The Prof G Pod with Scott Galloway - Prof G Markets: The $6.6 Trillion Sell-off
Episode Date: April 7, 2025Scott and Ed dig into the rubble of the record breaking $6.6 trillion sell-off following Trump’s tariffs announcements. They break down how Trump determined the tariff rates, what the tariffs will d...o to company earnings and the real economy, and offer advice on how to deal with turmoil in the markets as an investor.  Vote for Prof G Markets at the Webby Awards Subscribe to the Prof G Markets newsletter 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 public.com. If you're serious about investing, you need to know about public.com.
That's where you can invest in everything, stocks, options, bonds, and more, and even in a 6% or higher yield that you can lock in with a bond account.
Visit public.com slash prop G and get up to $10,000 when you transfer your old portfolio. That's public.com slash prop G.
Paid for by public investing, all investing involves the risk of loss, including loss of principal. The I should also disclose I am an investor in public.
The all-new all-electric Can-Am Origin motorcycle takes you everywhere. Sleek power for the streets and deep adventure routes for the trails.
Discover your origin today.
Learn more at CanAmMotorcycles.com.
With the Fizz loyalty program, you get rewarded just for having a mobile plan.
You know, for texting and stuff.
And if you're not getting rewards like extra data and dollars off with your mobile plan,
you're not with Fizz.
Switch today.
Conditions apply.
Details at Fizz.ca.
Today's number, $6.6 trillion.
That's how much value the U.S US stock market shed following Trump's tariff
announcement, a record breaking two day wipeout.
Ed, I just came from a necrophiliac's anonymous meeting and suddenly I
donned on me, what happens if I die here?
How are you? How are you?
How are you?
Are you are you reacting badly to this?
These tariffs?
What's what's going on with you?
So I'm an emotional tide full right now, not for the reason you probably sank. I lost, I don't
know, mid single digit millions, maybe 10 million bucks on the 48 hours on Thursday
and Friday, but that's the bad news. The good news is that means you have a lot of money
to begin with. I'm blessed. And I could kind of, I don't want to say I could kind of give
a shit, but the reason I'm a man on emotional die-bulls,
I just finished up a college tour with my son and it just is sort of this very,
it's a marker in time.
You know, it's just, we went to eight schools in five days and I decided I was
going to be totally focused on parenting and not do any business calls.
And it's just sort of, you know, it's just very emotional.
He doesn't understand it, but he will when he has sons.
But what happened on Thursday and Friday,
for me, I was much more upset about the Trump coin.
I was much more upset about, you know,
Marines being kicked out of the service
because they're transgender.
This to me is like so far fucking down the list
of this ass clowns,-American bigoted weird behavior.
I find it just sort of disappointing.
All of a sudden the most powerful people in the nation
have decided enough is enough when they lose,
when their portfolio goes down.
So yeah, I'm a bit of a mess today,
but for the right reasons.
I don't, you know, we know this is stupid.
So let's bust right into it.
You did a fantastic video I thought was really powerful
talking about, you know,
tariffs can play a role in restoring trade symmetry.
Talk a little bit about the asymmetry
as it relates to US tariffs and our trading partners.
Well, I will get into that. First of all,
Never mind. Get into other stuff, Ed. You're clearly the fucking producer here.
Yeah. OK.
I'm going to stick to our structure that producer Clare.
By the way, that's super sexy when you're not flexible and have to stick to a script.
Yeah, that's going to get you laid, boss.
Anyways, sorry. Go ahead. Sorry. No, I'm happy to talk about the asymmetry and what I brought up in the previous podcast,
which we will get to, is that the US is not getting screwed in the way that we think we are.
We will cover that. Before that, I just want to go over what exactly happened.
Trump's 10% tariffs on all exports to the US and higher rates for roughly
60 countries are the most severe American tariffs in a century. The markets offered a swift and
damning condemnation of those policies with one of the worst sell-offs in recent memory.
In the two trading days following the announcement, the S&P 500 dropped 11% to its lowest level in 11 months.
Meanwhile, the Nasdaq followed the Russell 2000 into bear market territory, down 20%
from its peak in February.
The speed of that drop is rivaled only by the pandemic and the dotcom implosion.
The Dow closed Friday, down more than 2,000 points for only the fourth time in history.
All told, we should probably just reiterate the number
you used at the start of the show, which is that the US stock market lost a record $6.6 trillion
in two days. Okay. Now that we've just gotten the basics out of the way, there are many places we
could start. I guess the first place that I would start and that a lot of people are talking about
I guess the first place that I would start and that a lot of people are talking about
is how these tariffs were actually calculated. I think most people know by now the tariff rates that this administration chose had actually nothing to do with the existing tariff rates
in the world. Instead, what they did was they took the trade deficit of each country, they divided it by
the imports.
That's how they determined the existing tariff rate, quote unquote.
And then to get the new tariff rate, they divided that number by two.
This calculation, I'm sure you've read about it before, people are covering it.
It actually has no relationship with the actual tariffs on the US.
It's measuring a completely different thing.
So, you know, I think that's a big part of why the markets reacted so badly. The markets realized,
oh my God, not only are these people serious about these tariffs, but they're also incredibly
stupid and misinformed. And I think that was the big freak out for everyone. Now on the point that you asked me to raise in terms of the trade symmetry, I think what
was really interesting to me was this recent article that we saw from the Washington Post,
which explains how this whole calculation went down.
What happened was Trump asked his team to do the analysis and to go out and find out,
okay, what actually is the effective tariff rate on each nation, which is a difficult thing to do
because, you know, these tariffs, they're not universal. They're specific to each item. And
then that rate can change depending on your relationship with a certain country. In other
words, determining a number,
a tariff rate is a difficult thing to do.
But his team did it.
They went out, they did the analysis,
and they went to the president
and they brought him a menu of options.
They said, okay, we did what you asked.
Here is what we could do.
And he looked at the menu and he said,
eh, I don't like it.
I want to do something else.
And that's when he decided on this new trade deficit formula, which again has nothing to
do with actual tariffs.
And this gets back to what I discussed last week, which is that if you actually look at
the numbers and you look at our relationship with all of these countries, we're not the victim
we like to think we are. Many countries charge less than we do. Most of our largest trading partners
charge around the same that we do. And in fact, if you look at the last 15 years, the US has
implemented the most amount of hawkish trade interventions of any nation. And so what I think happened was the Trump team went out,
they found the data, they did the analysis,
they showed him the data, they showed him the truth,
and then Trump looked at it and he said,
I don't like the data, I don't like the truth,
because it doesn't fit with my narrative.
