The Prof G Pod with Scott Galloway - Prof G Markets: OpenAI’s New Content Deals + Latin America’s Most Valuable Financial Institution
Episode Date: June 3, 2024Scott shares his thoughts on OpenAI’s content deal with Vox and if it means ChatGPT will now be training on this podcast’s content. Then Scott and Ed break down why Nubank’s shares have rallied ...so much this year, and what barriers stand in the way of it becoming a super-app. Follow our new Prof G Markets feed: Apple Podcasts Spotify 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
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Incorporated, NMLS 1617539. This week's number, $8,000. That's how much a ticket from New York
to London costs for a dog and its owner on Bark Air, a boutique dog's first airline.
What is the worst dog breed?
There are no bad dog breeds.
Okay, Chihuahua. Chihuahua. That's not a great breed.
Welcome to Prop G Markets.
Add a little dog humor.
A little dog humor from the dogs.
Yes.
Really going PG now.
I keep meeting these people with their kids, saying they're listening.
Very different vibe.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Anyways, today we're discussing OpenAI's content deal with Vox and Latin America's new top bank. Here with the news is PropG Media analyst and not a dog. Ed, did you grow up with dogs?
I did. I had one dog. I had a Border Terrier growing up.
A Border Terrier. What was your Border Terrier's name?
His name was Leo.
Leo. So first off, just a little word to the wise, never own one dog. Dogs need to have another dog.
They need a buddy.
Yeah, he was kind of a socially weird dog.
I actually wasn't that close to him.
Really?
That's such a moving story of a boy and his dysfunctional dog.
Any more heartwarming stories?
Let me get this. You're not that close to your siblings and don't like your parents, despite them working really hard to establish a good relationship with you.
Jesus Christ. Get to the a good relationship with you. Jesus Christ.
Get to the headlines, you sociopath.
Before that, I just want to remind listeners again,
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We're soon going to be moving this markets podcast
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And with that, let's start with our weekly review of market vitals.
The S&P 500 fell, the dollar climbed, Bitcoin jumped, and the yield on 10-year treasuries rose.
Shifting to the headlines. Saudi Aramco has announced a more than $10 billion stock sale.
Currently, just 1.5% of the company is publicly traded, and Saudi Arabia and its investment fund
own the rest. This follow-on sale is one of the largest of all time.
CanocoPhillips is acquiring Marathon Oil in an
all-stock deal valued at $22.5 billion, including debt. That news came just a day after the
shareholders of another oil company, Hess, voted to sell to Chevron for $53 billion.
And finally, Salesforce reported weaker-than-expected first-quarter revenue growth
of 11% from last year. That's
the first time the company has fallen short of revenue projections in 18 years. It also lowered
its expectations for subscription sales growth for the full year, and shares plunged 20%.
Scott, thoughts?
The Saudi Aramco thing, it sounds basic, but it sort of indicates the broader strategy of what is the fastest growing big economy other than
India, I think. And that is, here's the good news. They have infinite capital. The bad news is it's
running out. I think there's somewhere between 40 and 70 years of oil underneath that ocean,
or that ocean of oil does run out. They're smart people. They need to transition to another economy,
another type of economy. So what are they doing? They're selling a stake in their oil-based company and using it to try and fund the transition to tourism, education, technology, with liquidity recently. So four years ago,
they had around $130 billion in cash and in cash equivalents, and now it's down to around $20
billion. So they've spent almost 90% of the pot, and now they need to go find cash somewhere else.
And there are two ways to do that. One, they can borrow, which is what they have been doing. And
two, they can liquidate their position in Aramco, which is, as you're saying, that's what's happening here. Here's the part I don't
understand. This is all meant to fund their new investment plan. Vision 2030, the stuff that
you're talking about, transitioning the economy, which is projected to cost in total, not tens of
billions, not hundreds of billions, but trillions of dollars. Like it's the most
capital intensive project basically in history. And just as an example, they're building this
city in the desert, which we've talked about before, this city called Neom. Neom is going to
have its own artificial ski resort and its own moon, literally a moon, artificial moon made out of drones.
