The Prof G Pod with Scott Galloway - Prof G Markets: Meta & Microsoft Brush Off DeepSeek + Starbucks Stages a Comeback
Episode Date: February 3, 2025Follow Prof G Markets: Apple Podcasts Spotify Scott and Ed open the show by discussing the White House’s employee buyout, Starbucks’ fourth quarter earnings, and the beta launch of T-Mobile�...��s exclusive Starlink deal. Then they break down Meta, Microsoft, and Tesla’s earnings, and examine why big tech has yet to adjust its spending plans in response to the DeepSeek drawdown. Order "The Algebra of Wealth," out now Subscribe to No Mercy / No Malice 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
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Support for the show comes from the Fundrise Innovation Fund. One thing really matters in venture capital, investing in the best companies.
And that's exactly what the Fundrise Innovation Fund is aiming to do, amassing a $150 million portfolio with some of the biggest names in tech and AI.
Visit fundrise.com slash profg to check out their portfolio and start investing in minutes.
Carefully consider the investment material before investing, including objectives, risks, charges, and expenses.
This and other information can be found in the Innovation Fund's prospectus
at fundrise.com slash innovation. This is a paid sponsorship.
Hey, ProffG listeners. It's Ed. If you're hearing this message, it's because you're
still listening on the ProffG pod feed, which means you're missing half of our episodes
on our ProffG markets feed. So for all of the content,
head over to the ProfG Markets podcast and hit follow. We've also left a link in the description to make it easier.
Thank you very much, and I'll see you over on the other feed.
Today's number 1.5. That's the percentage of global stocks that Norway's sovereign wealth fund owns, making it the world's largest
single investor. Norway, with a dating scene, is a sauna on a hike and then you jump into a freezing river
and if you survive you get a second date. Not really a joke, just sort of an observation.
Here we are.
Just an observation.
Let's go Norwegian.
Let's make some cabbage here.
This episode is brought to you by Fundrise.
We think we're Norway.
We think we're rich and civilized.
Meanwhile, we're arguing over transgender.
Meanwhile, we're arguing over Chan.
Anyways, nevermind.
Keep that in.
I'm getting so fucking old.
I think I'm, I think I'm literally think I'm having one of several million strokes that I've been experiencing.
You get to my age, Ed, a stroke is kind of like, I don't know.
It's like a, it's like an erection when you're your age.
It just kind of happens when you're least expecting it.
Every morning.
Don't brag.
Don't rub it in my face.
Literally, literally don't rub it in my face, literally.
Literally don't rub it in my face.
Anyways.
It all comes back to the penis.
How are you, Scott?
I'm doing pretty well.
I found out I have to be in Orlando for a speaking gig.
And at first I was bummed and now I'm like
kind of sick of my kids.
So I'm sort of excited.
So I'm headed to Orlando on Monday.
And then I go up to New York for four days.
I'm excited about that.
I'm going to do our, our team strategy meeting where you're all going to present
your plan and I'm going to say you make too much money and you're not growing
revenues fast enough, just so you know, that's the feedback you're going to get.
I'm excited.
What about you?
What are you up to?
Um, let's see, I got my sister visiting this weekend.
That'll be pretty fun.
You're close with your sister, aren't you?
Yeah, I've gotten really close with her in the past couple of years.
I've always been pretty close, but gotten really close with her
over the past couple of years.
So she's visiting.
And why do you think that is?
I think maybe I'm just mature or maybe we're both more mature.
I know I used to feel kind of competitive with her.
I think that was probably a problem.
And I feel like when you're just more secure about yourself, it's just easier
to kind of get along with people or something. Or when you, I don't know, I feel like we
just have a very mature, nice relationship. So I hope that continues because I think relationships
go up and down as well.
Does she have kids?
No, she's not. But she got married a year ago. So she's definitely thinking about it.
You'll be a great uncle. You're like, kind of central casting to be an uncle.
I feel like I'm going to be kind of awkward with kids.
I think I'm not very good with kids already.
Well, you're awkward to begin with, but I think you'll be probably a little bit less awkward with children.
I see. I see it differently.
I think I can sort of like fake my way through being normal with adults.
But when it comes to kids, I'm going to be kind of like fumbling about what to talk about.
I don't know. I think you just make fart jokes and threaten to hit them if they don't behave.
That's my approach to children.
But no dick jokes.
I can get to enjoy.
You can get on the wrong list.
The next time you move, you have to go next door and tell them you've moved in
next door, which is real, a real inconvenience.
It's real bummer.
All right.
Well, should we start with our weekly review of market vitals?
Let's do it.
My brother, let's do it.
Uncle Ed.
The S&P 500 spent a week recovering from Monday's drawdown, the dollar rose, Bitcoin crashed below 100,000, but then rebounded by Thursday and the yield on 10-year
treasuries declined. Shifting to the headlines.
President Trump is adopting a corporate style buyout strategy,
offering federal workers the option to resign by February 6th
in exchange for pay through the end of September.
The White House expects 5% to 10% of federal employees
to accept the offer.
Starbucks' same store sales fell 4%
for the fourth straight quarter.
However, revenue beat expectations
and CEO Brian Nicol shared more details from his Back to Starbucks strategy,
emphasising a renewed focus on customer experience. The stock was up 8% on that news.
And finally, T-Mobile's fourth quarter revenue exceeded expectations,
up nearly 7% year over year. The company also issued its strongest start
of year guidance to date.
That earnings beat coincided with the beta launch
of its Starlink program,
where it'll be offering its customers exclusive access
to Starlink for the first year.
So Scott, let's start with this federal buyout here.
Just to just be clear, this is not the same
as a corporate buyout or a leverage buyout where you're buying out the investors in a company to control
the company. This is what's known as an employee buyout. And the reason companies
usually do this is to cut down on costs. Basically, you essentially offer your
employees a voluntary severance package. They can take it or leave it. And the
idea is to incentivize your employees to leave the company with that
severance package.
