I would say like one of the, you know, when I think back of some of your, one of my favorite pieces of yours over the year, I'm not going to know the title, but you, you had a really great deep dive on this idea that as our tools become better and more efficient, you know, a group that, you know, a company that would have taken 100 people to build, you know, five years ago.
go now only takes 20, right? And I think we're really seeing that right now in AI, where you have
companies like cursor, a big one, you know, with 20 people doing 100 million of ARR. It's been amazing
to see that play out. How, you know, how, you know, take basically one, take a victory lap there,
maybe double click in and share some more insight. But I feel like that was really, you basically
called that and did it in a very eloquent way. But I think we're, I expected it to be something like
maybe like five years from now that would be the case, but it feels like it's that way,
like today.
So there's a few different ways that goes.
And it's really, like, there's the Russell conjugation where like, you know, the person
who's doing something different than you is doing it bad, you're doing it right, whatever.
And like, I literally think about this bunch when I see all the charts of, uh, of these
companies making like more money than ramp faster.
I'm like, that's actually like way too fast and that's totally unsustainable.
Ram, however, is like actually growing perfectly.
That really actually goes through my head today
He's doing it just right
But they're not
And I think I'm actually responsible
For like
Yeah yeah yeah the bigger
The bigger growth rates scare me
It's okay
Your growth rate's perfect
Growing faster is unsustainable
Right
And I like actually disaster
You're growing the perfect right
The Goldilocks effect
The Goldilocks growth rate
I mean that's Eric and Kareem
Just doing what they do
I think it's just like really nailing that
That's hilarious
But I do think
There is something about that that really actually does,
it does scare me that fast growth and just like how easy it's become.
So really that you can build more with fewer people.
I took to me kind of two different things.
Like one, it just made me scared.
And this was like back in 2022,
like really scared about software in general because you can go out
and build with five people,
a company that grows really,
really fast.
And two,
I think the other point of that essay was because we have better tools and because you can do
more with fewer people,
startup should be able to just like actually start fresh and compete with these companies that you
never thought that you'd be able to compete with them writing uh you know a follow up on primer right now
which is taking on k through 12 education taking on public schools like not a group or a group of
incumbents that like you thought you'd ever be able to take on and i think they actually can you can
you can like put education on a more's law like cost curve and get make education better for less
and less money uh and so like that's pretty amazing obviously and a role you know is like starting to get
starting to approach kind of primes valuation.
And so that I think is like the really exciting part of it to me, less that five people
can build things really, really quickly and more that 100 people can build things to take
on like these really old big companies.
Yeah.
What's your AI stack?
You've been a little bit critical of AI's writing ability, which I think is fair.
We also, we have Kugan's benchmark, which we do about once a week where we get the new
latest model to try to tell us a joke.
And it's pretty.
It's hilarious when you.
you read it like you're a stand-up and it just bombs intentionally. And it's funny to watch someone
bomb intentionally. So it's good in that regard. But how have you been? Yeah, what's your,
what's your AI stack and. Yeah, what's actually useful? I mean, I still use Claude and chattypity
and Grock to just kind of like, if I don't understand something, throw it in or like to make sure that
I like, I have explained something the right way or to get feedback on an essay.
basically. Four point what's that? You're using it like a better Google search or like better
a better Google search and like just a little safety blanket on the like I don't have an editor. So somebody to like tell me that this isn't like the worst thing I've ever written.
Sure. 4.5 is actually a little bit better. It's stopped doing it with the thing that killed me that I've tweeted about a couple of times recently is like the M dash. It's not just blank. M dash. It's like a totally different blank. And 4.5 is actually stopped doing that, which is really good because I would see that in people's writing and it just like.
It really made me hurt.
Yeah.
What was the PG one, Delve?
Delve.
You know, it's funny.
When I read older stuff that's like that totally predates, I find delving it all the time.
I think PG might have been wrong on that.
Oh, really?
Interesting.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I thought there was some some weird round tripping thing where like the RLHF team in Kenya that OpenAI was paying to do the RLHF stuff had learned English in a very proper.
way. And so delve
was one of the words that was
like in the vocab
course that they all took. And so
they thought that it was like a much more
popular phrase than Americans
think. And Americans use it but just not all
the time. So it's kind of weird. But I
mean you'd see these aberrations all the time where you'd be like
write a tweet and it would like use hashtags.
And it's like that's kind of what a tweet
is but not really. Not today.
It's not a banger. Like no one uses hashtags.
Or if you do use hashtag it's like in this funny
kind of meta-ironic way.
it's not just like yeah yeah so yeah yeah give me some other hot takes on i mean it's i literally just
asked it uh today because i was trying to you know make my own joke uh for this podcast with you
know the joke that ended up becoming you know the fact that with this unbiased conversation about ramp
yeah there's like that one phrase like no bias no something no conflict no interest no mercy
no no no no mercy no no this is this is so i said that i said uh no bias no dot dot dot yeah it was
like very confidently no bias no bias no
bet. No bat. What you're thinking of, I was like, no. The phrase you're likely thinking of is
no skin in the game, no opinion. And Jordi got it in two seconds. Yeah, yeah. I like that. Still got it.
Not a paperclip yet. What's going on on Substack these days? They've got some like social
activity that's happening. It seems to be picking up. You're still writing on substack, correct?
I'm still writing on SubSack.
I've seen a lot of conversation about, you know, people going over to SubSack.
You can use links there.
It's a friend of your conversation.
I have not done that at all.
And I think, you know, my people are on X.
We're on X live right now, right?
Is it our first live X episode?
It is.
First ever.
First ever.
You can go retweet it right now.
Don't get too distracted.
Yeah.
I don't know where you want to take that.
Oh, no.
I mean, as a company seems to be doing very well.
Like the last time I saw Chris.
And I would, I got.
like some kind of, I don't know if I should even say, but like, you know.
You should say.
So some reference on like, oh, I'm like hiring an accountant that worked for them.
And they're like, oh, yeah, it's actually pretty good business.
And so congrats to the team.
I think they've, I think they've done really well from a company that was like kind of like
maybe overhyped at one point.
It's like, oh, it's like playing in the social.
It seems like it's, they built a really solid business.
Broken through the cultural norm.
Yep.
I see it on Instagram.
Yep.
And my question to you is, you pay them 10% of your gross revenue.
right?
No,
I don't.
Because he, unlike the All-in podcast, run ads.
This is why he's on the show.
There we go.
You got to run ads.
He is an ad respecter.
Ad respecter.
We're both, you know, RAM sponsored.
Obviously, Wander portfolio company.
Yes.
Long-time friend of the newsletter.
And you just feel good getting to tell people about that.
If I were, there you go.
If I were a subscriber business, I wouldn't get to tell people about RAM.
I wouldn't get to tell people about WANP.
There's not nearly enough ads on the screen right now.
We need more.
So we got,
Everyone has a sponsored hat right now.
There we go.
You got Be sure to look down so I can see the logo.
There we go. That's good.
Yeah, so, so, so I mean, he is kind of a bit of a failure mode for for sub-sac.
I am.
It's funny because people will ask me like, you know, like what do you think about
sub-sac and like you've talked to the team obviously and like I actually have
never talked to the co-founders.
I've talked to one person at substack once.
Wow.
Because I'm like the worst possible business for.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I haven't paid a dollar to substack.
What do you think about this idea that they should be doing the bundling and aggregation on their side where like you should go to substack?
Somebody should pay $20 a month and they should get, you know, like you and pirate wires and, you know, Barry Weiss's free press like all.
Instead of instead of those folks like leaving and you monetizing elsewhere, like do you think that makes sense or is that just like a crazy idea?
No, it's a good idea.
I mean, it's like it's the idea that everybody I think has that they should do that, that they should build an ad network that like there's all.
these things that are like clearly good for good for business that actually I think in practice like
when you when you're like dealing with people who have kind of like egos and think that their own thing
is like the thing are really really really really hard to pull off in practice like I wouldn't want to
be part of a bundle and so I think that that ends up being a challenge same with you know like ramp is
not going through an ad network and buying like runny slots right they're partnering with you know just
top shelf kind of shows and specific people and so I can be out of
network stuff falls apart there. I really like what substack is doing for the simplicity. Like I,
in the beginning was definitely somebody who thought that I would move to a different platform.
I wanted more customization, whatever. You have to give me a lot of money to move to a different
platform now just because it works really, really well. The core product that they built.
Yeah. Have you ever experimented with like a paid offshoot? Because I know you've done other
offshoot like what was the Thursday white pill one? We did the Friday. Yeah, the weekly
of optimism. Yeah, yeah, weekly dose of optimism, which is kind of like, yeah, yeah,
offshoot, but, but that's still free, right? It's all still, all still free. We could,
I don't want to write more. If anything, I want to write less this year. And so,
I think I don't want to. Bangers only. Lenders only. I don't want to limit what I send.
Exactly. And I actually don't know, like at this point, I'm in too deep and I don't know
what the conversion rate would be and maybe it would be incredibly embarrassing. And so I'm just
going to stick with, stick with what I got. There you go. Love it. Where you mentioned earlier,
you've been finding companies you feel are undervalued.
You obviously have an insane top of funnel, right?
You're broken through the mainstream.
If I ask somebody that, you know, is on X, they know who you are.
If I ask somebody that's kind of even LinkedIn mode, like, they usually know who you are, right?
So the top of funnel must be crazy.
I heard that.
But what, like, where are you excited to be investing right now?
I'm sure you're flooded and doing a bunch of AI, but at the same time, it feels like an
interesting time right now where you maybe wouldn't want to invest in the next humanoid robotic
company. You probably don't want to be investing in more defense, like net new defense tech
companies that are just incorporating today. What's got, you know, space feels like in many ways.
There's more opportunity than ever because the cost to get up there is dropped.
But where is exciting to you? What's the weird stuff you're looking at?
Yeah.
Really like the way that I've been thinking,
like my catchphrase on this is Anderl and SpaceX for everything.
So as opposed to like,
you see Andrew and SpaceX,
the move is not like go do the second best version of that.
It's go find that in the other industry.
So, you know,
like a base power company or so most internet doing Calco or Primer doing education.
Like find the thing that is going to go win that category is really what I'm looking for.
And those end up looking weird.
So I was kidding about the stuff that I'm investing in being undervalued.
But I do think that because it doesn't really fit a thesis that a fund would have on defense or whatever, it is a little more affordable than a humanoid company or a foundation model company for sure.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, stuff in like power, energy, deeper in the supply chain, way far away from the core hot AI consumer stuff.
There's going to be more reasonable prices there.
Also, are you looking at bio stuff yet or bioadjacent stuff?
Oh, we've been doing a lot of bio stuff.
I imagine.
I think hot take would be cancer.
It's probably gone in 10 years.