And that project alone is going to cost half a trillion. So I'm starting to think that all of
these forward-looking national investment plans are at least a little bit unserious,
because it just doesn't make much sense to me to be talking about building this solar-powered city
that's going to cost half a trillion dollars and have a moon made out of drones, while at the same time,
you're struggling with liquidity issues and then announcing this follow-on offering of,
wait for it, $10 billion. So just a couple of things. My father used to say that rich people
live hand to mouth, just on a higher level. And wealthy people are smart and they always have
their money invested. They sometimes
keep some money in cash, but you want to be in the markets. You want to be fully invested. You
want to be diversified, and if you get a big chunk of money and you want to put it into an ETF,
you should dollar cost in in case you're investing in highs. But wealthy people, wealthy nations have
their money at work for them, which creates situations where oftentimes they're in cash crunches or they have less liquidity than they'd like. This happens to
me all the time. I have tuition payments due and I'm like, wait, I don't have any cash,
so I got to find shit to sell. And I never thought having this level of economic security,
I would still have, you know, not liquidity problems, but I have to think about this stuff and I have
to look at it and say, okay, is all my stuff short-term? Anyways, I don't care how rich you
are. There's always liquidity. You're always going to run into liquidity issues. And these guys,
as rich as they are, are finding that, okay, maybe we're out a little bit over our skis or
our eyes were bigger than our stomach, but I bet, you know, there's going to be
a lot of debt involved. They're going to buy, you know, more glass from South Korean glass
manufacturers, but some of the manufacturers will finance some of the purchases. They will start
getting revenues from these companies. They will issue bonds when they build Neom and they build
this one area that they are fairly confident is going to spend off a couple billion dollars a year in taxes or resort fees or whatever, they'll be able to securitize those
cash flows by borrowing money. So that's the equity component here. That's a big headline
number and it's a staggering number, but that doesn't mean they need to come up with that
equity capital all at once. And so much of this is out of their control because if oil goes to
$300 a barrel,
they're fine. They're fine. They're probably going to announce that they're spending more.
But if oil goes to 15 bucks a barrel, they're going to have to scale back projects. They're
going to have to cancel some projects. But to give you a scale of this stuff,
I think the Infrastructure Act was $700 or $800 billion from the largest economy in the world.
That's supposed to give the entire infrastructure in the United States a facelift.
They have seven projects that are of that scale or greater. All of this comes
down to one thing. What is the price of oil in three, five, 10 years? I want to pivot to the oil
news, Canoco Phillips buying Marathon Oil. Canoco, it's Conoco.
Conoco. Jesus, you and your bread. Put that shit in the boot.
Yeah.
Conoco.
Mispronunciation aside, there's been a huge amount of consolidation in the oil and gas industry in the past year.
We've covered some of these deals in previous episodes, but I just want to remind you of
what's happened here.
Back in October, ExxonMobil agreed to buy Pioneer Natural Resources for $60 billion. That same month,
Chevron agreed to buy Hess for $53 billion. Two months later, Occidental bought Crown Rock for
$12 billion. And two months after that, Diamondback bought Endeavor for $26 billion. And now Conoco,
Philips, is buying Marathon for $22.5 billion.
What is going on here? If you let the economy just run unfettered,
what happens is one company, through innovation and great execution,
develops stronger earnings growth, and investors pile into that company because it's a safer bet.
They have access to cheaper capital, and then they use that cheaper capital to go make acquisitions
and forward-leaning investments, and no one else can match, and they kind of run away with the show.
