The Compound and Friends - Stocks After a Rate Cut With Nick Colas, the End of Quarterly Earnings Reports, Strategy Denied S&P Inclusion
Episode Date: September 16, 2025On this TCAF Tuesday, Josh Brown is joined by Nick Colas of DataTrek Research to discuss: the size of the next rate cut, the history of S&P multiples, Microsoft in 1999 vs today, outperforming sectors... of the market, and much more! Then at 44:35, hear an all-new episode of What Are Your Thoughts with Downtown Josh Brown and Michael Batnick! This episode is sponsored by Public and Rocket Money. Fund your account in five minutes or less by visiting: https://public.com/WAYT Cancel your unwanted subscriptions and reach your financial goals faster with Rocket Money. Go to https://rocketmoney.com/compound today. Sign up for The Compound Newsletter and never miss out! Instagram: https://instagram.com/thecompoundnews Twitter: https://twitter.com/thecompoundnews LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/the-compound-media/ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@thecompoundnews Public Disclosure: All investing involves the risk of loss, including loss of principal. Brokerage services for US-listed, registered securities, options and bonds in a self-directed account are offered by Public Investing, Inc., member FINRA & SIPC. Public Investing offers a High-Yield Cash Account where funds from this account are automatically deposited into partner banks where they earn interest and are eligible for FDIC insurance; Public Investing is not a bank. Cryptocurrency trading services are offered by Bakkt Crypto Solutions, LLC (NMLS ID 1890144), which is licensed to engage in virtual currency business activity by the NYSDFS. Cryptocurrency is highly speculative, involves a high degree of risk, and has the potential for loss of the entire amount of an investment. Cryptocurrency holdings are not protected by the FDIC or SIPC. Alpha is an experimental AI tool powered by GPT-4. Its output may be inaccurate and is not investment advice. Public makes no guarantees about its accuracy or reliability—verify independently before use. *Rate as of 6/24/25. APY is variable and subject to change. Investing involves the risk of loss. This podcast is for informational purposes only and should not be or regarded as personalized investment advice or relied upon for investment decisions. Michael Batnick and Josh Brown are employees of Ritholtz Wealth Management and may maintain positions in the securities discussed in this video. All opinions expressed by them are solely their own opinion and do not reflect the opinion of Ritholtz Wealth Management. The Compound Media, Incorporated, an affiliate of Ritholtz Wealth Management, receives payment from various entities for advertisements in affiliated podcasts, blogs and emails. Inclusion of such advertisements does not constitute or imply endorsement, sponsorship or recommendation thereof, or any affiliation therewith, by the Content Creator or by Ritholtz Wealth Management or any of its employees. For additional advertisement disclaimers see here https://ritholtzwealth.com/advertising-disclaimers. Investments in securities involve the risk of loss. Any mention of a particular security and related performance data is not a recommendation to buy or sell that security. The information provided on this website (including any information that may be accessed through this website) is not directed at any investor or category of investors and is provided solely as general information. Obviously nothing on this channel should be considered as personalized financial advice or a solicitation to buy or sell any securities. See our disclosures here: https://ritholtzwealth.com/podcast-youtube-disclosures/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the compound and friends.
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All right, this is an amazing show.
We are super excited to bring this to you.
Had an amazing conversation once again with my friend Nick Colas.
Nick is scary smart.
He comes up with new ways to think about what's happening in the market, new ways
to forecast, new ways to plan for different eventualities.
He's always thinking, always researching.
And some of his ideas, just when you look at it, you realize this guy just struck oil.
This is exactly what's happening.
And it's very often a lens that no one else is really looking through.
So tonight's a really great example of that.
We're going to talk a little bit about some opportunities and sectors.
We're going to talk a little bit about the upcoming rate.
decision at the Fed and all sorts of other stuff, it's always great to tape these,
what did we learn segments with Nick? And I know it's been a minute, but really happy to
have had him back this week. Following that, it's a new edition of what are your thoughts with
Michael Batnik and I. We're going to start off with President Donald Trump wants to get
rid of the requirement that companies file quarterly reports. Okay, I'm all yours. We'll dive into that.
and every other major thing that happened in the market this week.
As always, it was a lot of fun to create this episode,
especially with the people who join us in the live chat.
If you haven't done that yet, we record what are your thoughts almost every Tuesday
at 5 p.m. Eastern, and we'd love to see you there for the live.
And who knows, if you say something funny enough, it might even make it into the show.
All right, that's it for me.
I'm going to send you over right now.
Boys, make it happen.
Welcome to The Compound and Friends.
All opinions expressed by Josh Brown, Michael Batnick, and their castmates are solely their own opinions and do not reflect the opinion of Riddholt's wealth management.
This podcast is for informational purposes only and should not be relied upon for any investment decisions.
Clients of Riddholt's wealth management may maintain positions in the securities discussed in this podcast.
Ladies and gentlemen, welcome back to what did we learn?
My name is downtown Josh Brown.
I am your host, and with me today is my friend Nick Colas, co-founder of Data Trek
Research and the author of Data Trek's Morning Briefing Newsletter, which goes out daily
to 1,500-plus institutional and retail clients.
Nick's research partner and co-founder, Jessica Raib, who's usually here, will not be
joining us today, but she's here in spirit.
Nick and Jessica also have their own YouTube channel.
which you can find a link to in the description below.
This week, the Federal Open Reserve Committee has an interest rate decision to make.
And it looks like, for the first time in nine months, we will have an interest rate cut.
The consensus is currently for a 25 basis point cut, although there is some chatter about a 50 basis point cut.
The current odds, as of this morning, 94% chance of a quarter of a point cut, only a
6% chance for a 50 basis point cut. Nick, what are your thoughts as we head into that late
Wednesday afternoon announcement? Well, I brought a little show and tell for this topic. So let's
pop it up on the screen. It is all the Fed rate cuts since 1990, sized by 25, 50, and then 75 or
100. And the table here just shows how many cuts of those sizes have occurred in every year with
the rate cut back to 1990. There's been 55 cuts of various sizes since 1990 when the Fed first started
to really be transparent about what rate policy was. And 33 of those are 60% were 25s,
33% or 18 were 50s, and then 4 or 7% were 75s or 100. So the odds are usually for a 25 basis
point cut. That's usually what the Fed does. Say 2 to 1. Yeah, it's much more prevalent. Now, the thing to
take away from this table is the Fed only cuts by 50 or 75 or 100, but mostly 50, when there's a
recession or when we're just going, have been through a recession. So the 50s happened in 1991,
1992, 2001, 2002, 2007, 2008, and in 2020. So those were all recession or immediately post-recession
years. The only exception to this rule is last year when the Fed cut by 50 to start the current
rate cycle that wasn't in a recession, obviously, it was more to normalize rates. And so the takeaway from
this is you don't want 50 basis point cuts. 50 basis points cuts say the economy is in recession,
and you don't want that kind of signaling, which I think the Fed knows, traders know. So as much as there
was some chatter about 50 earlier in the month, I don't see it. It's going to be 25. Okay. So let's talk about
the exception. So last year, you could not have done a 50 basis. You did one 50 basis.
point cut. But like, the thing that people should understand about that is that is coming off of
one of the most extreme hiking cycles ever. So it's like the context of how fast rates went up
and by how much is really important to normalizing last year's 50 basis point cut. In that context,
it was almost more like a 25 basis point cut just because of like how much rates had risen.
am I like trying to rationalize something that's not really there or do you think that's a good
interpretation of the need for that 50 last year? It's a very good interpretation. However, let's think
about the bond market did after that 50 basis point cut. You know, 10 years rallied by almost
100 basis points of yield from September through the early part of this year. So even then the bond
market took that cut as a, oh, that's, that was a lot. That was very stimulative. So the 50, you know,
it came and went and we had two more 25s. But you're right.
The 50 was very exceptional.
And as the historical data that I popped up shows, very, very unusual.
We shouldn't expect to see that again.
We had a massive Dow Jones rally last week and a big move up in small caps and a lot of cyclical stocks, home builders.
And I was on TV Thursday.
And I think Friday was an even bigger rally than Thursday.
But I think it was a gap higher for the Dow every day last week or something like that.
And I was asked on TV, is this the market?
starting to potentially price in 50 basis points.
And I sort of felt like, yeah, that actually could explain why this sudden burst of
excitement for home building stocks, because that's the only thing that really moves those
stocks.
So do you think that that's not really the case what was happening last week?
It was like the door opening to wait a minute, maybe they'll do 50?
No, because 50 is the short end of the curve and things like home builders work off of
mortgages were really the long end of the curve.
And twos and tens didn't move all that much last week, which is interesting, but tens have
come down a lot.
And so I think what the market was saying was the Fed's going to be locked in on 25 every
meeting for the next of the year.
That's going to pull the short end of the curve down.
And the economy is slowing enough, particularly the labor market's slowing enough, that
you're not going to have a lot of incremental inflationary pressures.
And so the long end of the curve comes down as well.
And it was the market, kind of the equity market signing off on what the bond market was
already saying. Do you think the 25 basis point weight cut is already mostly priced in?
No one's going to be surprised by it at this point. It's been telegraphed. It's where the betting
market has already been. So it's like, all right, how would the market hypothetically react to
the Fed doing 50, even if they did it in a hawkish way, where they said, okay, we're adjusting
rates based on, you know, our data dependence, but we don't see the need to do much more than
this. Like if they kind of said it, not exactly those words. It would be such a departure from the way
the Powell Fed has operated, which has been much more slow and methodical to their, you know,
to many people's criticism of the Powell Fed. That's the way they've done it. So if they went 50 out
of the blue with no pre-warning, no nictimorous leak, no, no conditioning of the market,
tremendous shock. And I think we'd revert back to that table that we started with, which is 50s
happened in recession. And the market would say, crap, the Fed sees something we don't see we're going
into a recession. I want to put that table back up and ask you another question. In 2001,
there were eight 50 basis point cuts. Was that every Fed meeting that year was a 50 basis point
cut? Am I reading that right? In 1991 was 25s. There were eight 25s. And then in 2001,
yes. And if you add the two together, you'll see that there were 11 cuts. There were 11 cuts. There's
only eight Fed meetings in the year.
2001, Jan 3 was an emergency rate cut of 50 basis points.
And that's when the market said, oh, my goodness, we are really in some trouble because
the Fed met an emergency meeting on the first full business day of the year and cut rates
and then cut them again in their normally scheduled January meeting.
So that was a very tumultuous year for those of us who remember living through it.
That was a tough year.
It was what I think that was chart off.
I think that was the hardest year of my career.
and I barely had a career
but I just remember
every stock going down
every day of every week
of every month
and with almost no exception
every month was lower
than the prior month
and then sort of like
as a capper
after nine months of
stock selling off
we had 9-11
and I lived to you
I can't actually remember
a worst period of time
for me personally
I can't believe
that there were
11 separate rate cuts that year, and eight of them were 50 basis points.
I really, I didn't remember that detail until I saw it on your, your table.
We are in the opposite of that situation right now.
We've got stock prices that go up every day.
We've got earnings growth.
Every quarter, it's surprised to the upside.
And I get that there's like a little bit of squishiness in, in some of the labor metrics.
But like, by and large, it's a pretty damn good environment.
for most people.
So this looks nothing like that.
So I guess I would agree with you, a 50 basis point rate cut would throw the market for
a loop, like in terms of sentiment.
