The Compound and Friends - Stocks in Pre-Crisis Mode, Multiple Compression, the Citrini Crash, Halo Goes Viral
Episode Date: February 25, 2026Join Downtown Josh Brown and Michael B...atnick for another episode of What Are Your Thoughts and see what they have to say about: HALO stocks, PE compression, the Citrini crash, the housing market and more! This episode is s sponsored by Fidelity Investments and Janus Henderson Investors. Learn more about Fidelity Investments and the all-new Fidelity Trader+, Fidelity’s most powerful trading platform at: http://www.fidelity.com/TraderPlus Learn more about Janus Henderson Investors at: https://www.janushenderson.com/ 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 Fidelity Disclosure: Fidelity Investments and The Compound are not affiliated. Views, opinions, products, services, and strategies discussed are not endorsed or promoted by Fidelity Investments. Fidelity Brokerage Services LLC, Member NYSE, SIPC. 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
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Yeah, we're back.
It's been a minute.
I had Ben Carlson on in Michael's Place last week.
So it feels like it's been a while.
I don't know.
I feel like that for you?
I think I did four podcasts today, so no.
There's a lot to talk about.
Hey, guys, welcome to an all new edition of what are your thoughts?
First time listeners, my name is downtown Josh Brown.
And with me, as always, my co-host, Mr. Michael Batnik.
Michael say hello.
Hello, hello.
All right.
We have a live chat that's going on on YouTube
for those of you who are normally accustomed to listening to us.
Every once in a while, pop on to the live.
We tape this at 5 p.m. Eastern.
I want to say hello to some folks.
Chris Hayes is here.
Chris hit the like button eight times, he says.
Appreciate that, sir.
Media Mindy said y'all going to talk about Paramount and Netflix
with the new bid for Warner Brothers.
It's too busy.
You have time for that.
That's like number nine.
on the list of things that we would do today.
Normally, Mindy, we would love to.
It's just too much happening.
Cliff Peoples watched the Jessica and Nick Colas show here on the compound yesterday.
Appreciate you, sir.
They are so smart.
I love Nick and Jessica.
Who else is here?
Jerry's here.
John Carlo.
Charisma Spigot is back.
Georgie's in the house.
All the usual pounders are with us.
And some new names in Facebook.
We appreciate you guys.
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investment opportunities. Janice Henderson investors investing in a brighter future together.
Visit Janice Henderson.com. All right. It's a crazy week. I want to start with PE multiple
compression. And the reason why is because I really think that this is the key to the market this year.
earnings are coming in at record levels, revenue too, profit margins are rock solid.
If somebody says, why the hell is the S&P underperforming the international stock market
by the widest degree almost of all time, especially in a bull market, the only answer
I can give you is that investors are less confident in future cash flows and are therefore
demonstrating a lack of willingness to pay current multiples.
And that is a very fancy way of saying the multiples are too high for the level of confidence
we have in the future.
And it's a what we call a classic PE compression.
And this could end up being a year where earnings are good to great and stocks are flat
to down.
And the reason, I mean, it's February.
So who the hell knows?
But I'm just saying this could be one of those years where.
you get the earnings right, but you don't make money in the index.
What are your thoughts before we get into some of the reasons behind this?
That is the entire story.
And valuations are not a catalyst.
They're not support.
People want to sell.
There's no, there's no floor.
But what I take a little bit of comfort in, not a lot, but a little, is the fact that we are already seeing this correction.
Throw a match chart up, please.
So Josh mentioned the SEP is doing just fine.
Prices right near an all-time high.
Multables are contracting, which is why you see the earnings growing, but the index churning sideways.
So we're at 21 times.
All right, tells you absolutely nothing.
Quite literally.
Nothing.
There's no information in there whatsoever.
But if we were, and all right, if we were to look at the equal weight version, also doesn't tell you a whole lot, but it's closer to like 17 times chart off.
And I feel better that can we go from 17 to 13 and be in a war?
world of pain, 100% we could. There's no reason why we can't. But I do, I do feel better than being
at, say, 25 times at the equal weight. Or worse, being at a cheap valuation with earnings falling.
I promise you, that doesn't feel better. That's worse. That's worse. Way worse. Way worse.
So look, we've had an incredible run. I don't mean like over the last 15 years. I'm just saying like
the last two or three years have been really, really good. And part of,
Part of that sometimes is a period of give back.
Now, that could be for a quarter.
It could be for six months.
It could be for a year.
I can't tell you.
But like what I will stand on is that you have to train yourself mentally to endure it.
You have to be okay with that.
It's part of the deal that we all make.
And if the reason is there's uncertainty about the future because of innovation, like if that's our worst problem, that's really not that big of a problem.
So, dude and bro, I would say that if you were to tell somebody, yeah, how much we're stocks up 23, 24, and 25, it's okay if we're not up again 20%.
Nobody wants to hear it.
I think everybody would say, yeah, true, fair, good, you're right.
But nobody's worried about a flat year.
They're worried about a down 25% year.
Yeah.
And we're nowhere near that.
That's a little early.
Here's another thing.
Maybe I'm saying this to make myself feel better.
And I am.
midterm election years, the June to June, they just are choppy.
I don't know why.
And I'm not suggesting that the AI route is any way related to the fact that there's
a midterm election cycle coming up.
I'm not.
But and also, if you look at the November to November following midterm election year,
you could laugh, but it's up 100% of the time.
And it's not a sample size of three.
Are you going to watch the State of the Union tonight?
No.
I don't think I've ever watched this.
never miss a Trump state of the union. They are, they are incredible. Listen, not political. I don't
care about it. You guys know, I'm not a political person. There is literally never been a more
entertaining president in that setting where he just, he knows he has everyone's attention.
Not mine. He goes, he goes for it. Okay. Well, I will be watching the Nix Cavs in my entire
existence. I've been on the planet for 40 years. I guess as an adult for 10 of them. I never once.
I don't think I've ever spent more than 10 minutes watching a state of the union address.
And I'm not about to start now.
He's his own, let me just say one thing.
I'm not saying don't watch the Knicks.
His own Supreme Court, which basically he put like five of the nine people on it, on it,
just smacked him in the face this week.
They sit in the front, fucking row.
People don't even understand what's coming.
They sit.
I almost shouldn't even be hyping it up because people should be watching this show later tonight.
But like, they sit the Supreme.
court justices in the front like it's a rock concert and they're uh their VIPs.
This is going to be completely unhinged.
I cannot wait.
All right.
Let's let's do this Savita thing.
So, uh, one of our one of our favorite analysts, uh, Savita supermanian who leads the equity
and quant strategy group at Merrill Lynch or Bank of America.
I don't know what they call it now.
Um, this is actually her forecast.
Stocks are going to get cheaper this year.
Not stocks are going to get killed or just like.
they're going to get the PE multiple compression is going to be the story of the year.
And she laid out five very easy to understand reasons why that that will be the case in
their opinion.
And I want to go through all five of these at a very high level and then get your take when
I'm done.
Reason number one is disruption math.
So basically she's saying relative price declines often proceed earnings downgrades.
Our quant back test says historically, cheap tech lags.
rather than leads.
Real disruption can be a long process.
It was eight years from the Netflix IPO
until Blockbuster went bankrupt.
IT services swung from a 14% premium
to a 23% discount post-chat GPT.
And we're not going to put the chart up,
but you could take her word for it.
IT services is like the companies
that come in and help Fortune 500
workday.
Businesses like implement,
implement solutions.
and that's like on the front lines of potential disruption.
Reason two, equity shrinkage behind us,
glut of issuance ahead.
Mike, we talked a lot about buybacks
and how ladies and gentlemen,
the stock market is shrinking
was a post I wrote years ago,
talking about the lack of publicly traded companies
and just like the dearth of IPOs.