I think it's one of my favorite hot takes.
There's just so many different attacks on it.
And Carty's health therapies are doing well.
And it's a matter of kind of scaling, scaling those out.
Yeah, I'm sure you read Sebastian Malibis the power law.
I'm sure you've read Sebastian Malibize the power law.
And before that, he wrote that book on more money than God about hedge funds.
And so his whole thing is like go and find the group of people that are making trillions of dollars effectively
are like really moving capitalist markets, like the biggest power players, and then write the definitive
history and profile of them. And so I went to a speaker series with him. And afterwards, you know,
somebody comes up to him, he's like, what's the next book you're writing? Because that's where I want
to be investing today, right? And he said bio. He was like, I think that the next book I write will be
about like the flagship pioneering, like, but also the biotech public companies and then the biotech
funds. And so it's something that I've certainly been meaning to get more up to speed on. I have
a lot of friends and co-founders who have done like the PhD stuff. I have to say, it's
It is hard.
Bio is hard.
Like,
I compare,
like of all the other things,
you know,
at Hersberg,
who I've been working with
on the bio side,
who's, you know,
stand for Ph.G and genomics.
And he,
like, without him,
I wouldn't invest in bio.
You see other generalist investors
investing in bio,
and he'll be like,
that is the dumbest fucking deal
I've ever seen in my life.
Are we allowed to curse on X?
Dumbest deal I've ever seen in my life.
You are allowed to curse on X,
but you will,
what would your mother say?
And we will shame you for cursing generally
because this is a,
this is a friend,
our kids watch this show.
kid-friendly show. Our kids watch the show. Oh my goodness. I'm so sorry. We don't we don't curse personally,
but do whatever whatever's right for your brand. Yeah. They're, uh, you know, if you want to have like a low,
a low tier, like I, I know you're Irish guy. You're, you're, you're up in Boston getting drunk and
hammer. Oh, Patrick. Patrick. Pachy. Park you're performing out of some beers,
throw some curse words out. No, I, all to say, bio is incredibly exciting. And bio is like a really
funny one where I think like people get really excited and really like, oh my God. Like they told me that
they're going to make people live till 250 years old. They're definitely investing in that and
people are going to lose their shirt. But yeah, at the same time, it's like, it's like, every
category is hard until some power law company comes along and makes it look easy. Like, Anderall,
like hardware was hard. And now there's like, now there's a new hardware company like every two days.
And then they like, yeah, they can't like beat and Earl necessarily overnight. But they can like sell and
get deals and then sell to anderol or like create value or like. Or like,
Like there can be good deals done in hardware now, even though like hardware is hard.
Totally.
I mean more just like, and this might just be me calling myself out.
What do you have?
Like millions of people watching this right now calling myself out for being stupid.
But like just the vocabulary of biology and like understanding how that whole thing fits together.
It's just like a totally different beast.
Yeah.
I think compared to hardware and other things.
Yeah.
One of the things I've been sort of realizing around everything deep tech, hard tech,
biotech fits this is within.
software we went through a 20-year period in silicon valley where software entrepreneurs could go out and
make these sort of outlandish claims around the products that they would build but then just go and do it
right because the software is hard but you can kind of make the pixels like you know work and whatever it's
code right we know how to do it and then in hard tech is very different you know elizabeth holmes like
i do believe she genuinely believed that she could build the blood testing device that only needed
one drop but then like physics got involved it was like i got a i got a i got
I got to tell you to pump the brakes there.
So it's been interesting to see that play out where for you as somebody who's a definite optimist, somebody that wants to believe in human potential and the ability to build great things, you probably have to dial it back at points and say like, I want to believe this is real, but I'm not going to invest because I can't kind of reach that conviction threshold.
Yeah, I have said, and I think this is fair for me, not for people who are better at science, but like I do.
I'm trying to actually moving closer to the series A now and not doing deep tech because I'm not the guy to underwrite the science.
And if I'm like the investor that you're calling to have something that has a much science risk in it, like I shouldn't actually be.
It's more like the, you know, the furthest out proven thing and putting a bunch of those together and do a company.
Gentlemen, I have to, I have to leave you.
Wait, last, can we can I get a minute?
Yeah, you can get a minute.
Okay.
As the godfather of Solana, the guy who kicked off Salana summer, you did.
you got a you got to get credit uh you got you deserve some credit for that uh give us your 30 second take
on the strategic reserve it would have been an unimaginable to think that's the u.s government would be
buying salana but uh you probably maybe i wouldn't be surprised if you alluded to it what's your 30 second
take oh man my 30 second take is that it's also dumb right now like i think solana's great i think
it's like fast tech and i think it's like some point in five years a lot of finance is going to run on
Solana on Eith, maybe on Sue, or, you know, like a lot of, I think it's inevitable that that more
and more finance will move over to crypto stable coins and having strike behind it is like a
real thing. Any strategic reserve that has Cardano in it is just, it's a joke, right?
Like it's like, not to get political.
There's a bunch of like, and I'm guilty of this too. There's a bunch of a bunch of dog that
caught the car stuff going on. I think in crypto right now, it's like no regulation, strategic
reserve. We're like, this is actually kind of stupid. Like, not this way. This is not
we've been ready for you. Yeah, Bitcoin's down 8% today and basically round-tripped back to where the
announcement happened, which is so bearish. The U.S. government is buying crypto and everybody's
bearish. But I know you have an in-person meeting in like four minutes, so sorry for making you
late for that. Thanks for coming on. You're welcome to the next show. We'll talk to you soon.
Have a good way. See you. Let's move on to garage mahal's. This is important stuff.
This is really critical. If you're building a garage, how big should it be?
A couple hundred square feet?
No.
A couple thousand square feet.
No, we're talking to people that are making 6,000 square foot garages bigger than most people's houses.
And where are we talking about Minnesota?
So I have spent time in Minnesota.
The CEO, my co-founder at Rora, Brian lives in Minnesota.
And you can play everything's bigger in Minnesota, right?
The houses are bigger, the basements are bigger.
You can play basketball in his basement.
He's got a half court.
And when it's below freezing for,
half the year, you got to go big, you got to build man caves. And we're talking about man caves today.
So he's a three-car garage in the Minneapolis suburb, already full. He had a three-car garage.
Brett Bailey, talk about struggle. I mean, we need a moment of silence for this guy because he had to keep his racing portion a trailer outside through brutal Minnesota winters.
Then one March, as he prepared for a race, he discovered the wheels of the trailer had frozen to the ground.
unacceptable.
But he didn't just take it lying down.
He figured out a solution for two weeks.
He was throwing salt out there.
But now he is part of a man cave meets storage wars revolution spreading across the country.
I love it.
I'm a huge fan of man caves and storage wars.
So he now keeps his two Porsches, a Ferrari, a custom Harley, a dune buggy, and a racing trailer
in a nearly 2,700 square foot space outfitted like a sleek European car dealership.
It sports a tequila bar, heated floors, bathroom with a shower, giant TV, leather sofa,
stack of racing tires, and a car lift.
So you can lift up the car, work on it, wrench on it with a couple of cold ones on the weekend.
It's great.
Nothing like getting under your car after you've had a couple of beers.
Yeah.
Going to work on.
It's a little dangerous, but sometimes you hit that balmer peak, right?
You're working on your car?
Call them car barns, barn dominiums, toy sheds, garage mahales, or shouses for shophouses.
They're a big hit in the land of 10,000 lakes.
All right.
So what's the controversy here, John?
The controversy is that they're too big and they make the town look stupid.
Everyone hates how they look.
They called it, what was it?
What did they call it?
They call it the tin, tin city or something.
So I don't, you know this.
Ben, vice president, producer of the show, is actually from Minnesota.
Yeah.
So we might have to send him out there and just have him zoom into the show on the site.
Because this is just such an important story.
It is.
We got to get original reporting.
We don't like to do original reporting here.
We like to just spread misinformation from the timeline.
Yes, yes, yes.
But we got to get Ben on the ground there because.
Yeah.
There we go.
Ben says he's got friends with garage mahales.
That's fantastic.
Yeah.
In Cross Lake, a forested vacation.
two and a half hours north of the Twin Cities, space is limited on lakefront lots,
making storage space elsewhere, often in simple metal buildings, highly valuable.
The city council has twice put a moratorium on new storage, combating an image that has led
some to dub the community, Tin City, because there's so much tin going up as storage.
But if you look at some of these photos, they look fantastic.
It looks like a lot of fun.
If you're in one, Nelson and others, Towers.
the expansion of the tax base from the storage boom,
which includes his new 4,200 square foot building,
which is like, that's a massive house.
And he's got a taxidermied Codiak bear.
Yes, it's jammed with boats, an RV, sports cars,
motorcycles, a taxidermine codiac bear in his father's Model A.
One section designed with input from his wife
includes a full kitchen, flat screen TV,
bathroom, and stone fireplace.
You know the biggest thing here, John, is I can't go on
my backyard and throw up a, I can't do one of these because California, they don't, they don't want
you to build. You can do 80Us everyone. I know, but I want, I want 5,000 square feet of podcasting,
you know. I got to run to the restroom. Can you keep it going? I'll keep it going. Let's jump
through to the next post. We're going to jump into the timeline. We got a post from Reggie James.
Somebody posted, do you think that Steve Jobs did a market survey, you know, did, you know,
did a consumer survey to build the iPhone and Reggie Jumps in here with a fantastic point.
He says they literally did. They got all the phones on the market. They saw it was all junk by Apple
standards and they knew this for a while but had to get a few technical things in order first.
They had to get really good at miniaturization. iPod helped them learn that. Then they had a cross-learning
moment where the company they acquired for their touchscreen technology, which was working on computer
displays. They took that and brought it over to Project Purple. And that is how the multisprosal
touch was born. So now they have multi-touch and know how to make things small and they're still
looking at these junk phones on the market. Once they see what's wrong with them, they ask themselves,
what's the phone we'd make for ourselves? They vibed after they knew the market. They had
technical pieces in place and this is where all the software love that made the iPhone and the
iPhone finally comes together. Pulling from springboard and all the macOSS work, that's what
made the iPhone feel so good with directional manipulation of multi-touch. The iPhone wasn't some
isolated do-what-you-want-e-want-you-want-you-want-h-e-cult-e-eye-allings.