You might get a lot of people say, wait, wait, wait, wait, what did they do?
Why do they do that?
Yeah.
So it's, okay.
All right.
So you're on board with the 25 basis points.
You also believe the market pretty much knows that's what's going to happen.
If that's the case, how important is the commentary a company?
the rate cut, the statement itself, the press conference. What do you think? You know, the common
wisdom and what I hear from clients is we're going to get a Powell that is less dovish than the Fed Fund's
Futures market says. Because Fed Fund futures say you're 60, 70% chance of cuts at every meeting
through the rest of the year. And Powell's not going to want to sign off on that entirely. So it's
logical to think he's going to be a little more hawkish and be a little more narrative around
data dependent. But the market knows which way the wind is blowing.
I'm not sure it really matters all that much.
And against that backdrop, we have an amazing amount of positive earnings revisions for the S&P happening right now.
You know, we've talked about some prior videos, but typically speaking, numbers come down all through the course of a year.
That's the way they do it.
Analyst started 100 in January for the year, and they end up at 87.
This, since the beginning of the second quarter earnings season, numbers have just gone up every single week, pretty much.
And so we've got a tremendous earnings momentum right now.
which no one's really talking about.
So the whole of this worry about the Fed, I'm not too worried about it.
The numbers keep rising, estimates keep going up, which is super unusual in a mid-cycle market.
And so I'm very heartened to see those numbers go up.
I think that I'll more than offset anything from the Fed.
That's a great segue.
So let's talk about earnings estimates because one of the observations that I've made and I've heard
you make and a lot of other people make, if you have a choice and there's a scale and you slide
the scale on one end is pay attention to the economy and on the other end is pay attention to
earnings. If you had slid the marker all the way toward earnings and away from the economy,
you probably outperformed over the last 15 years. Yes. And if you're, right, and if your marker
is all the way on the other end where you're just constantly talking about economic data and
macroeconomics, you have probably underperformed to a substantial degree. At some point,
maybe that will change, but probably not tomorrow.
So let's dive into the earnings expectations and the fact that they've risen since, I don't
know, when we last talked, June?
Yeah.
Or July.
June, July.
They're up every week.
So you have an update to that.
Let's put that table up, John, and Nick will walk us through what we're looking at.
Okay.
So this is a grid that we've shown, I think, the last two videos, which our clients really love.
They don't necessarily love the message, but they love the analysis.
what this shows is S&P 500 fair values based on a range of P.E. multiples from 14 to 26 times
earnings. And then assuming we get the current estimate actually comes true for 2025 and
2006. And then a range of different earnings outcomes. So maybe earnings are lower by 10 or 20%
for this year. Maybe they're lower by 10 or 20 or 10% higher for next year. But it gives you a nice
sensitivity analysis based on investor confidence as expressed by
IPE ratios and actual earnings as expressed by this range.
And for those of you just-
I'm sorry, Nick,
Nick, before we go forward, so just to keep the chart up for clarity,
just so I make sure I understand this,
there are only seven scenarios in which stocks should go higher.
And then all of, and those are in green.
And then all of these blue or red scenarios represent the market
effectively staying flat or declining.
Yes, that is correct.
But there are 49 potential scenarios on this table.
Because it's seven by seven.
Yes.
And only seven deliver upside.
A bunch, one, two, three, four, five, six, seven are fair value.
We're a kind of fair value.
And the rest show declines.
And all the analysis is meant to show is that we need to, we're trading at very high
multiples, which we all know.
But we also need to believe in higher multiples or earnings upside in order to be
long here.
Because it's not just enough to say, hey, we're a 22, 23 times earnings.
Okay, fine. We need to say, okay, want to make money here. So how do we make money? We make money when
P.E multiples go higher or when earnings beat. So, for example, simplest scenario. The simplest scenario
for 10% upside to the S&P from right here is if we earn $305 a share next year. Now, that's
$2 higher than it was the last time we spoke. So numbers have gone up a little bit. And we do a 24
multiple on those numbers. So kind of peak.com-ish kind of valuations. That is the cleanest
upside story. If you have trouble with that story, you've got to think about your stock exposure.
I don't, and we'll talk about why not, but that is the central takeaway from that grid.
You've got to believe not just that we hold 22, 23, that we can get to 24. Otherwise,
it's super hard to justify being along U.S. large caps.
So how do we convince ourselves that either earnings estimates will go higher, and they've been going higher, but continue, and or multiples will go higher?
What's the story that we need to tell ourselves in order to justify, okay, that's where the upside's going to come from for large-cap U.S. stocks?
Yeah, it's obviously the right question to ask and really dig into.
And we've got some fundamental stuff we can talk about in a minute.
But let me just give my high order explanation or high order answer to that question.
PE multiples, valuations, they're a function of investor confidence in the future.
That's what they measure.
When PEs are 14, no one has any confidence.
Like in 2018 or 2020, PEs got the 14 in a heartbeat because you had the Fed raising rates or you had a pandemic confidence without the window.
Conversely, when you're 22, 24 times, like you were 22 times through most of
2020, 21. That means investors have a huge amount of confidence. And in that case, it was because
we had a lot of fiscal and monetary stimulus that was shoving money into the economy and we weren't
going to get a recession. Fine. Okay. Now you've got to believe in 24 times. In 24 times is a
little bit higher than dot com. And so the question becomes, are you as confident in two things?
The first is the U.S. economy. And the second is the fundamentals of the companies leading the
stock market higher. On the first point, I think you can have a high degree of confidence in the
U.S. economy because the Fed's cutting rates, the long end of the curve is finally coming down,
and so the backdrop is pretty healthy. And the labor market is squishy, but not rolling over.
So that's the fundamental action. I also think you've got a demographic tailwind,
and you've got less immigrants competing for jobs, and they might not be the same jobs as the
jobs that kids coming out of college would get. But just generally speaking, you do have a tighter labor
force almost for political reasons, and you have a lot of 30-year-olds in this country,
and they're going to work.
They're not, it's not the same as when the labor force was so dominated by boomers,
and a lot of them were just opting out via labor force non-participation.
With a population that's heavily concentrated amongst people in their late 20s,
early 30s, they're going to work.
So, like, I feel like that demographic slash immigration
story is how you can get past mentally the squishiness in the labor market data.
Yeah, that absolutely feels right.
And we'll see in the next couple of weeks.
That initial claims number last week was a little bit worrisome.
And there's some commentary that maybe it was due to some fraud in Texas.
So we'll see what this week's data looks like.
But it was a three-strandary deviation above the mean reading, which is, by definition,
hyper unusual.
So I'm willing to be convinced that labor market is still solid.
and I do believe it, but I'm also cognizant that the data is not 100% compelling.
Yeah.
Now that we've got John Voight as the head of the BLS, it should be a little bit more convincing
that the data is good.
I think that's like a part of the sideshow that's happening here politically is just
the upheaval at the Bureau itself.
And a lot of like questions now being asked that haven't been asked in a while and maybe should
have been like can we even trust the veracity of this data or how it's collected or what it means
but that being said if you believe in the data it's not as strong of a labor picture as it was a
year ago two years ago absolutely and look i mean as a sidebar it is strange that we measure
unemployment the same way as we did in 1948 with a survey of households and businesses and i
understand why that's the case from an economic analysis standpoint. You want continuity of the
data series. But it is pretty astounding that we measure and manage a huge economy with the same
basic math as after World War II. Okay. All right. So if we're at the current valuations
and the plan is to remain long and, you know, hope for one of those blue or green outcomes,
either fair value or the market has room to trade higher in the near term, then we have to get
comfortable with the individual components of the indices themselves.
So let's start with, let's start with Nvidia.
It's the biggest, most important stock in the world.
It's where a lot of the growth is coming from for the S&P 500, this year and next year.
And I know you've got an interesting way of thinking about the fundamentals of the
invidias of today versus their counterparts from 30 years ago, 25 years ago.
So we did this a couple weeks ago for clients, and let's pop up the NVIDIA.
Intel Comp, and I'll talk, walk you through it. So this is Intel's second quarter financial
results, some basic measures. And, sorry, NVIDIA's. And then this is Intel's financial results
in 1999. So literally apples to apples, what they have in revenues, margins, and so forth.
And the upshot of this data is, I'll just run through these numbers.
Invidia's operating margins are 1.8 times as high as Intel's in 1999. Intel powered,
obviously the PC boom in the late 90s.
Invidia's powering AI, so kind of equivalent in terms of their position in the market.
Net margins.
Invidia's net margins, dollars of income for every dollar revenue.
2.3 times what Intel's was, 57% versus 25%.
Invidia's acid intensity is eight times less, eight times better than an Intel.
Intel ran its own fabs in the 90s.
Invidia doesn't.
So Intel has 20 times revenues to BP and Eterns.
return on equity. Invidias is 106% ROE annualized based on Q2. Intel in 1999 was 23%. So
Nvidia is 4.7 times better on ROE than Intel was. Intel was no slouch. It was a great
company. And then if you compare the size, if you inflation adjust Intel's revenues in 1999 to now,
it's like $57 billion. Invita's annualized revenues just based on Q2, $187 billion.
$1. Invidian now is three times the size of Intel on an inflation-adjusted basis, and it's
seven and a half times more profitable. It's making annualized $106 billion. Intel would have
made $14 billion inflation adjusted. So the upshot here is Intel is just a hugely better
business than Intel was in the 90s. Invidia is a better. Invidia is much better.
Intel looks downright industrial compared to the Nvidia numbers of today.
It's like, and this is apples to apples because Intel was probably the most important stock of that time.
Some would say Cisco, some would say Cisco, but like, it's a semi, so it's a better comp to
Nvidia, number one.
And number two, it was every bit as elemental to that bull market.
That bull market was about the PC revolution combined with the internet, combined with
server demand and laptops and even phones eventually.
So, NVIDIA is, I think, Intel, I think, is the right comp to NVIDIA of today.
And you illustrating that NVIDIA is seven and a half times more profitable than Intel.
All right.
So maybe we don't deserve a multiple that's seven and a half times higher.
But like...
Two X? Why not?
It should be higher, right?
Isn't that like a very obvious?
Yeah, absolutely.
And this, so two points.
First is I also ran the Cisco numbers.
Intel's were better, which is why I popped those up.
but we also have the Cisco numbers in our report.
The second is that this is the crux of the problem with evaluations today.
And we have other examples, but let's just sort of hit this now.
I don't know how you value these companies versus the 1990s.
I just know that you have to value them more highly because the returns are better,
the margins are better, the asset intensity is lower.
The competitive advantage is better, and we'll touch on that in a second.
And the upshot is, is it worth 2x a multiple of 1999?
I don't know.
50%? I don't know. It's definitely more. And that's what the market struggles with.
That's why we're at 22 times earnings because the market knows we're better than we were in the 90s.
We absolutely are. And the question is how much?
What was Intel's peak multiple back then?
24. Yeah, 24 and change. 25.
Okay. So it's absurd to say that Nvidia should be worth seven and a half times that.
You know, like obviously, because A, it's unlikely that they will preserve.
their operating margin.
It's even more unlikely that they'll keep the revenue growth rate.
They're not telling people they can.
Nobody honestly should expect that.
So, okay.
So, but is it like outrageous for Nvidia to be valued at twice as much as Intel was?