So Trump is doing this except he's doing it with the U S government.
Good idea or bad idea, Scott?
So I think on a regular basis, you need to, it's probably a good idea to have
some churn and to have some recalibration of a company.
And especially I think with the federal government where I would think sometimes
because of deficit spending and more bureaucracy, I'll probably get a decent
amount of emails disagreeing with me.
I think sometimes that federal employees aren't subject to the same regular
reviews or standards that the private market imposes on the private sector.
So I'm kind of down with the idea
of occasionally looking at the federal government or state and local agencies
and reviewing it or reviewing the size of it. Having said that, as a percentage of the population,
our federal employee base has actually been level or declined over the last 40 or 50 years. So it's not like it's swelled beyond something crazy, if you will.
Now it's not kind of the decision or what you do.
It's how you do it.
I do not like buyouts.
And that is, I generally find that the people who take buyouts are your most
talented people because who's going to take a buyout, Oh, I'm a really talented
30 year old that has all sorts of options and they're going to pay me.
And I've been thinking about leaving because I have a lot of opportunities outside of the, you know,
the DOJ or whatever it might be.
Boom. Oh my gosh. I'm going to get eight months. Okay. Hey, Google. Hey, Salesforce. Hey, Aiken Gump or whatever.
I'm in and I got an eight month bonus, a signing bonus to come to you. So I find it's a self-defeating process buyouts.
And that is, I believe in performance reviews, I would have put more pressure
on them to say, to have a thoughtful way to say, okay, let's do assessments.
Because there's probably some departments that should be staffed up.
The IRS would probably hire more people for every dollar you put
into the IRS, you get 12 back.
And there's other departments that you probably lose more
than five or 10%.
I find this is just lazy
and you end up losing kind of your best.
Is there ever a situation where a buyout makes sense?
I guess your argument here is that it's sort of
the quickest way to cut down costs,
but it's not the most effective.
I think the other side to this would be, well, do we really want to build an entire apparatus
and do this entire review that's going to cost a lot of money, and we're going to figure out all of these
ways to understand which of our employees are delivering the most amount of value versus the others?
It sounds like a lot of bureaucracy versus this very quick
and easy way of just shaving down costs and also just shaving down your employee base.
So is there ever a situation where it does make sense?
When I was on the board of the New York Times, they did a lot of quote unquote buyouts of
different newsrooms.
They owned a bunch of newspapers and local and regional newspapers were just getting
the shit kicked out of them.
They just didn't have a place in the new economy.
And so they would do buyouts.
And the way they would do it was they would go to what I call the kind of
critical employees and say, FYI, we're letting in on this.
We're going to do a buyout, but we have plans for you and we want you to stay.
I think in any organization, it shouldn't be that hard to identify kind of critical leadership or people who are doing, who are exceptional. And I think
there's this hallmark version of an organization where everyone's great. And if anyone who's not
great, it's about the culture and we just got to find them in the right role. I don't buy that.
I've said for a while, and this is not again again, aspirational, you never say this in all hands.
I've kind of jokingly but have seriously said 10% of the employees add 120% of the value
and the other 90% are negative 20.
And you need to identify that 10%, especially as you scale an organization, and make sure
that they're nailed to the ground.
This is your equity stake.
I'm overpaying you.
You have no reason to ever leave.
You're going to do really well here.
It's one thing to cut costs, but what you want to do is you want to improve the tensile strength and the effectiveness.
It's almost like you could, I would argue if you had a growth mindset, you'd say,
I'm going to give the IRS more money, but I need them to increase tax revenues by X
dollars. I need the Department of Veteran Affairs to increase its customer service or its reviews,
its satisfaction reviews among veterans by 5% a year for the next four years. And here's a bonus
pool. And we'll keep hiring static, but we need you to be more productive.
We need you to be better at what you do.
I think that says Elon Musk written all over it
that rather than offering a carrot as well,
they're going at it with sort of a,
kind of a blunt instrument stick.
So I don't think this is the right way to go about it.
Yeah, it's one thing to offer an employee buyout.
It's another thing to insult all of your employees,
call them lazy, and offer them our DEI hires,
and then offer them a buyout.
Those are two very different things.
And just some statistics to look at here.
I think when we think about this bloated government trope,
we're sort of thinking of a Gen Z DEI hire
who's working at the DOJ or the Department of Education.
But when we think about just the actual demographic makeup
of the federal employee base, actually half of them
belong to one of these three agencies,
the Department of Defense, Department of Veterans Affairs,
and the Department of Homeland Security.
So that's not really the people
that you would think Trump is targeting
with all of his rhetoric.
In addition, the average federal employee is 47 years old.
A fifth of federal workers are already eligible
for retirement, only 7% are under the age of 30.
So I just think the narrative that we're telling ourselves about the government and who works
for the government, particularly driven with this DEI or anti-DEI obsession, doesn't really
tell the true story of who actually works for the government.
The most likely candidate to get cut is a 50-year- old middle-aged white person who works the
Department of Defense. That's the most likely candidate. So just think is worth
keeping in mind. Let's look at the numbers and then we can compare it to the
narrative we're being told. Let's move on to Starbucks and their earnings. I think
the biggest change here, the most important thing coming out of these earnings was this reversal
of Starbucks' open door policy.
And basically the open door policy said, anyone can come in and anyone can use our amenities
and you know, come in, hang out, it's free for all.
And this gets back to something that I said on this podcast a while ago, which is, you
know, Starbucks used to be the premium coffee chain in America.
You think about the premium brands today, you think La Cologne or Blue Bottle or in
New York we have Irving Farms, these sort of nice, cool coffee chains where you hang
out.
