This Week in Startups - Battery Power for Texans with Zach Dell, plus Tim Apple is LEAVING?, Polymarket to the US, and a Tesla fan update | E2190
Episode Date: October 9, 2025Today’s show:*Zach Dell of Base Power joins us at the top of today’s show to talk about building batteries in Austin, that $1 billion investment, and why an “all of the above” energy strategy ...is the only way forward.PLUS Jason and Alex’s thoughts on that Tesla non-upside down car announcement, growing resentments toward AI datacenters, Chinese robots actually going on sale, Tim Cook’s potential Apple exit, xAI’s Nvidia agreement and MUCH MORE.Timestamps:(00:02:10) A MAJOR GUEST! Zach Dell of Base Power joins us from the top of the show.(00:03:31) The basics of Base Power’s business model: the best electron is the cheapest electron(00:08:38) Zach teases Base’s new, time-saving approach to battery installation(00:10:32) Vanta - Get $1000 off your SOC 2 at https://www.vanta.com/twist(00:18:12) How Base’s grid can help drive down overall energy prices(00:21:17) Squarespace - Use offer code TWIST to save 10% off your first purchase of a website or domain at https://www.Squarespace.com/TWIST(00:30:12) Sentry - New users get 3 months free of the Business plan (covers 150k errors). Go to http://sentry.io/twist and use code TWIST(00:36:20) Tesla did not announce an upside fan car… Oh well…(00:44:27) Buy your Chinese robot TODAY on Walmart dot com? Or not!(00:48:12) Is Tim Apple EXITING Apple? Who’s next?(00:59:22) ANOTHER mega-deal? Now xAI is circling a Nvidia investment…Subscribe to the TWiST500 newsletter: https://ticker.thisweekinstartups.comCheck out the TWIST500: https://www.twist500.comSubscribe to This Week in Startups on Apple: https://rb.gy/v19fcpFollow Lon:X: https://x.com/lonsFollow Alex:X: https://x.com/alexLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/alexwilhelmFollow Jason:X: https://twitter.com/JasonLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jasoncalacanisThank you to our partners:Vanta - Get $1000 off your SOC 2 at https://www.vanta.com/twistSquarespace - Use offer code TWIST to save 10% off your first purchase of a website or domain at https://www.Squarespace.com/TWISTSentry - New users get 3 months free of the Business plan (covers 150k errors). Go to http://sentry.io/twist and use code TWISTGreat TWIST interviews: Will Guidara, Eoghan McCabe, Steve Huffman, Brian Chesky, Bob Moesta, Aaron Levie, Sophia Amoruso, Reid Hoffman, Frank Slootman, Billy McFarlandCheck out Jason’s suite of newsletters: https://substack.com/@calacanisFollow TWiST:Twitter: https://twitter.com/TWiStartupsYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/thisweekinInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/thisweekinstartupsTikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@thisweekinstartupsSubstack: https://twistartups.substack.comSubscribe to the Founder University Podcast: https://www.youtube.com/@founderuniversity1916
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All right, everybody, welcome back to this week in startups.
I'm your host, Jason Calcanis, with me.
My amazing co-host, Alex Wallam, how are you, sir?
I'm fantastic. The kids are sick, but I am in good spirits.
Let's do a show.
All right, yeah. The fact that you haven't gotten sick is great.
Let's introduce our guest today.
I've got a major guest here, major guest with a major announcement.
Yes. So today on the show, we had Mr. Zach Dell of base power. Base power is a startup that leases batteries to consumers, puts them in their homes, and then kind of balances out the grid, offering low-cost energy to consumers and more grid stability to all of us in America. The company's in the news today, Jason, because it just raised a billion dollars. Zach, welcome to the program.
Thank you for having me. I'm excited to be here.
That went fast, Zach. We were just here last year, and you guys were, I don't know, had a couple of dozen customers, I think. You were very nascent. And then, wow, what happened in the last year that led to this huge investment?
Well, when intensity meets focus, you get a lot of progress very quickly. So we've been executing to the best of our ability over the course of the last, you know, two years.
two and a half years since we started the company.
And our product has really resonated with customers.
So we've been growing really fast.
We've got more demand than we can handle.
And so we're trying to uncontrain the business
by growing our supply, building a factory,
starting to manufacture these batteries here in Austin.
And now this new round of capital really uncontrains us
from a capital perspective and is gonna enable our next phase of growth.
Got it.
And for people who don't understand the business,
instead of putting solar on your roof and a battery pack,
you've come up with an,
and came up with an interesting thesis,
which was, hey, if you just put batteries in there
and you load them up when electricity is cheap
and then deploy it when energy is expensive,
at least in our great state of Texas,
that can be particularly effective.
So explain that arbitrage, if you will,
the peak cost of energy versus the trow cost
and how much it costs to put this into somebody's home.
Yeah, so I'll take a step back first and say that, you know, what we believe is that people want their power to be affordable and reliable.
And that's really it, right?
So when you think about your electricity, you want your bill to go down and your lights to stay on.
And the way that we do that is by installing batteries that we own and operate on the homes of our members.
When the grid is up and running, to your point, Jason, we use the battery to support the grid in times of high demand.
And when the grid is down, the homeowner gets that battery to back up your home.
So the homeowner, the consumer, is getting all the benefits of home backup without that high at front cost.
And then we get to bid these assets into the wholesale power markets and do exactly what you're talking about,
which is charge the batteries when the price of power is low, discharge the batteries when the price of power is high,
make the grid more efficient, use more of that latent capacity on the grid and build a more resilient, reliable power system for all of Texas and soon the entire United States.
So explain the, and I'll let you go next, Alex, but just explain like the biggest arbitrage that could possibly happen, you know, here in Texas, you guys didn't, you guys didn't warn me, but it gets a little hot in the summer. You had like maybe 20 days over 100. People's ACs are blowing. It's incredibly expensive, I think, for electricity at that time. And then maybe overnight, it can go down 20, 30 degrees. And people's AC use goes down dramatically.
So just on a, I don't know, cost per kilowatt or a cost per day for the average home,
what does that look like?
Is it 10x, 5x?
What's the difference in cost?
No, I mean, it can be zero dollars to, you know, power can be zero dollars in the middle of the day
when there's tons of solar.
The sun is high in the sky.
There's tons of solar in Texas.
In Texas, it's about 20% of our fuel mix in Texas solar.
And so you're really low cost power in the middle of the day.
And then in the middle of the night, when the wind is blowing and not a lot of people are using electricity,
you have very low-cost power.
In the evenings, in the summer,
you have what's kind of known in the industry as the evening ramp,
so the sun's going down,
people are using a lot of power in the evening.
And this is all supply-demand-math, right?