You don't have to worry about it anymore.
Savita says scarcity drives multiple expansion.
So it's no surprise.
Stocks re-rated in the 2010s amid a 25% drop in stock supply.
Accelerating buybacks help too, but are now slowing.
From here, potential for mega IPOs.
The top three private companies are valued at 25 plus prior years of U.S.
IPO proceeds could represent a seismic supply shock.
So when we get Anthropic, Open AI, SpaceX, maybe Starlink is StanLIN,
as a standalone company, and the rolls on the runway, maybe Stripe.
These are massive market caps coming to the NYSC and to the NASDA.
They suck up some ply from other stocks.
Everybody understands.
Reason three, really strong earnings per share means really compressed multiples.
Above average earnings saw PE multiple compression 66% of the time since the year
1900. 14% earnings per share growth, growth years, that's their forecast for this year,
have seen an average of 10% PE compression. Really good fact to tuck away. Wait, that's so
interesting. Yeah. We should have a chart kid do something on that. Asset intensity and
financial leverage is worsening. Asset intensive financially levered index of the 1980s morphed
into an asset light cash-rich index of the 2010s.
But software, media, and internet companies
have recently jumped in asset intensity.
That's what we talked about with Nick and Jessica last night.
Did you know Ford is now more profitable
than Amazon meta and alphabet?
Wow.
Literally.
Yeah.
Did you know Nick and Jessica calculated that those three stocks
are putting over 100% of their operating cash flow
back into CAPEX this year?
All of it.
He goes, people are wondering, like, where do these
CAPEX budgets come from?
Mix, like, dummies.
It's the entire operating cash flow.
That's where it comes from.
It's literally the number.
That means somebody high up at Amazon goes to the treasurer
and says, what's our operating cash flow?
Oh, it's 200 million.
200 billion.
Great.
Right into CAPX.
That's what's going on.
And then number five, Savita's.
list, index risk from private hiccups as the VIX is set to rise.
She notes that pension funds have shifted from active public equity funds to a barbell
of passive and private equity.
Today's private capital woes could mean, raising capital in more liquid investments.
This is so interesting.
Equity index funds.
And the relationship between the VIX and the yield curve suggests a big increase in
the VIX in 2026, also accompanied by lower P's.
So in other words, asset managers who have made these ill-liquid investments that they're worried about
and they need to raise capital, that's selling pressure in the traditional stock market.
Not something that was on a lot of people's bingo cards earlier this year, but this is a real risk to multiples.
And so you add those five things up.
Why would you expect PE multiple expansion this year?
It seems like it'd be really hard for us to get it.
What do you think?
I don't think anybody coming into the year was arguing for,
multiple expansion.
Well, you ain't going to get it.
So tough shit.
It is weird that the VIX is under 20.
Don't you think?
Don't say that out loud.
Well, it just is.
I know.
I don't think it's going to stay there tomorrow.
But it is weird.
I would think in this environment
to be a little bit more elevated than that.
So, yes, everything that she said,
I don't really, I think the index and private hiccups is sort of whatever.
I don't think that's that big of deal.
Which is the one of those five that has,
that lands on you the hardest?
Take out this.
Take out disruption math because we all understand that already.
Well, okay, but that's the first one.
Equity shrinkage, I don't, I don't know.
Are we going to get those three IPOs this year?
I don't think so.
I mean, Anthropics instead of monster raise.
I think you're going to get three out of the five largest private companies in the world
in the next 12 months.
I don't think so.
I think the public market will have zero appetite for Open AI, who just shared with the
world that they expect to burn 200 and what?
It doesn't matter what the appetite is.
They're in a race with Anthropics.
Like one of them, the both of them want to beat the other.
It doesn't matter with the appetal.
No, it's it.
I said this to Ben today.
Nobody was scared when Open AI was in the lead.
We were laughing.
Like, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha.
And then all of a sudden, Anthropic comes over the top of like, oh, fuck.
Like, this shit's real.
Who do you hate more?
Sam Altman.
I'm not sure now.
I thought, I said, I don't like this creepy little doll from a horror movie.
He looks like, uh,
Brahms from the boy
I don't like this guy
But then he just has like dead eyes
When he talks
He doesn't seem to like having any real
Who are you talking about Dario?
No, uh, Altman
But then this guy Dario is really
Pissing me off
Just shut
Stop doing podcasts for five minutes
We've all heard enough
Everything out of this guy's mouth
Is another pronouncement
Of the futility of humanity
A, it's bullshit he's gonna be wrong
But B, it's like annoying
Why are you
Why do you have to say all this out loud every day
it's it's it's it's kind of strange could you just like you you have a private market valuation of 380 billion
could you just be in a like a a good dude does every public does every public statement out of you
have to scare the shit out of like normal regular people that are just like thinking about their
family like who is that in your contract you have to show up on all these podcasts and be a dick
about it i don't i don't think he's being a dick he's not that scary he's actually though
he's actually the one saying that we need some sort of regulations and guardrails.
Well, there's a, there's a, there's a conspiracy theory about why he's the one saying that.
And a lot of people are saying what he's really trying to do is entrench himself.
See, one of the interesting things about what happens with big tech and regulation,
the more regulation you have, the harder it is for new entrants to come along because the cost
of complying with that regulation is insurmountable.
Great example of that would be the banks after the financial,
crisis. They made the rules so impossible that only five banks had the ability to grow.
You could also look at meta, alphabet, et cetera. They're entrenched further by regulation.
They may be hemmed in about what they can do, but the silver lining is there is no other meta.
Nobody could afford it. Anthropics just raised $30 billion. It's not a lot of companies on the
planet that could do that. They already have it. Not to themselves.
I'm just saying like Claude is cool. The products are great. I use Open AI all
day long, chat cheap T all day long. It's fine. But like, guys, can you shut up for a few minutes?
All right. That's all I'm saying. Getting back to the multiple compression, the thing, the real
thing that worries me that's not on here is what if multiples are peaking? And so stocks might look
reasonably priced on a forward basis. What if the earnings aren't $290 and what if they're actually
270 in two years? Like what happens to price? No, well, we know it happens. It comes way down.
Yeah, I mean.
The thing that I also take comfort in is look at the global market.
Look at the global stock markets.
They're all red hot on fire.
I think a lot of the earnings benefits are accruing to other places of the market.
And on the one hand, there's only so, so I love the broadening.
I think everybody does.
But there's only so much selling pressure that the market can take before the 493 come down with it.
So right now the max seven are in a 12% drawdown.
The market could swallow that.
But Nvidia reports tomorrow on bombs and the Mac 7 is down 15, 18, 19.
The rest of the market is going to follow suit.
Unfortunately, yeah.
So I actually think that's unavoidable.
Which part?
The sentiment hit from an event like that.
I don't know that anyone's really spared from that.
It doesn't have to last long, but that'll definitely be the story of the next day.
All right.
So here's a weird thing.
This is from bespoke.
2026 has seen the narrowest spread between the year-to-date high and year-to-date low through 220 since
1966.
So if you look at a chart of the S&P, it's going nowhere fast.
It's very bizarre.
Yeah, because I just think it reflects like the extreme uncertainty right now.
And some of the biggest stocks that matter the most to the index are caught in that uncertainty.
It's hard to be bearish on these companies.
They're going to have 29% earnings growth this year.
Okay.
I'm glad you said that.
So how do you like, how do you get like completely out?
You can't.
So as I'm wearing this t-shirt for the first time, markets and turmoil, as all that we're talking.
That's such a great shirt, by the way.
Thank you.
Or you're welcome.
You know this.
Now available at I don't shop.com in the compound store, by the way.
