The Prof G Pod with Scott Galloway - Prof G Markets: Has a Global Market Rotation Begun? + Inside the Ultra-Luxury Hotel Industry
Episode Date: March 24, 2025Still listening on the Prof G Pod? Follow Prof G Markets for more: Apple Podcasts Spotify Scott and Ed open the show by discussing the federal reserve’s interest rate decision, the Professiona...l Tennis Player Association's lawsuit, and BYD’s new charging technology. Then they analyze Germany’s decision to boost defense spending while lifting its debt limit, unpacking the market’s reaction and broader economic implications. Finally, they break down ultra-luxury hotel group Aman’s latest funding round, and Scott explains how high-end hospitality brands are evolving to cater to an even richer clientele. Subscribe to the Prof G Markets newsletter Order "The Algebra of Wealth," out now Follow the podcast across socials @profgpod: Instagram Threads X Reddit Follow Scott on Instagram Follow Ed on Instagram and X Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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And then he didn't.
So he had to figure out how to start again.
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its own art.
It's its own creativity.
It's really art.
That's this week on Channels from the Vox Media Podcast Network.
Today's number, 63,000.
That's how many pages are in the newly released JFK assassination files,
but none of them contain any revelations. Ed,
what do JFK and Bill Clinton have in common?
Both their careers ended with a stained dress.
That's wrong. Dark and gross.
Any thoughts on the JFK file, Scott?
How did JFK break his arm?
Oh, a joke.
Good.
How did he break his arm?
By helping Jack off a horse.
Jack off a horse.
Jack off a horse.
Break your arm.
That's not even, that's not even JFK specific. Yeah.
Yeah. I don't, I'm reaching.
I'm reaching.
Yeah, you're reaching.
You're scraping the barrel.
By the way, you know, today is a very special day.
Special day.
You know what it is. I had that same anxiety that when my partner
asked me, you know, wakes up, it's like, oh, something, I'm like, happy birthday
anniversary. It's like, okay. I'm about to drop a bomb on you. It's my birthday
today. Oh my gosh. Ed, that's great because you get your driver's license this year, right?
Exactly. I'm finally eligible. 26.
26. Constantly. The first thing I say about you when people ask me about you is I'm like,
everyone said, people say very nice things about you. And I would say, you know, he's 25. And
people are like, I know that's so amazing. So wow, 26. That's not as impressive.
Yeah, not as impressive. Do you have any advice for me as I enter my 27th year on this planet?
Advice to you at 26, try and get a great shape.
I think every man under the age of 30 should be a fucking monster.
You still got a ton of testosterone and great double twitch muscle and great bone structure.
And you're going to spend the rest of your life from 35 on just trying to maintain.
So get to a really good place physically.
Bulk up.
Okay.
Say yes to everything, invest in relationships, try and establish as many
friendships.
It's harder to establish friendships as you get older.
So try and establish as many friendships as you can.
And in the meantime, work around the clock, try and get professional trajectory
such that you can have economic security by the time you're in your forties and
fifties and spend more time with your family.
So any mistakes you made at 26 that I should avoid?
I made a lot. I think my biggest mistake was I wasn't as kind as I should have been.
I looked at relationships as a transaction. If I wasn't getting as much, I exited the relationship.
I saw my employees, I started companies from the age of 27 as kind of a transaction where I thought if I'm
not getting more value out of them than I'm paying, I would fire them.
Well, you've had a massive turnaround on that.
Yeah.
Now I'm like, no, it's just the wrong role.
I came of professional age in the Bay Area in the 90s.
And there was this general zeitgeist that if you were talented and nice, I meant you were talented.
But if you were talented and an asshole, it meant you were Steve Jobs.
It meant you were a genius.
And there was this terrible zeitgeist or cultural norm that being an asshole somehow
indicated that you were super talented. And I adopted that.
I was never mean, but I could have been a lot kinder
professionally with people.
And also personally, I looked at my relationships
as a transaction, not as like, how do I,
how do I end up on the right side of the ledger?
And then something I did right
was I spent a ton of time with my mom.
And I know that sounds sort of lame,
but I was very close to my mom.
We spent a lot of time together. She constantly came I know that sounds sort of lame, but I was very close to my mom.
We spent a lot of time together.
She constantly came, stayed with me.
I constantly stayed with her.
And that was, you know, I'm an only child.
So that was very rewarding.
And we're really glad I did that.
That's about it.
So I'll work on getting ripped.
I will try to be nicer
and I'll spend more time with my parents.
I think that's a good, I think that's a good list of to-do's.
I'll check back a year from now.
You're at a point right now, so up until the age of like 22,
you're basically a total draw,
you're a total liability for your parents.
As a young man, I mean, especially think about you,
you're literally out of central casting
for parents right now.
And any time you spend with your parents right now,
they're just gonna get so much enjoyment out of.
And, you know, it's sad, but you don't,
it's impossible to realize or really register.
It's impossible.
Have you ever lost anyone close to you?
Just my granddad lost here.
Yeah, but that's natural.
I would say that's sort of,
you're sort of expecting that
in the fact you've been at grandparents.
No, I really, I am very inexperienced
with loss and death, I will say that.
Yeah. And you don't realize, especially with your parents, you don't realize how quickly
it comes when they're really old. And I really, that was something I got right. I spent a lot
of time with my mom. Okay. I like that. All right. Fuck that. Talk about AI and GDP. Let's
get on with this shit. Let's get on with the tariffs. I just want to remind our listeners
that we have a weekly newsletter now for ProffG Markets.
It's the ProffG Markets newsletter,
which breaks down key market moves
with data-driven analysis from me and from Scott
and from the ProffG team,
including our fan favorite Mia Silverio,
our research lead at ProffG Media.