This, that's what Starbucks used to be.
Over time, it has devolved into what looks like a fast food chain.
And I think a lot of that is, quite frankly,
the fact that it has become almost like a halfway
house for homeless people.
I mean, practically every Starbucks you enter,
you're either seeing homeless people around the side
or homeless people sometimes inside of the stores.
And this is not a very comfortable thing to talk about, but I find it so interesting because
this new policy is directly addressing that.
They now say that you can only use the bathroom if you're buying an item.
You can only use the Wi-Fi if you're buying an item.
They're going to train the baristas on how to handle loiterers, which is going to be
very uncomfortable, but I think it's actually quite important.
And the most interesting development I saw
was a statement made by this guy, Donald Whitehead, who
is the executive director of the National Coalition
for the Homeless.
And he said he was, quote, very concerned about this new Starbucks
policy.
He said, flat out, Starbucks functions
as an important buffer for homeless people.
So this is gonna be really controversial.
I think it's gonna get kind of ugly.
This is not a comfortable topic to be talking about,
but it does get to the heart of Starbucks' issue.
You cannot have a premium specialty coffee brand
that is also highly associated with the homelessness
crisis in America?
Well, my first question to add is, why do you hate the homeless?
Yes, I'm kidding.
I'm kidding.
I think you're exactly right.
I don't think Starbucks, I think Starbucks has an obligation to make money, treat its
employees well, be good to its community, and then pay their fair share of taxes such
that we can have more
systemic, a more systemic approach to homelessness. And I wonder if that same person is worried about
the red lobster, olive garden, and what they're, you know, the fact they're not letting homeless
people hang out. I saw the earnings and I thought, okay, Brian Nichol is the CEO. And this guy
is pretty much Jesus Christ in my book
because he spent the last six years at Chipotle.
So one, he owes me a lot of money.
And I have eaten at Chipotle.
When I'm in New York, I'm going to eat there,
basically lunch.
Mary Jean, my chief of staff, knows, she knows what I like.
And it starts with ch and it ends with po-lay.
I love it there.
I think he did an amazing job.
The stock was up nine X when he was there.
Wow.
So I think that the market just wants to interpret
everything this guy does and love it.
Because when I looked at the actual numbers,
they were fine, but I think the market is looking for reasons to take the stock up under this guy's leadership.
And in the last week, it's up 11%.
So he's added 13 billion.
The company's increased its market cap by $13 billion.
And people have been saying he's already made 50 or 80 million bucks.
That's cheap.
They got a great deal on this guy because the market wants to love him and the market
wants to say, Oh, Jesus Christ is here. And he's great deal on this guy. Because the market wants to love him and the market wants to say,
oh, Jesus Christ is here and he's gonna figure this out.
The thing that stuck out to me, you did your homework here
and your observation is more insightful
and has a more interesting overlay around public policy.
The thing I loved about it is,
it is impossible over time or very difficult
to maintain the discipline to not add more menu items.
Because you launch one, everyone goes into group thing,
people like it, there's some evidence,
and we all start saying,
oh, it makes sense to have charged lemonades
or to have banana bread or to have sandwiches
or to have, you just start, and before you know it,
what Steve Jobs said to the CEO of Nike
when he was on the board there,
he said, get rid of all the shit.
I think at some point Nike was like selling air fresheners
in their stores.
And he said, get rid of all the shit.
And the hardest part about specialty retail
and typically at the end of the day,
this is specialty retail is not what you have,
but what you don't have.
And that is you have a very curated, tight selection
of things that send a very strong signal about the voice.
And my understanding is they are cutting their beverage
and food options by 30%.
That means every three items, one of them is going away.
I think that's a baller move,
and this is what's gonna happen.
In the short run, that'll probably hurt, take a hit to revenues.
It's complicated, new signage costs, new training, but over the long term or the
medium or long term, I would argue it sends a stronger signal about what we do
and what we don't do.
And the bottom line is at the end of the day, Starbuck's problems are pretty basic.
They were charging too much and delivering too little.
And then I go into La Cologne and I'm like, hello, I'm, I'm, I'm rich Corinthian leather. I feel like I'm a,
I feel like I'm a total Euro trash, which I like. And it's, it's simple, great coffee. And I like
the crowd in there. And it just feels a little less, there aren't as many like, you know, napkins
and shit on the ground, right?
Yeah, absolutely.
Yeah, it's, the market's basically reacting to him
addressing the elephant in the room,
which is that Starbucks is no longer
a nice place to hang out.
And I think that's basically the entire game plan.
It's like, we're gonna make Starbucks
a nice place to hang out again.
We're gonna do free refills for our customers.
We're gonna make sure that we don't have homeless people
hanging around.
We're gonna make it sort of nice
and just an enjoyable environment to be in.
And that suddenly solved all of Starbucks' problems,
at least from a stock perspective.
But your point about he is the new Jesus Christ,
I just wanna point out,
they have awarded him $96 million in compensation.
He's been on the job for four months.
So the market thinks he's Jesus and so does management.
90 million in stock awards, a $5 million signing bonus plus buyouts
from his former company, Chipotle.
So he has some serious expectations going into this that he, we hope he'll meet.
So far he's been worth it.
And I don't, I have no problems with out of control CEO compensation.
I just think that should be taxed at 70% once you get above kind of 10 million.
But that's a another podcast.
Should hold on a second.
I had just a fucking fascinating insight and it slipped.
It slipped by hold on.
It's going to be so worth it.
Oh my God.
Hold on. It's gonna be so worth it. Oh my God, hold on.
It's gonna be amazing.
Oh, essentially what they're doing is they're taking money,
the capital they were spending on non-customers
and pouring it back into customers.
I know it wasn't as good as I'd hoped.
We need a mic drop.
Blinding insight.
