The Prof G Pod with Scott Galloway - Prof G Markets: The S&P 500 Enters Correction Territory
Episode Date: March 17, 2025Still listening on the Prof G Pod Feed? Follow Prof G Markets for more: Apple Podcasts Spotify Scott and Ed open the show by discussing Southwest Airlines' decision to start charging for checked... bags, Eric Schmidt’s appointment as CEO of Relativity Space, and the latest developments in Saudi Arabia’s Neom project. They then analyze the ongoing tariff battle, exploring its biggest potential consequences and why Scott believes China could ultimately come out ahead. Finally, they break down the $4 trillion market sell-off, and Ed highlights the key winners and losers from the plunge. Subscribe to the Prof G Markets newsletter Join us for a live recording at SXSW Order "The Algebra of Wealth," out now Follow the podcast across socials @profgpod: Instagram Threads X Reddit Follow Scott on Instagram Follow Ed on Instagram and X Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Today's number five inches.
That's the length of a live turtle that a Pennsylvanian man attempted to smuggle through airport security in his pants last week.
True story. I was blessed with a seven inch dick.
But now the priest is in jail. ["Texas, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Txs, Tx Ed, how are you? Ed, how are you? I'm just putting it together in my head. We have all these young interns.
They're literally just note to self exhibit 22B.
They're, if I don't keep giving them increase,
they're literally every day balancing the money
they'll get from the lawsuit that I'll settle out of court.
Only upside for us.
Oh, we have a new intern.
Wait, who's the new one?
That's probably Bella you're talking about,
who just came on full time, no longer an intern.
Oh, Bella. Hey, Bella. Welcome to PropG Markets. That's probably Bella you're talking about, who just came on full time, no longer an intern. Oh, Bella.
Hey, Bella.
Welcome to ProfG Markets.
That's right.
She came to, let's talk about me.
I was at Stern yesterday and I spoke to 500 students
and Bella came and yeah, I was super nice to everyone.
And then she told me she works for us.
I'm like, I pay you, I don't even need to be nice to you.
That's right.
Anyways, welcome Bella. Very good. Welcome Bella. Let's talk about priests.'m like, I pay you, I don't even need to be nice to you. That's right. Anyways, welcome Bella.
Very good.
Welcome Bella.
Let's talk about Priest.
What's going on with you, Ed?
I'm doing pretty well, Scott, back in New York.
And I'm just kind of, I just feel very good
about how that South By trip went.
I thought that was a great show.
Talk about that.
That was awesome, wasn't it?
So much fun.
I think the key detail is that we had 1500 people
outside of the doors. So that's what I think the key details that we had, 1,500 people outside of the doors.
So that's what I've been telling everyone
when I just come back and brag to people
about how successful this show is.
That's my big takeaway, that we had to turn away
two-thirds of the audience. What was your takeaway?
I'm now Pete Townsend.
I'm the most talented member of the band,
but fucking what's-his-face, the lead singer,
what's that guy's name?
I don't even know who Pete Townsend is.
Jesus Christ.
I know you're going to just, you're going to, exactly,
you're going to have a panic attack hearing that.
He was the lead guitarist of The Who, but the front man,
Richard Daltrey, who starred in a great movie,
Pinball Wizard, very handsome, better looking than the more talented
Pete Townsend.
This is where I'm going.
Everyone's like, oh, oh, Roger Daltrey, not giving any love to the real talent, Peter Townsend, this is where I'm going. Everyone's like, oh, Roger Daltry,
not giving any love to the real talent, Peter Townsend.
And that's what it feels like at South by Southwest.
Everyone's like, oh, Propp G, what's that like?
That's not true at all.
Yeah, what did you think of the,
we went to this Vox Media Dinner,
and it was very cool for me
because I got to sit next to Andy Roddick,
and I was a huge fan of him growing up.
You're not a fan of Megan Rapinoe?
I think there's a little sexism in here.
There are a lot of amazing female athletes that you have not mentioned at that dinner.
There were.
I wasn't that into women's soccer at the time.
Jesus, Claire, can you believe this guy?
Bella, I apologize.
And he calls himself a football fan too.
No love for Megan.
Arguably one of the greatest football players in history,
but you didn't bring her up.
I didn't, but Andy Roddick.
You brought up the white dude that plays tennis.
Okay, you got to give Andy Roddick his credit.
Fastest serve in history, yes.
And you went to Princeton, right?
Okay, yeah, yeah.
Six foot three, white male.
Figures.
Privilege, the patriarchy.
Oh my God, thank God I've got Claire.
I totally agree with that.
But literally on that stage of us, with us,
was Megan Rapinoe, arguably one of the greatest,
you know, football players in history.
Her wife, Sue Bird, a retired WNBA player,
who has also, I think, won the NCAA championship
two or three times.
It doesn't sound as good when you're reading
the Wikipedia page.
Bitch, who signs your checks?
Is that on my, is that on the Wikipedia page. Bitch, who signs your checks?
Is that on your Wikipedia page, who pays you?
I don't have a Wikipedia page.
Get to the headlines.
Okay.
Good.
Let's start with our weekly review of Market Vitals.
The S&P 500 entered correction territory. The dollar snapped its losing streak. Bitcoin
fell below $80,000 and the yield on 10-year treasuries dropped on Monday but recovered
through the week.
Southwest Airlines will begin charging passengers for checked bags. Beginning in late May, passengers
get a free checked bag only with top- tier loyalty status, a business class ticket or
the airline's credit card. Shares rose 8% on that announcement.
Former Google CEO Eric Schmidt has acquired a controlling stake in Rocket's startup
Relativity Space and he will now take over as its CEO. The company is known for its use
of 3D printers for rocket production.