And that goes out every Monday.
So I encourage you to go subscribe to that newsletter.
Go to ProfGMarkets.com and you'll have the updates
every Monday in your inbox.
It's a great newsletter.
And with that, let's start with our weekly review
of market vitals.
The S&P 500 climbed, the dollar increased,
Bitcoin broke its losing streak and the yield on 10-year Treasuries dipped, shifting to the headlines.
The Federal Reserve held interest rates steady, but raised its inflation forecast for the
year to 2.7%.
They also lowered their 2025 GDP growth projection to 1.7%.
That's a dip from December's estimates. lowered their 2025 GDP growth projection to 1.7%. However, the major indices rose as Fed
officials penciled in two rate cuts for the year.
Novak Djokovic's Professional Tennis Players Association is suing the game's governing
bodies, alleging that they operate as a cartel. The organization claims that the men's and
women's tours, along with the International Tennis Federation,
colluded to restrict competition and limit players' earnings.
And finally, BYD shares hit an all-time high after the company unveiled a new technology that fully charges its latest EVs in just five minutes.
The charging system will debut in the company's new sedan and SUV, both set to launch next month.
Scott, let's start with your thoughts on the interest rate decision from the Fed.
This is tough because they say that the markets sometimes climb a wall of worry.
And just as we started saying that the markets were really in trouble, it feels like the last two days have kind of rallied a bit.
But I just saw this as a bit of a nothing burger. What did you think?
Yeah. I mean, I think you raise rates if inflation is heating up and you cut rates if the economy
is slowing down. That's what these rate decisions are about. If you don't know what's going
on, if you don't have enough data or evidence to support a move in either direction, you
don't do anything. And that's basically what Powell said. He said, quote, uncertainty is remarkably high, so we're not going to be in any hurry
to move and we'll wait for further clarity.
And this is the same dynamic we discussed last week in the context of companies and
the struggles that they're facing where they can't make decisions because they just don't
know what Trump is going to do.
They don't know what the tariffs are going to look like and they don't know how supply chains are going to shift.
And so what you have now is an economy where,
from the bottom, all the way up to the top,
from main street businesses, then to corporations,
and then to Jerome Powell at the Federal Reserve,
everyone is stuck in this state of limbo,
where it's kind of like purgatory.
You don't know if you're going to heaven
or if you're going to hell, like you don't know if you go to heaven or if you go
to hell, so you just sit around waiting. And I think that's one of the big concerns that we've
gone from this economy that is very active, that does everything, to an economy that does nothing,
that has no choice but to basically just sit around and wait for someone else to make a move. And I think the other thing to remember here, you know, this was unsurprising that he held
rates steady.
Most economists and most markets and analysts expected this.
But if you look back a few months ago, that was not true.
You know, a few months ago, there were actually a lot of predictions that we would see a rate
cut in March, because a lot of people believed that inflation was getting under control.
We were moving towards that target of 2% and we might be able to cut rates earlier than
we expected.
I think the fact that this was so unsurprising to everyone is another indication of where
we are from an inflation perspective.
We're basically resigned to this notion
that prices are gonna go up again.
And I think you have to feel for Jerome Powell,
who has done an incredible job so far,
getting inflation under control, trying to get to 2%.
He's been doing this for years now,
very diligently and it's been working.
And then, Trump makes all these decisions that move everything in the opposite
direction.
He has to be incensed about this.
Trump has thrown a wrench in this whole operation that he's been working so long to get under
control.
And it's kind of remarkable the way he handles these press conferences, because you know he's pissed.
There's no way he couldn't be pissed.
People also about the tariffs.
He said, quote, with the arrival of the tariff inflation,
further progress may be delayed.
He's so neutral and so calm about everything,
but he just has to be angry on the inside.
But he's done such a good job of just saying,
you know, this is what we're gonna do.
We're just gonna react to whatever the executive branch decides and
we'll see what happens. So it's sort of a masterclass in, I would say, objectivity,
but also stoicism and not showing your cards. And maybe we have something to learn from
that.
I think the Fed chair has basically one job description and that is remain calm and carry
on. It just wouldn't help if he showed up sweating,
freaked out and like, fuck, I don't know.
It's I've never, I'm just, I'm totally awake.
I can't sleep.
I'm, I'm so freaked out and look at this data.
Jesus Christ.
I don't know what to make of this.
And yeah, maybe I'm giving him too much credit.
If you want someone to kind of look non-plus,
like they're sleeping fairly well and not to be
too alarmed, it needs to be the Fed chair.
Like if the Fed chair shows up, you know, without his shoes and like, he's been
on a bender all night, it's just like, and popping pills.
Like I think it would be way better for us.
That would be more fun to cover.
If every 15 seconds he said, I'm sorry, hold on a second.
And he like struggled to get his pills out of his briefcase and then started throwing pills into his mouth
and crunching on these things.
That would be good.
I'd love for him just in the middle
of these questions from Sanders,
I'd just love to see him just bend over
and just do a giant rail academy.
What would happen to interest rates then?
How would the 10 year respond then? What would happen to the rates then? What happened to the, what would happen to 10 you respond then?
What would happen to the stock market?
Exactly.
Uh, you know, I don't know.
I, you say you got a feel for chairman pal.
I feel for the American people that are.
Have to live under a fascist ass clown making decisions that no one can, no
one can discern like which direction we're headed in.
This is, is that unfair?
Fascist ass clown.
FAC.
This is, the silver lining is the following,
and that is I do think the American economy,
the gears just keep turning.
And people keep innovating,
people keep wanting to buy shit,
people keep wanting to make money, people keep wanting to make money,
people keep coming up with new ideas.