Not really.
Not really, no.
And not with those returns on capital.
I mean, this is kind of a grimy financial analysis topic, but,
100% ROE is insane.
100%.
You're taking your equity
and you're earning all that money
for your shareholders every year.
Two companies do that.
Invidia's one.
Apple's the other.
Yeah.
It's not something that you would expect
to be repeated across 20 different companies.
No.
So it's extraordinarily unique.
Yeah.
Okay.
You have another comparison.
You have meta versus IBM.
Yeah.
Meta of today.
IBM in 1999.
This one was just sort of a sentence.
choice for me because I remember Lou Gersner and IBM in the 90s and it was one of the best
run most highly regarded companies on the planet. And so this lines up META's Q2 and IBM's
1999. And they're kind of remarkably similar in some ways. The ROEs are actually exactly the
same at 37.6%. And interestingly, IBM was a more capital efficient company at a PPNE level than
meta is today. But where the difference comes in is in margins.
IBM was a 9% margin business in 1999. Meta is a 39% net margin business today, 4.4 times higher.
So meta is expressing a much stronger level of competitive advantage, meaning it has a stronger moat by virtue of showing those margins than IBM did in the 90s.
And IBM in the 90s was a fantastic company.
Meta is just way more fantastic.
And interestingly, when you inflation adjust the revenues, meta of today is almost exactly the same size as IBM in 1999, like 190,000.
versus $170 billion in inflation-adjusted revenues.
But META makes five times more money on an inflation-adjusted basis.
It's making annualized $73 billion.
IBM inflation-adjusted would make $15 billion.
So META, by virtue of margins, by virtue of size, is wildly more profitable than IBM
in 1999.
And for those of you who remember IBM in the 90s, this was a well-run company.
This was a well-regarded company.
Can I also point out, and I don't think it shows up.
any of these particular items. Meta is way more aggressive about investing for future growth.
And probably that was the problem that IBM has was that it was way too focused on returning
capital to shareholders and not thinking big enough about technology in the aughts decade
and the 20-teen's decade, which is why effectively the stock price did nothing for, I don't
know, 16, 17 years until, you know, recently, whereas meta is full throttle.
We don't know whether or not all of that investing is going to pay off.
But what we do know is that they are not managing future growth the way that IBM was.
Yes, that's an excellent, excellent point.
Totally agree.
Okay.
Do we think, given this, do we think that meta is appropriately valued relative to the way
IBM was being valued at the top of the dot-com bubble in 99?
Is there room for a higher valuation, or is it pretty much already getting it?
I think you touched on exactly the right point, which is what's the investment profile
of meta versus IBM back then?
And meta is doing, you can argue about how much they spend, but they are putting money
to work in anything that they think will grow.
So they tried the metaverse.
They renamed the company for the metaverse.
That didn't exactly work out.
but they didn't deter them from taking another swing
when it came to LLMs and Gen A.I.
So they're still trying,
and I think your point is so well taken
that IBM in the 90s was writing the PC boom,
but then they kind of gave up.
And because they didn't make their own chips very much,
they didn't leverage Moore's law,
and then they missed cell phones,
they missed a ton of things,
and they were dead,
where META is still in the game, still trying.
And I think you have to attribute that a lot
to Zuckerberg being the founder
who still runs the company
and whose wealth is tied up
in the value of that company,
and he's not going to let it,
die that way. Right. Gersner was a board-appointed CEO, not a founder. This is Zuckerberg's baby.
I also think Zuckerberg does not like giving Apple a third of the profits from meta's apps,
and they seem to be hell-bent on creating their own device platform, starting with the Rayban
glasses. Yeah. Because whatever the next form factor is for the AI age,
internet. I don't think that they want to be taking a backseat to Apple in terms of
where do the profits get diverted from all of this activity. I think they'd like a primary
relationship with their users and putting that equipment in people's hands. IBM gave away
its computer business to Asia. They went the other way, is my point. All right. And you've
got one more, and this is a fun one. Microsoft in 1999 versus Microsoft today.
Yes. This was another, like you said, another fun one because it's nominally the same company, same symbol, same, you know, everything. But the companies are very different. The margins are relatively similar, 39% then, 36% now, net margins. But Microsoft, interestingly, is a much more PP&E intensive company now than it was in the 90s. It was very lean back then. So it spends a lot, has a lot more money invested in equipment in hardware. It still doesn't matter because their ROEs are higher now than they were in the 90s.
1990s. R-O-E's now is 32%. R. We back then, 27%. So Microsoft's a slightly better business,
but the magic of this analysis is back on this bottom two lines. If Microsoft had grown by
inflation since 1989, it would be about a $38 billion revenue business, about a $15 billion
net income business, just if it grew by inflation, CPI. In reality, it is a $300 billion business,
So basically 10 times what inflation adjusted should have been.
And it's making $109 billion in that income versus 15 inflation adjusted.
So call that eight times more.
And this to me explains the power of technology generally because here's a company that has held margins, the better part of 30 years, and grown 10x where it should have been, just given inflation growth.
that's the power of technology, Moore's Law, the permanence of technology as a driver of revenue
growth, of net income growth. And so you end up with a company that is orders of magnitude bigger
than you would have thought possible 25 years ago. What's so interesting is right just after
this 1999 period's worth of numbers is when Bill Gates steps down, hands the reins to Steve
Balmer. Balmer then presides over 16 years of modest earnings growth.
but a flat to down stock price.
And ultimately, the company makes this full-bore pivot into cloud computing,
builds the second largest cloud computing platform in the world.
And that's how you get a company that, if they were just muddling along,
selling office software and operating systems,
it's, you know, and maybe a little bit of revenue from Bing and Xbox,
it's a $38 billion business, but they didn't do that.
They reinvented themselves for the cloud era, and that's how it gets to $300 billion in revenue.
And they take the cloud guy and they make him the CEO, and Bomber goes off to the NBA.
So I agree, it's a really fascinating what if, like, what if they had not built Azure
and had not gotten into the clouds to the degree that they did?
Be a very different story here.
Totally.
It would be the CPI numbers, not the numbers that are today.
Okay.
So your upshot here is that big tech business models have gotten a lot better over the last 30 years, better margins, more efficient companies, faster growth, more defensible moats.
And to look at today's valuations versus 1999s doesn't quite tell the right story or doesn't give investors enough credit for being smart enough to know that things have changed.
Yeah, that's exactly right.
And I'll sum it up is, you know, I worked for Steve Cohen for a couple of years.
And one of his favorite sayings was math is not an edge.
If you can do it on a calculator, it is not an investment edge.
So as much as I respect the P multiple analysis that we started with, and obviously I dedicate
some time to doing it for our clients, it's the reasons why those numbers are the way they
are that actually make the investable edge.
And I've staked my, you know, my thesis on the idea that these companies are substantially
better than the ones that were met with that we're benchmarking against the 1990s and
deserve a higher multiple. So I'm totally comfortable with a 22 multiple on the S&P
because we're looking at companies that are orders of magnitude better at the top of the
stack than they were in the late 1990s, not just in terms of size, but cash flow and
are we everything? To your credit, this is something that you've been saying for 10 years,
and I know because I've been reading you, and this was, it's easier to say today
because we've all kind of accepted it. This was not popular to have said five and 10 years ago
when people were still carrying on about
Cape ratios and
everything was a comparison to
1999, it was not a popular
thing to say, yes,
multiples are high and here's why that's a good
thing, because the market is
recognizing that business has changed
and some businesses
are extremely unique.
Now I feel like most people have gotten
over that and they get it. But back
then, it just looked like,
oh, Nick's being complacent again
about elevated multiples, like, here we go again.
This time it's different, blah, blah, blah.
It turns out this time it was very different.
And I want to give you credit as somebody who recognized that a long time ago.
Thank you.
And I'll tell you where it comes from.
I covered the crappiest sector on the planet for a decade.
I covered the domestic auto industry in the 1990s.
I did it for Steve as well.
And that taught me to respect these valuation measures and these return on capital measures
because the auto companies are horrible at it.
And so when I look at these tech companies, I can see them with fresh eyes and say, no, this is materially better than anything else I've ever seen.
This ain't Ford and GM.
This is an amazing thing.
This is not even IBM 99.
Okay.
Speaking of sectors, let's finish with this recent thought that you had.
It's kind of fascinating to me, and I'd love to have you walk us through PE multiple expansion and changes in earnings growth expectations.
Yes.
So let's pop the visual up.
This is something I did for clients last night, and I'm a little embarrassed.
It took me this long to figure out this paradigm, but let's walk through it.
The table here shows how every sector of the S&P has performed year-to-date, and we have outperforming sectors on top and underperforming sectors on the bottom.
And then we decompose that price return into two things.
The first is the percent change in the forward P-E multiple.
How much did P-E multiples change this year, up or down?
And then by extraction, we know how much earnings expectations changed, because,
because the price return is just a function of changing PE and change in earnings expectations.
And the takeaway from this is the winning sectors, communications, tech, industrials, and utilities.
Average 7% better PE multiples and 9.4% better earnings expectations.
And both of those numbers are better than the S&P as a whole, which was 12% up on the year,
driven by 4.7% PE multiple expansion and 7.3% net change in forward expectations.
So the recipe for a winning sector has been, on average, both a better forward multiple because
investors have more confidence in earnings and enough of an earnings momentum story so that the
street says, okay, these guys can continue to show better earnings growth than expected.
That's the case with, in some form, almost every outperforming sector.
It is not the case with unperforming sectors.
So you end up with much less PE multiple expansion and almost no change in forward earnings
expectations for losing sectors.
And my investment take away from this, and we can talk about the numbers individually,
but the one sector that stands out is financials.
They've had some very good changes in forward earnings expectations, 10%.
They've only had 1% improvement in P.E. multiples.
That's an opportunity, I think.
I think financials can work between now and year end up outperforming.
So, all right, that's the thing that jumps out to me.
So in other words, the forward PE for the financial sector in January to start the year
was 16.5. And right now it's 16.7. So unchanged. But forward earnings estimates are up 10%.
So the financial sector has gotten no credit in the form of like an upward re-rating
for the fact that they're growing earnings this year by 10%. I wonder if you have an explanation
for why. Is it just we're trapped in this thing where people think a bank should be 1.5 times book
value and that's just what it's going to be? Or you think there's another reason why financials
haven't had the benefit of that rising multiple? I think it's, you touched on a really important
one, banks, bank balance sheets, bank risk profiles, lending standards, credit quality. I think that's
probably 80% of it, of it. And so yes, I mean, that's a group that has persistently had a very
low multiple because the bank component of financials, which is now, call it 40% of the index,
50% of the index, has this cap in terms of perceived peak ROE.
But with some deregulation, perhaps some more deals like we saw last week, you get a little bit better.
More fintech, you get a little better multiple.
And let's not forget, like, Visa and MasterCard are in financials now that it didn't used to be.
So we have some potential for, you know, rewriting on some of the growth side as well.
So financials to me is like the easiest trade into year end, I think.
Yeah, I think there was a period of time where MasterCard was in consumer discretionary and Visa was in tech.