And people like to think, well, naturally, there'll be disruptors. Some of that is true,
but what you end up with, with kind of unfettered capitalism with no regulatory intervention,
specifically DOJ or antitrust action, is you end up with the following, and that is four companies
control at least 80% share in the following
sectors, drugstores, home improvements, cars, airplanes, oil, computer hardware, computer
software, food retail, internet retail, medical distributors, air freight couriers, telecom,
cable, satellite TV. I mean, essentially the world is controlled by a small number
of concentrated companies that have incredible advantage. And I think the fastest way to oxygenate the economy is if we were to go on a breakup L, you'd have YouTube, and you'd have Google Cloud.
That's three companies right there.
It's just you concentrate.
And what happens when these companies get concentrated is you have cartel pricing power.
They all kind of look at each other and raise prices equivalently.
There aren't that many suitors bidding to rent labor and on, you know, wash, rinse, and repeat.
And the myth is that competition is self-sustaining and eventually these companies get disrupted. And in some instances, that's true, but not until these
companies have created a tectonic shift in capital from labor to corporations and shareholders,
which again, entrenches and enriches the incumbent. So triple the budget of the DOJ and the FTC and go
through and oxygenate all parts of the economy and create more innovation and more taxes, more employment, more leverage on the part
of labor by going in and breaking these companies up. Yeah, I think that's right. But to be clear,
the Exxon Pioneer acquisition has been completed. I mean, it was subject to review, as you'd expect,
$60 billion deal. But at the beginning of last month,
Exxon announced that they closed the deal. So now we've got several other deals under review,
but I don't fully see how, if that's the precedent that's been set, that you could break up,
I don't know, a $12 billion deal for Crown Rock. Thoughts on these Salesforce earnings? Pretty dismal for the stock, down 17%.
Worst stock drop for Salesforce since, I believe, the financial crisis.
Wow, it's off 21%.
It's five years, it's up 41%.
Over the last one year, it's flat.
The people who look like geniuses are Elliot, who came in,
in I think late 2022 or or early 2023 and said, you need to get your costs
in line, and took the stock from 200 to about 300. And then I think they exited their position.
That was like the perfect activist investment. Stock is up 50% since then, and now it has checked
back because of slower growth. Did you get any color on the earnings call? Is it a function
of competition? Is it a function of their customers are scaling back? What do you think is going on here?
I personally think
that this sell-off was a little unfair.
I mean, yes, they missed,
but these were very marginal misses.
I mean, literally,
they were a fraction of a percentage off
on both metrics.
What I think is going on,
I think the trouble that they're having
is that Wall Street
is getting used to these NVIDIA-like beats, as we discussed last week, where you sort of blow your expectations out of
the water. And I think investors are looking at Salesforce and they're like, well, you know,
you're a tech company. Why can't you be like Microsoft or Amazon or Google or NVIDIA, all of
which have built in these huge expectations for AI and which Salesforce hasn't really accomplished.
And I think it's that story, it's the AI story
that investors are really looking for with Salesforce right now
and which Salesforce and Mark Benioff haven't really delivered on.
I think what they're overlooking, though,
is just the fact that the fundamental business for Salesforce
is still incredibly strong.
I mean, more than $9 billion in revenue, 11% revenue growth, which apparently was a problem,
but that's double-digit growth, $1.5 billion in profit.
It's still a juggernaut.
Is it going to take over the world with world-class gen AI?
Probably not, but I don't think it has to.
I don't even think it necessarily should.
So I don't know.
It just feels like an overpunishment.
I love that.
Why can't you be NVIDIA?
True story, Ed.
I used to have a girlfriend and she would scream out during sex, why can't you be more
like David Hasselhoff?
And I'd be like, I don't mind you imagining other men, but David Hasselhoff?
We'll be right back after the break with a look at the latest news from OpenAI. business, while you're so focused on the day-to-day, the personnel, and the finances,
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We're back with Profiteer Markets.
OpenAI signed two more content licensing agreements with The Atlantic and with Vox Media.
As we've discussed previously,
OpenAI has been striking deals across media,
most recently signing a contract with News Corp worth an estimated $250 million.