And I think we probably overestimate
the impact that the White House has on,
it makes for a lot of headlines, but I wonder,
I'm pretty sure we overestimated or underestimated,
we give them too much blame and too much credit,
but I would argue that this is that these decisions, it would be
impossible, I think, for them not to trickle down. And the fact that the GDP estimates have already
come down, I think is evidence. These decisions are not good for the economy.
Let's talk about this tennis lawsuit that was filed by Novak Djokovic and his
Association of Tennis Players, also strangely funded by Bill Ackman.
And I read the complaint that they filed
in New York Federal Court.
And I gotta say, it is so compelling.
I mean, issue after issue,
that I mean, the first main thing that they address
is price fixing, the fact that these tennis leagues
all collude with each other to suppress the amount
that they pay their tennis players.
And they have many specific examples.
One of them, which is kind of interesting,
is that Larry Ellison, who bought the BNP Paribas Open,
which is one of these tournaments,
he actually tried to increase the prize money.
He wanted to increase it by $1.6 million.
And the ATP Tour and the WTA Tour said,
no, we're not gonna do that,
because that means
we're gonna have to increase the prize money
for all the other tournaments.
They also have examples of limiting the endorsements
that these players can make.
Like if you wanna compete in these leagues,
you have to forfeit your name and your image
and your likeness rights.
They also control the kind of equipment you can use.
They control which kinds of sponsors
and sponsorships you can accept. They control which kinds of sponsors and sponsorships
you can accept.
And then there's some interesting stuff
about the working conditions,
which sounds a little ridiculous,
like boohoo, professional tennis players,
but it honestly does sound quite grueling
when they lay it out.
You have to play in every tournament year round.
And if you don't, if you skip a game,
you get penalized, even if it's
for like an emergency and it's, it's intentionally an extremely packed
schedule, they overfill the schedule specifically so that other tournaments
that might pay the players more don't compete and so that players don't go
play in other tournaments.
And so what you have here is an extremely vibrant, clear,
antitrust monopolization situation. But as I think you'll probably bring up,
the situation with antitrust and sports leagues is quite precarious. And I could go into that
in a second, but I do first just want to get your reactions to this lawsuit.
I love those. I think there are a few sectors that are more corrupt than sports leagues.
And that is they leverage the fact that people feel really benign about them to
establish regulatory capture and they get even legislation that enables them to be
monopolies.
I mean, if you and I wanted to start a football team, an NFL team in Chicago, we
can't, the NFL gets to decide they can control supply and the owners love it because
that means that they buy $4 billion.
And if they hold onto it for 10 years, they know it'll go up in value because
they know the number of billionaires will increase as the economy increases.
And there's a fixed set of supply.
I mean, these things are so corrupt and they leverage this monopoly power and they extract rents from the players, from consumers,
ticket prices have accelerated.
They're essentially legal monopolies.
And it's just ridiculous to think that why shouldn't you be able to start
a tournament, create another team?
I mean, think about any business that said, okay, for every city,
there can only be two software companies.
And the governing body ruled by the owners of these software companies get to decide
who the entrants are or are not.
And then if they basically have one league, that means you extract rents from the players
where you're the only game in town and you get to decide, you know, how much money the
maker don't make.
So it's, and it's especially bad in tennis
where the players command only 18% of the total revenue
generated by the sport compared to basketball
where the players get 50% and soccer get, they get 61%.
So I love this.
And I love that Liv came in and
basically challenged the monopoly of the PGA.
So I think competition is a good thing, but this is a
perfect example of corruption with this veneer of
benign goodwill because people have such
affection for sports.
But these are monopolies and the rents being
charged to ticket holders or consumers and advertisers who have, you know, have a limited supply
of, of, of games, et cetera, and to the players themselves is bottom line is
corrupt.
It's I love, I love this ad.
I love it.
I think the important thing you mentioned there though, is legal monopoly.
And this is what the interest And this is the very interesting
thing about sports and sports leagues. We have very robust antitrust laws in America and in Europe.
We crack down on anti-competitive behavior constantly. I mean, we talk a lot on this show
about antitrust and antitrust enforcement. There is one exception, both in the US and in Europe, to antitrust laws, and that is sports leagues.
They have decided in the courts, both in America and in Europe,
that sports leagues are not like regular businesses, that sports leagues actually need monopolization.
They need these governing bodies to cooperate with each other,
because their belief is that sports
only work if you have basically cooperation among the governing bodies such that the teams
and the players can compete on an even playing field.
In other words, their belief is it needs to be rigged in favour of entertainment.
And this is a long, strange history that goes back all the way to 1922,
when there was an antitrust lawsuit against the professional baseball league in America,
what is now the MLB. And the Supreme Court decided to make an exemption for the baseball
league. And that is why today the MLB is the only entity in the United States that is not
subject to antitrust laws. So this will be really interesting to see because yes, they make a great case here.
Yes, if you look at all of the details, it's 100% a monopoly.
There's no question about it.
But if you look at the history of antitrust in sports, I think it would indicate that
this is probably not going to go through because every time this happens, the courts review
it.
They look at the legislation and they say, yeah, you know, we see where
you're coming from, but sports is different.
So we can't convict here.
So we'll see what happens.
I'm kind of rooting for the tennis players.
Maybe that's just cause I like Djokovic, but if I had to predict, I would
say that the PTPA here does not win this case.
I would predict that the sports leagues will come out on top.
You may be right.
Cause I don't know what the kind of established law is, but you want to talk
about corruption, start talking about the international bodies that don't even
have to abide by anyone they, they live in this kind of Nether Netherland where
there's no essentially they're not subject to laws of any one nation and
they've established such monopolies and people have tried to take them on and
it hasn't worked had Turner started something called the Goodwill Games.