And finally, Saudi Arabia has reportedly invested $50 billion in its Neom project so far, with
the total projected cost reaching $8.8 trillion.
That is more than 25 times the country's annual budget, and the project's construction
is expected to continue for another 55 years.
Scott, we will start with this new policy from Southwest Airlines. This is very interesting because the whole free bag check thing has been central to Southwest
and its brand for years.
In fact, they actually trademarked this phrase, bags fly free.
So this was their big differentiator.
And last year, the company even said that the free bag policy was the third biggest reason why customers choose Southwest Airlines
And now they're scrapping it now. Why are they doing it?
It's quite simple. It's because of Elliott management the activist firm
You might remember last year Elliott bought a 10% stake in Southwest
they installed five directors to the board and
This was one of their big arguments in that play. They said, we want to charge fees on the back.
So I'm very interested to get your view on this.
This feels like almost a classic business school case study.
Like there's a fork in the road.
Do you charge extra on this thing you know you can make money off of, or do you
forgo the additional revenue and maybe you get some more loyalty and maybe some
more interest from your customers in the long run.
What do you think Scott?
This industry is arguably one of the more seminal technologies in history.
The ability to, my parents had to crawl across the Atlantic over seven to nine
days getting seasick to get to America.
Now you can get, you can realistically fly from London to New York in about seven
hours, and if you book well ahead, you can do it for $400.
I mean, it's just, this technology has been
such an unbelievable unlock for economic growth,
the ability for it to see your family more regularly,
mobility of capital to its greatest return.
It's been just an enormous breakthrough.
Airlines, if you net out all their profits
and all their costs, so far are break even.
Like they just, it's been a shitty business. Differentiation is near impossible in this
industry. What do they have? They're all flying the same tin cans. They're all flying one of two
planes from different, one of two manufacturers, Airbus or Boeing. They're all flying into the same
airport. It's very hard to differentiate on labor or service. And Southwest was able to find differentiation around a brand that meant
freedom. Okay, you just got fired and you want to head to Vegas, you make a reservation,
you need to change it, no change fees. We're not going to nickel and dime you with bags.
It's freedom. It's the ability. It was total cost structure. Even their planes are super
fucking ugly.
They're orange because they found early on that that was the paint that was most
over ordered and they could get the lowest cost on.
They had all 737s for a long time to create scale around repair and maintenance.
Everything was about low cost to give you economic freedom, to take your human
capital where and when you wanted.
This is exactly what you just said, and that is somebody has done the analysis that says,
okay, this cost of free bags is greater than the brand equity bump we're getting.
In the short term, they will absolutely recognize a really substantial increase to the bottom
line.
But in an environment where it is so difficult to establish differentiation,
I think they are trading off long-term margin for short-term stock gain.
I remember one of my first clients,
I started a strategy firm my second year in business school,
one of my first clients was Dreier's.
This CMO who's just incredibly smart,
this guy named Tyler Johnston.
And we were going into a recession, this was 1992.
And I said, well, why don't you just take down marketing spend?
He's, you know, they were a company that was always about to be acquired by
a bigger food company, which ultimately they were for a lot of money.
And he said, you can't take down, you always have to be disciplined about brand
and marketing spend, otherwise all you're doing is juicing your bottom line and
trading off long-term strength.
And I think that's what Clive Frankelwith
are probably doing here.
I haven't seen the numbers.
The people from Elliott are very smart.
But in an environment that is almost near impossible to
maintain, establish and maintain differentiation,
this was a tangible point of differentiation.
So I would call this short-term financial engineering
at the cost of long-term differentiation of margin power.
I do wanna bring up a similar story in Costco
because I think this is one of my favorite stories
in business.
So Costco is famous for their hot dogs,
and specifically the fact that their hot dogs
cost $1.50.
And they have cost that amount since 1985.
They are known for this.
Now, of course, this doesn't really make that much sense economically.
Inflation has risen almost 200% since then.
So if they were selling it at the same price, what $1.50 was in 1985, they
should be selling it for $4.50 today.
150 was in 1985, they should be selling it for 450 today. Several years ago, the then CEO, this guy, Craig Jelinek,
he was looking at the situation, looking at the income statement.
He said, okay, we need to raise the price of these hot dogs.
We're losing money on this.
So he goes to the founder of Costco, Jim Senegal, and he says, hey,
this isn't really working. I know the 150 thing, the hot dogs, it's cute, but I think we need to raise the price.
And Jim responded with what I think is the most iconic line in the history of business.
He said to him, quote, if you raise the price of the fucking hot dog, I will kill you.
And that was it. End of story. To this day, the Costco hot dog is $1.50. That
happened back in 2009. The stock was around $50 per share at that time. It's now at around $1,000 a
share. I don't think it's because of the hot dog, but I do think there is something to be said for
But I do think there is something to be said for sacrificing potentially short-term profits in exchange for in the future, goodwill, a better brand, stronger brand, customer loyalty,
all of these things that ultimately over the long term result in greater profits and more
shareholder value.
So I think I wonder if Elliot even cares about the long term value of this, because presumably they're just trying to make as much money as they can
in as short a time as possible,
and then they sell their position and move on to the next thing.
And by the way, I love hot dogs.
Last night, I decided to share a hot dog with a homeless person,
and he said, fuck off, get your own hot dog.
Anyways, let me be serious for a second.
So I started a company called Red Envelope,
and we spent a disparate,
basically I love benchmarking,
which is consultant's speak for ripping off other people's IP.