All that the market is talking about right now is risk.
Rightfully so.
everybody's talking about it.
You and I know how fast sentiment can turn, one earnings report, one piece of regulation,
one, whatever, it doesn't matter.
It doesn't matter.
So what do you think is more likely in December that LOL, the chase is back on?
We actually are going to get some sort of AI melt up.
Or, man, we could have gotten out so easily in February.
markets within 2% of an all-time high,
all the warning signs were there,
and we ended up having it down 25% in year.
Do you know how hard that is?
I mean, do you know how much we have to get through
between now and your end?
I'm just asking, no, I do that.
This is an impossible rhetorical question.
I think it's going to be a bifurcated market.
I'm on record.
We'll talk about Halo in a second,
but I really think that like half the stocks in the market,
and they're not gigantic,
but there are enough of them,
are going to have a good year.
But don't, I don't think this is a bad thing.
I feel like everybody is extrapolating the last four weeks until the rest of the year.
Everybody is saying the same thing that this is going to last.
Avoid the, avoid the junk by the Halo stocks.
And not just because you coined it, but like everybody seems to be guilty of extreme
recency bias, which we all are.
I mean, myself too.
But it really feels pronounced now.
Yeah.
The more interesting question is, like, is it realistic?
If there's a serious problem in tech,
if there's a serious problem with these software companies now actually coming out and one by one,
I know we got a warning from Workday.
It seemed like a pretty mild guidance miss.
It wasn't that bad.
Let's actually go to Workday.
Next chart.
So here's part of the problem.
So these stocks, like these weren't cheap stocks to begin with.
That's the problem.
So look at the non-gap operating margin.
Okay, great.
it's accelerating.
But look at the blue line.
Like, are you freaking kidding me?
With these software multiples, like your actual cash on cash margin is like 6%.
Yeah.
What are you doing?
So AI.
They're building their own agentic AI, they said.
They should.
What else are they going to do?
Anyway, so we're like, oh, these stocks are risky.
Oh, wow, that's so insightful.
Workday isn't a 60% drawdown at the open tomorrow.
It's not to say that it can't fall 80%.
I don't know why you can't.
But these stocks are so bombed out.
Yes, but the problem is everything was fine until.
And now you're starting to get, if you start to get earnings warnings from not just one of them,
but like 10 of them, if that's what we're going to start getting, then people are going to say,
oh, that sell off made perfect sense.
And probably it shouldn't be over yet.
So Salesforce, Salesforce reports tomorrow night.
I know that's going to be a big one, obviously.
They're reporting the same time as Nvidia.
tomorrow night's going to be low-key like fireworks.
I bought it.
I should probably just sell it at the open.
I'm down 3%.
I'm down 3%.
Who cares?
I should just sell it at the open.
Let's do a thought exercise.
What could they possibly say that would have the stock go higher?
Well,
no, their AI product was at a $500 million run rate?
Like, not nothing.
And it doesn't matter what they say.
I don't care what they say.
I can't know.
I can't how the stock reacts.
Right, but I'm saying what would be the thing
that gives you the reaction in the stock that you want?
Dude, I don't know what they're going to say, but stocks do bottom on bad news.
It's not like, right?
Like, it just does.
So I'm not saying that tomorrow is the bottom for Salesforce.
It's probably is.
It's probably going to go about 15% for all I know.
All right.
So on software.
So Warren Pyes said software has been a high margin, high multiple cornerstone of the S&P.
Yeah, very important.
It trades at roughly three times the indexes price to sales multiple.
and has margins that are more than twice the index.
If AI disrupts software, then the overall market will have to derate.
Using this model, try on please, a 50% reduction in software margins
suggest that the group must trade down from a 10 times price to sales multiple to five times.
Oh, my God.
Yeah, not great.
So what we're looking at here on the horizontal axis are software margins,
and of course, the higher the margin, the higher the multiple.
But Warren's saying that software has gone from overvalue to fair value.
But that's assuming that the margins don't deteriorate, which maybe they will, maybe they won't.
It's hard to see how they don't.
Can we safely say rest in peace to software is eating the world, 2011 to 2026, RIP?
Great run.
Great run, though.
I mean, one of the all-time greatest runs.
and I don't know what the next thing's going to be.
I think AI is eating software is like a little too cutesy.
But it's a new era.
There's no way around that at this point.
So it's a full-blown bare market.
So the unknowable question is, so software is having it, IGV,
it's having the worst month since 2008.
Yeah.
So investors are acting like there is a systemic risk in software stocks.
And yeah, they're probably right.
Right.
So I think the way to, people,
When people, so just to wrap up this multiple compression slash software segment to the show and then we'll move on.
Oh, no, we won't.
I've got one more piece.
To something even worse.
All right.
But I think the thing to say is like when you're paying 30 times EBITDA for a software stock, that's like annual cash flow.
You're paying 30 times.
That means give or take, like you feel pretty comfortable that that cash flow is coming in for at least the next 30 years.
And you think it's going to get bigger.
Nobody actually.
No, I know.
I know.
But I'm going to a theoretical exercise because I think it's important.
So like you're saying like for the next 30 years, I'm not worried about this company's cash flow coming in.
And of course, I think the number is going to go up.
If you're like, now I know people don't invest for 30 years.
But I'm just, I'm doing this because.
Conversations that happen when sales, what software companies are a 60% crash.
Right.
But if if you're now taking that multiple.
down from 30 to 15, which is effectively what's happening, in some cases, worse.
It's not that you're saying, oh, I'm only comfortable with the next 15 years worth of
the cash flow.
It's just a demonstration of a change in confidence.
And that's like the best way to explain what's happening here.
I wish I could tell you it's because these companies earning suck, but it's not.
It'd be easier that way.
So when Sauthor was eating the world in the pre-COVID era, okay?
So forget about 2021.
Salesforce was trading at nine to 10 times earnings, eight to 10 times earnings.
It's now on its way to four.
And is that the right number?
Who knows?
I guess there's nothing profound to say about these names that are down 60%.
Multiple of revenue.
Sales.
Four times sales.
All right.
All right.
All right.
So Adam Parker weighed in.
Really good stuff here.
He said, we looked at the last several times the software industry, EV to sales multiple,
have contracted sharply over a rolling six-month period.
All right.
So there's nine periods.
since 2000.
He said, we then observed after these periods how valuation worked for picking software stocks
following these sell-offs.
I thought this was really well done.
For the last 20 years, buying the most expensive software companies outperform buying the cheap
for the six months following these valuation corrections.
So Adam's saying, if you want to add a software name, add a fast-growing expansive one like
Palo Alto, not Salesforce because it's cheap.
So next chart.
these are the numbers.
The most expensive quintile, that's the blue highlight.
And he's looking at the spread between the most expensive and the least expensive.
And interesting thought exercise here.
Oh, so you got paid better in forward-looking returns if you bought the more expensive software stocks.
Yeah.
Okay.
I bet you that would hold this time because you go through the mental, you go through the mental exercise of saying, well, why is it expensive?
And when you do that, you end up with the stocks that have the best growth outlooks.
The market's not stupid.
They have those high valuations in some cases relative to their peers for a good reason.
So here's what I'm struggling with.
I take the stock market very seriously.
It's not perfect all the time, obviously.
But I genuinely believe, and I think you do too, that there is a lot of information in stock prices.
And you would be foolish to ignore them.
You agree?
Well, I never ignore stock prices.
Okay.
I don't know. I don't have to agree with what the market's doing.
I might have a different perception.
So then and also, sometimes the market is drunk.
And I think the market is drunk right now.
So I bought a, I bought Crowdstrike yesterday.
A stock that you've been a long time proponent of.
Just bombed out.