Try and, you know, start a competitive. My big idea when the World Cup was going through all of this nonsense, I do work with Nike, Adidas.
And I brought up with both of them, I said, why wouldn't you basically start a nonprofit and host a competitor or start a competitor of the World Cup. And just give all the money back to the, you know, try and break even, but
basically try and root out the corruption that about six, eight years ago, the
corruption at UEFA went just absolutely insane with paying off local officials.
And it became about bribes who, what host country got to host the World Cup.
So anyways, I would like to see, I hope this works, but I trust that you've done
the homework here and don't think that you think the courts are going to side
with the league.
Let's move on to BYD.
Remember this is the Chinese electric vehicle company and they've just come out
with this new charger for their vehicles, which is four times more powerful than Tesla's supercharger.
So it adds 80 kilometers for every minute of charging.
There are some technical questions that need to be addressed.
For example, there are concerns over what this does
to the lifetime durability of the battery.
It might decrease the quality over time.
Supposedly, it doesn't work very well for older car batteries.
So there are little questions around it.
But the overarching implication here is quite simple.
BYD is pulling away from Tesla,
both in terms of the vehicle sales.
We've talked a lot about that.
BYD is now the global leader in EV sales as of last quarter.
But now, Tesla had this differentiator, this super
charging system that everyone was very excited about.
And BYD is now pulling ahead in charging too.
So Scott, your reactions to this news and the fact that BYD
climbed again, it's now at a record high.
There's just no getting around it.
BYD has surpassed Tesla on almost every level in terms of tech.
And Tesla sales in China have been cut in half in February.
They're down 49% while BYD's rose 161%.
Their latest vehicle is 75% less expensive.
So four BYD's for the price of one Tesla.
This feels like it sort of is a metaphor for China in general.
And that is in the last three months, China as kind of evidence bore
indicated or a metaphor for the resurgence is BYD. A year to date, BYD stock is up 64% and it trades
at 33 times earnings while Tesla is down 38%, but still trades at 166 times earnings are said differently. And I love this stat. The market values each Tesla car sold at 425,000 in market cap and each car from
BYD, even after this run up for $39,000 a car.
So even despite the fact that BYD stock has skyrocketed and Tesla's has come down.
I mean, think about this.
and Tesla's has come down.
I mean, think about this. The market still values Tesla at 10 times
the value per car produced by BYD and BYD is growing.
So one of these, it would appear either BYD is dramatically,
and this is the question,
is BYD dramatically undervalued
or is Tesla dramatically overvalued?
And of course, I believe the answer is yes.
Yeah, it is pretty remarkable,
the stock performance of this company so far,
up 60% year to date.
It's up almost 100% in the past year.
It's doubled in the past year.
And I think there was a great article
by Liam Denning at Bloomberg,
which I think you shared with us.
And it basically just plots the stock prices of these two companies in the past three months,
year to date, Tesla versus BYD. And what is so striking is that it looks like,
it's basically a mirror image. I mean, if you listen to the podcast, it's harder to describe,
but you know, for every dollar increase in BYD
stock, you see a dollar decrease in Tesla stock. And you know, you just plot it out. BYD up 50%,
50 to 60%, Tesla coming down 50 to 60%. And basically what it tells you is this isn't just
a matter of, oh, BYD is doing really well right now. This is a matter of BYD is actively eating Tesla's lunch.
Every time Tesla does not make a sale or their sales decline, you're seeing an increase reflected
in the sales of BYD.
Every time Tesla's stock comes down, BYD stock goes up.
So I think we can only expect this trend is going to continue.
And it does feel like the market is beginning to recognize that this other company in China that has these cheaper cars,
it also has cheaper software, it's got these superchargers that are four times more powerful than Tesla's.
It's becoming very clear. BYD is probably going to be the new Tesla.
We'll be right back after the break with a look at Germany's defense spending.
If you're enjoying the show so far, be sure to give ProfitUMarket a follow wherever you
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We're back with ProfGMarkets.
German lawmakers approved a major boost in defense and infrastructure spending.
The plan removes borrowing limits for defense spending above 1% of GDP and creates a $533 billion infrastructure fund. It's a major shift for Germany, which
is historically cautious on defence spending and on debt. Previous borrowing limits were
capped at 0.35% of GDP. Now, this move could drive up to $1 trillion in investments over
the next decade.
We've discussed on this show how increased defense spending in Europe may boost their
equity markets, right, as investors are looking for an exit strategy from the US.
It does appear that that rotation is already starting to materialize and I have some data
we can go through.
But first, Scott, I want to get your reaction to this news from Germany, massive defense spending, a big increase in infrastructure spending too, and also the German stock market
on that news hit a record high.
I think this is overdue and just to call balls and strikes, I think that this is a benefit
that we've derived from the Trump administration.
I don't like the way they're going about it, but for a long time, everyone has been saying
that Japan and Germany and Europe have
been freeloading or free riding off of the military umbrella and expenditure of
the United States. And finally, it looks like they're stepping up.
And I do think that that is a direct function of Trump's withdrawal or basically
saying, you can no longer count on us. I mean, this will be good,
I think for the German economy because they're outstanding in manufacturing.
So you would think that they would make great weapons
systems and I like the idea.
I think Germany is a well-run, well-governed place.
And like I said, I think defense spending could be
the stimulus and also I'm trying to play this trade.
I think the Europe and defense trade is going to be a big one.
And I've just recently made an investment in a European aviation company that I think has some defense opportunities and I'm doing it based on two things.
I'm hoping to get sort of a double whammy of capital flows into Europe and
also the increase in defense spending.
Yeah.
If you just look at the stock market,
the DAX, D-A-X, the German stock market,
it rose around 2%.