Yes.
is that true it's true okay one of the more interesting stories this year market wide is in the
financials where robin hood got added to the s&p 500 um coinbase became a a huge market cap company
a firm has done really well you've got like all of these new fintechy kind of financials that
now have a meaningful enough market cap where you know compared to the jp morgans and the bank
of Americas, which are enormous, they actually show up. You've also had big turnarounds in Wells Fargo
and City, which are years in the making. I feel like the financials are more interesting this
year than they've been really going back to the financial crisis. There's a lot of dispersion
within the financials. I know there's more dispersion in areas like industrials, but like within the
financials, you've got to this big rally, but then you have some stocks that.
have done incredibly well in there.
And it feels like it's been a while since people were excited about these stocks.
It is.
And I think you touch on a really important kind of macro point for the market is re-ratings,
better multiples.
They will not happen for years and then they'll happen all at once.
And it happens when the group proves itself.
And I think this group is really finally starting to prove itself,
both in terms of growth and in terms of balance sheets.
Two other things that jumped out of me.
Just a quick comment from you.
utilities did have the jump in a forward PE multiple, probably because increased demand as a result of the AI CAPEX build out.
And a lot of these names, even the regulated ones, are getting re-rated because of this new layer of demand.
Does that seem justified to you?
It does.
I mean, I always struggle with utilities, like how much it's a rate story, how much of it's a secular story.
It feels okay.
And I think the rate story is probably just as important.
as the secular growth story.
So rates come down and people are looking for things that still have a high yield.
Utilities become more competitive with bonds.
Yeah, but, you know, like staples haven't had the same benefit and staples have pretty
good yields too.
So you can point to the secular story in utilities to say that's why utilities are working
in staples or not.
Okay.
Last one.
Consumer discretionary.
I'm surprised by this.
And I know it's a weird sector because Amazon and Tesla make up such an outsized
portion of this, but consumer discretionary is now selling at the same multiple that it was in
January, despite the fact that you did have, I guess, I guess it's only 4% earnings growth
for the group.
So it's kind of underwhelming earnings growth.
All right.
So that makes sense to you, too, then, you would say?
Yes, it does.
For sure.
Okay.
Okay.
None of these sectors have really fallen off much other than energy in terms of forward.
P.E. multiples.
Oh, excuse me. Have any?
Energy is higher.
Healthcare. Healthcare. Okay. All right.
And that's easily explained by just how difficult it is to navigate being a health care
company in 2025. Yeah, it's funny. If you look at the top 10 names in XLV,
the large cap health care ETF, like 40% of it are up decently on the year. It's just the
rest are just disasters. Yeah. Okay. All right. Nick, this has been incredible. I want to
remind people that if they appreciate your insights, and I know they do, there's a lot more
where this came from. And I want to send you guys two places. Number one, you can check out
Nick and Jessica on their very own YouTube channel. It's YouTube.com slash at Nick Colis and
Jessica Rabe, where they are published on a regular basis. And you could subscribe to Nick
and Jessica's research at datatrachresearch.com, just as 1,500 other
institutional investors and individual investors do, and you guys are publishing five days a week,
which I still find extraordinary and awesome.
So thank you so much for your insights.
We appreciate having you.
Please say hello to Jessica for us, and hope to see you again soon.
Great.
Thanks so much.
What up?
Michael, how are you?
What's up?
Happy birthday.
Yeah.
Oh, guys, it's Riddholt's 12th birthday.
What do you get a 12-year-old for their, uh, what would you get a 12-year-old right now
if you had to buy a birthday gift?
Probably one share of Uber.
All them highs.
Let's go.
12-year-old boy, you get a little.
him a share of stock.
What was he going to do with that?
No, no, no, real talk.
Thanks, Uncle Michael.
No, no, no, no, no.
Get him a Steph Curry, Jersey.
Steph Curry.
Maybe Anthony Edwards?
No, maybe Steph.
Is it 12-year-old now into Steph?
Yeah.
Yeah?
I don't know.
All right.
Listen, I don't know.
I don't know what to get either.
Anyway, happy birthday with Holtz wealth management, 12 years old.
Pretty incredible.
I was looking at some old photos of how far we've come.
And how far you've come in terms of the way you're dressing.
I just want to point out for the pounders, Michael is just bodying the fit today.
Dude, it's Tuesday.
It's Tuesday.
I had to dress up.
You look great.
You look like a million dollars.
All right.
Guys, welcome to what are your thoughts?
Every Tuesday at 5 p.m.
Eastern, Michael Batnik and I go live with the fans to talk about the biggest headlines in
the markets in the economy, all the things that matter to the investors.
and the traders who watch the show.
So great to be with you guys live once again tonight.
I want to give a shout out to the Situation Room
who recognized Michael is in a corner office on Bryant Park.
That's correct.
Bonus points if you could tell me what street.
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Cash King is here.
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Hey, this is what it's all about.
Akbar Muhammad, Chris Brown.
Just got that compound Navy trucker's hat.
It's the best one.
Guys, the hat is available.
I can't say forever.
But right now, I don't shop.com.
I don't shop.com.
We have the official compound trucker in two colorways.
And I like both.
I rock both.
So, um, Georgie D is here back from vacation.
Joe out tomorrow.
What's up, Pounders?
What's up, Joe?
All right.
All the gangsters are here.
We have a sponsor tonight.
Let's, uh, let's give a quick shout out to our sponsor, Public.
Michael, what's going on with Public these days?
Listen, this is the platform.
And this is not lip service.
For those who take investing seriously,
this is not a gimmick,
this is not meme land confetti.
This is a real deal investing, okay?
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Go to public.com slash, what are your thoughts?
I'm sorry, that's slash W-A-Y-T.
This is paid for by public investing, full disclosure,
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I just want to say one more thing on the AI stuff.
They're building this tool where you're going to be able to type out what you want.
Let's just say that you say, I want the SEP 500, but no MAC 7.
Or I want the SEP 500, no materials.
Oh, my God.
It's coming.
Yeah.
Unbelievable.
I was playing with, I was playing with the early version of.
it um yonick texted me and uh or so yonick texts me or life somebody texted me and i was playing
with it i really think that for a self-directed investor um the combination of a great app but then
the ability to like just use AI to ask a natural language question and get the tool here do this
magic magic yeah i think it's i think it's tremendous so uh huge fans of the guys at public
and thank you guys for sponsoring the show all right trump wants to get rid of quarterly reporting
Let's put this up.
Subject to SEC approval, companies and corporations should no longer be forced to, quote, unquote, report, not sure why that's in quotes, on a quarterly basis.
Quarterly reporting, exclamation point, but rather to report on a six-month basis, this will save money and allow managers to focus on properly running their companies.
Did you ever hear the statement that, quote, China has a 50 to 100-year view on management.
of a company, whereas we run our companies on a quarterly basis, not good.
Not good.
Four exclamation points.
All right.
What are your thoughts?
Let's start right there.
Just on the statement itself.
Oh, I love it.
I love it.
So here are my thoughts.
I did the meme of the girl.
Was she drinking something where she went like, hmm, hmm, mm, like that?
I don't know what she doing.
What was she doing?
The girl that made several faces like, yes.
maybe and then she's like she's like uh puckered up almost yeah so anyway that that's that's what
i went and within the span of five seconds i said terrible idea wait actually and the reason why i
said terrible ideas okay we need transparency okay investors need to be spoken to now i understand
that these quarterly reports suck up resources time financial and otherwise from these companies
I understand the short-term nature that this allows investors to think every 90 days.
So from that point of view, I think we need it.
But it is tricky.
But if you don't hear from companies regularly, they will lie to you aggressively.
So I think ultimately this is not good.
But I don't think it's black or white.
I think there's sides been made on both sides, cases been made on both sides.
okay um why does trump care about this oh that i don't know okay who's in his ear telling him
and i'll tell you another thing that's bad for america clearly reporting here's what i would
guess because he didn't come up with this on his own out of no way perhaps this is we need more
public companies one of the reasons companies aren't coming public is because it's a pain in
the ass to become public get rid of this ease the burden a little bit and maybe this was his
idea. But I fear that even though it's a distraction, it's a time suck, I think that if we were to
just do a semi-annual report, the shit that companies would try to get away with would be
so, so, so far over the top. Okay. I sort of feel strongly that they should allow companies
to move to a semi-annual, but then don't get upset when companies, when investors,
opt only to invest in companies that give them transparency into earnings and operations
at least every other, every 90 days.
Like, in other words, what will the multiple be on a company that voluntarily says,
you know what?
We don't want to tell you what's going on until another six months go by.
It depends on the company.
It depends on the company, maybe.
Okay.
Say more.
Berkshire investors wouldn't give a shit.
I might be the only company that can get away with it.
Yeah, probably.
What else would you trust?
Tesla.
Tesla could just never report earnings
and nobody would give a shit.
So I don't think it's black or white,
but this is top of mind for me
because I was just listening to Apple and China,
which is a phenomenal book about Apple
and their growth in China,
everything like that.
And Tim Cook tried to get away with it.
Early in 2018, they were having serious trouble in China.
And that's just said
that they didn't do a great job
being transparent with the investors.
like a month later, bad news came out of China.
And they were like, wait a minute, we just heard from you.
And they were like, oh, well, things, they knew.
They knew.
And this is Apple.
So if Apple is playing games, and there's a class action lawsuit after that, if Apple is
playing games, you got to hear from companies.
So I get that it's a waste and it's a charade.
And I get all that, but you need to hear from it.
But I do like your idea about let companies decide.
Okay.
I also think it's important to point out why we have companies reporting on a quarterly basis.
it didn't just like magic this was not on the tablets that god handed to moses on mount sinai
and then it's just like oh we report quarterly because in the bible this came about because in
the 1960s basically that was the early days of the financial scandal we just had scandal
after scandal after scandal and all kinds of mini crashes and the academics and the regulators
and Wall Street power brokers all met and discussed and the law firms and they came up with,
well, at the heart of this problem is that investors have to wait too long to find out
what's going on.
There's not enough transparency throughout the course of the year.
And a lot of companies are doing things where, we wanted to deal with it until the end
of the year.
So they're pulling something early in the year.
And then they have months to cover it up or hide it or obfuscate it.
You can't do that when every 90 days you're putting your results up.
It makes it harder to hide things.
So we have this thing in the early 60s called the salad oil scandal.
It sounds quaint now, but there was literally a company that had tankers that were supposed
to be filled with salad oil.
Somebody was cheating, filled them with water.
By the time it got reported to investors, it was like way too late.
A lot of money was lost.
It sounds like hilarious today, but this was a huge deal in the early 9th.
1960s, it led to a lot of reforms. So in 1970, after a whole wave of these things, I don't remember
the names of all of them, they adopted Rule 13A-13 under the Securities Act of 1934. And this was the
rule that required a Form 10Q, which is the quarterly report be filed with the SEC every 90 days.
It took effect in 1971. By no means, was this the end of financial scandals?
But I do think, like, we've had this evolution.
In the 80s, the way they did earnings reports was press release.
And they would send it out to the wire services.
If you were a big company, the AP would pick it up.
It would be in the newspaper, IBM report and earnings yesterday, right?
And then there were fax machines.
And then in the early 90s, when we had conference call technology, that's when these things
started to become wall street analysts sitting on calls with management you talk first then we get to
ask you guys questions the format that we know of today really is only a phenomenon that's existed
for the last 30 years and not all public companies were doing these calls and q&As really until about
25 years ago we had something called reg regulation fair disclosure or reg fd and i i was new in the business
but I remember when it was adopted.