A key acquisition and the success in learning to the iPod. Learn the real stories and don't just
take a cliche like users don't know what they want as an excuse to build nonsense. So
shots fired. Yeah, aggressive but completely fair analysis of the situation. The guy who posted
this though was like was like hey I'm actually I actually don't know the history I'm just curious like can
you just like educate me but reggie's a good poster so he kind of amps it up and it's like let's let's go
let's talk about this uh but yeah I want to have reggie you know reggie's had some amazing analysis of
apple over the years and their different trends it'd be it'd be great to have them on the show sometime
soon we should have them on the show uh it's interesting I remember this old core post by uh Joe Lonsdale
talking about the Higalian dialectic are you familiar with this now it's this idea of like uh the
dialectic is basically like there's a thesis, antithesis, and then the synthesis. And so you take
like the, like an idea, you think about the opposite of that idea, the counterargument, and then
you synthesize something that takes into the best art, the best pieces of both essentially. And it's a
very popular like mental model. And the example that he used in this Quora post to explain the Higalian
dialectic was literally Steve Jobs, both being like the vibes guy, but also the spreadsheet guy.
And it's so easy in thought leadership and like posting for people to be like, oh, like vibes are the only thing that matter.
Like you should never think about the market map.
Don't ask. Don't talk to customers.
Don't. Exactly. Exactly. People want axioms when in fact like like the best leaders are often like, you know, combinations of both.
The best generalized advice is to like don't do traditional market research.
Just talk to as many customers as you can. The thing about consumer is consumer is a category.
where you can have no pre-existing business experience
with a category and just build the product that you want.
I mean, you can do this in B2B as well,
but I think it's more common to just kind of ignore the market
and just build what you want in consumer.
Yep.
But even then, it's cool to see the history
of how the iPhone came together and not just being,
oh, here's a good idea, we should just do this.
Yeah.
Anyway, anything else on Apple?
I got a lot of hot takes on Apple.
You've got to be more positive about Apple, I think.
I just, I've just been positive on Apple for 20 plus years in my life.
Yeah, it's fair.
And it's fair to be negative in the short term, but I'm positive in the long run.
It's more just like, like, I feel like at the end of your, after you go massively viral for talking trash, there needs to be like, hey, like, we can.
I gave Apple and out.
I said if you're just giving up on innovation by an F1 team.
Exactly.
Then we'll shut up.
There's something about like, I still love this company and I want it to be great.
And there is a sliver of greatness here.
There's more than a sliver.
Oh, yeah.
Way more than a sliver.
Totally.
But if Tag Hoyer will sponsor F1, why not Apple?
That would be very cool.
An Apple car.
And no other sponsors.
Yeah, like Red Bull.
I mean, Red Bull has a few others.
Yeah, they've got a bunch.
They've got a bunch.
Imagine just the Apple car going around.
But I'm sure they can't do it because it's like some emissions thing or something.
Like they've made so many, like they've pandered so to so many like special interest groups
essentially.
Like they're like completely bought in at this point.
Yeah.
I don't know.
It'd be very cool.
I'd like an F1 team.
Do we want to talk about the GC?
Yeah.
General Catalyst is going public.
You'll be able to invest in a venture capital firm soon on public.com.
So get ready.
Move your assets over to public.com.
But no, this is a real story.
General Catalyst is considering an IPO.
Dan Primack has the scoop.
We've been hearing rumors about this for a couple months.
And as these asset managers get bigger and bigger, it makes more sense to trade them publicly.
There's a few reasons behind that.
The main reason in my, I mean, we can list out a few, but when you're a public company,
you are subject to much more aggressive audits.
And this is why people don't want to go public because it's a hassle.
They will put up with that hassle.
And as a result, they will have access to more capital.
And it will be a, there will be.
potentially more of like a power law consolidation in the actual fundraising of these funds.
General Catalyst has, you know, billions and billions under management at this point,
tens of billions. And if they want to go for even bigger funds saying, hey, we are publicly traded.
All of our financials are public. You can go see them. You know, you don't have to rely on
newcomer scooping some random things to count on it. But there was some debate over this. Dan Primmack,
posts that General Catalyst is considering an IPO. Jason Calacanis says, what is going public
exactly the returns or the LP interest? Dan Premack says, what do you mean? In this case, it would be
the management slash holding company like Carlisle, Blackstone, et cetera. And a lot of people don't
necessarily understand this, I guess, but, you know, asset managers are themselves businesses
that make money from fees and all sorts of different pieces of that. Yeah, and G.C., I think,
Didn't they roll out a private wealth?
Yeah.
Yeah.
And they have private equity investments.
They have growth stage investments, seed stage investments.
And so every time they make a deal with someone else's money.
And so it will be valued similarly to a bank, although it's a very like high performing bank in the sense.
But how do you, when you invest in a bank, when you buy shares in city or Chase, J.P. Morgan or, I don't know, Goldman Sachs, what is happening?
Well, Goldman takes money from some people, put my money in the bank, and then they lend that money out, and then they return it.
And over time, they make money. And it's just like any other business. So I don't know why Jason isn't thinking about this.
Jeremy Gaffan has a good bit on this, which is basically that at the end of the day, private equity is the greatest business model on earth.
He always says like merchant banks, the merchant banks.
Yeah, he talks about merchant banks. But specifically, it makes sense that the people that invests,
in private markets who study businesses all day long, created a business model for themselves
that's just absolutely fantastic. Sure. Yeah. I mean, they certainly have like an advantage playing
in the private markets. The question is, is it will be very interesting to see a venture capital
firm going out and doing, you know, a road show and putting together materials and saying,
look how much EBITA we're going to put up in this year. And it's based entire, you know,
presumably entirely based on the fee accumulation from their various funds that are all kind of funneling into this one vehicle.
It'll also be very interesting to see what comp looks like post IPO at these firms.
Right.
Because instead of carry points, you're looking at stock options potentially.
There's a whole variety of.
Yeah, that's what's unclear is the fund performance, the carry, where do those returns flow through?
Because some of them will flow to the partners still.
but you would imagine that investors in GC and the public markets would want upside and the returns as well.
Yep.
So the partners have, the partners own the general partnership, right?
Yeah.
So then they would just own shares in the company.
Exactly.
And so when you buy them, you're buying a slice of the general partner steak.
And if you buy enough, it's like you're a general partner.
Right.
But you just paid for that instead of what on it.
And yeah.
And this type of thing has happened before where, for,
have sold GP stakes and said, hey, I'm cashing out of my fund.
Yeah, Thrive did this.
But I'm selling, I don't know if that's actually, I haven't heard that.
But basically, I'm selling part of my GP stake.
You will be the one to earn the returns from that upfront.
Yeah, so this happened in 2023, January 24th, 20203.
Thrive Capital sells minority stake to Bob Iger and other moguls.
So this was kind of like a party round.
They sold 3.3% of the company, including CEO Bob Eiger.
And yeah, so they were able to raise $175 million to the balance sheet.
That's so fascinating, too.
Yeah.
And because you think about 3%, like, that could be just like hiring another GP and giving them a slice of the GP, right?
Yeah.
Like you hire another partner and you say, oh, you're going to be the one who does the AI deals or the deep tech deals or the defense deals or whatever.
and you wind up giving them effectively the same share, but they didn't pay for it, or unless they, you know, bought in for some reason.
Or they, and they don't get the same alignment.
Like at this point, it's kind of like Iger's like a partner almost in the sense of like if he owns a stake in this one firm.
So if he has a deal that he wants to bring or a partnership or he wants to do a deal with a portfolio company, like he is linked to thrive in this like very important way that's more tangible and more economic than just,
like, oh, I'm an advisor to your fund. It's like, no, like, I actually invested in your fund.
I, not just as an LP, but also on the GP side, which is fascinating. Anyway, so
Schill sums it up. He says, G.C. would be the first major USVC fund to IPO. They own a health
system, a wealth business, a fund of funds, a debt business, etc. They all started from a $73 million
fund one that had 0.7 IRA. Wow. Not good. Legends. But they kept it going. I mean, you just
got to give them credit for that. Yeah, it's amazing.
That's incredible.
Their first five funds weren't exceptional, but that all changed with Stripes when Hamant led Stripes Series B.
And of course, Hamant Tanaja is the CEO now.
And he refers to himself as CEO.
He has never, he's never said, I'm sure he said GP.
But more recently, he's been saying, hey, I'm the CEO of this firm.
I'm not just the, I'm not just the GP or like the named GP or the most important GP because all of that's kind of like, you know, fake essentially.
Yeah, we should ask Sheel. He's going to be on in 20 minutes. We should ask him
for kind of a deeper analysis here and how he thinks all the fees and everything. A huge percent of GCC's returns. 5.85 billion came from Livongo. A chronic care company sold for 18.5 billion in 2020 written down two years later. I wonder what it was written down to. And I wonder and I wonder exactly what happened with that. Like why was that asset so mispriced?
But this happens all the time.
I mean, plenty of times companies get sold early and then wind up not doing the thing.
But then on the other side, you have the Instagrams.
Yeah, so Teledoc was the acquirer.
They took a $13.7 billion loss in 2022 tied to the Livongo acquisition.
That's a lot.
That's a lot.
I wonder what happened.
I wonder how they mispriced it so bad.
This is maybe on par with Square's acquisition of a firm, or not a firm.
Who did Square acquire?
Wasn't it title or something?
Well, that was...
That was the...
Wasn't that like the music streaming thing?
Didn't they...
Wasn't Jack Dorsey buying that?
They bought after pay.
After pay.
Was that not a good deal?
I don't know.
So...
I mean, all that stuff blew up
when the interest rates were...
They acquired after pay for $29 billion.
Yeah.
And then like two years later
they were worth like maybe $40 billion.
Interesting.
Public company.
Okay.
Well, should we zoom in
on much smaller?
deals, a company making 30K in 24 hours, selling through Google meat after one viral tweet.
Interesting rhyme scheme here. I wonder if that's intentional. Eddie Zhu.
So just to clarify on the last bit, then we'll restart that. So Square buys a firm in the ZERP era for
29 billion. And two years later, they're worth 26 billion. You mean after pay, right?
Sorry. Sorry. Yeah, yeah. Okay. So Block or Square buys.
after pay for $29 billion.
That's a lot.
Less than two years later, they're worth $25 billion collectively themselves.
Block is worth $25 collectively?
I mean, they're worth $40 billion now.
So they'll build it all back.
It's one, it's just one figure, basically.
Yeah, yeah.
I mean, they're just one really good parlay away from getting back to nine-ditch territory.
Yeah, we don't see public companies like ripping parlayes.
It's $100 billion.
I don't even know.
I think that public companies should start ripping parleyes
Friday after the market closes.
What is your job as a CEO, if not a parlay?
It's like I want my CFO to work out.
I want this financing to go well.
I want that distribution deal to pop.
And I'm going to rip parles.
It is a parlay.
Well, yeah, and even you would push back
if the CFO's job is automated away by ramp
and they have all this free time,
they could be ripping parlays
and it would be fun for the market to be able to sort of anticipate,
all right, how's the company, you know,
the company's putting up $100 million on Draft Kings this weekend.
Like, how's it going to go, right?
No, no, no, no, don't, don't bet on sports.
Bet on yourself.
Bet on yourself.