It's now up 15% year to date.
It's one of the best performing stock markets
in the world right now.
You compare it to the S&P, which is down 4%.
It's outperforming the US.
It's also outperforming emerging markets. And, you know,
I think the question is, why is it doing this well? Because 500 billion in stimulus, it's a lot,
but it's not that much. And I don't think it's the sole explanation for why you're seeing this
explosion in values. And I think what's really driving this rally right now is the story that this spending decision tells
about what is going to happen in Germany.
Because we've discussed this before.
This is a country that hates debt.
They have a 60% debt to GDP ratio.
It's the lowest of the G7 by far.
You look at the UK, it's like 100%.
The US, obviously, really high, 120%. And in addition to
simply not taking on debt, they also have all of these rules and these controls that prevent them
from borrowing in the future. This is just the way their economy works. And I think a lot of that
is sort of a post-traumatic stress from the second world war,
where they realized we can't really trust ourselves.
We need to take extreme measures.
We need to make sure we never dig ourselves
into these kinds of holes.
And one way we can do that
is by stringently limiting our ability to borrow money.
As a result, as we've talked about,
their economy has been, eh, you know, fine,
but compared to the US, pretty sluggish.
And so I think last week was this pivotal moment
in the narrative where the government said,
by a huge majority, by the way, okay,
we're going to dramatically change our approach to spending.
And in addition to that spending bill,
they also stripped out these debt limits I talked about,
these controls that they have on how much they can borrow,
which are literally enshrined in their constitution.
So, you know, I mentioned that 0.35% number.
It used to be that the deficit was only allowed to hit 0.35% of GDP.
That was the max.
And last week they said, nope, we're going to get rid of that.
We're going to make an exception here.
So I think a lot of this is also a turning point in the story for Germany.
They had this decades long love affair with balancing the budget, with being fiscally
conservative and they literally just decided we're not doing that anymore.
We're going to have this big fiscal spending package today. And I think investors are probably believing,
if they're going to do this now,
they're probably going to do similar things in the future.
They're probably going to spend even more tomorrow.
And all of that government spending,
of course, if we're being realistic,
it's mostly going to go to German companies
and all of that money is going to flow to their bottom line.
The rivers are reversing.
European equity funds registered their largest four-week inflows in nearly 10 years.
And that's the most significant rotation out of US
into European equity since 1999.
And a B of A survey showed that 60% of investors
expect stronger European growth in the next year,
up 9% from just two months ago.
So 9% of people thought Europe was going to grow.
Now it's 60%.
The thesis I would have going into this is that they're estimating or they're
proposing that the European union is going to go from 1.9% of GDP on defense to 3%.
19 trillion dollar economy.
You're talking about 150 to 200 billion in additional capex that the market
wasn't expecting just six months ago. And that's annual. And where's that going to go? And what
companies are going to be in front of that tsunami of capital? And all of that with the tension
between the US and Europe. It used to be, okay, Europe, increase your defense spending. And by
the way, please buy our submarines and our missiles. And there's no fucking way they're doing
that now. Germany might say in order, in order to build
these systems, we might buy some parts from UK and
Italian companies or French companies, but no,
we're not, we're not going to buy from the US.
Sorry guys.
It'll be an intra European stimulus.
Um, I think it's, I think it's really fascinating.
I'm also quite optimistic about it.
I, I like the fact that Europe who would, what I think is kind of the home of a lot of progressive liberal thought and really has been a kind of a beacon of light for, I don't know, philosophy and democracy and kind of modern civilization.
I'd like to see them get their time in the sun outside of just Zara and LVMH.
them get their time in the sun outside of just Zara and LVMH. Yeah, I just want to emphasize that Bank of America data you mentioned right there, because
it is pretty remarkable, especially in the context of everything you've been talking
about.
You've been saying for months that you want to rotate out of the US and into Europe.
I just want to emphasize this data.
So this is the survey that Bank of America does of all of the fund managers.
It's a very reliable survey to understand how capital flows are moving in the world.
And they found that US equity allocations, allocations into American companies in
March, so this month, they dropped 40%.
And that is the largest drop ever.
Meanwhile, Eurozone stock allocations jumped 27% and that shift from US equities
into European equities, that transformation, that is the largest shift since 1999.
So the thing that you've been talking about for months now, and which I've been
kind of like, okay, maybe, yeah, okay,
you're gonna rotate out, you're gonna trim your holdings.
It's literally happening in record numbers now.
And it does beg the personal question,
how far into that rotation are you right now?
I think the dream scenario would be
that you sold immediately when you said you were thinking about it two months ago.
But I know that these things take a little bit more time.
The answer is not far enough.
I started selling down Apple and Amazon.
They started dropping.
So I thought I'll wait till they get back.
They haven't gotten back.
And this is one of my many flaws as an investor.
Apple and Amazon are kind of 80 or 90% of their
all-time highs, but because they were at a hundred
percent of their all-time highs 60 days ago, I'm
kicking myself and I don't want to sell.
So I wish I'd actually done what I said to do.
My biggest investment is in real estate, but my
second biggest is with a fund run by my friend,
Orlando Mochant, and he just invests in non-US special sits.
And he's up, it's a Len of partners,
he's up 12% year to date.
And I like him because he's highly diversified.
The last four years has been really difficult for him
because he's not in US growth,
but he's been flat because he's good,
and he's been very diversified.
Actually, we're actually a little bit up,
I shouldn't say that, I think we've compounded at eight
or 9%, but everything else been compounding.
And now that everything's going down, he's rocking and rolling.
The bottom line is I didn't rotate as aggressively as I should have.
But what my friend Orlando, who I've been talking to about this says is that these
cycles are usually multi-year cycles.