This is the prohibition of selective disclosure
of material information
to only analysts or big investors.
People can't believe this when I tell them,
but in 1999, it was perfectly legal
for Cisco Systems CEO
to call his favorite analyst at Morgan Stanley
and say, hey, the quarter is going to be a few pennies light.
Like, this was what you paid Wall Street for.
This was Alpha.
you literally were able to have corporate management selectively disclose things to certain hedge funds
or certain analysts. And then the analysts would white glove the stock. So the analyst would
color it so it's not the end of the world and they would kind of like gradually walk the stock lower.
But the whisper would go out because everyone knew the Morgan Stanley analyst is best friends or plays
golf with the CFO of this company and people just said, oh, Morgan Stanley downgraded it.
Well, he's the axe on that stock and he would know if there's an earnings problem.
So that was the world of the 90s.
And that's why active management was in its heyday.
And people were willing to pay mutual fund managers and hedge fund managers,
unbelievable amounts of money because it was like a legal form of inside information.
So regulation fair disclosure is really being adopted in 2008.
is really when the earnings season, earnings conference call,
that's when this thing really gets solidified.
And we've been living with it for 25 years
and nobody's really questioned it.
So, I mean, I do like that somebody's like,
wait, why are we doing this?
I kind of think it's cool.
But even if you say,
maybe we don't need to spend all this money
and time and aggravation
and maybe it's not good for investors
to judge 90-day periods, fine.
But just remember,
these things came into existence for a reason
because less transparency, more scams.
Thoughts?
Well done.
Golf clap.
That was very good.
One of the things that I was thinking about
as you were doing your monologue
is that easing the burden on new companies
coming public, we need to hear from them more than ever.
I mean, imagine to hear from Corweave every six months.
You could have an earnings report
where the stock could drop 60%.
So Oracle's stock, Oracle is one of the top 10 stocks in the world.
It stock went up 40% because there was new information,
a $300 billion contract with Open AI that was not in the stock,
and then we got the information,
and the stock had one of the biggest one-day moves of all time.
Could you even freaking imagine if it was a new issue
and you heard from that every six months?
A stock could fall 90% conceivably.
I think that's such a great point.
Like, okay, we're going to ease the burden on corporations.
but we're going to amp up the daily volatility
having companies drop these truth bombs
out of nowhere after not saying anything
for months and months and months.
It's not like, that's not great for anyone, really.
Yeah, so I don't hate it.
I don't think it's like the dumbest idea.
So maybe the idea for companies to opt in,
but I really am against the idea of just,
it's semi-annual, like just a blanket across the board.
That I don't like at all.
So we got some guys in the chat saying
this is definitely coming from the all-in people and David Sacks.
Oh, yeah, yeah, that sounds right.
That sounds right.
I was thinking about that because those guys do want to see more IPOs.
They're very involved in the venture world.
They're definitely hearing from the founders that they back, that they invest in,
like, why would I want to go public and then do quarterly updates?
So I think that's maybe true.
Some other people are saying, no, no, no, no, no.
This is like a whisper coming from Lutnik.
Howard Lutnik, of course, having spent his entire career on Wall Street at an investment
bank could be that too because Candor Fitzgerald obviously involved at the shallower end
of the pool in terms of like small caps coming public and making markets in smaller companies.
And yeah, this is a frequent complaint of sub one billion dollar public companies.
they're being held to the same standards as Fortune 500 companies that have the resources
to do all this investor relationship.
Not every company wants to devote 10% of their annual profits into complying with all these
regulations.
So look, I like that it's being discussed.
It's not one of these things where I need jarcated.
But like deregulation, the whole thing with all forms of deregulation, it's just important
to remind people these regulations.
aren't naturally occurring.
They came about because throughout the course of market history,
there was a need for this.
Now, if you say, well, the auditors are better
and therefore, as long as the auditors are getting reports
each month and they're seeing the money,
then maybe the public doesn't need to see it that often.
I could be talked into that.
I don't love it.
So I actually don't think anything.
Now, that being said, Atkins,
at the head of the SEC, he's going to study it, he's going to talk to people, and I think he's
going to hear both sides. Funny enough, I think the lawyers that represent public companies
are going to say, don't do it, because you're basically taking the cash cow away from them.
This is what they get paid for. So it'll be surprising if we ever hear, I don't know if there's
public comment or not, it'll be surprising to hear who was against deregulating the quarterly
report. Anyway, it's an interesting idea.
It's really weird that Trump is weighing in on this.
And then an hour later, he's got, he's got football opinions.
It's just crazy.
We have a president who's like, just omnipotent.
Whatever's going on.
Hey, hey, hey, hey, he's an ideas guy.
He's an, he's a take guy.
He's a take machine.
Hey, incidentally, he had a public company, uh, in the late 90s that went to zero,
DJT, not the current iteration of DJT.
It was the actual, you know, yeah.
Oh, oh, I know it was public.
Okay.
It was like a $6 stock.
I'm like, oh, my God, Donald Trump's has a public company.
He's like the richest, most successful businessman in the world.
How come it's $6?
And the guy I worked for was like, don't buy it.
And we eventually went to zero.
They were definitely making quarterly reports back then.
I don't know if he was involved with running it.
I just know it was named for him.
I think this probably goes nowhere, but it would be interesting to hear the
the conversation would be my final take.
I don't like it.
I don't hate it,
hate it,
hate it,
okay.
Adam Butler did a post on,
on Twitter that I thought was timely and noteworthy,
and I want to talk about it.
It's long,
I'm going to paraphrase and skip a few lines.
He said,
here's a hard truth about modern society.
We don't practice capitalism anymore.
Skip a few lines.
Social media is a canonical example.
It's established fact that Twitter,
TikTok, Facebook, Instagram, et cetera,
algorithms, which are tuned to maximize advertising revenues via limbic activation and produce
political division and derangement, depression, and a host of other problems.
But regulating against these algorithms might impair corporate profits, so America doesn't regulate
them.
Because the system is not designed to protect the rights of Americans to not be exploited
by corporations for profit.
The system is designed to protect corporations' rights to extract maximum profits from citizens.
This is pathological sociopathic at societal scale.
So here's where we are, and I skipped a bunch.
We built the most powerful resource allocation machine in history, then let it allocate us.
We became the resource, the product, the feedstock.
If you think I'm being dramatic, ask yourself, when did we last make a major policy decision
that hurt corporate profits but helped actual humans?
That silence you hear.
That's the cancer winning.
I mean, he sounds like Scott.
He sounds like my friend Scott Galloway.
Scott was basically like, these are the most powerful people in the world right now, the
people who control these algorithms and everything they do is about more advertising dollars
and the very simple way to generate more advertising dollars is to keep people engaged
and nothing keeps people engaged like rage yeah it's like it look porn works okay but these
companies are not going to go 24-7 porn um the only major social media network that's
allowing pornography right now throwout reddit is uh is x
So Instagram, you can't even show a nipple.
And, you know, so they're buttoned up there.
So what do they do?
Like, how do they, like, amplify engagement if they can't do, if they can't do naked girls?
The way they do it is by making us all want to kill each other.
And what's interesting is there's no limit on violence.
You can show executions.
You could post video clips of beheadings, like the stuff after October.
seventh just like women bloody being paraded through the streets you the algorithm will show you those
fucking clips seven million times until you want to go load up a gun and shoot somebody and there's
no limit on it and so basically we've said like okay no porn other than X but unlimited violence
and maybe every once in a while we'll put a little warning thing that somebody just clicks through
but no check on it whatsoever, no age limitation.
Anyone can see anything.
There was, you saw the, I didn't watch us, I assume you didn't either, but there was
a beheading last week.
That's all over the internet.
So I don't do social media, so I don't see any of that shit.
And I'm going to tell you right now, I quit Twitter.
I was on Twitter, I would say seven hours a day for 10 years, ish.
And I quit in 2020, it's five years ago.
and every time somebody sends me a tweet,
yo, look at this.
Oh, this is so funny.
Listen to this stand-up comic.
Look at this, like, I don't know, baseball play, whatever.
I go to it.
I watch the thing.
And then immediately under it starts populating
the most vicious, disgusting, racist,
violence-fementing content I've ever seen.
And I immediately click away.
And I'm like, holy shit.
I can't believe how much time I used to spend here.
I think it's gotten worse.
I think most people would say it's gotten worse.
It didn't used to be this way.
But like that's where these companies make their money.
They have to keep you on.
They have to keep you coming back.
And the way to do that is to constantly trigger your central nervous system, like
your amygdala.
It wants you to feel rage and fear and anger.
And it wants you to take sides and join a team.
And now we got kids that are doing this from the time.
they're eight years old.
Now they're 22, and they're fucking shooting people.
And I don't like corporate profits are in an all time high.
Hooray.
Yeah.
It's just, it's bad, dude.
You got teenage girls who hate, who hate themselves at 13 years old because the algorithm
is showing them girls that are skinnier than them.
Like, none of it's good.
And listen, I use social media.
I guess right now, technically, we're on YouTube.
This is social media.
And I would not say that.
all of the evil fully outweighs all of the good.
A lot of good has come from connecting the world, my own career included.
I just, I think Adam Butler is exactly right.
And unfortunately, the money is flowing.
And they're going to use us being at each other's throats to fund this AI buildout.
That's the reality.
That's what's happening.
And unapologetically.
And it gets worse every year.
And now the people who control these platforms, they are best friends with the president.
So, you know, maybe you want to solve this.
It's not going to get solved right now.
Maybe another, maybe another era.
I saw a reel on Instagram where a woman's house burned down and she's like walking through the ashes.
And she looks into the camera and says,
do you need the best soap for scrubbing burned down houses?
And it was like, you, what stage or otherwise?
It's so demented.
There was a guy at the university in Utah right after Charlie Kirk was murdered.
There was a guy who looked into his phone and started promoting his channel.
Yeah.
Like everyone around him is running for their lives.
There's no way of knowing if more bullets are coming.
this guy is into his phone promoting his channel live streaming the chaos of what's going like we're
now at the point where it's it's more important to please the algorithm and get likes and
engagement than it is to run for our lives in the middle of a of a shooting piece so nothing
nothing pleases the algorithm like rage and depression and i think this is this is helped fueling
the big disconnect that we talked about a couple of weeks ago
where it's like people think that
the world is going to hell economically.
People think that everybody's getting left behind
and it's just not true
and you have to resist the algorithm.
Are there people that are struggling?
Obviously, that is always the case.
Always.
But the disconnect between what you're seeing
from the headlines
and what is reality is so mind-bending
because it's the algorithm
it's not real life.
So let's move on to this chart.
For example, this goes to the corporate profit piece
that we're saying like corporate profits
at all cost. All right. So U.S. nominal GDP, which is a better representation of the overall
economy. This is so good. Versus the gap between that and the operating margin of the S&P 500.
What are the, what's this? What are the two different Y axes? So the blue on the left
is the operating margin. Operating margin. Now listen. So it's like 15%, now?
Yeah. So what is actually measuring is less relevant than this. Just like,
look at those lines, okay? They used to track basically one for one. Yep. And I don't know exactly
what happened two years ago, but the gap is real and it's growing. And this is, this is not made
up. This is not the algorithm. But I want to make the point. This is very important. It's not as
if, chart off, please. It's not as if the corporations are doing amazing and the average citizen is just
getting f***. It's just not true. It's not true. Listen to what these companies are.
saying on their quarterly reports.