I don't know anything about their business and cybersecurity and privacy.
I know nothing about it.
But this idea that like, Claude is just going to disrupt this monster of a business
because they put out on an agent?
Like, I just, come on.
Nobody actually thinks that.
They just think other people are going to think that and they're selling.
If you understand what CrowdStrike does versus what Claude put out,
Claude put out a bug finder.
It's a, it's a, it's a product that allows you to detect bugs in a security network.
That is nothing to do with CrowdStrike.
CrowdStrike is literally incident response.
I'm sniffing the risk.
I know.
It's like protecting companies.
It's not searching for bugs.
It's so far beyond that.
And it doesn't matter.
They took, I don't know, $15 billion out of the market cap or whatever.
Like, it's bonkers.
Well, Schwab, too.
I mean, you and I know that's wrong.
Yeah.
But it doesn't matter that you can make money on it on the long side.
That's right.
All right.
We have to get to this.
I know a million things have been said about it already.
But this is the thing that everyone's been talking about for 48.
hours. The Satrini research, I don't even know what people are calling a report. It's not. It's a
very well done creative writing exercise where these two guys put their heads together and tried
to picture a worst case scenario two years from now and then write a history of today to then,
I don't know, prospectively. Like, act as
though it's 2028 and they can go back two years and they paint this sort of stair step
downward into hell all of the various things that blow up along the way. And this piece has
everything. It has a white collar unemployment surge. It has mortgages blowing up. It has
the credit market seizing. It's got like every neck, every possible dominole falling because
the lifeblood of the economy is that is people doing knowledge work the upper kut right at a
at a at a at a at a at a white collar salary and just having those jobs vanish and what are all the
all the knock on effects um i wanted to get your take we haven't spoken about this but i know you
i know you had a pretty strong response to it i think you didn't you probably didn't sleep while
last night if what i heard is true so it really bummed me out chris said you were crying a little no
it really it really bummed me out to the point that robin said what's wrong like it really
fubbed me out number one it was a great piece and it was really well done and this is not like you just call
me and because well because we i want to save it for the show okay um and this is not some bullshit
permabair guy who's just you could safely discard he was very clear that this was like people call i
don't know if he called it science fiction but the part that bummed me out the most not like
the market lens and i was shocked at the market's reaction like i'm
American Express in Capital One fell 8% because of this report, like legitimately.
Those stocks would not have done that absent support.
That blew my face off.
Here's a part that bummed me out.
The human element of it.
There are factually, unfortunately, people in my life and in your life and in everybody
who's listening, there are people whose lives are going to get blown up.
Blown up.
blown up. There are people that are white-collar workers that live around us who are going to
lose a job, lose a spouse, lose a family. Like, I don't know. I'm not saying that's...
Don't you think that happens anyway? What do you mean? In general? This is a constant in our lives.
Stop, stop, stop, stop. Yes, that happens. That is always a part of life. But it's going to...
I'm not like, I'm not hyperbolic. Like, we're going to get 10% unemployment overnight because
I've rejected. I genuinely do. I genuinely do. It's...
don't think that it's going to be mass unemployment, mass hysteria.
But shit, dude, like, I could think of people that are expendable.
And it really bums me, it really bums me the fuck out.
Like, seriously.
Did you text any of them?
No, but seriously, there's a lot of people who just don't know what's happening.
And we, and it's inevitable.
And that part of it.
That part is true.
That part of it, like, really, really made me sad.
So this is like, all right.
Let me just react to that really quickly.
I think that that happens every day in America, in different industries, in different.
Now, you and I live in an upper middle class suburb in a place, probably one of the most expensive places to live in America.
And the reason it got that way is because there are huge employment opportunities in this area.
And that's why so many people want to be here.
And the employment opportunities pay very high salaries.
That's like part of the territory living in places like Westchester, Northern New Jersey, Nassau County, Long Island.
We happen to live in a place where it costs a lot to live.
And I think as a result of that, we very acutely feel these like tremors because it's almost impossible.
If you're like on a $600,000 salary and you're at the top of the range for what you do because you're in New York,
and then they tell you like a machine that's plugged in somewhere in Cincinnati is faster
than you at what you do and you're out, you're probably not going to get that level of
income back.
You will get another job probably doing something else, maybe in the same field.
Maybe you have to reinvent yourself.
It's very hard to replace a $600,000 annual income.
So I'm with you there.
I mean, that's that's very high.
I'm just talking about like regular people in our town.
Like that is right.
Dude, that's not regular.
What are you talking about?
That's absurd.
I don't know.
Okay.
You're on another planet.
Why is it?
300,000?
Yes.
For a family household.
Fine.
Everything I said is still true.
Yes.
It's hard.
It's really hard.
Once you can't replace that with what.
I'm agreeing with you though.
But we're saying the same thing like somebody making $120,000.
It sucks.
They get laid off.
It's an easier income to find the place that will replace that.
Even within the same sector, you get to the point where, you get to the point where.
it's much, much, much harder.
And I don't know where that threshold is,
but I'm making the same point that you are.
I just think it happens every day anyway.
Does this accelerate it?
Yes.
Put more people in the line of fire?
Yes.
Yes, of course it does.
All right.
So that, to me,
and there's a lot in there that, like, again,
it's probably above what I could understand.
But I just, that really hit.
All right.
I get it.
There's a rhetorical trick being played here.
which is piling up every possible negative,
stacking them one on top of another,
with no positives and no offsets
and absolutely no beneficial,
you know,
bends in the story.
And I remember 2011 watching people do this
with the European debt crisis,
and it was not guys on substack,
it was guys working at Sochgen,
but it's the same bullshit.
And the general idea was like,
Substack is a new Sochgen.
Basically, it can't be worse than sock gen.
So they would have these British guys do these like purposely do these like thought exercises where they would extrapolate out first Greek's defaults.
I saw that with you live in 2011.
Well, these guys doing this.
They were doing this shit professionally.
Scared the bejesus out of me.
But that's what they were doing.
Like they were like they were coming up with like the dominoes.
Yeah.
And it was every single day.
And they were having op-eds published at the Financial Times.
The Financial Times, like, was almost rooting for this.
So they, like, wanted, they wanted literal economic implosion.
I don't know why to this day.
But it was, maybe it was just about the clicks or the FT Alphaville subs.
But for whatever reason, it was like this cabal of the economist, F.T.
Alphaville, British strategists working at French investment banks.
And they would just hit publish and publish and publish.
And it was just like the Satrini piece, it was like this domino and not domino, then civil war in Germany, then the Italians ally with the Chinese.
And it was like one after.
It never plays out that way.
There are positive externalities even in a debt crisis.
I know it's hard to believe, but it's actually true.
So things got really bad in Southern Europe.
And I know people went through a lot of hardship, but the world didn't come to an end.
And so I don't like this sort of like domino effect think pieces
where the only externalities are possibly negative.
And so that was the first thing that jumped out of me.
The second thing was they had Discover card blowing up.
Does anyone know that Discover doesn't even trade publicly anymore?
Whatever.
I'm just saying like, there's a lot.
All right, it doesn't matter.
It was really well written.
And I think that's why it got the reaction that it did.
The stock market fell like 1.8%.
Dude, American Express fell in 8% Capital One, which is like, I've been pointing this entire run-up when people are saying one thing, but the data shows another thing.
I'm like, I understand people are bummed out, but don't tell me that consumers are under pressure when Capital One Financial, the most credit-exposed company maybe in the country is at a 52-week high.
It fell 8% yesterday.
Sorry, I got to address this in the shot.
Asaro 631.
Josh, could you please give a take on toast?
What are you?
Are you listening?
No offense.
Do your ears work?
Do you understand what's going on?