Really rocked my world.
Should we move on to T-Mobile?
Yeah, let's move on to T-Mobile.
We'll just go over the quarter really quickly.
They beat on earnings, beat on sales.
Sales grew 7% to $22 billion.
Most important number though, was their guidance for new customers in 2025.
So T-Mobile expects to acquire
six million new customers this year.
And that is their largest projection
for net new customers ever.
Which I think is kind of remarkable.
I mean, T-Mobile is sort of a old slow conglomerate.
And then 2025 is for whatever reason
gonna be this breakout year for them
in terms of net new customers.
Why do we think that's gonna happen?
I think the answer has to be Starlink.
I mean, T-Mobile suddenly has this incredible
competitive advantage this year,
and that they will be the only mobile network carrier
that offers Starlink's new direct to sell service.
Now, I don't know that much about the product.
I've never tried it, but supposedly Starlink
is the greatest thing since sliced bread.
You've said it, Scott.
I've heard other people who've used it, they've said it.
Supposedly with Starlink, you will never not have coverage.
You could be in the middle of the desert.
You could be flying on a plane, and you will always not have coverage. You could be in the middle of the desert. You could be flying on a plane
and you will always be connected.
So, you know, I look at this and I'm really excited.
And then I see that new customer guidance number.
I'm like, okay, maybe this makes sense.
Starlink is amazing.
I heard United is doing a deal with Starlink.
I would fly one airline over the other for Starlink.
It's incredible.
And I had one of those moments, you know, you have one of those technology moments, the first time you bought something on your phone or the first time you use Google Maps,
like Jesus Christ is incredible. Yeah, the first time I saw porn.
Wow. Nothing will ever be the same. Nothing will ever be the same.
By the way, no one can make sweet, sweet love to me like me.
All right.
Where were we?
Where were we?
Oh yeah.
T-Mobile, AT&T differentiation for telcos.
So I can't imagine the pounds of flesh that T-Mobile was able to,
that must've been so fun.
Whoever was the Starlink representative
negotiating these deals, they sat down with Verizon,
AT&T and T-Mobile and said, okay, let's be honest,
this is gonna be ugly.
Who wants it?
And we're gonna give one of you a two or three year
exclusive, which is gonna give you tangible differentiation,
which is nearly impossible in your category,
which will add billions, if not tens of billions of dollars
in shareholder value, and we want it all bitches.
So them making these projections is saying to the market,
we think this is going to be a tangible point
of differentiation.
What'll be interesting is when in their earnings
or if they have to disclose the terms of this deal,
because I bet.
Exactly. Yeah, T-Mobile is a terms of this deal. Because I bet. Exactly.
Yeah, T-Mobile is a winner here.
The biggest winner I bet is Starlink because...
Yeah, they're projected to hit $12 billion in revenue this year, which is a 50% year
of a year increase.
You got to think that number is just going to keep exploding.
I mean, they've barely even started yet.
This is hardly in the hands of consumers and they're still printing money.
I mean, most of it is just like military demand at this point. One loser, I will say, from
this whole thing is going to be like Ryan Reynolds and Snoop Dogg because from my understanding,
the only point of differentiation in the mobile carrier service industry is which celebrities
you can hire to be in your Super Bowl ads. And suddenly T-Mobile has Starlink
versus having Snoop Dogg like dancing on camera.
We'll be right back after the break
for a look at earnings from Microsoft, Meta and Tesla.
If you're enjoying the show so far and you haven't subscribed,
be sure to give ProfGMarket a follow
wherever you get your podcasts.
Support for the show comes from the Fundrise Innovation Fund. The investing world seems to be bending towards democratization, but venture capital always
felt like it may be one of the last ivory towers to fall.
It requires a lot of capital, the right relationships, et cetera, et cetera.
That's probably why when the Fundrise Innovation Fund launched promising to democratize
venture capital, there was a lot of skepticism. But the progress they've made in a few years
is hard to argue with. The Innovation Fund has now built a $150 million portfolio of
some of the most highly sought after private tech companies in the world. And their minimum
investment is just 10 bucks, which is virtually unheard of for venture capital. Look, even
the best venture funds should be categorized
as high risk investments.
Venture investing is not for everyone.
See above, high risk.
But at a minimum, you can visit fundrise.com slash profg
to check out the Innovation Funds portfolio for yourself.
Visit fundrise.com slash profg to check out
the Innovation Funds portfolio and start investing today.
Relevant disclaimers can be found at the end of the show and at fundrise.com slash innovation. We're back with Profit.
Meta, Microsoft and Tesla kicked off big tech earnings last week, with investors watching
how they addressed DeepSeek's AI advancements
and the impact of Trump's new policies.
We will start with Meta, which posted record fourth quarter revenue, also issued weaker
than expected forecasts for the current quarter.
Mark Zuckerberg framed DeepSeek's rise as validation of Meta's open source strategy.
He also said that 2025 will reshape the company's relationship with the government.
Shares were up more than 2% in after hours trading.
Just a few little statistics that stood out to me.
Sales up 21% to $47 billion.
I'm always just shocked at how big the numbers are for Meta's revenue.
Operating margins expanded 700 bips to 48%.
And when you look at the family of apps,
which is their main business,
the operating margins are even stronger, it's 60%.
So this was another really strong quarter.
I'm just so bullish on Meta, I have been for a while.
Scott, your reactions to Meta's earnings.
Addiction is a great business and they're executing well against it.
They've taken technology, addiction, network effects, monopoly.
I mean, two-thirds of social media globally is on Meta, really well-run company.
I'm addicted to Instagram. I love it. I think it's fantastic.
I can't stand Mark Zuckerberg and I'm not getting off Instagram.
They continue to perform really well.
I wonder if their hardware appears to be on a roll right now.
They're sold out across the U.