They have no incentive to lie.
So I pull this from the transcript.
This is from Live Nation.
I think every quarter for the last 12 quarters,
I've been asked what's going to happen in the U.S.
when the consumer goes away.
You guys are too far over, right?
And so for the same thing, same 12 quarters we've said,
things are going fine.
This is from Urban Outfitters.
We just have not really seen any weakening in the consumer right now.
We feel good about the macro environment and the consumer,
despite headwinds and tariffs and all sort of headlines that are out there.
This is from Tractor Supply.
From our view, the consumer is healthy and resilient, remarkably resilient.
Josh, just before we came on, Sarah Eisen tweeted, what did Sarah tweet?
She said, financial services companies in the payments and loan space, okay?
And I think these companies see the consumer are saying consumers are doing better than you think.
They're doing better than you think reading the papers.
Ally Financial, Bank of America, they're all saying the same thing.
And I'm not saying, again, yes, there are people that.
they're struggling. But this idea that it's only the rich that are doing well and everybody
else is getting left behind. It's just not true. It's the fucking algorithms. It's not true.
So there's a few things going on here. The first is ignore surveys, focus on data. All of the
credit card companies are putting out tons of data all the time on earnings reports, in between
earnings reports. They're literally telling you what's happening with actual spending on debit and
credit cards data so much more valuable than a survey you could ask you could ask people how do you
feel about the economy and they could give you an answer that is entirely colored by whatever else
in their life they're pissed off by and what you're going to come back with as the surveyor is
oh they're they're unhappy about the economy no they could be on it they might they might hate
Biden or they hate Trump or they hate their local congressperson or they just read an article
about somebody's teaching their kids something in kindergarten they weren't happy with like
they could be angry about anything and then it's telling the survey that they're pessimistic
about the economic outlook it's not it's not data it's vibes it's feelings it's a
relevance a huge waste of your time and also if you're on the dude if you're on the algorithm
for eight hours a day how do you think you're
you're going to feel about how things are going?
How do you think you feel?
Worse every minute.
It's like whatever the opposite of Zoloft is, that's X.com.
Worse every minute you spend on it, it's worse.
Here's the actual reality.
The XRT, which is the retail sector ETF, is up 11% year-to-date.
63% of the companies in that index are above their 50 day.
73% are above their 200 days.
There's not just Walmart going up, okay?
If you actually look at what was reported on retail sales today,
a 0.4% month over month, three months straight.
Spending is actually re-accelerating after it stalled out in the first two quarters this year.
So you could take that and you could take a survey where some old man picked up the phone
and vented his frustration about inflation into something that the surveyor takes as gospel
about how the consumer, quote-unquote, feels.
It's bullshit.
And the way you know it's bullshit,
try to book a flight somewhere.
Like, try to stay at a four or five-star hotel
during the holiday.
Like, anywhere you look, there are people
that are greefully spending money.
You're out of touch, Josh.
I'm kidding.
Although you are in touch.
But listen to what these companies are saying.
Salt of the earth.
Yeah, Josh is the only one going on vacations.
Listen to what Ally is saying.
They don't serve the, they're not American Express, okay?
All right.
Now, it is also true that obviously, obviously, obviously, it is a case-shaped economy.
There's no doubt about it.
So there are people that are doing better than others, as is always the case.
But particularly today, I saw a great chart showing that the top 10% of income earners are now responsible for half of spending, which is up from 35% to the turn of the century.
So yes, both things can be true.
And this is a really interesting chart that I had not considered as to why spending seems to just be up into the right.
Look at this chart from variant perception.
So look at the red chart.
Now, it's projected out into the future.
But this is up until the right.
And what we're looking at for people that are listening is retirees.
So 65 years and older is a total percentage of consumption.
They say retirees continue to make up more and more of U.S. consumption.
They're less sensitive to job market feedbacks loop, although still sensitive.
of course, to wealth effects from home values, et cetera.
But these people that are retired, it doesn't matter.
They have all the money already.
Yeah, so that's a really great chart.
It doesn't matter what the labor market is doing.
That's a really great chart.
If you're 55 to 64 years old, the state of the labor market is not the relevant thing.
The relevant thing is what is my house worth?
What is my stock market slash retirement portfolio worth?
And the answer to those two questions is just endlessly up and to the right.
The third question is, do I have a lot?
the wherewithal to borrow, use credit card debt, revolving line of credit. Can I basically at this
point in my life do whatever I want? And for tens of millions of households, that is basically the
case. Not for everyone. So for those people, the ups and downs of the weekly jobless claims,
this is not the thing that's driving their decision making because it's not the thing that's
driving their ability to spend. It's how wealthy they feel. And so this booming stock market
is producing economic growth for that cohort of the economy,
and it's a big cohort.
Look, for 50 years, we yelled at people in this age group,
or 50 years, 30 years yelled at people in this age group,
save, save, save, save, 401K, 401K, 401K.
It worked.
And you could say it was a self-fulfilling prophecy
because you start out with 30 million households
that are using 401Ks to save,
and then you get 60.
So now all these new households buying in
are just pushing stock prices up higher
for the people who got in 10 years before.
Tough shit.
Dude, that's how it works.
Guess what?
I paid a lot more for my house
than Zolot did.
That's the way it works.
And this demographic warfare,
people are upset that the boomers have all the money.
They're 70 years old.
Guess what?
When we're 70, we're going to have all the money.
How do you think how much interest works?
And when we're 70,
we would trade a lot of our money to be 30 like a lot like a lot of it many many many 70 year olds
would trade all their money put me back at 30 i'll figure it out you don't want to be you don't want
to be there you'll get there all right um this was interesting micro strategy i know we're calling it
strategy now i'm sorry uh apologies to michael sailor denied entry into the s and p 500 despite
meeting tech yeah and i didn't see this reported that widely because maybe maybe they'll just fix it
and they'll let them in eventually i don't know um but you know you know the isaiah thomas
meme i met the criteria but i wasn't selected uh all right so it's important to point out
this isn't like a government thing this is standard impores uh s and p global in that in
indices that make these decisions. It's a committee. We actually had Sam Stovall on our show.
He used to be the chairman of that committee. And they meet periodically and they look at
public companies that have grown very large and they make decisions. Does this company meet
the criteria for inclusion? Famously, the biggest issue they've ever had was Tesla.
This Tesla became like a $200 billion company with no profits. And one of the things,
things that's required for index inclusion is like four consecutive quarters of positive earnings
and Tesla just was so outside of the traditional bounds of that that they they had to consider
it. They did wait and they famously added it way after people had made so much money.
It looked like they were adding it at the top.
Is it a strategy in a very similar situation? Does their operating business make any money?
I think it made like, I'm making this up. I don't want to throw out a number, but it makes very little
money. Yeah. So that's the thing. It's, um, that's the thing. It's like a investment company more than
it is an operating business. They do have a very small software subsidiary that's not really
relevant to, to the stock price. It's like the, uh, the remaining kernel of the original business
that we used to call micro strategy. Um, but like, I don't know. I feel like it's, I feel like it's
kind of a big deal. J.P. Morgan weighed in on this.
And they said, the S&P 500 Index Committee's decision to reject strategies inclusion
represents a significant setback for corporate crypto treasuries.
Quote, last week, the S&P 500 Index Inclusion Committee rejected Microstrategy from being
included in the most prominent equity index in the world.
This is signaling that the committee, which can apply discretion in its index decisions,
is concerned about including micro strategy that's effectively a Bitcoin fund.
The bank argued the rejection is a blow not only to strategy but other corporate crypto
treasuries that have proliferated in recent months in an attempt to replicate
micro-strategy's crypto accumulation model.
So maybe, well, it did get into other indices.
So J.P. Morgan noted it's in the NASDAQ-100.
It's in the MSCI USA, MSCI world, Russell 2000, and the Crisp U.S.
Total Market Index.
Crisp is what Vanguard uses.
They don't necessarily use S&P.
But I don't know.
Do you think this matters to anyone?
I mean, it matters in the sense that strategy is not a small market cap.
And so inclusion in the S&P 500 would give it more dollars invested.
but what's interesting about strategy more so than the inclusion or lack thereof in my opinion
is the weakness in the stock relative to the strength in Bitcoin.
Like, it's not, the shine is off.
And I don't know if it gets it back.
Maybe it will, maybe it won't.
But it's not hot right now.
So is this, I haven't been following that closely, but is this the Jim Chano's investment thesis
where he went long Bitcoin or a Bitcoin ETF and went short strategy?
and his idea was that, like, the gap,
the strategy will not keep its premium to its NAV.
And so being long Bitcoin is a hedge against missing out on Bitcoin going to a million.
All right.
So it looks like he's starting to be right.
He's saying, he's saying, like, I don't want to be short strategy because if Bitcoin goes up
a thousand percent, yeah, strategy might only go up 500 percent, right?
So, um, let's, so in the last six months,
month, Bitcoin is up 37%. Strategy is up 10%. Let's show the next chart. So this is basically
Jim Chino's trade. Next chart, please. MicroStra. Okay. So he is betting that this chart breaks
down. He is betting that this chart breaks down. And what you're showing is that the outperformance
of micro strategy relative to Ibit peaked in November 2024. And I believe that's when Ibit listed
options came on the market. So strategy was working because if you want an exposure, I mean,
It's working for various reasons.
But if you want exposure to crypto and you couldn't own it and you want a levered exposure,
you couldn't get it.
Well, now there's plenty of options.
You can literally buy options.
And so if this thing breaks down and boy, is it hanging on support, it sure, it looks
like it's going to break down.
Then Chanos is going to make a lot of money.
If it rips in his face, then he'll lose, then, you know, then I'll lose money.
Okay.
So we now have five digital asset trusts, right?
These are calling these dats.
Five of size.
There's probably dozens.
because everyone's imitating everyone else.
You have micro strategy or strategy,
which is $74 billion in value.
I don't know how much Bitcoin do they own.
Or is that the amount of Bitcoin they owned?
That's the amount of Bitcoin they own.
Pretty remarkable.
So how big is the market cap?
Is it double?
Is it a buck 50?
I mean, that's huge.
Yeah.
Okay.
The next one is Tom Lee.
Bitmine immersion technology, which is, um, which is ETH, but I think they also are buying
other, uh, crypto tokens or coins, but I think it's, it's ETH. It's like nine billion worth of ETH.
And I don't know. Hold on. So strategy, strategy's market cap is starting to cut you up.
A strategy's market cap peaked at, uh, let's see, it peaked at 1.30. It's now down to 95.
And it's a lot. That's a lot of lost market cap.
Especially in a bull market.
Right.
That's with the price of Bitcoin rising.
Okay.
I would be tough.
I'm not in the trade.
I'm not shorting it.
I'm not involved in it at all.
I would be terrified right now.
Because if you get a bare market in Bitcoin, which happens all the time, just a normal run in the mill bare market.
If this thing's underperforming on the way up, what the hell is it going to do on the way down?
I don't know, but I would be nervous.
I just lost an air pod.
All right, we have bit, we have a bit minor immersion, which is Eid.
And then we have, Mara, which is $6 billion worth of BTC.
It's also a minor.
This is one of the original.
Dude, sucks.
So I bid is up, I bid is up 25% year to date.