And so we're kind of in the second ending.
If you really believe our thesis is accurate, there's this great rotation or the rivers reversing flow.
We're kind of, we're in inning one,
maybe we're in the bottom of the first inning.
And you're gonna see,
because even if you look at Apple, all right,
okay, it's lost 20% of its value in the last,
whatever, two, three months, it's still at a P of 31.
The hard part is when you think about,
and the reason I've been a bit reticent,
my two biggest equity holdings are Apple and Amazon,
is that I have about a,
I'm up about somewhere between eight and 12 fold
on each of them.
So you gotta ask yourself when you're selling a stock,
what other equity do I wanna buy at 77 cents on the dollar?
Cause I'll take a 23% tax hit.
So I got to feel strong enough that there's an opportunity,
a better opportunity with 77 cents on the dollar rather than just holding Apple
and Amazon. And I got to that point a couple of months ago,
I'm still going to continue to sell down cause while it's not the most expensive
it's been, it's still expensive.
And I am actively looking for a European and I've always been somewhat remiss to invest in
Chinese stocks, although I wish I had. But where I'm really starting to look now is at Latin America
where you haven't seen the same sort of run up. And I think there's a lot of great deals,
specifically in Brazil. But I am going to, you know, I calculate, I'm like 80 or 90% in US related equities and investments in real estate.
And I want to move down to 50 or 60.
Yeah, I'm sure there are a lot of people listening who are trying to think, okay, what do I do?
How do I get some European exposure?
What I would say, if you want to do this yourself, when we talk about this a lot, the safest way to do it,
and probably the smallest way to do it,
is just to buy a diversified portfolio of stocks
in the form of an ETF.
So some of the low cost options you could look at,
Vanguard has VGK, also iShares has one, IEUR,
that's their core Europe ETF.
Those are just options that are low cost.
I'm not saying you have to do those.
I'm not being paid by Vanguard or iShares to say that.
I think the point being though,
I wouldn't go in and try to find all of the gems
in the European stock market.
Don't go picking individual stocks.
I think the best thing that you could do here
is just look at the European stock market indexes,
look at the ETFs and the index funds and find the ones that are low cost and that make sense for
you.
In sum, you're exactly right.
Index funds, dollar cost average in, but keep in mind if you're a hundred percent invested
between your real estate, between your savings and between your stocks in US companies, you
might think you're diversified
or not. And Goldman just put out research saying that when stocks get this expensive,
it usually indicates almost flat returns for the next decade. So, you know, we'll see. They've
been wrong before, but absolutely, I think you want a little bit of exposure to some of the
international markets. I mean, just think about the sentiment around Europe,
how much has changed in the last 60 days
and what it's overshadowed.
China, as evidenced by the BYD story,
is having a bit of a like,
don't forget about us between DeepSeek, between BYD.
China's like, I don't, you know,
forget about us at your own peril, folks.
We're still the second largest economy.
We're still very good at what we do.
We're still really well managed.
I mean, I'm even thinking about going back.
I never, I didn't think I'd be back in China
for another five or 10 years.
And I'm thinking, oh, maybe it's time to do a trip there.
We were talking to Alice Han about it.
We gotta do a trip and we gotta do a live podcast there.
And we gotta meet with Xi Jinping in the Politburo.
Oh yeah, that's gonna happen.
We're such players.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Influence.
You're more likely to stop in Seoul on your way back
and join a K-pop band.
I'll be the sullen one.
I'll be the sullen one that gets addicted to heroin.
You'll be the front man that everyone's crazy about.
Anyways.
We'll be right back after the break
with a look at ultra Luxury Hotels.
If you're enjoying the show so far, hit follow and leave us a review on ProfG Markets.
We're back with Profitry Markets.
Ultra-luxury hotel group Armand is seeking $2 billion from investors to drive its global
expansion with plans to grow its presence across the Middle East and Africa.
The funds will support 23 ongoing hotel projects and the development of Armand Residences,
a collection of lavish homes offering hotel-level amenities.
Additionally, the company plans to launch a new hotel line
tailored to a younger clientele.
This is not groundbreaking news.
It's not earth-shattering from an economic perspective,
but we got to cover it because, Scott, you are the expert,
the world-renowned expert on luxury hotels.
You've stayed at probably every Armand property in the world.
And so, you know, anytime that the Armand shows up in, in the headlines, for any
reason, I think we've got to cover it.
I think we've got to look at the luxury hotel market.
So Scott, please take it away.
What is your reaction to the Armand group going out and raising $2
billion to expand across the globe?
So I'm, I'm fascinated by this industry.
As you referenced, I spend a disproportionate amount of my money on, you know, I
wrote that book on happiness.
And one of the things I took away from it, I struggled with happiness.
And one of the things I took away from writing a book on it is that every piece
of research says that we overestimate the happiness things will give us and
underestimate the happiness that experiences will give us.
So I spend a disproportionate amount of my income on travel and I don't travel
the cities. I travel to hotels.
I'm obsessed with those hotel lists and I just find it absolutely fascinating.
And if there's a great new hotel, I'll travel to the hotel.
I didn't go to the PSG game with my son in Paris.
I went to the new Cheval Blanc.
That's how I travel.
I go to hotels, I don't go to cities.
And I'm fascinated by the business.
So first off the business model, let me back up.
Peter Drucker said demographics are destiny.
And that is every major business trend can be predicted by demographics.
And what you want to do is you want to get in front of a demographic trend.
It's like surfing when the waves are perfect, right?
It's easy to be a great surfer with great waves or a great skier with great
powder and demographics are the great powder and great waves.
And one of the biggest demographic trends, quite frankly, is just the wealthy.
The number of millionaires in the U.S.
had get this has doubled since 2020.