But view your, but view your organization as if it is a parlay.
Yeah, because you're going to get this right,
then we're going to get this right, and then we're going to get this right.
You only have to do that a few times.
Exactly.
One T.
Jensen Wong.
He's like, I want China to not invade Thai.
I want.
I want.
TMC America to work.
TSMC to work.
I want Microsoft over 80 billion in CAPEX.
I want Zuck to develop a $20 billion.
Stargate, Lassa secures the $500 billion.
$500 billion.
And if he gets that, boom.
10 trillion stock.
You got to post that.
10 trillion stock.
He's like, here's my $10 trillion dollar parlay for Nvidia.
It's like the Tesla secret plan, you know?
Yeah.
It's like if all these things go right, my stock should be worth $10 trillion.
And so, you know, great stuff.
This is my plan.
Just express it in a parli.
I think it's a viral format.
I think it's good.
I like thinking about things in parlias,
even though I don't participate them in the sports betting realm
because it's low class and vulgar.
Anyway, moving on.
Eddie says he made $30,000 in 24 hours
selling through Google Meet after one viral tweet.
And I like the rhyme scheme there.
He says he was inspired by PMF or die.
Yeah, this is amazing.
So he made a post.
Yes.
on Saturday.
And he said, I built an algorithm that simulates
how thousands of users react to your tweet
so you'll know if it will go viral before you post.
It's a really cool concept.
Everybody's experiences.
If you posted on X, you think you've got something great.
You post it 300 impressions later.
You got one like from your absolute boy.
And you realize like, all right, this wasn't a good post.
Sometimes the opposite happens and something
that you weren't super confident in Rips.
But anyways, very cool.
He ended up launching this.
and starting to sell it kind of immediately and did $30,000 in volume in a day,
which annualized is pretty good business.
Yeah.
He basically would have gotten out of the cage in an hour.
Insane.
Oh, I didn't even annualize it.
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, you got to annualize everything.
Yeah, of course.
Don't talk about, you know, you had a good day, say, well, annualized were, you know,
$200 million revenue business.
It's great.
It's great.
Yeah, I saw some big, big people quote tweeting this.
It seemed really fun.
We should give it a try.
And congrats to Eddie.
I love that people have been inspired to go build stuff and take a crack.
Yeah, I saw Emmett Shear from...
Yeah, that's what it was.
Tick, tick, tick.
Yeah, saying, you know, some of dramatic, which basically alluding to if we're letting truly...
Right now, there's a lot of human input.
You know, your brain's basically an algorithm.
It sort of creates a concept, releases it to the algo, and then humanity sort of reacts.
And then in a world where algorithms are dictating the sort of entry into the algorithm,
it's just an entirely new level.
Yeah.
And so Emmett Shear says,
tick, tick.
And essentially, you know, he says, we're going to start,
he's going down like the wire heading path.
We're going to, you know, be optimizing for the algorithms too much.
That's going to lead to, you know,
some sort of AI doom scenario, essentially.
Not full doom.
I don't want to like mischaracterize what he's saying,
but he's just saying like,
it's clearly just like things are getting weird,
which I agree with.
And so, Yaxine shimes in and says,
would work better.
to replace this app with something that just has a blank screen with the text,
everyone likes you.
Because,
you know,
the goal is to get lots of dopamine from the like button,
basically.
But that's not really what it is.
The goal of social media,
everyone thinks it's the goal to get like,
you know,
a pat on the back and,
oh,
people like me,
I'm popular.
No,
the goal is to make money.
The goals to make money.
And,
and that's what a proxy for,
you know,
getting a bang or post is,
is that it will get you a job.
It will sell your product.
Like,
money. And so it's not about that everyone likes you. It's, it's, you know, you cannot replace the
app with with with shareholder value with actual capital trends changing. So Emmett says,
do you truly not see the oncoming train of consequences for building optimizers that can predict
the discourse generated from a post, both volume and tenor? Do you truly not see the oncoming train of
consequences for building optimizers that can predict the discourse generated from a post,
both volume and tenor. And so I can't. I'm at break it down. I got to dig into it. I mean,
I can imagine some consequences from that. I don't know about all of the, all of the consequences
on this oncoming train. I think the, you know, the reality is right now, every active creator
online is already hyper-fixated on how to, what is the algorithm want? What is the algorithm want?
want. Totally. It's like, TikTok does this. We're like, if you do this song, we're going to
surface it. If you talk about positively about, if you are against the TikTok band, we're
going to surface it. So people know that and they start to lean into it. So how is this an
oncoming train? I see this is like, the train has been whizzing past us and continues to whiz
past us and is is accelerating. And, you know, I don't see this as some binary moment that
Emmett is kind of, I don't know, we'll have to have them on and discuss this with him.
Because I think that's the main thing that I disagree with the characterization here is like,
I, Mr. Beast literally built this for YouTube like two years ago.
Yeah.
Like it's like, it predicts how well your thumbnails and titles are going to do.
And so like, we're here.
Like people, people have these tools.
Maybe, maybe it's not good enough yet.
And when it gets better, then it really becomes, you know, give the people what they want.
But I don't know.
I mean, yeah, it becomes all AI genera.
and it becomes all very addictive.
And it becomes wireheading and no one ever goes outside.
And they get the juice reward and they get the nutrients directly delivered into them.
And that's the end of humanity.
Beautiful.
Except for us because we'll be lifting on Mars.
Speaking of the end of humanity, we got a post from Patrick Patty Collison.
He says, Grock's voice mode remains active when the app is closed.
This behavior is made very clear with a live activity.
It ends up being an awesome experience.
plop it beside you while reading a book and bat occasional questions its way without interrupting
your flow. I read this post and I read the first sentence. Grock voice modes remains active when the
app is closed and I just thought like, oh, this is going to be bad. This is going to be like,
it's spying on you. You need to be aware of this. Like I thought, because I didn't even see it was him.
And I love that it's just like, this is exactly what I want actually. This is great. And I completely
agree. What was I? It's funny because Patrick has the perfect index.
X on AI, which is every AI company pays him, you know, 2.7% of every dollar. So you can be
sort of Switzerland. He's like the Switzerland of AI. The true Switzerland of AI. Yeah.
You know, everybody can run on Stripe. But this was cool. I mean, it does seem like, you know,
voice has been this sort of lingering trend that everybody's been predicting, but it hasn't quite
played out, right? It seems that voice has been predominantly used by people that aren't good at
using their thumbs and it hasn't been the preferred sort of method of communication communicating with
your device uh that seems to be changing right sesame sesame sesame came out last week and and had a pretty
incredible response it's a wild experience to use and and now grok is you know i i flagged this
post from patrick because i think we should try to um uh i think we should try to leave grok running for a show
and just start interacting with it and saying you know when we have a question
that I would otherwise Google.
We can just ask GROC.
Yeah.
And it'll have the context from the conversation
to be able to surface relevant data.
So that's cool.
But we're having trouble with X servers today,
our live stream on X,
the entire live stream.
They moved all the servers to GROC.
Yeah.
What happened?
Clearly, they're not,
they're not deploying AI.
They're not deploying the servers to the humans.
We're the second class citizens now.
Yeah.
Well, it's a disaster.
Oh, well.
But, sweet.
Well, let's jump in.
We got a,
promote a post from AdQuick, our favorite way to advertise out of the home.
Out of home advertising made easy and measurable.
Say goodbye to the headaches of out of home advertising.
Only AdQQ combines technology, out of home expertise and data to enable efficient,
seamless ad buying across the globe.
And what I think is amazing in the same way that any company in the world can go on meta
and just sort of sign up and start running ads alongside the biggest companies in the world.
Same thing happens on AdQuick.
biggest companies in the world, there's like a ton of the Fortune 500 that runs on AdQuick, Wall Street Journal, Warby Parker, ramp, discount tire, Instacart, Credit Karma, H&R Block, Lyft. All these massive companies use it, but you as a startup can go and start testing out of home, you know, even on a smaller scale. So you know, another way to advertise out of home, make a T-shirt like Jason Carmen did. Let's move on to the next post. He says, we made a movie about space for free on X. Then we made some T-shirts.
All of the designs are love at story.ink slash apparel.
Go check it out.
We love to support Jason Carmen here.
He has made some incredible documentaries.
And yeah, he's building a whole media company right now.
And it's fantastic.
And, yeah, I mean, really cool designs.
Like very, very iconic.
I think these will age very well.
And, yeah, good to get it out in the world.
And I'm sure it'll start a lot of conversations about the content.
If you see somebody rocking a Jason Carmen original,
You know they're an absolute killer.
Techno-optimist.
Should we go to Carpathie on 4.5 again?
Let's do it.
So this is a reply to someone, Zvi Moshevitz, saying,
GPD 4.5 reaction time, go, anything you want to make sure I don't miss or your own reactions.
And Carpathie says, my reaction is that there is an evaluation crisis.
I don't really know what metrics to look at right now.
MMLU was very good and useful for a few years, but that's long over.
Sweebench verified, real practical verified problems.
I really like and is great, but itself too narrow.
Chatbot Arena received too much focus.
Partly my fault, that LLM labs have started to really overfit for it via a combination of prompt
mining, private eval bombardment, and worse, explicit use of rankings as training supervision.
I still think it's okay, but there's lack of better.
feels like on like it's on the decline and signal. There's been a number of private e-vals
popping up, an ensemble of which might be one promising path forward, an in absence of great
comprehensive evals. I try to turn to vibe checks instead, but now I feel they are misleading
and there's too much opportunity for confirmation bias, too low sample size, etc. It's just not
great. TLDR, my reaction is I don't really know how good these models are right now. Yeah,
you got to get the models to write little stand-up sets.
feed them to stand-up comics
that get bucket-pulled at Kill Tony
or go on to the stand.
Put them in the stand.
No, it's got to be humans that step on stage
at the comedy store on an open mic tonight.
And don't get boot off.
And then you measure the booze to the laughs.
Booze to the laugh.
No, I think the real bench,
like the only thing that really matters right now
if your foundation model company
is being significant,
noticeably better.
Not to benchmarks,
noticeably better than chat GPT for specific use cases, right?
So Claude is noticeably better at coding, right?
And so people use Claude.
Grok is notably more entertaining for some specific use cases for consumers than chat
GPT, right?
So that's like something that, you know, potentially.
But you have the situation right now where 100 million plus consumers love chat GPT.
They think it's awesome.
So if you're competing with them, you don't just need to
to be 10% better on some random math benchmark. You need to be 50% better so that somebody will
try you and switch to you for their day-to-day use. I think that's what actually matters in
terms of winning. And, you know, you can see what, in my view, you can see what companies are
actually, consumer AI companies are actually doing well by looking at the App Store rankings, right? It's
not, it's a snapshot and it's obviously momentum driven. But if you're a consumer AI company and you're
not on the App Store chart while OpenAI has continued to have a pretty dominant position,
you're not in a good spot.