It's the number one product in 60% of Ray-Ban stores,
which obviously isn't a big revenue item,
but they might finally have their own hardware point of distribution so they don't have to kiss
Sundar Pichai or Tim Cook's ass.
Have you tried those, by the way, those new Ray-Ban Meta glasses?
I tried them about a year and a half ago.
My son, I was skiing with my son, and he kept saying, Meta, take a photo.
I'm like, what are you doing?
He's like, I got these Ray-Ban glasses and they're actually, I mean, this was a
year, a year and a half ago and I thought they were pretty good.
So headsets make no sense, but smart glasses, I think there's a future for.
Absolutely.
And I think that, I think that the Zuck is probably going to get some spillover effect
from the massive investment he's made in these headsets.
But you know, they have capital, they've increased their CapEx 60% to 65 billion
around technical talent and AI infrastructure.
Meta AI is used by more people than any other AI assistant
with over 700 million monthly active users.
It's integrated into Instagram, Messenger, WhatsApp.
Yeah, I think that's kind of a bullshit statistic
because I mean, I don't know how many people
are actually actively using the Meta AI tool
on those,
on those platforms. I think they're probably saying that when you search something into
the search bar and Instagram meta AI is being used. I actually don't, I don't, I don't, I mean,
I don't mind it when you disagree with me, despite the fact you hate the homeless.
But what they have is distribution and control of consumer. They do own the rails in a way the chat GPT doesn't, right?
Totally.
And their ability, I mean,
we're talking about those moments,
those technology moments.
I've had some chilling moments where I'm going to see a Paris-Central Mon game,
and I have a real pop-up and it's on hotels in Paris. I'm like, how the fuck did they, I mean, it's incredible
the targeting they could use.
And it goes to the notion that Meta more than I think
almost any organization, maybe with the exception of Uber,
has shown that if you can provide utility,
you can violate everyone's privacy.
That for all the bullshit and all the whining in Brussels
and DC, young people have said, violate my privacy,
just as long as there's a coupon
or I can see where my QX60 is,
if it's coming around the block.
Arguably Mark Zuckerberg right now is the most talented,
I mean, he's one of the three or more,
four most talented business people in the world.
If you just look at it from a shareholder perspective, they made huge
investments, they're running away with it.
And they're monetizing the fact that I said that the core Facebook platform
and now Instagram is the most successful thing in history.
Communism doesn't have this many people.
Capitalism doesn't have this many people.
Democracy, you know, there's no product, the Kardashians, nothing is as successful as Instagram right now as
a product or coupled with the Facebook core platform.
And then what's app, these are the most successful things in history.
As far as I can tell, someone might say, well, no, actually it's Google search,
but, and he has been outstanding.
They have been outstanding at monetizing it anyways.
Uh, couldn't, couldn't happen to a more mendacious fuck group of people, but
yeah, they're, they're doing, they're doing outstanding.
I'll just point out when, when you recommended Meta or you chose Meta
as your stock pick at the end of 2022. The stock was at $90 per share.
It's up to $690.
So if you would have followed Scott Galloway's advice, and nevermind
some of his other advice, but just this one, one stock pick, you'd be up 7X,
almost 8X, it's just insane.
This comeback they've searched.
Well, what was the stock, What was my stock pick at 2020?
What stock?
I'm now I'm really patting myself on the back.
I'm gonna, I'm gonna, I'm gonna elevate your praise on me.
What stock did I say was gonna be the biggest IPO
at 2024 ed?
Reddit, yeah.
Yeah, by the way,
when public five or six months ago,
it's up six fold since its IPO.
Incredible.
I am so angry, I invested,
I'm so angry I didn't back up the the truck fourth or fifth most traffic side in America.
And it went public at a $5 billion market cap in every other, every other company
on that list trades at somewhere between 800 billion and 3 trillion.
Anyways, thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
I'd like to thank my agent.
Exactly.
Just a few more things to go over here on these meta earnings.
And we should probably talk about threads, which has grown to go over here on these meta earnings.
And we should probably talk about threads, which has grown to more than 320 million monthly active users.
I find that astounding when you just consider the number of companies that have tried to create their own Twitter alternatives and the meta does it.
And then within about a year, he's at 320 million MAUs. Just to put that in context, last year, we don't know the official number, but last year
Elon said that X had 550 million monthly active users.
So Meta says they're adding a million MAUs per day.
So assuming that growth continues, threads could very well be bigger than X from a user
perspective by the end of the year.
So I just think we should just give credit to threads as well.
Their AI play is paying off incredibly well.
You mentioned that you're getting those great PSG ads.
They're saying the ad quality has dramatically increased
because of this new AI-powered ad ranking system.
In addition, they are putting out these Gen.AI tools
that they offer to their advertisers.
Six months ago, there were roughly one million advertisers
that were using Meta's Gen.AI tools.
Today, that number is four million.
So let me just think about the use cases of AI,
examples where AI is providing real demonstrable value
in the marketplace.
Meta is capturing all of that.
They're building value in AI, they're
building the data centers, they're building models,
but they're also receiving the value of the AI
in the form of their really high quality ad targeting.
So I just think Meta is absolutely crushing it.
Aside from Zuckerberg's adventures on Joe Rogan,
where he's kind of ruining his reputation, in my opinion,
I think Meta is just doing an incredible job.
I will move on to Microsoft,
unless you have anything else you wanna add.
Nope.
So Microsoft cloud business saw slow growth last quarter
due to limited data center capacity during the earnings call.
Satya Nadella said DeepSeek's innovations
will benefit Microsoft in the long run.
Despite beating expectations with a 12% revenue increase, that growth was the slowest since
2023 and shares fell nearly 5% after hours.
I was a little bit surprised to see the market's reaction to this.
They did beat on revenue.