I was always fascinated with Tiffany,
specifically how much IP and brand associations he
managed to inject into this aquamarine blue box,
and that elegance, sophistication, romance,
Audrey Hepburn, and I said,
I'm going to start a company that is the Tiffany of
hip, urban, progressive, more erotic sensibilities.
And we came up, we spent a lot of time and a lot of money
on a beautiful red box with a gorgeous bow,
and we had people in our fulfillment center
tie the bow with hands.
When a machine ties a bow,
it looks like a drunk guy
with big thumbs tied it.
It just looks weird.
And it was really expensive.
And someone did the analysis and said
that we actually have negative margin
on some of our least expensive products
when you put it in this beautiful red box.
And I said, you don't get it.
That is key to our brand.
And so this is simply,
this is why managers are supposed to get paid really well.
They have to trade off the temptation to add everything to the bottom line to our brand. And so this is simply, this is why managers are supposed to get paid really well.
They have to trade off the temptation to add everything
to the bottom line while managing long-term investments
that create sustainable margin and brand power.
And the thing about luxury brands
and the thing about great brand builders,
the analogy I use is like working out.
When you work out, it's time-expensive,
it's a pain and you're sore.
And so is brand building. It's expensive.
And the next day, it just fucking hurts.
But if you're disciplined about spending and offering the services
that buttress your brand associations, over time, you get stronger.
You have an easier time getting supplier relationships.
You have an easier time recruiting employees.
You have an easier time raising prices.
But in a company like Southwest, I would be very careful to remove any tangible point
of differentiation.
I mean, how on earth did these guys compete against each other?
What is Southwest's value proposition or differentiation now?
Like, what is it?
Well, we're just Southwest, we're orange.
I mean, what is it?
Yeah, exactly.
Let's move on to Eric Schmidt, the former CEO of Google,
who is now taking a new CEO position at Relativity Space,
which is this small space startup that builds rockets
with 3D printers.
I think most notably here,
Eric Schmidt bought his way into this.
So he made an offer to the company
to buy a controlling stake,
but that offer was
contingent on his becoming the CEO.
The then CEO who founded the company, this young entrepreneur, he has stepped aside
and he will now take a seat on the board.
Scott, I don't love this on a personal level, just the visual of a billionaire who
sees Bezos and Musk and Branson
all getting involved in the space race,
then deciding not to build his own company,
but to buy his way into one,
combined with the visual of this young
Y Combinator entrepreneur being swept to the side,
it just, it all reminds me of this intergenerational
wealth dynamic that we so often talk about, where you have
all of these old guys who are billionaires with too much money and too much time on their
hands, and then they just use the money to install themselves into positions of power
where they can play pretend startup or play pretend politics.
Maybe that's too harsh.
As I'm saying it out loud, I actually think maybe I am being a little harsh,
but that is where my mind goes.
Yeah, I think you're being unfair.
So there's two sides of this trade.
And that is the way corporate governance
and decisions get made is that shareholders get to decide
who are the board members.
And the board members get to decide
who would be best for stakeholders,
which is Latin for shareholders.
And the board decided that to get a guy like Eric Schmidt,
who is arguably one of the most lauded,
successful CEOs in history to come run their firm,
which sounds like it was struggling quite frankly,
is they decided, yeah, that is absolutely worth it.
And I would imagine the value of the company
is up substantially just on that press release.
So there's two sides of this trade,
including if the CEO had control of the company
because he didn't have to raise a lot of money
or he was doing so well,
that he had that kind of credibility of the board,
he could have decided what to do.
And maybe he did decide that it makes sense
for Eric Schmidt to take over.
Now, having said that, I would not invest in this thing.
I'm ageist when it comes to startups.
And that is when Eric Schmidt took over Google,
he was much younger and probably willing
to put all relationships and all vacations aside for a while.
And now he's a billionaire in his 60s,
who's probably in the midst of, like many of us,
of a realization that he's going to be dead soon,
and he's not going to work his ass off.
He's going to focus on St. Barts and relationships and time with loved ones and going to be dead soon, and he's not going to work his ass off. He's going to focus on
St. Barts and relationships and time with loved ones and going to the World Economic Forum and
talking about big thoughts and climate change. To drive a company like this is a young woman's game.
And what he should have done in my view was taken the chairman role, because I think 80% of his
expertise right now could
be leveraged 10, 20, 30 hours a week and kept someone else in the CEO position.
And also, I believe that luck is symmetrical.
And in order for a company to have the kind of extraordinary success that Alphabet has
recognized, that was a lot of luck.
And I typically don't invest behind a person
two times in a row, because if it's super successful,
I'm like, it's unlikely we're gonna get lucky again.
And I know that's a weird thing to say,
but I think a guy like Eric Schmidt,
I don't get why he's doing this personally.
I think he's in his mid-60s, maybe late 60s.
It feels like maybe he's bored.
Maybe he wants something to do. He's just written his book.
By the way, respect to Eric Schmidt.
I really don't want to just rag on this guy.
And I do respect him a lot as an offerator
and as a businessman.
But it feels like he's bored.
He sees Bezos and Branson and Musk.
And he's like, hey, that looks like fun.
I want to do that.
They're CEOs of those companies.
Why don't I do it?
Well, actually, Bezos has stepped down as CEO. Because he's realized he's about to do that. They're CEOs of those companies. Why don't I do it? Well, actually Bezos has stepped down as CEO
because he's realized he's about to die soon.
So he wants yachts and thongs.
I think he gets it.
But I think the question everyone's asking is,
Ed, why do you hate Eric Schmidt?
No, look, the guy is the chairman of everyone's dreams.
He's intensely smart, intensely well-connected.