And the App Store chart is the final benchmark, the real benchmark that matters.
It's got to be so hard to try and be competing in LLMs right now because it's like you have
people who are, everyone there is like an Open AI co-founder or adjacent to the president or a state
actor.
It's like if you're not on the highest, highest level, like how are you competing there?
going to be tough.
Anyway.
We got Sheel in the waiting room.
Let's do it.
Let's bring a man.
Let's talk FinTech.
Let's talk.
Strype.
Ad-Yad.
Hey, ramp.
We're not going to call it FinTech today.
We're going to call it finance technology.
Finance.
Finance.
Finance.
Tech.
Finance technology.
Let's go.
Let's bring them in.
Let's chat.
Let's chop it up with Sheel.
How we doing?
Should we do one more?
Related post?
Will Brown says it's interesting that 1.5 billion parameters is all you need to crush math competitions,
but you need like 15 trillion to make the model funny. Maybe humor is the right measure of true intelligence.
And I agree. I agree. It is very difficult. Can you see him in the waiting room?
Oh, well, 15 trillion parameters to be funny. The whole B-Me thing is funny because it feels like it's going to really benefit from personalization.
The people that are like, oh, it's so funny.
It's like, well, yeah, Tyler Cowan, like, you did laugh at it because, like, it's funny that the LLM knows so much about you.
You give that to just some random person off the street.
And it's like, be me.
Like, I don't know.
The LLM doesn't know anything about you or like you just have a normal job.
Hey, there we are.
Hey, guys.
Welcome.
Oh, looking good in the suit.
Let's go.
He was prepared.
Yeah, I mean, when you come on on this show, you got to dress up.
You got to do the part.
I appreciate it.
I mean, we had quite the lineup today.
Packy, Rayboi.
Nobody showed up in a suit, but you did, which is why.
I think you win the day.
You win the day.
Hey, let's go.
Let's go.
Let's go.
I love it.
Super excited to have you here.
I mean, we've had you on the show informally through the post.
Dozens of times.
Constantly surfacing the stories that matter.
But I don't know, we've had a big week.
I think why don't we start.
I want to kind of start with maybe kind of.
kind of extrapolating on your Stripe Adjun point of view. You covered this last week. Let's start
there. And then I want to kind of broaden it and talk about FinTech more broadly. There's been
some big news. But maybe we start there. What's your takeaway? Yeah. Yeah. What's like
the main takeaway from, you know, I think you've tried to generally stay somewhat impartial, right?
And just sort of like put the numbers out and let readers take away their own opinion. But yeah,
what's your what's your expansion there?
Yeah, so the overall headline is the Stripe, Stripe puts out an annual report now and Adjian's a public company. So they do. They process a similar amount of volume. Stripe is slightly ahead, growing slightly more. It's like $1.4 trillion processed by Stripe. And I think, you know, a lot of people look at that and say, okay, well, these are equivalent companies. So it's crazy that Stripe trades at $91.5 billion when Adyons a public company trades a $56 billion. So a lot of people said, okay,
that's a sign that the private markets are overvaluing Stripe.
I don't think that's exactly true.
Like, although they have similar processed volumes, their margin profile is different.
So like when you make a transaction on Stripe, Stripe actually charges more than Adyen does,
in part because of the types of businesses that Stripe serves.
Adyen has a lot of enterprise businesses.
Stripe has some smaller businesses.
So Stripe most likely actually has
greater net revenue than Adien does. We don't know it because Stripe hasn't posted that publicly.
But overall, I think both are amazing companies. I think Stripe, you know, people fault them for having
more employees, but I actually think it's interesting. I think like Stripe is investing more in
R&D and they're growing faster and they have a lot more business lines. So I think both are
outstanding companies. I actually have exposure to both, which I'm quite happy about.
Amazing. Awesome. You've got to be the best case in R&D.
you're conflicted, but the even better scenario is you're double-conflicting. And they're both
ripping. Yeah, they're both ripping. I'm happy to hear that. Where do you think, you know,
one, Stripes had this amazing ability to, you know, build a behemoth by betting on, basically
betting on these super early stage companies, right? Many of their biggest customers today were
startups when they were all going through YC together. And that's turned out to be a fantastic strategy,
is part of the reason that Stripe could be worth significantly more than Adyen right now is that the
sort of general investor base believes that they'll be able to take customers away from Adyen,
these sort of bigger enterprise players, because all the marketing, you know, Stripe has been able to
take these two lines, right? They've got Stripe Atlas, so they're going to get the next generation
of companies. Yeah. But then simultaneously, when you see they're out of home ads today, it's all
oriented around, hey, we sign Hertz, rent a car, right? Totally. Clearly marketing. And so,
do you see Stripes, you know, what are Stripe's biggest, you know, future opportunities,
you know, enterprise and sort of beyond? Yeah. So you're absolutely right. So Stripe does a phenomenal
job of getting all early stage startups or a huge percentage of early stage startups. And actually,
like this business, it started like almost 15 years ago now. And at that time, your CTO was not
making the decision on who you chose for payment processing. That was not a CTO's decision.
That decision was made by if you had a CFO as a CFO or it was like the CEO because it was it was a money decision and then what Stripe did is they said we're going to save you so much time and energy in getting a payment processor up and running that it's going to be the CTO's decision and the CTO is a little less price sensitive and it's going to go with the best option that saves them time and engineering resources.
So Stripe charged a little bit more money than you would pay if you went somewhere else,
but it was transparent and you knew what you were paying.
And then along the way, a lot of those early companies that they signed ended up growing into
massive behemots doing many billions of revenue.
And so that was awesome for Stripe.
But now Stripe is also saying, okay, we got those customers that started with us when they were
small and grew up.
But to your point, on the out of home and like when they're conferences and stuff, they are trying to attract these other behemates as well.
And so, you know, I think they have part of Amazon's business. They have Shopify is large in the, I think if you look at in aggregate all the sellers, Twitter Shopify one, then Shopify is probably the largest single opportunity for Stripe.
but it's made up of, you know, thousands or many more than that of smaller individual retailers.
Yeah, that makes sense. What other, what, you know, they've, they've obviously, they're making a push into stable coins.
Yeah. What do you think they're, you know, I think it was very smart to identify that, hey, what is the stable coin developer tool that has the most traction that's, that's really working and just pay kind of any price to get that and then sort of bolt that on, right?
That's basically what happened.
what do you think, you know, what's your thesis around Stripe and Stable Coins?
They obviously wanted to own that sort of asset and have exposure to it, but it's not like
they're exactly rolling it out across the entire portfolio today, but what do you think
that rollout actually looks like?
So, yeah, one thing that's kind of interesting is like how this came to be.
So one kind of funny thing is I think the bridge, Stripe acquisition was announced, I don't
three or four months ago.
Yeah.
And literally in the next month, I was getting five to ten stable coin pitches per week.
It's amazing how quickly that happens.
Like as soon as some large acquisition happens, you're instantly VCs are getting pitched
all sorts of companies around that space.
And everybody thinks, you know, because Stripe made this acquisition, now the space is super
hot.
I think what actually happened here is pretty interesting.
I think like bridge is a very, a great company.
I think what happened is they, so SpaceX had this problem with Starlink.
So Starlink, you know, is an international ISP accepting payments in developing markets.
Developing markets are really hard to accept payments in.
Traditional banking infrastructure like totally sucks.
It's slow.
It was like blocking transactions like traditional.
infrastructure in some of these markets was blocking
blocking transactions. So SpaceX
said, okay, we're looking for a solution.
I don't know if Sean McGuire
was involved at all, but like Sean is
close with SpaceX, is close
with, was an investor in Bridge.
And so bridge. You can imagine
between, you know, raging,
you know, fighting the culture war
on X, he was also doing the side
deal to get the bridge, SpaceX thing to happen.
I'm just saying there's a world.
It's amazing. He has ties to anything else.
Yeah.
The man contains multitudes.
He is a man of many talents for sure.
Continue.
Yeah.
Do you want to finish?
And I have a follow question.
I think like, I think SpaceX using stable coins was a big moment.
And I think a lot of other people said, oh, like we're having this issue too.
SpaceX is using stable coins with the bridge.
Yeah.
I think that was actually super instrumental for that.
Even the scale AI example, like really concretized it for me where it was like, oh, it's very clear that you're paying
bunch of people in international.
I paid, I paid, I paid video editors internationally using stable coins.
And just because like it's, it's so much easier for them to get the money.
And so I think as soon as you have that, it's very hard to be a skeptic about it because
you're like, okay, I actually used it.
It worked.
It was, it was what everyone's been talking about for a very long time, about easier,
faster, lower fees, etc.
But I wanted to flip it around for you and ask, you know, you, in consumer tech,
you always have like, oh, Zuck's going to kill you.
Do you feel like, you know, you get these bridge pitches post bridge acquisition.
Is there, is there any fear like, oh, Stripe is going to build that?
Is that a vibe that you see among early stage fintech companies?
Because there's been a lot of successful fintech startups.
Also, Stripe is a founder-led multi-deccorn that is very able to move quickly.
Yeah, I do think there's some of that.
but I think that there are other,
there are areas in which people have been able to build great businesses
that Stripe was competing.
Actually, you know, kind of crazy,
maybe blasphemous to talk about,
but one of your sponsors here and friends of ours,
Ramp, you know, Stripe ended up investing in Ramp.
Stripe, as you may recall, had a competing product.
Yeah.
So it's not like you can't beat Stripe at anything they do.
There are a lot of businesses that are going after.
Well, Stripe also had a,
Stablecoin, internal stable coin team.
That's right.
That had been working for a while.
So while Stripe, you know, those guys are super sharp.
And as you said, founder led.
My brother works there.
I'm, you know, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm,
businesses that, that, that go after businesses that Stripe is in.
And Stripe has a core focus area that they need to, that they're doing phenomenally well at.
And they're doing a bunch of other stuff that I think their opportunities to compete with them on.
Just don't start a high-end publishing company because they will kill you.
That is one thing.
Beautiful press.
I would not touch it with a 10-foot pole that industry.
I think that's the one that they just have completely locked up monopolized.
And they will actually break your legs if you get into that market.
The Irish mafia.
The Irish mafia will come out to send that monopoly.
We should just hope the strike does not launch a podcast because game over.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, very true.
What you posted a day or two ago about the general catalyst IPO and sort of
rumors around that. How do you talk about, you know, I don't know if you, you know, speak generally,
you don't need to give us any sort of inside baseball on it, but how do you think the sort of fee
structures work when a venture fund goes public and, and do you think that's going to impact
G.C's ability, you know, is it going to be good for GC's ability to recruit top investors?