They beat on revenue, they beat on guidance, they beat on earnings, but the
stock fell 5%.
And I think what investors are mostly concerned about here is the cloud revenue, which missed
by about 1%.
That's Microsoft's Azure revenue.
Scott, do you have any initial reactions to Microsoft's earnings?
I don't know.
I think the market is, you know have any initial reactions to Microsoft's earnings?
I don't know. I think the market is, you know, this is a company that's now, I think it's the
second or third most valuable company in the world. But, you know, the expectations, what you said
a while ago that if you don't blow away expectations, everyone's disappointed.
You know, Azure, all right, it grew 31%, not 33%. That's still incredible.
It's also in this kind of, you know, arms race.
It's CapEx totaled 23 billion for the quarter.
That's almost double what it did last year.
And Nadella has said he's signaling a measured approach
to capital allocation.
You don't want to buy too much of anything at one time.
You want to have the right ratio of modernization and demand.
Very different tone from before.
Yeah.
So shockingly, I've been looking at this, I'm looking at the stock chart and over
the last year, it's basically flat, which I find kind of interesting.
And over the last five years, it's, it's a three and a half fold, but year to date it's flat.
So it hasn't registered the same.
Is that fair?
It's gone flat for kind of the last year, but I don't have a lot of insight here.
Great company, good management.
Based in Seattle.
I think one of the big questions we were definitely asking following the deep seek saga, and this
is a conversation we're having with with Robert Armstrong was, will all of these big tech
companies keep investing as much money into AI and into AI infrastructure?
And if we just look at these earnings from Meta and Microsoft,
the answer appears to be yes. I mean, CAPEX or the CAPEX guidance remains on
course. Satya Nadella said that thing about how we're going to be measured
about it, but the investment plan is still the same. And Meta has said it's
going to keep its plan to spend $65 billion this year.
That's the same number we've seen before.
And so I think this is a really important thing for us to unpack because this big tech AI capex
thing is basically what's driving the entire market value of all the big AI stocks.
I mean, we've said this before, but roughly 40% of Nvidia's revenue comes from big tech.
So even a slight change in these CapEx plans
could completely transform Nvidia's business.
So it's something that investors and we as analysts
really need to dig into.
The question I would have for you,
you know, they've said the plan's going to stay the same.
$65 billion last year was the plan, same thing this year.
Is there a possibility though that DeepSeek happened too recently for companies like Meta
and Microsoft to report any changes in the spending plan?
In other words, could it be that this earnings report, they're reporting something, a plan that they baked
weeks ago, maybe months ago,
and if DeepSeek does change their approach,
we're not gonna see it in this week's earnings,
we're gonna see it in the next earnings report.
Is there a possibility, essentially,
that the pullback in spending will come next quarter?
So there's no way they were going to in any way acknowledge a deep
seek as a threat, because that would have just taken, that was like that
company that said open AI or I think it was check is having an impact on our
stock instead, Mark Zuckerberg, for example, said, this is validation of our
open source strategy, right?
And, you know, Saia said it was fine to just almost
swat it away like a gnat, he just wasn't worried about it.
They will remain steadfast in their commitment
to the spending until they're not.
And that is, it's like when you're contacted by the press
regarding a CEO and a startling company,
you're 100% behind them until you put out the press release saying we just fired him or her.
And they're going to say that already OpenAI is on a full court press to try and say,
move along, no big deal. They used chat GPT and this is bullshit and it's not a threat to us.
They're already trying to create, they're like a defense attorney at a murder trial trying to
create muck and confusion about these results that supposedly. Also, I was thinking Mark Andreessen
immediately came out and said, this is amazing. Is it because Mark Andreessen hates or is he
doesn't like this? He doesn't like open AI.
I, this shit is just so thick, but.
Right.
Well, I think he has every incentive to want disruption and to, and to back
insurgents, I, having said that, I'm pretty sure Andreessen has a somewhat
decent stake in open AI.
I don't think it's huge.
You know, Andreessen is funding all of them.
You know, they're funding all of the startups.
So they just want disruption.
So there's a lesson here.
And that is, all right, if you're a consultant
or a thought leader or a professor,
you make your business in communications,
especially around intellectual property
or thought leadership, this is how you go about it.
You ingest a tremendous amount of information.
It is impossible to digest all of it.
What you do is you ingest a lot of information
such that you find something that you think is real insight.
And then you try and wrestle with it,
really understand it, look at it through different prisms
and be able to talk about it and incorporate it into your rap.
As a consultant, all I was basically doing
was finding other people's great ideas,
finding what I thought were the best
and most insightful ideas,
and then repackaging them as my own or my firm's own.
And that's not entirely true.
We would reference in footnote who it was.
I had one of those moments with our guest, Robert Armstrong.
And that is, it just dawned on me
that if you look at the airline industry, what he said it just dawned on me that if you look
at the airline industry, what he said, or dawned on him,
it's added unbelievable value to the economy
and to our lives.
No one's made any money.
The net income, the net gross income over the last 50 years
for airlines and commercial jet manufacturers
has probably been negative because there's been
so much competition that all of the spoils and capture
have been recognized by consumers. I was thinking about, I was on
the board of Gateway Computer, think about how much PCs changed the world and
we were the second largest PC manufacturer in the world. Shouldn't we
have been worth a hundred or two hundred billion dollars? But we weren't. It was a
shitty business because anybody,
including two kids in their dorm
at the University of Texas in Austin
could pull together a computer
and Ted started assembling computers
in his barn in South Dakota,
which meant that China could assemble them
for no money down.
And the company that made some money was the brain, Intel,
but basically PCs, as revolutionary as they were,
again, all the capture, all the surplus value
was captured by consumers.
And Robert's notion that this might in fact be,
AI might in fact be one of those industries
where everybody becomes more productive,
everyone's life gets better, it's remarkable,
but you don't have this concentration of capture
across a small number of companies.