You're asking me about a small cap software company
in the midst of the biggest software crash in history.
What would you like to know, sir?
Do they still make software?
All right.
Stop, stop, stop.
Don't talk to the crowd.
All right.
So.
J.P. Morgan.
All right.
So Jamie Diamond.
What is this about?
Is Brian Sazi eavesdropping?
at cocktail parties?
Apparently.
What is this?
Here's what Jamie said.
What is he doing?
What if, I think there are two million commercial truckers in the United States and there are
lots of other examples you can give.
There's a thought exercise.
You could push a butt and eliminate all of them and they make $120,000 on average.
Save fuel, save lives, time, blah, blah.
Would you do it if you put two million people on the street where even if there are jobs
available, that next job is $25,000 a year stocking shelves?
I was saying that's kind of really bad civilly.
Should we as a society agree to that?
I don't think so.
I was talking about the business and government
and they should start thinking today,
not when it happens to deal with the issue.
It's got to be the business and government.
All right, I don't think anybody has faith in the government.
It doesn't matter what's out of the aisle you're on.
But I do, I do have faith in humanity.
So for as much as I'm scared of the individual level,
and nothing will change that
because I think that there's an inevitability to that,
I believe strongly in humanity that, yes, we will solve this.
There will be all sorts of amazing,
amazing things that come out of AI, medicine, and a million things that we can't predict.
But I'm worried about between now and then.
I really am.
What's more likely to you?
Two million commercial truckers lose their job in the next five years.
Or we have a missing generation of new truckers who just never go into that job because
there are less opportunities over the next five to 10 years.
And it just sort of fades away as a job option.
Because I'm going to tell you, for most of these things,
that's actually how it works.
It's very rare that a new innovation comes along
and everyone gets displaced at once.
It's more likely it just becomes an industry that shrinks
and we have less people go into that,
but they don't do nothing.
They leave.
They go do something else.
It's not pleasant, okay?
I'm not going to say it's been pleasant for coal miners
over the last 30 years.
But when was that a good job?
when was when was climbing down into a coal mine ever pleasant yeah so i think this is more gradual
and it does not just place two million people but the good jobs are going to be under assault
too says you and are all these email bullshit jobs that we're saying are good jobs good just
because they pay a six-figure salary are they definitely good is it a good job to sit there
and spam people's emails all day is that we think that's a good job because it's air
conditions. I don't even know that I agree with the premise that all of the jobs being disrupted,
like that we're not doing certain people a favor. Well, what's good? A good job is a job that puts
food on the table and security for your family. That's a good job. Oh, all right. Well,
if that's the only baseline, then yes, a lot of good jobs are going to go away. But I just don't,
I don't know that I agree with that's the baseline. That's the baseline. Let's talk about Hela.
Are you ready to jump out that window behind you yet? Yeah, I'm, I don't like this.
All right.
Let's move.
Well, here's the good news.
Josh went viral.
I am the smartest man alive.
Yeah.
Good luck disrupting.
The genius, that is me.
Because this week, I went viral.
All right.
So I'm not going to do this whole discussion of what Halo is.
We did that already.
We've done it a few times.
Heavy assets, low obsolescence risk is the theme of the year.
I said at the beginning of February, still believe it.
Everything that's happened since has only confirmed how brilliant I think I am.
I want to put this table up real quick.
This is yesterday.
This is what the stock market looks like this year, but this was just yesterday.
This is a perfect halo day.
Look to leadership.
Consumer Staples 1.
Healthcare 2.
Utilities 3, energy 4, real estate 5, material 6.
All 6 are the only sector is green.
What was read?
Communication services,
industrials,
that one you can go either way with.
Technology,
consumer discretionary financials.
John,
throw out my chart from later.
This is what the end of the year.
Wait,
I just want to say,
this is what the end of the year
is going to look like,
just so you understand that,
okay?
Well, I don't know that.
I know.
Nobody knows that.
I know that.
So I made the same chart,
the same table.
I made into a chart.
John, just throw that up.
Where's the leadership
coming from just so we could
look at this one more time?
This is so nuts.
Look at where the S&P 500 is.
It's up 80 basis points.
Yeah.
And look at everything to the left.
Energy is 1% of the S&P.
It's up 24%.
Materials is, I could even be smaller.
It's up 17.5%.
Staples plus 15.
Industrials plus 14.
And when Sean and I are doing our best stocks in the market research, these are the
stocks.
Chart back on, chart back on.
The thing that scares me or worries me about the stock market itself.
And listen, I'm not overly concerned.
I know this isn't a pop of thing to say out loud.
Stock market falls 10% this year.
Who cares, right?
Like we're in a massive, massive bull market.
It's fine.
Nobody's going to die.
But the red bars, comm services, tech, discretionary, financials.
You need these to participate for a sustainable market.
You just do.
Now, maybe you don't.
Or.
Maybe you don't.
But historically.
It's just mean reversion within a bull market.
And it's sectors that had lagged for three years catching up, getting re-rated.
Well, that is what's happening.
Fine.
How about this?
I like it.
Why do we not like it?
No, dude, I love it.
It's great.
If those four bars stay where they are, we could still rock.
But if the mag seven, like, implodes, then everything else is coming down with it.
That's all I'm saying.
Okay.
Let's hope not.
I don't think it will.
All right.
I just want to show off the recognition that my brilliance has received.
John, can we roll through some websites and some media outlets?
Here's the Wall Street Journal.
Wall Street's latest bet is on Halo companies with AI immunity.
You spoke to the journal for this now?
Yeah, I talked to her name is Hannah Lang, a great reporter at the journal.
Here's the next one.
Financial Post.
I think this is like the WSJ of Canada.
If I'm not mistaken, Halo stocks.
AI may be a threat to some stocks,
but investors should be watching for this halo effect.
Bang!
Next one, CNBC.com.
All right, that's the home team.
Josh Brown's halo stocks.
They can't be disrupted by AI
and we'll get more profitable because of it.
That's February 9th.
Look at the date on that.
Here's Goldman Sachs research today.
Strategy matters.
This is like,
this is some like high-end luxury shit from Goldman.
They might have put you in the footnote,
but come on.
Like,
I know.
Literally, they're spelling it out.
Focus on Halo, heavy assets, low obsolescence.
Literally, nobody could give me attribution.
Should I email Tony Pascarella?
Yeah.
And break his balls about that, right?
Can I say one more thing about the current stock market?
So I also, I don't think, I think you would agree with this.
Nobody likes the fact that discretionary is underperforming staples in a serious, serious way.
Evenly equal weight.
Looks disgusting.
That is not a risk on appetite.
But look at small caps.
Look at the Russell 2000 hanging right near 52.
week highs. Small caps are most small caps sect by industry designation are mostly Halo. Don't interrupt
my ticker tape parade. Barron's put this up. Want stocks with AI immunity? Think Halo. Next,
market watch. Go. Fire market watch. Why the halo trade boosting hard assets is no fluke according to
Morgan Stanley. Also no attribution. That's all right. Dude, show the cover of good housekeeping.
Here's Axios. Anything but AI is giving rise to the halo trade. Michael,
I am
f***ing famous.
I don't know.
All right.
Let's play this video real quick.
Taxi drivers and accountants
both got automated.
One group got poorer,
the other got richer.
And the reason why
is probably the most important idea
for understanding
what AI is about to do
to your job.
Before Uber,
London cabby spent years
memorizing 25,000 streets.
It's called the knowledge.
That expertise was the entire job.
You were paying for what they knew.
Then GPS automated the expert part, the hard part, the thing that took years to learn.
Suddenly anyone with a car and a phone could do the job.
Employment and ride services went up 250% wages, flat.
Because the hard part was gone and anyone could do what was left.
Now look at accountants.