So what we're gonna do now is we're gonna make up the data
and we're gonna make up the truth.
And that's what that board was
that he was holding in the Rose Garden.
It was basically a fabricated list.
It was like an imaginary world of what if the tariff rates were this amount?
And then we will just divide that what if number by two in order to make you believe
that America is getting screwed.
So that's, it's a very interesting dynamic following what I talked about on the last episode, which is,
you know, look, do the numbers, do the math, look at the actual tariff rates, do the hard work of
understanding what is going on in the economy. And you will conclude, as is usually the case,
America is not really getting screwed on much. In fact, we're the most powerful nation in the world for a reason.
We're actually quite stringent on other nations on many things, including tariffs.
But Trump, it didn't fit with his narrative.
Trump needs to believe that America is getting screwed by foreigners.
And so it was a miraculous thing to see him literally make up the numbers.
And I think the most concerning and disturbing thing is seeing his team
just playing the sycophantry once again, clapping at his announcement
and basically pretending that he's got it all right.
Having just told him these are what the real numbers are.
And he said, no, I don't like those numbers.
And they capitulated.
Yeah.
So the first myth we have to take off the table is somehow that, that America is
the victim here, right?
If, if anyone has been flexing their muscle and imposing onerous tariffs that,
that we've been able to figure out a way to pay, I think you, I think some of your
data, 25% tariff on Japanese trucks entering the US,
they charge us 0% tariff. I think you said 82% for sugar imported in from Brazil,
they charge us 13%. Typically, if there's asymmetry, we're on the right side of the asymmetry,
so to speak. This will likely be the second largest or the largest own goal since our entry into
Iraq.
And the biggest or the largest was Nigel Farage convincing angry Brits because the economy
hadn't grown that this would be our independence day.
And the economy has just basically gone sideways since then.
Tariffs make no sense.
They've never made any sense. There are rare exceptions when
they can be used tactically to restore symmetry in key areas where we're getting a raw deal or
to protect certain industries that you need for strategic reasons. You probably need a certain
amount of domestic steel production in case we go to war. But just to use one company example,
Apple, the tariffs that he has imposed
are gonna cost Apple $40 billion.
By the way, it's the importer that pays the tariff.
So they're gonna have to pay $40 billion, right?
That comes right off the bottom line.
The PE of Apple was 38, now I think it's 34.
So you're talking about a trillion dollars
in shareholder losses to Apple.
And I wanna come back to shareholder losses.
In addition, the idea is that if you kind of raise the cost,
then it inspires domestic production.
To produce an iPhone in the US would cost $3,500 an iPhone.
So we're not moving back manufacturing.
All it's going to do is increase the price of an iPhone
from $1,600 to $2,300 and reduce the market capitalization
of Apple by a trillion dollars.
And that is fairly typical of what happens across the board.
So these, it is difficult to think of a more elegant way
to reduce prosperity than tariffs.
And what people aren't talking about
that's even more damaging is the uncertainty.
People don't know how to plan their businesses.
If he just come out and said, all right, 10% tariffs,
businesses, both foreign and domestic
could plan their business, get on with it.
They don't know who they're waking up next to. His sclerotic, epileptic
decision-making, he could cancel all tariffs on Monday. So no one
knows what to do here. What they are doing is the largest companies, the
largest economies in the world, are reconfiguring their supply routes to
excise American manufacturers and
American services firms from their supply chain. This will take likely years
if not decades to repair and reassemble. The other thing we're not missing and
Josh Brown brought this up, I just think it was a fascinating insight, it's that
if you look at the products we export,
a lot of finished products,
a lot of high value manufacturing,
by the way, we need to rebuild our manufacturing base.
Now we have purposely traded it off
because the services jobs we've replaced
the manufacturing base with are generally higher paying.
And we are still the second largest manufacturer
in the world behind China.
But we, for example, we take an Nvidia chip,
very, very high value add, and we export those chips.
Those products probably have a 50 or 60 point profit margin.
We import Mercedes.
Mercedes maybe, maybe has a 10% profit margin.
The products we generally import in
have a much lower margin than the products we
export because we're bigger in services and high value add products. So let's just look at NVIDIA
versus Apple. NVIDIA has a price to sales ratio of about 24. Mercedes has a price to sales ratio of
0.23. Meaning if you were to go pro-route
and assume we're gonna reduce a billion dollars
because of these reciprocal tariffs,
which they didn't think were gonna happen for some reason,
but let's just assume for shits and giggles,
a billion less dollars of Mercedes coming in
because of the tariffs
and a billion less of Nvidia chips going out.
That's a reduction in market cap of 23 or 24 billion to Nvidia shareholders,
and it's a reduction of 23 million to Mercedes shareholders. In other words, if we go peri
passu and lose $1 for every dollar they lose, that's not the analogy. This is apples to
aircraft carriers. They hit to our stock market, they hit to our market capitalization,
they hit to the compensation via options of domestic employees
that work for these amazing firms,
will be much greater, much greater
than the hit to foreign markets.
We'll hear both.
All the markets were down, right?
Our market was down.
Europe stocks, 600, fell 8%.
UK's FTSE fell 7%.'s stocks, 600, fell 8%.
UK's FTSE fell 7%.
The MSCI Asian index fell 5%.
This guy has figured out a way to elegantly take down
the prosperity of the global economy.
And I only have one of two scenarios here.
And one sounds paranoid, but it doesn't mean I'm wrong.
The first scenario is this guy's just a fucking idiot.
And nobody around him has the stones to say,
this is just a really bad idea.
And it's gonna cost you a lot of votes, a lot of support.
Farmers are gonna get hit the hardest.
Canada and Europe are already deciding to be more strategic
with their tariffs and they're going after the heart
and lungs, they're going after the red states.
They're either all acolytes or he just doesn't listen to them.
My second scenario, and I know this sounds ridiculous,
but what I would ask our listeners
to contemplate is the following.
If President Trump had received $10 billion
or commitment of $10 billion from both Putin and Xi
into his Trump coin in exchange
for dividing the Western Alliance, for driving the biggest trading partners into the arms
of China, for withdrawing from Ukraine.
Wouldn't that just make perfect fucking sense right now?
If Xi and Putin had called this guy and said, all right, I mean, he's either this fucking stupid
or this fucking corrupt
because none of this shit makes absolutely any sense.
Whatsoever, there is no evidence, there is no support.
There is no empirical argument for why or how
this does anything but reduce prosperity,
throw our trading partners into the arms of our adversaries.