So the price of power goes up,
supply goes down, demand is still high,
and you have price bikes in the evening.
And in the winter seasons,
you have what's referred to as the morning ramp,
where similar kind of situation happening
where people wake up, they start heating their homes.
Demand is really high, supply is low,
and you have price bike.
So you can go from zero to, you know, thousands of dollars
or megawatt hour.
And so the swings are really dramatic here in Texas.
So given that the strings, the swings are so dramatic,
you seems to give a lot of arbitrage opportunity.
I'm curious about how long it takes to recoup the investment
into the batteries because you guys only charge $7 to, you know,
$900 to install and then a low monthly fee.
So you're taking a lot of upfront costs, Zach.
How long does it take to pay those back?
Yeah, so $6.95 up front and $19 a month for one of our systems.
And the paybacks are fast.
number of years, a handful of years, it's roughly a 10-year useful life asset and a payback
as well inside of that.
So essentially, within the first three-year period that you guarantee the current rate
today, which is 8.5 cents per kilowatt hour, you'll recruit the entire value of the battery
and be into the profit on each one of those installs.
Yeah, the idea is that as we develop new generations of the technology, our cost to deploy
the marginal asset goes down, the payback shorten, and our returns go up, and then we pass
those returns on to the customer in the form of lower prices.
So our view is that electricity is a commodity.
The best electron is the cheapest electron.
So our vision as a business is to develop a compounding cost advantage to vertical integration, drive cost down for the consumer and sell the lowest cost electron on the planet.
Great segue into the Austin battery facility you guys are building out.
How much can you bring costs down on the battery side of things if you can get off of Chinese supply chains and build those domestically?
Very significantly.
So by vertically integrating our manufacturing here in Austin, we'll be able to take a ton of cost out.
out of the system and drive our landed costs down, tighten those paybacks as we discussed,
increase our returns, and drive cost down for consumers.
And really, this is what it's all about, right?
It's like, why are we building a factory?
Like, yes, it's cool to have a factory and it's fun to walk around and, you know, touch
the machines.
But the reality is, like, we're doing this because we want to drive cost down for consumers,
and vertical integration is the best way to do that.
Okay.
And then what fraction of your fundraise is going to go towards financing the buildout of your
next, I don't know, a few thousand installations versus the actual factory itself?
A lot of the capital will go into battery CAPEX.
So the things that go through the factory, some amount of it will go into the machines.
The building is already standing.
We're not building a new building from scratch.
We'll soon be able to talk more about Base Factory 2, which will be a bit more CAPEX.
But the majority of the capital is going to be going into these assets.
And then growing our team, right?
We've got 250 people, some of the best engineers, operators, and creatives from all across
the country that have come to Austin to join our team.
And we're going to be growing that team really aggressively.
And obviously, you know, need a lot of capital to build a really strong team of people.
So that's another big focus bar.
Just to go a little bit into the batteries themselves, the cells, I'm assuming you're not
making the cells themselves.
You're assembling everything else around the cells.
You source those cells from a Samsung, another manufacturer.
And so how does that work?
That's right, Jason.
So we do everything above the cell.
So we take the cells and we design modules and the modules.
and the modules are part of a pack,
and then we build the power electronics
that basically make up the inverter
that allow us to move power in and out of the battery.
And so we design all of those components
that are above the cell.
What I'll say is today we don't make cells.
I think over the long arc of time,
we may go into the cell business
as we further vertically integrate.
And if we do that,
the reason we do it
is so that we can drive cost down further for the customer,
right? Further vertically integrate,
take cost out, drive cost down for the consumer.
It's not the part of the business
that we're in today, but it is something we're thinking about over the long term.
And those cells are made almost exclusively in China today?
They're not, actually.
There's lots of the companies that make the IP for the cells are Chinese companies,
but they have factories all over the world.
So you see a lot of these factories popping up in some of them in Europe, some of them in
Southeast Asia, some of them are getting built in the U.S. largely through joint ventures,
many of them with the auto OEMs.
But while most of the IP for lithium iron fire,
not to get too technical, but there's kind of two dominant lithium-based chemistries,
lithium-iron phosphate, and then NMC, nickel-manganese-cobalt.
The Koreans largely have been, you know, mostly indexed to NMC.
The Chinese have been largely mostly indexed to LFP.
Most of the LFP IP and electoral property is dominated and owned by Chinese companies,
but the actual plants themselves are not all located in China.
Got it.
Which one of those is better for home-based batteries, Zach?
I'm not as familiar with the actual breakdown.
Yeah, good question.
LFP really do this.
safety, right? So when you see, you know, safety risk with batteries, most of that is oriented
around NMC batteries because you have higher C rates and higher risk of thermal runaway. And
effectively what that means is you can charge and discharge the battery much faster, which
really matters in a car, right? Because you've got to get, you know, zero to 60 and three seconds.
Doesn't matter so much in a home battery. And so the LFP chemistry is a better solution for
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Okay, not to make it at all political, but we have an administration that's been talking
about clean, beautiful coal. You may have seen me getting into it with Chris Wright on some
all-in podcasts at different points in time. And some of these folks in the movement over there
believe that just batteries are not sustainable. Solar is not sustainable. We're just never
going to be able to make enough batteries.
But then I just looked at Tesla's last quarter, and they produced more battery power
this year in three quarters than they did last year in four.
And it's ramping up.
So is there a disconnect?
Is this just, you know, maybe people talking their book or, you know, it's just insane to think
that clean, beautiful call, as clean and beautiful as it might be.
Kind of interesting to put those words around it.
It doesn't make much sense to me, and just after my cursory research, it seems like those coal plants are extremely expensive to build.
And batteries, it seems like we've been ramping up and they've been increasing their density and their affordability every year.
So take us through the reality, if you will.
Yeah. So I believe in the all of the above energy strategy.
The reality is we are in the midst of a generational increase in electricity demand.
and what we need is more supply.
And there are some types of supply that are better than others,
and we can debate that.
But what does better actually mean?
In my opinion, better means cheaper.
The best electron is the cheapest electron, right?
It is a commodity, the best version of the commodity is the one that is available and affordable.
And so my view is that the lowest cost electron will win.
And what really matters is like the marginal megawatt, right?
What is the cost to produce the marginal megawatt?
I think over time, to the point you're making, Jason,
as we continue to ride the cost curves down that we've seen in solar,
as those continue, but as the same kind of dynamics play out in the battery industry,
solar and storage will be the low-cost way to generate the marginal megawatt.
Now, that doesn't mean we need no coal or no natural gas or no hydroelectric or no geothermal
or no nuclear, but I do think that over time,
and a lot of great research online about this that I could point you to,
solar and storage will win the day in terms of cost of the marginal megawatt.