Mara is up 4.
I'm going to this air pod.
Go ahead.
Go ahead.
Mara is up 4.5%.
If you guys are interested in learning more about these treasury companies, our friend,
Straza and Alfonso did a killer video on YouTube.
I watched it the other day talking about a lot of these companies are pivoting to
AI and not just like an LOL pivot because they have all of this compute power and know
how.
So Riot, for example, Riot is one of the companies, the original block mining companies.
Riot has pivoted to AI and they're up 71% year to date.
They are on fire.
No, it's not funny.
It's for real.
I know.
It's not just a name change.
They're like actually doing shit.
These are all sand castles.
The wave is coming.
All right.
Sharp link gaming, S-B-E-T.
So I've never heard of this.
$3 billion.
Again, if I were on Twitter all day, I'd probably know all about it.
But I'm living my life instead.
$3 billion.
And then the last one, Metaplanet, $2 billion.
Is this Japanese?
This is the one.
I love this one.
This is the one.
I don't know.
Why is it called meta?
Wait, what's the ticker?
Wait, is this the company that was mining Eth on Mars?
Oh, why did you say so?
Yeah, I don't know.
How quickly can I get along this stock?
Okay.
So look, and then, of course, we don't have, we don't have Dan Ives' thing, but Dan's thing
is for World Coin, and I don't know what the market cap is.
I'm sure it's $900 billion.
But like, if the biggest one of these and the most established is not going to be blessed
with an index inclusion by S&P, A, could that potentially change as people get more accustomed
to the fact that these exist?
Or B, do people just say, we don't care if it's in the index?
We really believe in this strategy of issuing shares to buy more crypto until this company
corners the market and gets five percent, which you think it's version two?
Yes. No, I think yes to both. I think yes to both. I don't think anybody's buying
strategy. I'm sure there are people that were front running this, but I don't think the actual
thesis of strategy is not to be included in the SP 500. Somebody named Yoku Bu Tenchi says
meta planet is a tax loophole for Japan. All right. I got to dig in there. I have no opinion.
I got to, uh, I got to dig in there. I'm not, I'm not going to say anymore on this. Okay.
what happens after rate cuts michael you tell me okay um i don't know if you guys saw this thing i did
with uh nick colis yesterday it was really good um i just want to replay his chart really quickly
this is every rate cut over the last uh since 1990 by size of rate cut have you ever seen this
before nope okay so we've had 33 25 basis point rate cuts 1850 basis point rate cuts and
only for 75 or 100 basis point rate cut, you could basically see that all of these 50s,
with the exception of last year, took place during a crisis, like real deal crisis,
like 2001 and 2008 and 2020.
So Nick was making the point.
We really don't want to see a 50 basis point.
It's almost 96% chance, I think, right now based on a,
chart off base on the betting markets that tomorrow, Wednesday, we're going to get 25 basis
points. Where are you with this? I'm, listen, 96%. I don't want to fade that. I'm not going to
zag just for the sake of Zag. No, like, where are you on like how much is that price? I know
it's price into the bond market. You think the stock market, we get that, probably very little
reaction. What if he zags, dude? What if he's like, no, I'm good. You know what doesn't exist much
anymore people don't sell the news you know why because the news is so well the news is so
thoroughly disseminated and ingested i mean it's possible that we sell off because you know
why not but like sell the news is uh sort of an ancient thing you mean like sell the news as a as a
by the rumor sell the news like as a tandem thing yeah well like so the shortcut is to not sell
the news because if you just stay long then de facto you've bought the rumor of the next
so why do anything ever at all all right anyway i thought that was a good point nick made let's pop
this chart returns after the first fed cuts so this is like our data now this is our stuff
so on average so chart kid matt shows that on average the smp 500 is up 9.6% a year later
two thirds of that is from multiple expansion the other third is from earnings growth um but of
course, you know, average here sort of hides what the truth is. So let's show the next chart.
This is the forward 12-month return broken down by individual rate cuts. And it's, you know,
it's sort of all over the place. More up than not, but some bad ones in there.
Wait, wait. Let me, let me just ask you a question. So this is showing the dates of the initial
rate cut of the cycle. That's right, Josh. That's the starting point. Yes. And then the
The diamond is the drawdown, max drawdown 12 months later versus the average and the 12 month return.
So what's your, what's the takeaway from this?
This is not satisfying, but it's mixed.
Right.
So there's no like, there's no concrete narrative of, um, we start a rate cutting cycle.
Oh, and by the way, is this the start of a rate cutting cycle or a continuation of the one of the cut from nine months ago?
I think it's new.
But yeah, no, fair point.
I don't know.
I think this current environment is so weird.
I still think with the mashup of AI and hyperscale spending, of tariffs and whatever's going on there, of vibes, of demographics, of a post-COVID world.
Like, this is a very, this is a very odd market, a couple with the fact that we've had this really strong bull market amidst the rate hiking.
cycle and we're rallying before rates are even lowered. But like this idea that stocks are going
to sell off like materially, that the first rate cut is going to be the top. Dude, that's,
that's it. Like, we're, we're writing the book right now. The book does not exist. It does, I wish I
could say, oh, this is just like the 1957 to 1968. We're writing. Yeah, we're writing the
screenplay. Yeah. Like, write this minute. So I, I, so you'll like this. David Kelly had a good take. He
was to talk more about, like, the actual impact on the real economy, forget about the stock
market. And he had a maybe a bit of a contrarian take. He said the first and most important
impact of lower interest rates and aggregate demand comes via its impact on household discretionary
income. And it is negative. This can be seen by looking at household interest income and
expense separately. On the income side, Americans had households had a total financial assets
of $125 trillion, 14 of which were held in deposits. Assuming that all, assuming that all,
all of those were fully impacted by the Fed easing, a 1% decline in short-term interest rates
would reduce annual household income by roughly $140 billion.
Now, hold on.
The 140 billion is not all spent, obviously, but he makes a point that even if you were to compare
that with the liability side, a lot of the liabilities are fixed in nature and the assets
dwarf the liabilities.
So if you look at that, I thought you would like that part.
So he said that a 1% interest rate reduction across the board would reduce annual interest expense by $30 billion.
So $140 billion versus $30 billion.
$90 billion in spending at risk.
But wait, the truth is that those don't net each other out because the $30 billion in interest expense, that's money good.
That is money that's being spent, okay?
The $140 billion, it's just, it's Jeff Bezos earning another billion dollars a day.
You know what I mean?
Like, it's not the same.
All right.
I get that, but still, I just want to take this moment to point out.
This is one of my best calls ever.
5% overnight rates risk-free were a stimulus for the economy.
They were a stimulus for the top 20% of households that own the whole stock market,
own the whole bond market.
They had never, ever felt richer than they did.
When they checked their 401K, record high stock prices,
then they checked their savings and checking account at the bank,
and saw a geyser spewing more cash into their accounts.
You're not wrong.
You're not wrong, but you just mentioned a key component of this.
They saw the 4% cash ends in the stock market at all-time highs.
If the stock market, if the 5% or the 4.5% interest rates crush the stock market,
the income would feel like a drop in the bucket.
Fine, but it's mental.
It's not the dollar amount of the income to me is not the thing.
It's the wealth effect produced in someone's mind when they see that.
that not only are they making money in their real estate,
their stock portfolio,
the value of their small business,
then it's like,
oh, shit,
my money market funds are paying me 4%.
Yeah,
yeah.
I'm going to go,
I'm taking my whole family to the sphere
to watch the backstreet boys.
I'm doing it.
I'm doing it right now.
It'll give a shit.
My money's making money.
It's been 15 years since people were able to say,
my money makes money.
But that, like,
okay,
felt that way. What's this wall of worry graphic? Let's put this thing out.
All right. So we were talking last week, two weeks ago, about is the AI sentiment survey
data just garbage? And I think a lot of survey data is, but man, this is, this is not noise
to me. This is signal. So here's what we're looking at. Chart kid did this wonderful thing where
he showed what happens on the left. This is the average path for 22 weeks, which is where we
are today when the SEP 500 rallies 20 to 30 percent. Obviously, that's a great line. It's up
to the right. And what happens, of course, every time is that the average change in bullish
sentiment is also up to the right. When stocks are going up, people get more bullish. Duh.
However, what we saw in this current example is a ridiculous rally, very fast. People got left
behind. And the current change in bullish sentiment is flat. This is remarkable, dude. And I
know that the AAI is a certain segment of investors.
It's not the entire population.
It's old people.
But be that as it may, dude.
The SEP just rallied 30% to 22 weeks and no bullish change in sentiment.
Throw it out.
Nah, I don't think so.
I don't think so.
Throw it out.
Update your data set.
Okay, don't throw it out.
Create a tapestry of different sentiment survey datasets.
Talk to bro.
Go talk to Robin Hood.
Bro.
You don't talk to anyone.
You don't talk to anyone.
Talk to Van Gogh people.
You talk to me.
No, no, no, I mean if you're a surveyor.
Okay, fine.
So let's listen to this.
Stop calling people at home.
Okay, how about this?
Who have to put their dentures in to answer the survey questions.
Schwab has this report that I mention all the time called S-Tax or Stax or whatever they call it.
And this is quantitative.
This is not a survey.
And the last four months, there's been barely any rebound in activity, actual activity.
People are not euphoric.
They're not even bullish.
Now, obviously, don't talk about open.
Yeah, there's people.
pockets, okay, I get it. But there is still a lot of doubt about the sustainability of this
bull market. There is. That's a fact. I'm not making that up. People are doubt in this bull market.
So that's bullish. Yes. I like that. All right. Okay. Last thing I wanted to get to.
The NASDAQ just announced they're going to tokenize every stock that trades on their exchange
by the year 2026, I think. Big deal. Do you understand what they're saying or no?
So I read the report, and I don't, there wasn't a lot of why.
No, the post, the post, the post.
It was their post.
It was like their press release.
So it was a lot about how the rails, the blockchain rails are better.
It's coming.
Listen, you might not like it.
You might think it doesn't make sense.
You might question it.
It is inevitable.
The integration, this is NASDAQ writing.
The integration of tokenization and blockchain tech alongside traditional market infrastructure
presents an extraordinary opportunity for the system.
These capabilities have the potential
to deliver profound benefits
to issuers, investors, and economies globally
through reduced frictions.
I like that.
Accelerated settlement times.
Everybody likes that.
Automated processes, of course,
and improved efficiencies in capital
and collateral management.
I am excited to share
that we have submitted a filing
to the SEC to facilitate the trading of tokenized securities on the NASDAQ stock market.
I don't know if that means they're going to say to the issuers who list on the NASDAQ,
we are going to create a tokenized version of your security and we'll do it safely and we'll
test it and it'll be ready in a year.
Is that what they're saying?
I have a lot of questions.
I don't know how it's going to work.
I know these are not derivatives.
They are actual tokens that represent shares.
shareholder, like, voting rights.
Like, these are real shares on the blockchain.
I don't know.
I have a million questions.
I don't know.
But this is coming.
And think about, like, I'm not an expert in this market structure by any means, but
like ADRs.
Like, and think about all of the inefficiencies, the roadblocks, the hurdles for
companies trading around the globe.
This is all coming.
There's a guy named Simon Taylor, who writes something called FinTech Brain Food.
And he went out of his way to point out how different.
what NASDAQ announced was from what Robin Hood announced.