Japan, South Korea, and China are talking for the first time
about closer economic ties.
So this is the inconsistency,
the market capitalization loss,
the general sort of reduction in the value proposition
of our products abroad
while increasing our prices domestically.
This is Nigel Farage on steroids,
but Trump is gonna take down a bunch of Western economies
in the short term.
The big winner is China,
because China is basically gonna scoop up a lot
of these trading relationships
that we are throwing in the dustbin.
Yeah.
I think the Brexit analogy is the correct one.
And by the way, we've been making that analogy
since the very beginning, ever since he said the word tariff,
which is it was an extremely emotionally compelling argument
at the time to tell everyone that this sovereign nation is
being screwed by its partners.
And no one had, I would say,
the attention span to go in and look at the data and actually understand what was happening.
And it was more exciting to assume that we're getting screwed and that we need to sort of
batten down the hatches and turn inward. And we saw the effects of that play out over multiple years. And we've covered it in many episodes before.
The UK economy is absolutely dog shit,
is what I would say right now.
You know, you said they flatlined.
They haven't flatlined, they've contracted.
I mean, it's been a total disaster.
And the entire country recognizes that now.
They recognize, oh yeah, that was a mistake.
So we said from the beginning,
this is the same thing at play. We're getting very excited about the idea that we're getting
patriotic and we're going to sort of say, fuck you to our quote unquote enemies who
are in reality our friends actually. And we're going to be pro-America, quote unquote America
first. And we said from the beginning, it's not going to work. It's going to tank the
economy. It's going to tank the stock market.
I said that to many of my MAGA friends and they said I had Trump derangement
syndrome. It's very, very simple stuff.
Now you say, what is the reasoning here?
I'll just tell you what the reasoning that I'm hearing from the MAGA base is.
The argument from Trump supporters right now is basically twofold.
The first is that this is a long-term play. They would point to our debt load,
they would point to our deficit, they would say this is not sustainable,
and that failure on this path is inevitable in the next, call it, 20 years.
So if we don't shake things up dramatically right now,
we are essentially admitting defeat.
And if we do this, we can reconstitute a new economy
that is less dependent on government debt,
as it has been in the past,
and is more dependent on revenue,
the external revenue, as he puts it,
from tariffing other countries.
So that's sort of the first argument that it's a long-term play.
The second is that it's a negotiating tactic.
And they would say, these tariffs, they're probably not here to stay.
But what it does is it freaks everyone out.
It shows all these other nations, we're serious, we'll actually do this stuff.
And it will allow us to bring them to the table
and make them do whatever they want, whatever we want.
So that would be their argument.
My issue is those two arguments are completely contradictory
because it's either a real policy
that has long-term benefits,
or it's like a pump fake and a negotiating tactic.
It can't be both.
So I would like to get your response to their response.
What would be your reaction to their arguments?
Either one, that we have to do this
because America is screwed on this long-term debt path,
or two, this is 40 chest chess. It's a negotiating tactic.
Yeah. I, the, the trope or the weirdness here, whenever no one in the administration
can justify, explain or rationalize a decision he's making, they claim he's
playing 4D chess, that this is so stupid or crazy, that it's crazy genius and you
just aren't privy to his genius yet.
Uh, enough already.
That's just stupid.
There's a lot of smart people out there.
Tell us what you're thinking.
And this notion that, oh, all will be revealed
as genius will be revealed.
That argument doesn't hold.
I think the best argument from an optics standpoint
is it is true that we've lost a lot of manufacturing jobs.
And at least theoretically,
if you raise the price of importsorts our domestic manufacturers should be more competitive
Theoretically and you should increase manufacturing jobs
The problem is they impose reciprocal tariffs. I mean it just as an example 88% of
Toys under the Christmas tree are from China
Tariffs on toys I think are going from 3% to like 33 or something. So a 20% increase in the cost of toys.
90 plus percent of Americans are on a fixed budget for Christmas gifts.
They just can't spend whatever it takes.
So just to bring it home, this Christmas,
90% of households are going to have 20% fewer gifts under the tree for their kids.
Instead of 10 gifts, they're going to have 8.
So the notion it's going to bring back manufacturing doesn't really hold.
I do believe you could say, all right, we're going to give massive subsidies to the chips industry because it's strategic, it'll create good jobs.
We're going to spend a lot of money on an infrastructure bill,
which will create shovel-ready jobs for people here who don't have college degrees.
I'm sympathetic to the argument that we need more on-ramps.
But the notion that tariffs are going to somehow restore American manufacturing,
it doesn't pan out that way.
As a matter of fact, almost every example,
this is essentially the policies of Latin America
from the kind of the 50s to the 80s, and it didn't work.
It was a disaster for them.
And then a lot of people think that essentially
China had all of this kind of cultural backlash.
And basically they said Mao Zedong,
his strategies didn't work.
So they've totally embraced kind of,
I don't wanna say open trade because they in fact
are not open in terms of media,
but let's just use that as an example.
And to be fair, we should tariff the shit,
I.e. ban TikTok because they don't allow
meta into their country.
That's an example where I think you could have tariffs
or basically a ban. and TikTok because they don't allow meta into their country. That's an example where I think you could have tariffs
or basically a ban.
But essentially meta trades at eight times sales.
ByteDance trades at three,
despite the fact it's growing faster.
Now, why do our companies trade at a much higher multiple
than their analog abroad?
It's because one, we have rule of law here.
We have higher growth. we have more innovation,
great universities, more risk capital,
more risk aggressive people, more flexible companies.
We also are seen as consistent,
and that is good trading partners.
Now, all of a sudden, in a matter of a few short months
since inauguration, we've gone from the rule of fair play
or rule of law being a huge attribute.
I mean, you can't overestimate. When I speak to people who've come here,
who've immigrated here, they say the rule of,
I have a close friend who runs a lot of my money
from El Salvador and he's like,
the bottom line is you can be successful in El Salvador
and someone might just show up and take your money.
Who, with the government's backing.
I have another good friend who came from Russia,
said, you get the wrong, the wrong person makes a call about you,
you're done.
You get as much money as you can and you get out.
The rule of fair law is no longer a given here in the US.
Consistency, being a good trading partner, no,
that's no longer a rule here.
We're doing used car sales on the White House lawn.
So what you're gonna see here,
and the reason why I'm transitioning out of US stocks,
is even after this route,
we traded a P, the S&P trades at a P of around 24, 25.
It was 28.
Germany's around 21, Japan 16, China 14.