So it's just, it's staggering.
One in 15 Americans is now considered a millionaire
and a projected 16% growth to 25 millionaires by 2028.
So the fastest growing demographic group
is not even the 1%, it's a 0.1%.
And if you think about the brands in the hotel space, So the fastest growing demographic group is not even the 1%, it's a 0.1%.
And if you think about the brands in the hotel space,
the nicest brands were the Rich Carlton and the Four Seasons.
They were kind of the duopoly for rich people.
And then Mandarin Oriental kind of saw an opportunity out of Hong Kong,
came in tapping into wealthy Asians and the great brand halo of Asian service.
And then the explosion in mega kind of cent
of millionaires and billionaires,
not even, but just the super wealthy, so to speak.
I'd say that's probably people with $10 million and above.
A whole raft of brands have come in
above those luxury brands.
Rosewood, Almond as we're talking about,
Cheval and Blanc, Six Senses.
And they basically have come in
and they've leveraged a lot.
They've leveraged demographics,
they've leveraged the new means of branding.
And that is only the Four Seasons of the Ritz Carlton
or Marriott or Hilton had the money to develop
very expensive reservation systems and do branding.
And now branding isn't a function of advertising,
it's a function of Instagram.
And these hotels are literally an Instagram orgy.
They are so over the top.
They have such a beautiful clientele.
They're in such beautiful locales
that basically their entire marketing is on.
At the Hotel du Cap at any given moment,
there are a thousand Instagram postings an hour,
just saying, look at this place.
Look how incredible this place is.
Look at how incredible the food is.
If you go to, you know, whatever it might be, I'm trying to think of the Rosewood Mayacoba,
these things are just built for Instagram.
So they've taken advantage of the new kind of content creation, usurping marketing spend or replacing
or obviating the need for marketing spend.
And you have also post COVID is sort of a YOLO mentality
where people are saying, for the first time,
I'll spend $5,000 a night on a hotel.
And people, even rich people never would have thought
of that, they never would have considered it.
But now they're like, okay, maybe I know someone who's died.
Maybe I'm in my sixties. I've got the money.
This thing is extraordinary.
This place is just extraordinary.
I, you know, will pay 5,000 bucks a night.
The business model is also incredible because what they do
is they find a local billionaire that wants to say,
I own the Four Seasons in Hawaii, Michael Dell.
They pay for the construction.
They then enter into a management agreement with the flag, the Four Seasons,
or Rosewood who manages it, does the service, does the training,
does the standards, the decorations, the interior design has the reservation
system and they take say between eight and 12% a year, which doesn't sound like
a lot, but most of it hits the bottom line because the costs of the employees is funded out of the revenue.
And then they take an additional 8 to 12%.
So even in 2008, when the market crashes, the Four Seasons still makes money because
they're taking 8 to 12% off the top.
And they have a services agreement where the owner of the Four Seasons in Midtown Manhattan
basically has to declare bankruptcy because he has to maintain certain levels of service per his agreement with the Four Seasons.
So the Four Seasons only actually owns one of their hotels.
The rest, they get other people to finance and they take a very high margin management fee to kind of run the place.
So they outsource the capital risk. They manage or they train or they create the service standards and they just get
all high margin, incredible revenue.
In addition, they found another way to make a shit ton of money.
And that is they said, okay, let's take a 5 million or an $8 million condo in the,
in a high rise on the beach and South beach.
And we've branded the almond residences and we can charge $12 million for it
because they get hotel amenities and the branding
and the owner when he or she is not there
can put it back into the rental pool and they rent it out
and they split the revenue.
The owner gets 50% and the brand gets 50%.
So I get someone else to finance the construction
of something ridiculously overpay for it.
And then it continues to make revenue for me because of the brand.
I mean, this really is a lesson in the power of brands, a lesson in the power of demographic trends,
and a lesson in kind of business models around you don't want to be in the business of owning the capital.
You want to be in the business of owning the capital.
You want to be in the business of managing it and taking revenue off of the top.
One thing I often think about Scott, we've addressed what the world looks like when it's
ruled by the mega rich. You know, we've seen huge monopolies form, money and lobbying
power starts to take hold in the government. You start to see these populist movements.
You also start to see the rise in these luxury brands and these luxury items
and these businesses that specifically service extremely rich people, where
you can charge these incredibly high prices.
My question is what is going to happen when all these billionaires and
multimillionaires start dying because they're all getting old-ish.
And what's going to happen when all of that wealth is transferred on to, I mean,
if we had to guess, their children and their grandchildren.
What happens to a society that is dominated by people, not who made obscene
wealth, but who inherited obscene wealth.
Just to keep it real,
I wanna talk about a couple other hotel stories.
When I was right out of business school,
I started a company called Profit and we did consulting
and we would just take any engagement.
And I took an engagement with a pager company
helping them figure out their customer service.
And it was in Minneapolis. And I went with my friend Lee Lotus. And it was, I remember it because it was the day of the Clinton-Bush-Perot debate.
And we got a hotel for 39 bucks a night, I think at the Minneapolis airport. And we had to go out and try and buy nose plugs or some like weird Vaseline to put under our,
or weird scent to put under our noses
because it stank so badly of smoke.
It literally felt like someone had fallen asleep
and been burned alive by the smoke.
And then the other one was I was at, I had a client,
I think it was Roots or some Canadian company,
the Montreal, in Montreal.
And it was my own company, we're a small business.
So it was like, I think it was like 70 Canadian.
And I checked in and it was 1993,
and you know, whatever, I was your age.
So the first thing that I do, I settle in
and I turn on porn.
And it's not working.
So I called down to the front desk,
I'm like, the TV's not working.
So this Asian woman comes up.
