The Prof G Pod with Scott Galloway - No Mercy / No Malice: Mammon
Episode Date: December 2, 2023As read by George Hahn. https://www.profgalloway.com/mammon/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices...
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Support for this show comes from Constant Contact.
If you struggle just to get your customers to notice you,
Constant Contact has what you need to grab their attention.
Constant Contact's award-winning marketing platform
offers all the automation, integration, and reporting tools
that get your marketing running seamlessly,
all backed by their expert live customer support.
It's time to get going and growing with Constant Contact today.
Ready, set, grow.
Go to ConstantContact.ca and start your free trial today.
Go to ConstantContact.ca for your free trial.
ConstantContact.ca
Support for PropG comes from NerdWallet. Starting your slash learn more to over 400 credit cards.
Head over to nerdwallet.com forward slash learn more to find smarter credit cards, savings accounts, mortgage rates, and more.
NerdWallet. Finance smarter.
NerdWallet Compare Incorporated.
NMLS 1617539.
I'm Scott Galloway, and this is No Mercy, No Malice.
When capital and ideals clash, capital wins.
The near collapse of open AI signals the decline of ESG investing.
Capital can only be constrained by one force, democracy.
Mammon, as read by George Hahn.
I just paused my Hulu subscription. Pretty sure that means I'm blackmailing Bob Iger.
The real tragedy of Andrew Ross Sorkin's interview with a co-founder of OpenAI
is that ketamine addicts deserve a
better spokesperson. But that's another post. The collapse and rebirth of the Valley's preeminent
private company was the most bewildering business story of 2023, and an object lesson in a truth
that's hiding in plain sight. When capital and ideals clash, capital smothers ideals in their sleep.
The end of the charade that OpenAI was a non-profit signals the beginning of the end of ESG.
We are always ready and want to believe that this time it's different.
We will do good while making billions.
The last big corporate jazz hands was the ESG movement,
purporting to prioritize environmental, social, and governance concerns over shareholder returns.
Succumbing to this siren call, we abdicated our responsibility to discipline corporations
and curb the externalities wrought by the pursuit of profit,
believing instead that one profit-seeking entity could cajole another profit-seeking entity to seek something else.
Elon Musk and Sam Altman founded OpenAI eight years ago with a specific altruistic mission. To invent the most transformative
technology ever known and then give it away for free. They had amassed vast wealth from private
enterprise and didn't believe a for-profit company could be a responsible steward of the AI tech they
planned to build. Fast forward, one box was checked with a pen
the size of the Hercules Corona Borealis Great Wall. OpenAI is likely the most important private
company in the world, and it's already one of the most valuable. But the tsunami of private capital washed over its founding ideals.
Once the water receded, one house of worship, the pursuit of shareholder value, stood unblemished.
Note, in this instance, shareholder should not be confused with stakeholder. OpenAI's founding mission was drawn and quartered the moment the company took its first billion-dollar investment from Microsoft in 2019.
Four years in, the company determined it would need billions to build the team and computing infrastructure that advanced AI would require.
It's possible they always knew this and expected Elon to foot the bill.
But he severed ties in 2018, either because of conflicts or because he lost a power struggle.
Regardless, the company needed capital.
It raised a billion dollars from Microsoft and restructured itself as a for-profit controlled
by the original non-profit.
When a non-profit takes a billion-dollar investment from a for-profit,
it has been bitten by the dead and is now also a profit-seeking white walker.
Open AI was not the first company whose founders thought they could breathe and swallow at the
same time. Tech, in particular, is a museum of grandiose mission statements,
eventually cast aside in pursuit of profit. Google, from which Sam and Elon poached some
of the first open AI hires, famously espoused the mantra, don't be evil, putting the motto in its
2004 IPO prospectus. Stephen Levy used the phrase as a thematic touchstone
in his history of the company, the book In the Plex.
The book highlights the crisis the company faced
balancing principles against profit.
Over and over, it asked itself,
is this evil?
And chose evil.
Building its own browser, page 210.
Tracking users to sell ads, 338.
Building AI for weapons, 405.
And, most famously, agreeing to censor search results on behalf of the Chinese government, 284.
Not to mention radicalizing young men and undermining the business of journalism.
In 2018, the company passively acknowledged what it had become,
relegating Don't Be Evil to an HR scold at the end of its code of conduct.
Sports analysts refer to the impact of a great player as their gravity.
They pull defensive players toward them,
leaving other players open. Messi, Steph Curry, everyone in Man City's attack has gravity.
Capital bests them all. See Ronaldo's Al Nasser contract. Everything you want to do at a company,
including hiring employees, buying raw materials, and renting space, requires capital.
Your shareholders demand a return on theirs, i.e. profits.
A manager's task is difficult but simple.
Allocate finite capital to generate a greater return than their peer group gets. And when the ROI-maximizing decision isn't one that benefits humanity,
capital wins.
Sam may have his hands on the wheel,
but he's sitting on Satya's lap as he drives.
Capital is in charge.
The saga at OpenAI is playing out at macro scale in the markets with the decline of the ESG movement.
ESG stands for Environment, Society, Governance.
And it's what fashionable multinationals are wearing this season.
It comes in a few styles, a management strategy, an investment thesis, a product offering. But they're all the
same masquerade, that for-profit corporations and the markets can police themselves. The question
of whether they can is bested by the evidence. They don't. Over the past decade, a crop of funds has surfaced offering to invest your money in
sustainable ways while still delivering competitive returns. The experiment has been a failure.
ESG is neither an investment strategy nor altruism. It's branding. As my colleague at NYU, Oswath Damodaran, highlights,
corporate ESG scores increase every year.