So he's basically saying like Robin Hood, Robin Hood created tokenized stocks, which basically
were derivatives.
You own a claim on a claim.
It's a SPV or a special purpose vehicle wrapped around a stock.
The redemption rights are controlled by the SPV holder.
So in other words, if Robin Hood goes under, that's who you're in business with.
Like, that's your counterparty, not the core.
corporation that issued the stock.
They just put like their own wrapper around it.
That's not what NASDAQ is saying.
NASDAQ is saying we're actually tokenizing the actual equity.
So you keep your shareholder rights.
We're not stuffing the equity into a token and then selling you the token.
We're making the equity the token.
I thought that was interesting.
You keep your voting power.
You get your dividends directly.
And the only thing that changes is it's on.
blockchain rails, which is the less friction, faster settlement part.
Where does this custody?
Like, is this like you have to have your own wallet?
I don't get how that's going to work.
He's saying the infrastructure, I'll just quote them, DTCC's app chain built on enterprise
Ethereum using ERC dash 3643 standards.
I don't know what anything that means.
No, I understand.
Say no more.
I get it now.
Accenture, Consensus, Citigroup, MasterCard, Santander, and Visa are all backing this
working group. What this means is 24-7 trading around the world, instant settlement, programmable
ownership, access to U.S. equities for anyone anywhere in the world. And I guess the way that he
wrote it up is it's a really big deal. And all of the comments are all these other fintech nerds,
and they seem to be going crazy for it. So look, I'm not going to do this thing where I'm like,
No. I'm going to say, yeah, all right, it's the NASDAQ. It's not a fly-by-night organization. It's not a
broker-dealer. This is one of the most important exchanges in the world. You think they're going to
destroy the stock market with, with a new innovation? I doubt it. So I'm going to, I'm going to let
this one breathe. And we'll see how it goes. You know, we could look back in 20 years and think,
like, obviously when you look back, there's a lot of revisionist history, right? Your, your memories morph
into what you wanted to believe
or what you want to believe
you believed back in the day.
And we might think
like this was so obvious.
Like obviously technology
was going to get better.
Why would you not think
that technology was going to get better?
The financial rails of today
were built in the 70s.
And I was listening to my God,
I'm getting annoying
with this audiobook stuff,
but I was listening to Chuck Closterman.
He wrote a book called the 90s.
And during the internet,
the early days of the internet,
and even like in 95,
people were like,
what is this digital internet?
What is this digital highway?
Like I don't, and now people look back and like laugh how naive I was and we might do the same.
I'll do.
Well, not everything from that era, though, ended up turning out to be true.
So we only have like the winners to look back and say, oh, this was so obvious.
But I have the benefit of hindsight because there was a controversy early on when I started in the business, which was the decimalization of stocks.
So my first two years as a stockbroker
We were trading stocks in eighths and quarters
And 16ths, which we called teenies
And they wanted to make every trade go off in a penny
And like right now we like take that for granted
But back then you would sell a stock at three and five eighths
And hope you could buy it back someday at two and a quarter
And getting rid of that was super controversial
People like, no, don't do that. Why would you do?
they ended up wiping out profits for the market makers for about 15 years until Citadel came
along.
They wiped out small cap broker dealers who needed that eighth or that 16th in the spread
to justify writing research on all these companies.
They killed the IPO market.
It was not without its casualties, but I think most individual investors would say this
ended up being a great thing because the bid S spread is now a penny.
and it used to be 30 pennies and that adds up when you're doing big big lot so can't we can't we look back
in 10 years and be like could you imagine that like markets used to be closed like just because people
needed to go home yeah yeah i listen that's why that's why i i want to hear more about the nasd like
what is the nasdaq you're going to and why does the nasdaq think this is good for them most
importantly why why are they leading the charge it can't just be innovation for innovation
sake, there's got to be some money to be made here.
So I want to know what it is.
But I have an open mind.
Okay.
You're up.
Make the case.
I'm going to make the case.
I was, so I'm moving, as you know.
And I had, not to brag.
You bought a beautiful home.
I'm so proud of you.
Thank you.
So I got home on Wednesday night at midnight.
At 6.30 in the morning, Robin woke me up and said, let's go.
Get out of bed.
We're moving.
And for the last five days, it's been, it's been nonstop.
My, my national grid wasn't turned on.
So I'm taking the kids back and forth to shower.
We can't shower in our house.
God.
And then yesterday.
That would never happen with sprinkles in charge.
No, I know.
Just saying, no chance.
I know.
And on Saturday or Sunday, I had, I had two hours.
Robin was with the kids or whatever.
And so, obviously, I'm at my computer doing work.
And I'm getting caught up because it's been, we've been, you know, off for a few days
at Future Proof.
And what's so funny?
Adam said your new house is 90% mudroom, 10% house.
It's true.
And I thought to myself, and there's a reason I'm telling the story.
I thought to myself, I'm a fucking maniac.
Like, I have two hours, and I am absolutely going hogwild on a beautiful Saturday afternoon, catching up on emails, whatever, preparing for this week.
And I thought to myself, I thought to myself that quote,
And then I realized, like, I connected it with this.
I was listening to Karen Seidman Baker,
Becker, excuse me.
She was on Patrick O'Shaughnessy's podcast, maybe four or five months ago.
And she said the quote to somebody that rejected her or passed on her company.
The company is clear, by the way.
Like, why are you going to win?
And she said, because I am a fucking animal.
And so as I was thinking about that to myself, doing work on a Saturday when I had a minute,
I thought about her.
And I said, oh, shit, I meant to buy that stock.
And I don't even, I don't even know if clear is a good business or not.
Like, I don't care.
It's the thing at the airport that they convince you to do because TSA pre is not fast enough.
But she was so beyond impressive.
I texted Patrick.
Like, she is amazing.
And I meant to buy the stock.
I forgot to buy the stock.
I pulled up a chart to see what was going on.
And I said, so pull the chart on.
Pull the chart up, please.
so wait why why all of a sudden it had such a horrible debut next chart please this is the free cash flow
and the revenue the business is doing phenomenally well that that'll do it so i haven't dug into the
fundamentals i'm going to listen to the most recent call and find out what's going on and i probably
still want to buy still will still buy the stock so my my point is i wanted to bet on her and i just
forgot to buy the stock and when you've got like just amazing special people like this you just got a
bet on them just like pure jockey yeah see it's it's interesting and i think this is why you've
gravitated a little bit more than i have to like private market investments and venture back to
companies because that's the whole ballgame it's there is no business is an idea of a business
you're betting on jockeys you're betting on the people i was talking about you like that you like
i was talking my friend today about one of our mutual companies that is crushing it and i said like
whatever rob's doing my answer is i want to give you money i don't even care what you're doing
but I believe in you.
Okay.
So you're a big, like, management guy, bet on the person guy.
Huge.
Huge.
You know what?
Last thing, and then I'll shut the fuck up about, excuse my language, about these
audiobooks.
So Steve Jobs, listen to this quote.
Now, you know what?
I feel like my brain has been deprived of oxygen because I haven't read a book in three
years because I don't have the mental energy at the end of the night.
Remember I told you that was going to happen 10 years ago?
And you don't believe me?
My brain shuts down at 845 and I go to sleep at 9.15.
I am wiped at the end of the day.
I can't physically read.
And I don't care if it's cheating.
Fake read.
He's better than no reading.
And I feel like I feel like I'm alive again with these books.
So anyway, Steve Jobs said, just talking about like people.
Steve Jobs said it doesn't make sense to hire smart people and tell them what to do.
We hire smart people so they can tell us what to do.
So you're goddamn right.
I'm all in on these people.
All right.
Listen, I don't, I don't hate it.
I was all in on you.
when I met you. So, hey, you're getting torn to pieces in the, in the chat.
Awesome. Thank you. I appreciate. I appreciate that.
Super Savage Spirit says Michael looks like a rich, bald CEO right now.
I'll take it. That's not bad, though, right?
You know what? When I was, when I was 26 years old, I made $900 for the year.
Okay? And when Josh hired me, I made $36,000 for the year. So I will take, I will, don't, don't reveal my
I don't reveal my methods of enticing people to join a, join 12, 12 years ago.
Okay.
So I will take rich, bald asshole all day.
All right.
Dude, you're the man.
We're so proud of you for your new beautiful home and your new mudroom.
And I got to tell you that was a, that was a killer, make the case.
I got to look at that stock.
Okay.
Mystery chart.
And then we're going to get out of here.
I forgot what I.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
Okay.
All right.
The top pain.
are these are three charts i know what this is no hint wait you're going no hint you're going to
guess all three all right let me just try no and don't don't google anything hands down dude
hands up my hands are up i can't i can't see you all i see is the charts of the screen okay
all right this is the trifecta guess the trifecta this is audacious is this the rossil
two thousand the value and the growth sad trombone no damn it all right go ahead i'm
wanted you to do it. I got too ambitious. I bit off more than I could show that's on me. Hand up. Hand up. I wanted you to do it. I guess you're not really him after all. I thought you were. What is this? Give me one clip. The top pain is a sector and pain's two and three are the two largest companies in the sector. Okay. I think you could do this. Okay. Hold on. So it didn't take out new highs. I don't know, man. I'm getting nervous now. I'm a failure. I'm a loser. I'm watching the chat to see if anybody's going to get it. It's pathetic. No one has it.
So what got absolutely knee-capped in March?
Well, everything did.
And these are the two largest stocks.
Yeah, the two largest stocks in the sector,
and on top is the sector spider.
All right.
Let me just, I'll just go with X, L-Y, Amazon, and Tesla.
I'm sorry.
All right, what is it?
The reveal, please.
John, if you please.
So this is the energy sector,
X-L-E-on-top, Exxon-Mobile below it,
and Chevron below that.
all the same chart. Obviously, these two companies make up a huge proportion of the
XLE. They all look the same. And here's my question to you, what happens when they get
back to that cliff from March? Do they get turned away? Or is that the biggest breakout for energy
stocks in five years? What do you think? What's going to happen? I really am. A chart back on
ninny mugging. Um, let me say, hold on. Dude, look at what's setting up here. I'm looking.
that chart visual is not great.
Oh, yeah, all-time highs.
We have individual charts.
Let's just roll through them really quickly.
Okay, yep, going.
It's going, right?
Okay, I agree.
Golden Cross and the XLE.
We like it.
Next chart.
Oh, golden cross and Exxon mobile.
Oh, man.
I should buy this.
About to take out overhead resistance.
This is the one I've, the next one I actually own, Chevron.
I'm long.
Size.
Xon better.
Yeah, but look at this gap fill coming up.
It's going to happen.
It's going to happen.
We're going to go, we're going to 170 on Chevron.
Massive, massive Golden Cross happened here about a month ago, and this stock just
will not look back.
I think they could all work.
They should all work together if they're going to work.
Looks great.
And I'm dying to see what happens at that March cliff.
I can't wait.
I'm anticipating that happening sometime around year end.
Well, this is Barry bullshit.
A little, remember that little Exxon?
all right guys thank you so much for watching i know we went a little long tonight but it's only
because we love you so much uh really appreciate all the shoutouts in the chat make sure you
follow the channel for god's sake if you want the trucker hat go to i don't shop dot com while supplies
last and i can't guarantee that so hurry up and we'll talk to you soon
You know,