I just don't understand why a guy at that point in his life
would want to do the work.
When you're the CEO of a startup,
I speak from experience here, your inbox is never empty.
And you have to be able to work 15 and 16 hour days.
The only time I've ever really grown shareholder value is when,
quite frankly, my personal life is a bit of a shit show.
Because the marketplace is competitive and gives advantage to people
who are willing to do nothing but work all the fucking time.
And this is not a Hallmark commercial.
I'm not saying this is aspirational, and I think a lot of people
go to work for big companies to leverage their IP,
their distribution channels, and their platform, and their size,
and the regulatory capture so they can work 40 to 50 hours a week,
not 60 to 80.
You want to be in a startup,
you want to be in a company like this?
I think it's table stakes even for a guy like Eric Schmidt,
to have to work around the clock,
and if I were him with his wealth at his age,
there's no way I would do that.
Anyways, I'm bullish on Eric Schmidt,
but as a chairman, I think this is a bad idea
for him to get back into the game like this.
Maybe he can run it from St. Barthes
and it will go smoothly, yeah.
Look at me, I have,
not that I'm comparing myself to these individuals,
I have Catherine Dillon run our company
so I can just make dick jokes and go to South by Southwest.
That's what he should be doing.
Taking that out of Scott's book, Eric Schmidt.
Let's talk about Neom.
All right.
This is Saudi Arabia's plan to build a new city.
It's gotten a ton of coverage over the years.
Ton of hype, ton of interest.
Just for those that don't know, the plan is to build a 105 mile long glass
domed mega city in the desert of Saudi Arabia.
It's supposed to house 9 million people with no cars,
fully stuffed by robots, fully powered by wind and solar.
It's supposed to have its own ski resort.
And my personal favorite stat,
it's supposed to have its own artificial moon.
I've thought this is ridiculous for a long time
because it's just unrealistic.
And now we're learning they're 55 years away from completion.
The projected cost is $9 trillion now.
And I just want to emphasize the original budget for this city
was $500 billion.
So they are over budget by 1,700% or in dollar terms,
$8 and 1 half trillion.
And I think this highlights a problem that I've flagged before about Saudi Arabia and
their investment decisions.
Quite simply, I think they're childish.
I just don't think these are very serious investors.
The combination of the ski resort and the moon, the obsession with the Premier League,
with the World Cup, with golf, with giant AI chips, that company Cerebris,
the obsession with e-sports and gaming.
Just last week, they bought Pokemon Go for three and a half billion dollars.
And I look at what's happening in Saudi Arabia and what they're investing in.
The whole thing to me is reminiscent of a rich kid with a billionaire dad who just gave
him the keys to the family trust.
And by the way, that's pretty much what that country is.
Like the only difference is that it's not a trust fund.
It's an oil reserve.
So I think these are unserious, frankly, stupid investments, but I'm going to
brace myself for when you call me racist in the next two minutes.
You're accurate.
It is a rich kid.
My interaction with the kingdom has mostly been around
involvement with hedge funds raising money
and some of the investments they make.
And I find that they're actually incredibly disciplined
and very smart and that they hire the best and brightest
from the alternative investments world to try
and allocate their capital efficiently.
In this instance, then maybe their eyes are bigger than their stomach.
Maybe it'll be scaled back.
But I'd like to see more big outrageous ideas.
I would like to see in the US some say,
we're going to spend several trillion dollars to build a national high-speed
rail, at least up and down the Eastern seaboard.
I'd like to see some big bold infrastructure announcements in the US.
We did one, our infrastructure act was 700 billion, I think.
They have seven projects of over a trillion.
It looks as if this one is probably unrealistic, but I think that a place like the kingdom
has the money and the mandate to quite frankly be, I don't know, be out over their skis a
little bit.
I do think there's a difference between a high speed rail and an artificial moon.
And there's somewhere in that difference is where we draw the line.
To your point, though, they are attracting a ton of investment.
They're attracting especially a lot of consulting businesses and advisory
businesses. The advisory business has grown 13% in the Gulf States in the past year.
Deloitte has nine offices in the UAE alone.
And there's this stat that I love, which is that McKinsey, which is consulting
on this Neom project, McKinsey is reportedly earning more than $130 million per
year to consult on Neom.
And my reaction to that is you got to hand it to McKinsey.
I mean, they are just exceptional at finding rich people, building them
PowerPoint presentations, and then charging them crazy fees.
Um, and all I can think is just what a great business consulting is.
These huge margins, very little overhead.
You were a consultant for many years.
Do you have any thoughts on just
how the consulting business works?
Let me give you the pluses and the minuses of consulting.
It's a great company to start
because it requires little capex.
Your expenses and your assets go home
in the elevator every night.
And if you don't have business, you can lay off people.
If you do have business, you can ramp up.
So in the sense it's, it services companies are good businesses to start
because they don't require a lot of IP or dramatic capex.
You can start a consulting company as I did by just getting a client.
I got Dreyer's and I got Levi Strauss and company and
William Sonoma is my first clients.
It's an incredible training.
If you want to be an athlete, you have to be a good communicator.
You have to go to the analytics.
You have to be good at managing relationships.
You have to be able to sell. It really have to go to the analytics. You have to be good at managing relationships. You have to be able to sell.
It really is training for a triathlon or decathlon.
Um, I think it's a fantastic, if you're coming out of business school and think,
I want a second MBA, but I want it in the private sector, consulting is a
fantastic training.
It turns you into a great athlete.
You make good money.
You never get really wealthy.
Uh, that's the downside because the barriers of entry here,
it's a multiple of EBITDA business.