Computers automated the routine part, the data entry, the bookkeeping, the repetitive calculations, the easy part.
What was left?
The complex analytical work.
The judgment calls that required more expertise, not less.
So wages went up. The job got more specialized and more valuable. Same story. Technology
automates part of a job, completely opposite outcomes. The difference is whether the technology
took the hard parts or the easy parts. If the technology takes the hard parts, the things that
took years to learn, the expertise that made you worth paying for, you're heading towards
more competition and lower wages because the barrier to entry just disappeared, machines can come
in. If the technology takes the easy parts,
the routine, the repetitive, the stuff that you didn't need much training for, you're heading towards
more specialisation and higher wages because now you spend all your time on the work that actually
requires you. This is the question you need to be asking right now, not will AI take my job?
That's the wrong question. The right question is, in my job, is AI taking the hard parts or the
easy parts? Think about what you did last week. The tasks that AI could already handle,
were those the tasks that took you years to learn,
or were they the parts they could have taught,
you could have taught one new hire on day one?
All right.
That's a, I mean, that's a really great point
that juxtaposition between taxi drivers and accountants,
the technology with taxis took the hard part.
The drivers knew where everything was,
and then once the machines did,
there was nothing for them to do.
What are they just like on the steering wheel?
The thing with accountants, though, it's the opposite.
All the wrote, annoying task stuff, the calculations, a machine could do that.
That's not the thing that makes an accountant, an accountant.
The thing that makes the accountant the accountant is that specialized knowledge and that ability
to communicate options with customers and lifelong clients.
So, and that's why accountants get paid more since TurboTax came along.
but taxi drivers get paid less or nothing
since the advent of Uber.
And I think it's a really,
I think it's a really important
way of understanding
what's about to happen.
You don't seem convinced.
I'm not.
Is that because she's from Middle Earth?
Talks like a Hobbit.
What is the reason?
Where is that accent from?
We need to...
That's Australia.
Or maybe New Zealand.
We need to find out what's going on.
That was classic.
Oh, no, you know what?
That could have been South Africa.
All right.
Well, I thought she, I thought she made
a really important distinction between, does the AI do the hard part of the easy part?
Now, there's people in the chat saying, what if it does both?
I don't know what to tell you.
Move to New Zealand.
Ask her.
All right.
Next.
All right.
Hard to believe.
Hard to believe that the cumulative advanced decline line for New York stock exchange listed
stocks hit a new all-time high the other day?
Nobody would know this.
Like, what?
Is the Halo stocks?
What else you want to tell you?
It's anything but software and information technology.
All right.
So this makes me feel a little bit better about the state of affairs.
Next chart, please.
Look at chart go to Matt doing this thing.
Expensive stocks are underperforming.
So Matt is looking at median price of sales based on 10 equally weighted buckets of stocks.
And it's very clear.
This picture picks a very clear story.
The stocks are getting smoked or the stocks that were expensive to begin with.
So how do you not look at this and say it's just mean reversion?
And it's just like, it's the countertrend to answer to correcting what's gone on for the last three years.
Sort of how it seems to me.
Right?
Yeah.
Like it's, it's like, all right, we had this one group of stocks.
They were expensive at the start.
They got even more expensive.
And that ran its course.
And now there's concern about their future earnings cash flows.
Let's sell those and buy these cheap ones.
And now the cheap ones are getting expensive.
I did a thing on the air today at CNBC about the,
oil stocks, the huge re-rating in those multiples, people don't even understand.
Like, you got stocks now, Oxy is trading 32 times trailing 12-month earnings.
Yeah, that makes sense.
Exxon Mobil has gone from 14 to 22.
Chevron has gone from, I think, 16 to 28.
What's the expected earnings growth for these companies?
It's got to be the 5%.
Really?
No, no.
In most cases, it's not even close.
Well, why would it be?
WTI crude is like 60.
It's got nowhere.
Is this,
that's what a Vee rating looks like.
This is the funny thing about valuations.
Like, does this make sense?
Oh, you're paying for the next 24 years worth of, like, give me a break.
Nobody cares.
All right.
I'm sorry for doing that.
But I'm just saying like, that's, that's, that's what it looks like.
All right.
Let's move out to better news.
Yeah, pre-crisis parallels.
All right.
We did a whole thing with Diamond, but I did want to take one more quote of his.
John, give me this screen grab.
This is Bloomberg.
Diamond sees pre-crisis parallels as rivals do dumb things.
So now we come to the private equity, private credit portion of this, which is its own story, somewhat connected to the software or crash.
This is Jamie.
Unfortunately, we did see this in 2005, 06, and 07, almost the same thing.
The rising tide was lifting all boats.
Everyone was making a lot of money.
I see a couple people doing some dumb things.
They're just doing dumb things to create NII.
That's net interest income.
And then they do all this like 2008 stuff.
Did he name names?
Did he name names?
Yeah.
When auto lender,
tricolor, tri-color holdings and car parts supplier first brands group imploded
last year, he said seeing one cockroach meant more would likely crop up.
And then he said, quote, there's always a surprise in a credit cycle.
this time around it might be software because of AI.
Hold that thought.
Lloyd Blank Fine, off the top rope,
coming into trash
whoever's running Goldman Sachs
and whoever's running
all of these private credit firms.
Look at this guy.
Blank Fine has a book coming out on March 3rd.
That's why he's talking,
just in case you were wondering.
Oh, yeah, whatever happened to that guy.
What happened was he crushed it
and he sort of retired.
And now he's in that mode where, hey, I got something to say.
So here's what he said.
Is a crisis brewing in private credit?
Quote, the people who run these firms have had great lives and made a lot of money.
These firms are very successful, very lucrative, not content with the market that they have.
And as big companies they have, they want to make them bigger.
How are they making them bigger by finding new outlets of capital?
What are they going to?
Retail, consumers, 401K.
insurance companies.
If something blows up and big institutional investors lose money,
does the public sector care that much?
Not really.
If a bunch of individuals start losing their 401K plans and their money,
does the public sector care?
Does the government care?
Yes, a lot.
I think it's crazy to put those assets there.
And I think it's crazy from their point of view.
They have nice lives.
They make a fortune.
Their companies are huge.
They already own their yachts.
and whatever it is they want,
why are you going into this dangerous territory
just to make your business a little bit bigger
when that represents such a big potential problem?
All right, team blanks find on this.
I mean, I wish you just would have answered the question.
Seriously.
The answer.
No, it's not.
He didn't answer.
Is it a crisis brewing in private credit?
Yeah.
He answered a different question.
Well, the answer to the question.
Well, I think that's what he sees as the crisis, dude.
I think he speaks for all of us.
And I think this is actually a good thing that this is happening before or not after these things
are in 401 cases.
He said in a financial crisis, a trader would say, I think an investment is worth X.
And I'd say, go out and sell it.
And they couldn't.
These private credit investments are illiquid.
So how do they find out what the true value is?
We don't know what something's worth for sure unless you try to sell it and somebody buys it.
I think something will occur and we'll say, I can't believe there's gambling in the casino.
know, I can't believe my predecessors let this happen, and then I'll have to get fixed,
and it'll be more conservative than it happened.
And he's almost like, what is he lobbying, come back and run an investment bank?
No, he's writing, he's writing a book.
So the story with private credit is that in the springfall, these, these BDCs and these
stocks started to get lower, started to go lower, as interest rates are coming down, and these
are floating rate loans.
And so the investors were going to own, we're going to earn less.
less interest income and therefore all things equal, these were less relatively less attractive
than they were in 2022 when interest rates were killing bonds and these things were floating
high or no duration.
Like it was, it was kumbaya.
It was a perfect storm for greatness.