It's the white lotus scene again.
Yep, it turns on the TV and of course, the porn comes up
and it's like going in and out.
So she sits there and starts banging on the TV
and occasionally the porn comes in and it comes out,
comes in, comes out.
Were you not ashamed?
Oh, it was fucking humiliating.
It was like crazy embarrassing.
And I remember thinking, and then this couple,
this family of like five is looking for the room.
They come into my room and start going,
where's room 308?
Is my porn is coming on and off my TV?
She's banging on the TV.
And I looked at the couch.
I remember the exact moment.
I looked at the couch and it was covered in plastic.
And I thought, this is where people come to kill themselves.
This is that kind of place.
You said I want out.
I can't fill this void in my chest.
I'm going to go check into this hotel.
And anyway, so I've had, I've seen, I've seen hotels from all ends of the spectrum.
Um, I'm sorry.
What was the question?
Ed, what was the question?
My question is what is going to happen when the wealth transfer finally occurs?
Look, I believe in a really aggressive inheritance tax.
I don't believe in dynastic wealth.
One, it's bad for society.
So rich kids get into the best schools and also inherit the money so they can start businesses.
And there's a myth that the middle class is a
naturally occurring organism.
It isn't, it requires additional
redistribution of income and Republicans and
the incumbents would like us to believe that,
Oh no, the middle class is a naturally
occurring organism and it'll come back on its own.
No, if you don't take money from corporations
and the most fortunate among us and redistributed
in the middle class,
the middle class throughout history eventually goes away. And what you have with dynastic wealth
is you're taking capital that should go back into the ecosystem and just creating these dynasties
of unproductive rich people. Now, the good news is that most of them aren't very happy.
And so for me, the reason that you can justify an exceptional inheritance tax
is that additional capital or inheriting more than say 10 million bucks, that
doesn't increase the happiness of your kids.
Um, I know a lot of rich kids and I know a lot of kids who are not rich and the
levels of happiness are not greater among the rich kids.
Uh, so if, if the whole point is to create a society
where people can have purpose and meaning
and live a happy life,
and they're getting no additional happiness,
if you let them inherit more than say 10 or $20 million,
then what's the point when you could redistribute
that capital to other people
and give them more of a shot?
So I hate dynastic wealth,
but what you're seeing and I see it,
I think I've always resented rich kids because I'm not one of them and I was always jealous of them,
but what you're talking about is already happening, Ed. I mean, when you go to these nice hotels,
there's people in their 50s and 60s and you can tell it's probably their money. And then there's
a whole raft of a younger generation. To be clear, some of them, whether it's tech, some of them, you know, whatever it is, but a lot of
them are there with their parents' credit card.
It's already happening.
By the way, this funding round by Armand, they're looking for investors as we speak, and they're
specifically looking for high net worth individuals to invest.
And they're specifically looking for high net worth individuals to invest.
If you got the call from Armand tomorrow, inviting you say to an SPV into the new Armand residency, would you invest?
100% no.
Uh, the returns are, the returns are shitty because it's a vanity investment.
So there's a lot of people that love the, I'm sure they have some sort of deal.
People love the idea of investing in Armand.
So that means they can extract, they can get very cheap capital,
which spells shitty returns.
So I would bet that it's just not a great investment.
It's like timeshares or I would, I would, I don't, I haven't seen the paperwork
on the underlying dynamics, but because so many people love the idea of investing
in Amman, they're going to get a disproportionate amount of capital such
that they will be able to offer really shitty terms. I would bet the returns will be awful,
but maybe there's some psychic return of saying, oh, I'm an owner of Almond and I get 10% off
of rates. I remember more hotel stories back when I remember taking my girlfriend,
I was trying to impress her a nice hotel in Cabo, but I signed us up.
The reason I got it could go is I signed us up for a
timeshare tour and it was at a turn on when I told her
we had to take a two hour tour in the middle of the
day to look at timeshare opportunities.
That's what happens when you roll with a dog.
That was when I laid that on her, got her down to
Mexico and I'm like, Oh, I got this like free cocktail thing for us.
She's like, Oh, I'm not going to go.
I'm like, you need to go.
It's a timeshare pitch.
We have to go.
Otherwise I can't get this room right.
Do you think that's, do you think that's a turn on?
Oh damn, that doesn't work.
Let's take a look at the week ahead.
We'll see the personal consumption expenditures index for February, as well
as earnings from GameStop and Lululemon. ahead. We'll see the personal consumption expenditures index for February, as well as
earnings from GameStop and Lululemon. Do you have any predictions for us, Scott?
Yeah, my prediction is that the flows of capital into Europe begin to infect not just the defense
contractors, but start to infect the other sectors in the economy. And that we're going to see,
I think so far, European markets
are up 13 or 16 percent. I think they're going to be up 30 plus this year. I think this is a trade,
a momentum trade. And I think there's probably a lot of fund managers right now thinking, okay,
I missed this, but it's not too late. And you're going to see just an entirely different
willingness and promiscuity around allocating big pools of capital to European
stocks that haven't been there for 20 years.
I quite frankly, I just think we're getting started.
To that point, we made the point that US stocks have come down, but they're still expensive.
You make the same case with Europe.
European stocks have gone up, but they're still cheap.
I think you're probably right there.
This episode was produced by Claire Miller and engineered by Benjamin Spencer.
Our associate producer is Alison Weiss.
Mia Silverio is our research lead.
Isabella Kintzel is our research associate.
Drew Burrows is our technical director.
And Catherine Dillon is our executive producer.
Thank you for listening to ProfG Markets from the Vox Media Podcast Network.
Join us for a fresh take on markets on Thursday. As the world turns
And the blood flies
In love, love, love, love