When I started my second consulting firm, L2,
which I called Business Strategy,
I turned it from intermittent consulting engagements.
I used to charge William Sonoma half a million dollars
to do their internet strategy.
Instead, I said to Nike,
give me a quarter of a million a year
and I'll meet with you every three months
and just look at data and give you advice.
It is a very taxing business.
Again, see about it's a young woman's game.
It's very taxing on your health and your relationships
because when you're in the services business,
you're always someone else's bitch.
Actually, this happened to me three times.
The CMO of Audi, who was my biggest client,
called and said, Scott, we love you.
Can you be on Ingolstadt tomorrow? And the answer was always, yeah. happened to me three times. The CMO of Audi, who was my biggest client, called and said, Scott, we love you.
Can you be on Ingolstadt tomorrow?
And the answer was always, yeah.
Yeah, I'll get on a fucking plane from San Francisco,
flying to Munich, being coach,
because it was my money back then,
with six young people trying to figure out
a PowerPoint presentation of what we were gonna say
to Audi that they hadn't heard from McKinsey
and bombed to the Kinkos when we got to Munich at 9 a.m.
to print this thing out and then fly back to San Francisco the next day.
It takes a real toll on your relationships and your health.
It's a very taxing industry.
It's also you make a good living, but it's hard to get really wealthy
in consulting because it's all current income.
I found it fucking exhausting.
I don't want to golf or have dinner.
If you're having golf and dinner
with people you don't really like,
it means you're in an undifferentiated industry.
What do you mean by that?
I mean, the truly great companies
don't need to socialize with their clients.
And also, if you're spending time,
a lot of time getting taken to basketball games
or dinners by third-party
vendors, it means you're paying too much.
It means you're getting ripped off.
So Vanguard's not going to take you out to lunch, but your wealth advisor from name the
brokerage who takes you to a basketball game, that means she is charging you onerous fees.
That's a great point.
Anyways, the services business is we're all selling the same shit, and the way we differentiate
is relationships.
Anyways, that's my TED talk on the services business.
I love it.
By the way, I think if you were still doing that today, you would be printing money in
the Gulf and kissing ass in Riyadh.
But maybe you'll still do that anyway.
We'll be right back after the break with a look at the latest on tariffs.
And if you're enjoying the show so far, be sure to give Proficy Market a follow wherever
you get your podcasts.
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Watch Sensory Overload now, streaming on Hulu. things tariffs. So first off, back in February, Trump announced a 25% tariff on all steel
and aluminum that comes into the US. And the big news is that that tariff officially went
into effect last week on Wednesday. Then, as we discussed in the previous week, the
Premier of Ontario announced a 25% tariff on all electricity that comes out of Ontario.
And Trump got very mad about this.
And a few days later, he said he would double tariffs on Canada's steel and aluminum to
50%.
Now, in response to that, Doug Ford backed down.
He suspended his tariff.
And then after that, Trump also backed down and he brought the tariff back down to 25%. In other words, a
ton of headlines and a ton of back and forth, but nothing
actually happened. We're still in the same position we were a couple of weeks ago. Let's just shift to what happened in Europe.
As I said, that steel and aluminum tariff, which applies to the whole world,
that came into effect on Wednesday. So that does affect Europe. Europe's response was,
we're going to tariff you right back. They put a tariff on American whiskey, on American jeans,
on Harley Davidson motorcycles. It's a pretty hilarious lineup of items.
I think they're intentionally cartoonish to make a statement. But if you add up the numbers,
it does actually make sense
because those tariffs will be $28 billion on America
and that's the same amount Europe will pay on the steel and aluminum.
Then in response to that, Trump got angry again.
He threatened a 200% tariff on European wine.
Okay, now the question is, does any of this actually matter?
Probably not. Because for all we know, the picture
will look very different in a few days. They'll be reversed, unreversed, increased, decreased,
whatever. And I have to say, Scott, it's beginning to make my job a little ridiculous, because
the size and scope of these policies and the financial impact they have on our economy,
they're too big to ignore. I can't simply resign from understanding them and say,
I don't really know what happened with tariffs, they went up, they went down, whatever.
At the same time though, this is a complete and utter waste of my time.
And for analysts and for investors and for CFOs and CEOs, it's even worse because for those guys,
there is actual money on the line. If you're a Jack Daniels or a Levi's or a US Steel,
you do need to understand the tariffs. You need to write up research reports. You need to
model out the economics, analyze the downside, analyze the upside. It's a lot of work.
And so these guys probably spent weeks figuring out what will these tariffs actually do to our business.
And they woke up one morning, they checked the news,
and bang, none of it mattered anymore.
And that's the thing that I think corporations
and executives are gonna be most upset about this.
And we'll talk about what's happened in the markets.
But Scott, first, just your reactions
to what happened last week with tariffs.
Well, as you know, I like to ground everything in a personal parable,
so I can talk more about me.
So tariffs coming in, you charge a tariff.
We charge tariff on aluminum and steel,
and the rationale was we need to maintain
a healthy domestic production or supply of steel.
That kind of makes sense.
If we go to war, we need tanks.
We don't want to be too
vulnerable. So great, Cleveland Cliffs and US Steel saw their earnings go up because their product
became more competitive because foreign imports became more expensive. But that additional
incremental income was vastly outweighed by the decrease in demand for products that had to
dramatically increase their prices
because of the additional cost of the input
of steel and aluminum into their products.
So we're net losers, even when they pay the tariff
and there's no reciprocal tariff.
And this comes back to my first parable.
I don't know if you've noticed when we're on this show,
I angle my head to the left.
I guess I haven't, now I'm noticing.