So first it was the rates coming down that said investors saying, you know what, I don't
think we'd like these things anymore.
And then it was a tricolor and first brands, which by the way were syndicated loans.
It wasn't even private credit things.
And then there's like, yeah, maybe these are more.
Those weren't poorly underwritten.
Those were frauds.
frauds. Again, not private credit frauds, just frauds. And so I was able to hand-wave a lot of that
away. What I wasn't able to hand-wave away was the title wave of money coming into the space.
Like, there can't be this many good loans available. There just can't be. So a sloppy underwriting,
which we're going to find out about and give it, I don't know, give it a couple of months,
give it now. Now. And the thing that for me just is like makes this really hard is the software
part of it. So B-Cred, for example, 26% of their book is in software loans of middle market software
companies. And that doesn't mean they were bad loans or anything, anyone did anything wrong.
The world changed. It's a private, illiquid investment, and the world changed. The world changed.
So if the equity, and yeah, like these could have been made a proper loan to values and there's
plenty of equity cushion or there was, well, guess what? The publicly traded stocks down 60%.
What do you think the privately traded businesses are worth as a percentage of what they were worth?
Way less, okay?
Yeah.
So what, so I don't know what the portfolios look like.
Who the hell knows?
But investors aren't waiting.
These names are getting murdered.
Blue Owls in a 60% drawdown.
The publicly listed BDC is getting murdered.
And again,
putting a pin in that.
Lessing, last thing.
The worst part of it is, Josh,
we haven't even seen the cycle turn.
There's no distress.
Like, everything is fine.
Again, it's multiple compression,
but in a different arena.
It's the same concept.
Yeah.
We know these companies are worthwhile.
none of them have, there's no, literally no problems.
None of them are filing chapter seven, chapter 11.
That makes it more scary.
Well, that, but it's the same concept.
We're just, we're just not willing to agree that they're worth what they were last year.
Put a pin in that, though, because we're going to revisit that at the end.
10-year treasury rate, Neil Dutta, quote,
in the last couple of weeks, we have seen stronger than expected employment and firm core
PCE inflation.
We might even get a politically pliant Fed chair.
There's also quite a bit of enthusiasm out there
as financial market conditions have eased
and the tax refund season expected to be stronger
relative to last year is in full swing.
Despite all this,
10-year yields have actually been sliding.
I am not sure what the right level of the 10-year should be,
but there's every reason for longer-term yields
to be rising right now.
It's notable that they haven't been.
Ten-year hit 4% today.
Do we need to read more into this?
I don't know.
This is such a weird market, dude.
If you hear like the way that we're talking, just our tone and what we're saying,
you would just assume the market's at a 15, 20 percent drawdown.
And we're right in your all-time highs.
Now, I don't know if that makes me more or less confident.
That's why I call this episode pre-crisis vibes,
because that's what it feels like.
Like, it feels like everybody sees a crisis about to unfold, but it hasn't started yet.
Okay, so I love that you said that because going into 2023 and 2022 during the rate hiking cycle,
everybody had the ability to brace for impact.
Everybody got religion and did what they had to do with their balance sheet and then this or
their that.
And they braced for an impact that didn't come.
Now, I'm not saying that because it didn't happen the last time it won't happen this time,
but I think what the Trini did in service to society for everybody focusing, like everybody
is bracing for impact.
And I think that changes the nature of risk.
Now, I'm not saying that we're going to eliminate it, of course, but I like that everybody's sort of feeling anxious about the future.
That's not a bad take.
Like, in other words, he told everybody, he told everybody, like, put your pads on.
And if enough people do that, some of the recklessness that maybe we were worried about last year is not going to manifest itself.
Done.
All right.
It's not a bad take.
All right.
Let's talk about an area of the halo trade that's not working.
U.S. pending home sales.
Holy mackerel.
Okay.
That's part of that 10 year, though,
falling to 4%,
like people are not bullish
on the economy right now.
Let's look at pending home sales.
The, yeah, not great.
Like, this is a very seasonal chart.
Like, it goes, for the last three years,
the lines all moved together.
And the red line for 2026,
it's diverging bigly.
Off a cliff.
We're looking at four-week rolling average
of weak-pending sales.
and it does not look like the others.
And then the four-week rolling average on the bottom chart of median days in the market.
Like this is bad, dude.
Houses are just not selling.
So pool corporation reported, the stock is getting murdered.
Swimming pool builds are down 50% since the pandemic.
Now, obviously, a lot of this is pull forward, but still, in 2025, we estimate that just under
60,000 new pools were built in the U.S.
A mid-single-digit decline.
This is about half of what we saw at the height of the pandemic.
And 40% lower than 2022.
Holy shit.
One other.
Floor and decor.
Murdered.
Murdered.
Oh.
What is this like carpets and wood wood.
I'm guessing it's like floor and probably some decor.
Just destroyed.
Chat, would you have guessed?
You would see floor and decor and pool in drawdowns of this size?
Is that anecdotally?
I think I would have.
I feel like everybody shot their shot from.
2020 till 2025-ish.
And then, like, if you were going to do something, you're going to redo your house or dig a
pool, like you already did that.
But we were bullish.
And now it's a retrenchment.
We were bullish on rates coming down and the housing market.
Well, they have to come down.
But they have come down.
The 30 years below 6%.
Home, like rocket, like, these stocks are not working.
People are not spending money.
The chat is saying the sellers have to bring their prices down.
Yeah, we know.
they're not going to.
It's a buyer's market where nobody's buying or nobody's selling.
It's it's not good.
I grabbed this.
I wanted to share with you.
Home Depot reported this morning,
adjusted earnings 272 versus consensus 253,
topping estimates despite year-over-year pressure.
Revenue actually beat.
Same store sales were up 0.4% in the U.S.
0.3%, which reversed prior declines.
And it beat the forecasts,
which were for a drop.
So somehow, and Lowe's is tomorrow.
Oh, yeah, and the stock still could have barely bound to close on the lows of the day.
No, Lowe's is tomorrow before the open.
So we'll see any coverage.
Then one more thing.
Here's a skeet from Sean Broderick.
A skeet?
A blue sky tweet?
I don't know.
What are we calling it?
We don't call them skis.
All right.
Google search.
This is a chart of Google searches for, quote, can't sell house.
absolutely skyrocketed to the highest level in over a decade.
Isn't this a great chart?
What is going on?
You can't sell your house because it's not worth what you think it is.
Like, do you need somebody to hit you over the head with a baseball bat?
You can't sell it because the price is wrong.
Isn't that it?
There's more than that.
That's it.
If you were able to afford a house, you probably already bought a house.
Well, I think that's the same thing as the put in the pool.
we do the floors.
I agree with you.
I totally agree with you.
Right.
The people that wanted to did it.
All right.
Let's do make the case.
Then you're going to do a mystery chart.
And then we're going to let everybody out of here.
You call yourself a contrarian, you son of a bitch.
Well, let's see.
Chart on.
Now, I don't give a hook.
Dude, I bought Blackstone on Friday.
And then it fell 8% the next day.
No, I said a real contrarian.
No, you know what?
I just.
Blue owl.
I just, go ahead.
I have things to say.
Go ahead.
I listened to your episode of Talking Wealth today, and I thought it was great.
And you got into, who was the guest again?
Brian Moriotti from Morningstar.
All right.
Guys, if you're a financial advisor or interested in wealth management topics, we have a weekly
podcast called Talking Wealth.
And the latest episode is about the Blue Owl and the OBDC saga.
I thought that was really good, Mike.
Thank you.
Your takeaway from that is even at $10 a share, this Blue Owl is not yet safe to buy.
Okay.
Or maybe more dangerous than even when it was at 20?
It probably is.
It probably is.