Yeah, it's pretty clear. The physics and the progress and the scale is just all there.
Yeah, you know, people talk about nuclear fusion as this thing that we need to crack.
But we have an amazing fusion reactor available to us today in the sky.
It's called the sun. And it's extremely powerful.
Yeah, no, no. Elon's been saying this for 20 years.
Like, let's just use the sun.
Okay, so the key to the business is just my outside observation is installing solar panels.
on a roof is expensive, time-consuming,
damages the roof.
It's just, I don't know, you're talking about taking a year.
How long does it take to put those two little R2D2 units
that look like an HVAC on the side of a building?
What's the total installation time?
Yeah.
We understand the cost, but the time.
Our installs happen in a number of hours.
So on the order of four to six hours,
with our current generation of hardware, our next generation hardware that is,
might I remind you, fully custom designed and manufactured by base,
is much faster to install. And this is a really important piece.
When you have a vertically integrated business and the time and the cost of the installation
hits your bottom line, you care a lot about the mechanism by which that battery is installed.
And so we've designed our battery to be installed in a very different way
than home batteries have really ever been installed. And I'll just leave it at that for now,
and you'll see very soon what that mechanism actually is.
But we have basically built a new process and technology that allows you to install many of these,
accrue to do many of these installations a day, drive that cost down, allow us to increase our
returns at the asset level, which again leads to lower prices for customers.
So really excited about our next-gen battery, about the cost out that will come from the design,
in manufacturing, but also the install cost, which is a huge part of the cost of getting a battery in the ground.
It does seem the way you're constructing these to go on the outside of suburban homes and not to rely on solar.
Just to put them on the outside seems incredibly quick. I know when you get power walls put in the
inside of a home, now you've got to put very heavy things on walls, studs. It's a bit complicated and
it's a bit of work. Also, I suspect, but I don't know. Are your unit,
it's cheaper to produce than say the power wall because that is so elegant and thin and mounted.
It has a certain elegance to it, but I would also think it comes with a bit of cost.
Yeah, the way I think about this is I think that product is, you know, you can think about it as the Ferrari of batteries, right?
And ours is really the, you know, the Camry, Corolla, you know, workhorse product, right?
It's not a, it's not an iPhone, right?
It's not a premium, shiny product that should be $20,000, right?
Our product is an infrastructure asset.
It's an efficiency box.
It's a savings machine, right?
And we sell it as such.
We position it as such.
So, you know, I think if you look at the last decade of home energy companies,
they have really taken this premium product valence where, you know, these things are very expensive and they're shiny.
And the reality is like energy is a commodity.
What matters is cost, efficiency.
These are infrastructure assets.
They should be sold in position as such.
And that's really the approach that we take.
So if you were to put these on, say, I don't know, 20% of the single family homes here in
Austin in the greater hill country area, you know, just around the town, what impact would
that have on the grid for every 10 or 20% of homes?
Like I'll say every 10% of homes you can convert because the grid here has challenges, right?
So explain to us what this could do to the ecosystem because it does seem to me at some point,
with electricity prices spiking because of the use of data centers,
it's been going up massively in some regions,
maybe this should be funded by the data centers
and the companies that are trying to get more power.
Has that come up?
Well, you ask a couple questions there.
I'll try to get to both of them.
So the first one is if we're able to put batteries on 10%,
let's take Texas, for example, right?
So there's on the order of 10 million single family homes in Texas,
10% of 10 million is a million homes, right?
with our next generation product is a 40 kilowatt hour battery and 20 kilowatt
inverter so a million homes with 20 kilowatts in each homes is two gigawatts right so
you know adding two gigawatts to the grid is you know massive amount of scale sorry 20
gigawatts excuse me so you know that's that's a lot of capacity that we that we
add to the grid with you know just 10% of the homes in Texas and what that means
is reliability in the state goes up right so we have a winter storm
jury type situation and we need much more flexible capacity we now have to
20 gigawatts that we can call on to protect the Texas power grid when you have these
really uncertain price swings.
And then prices go down, right?
We are really smoothing out that curve, that peaky curve.
And so again, we drive down prices for those 10% of homeowners that have the base battery
on their home.
But yes, when you sign up with base, you are protecting your home and you're protecting
your pocketbook, but you're also contributing to making the whole grid in Texas and soon the whole
country more reliable for everybody.
The next question you ask is about the data center build out.
So we are working on a product that we call Speed to Power,
which is a solution for data center developers
to get grid connected faster.
So to hyper kind of oversimplify what this means
is if you're a data center developer and you,
you know, you're meta and you say,
hi, I'm Meta, you know, Mr. Utility, PG&E,
I would like to build a one gigawlot data center,
please, please give me one gigawatt of interconnection.
The utility says, well, you know,
we don't have a gigawatt of interconnection,
so you need to get the interconnection to you
and you need to wait in line effectively.
And I'm oversimplifying here, but bear with me.
Well, what we can do is we can do is,
you can say, hey, meta, we can go to play 500 megawatts of batteries around your data center
effectively on the same utility feeder such that the batteries are electrically equivalent
to having a big battery on the site of the data center.
Now, do you really want to put big batteries on data center locations?
Maybe, but if I'm a real estate developer or a data center developer and I have a site
that's designed for data center, I'd like to put as many GPUs on that site as possible.
That site is not designed for batteries and I'm not an energy developer by trade, right?
So what I'd rather do is have a third party come in and say, hey, you can actually just
buy our battery capacity from us.
We'll discharge the batteries when you're running your GPUs.
We'll offset your load of the data center and you can get grid connected faster.
And so we're working with some developers across the country on this product and really
excited to bring it to market because we want to win the AI race.
We want to help these data center loads get grid connected faster.
It feels like a win-win-win, right?
Like the consumer who has the free battery or discounted battery, you guys win because you have a great
business and then the data centers win because, hey, my feeling is these data centers and
the AI companies are going to become severely hated in the coming years, not just for,
you know, if the possibility of jobs, you know, get displaced, but they may also,
people might start looking at their electrical bills like they are in Virginia right now,
which is data center alley.
And they say, whoa, why is my data, why is my bill going up?
And then they see on the news, oh, these data centers are being built and people start making
the connection that there is a greedy data.
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Yeah, I think it could be the opposite, actually,
where these hyperscalerscalers are actually subsidizing the power costs for the consumer
in this kind of mechanism that I've described.
So, you know, we hope to flip that script.
That makes it particularly brilliant.
Go ahead, Alex.
Well, I'm just curious about the transmission from the homes and their batteries
back to the data center because usually when we see a large facility like that,
there's a big power connection to, you know, a lot of copper cables and such.
If you're aggregating power from individual homes, Zach, does that become a grid difficulty?
Is there a congestion issue there?