You need to start investing in this relationship.
You never noticed.
You haven't noticed all the Pilates I've been doing.
You're trying to be more attractive to either,
you awful person.
Oh no, I've noticed that for sure.
How do I fucking hate Pilates?
The-
The-
Angle of your face.
All right, the angle of my face.
My nose goes to the right.
And the reason why it goes to the right
is when I first moved to New York,
I had, I was bored too much time on my hands.
I was doing yoga and I was doing boxing.
And I got a trainer, this guy, this boxing guy,
and I'd spar with him and he convinced me,
it's like, you know, you've got pretty good hand speed,
you're in good shape, why don't you enter
this boxing tournament, this gym,
this boxing gym we belong to.
And I'm like, was stupid enough
to think that was a good idea.
So I'm 6'2", 190.
It ends up that a guy who's 5'9", and 190,
and knows how to box is fucking Mike Tyson.
So I get into the ring with this guy.
All I hear, all I remember was the bell.
And the next thing I remember was all of these bright lights
because I was flat on my back.
The amount of money I would pay to watch this fight.
It's crazy.
Oh my God.
And my nose has never straightened.
My nose now goes to the right.
And here's the thing.
Strategy, one of the biggest mistakes we make in strategy is believing that we're
boxing against someone we're paying or a speed bag that it won't hit back.
And that's where Trump's biggest flaw is,
in my opinion, is he believes
that he can just impose tariffs unilaterally,
and there won't be reciprocal tariffs
that dampen the demand for our products in bigger.
Most, our best companies sell issues.
Nike gets two thirds of its revenue from outside of the US.
Google probably gets four fifths of its revenue from outside of the US. Google probably gets four fifths of its revenue
from outside of the US.
And you don't believe that these nations
are gonna slap on recipients.
You don't believe they're not gonna hit back
and break your fucking nose.
Of course they are.
This is one of the biggest mistakes.
Whenever you're doing scenario planning,
you have a tendency to believe
that you're doing it in a vacuum
and that all of your competitors
are just gonna sit there and not respond.
This is the biggest flaw in scenario planning.
Well, if we do this, the following things will happen.
Generally, what corporate strategy executives leave out is like, okay, the moment we do this, what will they do?
They'll respond.
Well, if we decrease prices, we're going to capture more share.
We're going to roll up the industry and be able to charge monopoly rents. Well, you realize the day after we lower prices,
our competitors are probably going to lower prices too, right?
So we're just going to inspire a decrease in margin across the industry.
Unless we have more capital, they can go toe to toe with us.
This is Trump's, in my opinion,
one of his many flaws is he's under the impression he's
boxing against someone he's paying or speeding back.
Two, the biggest negative impact of this is that we have become an unserious partner.
In studies with rats, they can get food without a shock.
They love that.
They can get food with a shock every time, or they can get
food with a shock intermittently. And the rats that are the most stressed are not the ones who
get shocked every time because they know what to expect. It's the rats that are shocked half the
time because they don't know what to expect. And this is where we are with our supply chain and our global alliances.
Every country in the world is thinking about how they diversify away from doing business
with America because they do not know who they are waking up next to.
I think this is the first time where my classics degree has
ever been useful and it'll probably be the last time. But there's a quote
by Cicero that I will
leave you with and that is quote, more is lost by indecision than wrong decision. Indecision is the
thief of opportunity. Indecision will rob you blind. I think that's pretty much sums up what's
happening with tariffs right now. We're not even committing to the tariffs. We're flip-flopping every second, and we're wasting both our partner's time and our own time. And one final story that I think
is quite interesting, and I want to get your quick reaction to on tariffs.
So Walmart was recently summoned by the Chinese government who was very upset with them
because apparently Walmart has been asking
Chinese suppliers to reduce their costs
because Walmart is so worried about these tariffs.
So they went to these Chinese suppliers,
they say, hey, we have to deal with these tariffs.
Is there any way you could bring costs down?
The CCP got very, very angry about this.
They called up Walmart and their executives and they discussed the issue.
The Chinese authorities, the state media, they said publicly, quote, if Walmart insists,
then what awaits Walmart is not just talk.
It's so interesting how what started as a political altercation is now implicating companies
and their executives.
Walmart is now stuck in the crosshairs of this trade war,
and they're being threatened by national governments.
And so this is yet another reason why I think it's not just anti-MAGA people who are upset about this.
I think it's basically the entire corporate world who has to deal with the fact that they are on the wrong end of the stick
when it comes to the president's foreign policy
and his decisions on these tariffs.
You're a classics major from Princeton
who likes a white tennis player.
Seriously, you're the most translucent person
I know right now.
You're literally the widest guy in the world right now.
By the way, let me get to a point.
This is how a real man quotes people.
General Eisenhower said,
the wrong decision is bad, no decision is worse.
Not fucking Cicero.
Beto and Cicero said it.
Jesus Christ.
Anyways, your point is exactly the right one.
The inconsistency and uncertainty is worse than the actual tariffs themselves.
You can't operate a company much less a business or a country this way.
We've taken for granted the fact that most nations, when they enter into an agreement,
they respect us. They think that we'll do our best, that the laws, the contract law applies to them
and applies to us, that there's a rule of fair play,
consistency, we do what we say we're gonna do.
And you know who the big winner here is China.
Chinese officials are roaming around the EU right now
and saying, hey, we're the devil you know.
We'll do what we say.
We're open for business.
You want a trade relationship?
You've been buying all this stuff from America.
You can't count on them.
Guess what?
You may not like us, but you know what?
We do what we say.
You can count on us.