A lot of that is directly correlated to what I'll call the separation of business and state.
And that is business embraces rule of law and competition and the government stays out of the way.
And that is not true in China. The CCP can weigh in and you can't rely
on the Chinese government to not meddle with competition.
And that's one of the reasons it trades
at a much lower multiple.
You're about to see dramatic contraction
in the multiple across the SMP,
because a lot of the features that created a flow
of capital into the US,
consistency, rule of law, are no longer attributes
that people can rely on.
This will take, I mean, think about it.
If we go from a multiple of 25 to say where Japan is at 16,
Meta, Ford Motor, P&G could increase their earnings 60%
and the stock would be flat over the next four or five years.
You can't outrun multiple contraction.
If you've invested in Latin America over the last 10 years,
you've been fucked and you might've picked great companies
that outperformed increased earnings, increased revenues,
but the stock hasn't gone up because the multiple contraction
has vastly outpaced the individual earnings
or revenue growth of that company.
And that is what, in my view,
we are about to experience here in the US
through this inconsistency.
All of a sudden, the US brand is about kleptocracy
and sclerotic decision-making.
We'll be right back after the break.
If you're enjoying the show so far and you haven't subscribed, be sure to give
ProfGMarkets a follow wherever you get your podcasts.
Support for ProfGMarkets comes from found.
When you're a small business owner,
keeping your bookkeeping and taxes in order comes at a cost. I'm not just talking about
your money here, I'm talking about your time. Hours and hours that you could have spent
actually growing your business. But it doesn't have to be that way, thanks to Found. Found
is a business banking platform that doesn't just consolidate your financial ecosystem.
Found automates manual activities like expense tracking and finding tax write-offs.
Found makes staying on top of invoices and payments incredibly easy.
Other small businesses are loving Found too.
This Found user said, quote,
Found is going to save me so much headache,
it makes everything so much easier.
Expenses, income, profits, taxes, invoices even. And Found has 30,000 5-star reviews just like this.
Open a Found account for free at F-O-U-N-D dot com slash ProfG. Found is a financial
technology company, not a bank. Banking services are provided by Piermont Bank, member FDIC.
Don't put this one off,
join thousands of small business owners
who have streamlined their finances with Found.
Support for ProfG Markets comes from Vanta.
Trust isn't just earned, it's demanded.
Whether you're a startup founder
navigating your first audit,
or a seasoned security professional scaling your GRC program, proving your commitment to security has never been more critical or
more complex.
That's where Vanta comes in.
Businesses use Vanta to establish trust by automating compliance needs across over 35
frameworks like SOC 2 and ISO 27001, essentialize security workflows, complete questionnaires
up to five times faster,
and proactively manage vendor risk.
Vanta not only saves you time, it can also save you money.
A new IDC white paper found that Vanta customers achieve $535,000 per year in benefits, and
the platform pays for itself in just three months.
You can join over 9,000 global companies like Atlassian, Quora, and Factory, who use Vanta
to manage risk and prove security in real time. For a limited time, our audience gets $1,000 off Vanta
at vanta.com slash markets. That's vanta.com slash markets for $1,000 off.
McDonald's has entered a Minecraft movie universe and Grimace, Birdie, and
Hamburglar just spawned his new collectibles in the overworld.
Now for a limited time, you can get one of six McDonald's collectibles when you order
a Minecraft movie meal with your choice of a Big Mac or a 10-piece Chicken McNuggets
with Spicy Netherflame Sauce.
A Minecraft movie meal available now at your local McDonald's.
See it in theaters April 4th.
Meal available for a limited time while supplies last. At participating Canadian restaurants.
We're back with Proffesure Markets.
You know, an argument I keep seeing
and which Scott Bessent made,
you know, he has that quote that people are citing a lot.
This is a mag seven problem, not a mag a problem.
And I think that's worth addressing,
because his point is that,
yeah, sure, we'll see multiple contraction,
but the top 10% owns almost 90% of the stock market,
which means that the only demographic
that this sell-off is really going to affect is rich people.
And I just want to clarify
the truth of this point, which I think has been seriously perverted over the past couple of years,
because there is truth to that point. It is true that the stock market is primarily owned by
rich people. And you made that point during COVID where we were artificially pumping stimulus
into the economy such that we could maintain
the multiples that we had gotten used to in the stock market.
And your point was, like the stock market falling
isn't a catastrophe because this isn't Main Street.
This will largely affect rich people.
It won't affect poor people as much
But that argument has now been perverted and advanced into a total untruth
Where they make the claim that the stock market has no correlation with the real economy
But the idea that the stock market falling has no effect on poor people at all
market falling has no effect on poor people at all. Which is not true at all because actually the stock market is a reflection of the real
economy.
Yes, it's not one to one, but if you see a contraction in earnings, if you see an increase
in tariffs, which means that the burden is going to be shouldered by the companies who
are importing those goods, then what we're going to start to see is one, an increase in prices.
We're expected to see above 4% inflation this year.
And two, we're going to see layoffs.
This is going to massively affect the job market.
So whenever I see that argument that a lot of people seem to be making right now, well,
this is only going to affect rich people.
That's actually not true.
Yes, it does affect rich people.
Yes, it affects multiples and people whose assets are largely held in the stock market,
but it also is going to affect poor people.
If you have a recession in the stock market, eventually it does trickle down into the real
economy and you're going to see massive job losses, massive layoffs.
It's going to be so hard to enter this job market if you're just graduating from college
in the next year or two.
So I just think we need to dispel that myth because what started as an important point
about who really owns the stock market has been twisted and perverted into some weird
justification into tanking the economy at large, which is going to affect everyone in
the US. But I would also going to affect everyone in the US.
But I would also like to get your thoughts on that.
The stock market, the Dow and the NASDAQ are not the real economy.
There are reflection on components of the real economy, but there is some
truth to the notion that essentially the Dow Jones and the NASDAQ are essentially
the PSA or the blood pressure reading of the top 10%, if not the top 1%.
And what do you know?
They've been on a record tear for 15 years
and until a month ago,
72 highs in the previous 24 months, what have you.
And I'm actually a fan of programs
that would probably take, not purposely,
the stock market down.
If you were to say that the alternative minimum tax
on corporations who have enjoyed,
now enjoyed the lowest tax rates since 1939,
if you were to say,
corporations aren't paying enough taxes,
we're gonna have an AMT of 30%, that seems reasonable,
but it'd be an enormous hike in corporate taxes because many of them,
including the biggest names in business,
don't pay any because of the tax code,
the stock market would go down
because they would have lower earnings.