It really depends. It depends on the topology of the grid.
So, and where the substations are, where the data center is, where the, where the neighborhoods are, where the substations are.
And so there's usually some kind of catchment area, as a term I would use, around the data center in which you can install the batteries, such that they are electrically equivalent to having the battery behind the meter at the data center.
And how large is that catchment area?
for, let's say, a one-kigawatt data center?
It really depends based on, again, the grid topology, where the substations are, that kind of thing.
But it could be, you know, it could be hundreds of thousands of single-family homes.
Got it.
Okay.
So lots of individual homes there to put enough capacity into them to get the grid.
Okay, that makes a lot of sense to me.
Who loses, though?
Because Jason just said everyone seems to win here.
And that's not usually how capitalism works.
So who's going to take a bite out of their profits if you succeed?
Well, the incumbent retail electricity providers in the competitive markets that are competing with us, I think we'll have a very hard time.
Well, I think we'll all cry quite a lot about that, Jason, does you think?
Yeah, I mean, since moving to Texas, much like in Brooklyn, you have to be resilient and you have to be a rugged individual.
What I love about your business, Zach, is that it hits on those notes.
People here would like to be resilient.
they would like to be independent of the grid or at least semi-independent of the grid.
How long if power goes off would your average installation keep a home running or keep a home running
if they don't use their washer and dryer, which are like the big ones, yeah, or turn their AC down a bit?
Yeah, so we have two configurations, one battery and two batteries. Very simple.
The average single family home in Texas is one battery is going to get about 24 hours of backup
with kind of moderate usage.
and then, of course, 24 hours, sorry, 48 hours of backup with two batteries.
Obviously, if you got three AC units and two hot tubs and, you know, a bouncy house,
you're going to be pulling a lot of power and you're going to run that battery down.
Wait, you've been to the ranch?
I didn't know you were.
Wait, you have how many hot tubs?
I don't know.
There's zero hot tubs right now, but we're putting in 16.
Can a person who's got a lot of batteries out there, Jason?
Exactly.
No, I mean, I've talked to you about it before and I've been thinking about it.
You know, we have two wells, protein sources, two internet connected satellite and wired.
You know, you really start to think about how can I be independent and how can this, you know,
home and this homestead not be reliant on anybody or anything.
And that's where I think Americans are going to get to when it comes to energy.
It's already happened.
I don't know if you've done much research of what's going on in India or China, where people
are just buying batteries off of Amazon, basically, and solar panels.
and then plugging their devices into it,
not even like plugging, you know,
like literally getting a small refrigerator,
plug it into an anchor battery
with putting some solar in their backyard.
People are becoming very, what's the word?
Resourceful.
Resourceful in the face of the energy crisis.
What have you seen around the world
in your research of the most resourceful places
where batteries and solar and independence are happening?
You know, there's a really interesting story
like this playing out in Pakistan.
where they have seen, I think, the highest rate of residential rooftop solar deployment in the world.
And it's much like what you're talking about, a lot of DIY kind of self-serve folks doing it themselves,
which is super cool.
And to our earlier conversation around the cost of solar and storage,
you know, they're going to see these costs continue to go down.
And so resourceful folks in all different countries, all different corners of the world,
will turn to these technologies as a solution to power bills going up and reliability going down.
All right.
Speaking of expansion, how long until you're out of Texas?
When can I get this in California?
When's it coming to Rhode Island?
We're working on it.
We're looking to expand in early 2026.
So we haven't yet announced what our next market will be.
But we hope to bring base to every household in America and beyond.
And we want to be a global energy technology market leader.
So we're really excited to announce our next few markets.
And we'll hopefully make our way to your neck of the woods very soon.
And what a great real estate play.
If you wanted to build a bunch of batteries and put them somewhere,
you've got to buy some land here you just you know get a little 10 by 10 spot on people's existing
properties and you get to distribute all this power it's just super brilliant as a distributed
network it's it's very crypto like in that way don't want you coin though stay focused on what you
got there are no coins in our future please stay out of the coin business all right sack thanks so
much for coming on the pod continue success if people want to learn more where can they go if
they're in texas and they want to get in the queue i know you got a queue there
How do people get in the queue?
Check us out at basepowercompany.com.
We'd love to hear from you.
Thanks to you both for having me on the show.
And look forward to hosting you at the office down in Austin.
Can't wait.
Let's go get some Terry Blacksbeef ribs and we'll be there any minute.
Sounds like a plan.
All right.
Great job.
And we'll see you soon.
Thanks, guys.
All right.
Very exciting.
You know, it's Alex to see people doing real hardware work and really solving these problems.
You know, if we were sitting here 20 years ago,
in Silicon Valley, the idea that a startup would be venture funded and then be able to raise a
billion dollars to do an infrastructure play. This really only exists because Elon decided to do
Tesla and SpaceX and kind of break people's brains that you could actually do physical stuff
in the real world. Or Uber and Airbnb said, hey, well, we can do things in the real world too.
And now, you know, technologists don't feel limited to laptops and iPhones. This is like a hard
installation problem. But boy, what a great insight they had that, hey, we don't need another
source of energy. We need to store energy when it's at the lowest possible rate. And this is
where my frustration with my guy, Chris Wright, you know, in our debates, you know, I don't hear
talking about base power or solar enough. And this administration needs to start thinking, hey,
minute, what could these costs, what do you think the actual cost is to them to put, you know,
a battery or two, those, maybe they cost 5K each, maybe it costs them 1,000 or 2,000 to install,
so it's maybe 7,000 a home.
I'm talking about their cost.
It's probably not that great.
Maybe it's 10,000 a home if we just ramp it up.
Well, if there's 10 billion homes in this state and the state is having energy problems,
well, maybe the state should be subsidizing that instead of.
you know, building coal plans or whatever. And here in the great state of Texas, we have the most
solar power of any state. I can tell you it's not because people here are woke or MAGA.
It's because, like Zach said, they're focused on what is the cheapest energy. And it's clear
solar batteries is the cheapest, with the exception of maybe if there's a coal plant or a gas plant
already installed and you put a data center smack dab on top of it.
Sure. But, you know, let's keep our eyes on the prize here, folks. Really great job to Zach and his team.
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helping you track everything on your application, not just the errors. Don't just listen to me.
Try it out for yourself. Go to century.io slash twist and take your monitoring and debugging to the next
level. That's century.com. If there were 10 million homes in Texas, just throwing a number out
there, and you had to do $10,000 installation each, that would be $100 billion,
compared to Texas's nominal GDP, Jason, which was $2.7 trillion in 2024.
We can afford this as a nation.
This is within our budget.
I mean, if you were to do bonds, you know, if literally the state of Texas did a bond
for $100 billion, or they just did it, you know, I don't know, $10 billion at a time,
10% of homes at a time.