If we enter into a trade relationship
and we are in agreement between this supplier
and your company assembling this in Stockholm,
you can count on us.
You know who you're waking up next to.
We'll be right back after the break
with a look at the $4 trillion market sell-off.
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and leave us a review on ProfG Markets.
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What if the keys to solve the world's hardest problems were already within our grasp? Applying. Hiring. Indeed. Is all you need. energy, global food security, connectivity for everyone, radical ideas that could change
the world.
And now, in the Moonshot podcast, I'm bringing you unprecedented access to the people making
it happen.
I had every reason to believe this is fundamentally impossible.
And I was the expert.
People here literally manifest things out of nothing.
Some of these ideas will make it, some will fail.
But every Moonshot moves us forward.
Because the future isn't something we just predict.
It's something we build together.
What an incredible time to exercise what only humans can do.
Dreaming together and imagining the world we want to step into.
I'm Astro Teller.
This is the Moonshot Podcast.
Out now wherever you listen. So I'll tell you like, I'll tellro Teller. This is the Moonshot Podcast. Out now wherever you listen.
So I'll tell you like, I'll tell you a story.
This week on Unexplainable,
a story about researchers building AIs.
And the system says, well, this is a great view.
This is awesome.
And I was like, oh crap.
Researchers who watch their experiments go horribly wrong.
Wait a second. Like, what's even going on here?
Only to realize the answer has been staring at them in the mirror.
Humans are just suckers for anything that looks human.
Good Robot, a four-part series on the stories we tell about AI
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We're back with ProfG Markets.
US stocks have faced their toughest start to a presidency since 2009, with the market
losing $4 trillion in value. Stocks have faced their toughest start to a presidency since 2009, with the market losing
$4 trillion in value.
Amid a three-week sell-off, the VIX, or the market's fear gauge, surged to its highest
level since December.
Bitcoin fell below $80,000, and treasury yields fell as well.
Across asset classes, the so-called Trump bump we saw after the election has disappeared.
So, Scott, in terms of the stock market, since Trump went to the office, the S&P has dropped
7%, the NASDAQ has fallen 11%.
We're starting to hear the word recession a lot more.
In fact, we discussed that in the live podcast.
I'm also hearing people say bear market.
I've also seen some comparisons to the dot com bubble.
In fact, it was exactly 25 years ago as of last week that the dot com bubble burst and
the stock market crashed.
And so I've been seeing speculation that maybe we're in for dot com bust 2.0 here or that
the stock market might fully collapse.
So you lived through that crisis in the year 2000, which many people are comparing this
period to.
Do you think we're anywhere close to that?
Are we close to a bear market, perhaps?
First off, you could say that, okay, all we've lost is the Trump bump.
The stock market is still at a pretty near historical high.
Now, Warren Buffett timed it perfectly.
As soon as they announced the tariffs
and he saw Apple at 250 bucks trading at 38 times earnings
when it usually trades at about 18 over its history,
he's gone straight to cash.
So America just looks expensive.
You could argue that some of the air being let out here
is just a natural part of the cycle
and it's still at fairly robust highs.
The question is, what do you do about it?
And a lot of people are saying, I'm moving to cash.
I believe that moving to cash,
it's very hard to time the markets.
I'm always invested.
What I am doing, and the lesson or the advice
I would give around this, around how to respond,
learned from my mistakes.
In 2016, when Trump was elected, I thought,
this guy's a fucking idiot
and the market's gonna crash. He's stupid. And so I sold pretty much everything. The markets ripped.
So in addition to paying capital gains on the stocks that I ended up buying back into six months
later at a higher price when I realized what an idiot I was trying to time the markets and probably
not acknowledging that the president has less impact on the markets than we'd like to think and gets
more blame and credit than they deserve. It was an emotional reaction. So now I'm not going to have
the same emotional reaction. What I am doing though is deciding, okay, over the medium and
long-term because of demographics and productivity and innovation, the markets globally do tend to go
up and to the right. So what I am doing is diversifying out of us stocks.
I won't sell everything.
I still have a lot of money in the private markets here and in real estate,
but I'm getting more exposure to European and Latin American stocks.
Cause the way I have really fucked up my economic health and economic
wellbeing is through a lack of diversification.
And that is I was all in on tech in 1999
and then all in on growth in 2007.
And by the middle of 2000 and the middle of 2008,
I was broke.
I went from wealthy to broke.
And I'm not doing that again.
And the way you try not to do that again
is through diversification,
but trying to time the markets and moving to cash, I believe you should always be invested, but you want to diversify.
And I think if you just look at the relative valuations, it's not a bad idea to take some
money off of the table in US and put it into global index funds.
I think there'd probably be some people out there who are saying, but we're down 10%.
The market's down.
Why would I want to sell now or freaking out that we're in the middle of this big crash?
I do want to point out, so far at least, this is very much a correction and not a crash.
The market's down 10% from its high.
If we were to enter an actual bear market, it would need to come down 20%.
So we're not there yet.
And if you look at the historical PE of the S&P 500, last month it was trading at 25 times earnings
on average. And you compare that to the long term PE of the S&P 500, which is 16 times earnings.
So even still, it is still a richly valued market. So if you're thinking of unwinding some of your positions
and diversifying elsewhere, yeah, it's maybe a little annoying.
You didn't do it a month ago, two months ago, three months ago,
but big picture, it really isn't a big deal at all.
The market is still doing pretty well
on a price to earnings basis.
Okay, so Apple's PE has crashed from 38 to 34.
I bought Apple and it's better to be lucky than good
in 2011 and I paid nine times earnings.
So to think that all of a, wow, Apple is cheap.