That has just blown me away. I think that that is such an interesting insight that this might be
the airline of the PC business where it changes everything or it changes a lot,
but the spoils aren't going to be captured by a small number of companies. It won't be an easy
place to invest or make money because why wouldn't you have invested everything
in Pan Am back in the 70s?
Oh my God, you can get on a 747 and get to London
and this is amazing.
This is incredible.
And guess what?
All those companies, Pan Am, TWA, PSA, Air California,
Eastern Airlines, I mean, every airline I flew
was a young man, Braniff,
Laker Airlines, I mean, they just, the list goes on and on and on. They've all gone away.
We'll be right back. If you're enjoying the show so far, hit follow and leave us a review
on ProfG Markets. Support for the show comes from the Fundrise Innovation Fund.
Think of the five biggest names in AI today.
How many of these companies do you own shares of?
Probably not many.
Maybe one, maybe two.
Why is that?
Because the open AIs and anthropics of the world are still private.
That means unless you're an employee or a VC, you're out of luck. So it isn't hard to see why venture capital has been one of the most prized asset classes in the
world. But unless you're worth eight or nine figures, you likely don't have access to these
funds. The Fundrise Innovation Fund is different. It's already raised more than 150 million.
It holds a portfolio of pre-IPO tech companies that are valued at tens or even hundreds of
billions of dollars. And most importantly, it's open to investors of all sizes.
Visit fundrise.com slash Profji to check out
the Innovation Funds portfolio and start investing today.
Relevant disclaimers can be found at the end of the show
and at fundrise.com slash innovation.
We're back with ProitG Markets.
Let's move on to Tesla.
Tesla missed profit expectations but expects sales to grow after a tough 2024.
Tesla's CFO acknowledged that Trump's proposed tariffs would, quote, have an impact on business
and profitability.
Shares climbed more than 4% after hours and they're up more than 80% Since the last earnings report. I'll run through the financials that jumped out to me
Revenue up 2% it was a miss. They also missed on auto revenue by 9%
They did be on EBITDA, but they missed on earnings overall. I look at this
This is an incredibly disappointing quarter.
However, the stock opens up the next morning up 4%.
So I'm trying to think like, okay,
well, what are people excited about?
I think we can at least attribute some of that excitement
to the full self-driving outlook.
Elon said, quote,
unsupervised full self-driving
will launch in Texas in June.
He also added, quote, this is my favorite quote, unsupervised full self-driving will launch in Texas in June. He also added quote, this is my favorite quote.
This is not some far off mythical situation.
It's literally, you know, five, six months away.
And I guess that's enough to get the market excited.
Scott, your reactions.
I wonder when the market's going to realize this is a giant jazz hand.
I think, I think this guy's on his ninth life in terms of coming up with reasons
why this company should be valued like a software company when it's not a
mobile company, its share of the EV market fell from 55% to 49.
Its competitors are gaining ground.
A BYD overtook Tesla and global EV production, marking the end of
their kind of three year brain as the EV leader.
It's basically flat to down.
If you look at the, I think it was about two and a quarter billion dollars in profits.
A quarter of those profits come from the sale of, I think, carbon credits to other
automobile companies, which are supposedly going to go away under the Trump administration.
So you're looking likely over the next 24 months of decline in profits.
Which were already declining.
The margins are already compressing and they're bringing down prices already.
Still, even with all this, it's an amazing company and deserves a
premium to the rest of the auto market.
The question is, does it deserve this premium?
The price to sales on Tesla right now, or the market cap to sales is 14 versus Ford at 0.29,
General Motors at 0.35, Honda at 0.42,
and Toyota, arguably the best run automobile company
in the world, who's growing and correctly double down
on hybrids, Toyota trades at, don't know, wait for it,
a price to sales ratio of one
versus Tesla at 14.
Granted, they have some software,
they have some interesting power products.
I mean, it continues to be, oh wait, it's a meme stock.
You're investing a meal on Musk.
Okay, he's managed to keep it elevated.
Okay, we're beneficiaries of the new kleptocracy.
We'll figure out a way to get regulatory capture
because I spent a quarter of a billion dollars
and some people would say I'm the reason
that Trump is in office.
All right, the market says this is a kleptocracy boom,
we'll bid your stocks out.
This thing is so crazily overvalued
that I just, and I always have to disclose, I've been saying this
for a long time and I've been wrong, but at some point gravity has to hit this thing.
It has to.
It's so annoying.
I mean, it goes on and on and on, but I'm, I'm still with you on it.
I still think it's just so, so overvalued.
Can we also just talk about how the Tesla
is actually just a bad car in my opinion?
You don't like Teslas?
Like, I think the Tesla is a bad, cheap, ugly car.
And I used to think it was cool because it was so novel,
but you know, I get in a Tesla,
like every other Uber now in New York is a Tesla,
and I'm always disappointed to get in the Tesla.
It feels cheap, it's jerky, you start to get car sick.
I genuinely think it's a bad car.
And the worst is when I'll,
sometimes I'll order an Uber Black
when I'm trying to feel sexy, and a Tesla shows up.
And I'm like, this is a joke.
This is not a luxury vehicle
by any stretch of the imagination.
This is like a bad, cheap and cheap feeling car.
I'm wondering if you share the same views.
I know you used to have a Tesla.
I do think it's a great car.
I think the Cybertruck is basically a midlife crisis
in stainless steel.
I think that thing makes no fucking sense.
I think that's just so stupid.
The thing that's always shocked me
as someone who thinks they understand brands,
you know, basically Tesla is turning into a car for crypto brothers with better
credit scores.
Crypto bros and Uber drivers is my take.
And so he's looking for more jazz hands and also Waymo.
I was in a Waymo in LA about four months ago.