Sure.
They could just do $10 billion bonds, pay 5, 6% on them, make them uny bonds or the people
who buy them don't have to pay taxes and make some yum yum, yum,
especially when interest rates comes down, you know, just a $10 billion bond to put 10% on the homes,
that would then make the upgrades to the grid and the upgrades to the sources of power.
It would kind of crack the monopolies, it would make a more efficient market.
I think it's a very disruptive thing that he's doing.
Yeah.
I can tell you every time I, in three, in my last four homes, you know, over 20 years I've owned
four primary residences.
And each time we move homes, I look at that and I, my L.A. home with a shake roof, you know, it wasn't worth, you know, and an old house and a house built in 1940.
Like, they were like, yeah, you can't really put solar on here. The whole house could collapse.
And I was like, okay. You know, then the next one, same situation, you know, in the Bay Area.
Just this house is like old. It's a 1945 house. You can't do it. Modern house, beautiful. I buy this incredible.
incredible, you know, modern masterpiece.
And they're like, okay, you're going to ruin the aesthetic.
You're going to take millions of dollars off the value of this house by doing it.
I'm like, okay, can't do it.
And now here I am on the ranch.
And it's like, yeah, just take one of your acres in the corner here.
And you can use like a quarter acre or less to just put a solar installation and run the cable here.
You'd be off the grid forever.
So, yeah, it's really smart that they're doing it in suburbia and where they're
are single family standalone homes.
You could also do it in townhomes, I suppose.
But this is going to be so disruptive.
I love a great disruptive play.
And talk about the timing.
The timing of this is just perfect
because, man, prices for energy are going to spike.
And it is going to add to the resentment of AI.
The resentment of AI.
You can see it start to building, you know, cab drivers in,
in Wuhan are already starting to protest.
The number of licenses given in China
is going to be limited.
They're going to limit the number of licenses
so that young men don't lose their jobs as drivers.
You look at Amazon.
You look at the figure robots came out
and coming out with version 3.
Optimus, these things are doing Kung Fu.
If you can do Kung Fu,
I think you can fill my Amazon package.
Yes.
Yes.
So we're getting pretty close to job
displacement, I believe, at a level, I don't think we've seen more than once or twice in the history
of humanity, ag revolution, industrial revolution. This could be, this time could be different.
It absolutely could be. One last thing I was before we move on. There's a company we had on the show,
Jason, called X-O-Watt. I'll put the episode number in the description. And I was just thinking
about them when we're talking to Zach, because I haven't checked in on them in a little bit.
Here is how they're pitching their company now. It's a heat storage system.
Jason for industrial solutions, but now they have changed their branding to powering AI with 24
hour solar. So I think this is going to become the theme from basically all energy startups that
we care about on Twist 500 and otherwise. It's going to be an AI play. And you know what? Good.
Love it. I mean, these solar arrays, geothermal, you know, smoothing out the grid, batteries,
it's like it really is possible right now to just do this. It might take a little incentives on the
margin, but not too much.
Hey, we had this little spinning wheel.
We did.
And I made some guesses, and I think I was wrong.
Yes, sadly, I think your guesses were a lot more fun than what we ended up getting.
But Tesla is a company that's a real business, not just an idea factory.
So they do have products for everybody.
On Monday, we talked about a small video from Tesla showing a spinning fan slash wheel and a sound effect.
Yeah, let's show it.
Yeah.
Let's show that.
So we folks don't have to imagine it.
if you missed it, it's a, yeah, look like a fan that would be inside of your computer.
I thought this would be a fan that was used in hypercars. There's supercars and there's hypercars.
So you have supercars, you know, Ferraris and Lamborghinis and then you get to hypercars. Those are
the million dollar ones that have over a thousand horsepower supercar, 600 horsepower.
So what was that? What was it? Do we know what that is?
Yes, as it turns out, Jason, that was new 18-inch wheels on the Model 3 standard, which is different than the Model Y standard.
I got to say, shout out to Tesla for having a great hype video, but what they announced were more affordable EVs, Jason.
Really?
Well, I just really wanted it to be the leaf glow or the selfishly the Tesla 2.0, so I could have Tesla Roadster 2.0, so we'd have the 1.0 roads and the 2.0 roads are sitting.
next to each other in the garage.
Okay, that would be pretty cool.
That would be pretty cool.
But I guess it's the wheel spinning.
But there's major pressure right now on the EV category in terms of affordability from two fronts.
One is the tax credit going away.
You just get $7,500 or something.
And then internationally, B.D, ShaoMay, we talked about a bunch of these car companies.
You can pop up a car company in China, like you can pop up a cell phone, a mobile.
handset operator. So it is a new world, folks. Yep. And if you want to see those wheels in action,
Jason, here is a picture of the new Model 3 standard with them. They're called the 18-inch
prismatic, I believe. No, it's a Prismata wheels. And this is the stripped-down version,
which to me looks just like other Model 3s. So I think they've found a pretty good way to hide
the cost savings. But you can get a Model 3 standard for now just under 40K, and you can get
the model, oh, I'm sorry, yeah, the Model Y standard for just under 40K.
and the Model 3 standard for 37KJZ, which seems, even without discounts, pretty damn affordable.
Yeah, these are much more affordable.
The only difference is some of the trim and some of the components.
If you look at the trim, the light on my new Juniper Model Y, which I think I'm leasing, but it's, I don't know if it was like 55, maybe it was 60K all in.
So this is 40K and it would be 48 with self-driving.
So I think it's 12K less than mine.
have the light goes across and you have a glass roof not a you know a steel roof like this one has
doesn't have the glass roof which some people might prefer actually because sometimes you get too much
light in if you're in Arizona or Texas and um these look a little slower they have a similar
range but they use less batteries because they made it lighter and then all kinds of tiny savings
I saw people talking online about the seat adjuster is
now in the dashboard as opposed to the components on the side. So if you just keep stripping these
things out, little tiny things like that add up, you know, $50 here, $150 there, a little bit less
actual batteries while maintaining the range because it's lighter. They have fabric seats,
not leather. You don't have the cooling, which if you're in Texas, I can tell you, you need
to have air-condition seats. You get into an air-conditioned Tesla with the air-condition seats.
Oh my God, your car goes from being 110 degrees inside to, you know, just beautiful 72 in minutes.
It's amazing.
So wait.
The seats are self-cooling as well?
Yeah, they have little holes in them.
This has existed for a while.
You have heated seats, right?
Right.
Which is just like a mesh that warms it.
Yeah.
You need that in the northeast.
In the south, these have little holes in it.
And I guess there's a series of pipes that blow cold air.
and the cold air comes through the holes
and it freezes your nuts.