I'd be in favor of that.
I think people of your generation need disruption,
maybe even if that means hopefully getting a chance
to buy real estate and stocks at a lower price.
Disruption and churn is a key component of transferring wealth back from the incumbents to the entrance on a regular basis.
And as I've said, we've done everything we can specifically run up your credit card to smooth out
disruption such that I can stay rich. If we were to raise minimum wage to $25 an hour,
McDonald's and Walmart's stock would go down substantially.
I'd be in favor of that, I think it's worth it.
This is a double whammy.
This goes from bad to worse,
in that it's not only does the stock market go down,
but 98% of companies that export products
are small and medium sized businesses.
43% of US agricultural exports go to our free trade partners who've agreed to
have lower tariffs.
That's up from 29% in 1990.
40 million American jobs depend on trade.
And that you'd think, well, out of 355 million, that's not a lot.
Only 150 million Americans work.
So you're talking about a quarter of our jobs
are dependent upon trade
and we're going into a voluntary unnecessary trade war.
So there are certain components.
They're playing, they're trying to play the everyman.
Well, it just impacts the rich.
Well, okay, that's a fair argument.
But when you go after policies that reduce prosperity,
reduce economic growth,
reduce the demand for products across every company,
including those that are not publicly traded,
everyone's gonna feel this.
Everyone's gonna feel this.
So that just doesn't hold water.
What I will say, and I just find it,
I go back to this notion,
look what money has done to us.
A friend of mine went to a wedding and his niece is
marrying a woman who's in the Marines.
One of the Marines that was there is
this transgender male who's been in the Marines 14 years.
I think he repairs, he works on aircraft carriers
or something repairing things.
He's been in the Marine for 14 years, he's transgender.
He's just gotten noticed that he can no longer
be in the Marines.
I mean, it's just, why would we, when 70% of American males
who show up to a recruiting office can't qualify for the armed services
because they're either mentally unfit or obese.
Why would we risk our national security
for a right-wing hateful trend
through the current administration?
When we hear about people being arrested
because they didn't narc on people
who were planning a pregnancy. When we hear about women in emergency rooms being turned away and risking
sepsis in the parking lot, but the only thing that gets the most powerful
Democrats or quote unquote Democrats down to fucking Mar-a-Lago is when the
stock market goes down. So look, whatever it takes for people of power to, to begin recognizing that Ben Shapiro isn't upset
about anything until he frames this as a tax increase. Now he's like, okay, this is the largest
tax increase in history. No, it's not been the largest tax increase in history? No, it's not Ben. The largest tax increase in history is trading off tax cuts for increased taxes
on young people in the form of deficits.
Deficit funded tax cuts are essentially
a tax increase on young people and they're inefficient.
Trickle down just doesn't fucking work.
It doesn't work boss.
But the Republicans are now outraged
because they say this is an unconstitutional tax increase
in the form of tariffs. But if this is what it takes to get people's attention, fine. For me,
this is like number 15 on the list of shit that just outrages me. But if this is what it takes to
get to the attention of powerful people, fine. Well, but there are ways to do it without making poor people poorer.
Fair enough.
There are ways to, you know, extract the obscene wealth that we've been seeing accumulated among the rich.
And it appears that that's the justification that they are using for this policy.
But there's a way to do that which doesn't also make poor people poorer in the
form of layoffs, a tighter job market, and of course, inflation.
That's the most important impact we're going to see.
This is going to be massively inflationary.
It's going to hit poor people the hardest.
The way you do that is, as you say, you get your act together on taxes.
That's how you do it.
I think the double whammy, as you say,
is the right way to put it. Yes, this is going to affect rich people negatively, but it's also
going to affect poor people negatively. And there is a way to implement policy that can address the
massive wealth inequality that we've seen over the past few years, but to suddenly, after making this insane policy, then say, oh, this was all part of the plan because look how rich everyone
is.
Having enriched those same people for many, many years, to me, it's just, they're completely
fumbling the ball here.
But I want to move on to what people can actually do about this.
So you know, we lost more than $6 trillion in value in the stock
market. The dollar shed 6% of its value. The odds of a recession, according to JP Morgan,
have now risen to 60%. So in all likelihood, we can expect a recession in 2025.
I'd just like to get some advice from you.
And let's start with young people. Let's start with me, for example.
This could be the first real recession
of my professional career.
What would be your advice for a young person like me?
What should I be doing with my money?
And what exactly should I be worried about
if a recession is coming this year?
So action absorbs anxiety,
and there's two components to this.
But at the same time, you don't want to make decisions
from an emotional position or from an emotional complexion.
So a couple of things,
in terms of your own personal activity,
I never think it's a bad idea to say,
where could I save money and dollar cost average in
and start investing more?
Because quite frankly, this might be,
it might be an opportunity.
You always wanna be in the market.
I'm not, I think it's always a great time to say,
how could I cut my expenses as a young person
and invest more?
So ignore the markets for the moment.
The first question in terms of real action,
what could I do to reduce my costs,
get one of those apps to look at my subscriptions,
one glass coffee, downgrade my gym from Equinox
to whatever, a boxing, whatever it might be,
partner with my boyfriend or my girlfriend
to try and save a little bit money,
but we're gonna get, in case the shock comes,
we're ready or more ready.
And if it doesn't, any incremental savings we have,
we're gonna invest in the market.
I think you always wanna be invested at your age.
It is impossible.
In the last three years, we've had up 24, up 27 and down 10.
You couldn't pick which of those years came sequentially.
So don't try and believe you can time the market.
Your action is to think,
how can I be more financially responsible
and free up more money to invest? Terms of your investment strategy, and this is the email and the text
I got, what should I do? What should I do? I'm freaking out. What should I do? This is
what you do as it relates to investments. Nothing. Because when something traumatic happens to
you, and for this, I was shocked how many people I know saw this as a traumatic event.
They were watching, you know,
glued to their phones watching their net worth go down
10, 20, 30%.
You never wanna make a decision
from an emotionally fragile standpoint.
When you get divorced, girlfriend breaks up with you,
lose your job, someone in your life dies.
You do not wanna make any big life decisions in that moment.
You aren't thinking straight.
And you want to take action, you want to try and do something, don't.
Wait a while, talk to people before you do anything.
Because say you sold everything yesterday.
The worst piece of advice in financial history was probably Jim Kramer at
the depths of the great financial recession saying,
if you can't stand the volatility, then you should sell your position.