Terms of the deals with The Atlantic and with Vox have not been disclosed,
but we do know a few details about their arrangements.
For example, Vox will allow its content to be displayed on ChatGPT,
but the platform must include attribution links to the source material.
Meanwhile, Vox will use OpenAI's technology to enhance its ad platform
and its commerce product called the Gift Scout,
which offers shopping suggestions based on a user's prompts.
Okay, Scott, Vox Media is our distribution partner.
Genuine question, are we about to get fed into the ChatGPT LLM?
I typed into ChatGPT, how do I study?
And it said, I'll help you on the hard parts.
So it's making penis jokes.
Coincidence, Ed?
Coincidence?
I don't think so.
I think they're crawling the dog.
That was good.
They're crawling us.
Look, we said, I think one of our predictions was that a lot of, I won't call them second
tier, but smaller media companies would find a new incremental high margin revenue source bidding or renting out their content or entering into
exclusive or licensed deals with LLMs who are all trying to, I don't know how much of this is they
need the content or they're just trying to placate these people and pretend that they're good for the
entire ecosystem. It's like when Google would occasionally run ads to say, oh, we're a good
partner. So, you know, no, we're not just sucking the oxygen out
of the room of every media company and advertising company in the world. We advertise because
you're our partners. You're our partners. And, you know, they run their fingers through their
hair before they shot them in the fucking face. Look, I don't, these deals, I think if you really
pull under the hood, these deals are smaller on a top line level, but it's all gross margin revenue, right?
And what will be interesting is this will go one of two ways.
And that is as it becomes normalized that you have to pay for the license for this content.
And I'm sure that the media companies themselves will come up with their own LLMs to detect whether or not they're crawling our podcast.
And by the way, the agreement says they are not crawling podcasts,
but the content they own.
I didn't see that.
Oh no, oh no.
I would be like calling back off and say,
this shit is gold.
This shit is gold.
You don't get to put gold in your,
you don't get to have a new gold tooth without Panda Dog
and the Canoco Brit on my podcast.
But they're not doing that.
Supposedly they're just doing the content they own,
which I think is like New York Magazine
and all the blogs they have.
And they produce a decent amount of content.
The question is whether this sets off a bidding war
for good content
and creates the incremental revenue stream
that all the media has been waiting for from big tech,
or if it's just going to be used to train other LLMs
that'll begin producing their own New York Magazine-like content for the LLMs to crawl themselves. And where I went into sort of a
rabbit hole mentally was the notion that I think at some point with these voice front ends on AI
that I'll be able to say when I wake up in the morning, give me today's business news
in the voice of George Carlin, but with the fact-driven nature of Reuters,
and I'm not going to need to go to HBO Max. I don't know where I would go for George Carlin content, but I don't
need to go to the Reuters site or I don't need to go to the CNN site. My content, the analogy I would
use, I was at San Ambrose yesterday and they, well, that place makes money on everything. It's
such a ripoff, But most restaurants try to
break even on the food and where they make the money on is on the alcohol. And I wonder, I mean,
the ideal model with content companies are hoping for is that they break even on their actual
content, but they make money off of things like, I don't know, events or renting and leasing their
data out to LLMs, that that becomes their high margin. Because when daddy
orders that third makers and ginger with his cacio e pepe and prosciutto burrata, you know,
the margin on those makers and gingers that they're charging me, I think 22 bucks for,
I think the drink costs 55 or 70 cents. That's how these places make money is based off of my
addiction and wanting me to like me more. But I don't know. I think I
could see this going one or two ways. I don't know if this is a big head fake or jazz hands.
It's going to just result in training these LLMs such in a year or two years, they don't need them.
Or if we're at the very early days of what ultimately will be a bidding war and an increase
in this very small, but high margin revenue. I mean, I know that you're, I would say friends,
I think with Jim Bancroft, CEO. I am.
Vox Media.
Nicest guy in media.
Have you ever, have you had any conversations with him about this?