Is it because there's more liquidity? Is it going to be bad in the sense that, you know,
people that really want to bet on themselves are like, oh, I could.
go work for BTV and get a bunch of carry and I trust my picking ability and I can make them
a lot more, you know, getting actual carry. How does that unfold? I think on the latter part,
I think like these mega funds will call them the like, you know, double digit billion AUM going out
to raise five to ten each time. They're already huge behemots and like somebody who is considering
working at them should not be considering working for us.
Like we're we're playing a different game.
Yeah.
It's like, you know, you're a seed or series A startup and you interview somebody who's like,
and you're like, who are you considering?
And they're like, well, I'm considering meta, stripe.
And you guys, I'm like, get out of the room, dude, don't waste my time.
Yeah, yeah.
We just had this.
It makes so much sense.
So I think, you know, I think we play a different game.
Like they're in the asset accumulation game.
And going to public only furthers that.
Sure.
We're like, they're going to make a lot of their money off of management fees from these billions of dollars they collect.
And, you know, returns, like they've had some great returns along the way.
You know, they led Stripes Series B and I think of $500 million valuation.
It's now worth $91 billion.
So obviously they've done phenomenally well there.
They have a few other bangers that they've had through the years, Livongo, amongst others.
So I think in the past they've had some pretty good returns.
I think in the future, it becomes more of an asset accumulation game.
And if I think about how we as BTV, like if we're pitching or if we're trying to sell a startup to take our money, it's like, look, like we're returns motivated.
We're driven by you being successful.
They're just and like you're really meaningful to us versus if if it's,
a multi-stage firm, it's like, take their money later. Like, they're not, they're not as driven
by your success. They'll always be there. Yeah, they'll always be there. We won't be. Yeah,
yeah, exactly. But I think it's interesting. I think you're going to see more funds IPO, frankly.
I don't think this is the last one. I think, you know, it's certainly possible that Andreessen could
IPO and any of the mega funds could. Yeah, that makes sense. Especially if they're already set up
SRAs, right? Yeah, exactly. You have to be feeling pretty good lately given that FinTech is.
is back. I'm sure you had, I'm sure you had a, no, I remember this in, in late, uh, early
2023, FTX had collapsed. I was running a fintech at the time that, that had digital asset
features and traditional fiat features. And it just was like, where, where do we really go from here?
Brex at the time was burning, spending like 800 million a year to make, you know, uh, like what,
it was totally inverted, right? It was like 500 million in revenue on like 800 million of expenses.
I was like, is this category like, you know, where do we go from here, right?
It was sort of a dark time.
You guys rode through it.
You know, crypto is really good at this, right?
Like crypto VCs, like the market's down.
They're like, I'm going to get paid if I just hang on.
VCs typically are like, you know, you probably had a lot of fair weather fintech investors that were like, we're going to go and do other categories.
How, where do you think the biggest opportunities are in fintech today?
And, yeah, I'd even be curious, you know, without.
naming names out of the last few deals that you've done, can you kind of kind of talk about the
investment areas? Yeah, sure, sure, sure. So I'd say like fintech overall, look, it's been,
it's been a crazy time. We started this fund five and a half years ago. It's been a roller coaster.
And I've been investing in fintech full time since 2016. Nobody gave a shit about us then.
Then, you know, fast forward to 2021. We were the belt, the ball. Everybody, everybody wanted to invest in
FinTech. People were like begging us to give them advance notice on deals we did and then
investing like months after us at in some cases like 15 times evaluation. It was absolutely bonkers
and stupid frankly. Good for fundraising. I'm sure. Yeah. You know, good for fundraising actually,
not actually not actually good for those companies that took too much money. Sure. And so and then what
happened was an overcorrection in 2022 and 2023. And, and, and,
And in part because those companies had so much money, they didn't have to find PMF.
Like it wasn't PMF or die.
It was PMF or survive because you raise $100 million.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
PNF or Coast for five years.
Yeah, exactly.
And so, you know, fortunately, most of the companies in our portfolio, like, they had
enough money to survive and then they didn't burn too much.
And they're now, like, now they're having killer years.
Like a lot of our companies actually kind of struggled in 22 and 23, but then 24 was a banger year and like, especially the second half.
I think it was just coming out of that whiplash.
And you saw it in the public markets too.
Like if you look at fintech companies, 22 and 23, they were totally in the in the doldrums.
Yeah, I was just explaining, I was just explaining to John that Square bought afterpay for $29 billion and then was worth less than 20, like $25 billion combined like less than a year.
I mean, one of the most devastating acquisitions ever in recent memory.
By the way, that's a fun topic.
So after pay.
So the cool thing about that one is our friends at Matrix, Dana over there, when they invested in afterpay, I believe it was an $80 million public company.
What?
Matrix led the A.
It was an Australian.
They were already
They were already
They'd raise money
And raising money
Australia just meant you go public
There's a lot of Canadian companies like that
I see them all the time
Where it's like oh it's a hundred million dollar company
And they just happen to be public
Because like that's how you get a deal done
If you're raising $5 million
Like you have to go public
Because I want all of the oversight
And I want all the accounting
And I want all the audits
And so you better just be public
If you want me to underwrite this
Yeah
So what a banger of a deal
Like they invest in any of us could have invested in
Yeah. And then like I don't know how many years later it's four or five years later sells for $30 billion.
I think when all of a sudden done, what happened was it got announced to $30 billion.
But by the time it closed, Square stock had already dropped a lot. So it was like half as much still quite a banger.
Yeah. Yeah. Amazing. How that's why they brought in TJ to find the next one, right? Yeah. Yeah. Yep.
So there was a bunch of, you know, a bunch of businesses started super low rate environment that worked in that, in that sort of setting and then sort of started to not work in 20, 23 and beyond. How are you advising your founders around, you just are you telling them like plan? Like this is the new normal. You know, it's been easy to imagine a situation where Trump just lays on the pressure to drop rates. But and then, and this reminds me, you have.
have a portfolio company Mercury that generates, you know, basically like really obscene levels
of EBTA, but it's predicated on, you know, this sort of Fed funds rate that they don't control,
right? So they've built a fantastic product. But so, yeah, how are you advising your portfolio
companies around the sort of rate environment, given that so much of the returns in FinTech are
driven by, you know, finding that perfect balance? Yeah, it's true. And, and,
I would say overall lower rates are great for us.
We have Mercury and one other portfolio company relay that are benefited by having higher interest rates.
It's because they're sitting on deposits.
So, you know, that's how they make a lot of their money.
It's tricky for both those companies.
Like, if you think about, to your point, they're printing money.
But investors have to think about, okay, like, what is the rate that we can make,
we can assume is going to be the case going forward?
it's really hard to predict these things.
I don't think it's going to be back to where it was in 2021
anytime soon, if ever.
But at the same time, you could totally imagine, like, you know,
like a period in the next decade where we have effectively zero interest rates
for like five years plus, like post some sort of recession, like inflation stops.
Yeah, and that was why when the Mercury News came out and, you know,
they were getting a $3 billion dollar valuation and everybody's like,
oh, this is great because it's 2x, whatever they got priced in 2021.
I was looking at that and saying they're not really getting credit for that.
Oh, totally.
Profit at all.
They may as well, like, there's, you know, other companies that are losing $200 million a year,
much less making $200 million a year that are getting priced like that.
So fundamentally, America just has a lot of debt and keeping a high interest rate is not fun when you have a lot of it.
Yeah, totally.
I think you're going to see a lot of pressure from Trump.
I think there will.
At some point in the future of American history, we will see low interest.
Yeah, the next, the next grift, there's been one grift every two weeks.
but the next might be dropping, dropping rates just long enough to refinance the whole Trump.
Yeah.
You know, but anyway, so your general position is like assume they're going to be somewhere between here and 2%
and you got to make your business model work kind of anywhere in that range.
Sure.
Yeah, totally.
And one thing that's interesting is like Mercury started before.
Like Mercury was making a large portion of their revenue off of the rate.
And then in 2020, rates dropped.
they lost a huge portion of their revenue and then actually like built up a pretty substantial
interchange revenue business and like kind of I don't remember the exact amount but like in
March 2020 rates dropped Mercury lost a shitload of the revenue and I believe that like two or
three months later they were back up to where they were they were from before yeah yeah that makes
sense since it's the the topic of the last 24th
hours. I would love your take on the strategic scam and gambling.
Yeah.
The strategic crypto reserve? Yeah. Yeah. I think, I think it's total bullshit. It's like a,
it's a classic big government idea that masquerades as some sort of like forward thinking
policy. You can say we're innovative or whatever, but it's actually quite the opposite. We're
literally handling handing public funds over to like, you know, private cronies and
wealthy people like myself.
Yeah, you said your single biggest position, personal position is Bitcoin.
So you're actually, and the craziest thing is, you know, we started the show today and we
realized that the Bitcoin price had almost round trip back to, which is the biggest bear signal
that the government announces, hey, we're going to be investing in crypto now.
It doesn't move the market materially or in any permanent way.
Yeah, it's crazy.
Really priced in fully.
It's ridiculous.
I think like my point of view is on this and a bunch of the other stuff that that has
Trump has done this administration.
I feel like, you know, it seems like a short term political win, but long term it's bad.
And in this case, I think this crypto reserve undermines the dollar's position, which is like
fucking awesome.
The dollar is the global reserve currency.
And this sends some sort of confusing signal about our own conflict.
confidence in USD.
Yeah.
And like, so other countries hold, hold dollars because they're stable, consistent, and
predictable.
Yeah.
And, you know, I think you could make the case for Bitcoin.
I wouldn't personally.
Sure.
But you could make the case that Bitcoin is the new gold.
And it's some sort of hedge against inflation or currency instability.
I don't think you can make the case for fucking Cardano, you know, XRP.
Like, what is this?
shit. It's, it's, it's, uh, it's basically a taxpayer funded backstop. Now, David Sacks came out today
against Joe Lonsdale and said it's not taxpayer funded. I think that's bullshit. Let's say there's
confiscating coins and holding them. It's the same thing. Like if you like previously when they confiscated,
they sold. Yep. Not selling. It's the same thing. Like, it makes no difference.
Well, what about the argument of like, you know, during the bank bailouts in 2008, obviously,
like it looked very bad because it's like taxpayer money is going into the the balance sheet
of Bank of America, Wells Fargo, save those companies. But if you look back historically now and
you read the Tim Geithner book, it's like, well, the banks paid them back with interest and the
taxpayer actually made money on that. What about that argument? Yeah. So what's the, but what's the
argument for the crypto reserve because the argument is that is that it could be net positive to the taxpayer.
Like the taxpayer, yes, the taxpayer does put money into this thing, essentially.
But if it goes up, then they wind up paying less taxes down the road when the government
wants to fund something because, hey, we don't need a tax you as much because we went 10x long
on X, Y, or Z.