Uh, I think they have a big head start on them.
So I don't.
Oh yeah.
They've launched.
They're giving rides.
I don't know why everyone's so excited about full self-driving. Like it's this massive new thing. Waymo's already
done it. Yeah, it's here. It was really, really impressive. So at some point we'll be right here.
At some point this thing gets cut dramatically. Let's also talk about quickly the role Bitcoin
played in this quarter for Tesla. So net income hit $2.3 billion this quarter,
up from just over 2 billion last quarter,
but $600 million of that net income
was because of the rise in Tesla's Bitcoin holdings.
So if you get rid of the Bitcoin,
the net income would have been significantly lower than last quarters.
What's interesting is actually Tesla played by the rules here. There's this new accounting
rule from the financial accounting standards boards, which mandates that companies now
mark their crypto assets to market each quarter. And it used to be that you had to report
the lowest value recorded during your ownership
of your digital assets, but now you update them each quarter
and that is reflected in your net income.
I'd like to get your take on all of that.
My view, just quickly, I hate this
because it feels like once again,
the actual earnings of companies
that is supposed to be showing us how is the fundamental business doing, suddenly it's being corrupted again.
And it's now skewed by these wild swings in the value of crypto.
So even if you have a shitty quarter, which is what they had, if Bitcoin goes up, you
can come out and say, actually, you had a pretty good quarter.
So what are your thoughts on this Bitcoin wrinkle?
They're usually special charges or special revenue recognition.
Usually the markets discounts that in this case, it just makes no sense.
And what this is not financial advice because you can stay, the markets can
stay a rational longer than you can stay liquid.
And I thought this thing was overvalued at 50 bucks a share and now it's at 400.
So we'll see.
And before we get accused of the Elon derangement syndrome,
I just want to point out I genuinely think
I'm calling balls and strikes here.
I think Tesla is way overvalued.
I think SpaceX, particularly because of Starlink,
is going to absolutely destroy.
If I could put my money in any startup right now,
it would probably be SpaceX.
So I do not think this is us just railing against Elon.
I think we do call balls and strikes.
Heil, Heil Elon!
Heil Elon!
When I walked into, I don't know if it's his kind of right wing proclivities have impacted
the dealer network, but I went into their retail store in Boca Raton and I said, uh, what colors does the Model Y come in?
And they said, Viva Lasso questions.
Let's take a look at the week.
We'll see earnings from Palantir, Google, Amazon, Disney, and Uber.
The big earnings season continues.
Do you have any predictions for us, Scott?
The big earnings season continues. Do you have any predictions for us, Scott?
Scott Madden I'm just fascinated with Robert Armstrong's
notion of these industries that the capture here may be captured by 7 billion humans as opposed
to a small number of companies. And it got me thinking if all of a sudden you can have 80%
of chat GPT for 10 or 20 or even 50% of the price.
That was Old Navy's strategy.
My first consulting engagement out of business school in 1992 was,
they said, what are the demographic gaps out there?
And we did this for the gap.
And we came back and said, single mothers,
they're a huge population and they want their kids to feel good about themselves, but they can't afford the gap.
And so the basic premise of old Navy, we came up with a new brand was 80%
of the gap for 50% of the price.
And so we were part of the strategy to launch old Navy and old Navy was the
fastest zero to a billion retailer in history.
And generally speaking, this 80% of the value for 50% of the price is an incredible strategy.
It's the strategy of Southwest. Southwest said we can be 80% of American Delta United for 50%
of the price. And I'm wondering if the old Navy of quote unquote AI has come in. And where I think
it impacts, I was trying to look for winners here, is that I'm trying to do a scan of what companies
had put aside 100, 200 or $500 million.
Say a pharmaceutical company said,
we need to expedite drug discovery in this great era of AI.
So we're gonna have to put aside two, three, $500 million
to build our own thick layer on top of chat GPT
or pay them a shit ton of money,
or Airbnb or Expedia,
which are probably making huge investments
and working with OpenAI and guaranteeing them a ton of money
for enterprise-wide access to their LLM.
Did their costs of incorporating AI just reduce dramatically?
Are we gonna see a bunch of companies
that are doing really well say,
oh, and I've got good news,
we're growing and I've got great news and that is we're going to get all of the great taste of
AI without the calories, specifically the cost.
And that reserve or our capex planning of 100 or 500 million over the next three years on AI,
it's been reduced by 90 percent and that's all going to flow to the bottom line.
So my prediction is there's going to be a new wave of, I don't know
how you would even call them, you know, remora fish that are just going to get,
kind of get free pickings, if you will, because they're a capex just, I wonder
overnight, if it just went down 50, 70, 80%, which is going to juice their
earnings over the next two or three years.
This episode was produced by Claire Miller and engineered by Benjamin Spencer. Our associate
producer is Alison Weiss, Mia Silverio is our research lead, Drew Burrows is our technical
director, and Catherine Dillon is our executive producer. Thank you for listening to Profgy
Markets from the Vox Media Podcast Network. Join us on Thursday for our conversation with the one and only Aswath de Moderen, only on
Profgy Markets. Tell me, in kind reunion
As the world turns
And the dark flies
In love, love, love, love Support for the show comes from the Fundrise Innovation Fund.
You've heard me talk about the Fundrise Innovation Fund before, so I'll keep this short.
Venture capital was, and to a certain extent is, still an old boys club.
You had either to be filthy rich or an insider to get access.
The Innovation Fund is trying to change that, building a blue chip portfolio, making it
available to everyone.
And with $150 million raised from tens of thousands of investors, it's just getting
started.
Carefully consider the investment material before investing, including objectives, risks,
charges, and expenses.
This and other information can be found in the Innovation Fund's prospectus at fundrise.com
slash innovation.
This is a paid sponsorship.