Not necessarily about this deal specifically, but, you know, licensing deals with AI companies.
So really there isn't a move that, a big move that involves strategy or technology
that Jim doesn't, that Jim makes without checking in with me first and getting the
benefit of my wisdom.
Everything I've said is a lie. He never, that bitch never calls me. Literally, never calls me.
Never says, hey, what do you think about this deal with OpenAI? I mean, for God's sakes, I've got
all these AI people crawling up my ass, inviting me to their headquarters to try and give talks
and pay me a lot of money so I'll say nice things about him. But Jim Bancroft doesn't call me. No, no, no, no. No, he doesn't want to get my view on this stuff. No, he has not said a word to me.
He's probably worried I'm going to go, well, I want a bigger deal or something. It's like when I,
sometimes I'm a little remiss to tell the team at Prop G how well we're doing for it. They're
going to be like, well, I want more pet bereavement deal for Fluffy. Fluffy passed away and I need three weeks off. Anyways, where are we?
We're still on OpenAI. So, you know, we've seen a lot of these licensing agreements and we've been
discussing them a lot recently. I just want to go over all of the announcements that OpenAI has
released so far. So, so far we have deals with the Associated Press, Axel Springer, Dot Dash Meredith,
Financial Times, Le Monde, Prisa Media, News Corp, and now Vox Media and The Atlantic. So that's nine
contracts. None of them have disclosed any of the deal terms, specifically how much the contracts
are worth. And we've seen rumors the Axel Springer deal is supposedly worth tens of millions. That's how it's been reported in the media. The News Corp deal is supposedly
north of $250 million, but no one actually knows. It's all just sort of rumors or according to
people familiar with the matter kind of reporting. My question to you, why aren't any of these
companies disclosing that information?
I mean, as you say, if this is going to be the profit maker, especially for a public company, why aren't they saying how much money they're going to make?
I would bet that the numbers are pretty mediocre.
So even that $250 million deal, I don't know if it's four years or five years, but that comes down to $50 million a year.
Now, granted, $47 million of it will hit the bottom line.
But when you talk about News Corp, you're talking about some really robust content, and it's a great deal.
It's a great press release for OpenAI, and yet they only came up with $50 million a year. So I bet the Vox deal is millions, not even tens of millions.
And so they don't want to announce that. OpenAI wants credit
for trying to play nice and be thinking about differentiating its content and being partners
with this ecosystem and being a good citizen. My guess is Bancroft has struck a deal for millions.
And it's great because it all hit the bottom line, but it's not like it's 100 million bucks.
And so they both parties decide to keep it confidential for fear that it's just going to be a lot of heckling
from the cheap seats.
Like, oh, you're letting,
Altman's putting a gag ball on you
and telling you to grab your ankles
and giving you, you know, 50 bucks and bus fare.
You ask why Jim Bancuff doesn't call you for advice.
Can you imagine why he wouldn't want to call me?
Get us out of that one, Ed.
Canoco us out of that one.
So two final news items concerning OpenAI.
One is that they are creating a safety and security committee, which is, quote, responsible for making recommendations on critical safety and security decisions for all OpenAI projects.
This is coming less than a month after
they dissolved the super alignment team, which we discussed, and that team was essentially tasked
with the exact same thing, safety and security. The second news item is that Jan Leiker, who is
a former leader of that super alignment team at OpenAI, who, as we discussed, resigned. He is now joining Anthropic, which is one of the
leading competitors to OpenAI. Reactions to either of those headlines? The world is going through,
in 10 months, what took them 10 years to discover at Meta. And that is, they don't give a flying
fuck about your well-being, and they're not going to take care of you when you're older.