Yeah, it's just a question of, do you trust the government to allocate our dollars?
Yep.
Or do we trust individuals?
And so I think it's like a personal freedoms issue.
So it's kind of strange to have it come from the Republican Party, frankly.
Yeah, totally.
It was odd.
Anyway, what, talk to us about, you've got an accelerator, which vertical-specific accelerator, makes a ton of sense.
It, you know, if you're, you know, YC is an amazing product and platform.
Why are you locking them in cages, though?
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, no, that's a real question.
Why aren't you locking them and putting a live stream on it?
Yeah.
No, I don't think that, I think people are sick at this point of the PMF or die approach applied to financial products.
Yeah.
You know, we very clearly did not want that because there's been some bad, bad things that
happened when you just try to.
But what kind of companies are you looking for?
I imagine that it would be insane if somebody had the opportunity to go through your guys'
accelerator and they're building in FinTech to choose YC, not because YC is not great,
but just because you guys can connect them to this hyper, hyper-specific network.
Yeah.
Yeah, I totally agree.
YC is great.
Look, I ran an accelerator, 2016 to 2018.
I think Gary said that they had 4.5% of their companies became unicorns.
Actually, in mine, 7% became unicorns.
So we have a good success rate.
Congratulations.
So we have a good success rate.
I think the idea is like, look, if you're building in an area that we have expertise,
yes, ring the gong.
We have expertise so we can be helpful.
Now, you asked what areas I'm interested in.
I'd say, look, we're sort of founder-driven first and foremost, but there are some areas we've invested in a lot.
One is this, you know, very unsurprisingly, we're investing in AI companies.
We've done a bunch recently in the services as software space.
Cool.
Including one, actually, we did with previous guest on here, Keith.
We have a company called Basis that's an AI for accounting company that is able to do a lot of the work.
that a low-level accountant does.
We led to seed last year, Keith Led the A recently.
We've done a bunch of others in that space.
We did one in the SMB loan underwriting space called Kodge.
We did one in the mortgage space, did one in insurance.
And all these companies basically are using AI,
but embedding themselves deeply into a workflow and solving a problem for somebody
who probably could not build it themselves, which is exciting.
I think, you know, my worry with a lot of these
companies, you've seen all the charts, zero to 100 million revenue. I think a lot of them that
aren't as deeply embedding into a workflow, I think are in danger of going from zero to 100
down. Easy come, easy go. Yeah. So we're trying to invest in companies that we think have some
durable lasting value, some data distribution and embedded workflow value. And those kind of things
are easy to find in FitTech. Yeah. Have you touched any? And those kind of things are easy to find in FitTech.
Yeah, have you touched any of these broader sort of more PE style roll-ups?
You know, there's some opportunities in payments, obviously, for that.
Have you gone into that space at all yet?
And what's your general point of view there?
We haven't done a whole lot of these PE roll-up style things.
We've done a couple things that are similar.
We did one in the healthcare space that's doing, that works in private practices,
it's called Maroka.
I think, honestly, juries out.
on those kind of businesses and raising venture dollars to do so.
Probably works better for the asset accumulator harvester model
where you can deploy a lot of capital with lower risk unless you're saying,
you know, we're going to replace every employee with AI.
You know, it's easier to say we're going to buy a bunch of companies at fair prices
and get some efficiency, but that's basically just private equity,
which is not the business that you're in.
not the business that we're in.
That's exactly right.
And so I completely agree.
I was going to bring up like general catalyst is buying a hospital system in Akron, Ohio.
That's, they're in a different business than we're in.
And I can see why it makes sense for them.
Really quickly, you say is buying?
Can you break down like, I heard about that deal like last year.
Why is it taking so long?
Like what's going on with that?
What is, is this like regulatory approval type of situation?
Yeah, I'd imagine.
I don't know.
I don't know any first thing.
But I'd imagine when you're buying a health system,
there's a ton of shit that you have to do.
There's like there's pushback from the community I noticed like immediately.
Like when we heard about it,
I also saw articles like,
hey, this is fucked up.
Like venture capital firm is buying something that should be for the public good.
Yeah, there's been a lot of pushback on like,
oh, private equity bought this, you know, local clinic and like made it worse
or like reduce the quality of care to like maximize profits.
So it's always been controversial.
It'll be very interesting to see how general catalyst positions themselves in the IPO.
I mean, Citadel was thinking about going IPO back like, I don't know, 10 years ago.
And they, like hedge funds were seen as like villains of the crash.
So they bought an investment bank to try and make themselves look better, which is hilarious to me.
Because it's like, oh, yeah, we're not the bad hedge fund guys.
We're the good investment bankers.
Both of those are like kind of villainized already.
It's bad if you go banker to make yourself look better.
That's bad.
That's great.
I think they paid McKinsey like a fortune to like, you know, advise them on how to position their brand going into the IPO.
And then they just kept it private and then they created Citadel securities and printed.
It was great.
Yeah.
You're probably got a jump.
Yeah.
I know we had 30 minutes.
Is there any IPOs that you're pretty convicted or happening in 2025 in FinTech specifically?
I mean, there have been rumors around Chime and Clorna and, you know,
know. I'm in corner the biggest. I think where chime prices is going to be, you know, very important to the
fintech world. I think like I think in the private markets, it's currently trading at 10, but people think,
you know, people think it's going to go out stronger. It's going to have a huge impact on,
on me and our portfolio. Actually, we have, we have some other companies that are in a similar space.
So I'm, I'm really looking forward to that one. Clarna, I think,
I actually don't know where it's going to price.
Quarna has something interesting.
They raised it a crazy valuation and then did a massive down round,
which is not necessarily bad thing, especially for them.
Klarna actually does not have liquidation preferences crazy enough.
So it actually was just like...
They also replaced 100% of their employees with AI, right?
Supposedly.
It's just the CEO and Claude 3 saw it cursor actually now.
Somebody should go buy a Peloton and then...
see if a human bangs on their door or it's just a chat pop being like hey please pay this back
uh no that's fun what but but but chime what was their what was their what was their 2021 or 22
valuation it must wasn't it or you know four yeah 25 billion and 25 billion yeah nice
and i remember trading privately at like 30 yeah yeah cool very cool well we will have to definitely
you back on for those IPOs. This is super fun guys. You're welcome any week and thanks for jumping on.
Appreciate it. Cheers. Bye. Cheers. Cheers. See, yeah. Bye.
Bye. Fantastic. Should we close out with? We're going so long the lights are turning off because we're running out a little battery and we're really pushing to the limit today. It's great. Should we close out with some timeline? What do you want to do?
A little bit of time. We got to drive around in a Ferrari later. You know, it's a hard life out here.
More to come there. Also not kidding.
Did you see the Mr. Beast backlash?
I thought this is kind of interesting.
I didn't.
So Mr. Beast did a podcast on Diary of a CEO.
Have you ever listened to this podcast?
Diary of a CEO.
Yeah, but it's like the biggest.
It's the biggest business podcast and no one in Silicon Valley listens to it.
It's very odd.
I mean, it's like it's popular, but it's popular just with like a very different crowd, I guess.
I think it has a lot to do with the fact that it's not an American show.
The guy's British.
And so even though he has, he has great guests.
like, I mean, Brian Cheskey.
He also has like a Web 3 startup.
He does?
Yeah, yeah.
Oh, I had no idea.
The host.
Really?
Yeah.
Wow.
He should have stuck to supplements, I guess.
But anyway.
I'm going to let you read through this.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, sure.
So Mr. Beast goes on diary of a CEO.
And then Kataku writes an article about Mr. Beast going on the show and says,
Mr. Beast, life is, quote, so much easier when you're broke.
And of course, this is very common.
controversial. People get very upset. There's a viral post saying FU. It gets like 100 million likes.
Everyone sees it as very, you know, negative and flippant that this rich guy would come on and say,
ah, life's so much easier when you're broke. But that's not actually what he said. And it's very
interesting. So Jack Appleby breaks it down. He says, this might be an all-time PR team screw up.
Mr. Beast went on Diary of a CEO podcast. The podcast PR team pitched Jack.
Appleby and other writers to cover it, which is something most podcast, most people don't know
about podcasts, but when you go on a podcast, there's a PR team for, you know, trying to amplify
the attention that this guest gets. It's all very, very planned out, very insider plant,
industry plant. And so when Kataku wrote about it, they used a pretty harsh quote. He said,
I'd have done the same, except it's not a real quote. The podcast publicity team somehow
confused Mr. Bees saying, bro, as broke. So maybe they use like AI dictation or something. But
in a moment where he's just saying life is harder when you travel, they misquote him and made him
sound like a jerk when it's not the case at all. And it's all not naturally gone viral with the
misinformation side of it, all because the publicity team tried to get coverage and they screwed up.
So now Mr. Beast is taking heat. Kataku is taking heat when neither of them deserve it. And so the real
quote was, this is killing me, to be honest.
It was like so much easier when you're broke if you don't travel constantly.
And that's not what he was saying.
He was saying, it's so much easier when, bro, like, you're not traveling.
And it's fascinating.
And of course, his original point is correct.
But the, but the Strowsian reading of all this is, of course, that life is so much
easier when you're broke.
And that with wealth comes responsibility.
Yeah.
And that, and that what he's, and that what he's,
when he's getting canceled for, he should have said the quiet part loud and that everyone
else is wrong. Yeah, it's true. He's also built up a brand where he's sort of almost promised
his audience that he's reinvesting like 101% of whatever he makes. He's gone out very publicly.
But I mean, Elon has said this and not back down from it where he said like, look, I have all this
money. I'm the world's richest man. I'm miserable. You don't want to be me. Like I'm not having fun.
Like I'm like like I'm having I'm doing there's forward motion there's energy
But I wouldn't call what I'm doing fun and that's fine that's good that's also a choice right
He could retire he could retire by the biggest yacht and not ever talk to the media again exactly exactly yeah he could totally
He didn't have to buy and plenty of people have the the Google founders did for a long time
Bill Gates you could say has kind of been on that tip for a long time
Even Ellison is kind of chilling from time to time like there are people that she
to be much less aggressive.
Yeah, Jason Calacanis
was the first investor in Uber,
one of the first. And now
he's deciding to be in this, you know,
go to war with defense tech founder.
He does not need to do that, you know?
He could pass on that
and yet he doesn't. He keeps
kicking the beast and everyone involved in that
seems to love fighting. Love fighting.
It's very annoying for me.
Makes sense. I'm totally over it.
Anyway. Over it.
Should we stay on the topic of VC? Liz Wessel.
Ramper,
Congratulations to Liz.
She was an angel.
She says,
Has anyone written
about the trend
over the last six to 12 months
of founders
18 to 26 years old
raising VC to buy old school
businesses and inject
AI into them?