That sounds fantastic because the last time I was in...
Your crack.
I mean, I was in New Orleans not too long ago
and it was very uncomfortable for a number of reasons,
including car seats being too hot.
So I love that.
All right.
Last thing here, Tesla's worth $1.43 trillion.
Last time we checked in
and the company didn't really lose any steam
over this set of announcements, Jason,
so it seems that the market's happy
with what they put out.
They need to put out the model two.
I think this is a great,
step, I think the world wants a two-door hatchback and then maybe a minivan from Tesla.
But firing up new lines of cars is hard.
And I think they, although they may do that, I don't have any inside information, obviously.
But if they do that, if they can do that, that would be amazing if they could have either
of those cars.
And then you would be, you know, competing with the Prius, like the two-door Prius or whatever.
And, you know, get it down to 25K.
or 30K and under, that's when it's going to be super magical.
But I think they're just going to go for optimists.
And I think even self-driving is like going to wind up being de minimis compared to the
opportunity with optimists.
So I do think they'll get self-driving working in the next year or two to be able to take
the safety driver out.
That's my timeline.
I know other people are thinking it's going to be three months or six months or three weeks.
14.1 just came out.
And if you look at the website FSD tracker, which is like consumers saying what they're getting,
and then you just take the anecdotal videos from the superfans who have, you know,
who are doing rides in the Bay Area with the driver, have a ride-sharing service there now and
limited supply.
And then the Austin one, I would say, you know, they're at 96 or 97 percent, depending on the ride,
obviously, but the FSD tractor, I think, still has it at 97.4.
Estimated distance with no disengagement's last 30 days, 97.4.
Drivers with, what does it say?
One or no disengagement's last 30 days.
Yeah, so this is one or no disengagement.
So essentially, it's the second layer of reliability should being showed there.
But I think the city distance to critical disengagement is the most important thing,
because it's going up quite dramatically, Jason.
If you look back at, you know, version 10 here was, you know, 29 miles and now it's over 200,
that's a 10x improvement over four generations of the FSD software.
So if you were going in a critical disengagement and somebody could get hurt.
So what that means is if the car is going 200, what did you say was 250 miles without a disengagement?
I think it was 226.
Okay.
So 226, if you were going, I don't know, 30 miles per hour,
30 miles per average, you're talking about every nine hours or something like that,
not even 10, like maybe eight hours, no, seven or eight hours, you'd have a critical
disengagement.
In other words, if this was three shifts a day, or no, four shifts a day, you'd have four
critical disengagement every eight hours.
Obviously, it's not acceptable, not ready to take the driver out.
It needs to be, I don't know, something critical happens once every two months.
I don't know.
I don't know what the right number is because the metrics,
the statistics are not normalized, but Tesla is going for the wide.
They're going that we can launch these anywhere, whereas Waymo's like, we're going to
focus on smaller dense areas and make it perfect.
Now, if you limit the area dramatically, like Waymo has, and you have LiDR, you're constantly,
every car is building a 3D model of the world, you know, every ride.
So if something changes, somebody double parks or like there's a dumpster so many put outside somebody's house because they're doing a construction project, whatever it happens to be.
You know, there's a construction project of some type in the street.
It's going to get built into the world model faster.
So less area equals better stability.
Next up on the show, you can now buy Chinese humanoid robots on walmart.com.
So if you happen to have...
$21,600, Jason, you can get yourself a Unitary G1 Basic.
Here is a screenshot that I took from walmart.com.
You can also purchase battery packs or their Unitary go-to air smart robot dog for just $2,200.
I was blown away by this.
I wanted to verify it, Jason.
And I even chased down the company in question.
It's a company called Futurology and they are now an official vendor for Unitry.
So if you want your Chinese spyware on two legs in your home,
Good news.
It's now available for 20K.
You cut me off at the past.
I mean, I think we need to talk to Vice President J.D. Vance about this.
Or maybe Marco Rubio.
He's Secretary of State, yeah.
We need to talk to these two gentlemen because selling robots from China does not sound like a great idea.
And was it true?
I saw this spreading.
that Unitary robots were sending data back to the mothership?
Yes.
What?
I believe it was on a five-minute interval.
Now, there's two ways to think about this.
One is it's a piece of technology and they often send telemetry back and forth between
individual bits of hardware and servers.
That's not a bad thing.
Lots of stuff does that.
But when it comes to China, when it comes to data security, and when it comes to other
things like their G-O-1 robot having a back door that we should,
found. I think it's a legitimately large problem. Now, Jason, we're an open country. We've talked a lot
about self-driving cars in their training. I think that it's probably better to have an open society,
more competition, and worry a little bit less about certain cybersecurity issues. But in this case,
because who's going to buy this? It's going to be startups that want to play with a humanoid robot.
Well, that's a great place to harvest IP. Your mom's not going to buy this, right? I mean, this is not
designed for the average consumer because you have to program it. So on one hand, I'm really
excited to see more accessibility to hardware that it will allow startups to build and try things.
On the other hand, we don't have that deal with China, you mentioned yet.
And so right now we're still geopolitical adversaries and therefore spying is a big deal.
So I'm kind of torn on us.
There's spying, yeah, like TikTok.
And then there's also attacking and being able to go on the offensive and do missions.
These things are a different breed than your app, TikTok, you know, stealing your location
or something like that.
They can actually go do things in the real world.
And here it is.
Security researchers say G1 humanoid robots are secretly sending information to China.
And yeah, what if these things go rogue is, I guess, the key.
It's now off Walmart.com.
They yoinked it, ladies and gentlemen.
And they raised the price of the robot dog.
So everything I told you has now been replaced by change in the last two hours.
I was trying to point out you could buy them in a pack of six for three-day delivery from Futurology.
but apparently
something happened
maybe Marco Rubio
did take a swing at this
but other startups
in the U.S. are taking note
Jason Chris Paxton
he's the AI innovation lead
at agility robotics
a company we've talked about
when this story broke
said this is real
WTF because I don't think
any American company is ready
to mass produce a
$20,000
humanoid robot
yeah this is just a bad idea
folks
you know you don't need
be paranoid, to be concerned about Chinese robots. That's just common sense. I did see in the news
people speculating about Tim Cook. Yes. Retiring or stepping down at some point, he's going to be
65 years old. And I guess this came from Bloomberg and the very famous Apple reporter there,
Mark German, who gets things right. Tell us what's going on.
Cooper Tino. Yeah. So, Mag 7 companies, the largest companies, when they have a change in
leadership, it's a pretty seismic deal. I reported on the Steve Bomber to Sotianadella transfer of power.
And so this is not like just swapping out your VP of sales. It's picking your next leader
for the next 10 to 20 years of your business. So when we discuss this, that's the scale we're talking
about. Apple is a multi-trillion dollar company, relationships around the world. It's a big deal.