And despite their hushed tones and concerns about the future of AI, they are there to make profit, and they're really good
at that and shouldn't be trusted to do anything else. And this goes to a bigger issue, and that is
all of this stuff around corporate social responsibility and making the world a better
place. I can't go to a conference for a beauty company or a technology company where
some very hopeful 20-something stands up and says, we believe here our role is in empowering women
or creating a more sustainable future. I'm like, no, it's not. Your job is to make more fucking
money for the shareholders. And that's what you're going to do. And a few people will care or nod
their heads that you're changing the world for it to be a
better place. But the way you make a world a better place is you create more value than your inputs.
You create economic security for you and your family. You're a good citizen. You vote. You
give some money away. And then we regulate the company and tax it at a fair rate such that we,
the electorate, can elect people who will vote on things like food stamps and protect a woman's
bodily autonomy. And just because you paint a fucking AirPod red does not mean you are doing
anything for the world. And all of this corporate social responsibility and DEI bullshit has done
nothing but distract the populace from the need to regulate these companies. And all of this
kind of notion that we keep hoping that capitalism can serve as an engine of change
for social good, we've had 40 years to try and do that. Ben & Jerry's is still a very small company.
REI is a cute little company, good for them. The majority of companies will do whatever they need
to do to make more money, full stop. Ford would still be pouring mercury into the river if we
allowed them to do that. The trust and safety team of OpenAI should be in Washington, D.C. and have the ability to tax, prosecute, and imprison.
Enough with this notion that we have a new generation of corporate leaders that give a flying fuck.
Spoiler alert, they don't.
It's so interesting because, you know, you're describing that actually the main goal for Sam Altman
from OpenAI is to create shareholder value.
But this is a non-profit company.
And I don't know if you remember that exchange between Sam Altman and Senator Kennedy during
the Senate hearing where he's like, oh, do you make a lot of money?
And Sam's like, no, I don't make any money.
I don't have any equity in OpenAI, which would go against your
point until I just learned this week that apparently the board is discussing granting
Sam equity in a new, more traditional corporation in OpenAI to incentivize him.
I remember that exchange where everyone, where Sam said, I'm not making any money
with it. Oh, that must mean he's doing good things. I remember thinking, just trust me on this. He's
going to make billions. I mean, how could Sam not make billions? If he has the ability even
personally to invest in AI companies and has influence over their ability to announce a
partnership with OpenAI. Now, granted, the board should be able to suss out conflicts like that, but it probably won't. This is the easiest prediction ever. Sam Altman, directly or indirectly, is going
to make billions of dollars from OpenAI. Sam is doing exactly what he should be doing. Who's not
doing what they're supposed to be doing is us. We're supposed to elect people that see through
this bullshit, put in place some sort of compute tax, put in place a tax, a progressive tax structure such that the six wealthiest or the 25 wealthiest people in
America don't pay an effective tax rate of eight fucking percent. Really? Really? Oh, Jesus Christ.
Anyways, God, I sound especially get off my lawn today, don't I? Thank you for my TED Talk.
We'll be right back after the break
with a look at the new most valuable bank
in Latin America.
We're back with Profiteer Markets.
Brazilian fintech Nubank
has just become Latin America's most valuable financial institution by market cap.
Its shares have rallied more than 40% this year to give the company a market cap of roughly $58 billion.
That puts it ahead of Itaú, Brazil's largest bank, which has been around since 1945.
Behind that rally is a story of tremendous market expansion. When Nubank launched in 2013,
roughly 40% of Brazilians were unbanked, and an oligopoly controlled roughly 80% of the market.
Now, just over a decade later, 54% of Brazilian adults are Nubank customers. The company has
also expanded to Mexico and Colombia, and it has also surpassed 100 million
customers, making it the first digital banking platform outside of Asia to hit that metric.
Scott, you interviewed the NewBank CEO David Velez back in 2022.
I think you also invested in the IPO in 2021, if I'm correct.
What do you make of this company and its performance since then?