Can you imagine if you sold your position in 2008
at the lows, within 14 months they were back.
You wanna talk about a hit to your mental health.
I panicked, I sold and it came ripping back
because this is what could happen.
Say at the end of Friday, Americans, not Americans,
humans will do almost anything to avoid pain.
They just thought, shit, everything's so far down.
If you're in tech stocks, you might've been down 20, 30%
in 48 hours, I can't handle down 20, 30% in 48 hours.
I can't handle anymore, I'm just going to cash.
You do that Friday at 3 p.m.
Because this guy's so inconsistent,
because the market is now volatile,
the volatility of the VIX has gone way up.
There's a non-zero probability on Monday, Ed.
He says, just kidding, I'll tear this off,
and the market goes up 2000 points.
And then what happens to your mental health?
I perfectly timed this fucking wrong.
And your emotions are your enemy in the market
because your emotions are rational in the sense
that other people are having the exact same emotion
and are doing things in unison as a herd,
which creates alpha on the other side.
And that is, if at 3.30 PM, a lot of people were thinking,
I just need to sell like everyone else,
those people generally don't do well
because everyone's selling or everyone's buying, right?
So you do nothing.
Now, over the medium and long-term,
I think it's a decent idea to say, okay,
I wanna avoid some of this mental trauma.
I wanna avoid what I believe is probably
maybe a signal that the American run
or the historic run might be coming to an end.
I think potentially saying, okay,
after things have settled a bit,
if I have some losses,
maybe harvesting some losses for tax reasons,
if that makes sense,
or thinking about diversifying out
into low-cost ETFs geographically?
Should I be looking at some ETFs in Latin America,
in Asia, in Europe, recognizing that over the long-term,
demographics and innovation and productivity
take the markets up and to the right over the long-term.
I want low fees, but to just be in the S&P,
even if it's the SPY, you think you're diversified
with an index fund?
No, you're not.
So I do think it might be time to think over the medium
and the long term, should I be diversifying
into other markets that might recognize more growth
in the next five years, given that we look in America
to be developing a reputation
for a less ideal place to invest,
meaning the flows of the rivers of capital
that have been one way into the US for the last 15 years
are about to reverse.
And we might experience that insurmountable foe
of multiple contraction.
I think you think about this,
you start talking to people about it,
but you don't start selling everything and going to cash. When you're your age, and I think even when you think about this, you start talking to people about it, but you don't start selling
everything and going into cash.
When you're your age, and I think even when you're my age, you want to be diversified,
you always want to be in the market.
The markets could go up a thousand or two thousand points on Monday, they could go down
another thousand or two thousand points.
So you just want to think, you want to start thinking about how you make yourself more
bulletproof, set yourself up for success, but you do not want to make big decisions
from a position of emotion.
Yeah.
I think the worst thing that you could do right now is panic sell.
And I just want to make clear for everyone who's listening to your advice right now.
You're not saying sell your S&P and go buy the Euro stocks.
You're saying hold your S&P, take what cash you have, and go diversify into other markets.
And I think that makes a lot of sense.
The other thing that a lot of people are talking about right now though, which I'd like to
get your thoughts on, is buying the dip. You know, hedge funds, they sold over $40 billion in stocks on Thursday,
which is the highest net sell-off from hedge funds since 2010.
Meanwhile, retail investors bought almost $5 billion worth of stocks on Thursday,
which is the highest net purchase from retail investors in the past 10 years.
In other words, institutions are selling and retail investors are actually buying.
They are leaning into it. They're buying the dip.
So what are your thoughts on buying the dip right now?
Do you think this is a good time to buy the dip or do you think we should be waiting a little longer?
It's impossible to know.
The only strategy I'm comfortable recommending or actions I'm comfortable
recommending is if you find that you're 90% in US stocks or 95 or a hundred,
there's a lot of people that are a hundred percent in US real estate in US
and our entire net worth is tied up in the US because of innovation in the
financial markets, you can now buy a low cost ETF in Brazil or in China
or Vietnam or all of Europe.
What I'm suggesting is you look at your portfolio,
you don't do anything in the immediate term
because who knows what's gonna happen with this volatility
and you think about diversifying.
And also I always think it's a great idea,
if you have cash or you can figure out a way
to get some extra money together, I love investing.
And, but I think this notion of buying the dip, shit,
we don't know if this is, if we're gonna look back,
it's not as if the market is cheap right now.
It's not, it's not like, oh, everything's on sale.
And I remember I worked remember I was an advisor to a kind of Phil Falcone
at Harbinger Capital and Phil made one of the great bets
in history, he bet on the subprime crisis.
He went from 300 million AOM to 22 billion.
And I remember coming in, in March of 09 or 10,
I'm like, oh my God, we gotta buy William Sonoma.
It's at five bucks a share, we gotta buy.
And I remember him saying to me,
what do I sell to buy this?
Everything's on sale right now.
Everything's on sale.
We are so far from that.
If you didn't know what had happened on Thursday and Friday,
you wouldn't look at a lot of S&P stocks and go,
oh my God, they're irresistible.
Now there's probably some value,
like Nike I was watching,
it's just gotten the shit beaten out of it.
It's at a 12 or a 15 year low.
You know, Intel, there's probably some good companies.
I wouldn't say they're on sale.
I would say they're slightly marked down
from what was historically high prices.
So this notion that you should lever up or margin up, no. If you have some money and
you want to be in the market, I think you really want to look at how diversified you are, geographically.
And I love the idea of freeing up money to invest. I think that's a great idea for a young person.
Okay, I'm going to figure out a way. I have some cash. I want a dollar cost average in,
but I think it's about diversification. But the notion somehow
that the markets are on sale right now versus what versus Wednesday night. True. That's it. They're
not on sale.
We'll be right back. If you're enjoying the show so from Zbiotics.
If you're like me, then you'll probably enjoy a cocktail with friends at the end of
a long day.
And if you want to feel your best in the morning, you could start the night with Zbiotics.
Zbiotics pre-alcohol probiotic drink is the world's first genetically engineered probiotic.
It was invented by PhD scientists to tackle rough mornings after drinking.
And according to Z-Biotics, here's how it works. When you drink, alcohol gets converted into a toxic byproduct in the gut.
It's this byproduct, not dehydration, that's to blame for your rough next day.
Pre-alcohol produces an enzyme to break this byproduct down.
Just remember to make pre-alcohol your first drink
of the night, drink responsibly,
and you'll feel your best tomorrow.