Okay, it's not as insane as it was a month ago,
but to believe that the markets are on sale right now
in the US?
No, I mean, they're not at all time highs,
but by any metric, they're still expensive.
Let's just go through some of the winners and the losers in this sell-off.
We touched on it a little bit in our last episode,
but I think it's worth examining more.
I'll start with the winners.
I mentioned in at South by Southwest,
a big winner here are these traders who are trading
on the volatility.
Let's focus on stocks for this session.
I have two groups of winners here.
First off, we have the domestic steel and aluminum stocks.
That's basically two or three companies.
It's like US Steel and its new core.
There are very few companies that are actually benefiting from the tariffs
from a steel and aluminum perspective. And actually, if you look since inauguration day,
they're almost flat. So they're barely winners. But I think we can count them because last
week when the tariff stuff happened, they rose a little bit. The second group of winners
is what I will call the defensive stocks. And these are stocks that are highly unspeculative, no tech, very old, very mature, and crucially,
these are the stocks that issue dividends.
So companies like Johnson & Johnson and Coca-Cola, they are up since Trump took office.
Again, not by that much.
It's not a huge win, but they are outperforming.
And I think the dynamic we're seeing here is investors are now looking for safety.
They're not interested in these moonshot AI bets or software plays or anything basically
that depends on an optimistic future.
Instead, they're going to the stocks that can hand you cash in your pocket today, the
dividend stocks.
Let's go to the losers.
First off, the tech companies.
Amazon down 10% year to date. Apple down 11%. Google down 12%. NVIDIA down 17%.
Also, the banks. Citigroup, Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs. They are all suffering since
Trump was elected. Small cap stocks. So these are the small market cap companies, companies in the Russell
2000, they are taking a beating right now.
Also Tesla, of course, that's its own story, but it's down 35% on the year.
Now, what do all of these companies have in common?
All of these losers.
It's so interesting.
They are all the Trump trades.
These are the very companies that we talked on this podcast
that were supposed to benefit from the administration.
You remember we spoke with Tom Lee.
He was bullish on these companies specifically.
And to be clear, I agreed with him.
But the market is basically telling us right now,
hey, remember everything we said about Trump
and who he's gonna help
and which companies are gonna benefit?
Forget all of that.
No longer
true. We misjudged him. We didn't realize. Sorry, our bad. And this is all reminding me of something
that Anthony Scaramucci told us nine months ago, when we were in the middle of the election,
no one knew what was going to happen. And Trump was beginning to talk about this tariff thing.
And there was this consensus view on Wall Street.
And I had many discussions with many investors
and many people on this podcast.
There was this view that it's all just talk.
He doesn't really mean it.
He's just, he's throwing meat to the base.
He's not gonna go through with this.
Think what it would do to the markets.
He doesn't wanna do that.
Why would he do that?
Anyway, we had that conversation with Anthony Scaramucci
and I put forward that thesis to
Anthony.
He's calling for sky-high tariffs, which will cripple poor people.
Tariffs, as you both know, are regressive taxes on poor people.
Do you think he's serious about those?
So Ed, this guy knows how to boil a frog better than anybody they've ever met, right?
You're in the cold water and he simmers the frog until the frog is dead. Do you know how many things
from 2016 to today that we could say, is he serious about that? And then you say, oh no,
he's not serious about that. And he fucking does it. 100%. You're like, holy shit, he is serious about that.
And then he does it again.
I mean, he completely nailed it.
And I think it is very interesting to see what's happening in the markets right now.
The fact that the markets are down and Wall Street and corporations are suddenly
realizing, oh my God, he was serious.
Maybe he's not on our side.
And I think that's the vibe shift
that is making Wall Street and investors
so freaked out right now.
We thought that Trump was one of us.
Maybe he isn't.
Let's take a look at the week ahead.
We'll hear the Fed's interest rate decision for March.
We'll also see earnings from Nike, FedEx, and Five Below.
Scott, any predictions?
So, supposedly,
SoftBank was about to lead around into open AI at a valuation of between $260 and $300 pre-money,
putting a $40 billion around, putting it a post of $300, a post of $340.
I think the insecurity in the market right now is probably going to give them a putting a $40 billion around, putting it a post of 300 or a post of 340.
I think the insecurity in the market right now
is probably gonna give them a reason
to hit the sanity button
and either get different terms or better terms
or not do this investment.
It strikes me that valuing open AI
is amazing a company as it is,
is valuable or as impactful as AI is going to be.
I would imagine a lot of his investors are like, it's beginning to smell a lot like WeWork.
I guess my prediction is I'm not sure this round is going to close on the terms initially reported
in the press because it hasn't closed yet. And it just feels to me, this is too rich.
If you're a limited partner in SoftBank, basically Masayoshi-san has tried to convince you
that within five years,
this will be one of the 10 most valuable companies
in the world,
because it's gonna have to have a trillion dollar
plus market cap to justify the kinds of returns
for this type of risk.
I think that is a difficult argument to make
with any level of certainty right now.
Is OpenAI an amazing company at 50 or 100 billion?
Absolutely. At 300 billion? Absolutely.
At 300 billion? I don't know. That feels very toppy to me, Ed.
This episode was produced by Claire Miller and engineered by Benjamin Spencer. Our associate
producer is Alison Weiss, Mia Silverio is our research lead, Isabella Kintzel is our research
associate, Drew Burrows is our technical director director and Catherine Dillon is our executive producer.
Thank you for listening to ProfD Markets from the Vox Media Podcast Network.
Join us on Thursday for our interview with Lyn Alden, only on ProfD Markets. You held me in kind reunion
As the world turns
And the blood flies in love, love, love, love