It's been an okay performer. It hasn't been a great performer. I think I either sold,
eventually sold a break-even or even a loss, but stocks up 80% in the last year. And it really
tapped into an incredible need. And that is a dramatic number of people in Latin America are
unbanked and they end up paying these onerous fees to get banked. And also, they pay enormous fees in terms of their time, the ability to have to go down to the utility to pay to go into a room with cameras and take your shirt off because they were so worried about crime. And they recognized they can skip the branch network.
It's like when India skipped landline and went straight from kind of no phone to cell phone.
Large parts of Latin America and Central America, they're skipping from the unbanked to digital
banking. The company is really well run. It's reported five consecutive quarters of profitability and over 20% revenue growth. And the other thing that I love about this company is it's an asset
light business model. These branches, I think you have to have at least 30 million or 60 million
in deposits just to support the real estate and the human personnel of that operating system of
a branch. Yeah. The number I've seen is 50 million,
50 million to generate a return on a bank branch, yeah.
And when you build, make the fixed investment
with cheap capital, which they have access to
to build the technology,
and you don't have to have assets,
you don't have to have real estate
and things in the window saying,
you know, get your mortgage here for 8%.
At the end of the day, people absolutely love this.
The NPS levels are, get this, two to three times greater than their competitors, which means their cost of customer acquisition is much lower and they don't have the same churn. This is a great company. You'd like to see this in Latin America. There's MercadoLibre, but there hasn't been a ton of digital big winners here, and that's what they need. They need some companies that
make a bunch of people billions of dollars, which inspires venture capital. I hope David starts a VC
firm in Brazil because that's what you need. You need a Michael Dell to make billions of dollars
and then start a VC ecosystem in Austin. So I hope it happens here. I'm really fond of Latin
America. If you globally think about what's happened to the economy over the last 40 or 50 years, America's held its own. We control the same amount of GDP,
great growth. We're killing it. China, Southeast Asia, they're the big winners.
The big losers in the global race for economic dominance have been Europe and Latin America.
The saying in Brazil is that no country has a brighter future than Brazil,
but it's meant as a bit of an insult. And that is,
Brazil is always a little engine that supposedly can, but never does. And so I hope, you know,
I hope this does really well. Good for NewBank, good for Brazil, good for the planet.
It's now turning into a banking meets insurance meets stock market investing meets travel meets telco product, kind of everything in
one, which reminds me of this idea of the super app, which we discussed a long time ago, which is
basically a term for an app that acts as a portal for everything from banking, communicating,
ride hailing. It's basically what WeChat is in China. So it feels like NewBank is getting into
super app territory here. Do you think that's the idea? Is that the strategy they're going for,
do you think? Every company has the same aspiration. Every company wants to control
your interface. We're in an attention economy. If I can figure out a way to control more of
your time on a screen, I can monetize it eventually. And so everybody wants to,
iOS wants to control everything.
They want to be in your car, right? Android wants to be the operator. Alexa, or basically Amazon's Alexa, was an attempt to control more of the interface through digital world where you're
interacting through their voice devices. Every company wants to leverage their custody of the
consumer to grab more and more of their attention such that they can monetize it. And that's the same thing here. And obviously, the biggest threats or the biggest barriers to
super app status are iOS and Android that do not want anyone... I mean, ultimately, iOS is the
premier super app for rich people, and Android is the super app for everybody else. And that's what
you go through to access Uber and everything else, and they figure out a way to tax them or tax the end consumer for a more elegant way to access those apps, which is Apple. One's an ad model. One is a subscription model. But those guys have a vested interest in sticking their elbows out and not essentially wanted to be a super app for gaming.
They wanted to put other games on its platform and start charging from similar the way the app
store works at Apple. And Apple said, no, we're going to disable this technology. We're not going
to let you do it. But NewBank, it'll be really interesting. If the stock were to go to 50,
it's because they would be able to show that they can launch adjacent categories and immediately get
market share.
And then say, okay,
even if we break even on the banking,
which they don't, they make money,
but we now have, as you call it,
the super app power
to start taking people into different verticals.
The term that people use to describe this,
this kind of bank,
which is a digital bank,
is neobank.