I have been using Zbiotics and I have found it takes
about 30 to 40% of whatever you wanna call it,
the pain or not feeling great, away the next morning.
So I'm a fan, I use it.
Anyways, go to zbiotics.com slash propg to learn more
and get 15% off your first order
when you use prop G at checkout.
Zbiotics is back with 100% money back guarantee, so if you're unsatisfied for any reason,
they'll refund your money, no questions asked.
Remember to head to zbiotics.com slash prop G and use the code prop G at checkout for
15% off.
This is a Reese's Peanut Butter Cups sound experiment. We're looking to find the
perfect way to hear Reese's so you'll buy more of them. Here we go. Reese's. Reese's. Reese's.
Reese's. Reese's. Get out of here you little stinker. Reese's. Reese's.
Reeses! Reeses!
Reeses!
Peanut butter cups.
That breathy one sounded very creepy, am I right? way you manage your people and money today so you can transform tomorrow. Workday moving business forever forward.
We're back with ProfGMarkets.
I would like to pivot to advice for older people.
Someone say closer to retirement age, someone who has been-
Get a colonoscopy.
Someone who's been.
You're gonna be dead soon.
Forgive yourself, be nicer to people.
Be kinder.
Order the good wine is Bill Bixby
from the Incredible Hulk and the courtship
of Eddie's father, someone you probably don't know.
When he was dying of cancer,
he used to say to everybody, buy the good wine.
But on a serious note, I mean,
there are people who have been building
their retirement accounts for a long time.
They've just seen the value of that account
slashed more than 10%.
I'm sure a lot of people are legitimately
panicking right now.
I think for young people,
it's actually a lot less stressful,
because as you've made the point before,
we actually, for a lot of us, we don't really own assets.
Um, it's kind of a nice thing when the stock market's on sale, we'll just
earn our income in cash and then convert that into assets.
Um, when we buy the stock market and hopefully it's, it goes down a little
bit and then we can see it grow over a lifetime.
But for someone who is saying their sixties who has been building up the asset
base and this is the asset base they are ready to live off of, what would you say
to them?
Well, I'll talk about them and then I'll, I don't like to give financial advice.
I'll say what I'm doing.
And I'm in a much more blessed position than a lot of people for a lot of reasons.
I got lucky and I'm talented.
So, and I've been very open about my
wealth on this program. So first off, same advice, don't panic sell. The markets could rip back up.
Work with someone, talk to some people and say, am I too invested in the U.S. market? And how can I
thoughtfully and rationally and in a mature manner start to diversify away from a geographic concentration?
I think that same advice goes.
And also are there opportunities to perhaps maybe ramp up my investing through consuming less, right?
You don't like to tell people to consume less if they, you know, they're already living close to the bone.
But are there opportunities to make a few cuts here and there?
It's basically the same advice,
almost the same advice for young people.
Diversification is even more important for old people
because they don't have the time to make it back.
So diversification is your Kevlar.
So this should be the impetus to try and figure out
if you would benefit from diversifying.
Now, what I am doing or what I've done,
I'm doing nothing over the next few days
because I think the market could go up two or three.
This guy could announce all tariffs are off on Monday
and we're off to the races.
What I've been doing over the last three months
is I have been doing,
I have been slowly but surely selling out
of US-based assets and buying European.
I made my biggest private investment of the year
was in a European defense company.
My other one was I invested in a friends company,
Alenna Partners that manages special sits
in Latin America and Europe.
I love that.
It's mid-cap and small-cap and basic value.
I wanted to get away from tech, what I thought was just.
Now, I also wanna be clear,
I've been planning to sell Apple and Amazon down
and I waited too long.
So I don't get it right, I'm not a genius.
I still, I lost a shit ton of money Thursday and Friday
from Apple and Amazon
because I know I've been thinking about it,
but I was thought, well,
maybe when Apple hits 250 again, right?
And it didn't, now it's back at whatever.
By the way, my prediction was right,
not for all the right reasons,
but I said Apple would hit,
go below $200 in the next six months.
You did. It did.
You did.
So chalk it up as a win.
So what I have done though,
or what I did was I went short.
I thought this thing's just too expensive, specifically AI.
I lost, I don't know, I haven't even really looked.
I think I lost somewhere between five and seven million bucks
on Thursday and Friday in just my US equities.
But I got 30% of it back because I'm short Palantir
and Tempest AI.
I think AI is overvalued.
I think Palantir is crazy overvalued.
So I've been short those companies.
I didn't know you're short.
I love that. That's amazing. When did you go short Palantir is crazy overvalued. So I've been short those companies. I didn't know you're short. I love that.
That's amazing.
When did you go short Palantir and Tempest?
Just a couple of weeks ago.
I thought AI has gone apeshit crazy
and they went up dramatically, got hurt,
but now they're well down.
So I've got, I'm never perfectly matched
in terms of net exposure short long
because I do think the market's general trajectory
is up into the right over the medium and the long term.
So I always want to have and do have a long bias.
So I didn't get my full whatever it was, 7 million in losses back, but I got two or three
back, which quite frankly, kind of, it kind of softens the blow. And I don't think it's
a bad idea when you're like me and fully almost, you know, kind of over invested in the U S
because of real estate and equities and the fact that I make small investments and the
fact that our business, quite frankly, and you need to take this into
account is very dependent upon the US market.
So I said, all right, I want to short the US market.
I want to short AI.
So I went short on Palantir and Tempus, which I just think are just trading at crazy multiples.
So I got some of that back.
But what I am doing over the medium slash long term
is I'm saying, okay, I'm probably,
I was probably six months ago, 95%, 90% US assets.
I'm now 70 and I'm gonna try and go somewhere
between 40 and 50 over the next three or six months.
Cause these cycles take a while to play out.
It's not like you think, well, it's too late to diversify.
Guess what, folks?
If you want to diversify into Latin American or Asian
or European stocks, they got whacked on Friday.
So you might be actually,
if you had some tax losses to harvest
and you wanted to diversify,
you're not really getting punished
because while those markets didn't go down as much,
they went down nearly as much.
So it's still actually a decent time to diversify.
So what am I doing?
I'm trying to reduce my exposure to US assets
because I do think we're gonna experience
multiple contraction, no way to outrun it.
I'm at an age where I can't make it again
or I can't make as much back again.
I have been wealthy three times, which means I have gone broke twice.
I'm not broke, but I've lost most of it.
There's a saying that any fool can make money.
It takes someone smart to hold onto it.
I am that fool, right?
I was not smart.
I did not diversify because I started believing I was good at investing and going all in on NASDAQ stocks
all the time because I understand technology
better than anyone.