It probably is okay to buy.
There's not investment advice.
I don't want to invest in this company.
I don't trust management.
I was on the call yesterday talking to their investors about what happened.
And I just, I don't like what they're saying.
They're acting like it's all fake news.
It's like Mark Lipschultz is saying that he sees green flags, not red flags.
It's like, bro, your stock's down 60%.
Now, maybe the FTA is, is.
inaccurately reporting some of the things, but don't act that there's no smoke, okay?
You just voluntarily gave your investors back 30% of their money.
Like, and oh, we sold it for 99.7 cents on the dollar, nothing to see here.
People aren't dumb.
And the fact that they were blindsided by the stock market's reaction tells me all I need to know.
I have no faith in them.
No faith in them.
I don't think anybody else does you.
All right.
I 100% agree with you.
So this is make the case.
And normally we talk about something on Bullish on, but I really wanted to show, like,
the sentiment on these names could not be worse.
And if you're really one of these people who thinks you're Warren Buffett and you run into a burning building with your wallet open and blah, blah, blah, blah, here you go.
Wait, dude.
I bought, I bought Blackstone on Friday.
Yesterday it was down 8%.
All right.
This one I actually own.
I own Carlisle Group.
It's in a 26% drawdown, which makes it one of the better, one of the stocks holding up best in the space.
I really do trust management of this one, and I am not selling it.
I wouldn't say I'm adding to it.
I'm still long Carlisle, for those who are wondering.
Let's do the next one.
This is Apollo.
36% drawdown.
I trust them.
It looks like you trust this company.
To the extent that you could trust like any of these companies, I think that Mark Rowan tells
it like it is.
You hear him on the company's ball.
I like that.
I like that guy.
He tells the truth.
All right.
This is going to come back to bite us in the ass if he's hiding some cockroaches and
But I trust that guy.
Is that what we're saying like we trust the guy or we don't trust the guy?
That's it.
Everybody knows that there's risk.
Okay.
What do you think of stock down 40% is telling you that everything's great?
Oh, that's risky.
No shit.
Stephen Harmon in the chat is pointing out, Blue Owl, who's bailed out by their own insurers last week.
So that's a whole other story.
That's a whole, we're not going to get into that.
All right.
Aries, 41% drawdown.
I don't know anything about this company at all.
So Ares has the biggest BDC.
I mean, it was $14 billion.
All right.
Forget it.
Next.
Blackstone, this one you bought.
I bought it.
This is a 42% drawdown.
This is the black,
I think you're going to make running in this one.
This is the Black Rock of Private Equity.
And I know the story is not pretty right now.
And yeah, it could definitely, definitely get a lot worse.
Could it get cut in half?
Yeah, sure, maybe.
Fine.
Why not?
I remember the IPO of Black, Blackstone.
And I'm going to tell you it fell 70%.
they went public in like 06, horrible timing for new investors.
But this one was the first to come back and it came back the biggest.
And I think they've, they've been through credit cycles.
They've been through moments where investors don't trust private assets.
I think they're going to live.
Yeah, everybody knows that flows are going to slow down.
Like, that's not, it's not going to surprise anybody.
It's not going to surprise anybody.
It's in the price, okay?
And these are, for the most part, illiquid.
vehicles. We know the fee-related earnings.
Like, all right. Yeah. Here's K.KR. Disgusting.
Fordly-three percent drawdown. This one is in every way, shape, and form as illustrious
of a history, as Blackstone, as Ares Apollo.
Like, these-
They invented the LBO.
These businesses have great reputations.
I don't know. What do we?
I don't know what to do.
You don't have to, you don't have to buy these stocks. In fact, you probably should
I'm not going to.
But if you're selling these,
if you're panic selling today,
you're never allowed to quote Warren Buffett ever again, okay?
Ever.
Those are the rules.
Does Berkshire step in and look at the loans
and say 50% discount?
Yeah,
I'll buy 10% of this piece of shit.
So Boas Weinstein's yesterday said that he's a long blue owl
and he's trying to buy.
I think that's what he tweeted.
And he's looking at the,
he's looking at the money assets.
Is he buying the BDC or is he buying the equity of the corporation?
The equity.
Two very different things.
The equity.
So he's invested in the stock of Blue Owl?
Yeah.
Let me not miss.
He knows more about the stuff than we do.
He said the way the wheels are coming off the car and the equities of private credit
managers and the investors who hold them.
Look at LNC today.
Public credit looks absurdly rich.
This might surprise, but Saba Capital is long stock in BX, Ares, Apollo, and also
Owl.
We sold down a lot of CDX high-ield at the same time.
Okay.
So he's hedging out the credit risk and buying the equity.
What he's like his claim to fame and he's really good at this,
maybe the best in the world at this,
is closed-end funds.
Well, that's what these are.
That's selling at a discount today.
That's effectively what these are.
Closed-in funds selling at such a huge discount that he buys them.
And in some cases, I think he is an activist and he makes the things shut itself down
so that he gets par on the underlying investment.
Or it's like, listen, this portfolio is traded at a 22% to your bull.
bullshit nav. Maybe it's only training at a, I don't know, a 14% discount or whatever it is. And I can
make money that way. Okay. Well, better him than me because I don't know what I'm doing in that
space. I really, this is not, nobody should listen to me on whether or not it's time to buy them.
I just wanted to get your take. All right, you have a mystery chart? I do. Let's do the first one.
Please. I forget even what I shared. What is this? Okay. This is five years. And this shouldn't
be that, that hard. You and Ben were speaking about this last week.
But what, like, what is it?
It stocks?
Well, you should know, you should know what the purple line is.
The purple line is, it's American index.
But look at the spread.
So five years, 89% versus 59.
What's up 89%?
What's up 59%.
Okay.
Let's say that emerging markets is yellow?
Close.
Close.
Close.
China?
The purple is the S&P, obviously.
Okay.
But look at this spread, dude.
This is not insubstantial.
In fact, you could say it's quite substantial.
This is international small cap value stocks.
So full disclosure.
Oh, international small cap value, tip of my tongue.
Why didn't I get that?
Isn't that wild?
Yeah.
40 points.
But can I tell you?
Not 40.
Not 40, my bad.
That was really.
Wait.
I'll tell you one thing about international small cap value.
Do you want to know?
It's all halo, the whole thing.
All of it.
I got one more for you.
There's no disruption in international small-cap value.
There's no mystery here.
I'll just tell you.
This is emerging, John, reveal it, please.
This is going back to October 2022.
EM versus SDI.
Isn't it wild?
Going back to October 2022, the S&P has lagged emerging markets.
How?
Just what's gone on in the last month?
Chart back on.
It really, it's from the liberation day bottom, smoking them.
Unreal.
Yeah.
Look, and it's, and you know, you don't know when you're in an outperformance or an underperformance
regime in any asset class versus another until enough time goes by that you can look back.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Like right now, we could be in a regime where people are going to be blown away by thing X is
outperforming thing Y.
But like, you need enough time to go by in order.
It's all hindsight.
Like all of it.
Correct.
So very difficult the gameplay.
All right, guys, I want to mention, first of all,
thank you guys so much for joining us for the live.
We appreciate it.
Make sure you hit that like on your way out.
It means a lot.
Helps us for the algorithm.
I want to mention tomorrow's Wednesday,
all new animal spirits with Michael and Ben.
We'll do an Ask the Compound later this week.
I always forget what day, but it's always good.
I think it's Wednesday.
I could be wrong.
And then it's an all new edition of the compound and friends on Friday.
Friday, two friends, two friends, both new guests coming by to hand with us.
Maybe one. Maybe just one. We're about to find out for sure. Either way, you're going to love the show.
Thank you. Thank you again. See you soon.
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