Is that because corporations are becoming better?
Or is it because the bar is getting lower?
When a company like American Airlines makes the Dow Jones Sustainability Index,
it's the latter.
The hollowness of ESG investing is reflected in its returns, which are neither good nor bad, but average. So average that the S&P 500 and the S&P 500 ESG index's returns are nearly identical every year.
And that's by design.
The top five weighted companies in the S&P 500 ESG index are Microsoft, Apple, Amazon, NVIDIA, and Google.
It's no coincidence these are also the five most valuable companies in the U.S.
Meanwhile, investors pay a greater expense ratio on the ESG ETF, 0.10%.
And by ESG standards, even that's low. The iShares ESG Aware ETF charges 0.15%, and the FlexShares ESG ETF almost trebles that to 0.42%.
It's the definition of branding. Create intangible associations that evoke emotion
versus product benefit, resulting in pricing power. Or, more simply, slap a green label on your fund,
marginally adjust your weightings, and charge more.
The ESG movement is waning.
Investors withdrew $14 billion from sustainable funds this year.
The shift is partly structural.
Traditional funds have also seen net withdrawals, a.k.a. negative organic growth.
But ESG funds are facing steeper declines,
likely because people are catching on to their sleight of hand.
We wrote about a greenwasher extraordinaire two years ago, Aspiration,
which promised to save the planet
with a debit card. The planet is still under threat, and the company fired its founder CEO,
laid off hundreds of staff, and pivoted towards selling carbon credits to corporations.
Aspiration is a case study in the deeper cost of buying into the mythology of do-gooder capitalism.
Capitalists weaponize it for profit.
Two months ago, Deutsche Bank agreed to pay a $19 million settlement
for claiming it made investment decisions based on ESG but not actually doing that.
Which is fraud, but also dumb, as being labeled ESG is not a big lift.
See above, American Airlines. Before that, oil giant Shell was accused of misleading investors
on its green credentials. In the past year, corporate greenwashing incidents have risen 70%.
The danger bigger than usurious fees is that we don't invest in the democratic institutions
focused on preventing a tragedy of the commons,
because we believe market solutions can handle carbon emissions and forced labor.
It's not the fault of the businesses, but the citizenry,
which continues to engage in a consensual hallucination
that tech innovators can cosplay world leaders
and solve our most pressing problems,
all while making us, and them, rich.
I don't know if or how climate change is remedied,
but I'm certain the solutions will cost money
before they make any.
Corporations are so good at making money,
they shouldn't be trusted to do anything else.
Treating your employees well,
investing in the community,
and generally supporting the commonwealth
all offer short
and long-term benefits to stakeholders, and so stakeholders, us, should ensure it all happens.
This is not an abdication of corporate responsibility or reheated Milton Friedman,
but a call for more robust government oversight and regulation, including antitrust actions and a rebalancing
of power from the top 1% and corporations. Larry and Sergey weren't being disingenuous
when they founded Google as a different kind of company or adopted don't be evil as their
guiding principle. In their original paper introducing the Google search engine,
they included an appendix about the evils of advertising.
Quote,
Advertising-funded search engines will be inherently biased toward the advertisers
and away from the needs of the consumers.
Unquote.
I'm sure they believed that, because it's true.
Their original sin was naivete, not deceit.
They thought they could defy gravity.
Likewise, I don't believe that John D. Rockefeller founded Standard Oil
intending to heat the planet to an unlivable temperature,
or that the thousands of good people who work at Chevron or Exxon or Shell
are rooting for the mass migrations and economic collapse their continued carbon production will
cause. All the worst people in the world didn't decide to go work for tobacco companies in the
20th century, nor have Meta's recruiters developed a skills-based assessment to find evil geniuses.
There are bad people in business,
and immoral conduct,
recruiting underage children to a product that gnaws at their mental health,
promoting anti-Semitism,
remains immoral.
We should call bad acts out where we see them
and withhold our business or capital from bad actors when we can.
But don't expect it to change anything.
As the late Charlie Munger put it, quote,
Show me the incentive and change the incentives
versus change the executives and keep the incentives,
I'd argue door one is the better way to go.
And the upside incentives are, most definitely, in place.
There is no country on earth minting as many millionaires and billionaires as the U.S.
Regardless of the odds and the harsh reality that success is more about when and where you are born
than your talent, most Americans believe they have a shot at extraordinary prosperity.
And that's a good thing. We can't and shouldn't weaken the pull of capital.
The profit motive is capitalism's driving force,
and it's driven a greater increase in prosperity than any other human creation.
The problem is our better angels are outmatched.
We need counterweights to the incremental rationalizations made in conference rooms named only good news.
It's the lack of regulation and the disincentives that have let externalities run amok.
Government prosecutors sending SBF and, likely, Zhao to prison will do more to clean up crypto than any ESG fund overcharging investors.
If we want to stop meta from sending images of nooses to bullied young girls, we need to make that behavior a crime.
Or at least let those girls' parents sue, i.e. reform Section 230 as I advocated for before. ESG and ineffective altruism are heat shields against real limits
on action. They allow corporations to retain their power and their capital while expectorating
exhaust into a headwind. Every time I write about the abuses of tech companies, I get the response, quote,
well, if you don't like the companies, don't use their products, unquote.
This is the cry of the defeated, those so broken on the wheel of corporate exploitation,
they've unilaterally disarmed, abandoning the one power we the people possess that's equal to capital.
Democracy.
It's not up to each of us to protect the Commonwealth.
It's up to all of us.
Put another way, the most effective ESG is not a fund charging higher fees to invest in American Airlines.
It's a perp walk.
Life is so rich.