Yeah, what a fucking idiot.
Anyways, now I'm trying to learn.
I'm like, okay, okay, I can maybe, you know,
I can diversify a bit.
I'm gonna, that's my Kevlar.
I'm not gonna swing for the fences. I'm going to be more thoughtful this time and diversify a bit. I, I'm going to, that's my Kevlar. I'm not going to swing for the fences.
I'm going to be more thoughtful this time and diversify. I believe in innovation.
I believe in Europe.
I believe in Latin American stocks.
I hate to say it, but, but the Chinese I think are making a big comeback.
So look, that's what I'm doing.
I'm diversifying.
I'm, I'm going more global versus just the U.S.
I'm trying to pull in my chin.
I'm trying to pull in my horns a little bit.
And I don't think that's a bad idea
when you're a little bit older.
I think you want to be diversified.
I would like to just make, as we wrap up here,
one point about America, because I think a lot of people,
they are panicked about what's happening
in the U.S. stock market.
They're panicked about what Trump is doing and there's no doubt about it.
I mean, what he's doing is quite frankly insane and both commentators on the left
and the right agree on all of this and this is why we're seeing this
unbelievable reaction in the stock market.
What I would say though about America and investing in America, I mean,
Buffett has that great saying, never bet against America.
If this were happening in China or some autocratic nation, I think it would probably
be a good idea to sell everything you have because what it means is that the government
is taking us in the
complete wrong direction.
And I think you could expect that would happen and play out over 10, 20, 30 years.
I mean, Xi Jinping, as an example, has installed himself as the indefinite leader of China.
He's never coming out.
The great thing about America is that we live
in a democratic system. And what we're seeing happen and what we've seen over the last week
or so is the markets and the world is kind of coming to its senses that what this guy's
doing doesn't really make any sense. And we're one of the few nations in the world
where when we install someone who's crazy into the office,
and this was written up in the constitution,
the constitution was built with all of these checks
and balances and all of these designs
that was specifically meant to brace for the impact
of installing someone stupid.
And that is what we have right now.
We've seen from these tariff policies,
and this is a stupid leader
that is making stupid policy decisions.
The wonderful thing about America
is that we'll vote him out.
I mean, if this continues and things get really, really bad,
we'll just vote him out.
And we're one of the few nations in the world
that can do that.
And I think the reality is
Yes, the stock market is down today. It'll probably be down tomorrow and the next week
But if you take a longer term view
We have the luxury of knowing that if things get really really bad
We will just take action and decide to change them and we can change the trajectory of both the economy and the stock market.
And so for those reasons, you know, I, I agree, I think it's good to diversify,
but I definitely don't think that it's time to sell.
I don't think this is a moment where the U S is doomed and it's doomed forever.
The great thing about the U S is the fact that it is democratic and we can get ourselves out of holes every four years.
And so if things continue in this trajectory,
that's exactly what'll happen.
He'll be voted out and we'll make things right again.
I love that.
And I love hearing it from someone with a British accent.
Yeah, you're right.
You don't want to bet against America.
I would argue some of the damage here is structural,
not cyclical that he's undertaking.
I see above, what would Putin and Xi do differently
if they wanted to just cede advantage
from the US to China and Russia?
What would they do differently
than what he's doing right now?
And so I, and unfortunately I do believe,
and you know, this is trying to manifest,
we are going to elect somebody else
after even red states realize,
I mean, how many TikToks are we gonna have
over the next few weeks of,
I voted for Donald, I voted for President Trump
and I regret it.
We're gonna see a lot of those videos.
It's gonna be unbelievable.
I mean, no doubt about it.
The problem is, there has been a world order and inconsistency in a playbook, and America has been
seen, and we've taken it a bit for granted, that we were seen as the stalwart. We were seen as the
base. We were the pillar. We were the mortar inside of all these bricks of wonderful democracies. And
I think he's literally ripping at the fabric
of the world order.
And a lot of nations, even if we bring in someone
who's seen as responsible and an adult
from the Republican or the Democratic side,
I'm not sure the world order is gonna say,
you know, we've reconfigured our supply chain
through Mexico, we're buying more products out of China.
We're doing a lot more trade with Germany
than we are with the US now. We're getting our agricultural products from of China. We're doing a lot more trade with Germany than we are with the US now.
We're getting our agricultural products
from different nations.
If they're gonna say, oh, okay, game on again,
we're back in the US.
I think some of this damage will last for a while.
I think the hangover here is gonna outlive
the Trump presidency.
And that's what's so awful about this.
I don't think that this is,
I think this is gonna do long lasting damage
just as the way we had a 15 year bull market run.
I think you could argue this might be the beginning
of a multi-year, not three and a half,
but five, 10, 12 year reversal of those flows.
And even if companies, even if they get their act together,
the American economy is like no other.
People are so innovative here, so risk aggressive, the gears turn on.
But the thing I don't think they're going to be able to turn around is I think the
momentum now is dramatically around multiple contraction for the S&P and the
NASDAQ.
And I think that is going to, I think that is just going to be a vicious
hangover that'll be several years.
Well, we will definitely be continuing that conversation over the next several years.
So I'm glad everyone will join us for the ride.
Let's take a look at the week ahead.
JP Morgan and Wells Fargo will kick off first quarter earning season.
We'll certainly be listening to what Jamie Diamond has to say about the tariffs
and what's happened in the markets.
We'll also see inflation data for March
from the consumer price index. Scott, do you have any predictions?
Scott McPherson Volatility, that's the only thing I'm comfortable
predicting. It'd be fun to say the market's off another 5,000 points next week. Market could go
up 3,000 points. The only thing I'm fairly certain on is volatility. Don't try this at home, but you're
going to see a lot of traders make money
buying and selling options
because we're about to see the VIX go crazy.
And traders love volatility
because they can spot anomalies and panic selling them
and panic buying and weigh in with good bets on volatility.
Anyways, long-winded way of saying,
my only prediction next week is volatility.
This episode was produced by Claire Miller and engineered by Benjamin Spencer. Our associate producer is Alison Weiss, Mia Silverio is our research lead, Isabella Kintzel
is our research associate, Dan Shalan is our intern, Drew Burrows is our technical director,
and Catherine DeLinn is our executive producer.
Thank you for listening to ProfG Markets from the Vox Media Podcast Network.
Join us on Thursday for our interview with Gary Stevenson, only on ProfG Markets. In kind reunion
As the world turns
And the blood flies
In love, love, love, love