The question was, who's going to step in after Tim Cook eventually either goes to
lead the board or just sits down in place with all of his money. The answer, it turns out,
is a man named John Turnus, according to German's reporting. And the reason why he's a good
candidate, Jason, is that he's only 50, which is relatively young compared to much of the Apple C-suite.
He's also had a really long tenure at the company. He's been greatly involved in their hardware
products, including some of their recent successes that we've talked about on the show,
better computers, better chips and so forth. I think it makes a lot of sense. The thing that I'm
concerned about, though, is I feel like today, when I look at Apple,
great hardware, crap software.
And so to me, they're almost doubling down
on what they're good at,
and they're not investing more
in what I think they should be,
which is their AI suite being complete trash,
Siri not being very good,
the app store being a bit of a mess.
And so I think John, Mr. Ternis,
makes good choice.
It's a good selection if you want better iPads,
but I think they've already nailed that.
And so to me, I was kind of hoping
for a different direction.
Well, 50 years old is when, I believe,
Tim Cook took over for Steve Jobs.
And there was a guy named Jeff Will,
who was supposed to be, he was the C.O. of Apple up until July of this year.
Yeah.
And he was supposed to be the heir apparent, Jeff Williams.
And he was, he was involved in a lot of launches.
I think he was like even, you know, Apple Watch, iPod, a bunch of, like, you know, he's been there forever.
What happened to, I guess, Jeff Williams was my question.
I know that he had Johnny Ive leaving.
But when did Jeff Williams?
Yeah, he stepped down on July 8th.
July 8th.
I have the bit of Apple.
And he's retiring here.
Yeah, that's the interesting thing.
It's not like he was swapping out jobs.
But I mean, also maybe in this current climate, business is less fun.
That's my take.
Because if you're Tim Cook, what do you have to do right now?
You have to go to the Oval Office.
You have to kind of bow and scrape.
And the president sets your travel agenda.
And you have to do, you know, big ribbon companies.
you're not just in the weeds with technology.
You're also playing a political game.
I wonder if everyone wants to do that.
Yeah, the stakes are higher, obviously.
It's a bigger company and less time actually doing product and more time being, yeah,
the representative of the company.
At times, a diplomat, you're dealing with geopolitical issues, India versus China versus
Vietnam.
Yeah, and I guess, you know, at some point, the great success of Apple,
buying back so many shares, so much cash.
the stock going up, you know, so consistently over the 27 years that Jeff Williams was there.
Like at a certain point, the money does become a distraction. And you have to think when you're
62 years old, like he was when he retired, he's eight years older than me. Yeah, maybe you're like
what's left. And what's left is enjoying life. And you also never know what's going on with a person
sometimes, you know, they can be going through a divorce or they have a kid who's got challenged.
or a parent who's sick.
So I always have a little bit of grace for folks
without knowing their personal story as to why.
Yeah.
And for Tim Cook, I mean, 15 years at the helm,
he's got to be getting tired.
I mean, it looks like he's in great shape
for a 65-year-old, that dude's pry.
I think you could do it for another 15 years, no problem.
But again, if you've got 15 years left on the planet
in this life form and you're 65,
You could still ski a little bit.
Maybe you can ski for five more years or 10 more years.
Maybe you can, you know, really have a fourth act.
You used to have like you were a child, you worked, you retired.
You had three acts.
Now people seem to have like four or five.
Good news for you and your small shareholding in Polymarket, Jason, because intercontinental
exchange, the parent company of the New York Stock Exchange is going to invest up to $2 billion
in the company.
bringing its valuation all the way up to $8 billion pre-money.
And I thought 8 plus 2 equals 10.
But Shane did a tweet and he said 8 plus 2 is actually 9.
So it's worth either 9 or 10 billion.
Not quite sure why there's disagreement there.
Well, they said up to 2 billion.
So maybe they're investing a billion now and 2 billion in the future.
It's taken a guess.
I didn't have a nail downs.
I didn't want to speculate too much.
But it's an enormous amount of money.
It's an enormous upround for the company.
And it really, I think, gives them enough cash to crush the company.
And even more, they have a great partner in the Nice.
The intercontinental exchange is going to distribute data from Polly Market out, giving the company a business model for the first time.
Yeah. Couldn't be more bullish for Polly Market if you tried to make up an announcement.
Yeah. So they are going to distribute the data to the financial institutions who subscribe to their products.
And that will create revenue.
for polymarket.
Is I mean understanding correctly?
That's my guess, because when I was prepping about this,
I was really confused by how polymarket makes money.
Well, they're going to take when they're going to eventually take a portion of the fees
like other competitors do.
And they just haven't launched in the U.S., but they bought that other company.
So they will be launching in the U.S.
And in fact, on polymarket, people are right now,
there's a polymarket for when they'll go public.
I'm sorry, when they'll launch in the U.S.
Yeah, actually, I have one of those pulled up right here, Jason.
There's a running market $3 million in volume asking, will Polly Market go live in the U.S.
inside of 2025 and complete unanimity, 98% chance everyone agrees on this.
So your view then is that as they expand in the U.S. and they grow their volume,
they'll start taking a couple of points off the flow.
Yeah, of course.
It would just transaction fees.
So if you want to, you know, and if it's 10 bibs, if it's 1%, who knows,
what it will be, but there'll be a little vague in there, and that's it.
Yeah, but in the meantime, as the company doesn't do that, and they just kind of operate this
exchange right now, as far as I can tell it, for essentially free, a software enterprise deal
with New York Stock Exchange is a great way to bring in some money in the interim.
As part of this announcement, Shane did drop some other notes, Jason, and this was not public,
and I also will note, you did not text me this information, so sad times.
But before the election last year, they raised a $55 million round to that.
blockchain capital led at a $350 million valuation.
And then earlier this year, founders fund led a $150 million round at $1.2 billion.
So those were kind of quietly done leading up to this.
But it does explain the valuation jump from their earlier price to now this $9 to $10 billion
price deck, which is enormous.
Yeah, it's pretty great.
I think it's going to be a huge success.
I guess the shareholders of intercontinental exchange.
didn't like the investment right now?
Or they've been, actually, they've been on a downward trajectory since August.
So I don't know if that has too much to do with this deal.
It didn't help.
The chart here, if you're on the audio version, I just have basically a two-month chart of the
ICE stock price.
And it took another bit of a dip there.
The thing I think they struggled with Jason is just growth.
The company is very profitable off of $2.5 billion in revenue in their last quarter.
It was only up 10%.