No, they call it a Canoco bank, Ed.
It's a Canoco bank.
Jesus Christ. What are you,
a stripper at a Brazilian nightclub? Next up, big hand for Canoco.
That's so annoying. Get out there. Get out there and shake your moneymaker, Ed. Get out there.
Oh my God. But I didn't get along with my dog. What the fuck is wrong with you?
What is wrong with you?
Oh, my God.
Why did you hate your dog, Ed?
He was just weird, man.
He was weird.
I think he thought he was a human.
Did he try and hurt you?
Those are hurting dogs, right?
No.
No, actually, he hurt other dogs.
He would always bite other dogs.
And whenever I'd take him for a walk,
it was always smush-faced dogs, like pugs and bulldogs.
And he would always bite them. Was it a purebred? uh i think so that's the problem always get a mutt always get a mutt why
mutts it's as if mutts know that they're about to be shipped off to be executed so they are so
thrilled when you bring them home and start feeding them like lamb organic lamb food they're
literally like i'll tell you what is that you're feeding your dogs organic lamb oh my dogs eat much better than we do literally i'll come home i'll come home
tonight i'm getting home at 3 a.m there's gonna be nothing for me like there'll literally be
nothing like no one will even like oh did dad eat who the fuck cares but if the dog makes a
whimper in the middle of the night we'll get up and we'll microwave it some sort of like organic
sheep intestine thing that's good for its coat yeah no that's a
ton of fun although i did get a i my my birthday present to myself when i turned 45 55 was i bought
a great thing and boy is she stupid oh my gosh the village idiot of dogs and so sweet and loving
oh god i love that i can't wait to see that dog. Can't wait. The kid's sort of excited.
Can't wait to see Leah.
Yeah, exactly.
She'll get up in the middle of the night.
She'll come over.
And it's really weird.
I don't know if you've noticed this because you probably haven't noticed it because you hate dogs.
But she'll come over.
Great Danes have this weird thing.
They, as a means of affection, they shove their like hind torso into you.
That's how they express love.
They're like, it's good to see you.
How about a little of my back and butt just to welcome you home?
Is that how you express love?
That's, yeah.
That's where you learned it from.
You know how I express love.
I express love one way, Benjamin.
So I give people money.
It's the best kind of love.
Trips to St. Paul's, which is a good way to, yeah, it's a good love language.
It's the neosporin for every relationship.
I tell people that.
I'm like, this is how I express affection.
I'm, anyways, I don't want to give specifics, but.
All right.
Am I supposed to make a prediction?
Where are we at?
Yeah, fuck it.
Let's just wrap up the show.
Before we do that, let's take a look at the week ahead.
We'll see the unemployment rate for May.
We'll also see earnings from Lululemon, Dollar Tree, and CrowdStrike riveting. Do you have any predictions?
My prediction is, and this isn't financial advice, but I bet within 30 days, Salesforce has recovered
most of its losses. I was just, as you were talking, I like what you said. I looked at the
numbers. It barely missed. The company is still doing really well. They've cut some costs. I don't see any evidence here that the company should be worth
a lot less. And while the stock was up, it wasn't up so substantially that this was just air coming
out. I think this was, to your point, everyone saying, well, why aren't you NVIDIA? And I'm like,
okay, they're not, but they're still an amazing company. So anyways, my prediction is that this
22% stock decline we're looking at today, that Salesforce recovers most or all of it within
the next 30 days. This episode was produced by Claire Miller and engineered by Benjamin Spencer.
Our associate producer is Alison Weiss. Our executive producers are Jason Stavis and
Catherine Dillon. Mia Silverio is our research lead and Drew Burrows is our technical director.
Thank you for listening to Prof G Markets
from the Vox Media Podcast Network.
Join us on Thursday for our conversation
with Morgan Housel, only on Prof G Markets. You held me
In kind
Reunion
As the world turns
And the dark flies
In love, love, love, love