I've seen so many pitches
in every vertical on this
in 2024 and it looks like
still in 2025.
I'm curious to learn
how VCs who have done
these seed and A rounds
often priced pretty high
are thinking about this
approach.
Blog posts or podcast Rex
appreciated it.
Well, let's just do a podcast
about it right now. Let's do it. Let's do it. So, Liz, we got the answer for you. We're going to go to
Jordy, an expert in this exact topic. Jordy, break it down for us. Would you invest in a 18-year-old
founder buying a old school business, injecting AI into it? And the seed round is that, you know,
you're going to get one. You had me at AI, John. I'm in. I'm in. Send me the wire instructions.
Fantastic. No, so there's two things that happen. The, the concept of the search
fund exploded because the idea of these sort of old school IRAL real world businesses
it wasn't a Silicon Valley thing it wasn't a SELcan Valley it wasn't HBS yeah it was an
HBS thing saying hey you could have gone to Goldman yep instead you're going to take
five million bucks and try to turn it into 15 million dollars in you know five years
something like that so that became popular and then the AI sort of enabled roll up you
know started blowing up and and Liz is right there's just tons and tons and tons of these
companies. My concern, you know, generally I think we're going to see, we're going to see
returns in the category. It's not going to be one where, you know, everything that gets basically
zeroed out. But that being said, you're going into, you're taking venture dollars and you're going
into this sort of private equity world, which is like one of the most efficient markets in the
world, right? Private equity has spent decades honing the ability to buy assets, make them better
and then sell them for a higher price. Yep. And so,
by going in there and saying it's a huge bet to say we're going to we're going to be able to
replace 80 to 90 percent of the employees with AI right when when the models are good but you know
they're not agentic yet right for the most part and so my my concern is that you're going to have
that it seems like the most likely outcome is like some of the big winners end up being the big
winners still end up not being venture winners right and that they they they get a nice
three to five X and on invested capital,
but it's not enough to sort of return any type of fund.
Yeah.
I think that's a good point.
I'm trying to think of like the private equity deals that I've seen like kind of
up close and personal.
And I'm going back to like Bain Capital.
When I was there,
they,
the historical like banger for them was staples.
Yeah.
You know,
staple stores.
And that was not a digital transformation story.
Yep.
Like that was very much a nuts and bolts like.
What should the capital structure be?
How do we lever this thing up properly?
How do we close underperforming stores, ramp up overperforming stores?
It was not, it was not, hey, the internet's here.
I mean, this happened to like the 90s.
Like this is the main capital story.
So, I mean, they think they owned, I think they owned staples from like the 80s, 90s to
the early 2000s.
Like the internet was a thing.
There is a world where you could be like buy staples and turn it into Amazon.com.
Yep.
But I'm sure they launched an e-commerce site at that point, but it didn't like materially
change the business.
Same thing they bought, who they buy, Toys R Us.
And that one, I think they got out, but eventually they went bankrupt and it was not a digital transformation story.
And so, yeah, the private equity thing, it's like the, even though there's been a trend of like the internet for a long time, there, like, that hasn't been the story of private equity in my, in my, in everything I've read over the past like few decades.
It hasn't been, oh, let's, like, let's go and buy the hospital network.
And we're going to improve the user experience flows of the payments plan or whatever.
It hasn't been.
The challenge is when you're buying a legacy sort of S&B, typically the founder is retiring.
And the reason that that company, you know, outsiders will look at the business and say,
oh, they run on pen and paper.
They're not factoring in the fact that that founder was a staple of their local community.
It would work 12 hours a day for decades and put their blood, sweat, and tears.
into the business. And so you would get this effect of you're ripping out this sort of owner operator
who's made their life's work, this company, and then you're slapping some AI on it.
And I don't know, I think you almost are better off with the owner operator, right? And so the value
and so in these business, when you're buying businesses that are being valued on cash flows,
you need to make them grow faster and you need to increase earnings. Otherwise, the value is less.
Yes. And so it's, it's, you can rip out cost to increase earnings.
but the sort of replacement,
the sort of what you're ripping out
is human capital and injecting
artificial intelligence.
It's unclear what that trade
is going to look like in the short term.
The other thing is...
And where the value capsule lies,
because...
So hold on to that second point,
but the interesting thing is like,
like, oh, they're doing stuff on pen and paper.
Well, if they're paying somebody,
you know, $10 an hour
and they're only spending one hour a month on it,
well, that's $10 a month.
DocuSign's going to hit you up
for $100 a month.
you're going to 10x your bill by going not paper, right?
Yeah.
And so there's a question of like, how efficiently priced are the digital tools?
Yeah.
Because if they're really officially priced, they're going to take their pound to flash and
you're just going to end up.
Small businesses are like you have the niece and nephew of the founder who like kind of
work for like below minimum wage.
Exactly.
They're getting ripped out too, right?
They're not sticking around.
Yeah, yeah.
We're the grandchildren coming in on the weekend and like, you know, rack and
servers. I've got a buddy in Malibu who's like has a multi-100 million dollar like healthcare
software focused PE fund and he he has like people don't realize like how how precise these
managers are and that he does not care to try to get a 10x he's like I just want to get you know
2x I want a 2x and that's really all that I care about but I'm never going to miss and I'm just like
only and so you're coming in and you're competing with an operator where you're going to have to pay
you know people that are selling their businesses usually they have some type of long-term
incentive to make sure the the acquisition is successful do they want to sell to the guy that's a
proven operator that's like like literally like I'm going to go out of business if this doesn't
you know my fund is going to be damaged if this doesn't work or do you want the 22 year old
that's like you know I'm rolling up you know pools like I saw like a
like a pool roll up that was like and I think it's awesome like it's a cool like it's a cool
shot but you know uh I I'm it's unclear if public pools no no like residential pools so like if
you can so you can go on a biz buy sell or some of these other sites right now and you can buy a
pool route and it'll be like basically the client the clients and so these things trade over time
where you can go and say yeah I'm going to buy you know thousands of
pool clients and outside of Austin, right?
Yeah.
Roll those up.
The challenge is like the, the competitive pressure on a pool route is so intense that
anybody with, you know, $100 worth of equipment can clean pools, right?
And so it's not, it's certainly not a monopoly type environment.
Totally.
Yeah.
Yeah, I mean, I can see a lot of VC's getting burnt here, mostly because like, yeah, like,
even if you wind up shifting from, look, we have 100x in our, in our fund,
to everything's a three X.
And you work out the math and the IRR should be the same.
That's not the entire purpose of a single fund.
Because there's plenty of situations where, yeah, you want to get a seed,
you want to get a seed into some company and then you want to pile it into,
pile into it with your growth fund.
Yeah.
And if you're just getting a 2X, you're not going to pile into it and scale it.
And so it's kind of just this hope that AI will transform private equity.
And maybe it will, but we don't know.
We haven't seen it.
Yeah.
And the risk for venture funds is that you're running a,
traditional venture model and then you say, oh, we're going to put 20% of our fund into a bunch of,
you know, roll-ups. And then you get a banger and it's a 4x. And they're like, great. Like,
we still are like, are under going to underperform. Yeah. So anyways, I think, um, yeah, venture people
need to understand that, uh, you know, we like to go into other industries and, and, you know,
sort of say like, oh, like, you guys have been doing this all wrong. Like, expeditionary or boondoggles. I mean,
they're basically boondoggles.
Yeah.
Maybe.
Hopefully it works out.
I hope they figure it out.
Let's go to Molly O'Shea.
This is a fun one.
I think we should take this into account.
We've been podcasting pretty hard.
I think we should announce that we're taking a break.
We're going to take maybe 18 hours off.
Yeah.
So you won't hear from us for a while.
Yeah.
We're going to end this stream eventually and it's going to be about 18 hours until we start up again.
Yeah.
So we're going to spend time with our family.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Really recharge the batteries.
Yep.
deep breaths and stuff. But then we'll be right back at it. But let's close out with this post from
Molly O'Shea. She says, after further analysis, I've come to the difficult decision to go into
hermit mode. I will be refraining from any generalized social interaction or networking like events,
travel conferences, and coffee chats for the foreseeable future. If you want to hang out,
sign up, link in my bio, my team will get back to you. Brave, Molly. Brave. You're brave.
I wonder who inspired that. I wonder who inspired that. I wonder who inspired that. No, no, we love Molly.
on this show and yeah she's our default answer when we get invited to events now is uh come on the show
yeah happy to cover it on the show if you invite us to event we're going to say no but if you tweet
about it we'll cover it on the show there you want to call in you can call in to everybody wins but
you're probably not going to get us out of this chair because it's so much fun it's just too much fun
it's too much fun you never want to turn off the stream are there any on bangers you want to go through
what was your sleep score last night because I oh I had a rough one I had a good one
I got a ton of sleep.
It takes me having the worst night of the last 30 days for you to do better.
I got a 72.
I got a 94.
I slept eight hours and seven minutes.
Let's go.
You put up,
you consistently do eight hours.
This is great.
You got the laugh.
That's great.
Yeah.
Amazing.
Huge numbers.
Built like a bear,
sleep like a bear.
Just hibernate every once in a while.
I have,
I've been a bit under the weather.
So I had to go to bed early.
still got up at six, got in, pumped slider.
So I didn't set an alarm.
Yeah.
I used the eight sleep alarm.
I didn't set it yesterday.
Yeah.
You shouldn't have told me about that because if you're competing with me, now I got an edge.
Yeah.
You got to keep these features to us to, to, I got some other secret features.
Okay.
I'll share with the audience, but you're going to have to.
I'll have to do cover my ears.
No, but I didn't turn on the, the warming feature at the end of the night.
Yeah.
And so it was like impossible to get out of bed yesterday, even though I was sleeping in like two hours past.
whenever we normally get up.
So anyways, go to e-sleep.com.
I forgot my transition.
My original transition was when we go to the moon with Firefly,
we'll sleep on an eight-sleep on the moon or something.
But somehow I missed that.
And we are interested in competing with the audience.
So go to eight-sleep.com slash TVPN.
Yep.
And get a discount on eight-sleep.
And then DM us.
We'll get in a group and we'll all sort of motivate each other
to put up crazy numbers.
Yeah.
Anyways, we got some more timeline?
I think let's do more timeline tomorrow.
I think we're good at this point.
It's getting late.
Good, good, good.
We got a promotion to film.
Yeah, we are going to go drive a Ferrari round, which you'll hear more about soon.
Fantastic.
Thanks for watching.
Leave us five stars on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.
Leave an ad in your review.
We've got to do a review of the reviews tomorrow.
Yeah, we should do a review of the reviews.
We'll get them up on the show.
and thanks for watching.
We appreciate you.
Thank you, brothers.
We'll see tomorrow.
Thank you.
See you tomorrow.