They had operating income of 1.3.3.
billion. So it's just a very lucrative enterprise. And so from that perspective, I think taking
the swing on polymarket makes sense twice. Not only do you derisks yourself from the traditional
stock market world and bring yourself into the new world of prediction markets, but also don't
forget, Polymarket is a blockchain-based company. They settle their trades on Polygon, which is an
Ethereum L2. And so they have both feet in the crypto world. And as we talk about tokenization,
as we talk about companies like Robin Hood getting more into crypto, I think it makes good sense.
And if you look, it looks like the Dune data indicates $1.4 billion worth of volume in September,
and they're on pace in October for 1.2.
So you know, you average that out.
That would be, you know, let's call $15 billion a year in volume.
$15 billion a year in volume, well, 10% of that would be 1.5.
And if they got 1%, that would be $150 million.
Is that right?
So this could be making a lot of money very quickly and early on if they just get one, but one percent of that float.
Yeah.
I'm long-term bullish about polymarket and Kalshi and prediction markets from Robin Hood.
Not going to lie, I know you're a shareholder.
10 billion seems a little expensive for the company today.
But if you are the New York Stock Exchange and you want to be de-risked, strategic money just trades differently than financial investments.
So I'm actually really here for this.
Shout to the company.
My gut tells me.
this could, the volume here could 10x in the next couple of years.
Because remember, they're not legal in the U.S. yet.
They have not launched in the U.S. yet.
Yes.
When they launched in the U.S., I think the volume's going to go 10x.
Now, it may take a year or two, but I would say 10x the volume,
which means they're going to very quickly get to a billion dollars in revenue.
Do you want to do a little twist bet on that?
Sure.
So, I don't know.
In a year, it's a year after they launched.
in the US, it will be triple.
Two years later, it will be triple again.
I think they'll triple each year.
So which bet do you want to take?
Well, I think because you're the shareholder,
I'm not going to make you bet against your own company.
So I'll take the under on both of those.
Well, let's just take one.
We'll just do it because it was settled in a year.
It'd be faster to get the juice.
So in one year, it triples volume.
One year post-US launch or one year from October 8th?
Yeah, from the launch.
Okay.
I'll take the under.
Jason takes the over.
That way, you'll get paid twice, if you're right.
Another Hyundai.
Yep, Hyundai in plan.
I'm going to add it to the docket.
Add it to the slash bets page.
Yep.
All right, let's keep moving.
Next up on the docket, XAI may secure a investment from Nvidia.
Jason, you talked a little bit with Zach at the top of the show about your concern,
about how much money is flowing around the world of AI Infra and some of the circularity thereof.
Well, here's the latest.
According to Bloomberg reporting,
X-A-I is looking to raise $20 billion.
X-A-I, of course, is Elon Musk's
AI company that's merged.
So it now has what was Twitter
and the new AI company in one-bucket.
Looking to put together a $20 billion round,
$7.5 billion in equity,
$12.5 billion in debt.
Invidia might put up $2 billion worth of money into this.
The tricky thing is it's set up via an SPV.
The debt is.
And they're going to essentially use
the chips they're going to buy
as the backing, the asset backing for that debt.
And that does take some of the financial risk
and put it outside of XAI,
but it does seem like a bit of excessive cleverness
to make the math work out.
And I'm just kind of curious, putting aside
the fact that it's Elon's company,
how does this sound to you as a person
who's been in a lot of deals?
Yeah, I mean, it's actually good for the shareholders
of XAI to have an equipment lease, basically.
So equipment leases, people would do those, even for small companies.
You know, Dell has an equipment leasing program.
So if you want to buy, you know, 30 laptops and you're $3,000 each and whatever, you get a monitor for people, you can do that with financing, right?
So then you don't have to use your capital to do that.
You just pay a monthly fee and spread it out over the life of these, which is five years for these.
Some people are doing six.
Some people are doing four.
So it makes a lot more sense if you don't want to dilute your equity to set up.
equity financing. I suspect a decent amount of the deals we're seeing will have some component
of this, which is equity financing. So what that means is if you were in the equity financing piece
of one of these investments, it could be done any number of ways. You could have warrants to buy a
little equity in the company or, you know, whatever. If you were putting in 20 bucks, 7.5 goes in an equity,
12.5 goes in debt, you get paid a, you know, a coupon on the debt. And then maybe you have some converts,
you know, or a little pot sweetener to get a little extra equity. But, you know, it's pretty savvy
people are investing in these things. And yeah, it's not actually non-traditional to do equipment
financing. Okay. It's pretty standard. Actually, it would be, the thing that's actually surprising
is more like the Nvidia Open AI deal, while they're putting it $100 billion and then they're buying a bunch of
AMD chips. That's the weird one in all of this.
Okay. So they're a little bit different. So the
Nvidia OpenAI deal, they only get the Nvidia money after they buy
the gear. So I think that's a tranche-based investment as well.
So they're not going to take Nvidia money and then give it to Lisa over at AMD.
That would be too messy. But here's the thing that I've been thinking about.
If you're in video, you're essentially via different mechanisms,
taking your GPUs and getting shares.
in some of these AI companies.
Your GPUs, you sell at a 70% gross margin.
So do you get to essentially buy dollars in equity
for 30 cents on the dollar
because you are using high margin products?
It feels like people are worried about Nvidia.
I think they're getting the best deal in the world.
It's brilliant.
But, you know, the challenge in all of this is
these are conflicted party transactions
is how they get framed.
It's okay to have a conflicted party transaction.
You just have to explain the conflict if there is one.
And there's some diligence you have to do around that.
Here's a scenario.
Let's say, Open AI and NVIDIA, this $100 billion changes hands.
And it just essentially round trips, let's say, or the majority of it round trips.
Let's say the management teams of these two companies, not even the CEO, just the management teams.
They start shelling shares on the way up.
Now, let's say there's a recession.
for whatever reason, all these stocks go down 50%.
Nothing to do with the round-tripping.
Nothing to do with the, I shouldn't say round-tripping,
nothing to do with the conflicted party transaction,
I think, would be the way to say it.
So now the management has gained something, right?
They sold shares.
The shares went up because of these deal announcements.
When these deal announcements happens,
typically the shares go up.
And the shares will certainly go up
when the revenue starts hitting
because people will be more bullish on the companies.
Now people sell their shares.
They've personally gained from a conflicted party transaction.
Then the shares go back down.
And if the shares go back down and then other people, you know, who own shares in the company are negatively impacted while the management teams are benefiting, you have lawsuits and investigation.
So that's how this practically could.
That's the risk in all of this.
Now, you don't have to be right to file a lawsuit or win a lawsuit.
You could just be an ambulance chasing shareholder and still win.
That does happen.
Like in the case of Tesla and Delaware, a chance record or whatever.
Yes.
The person had like 10 chairs and they were able to be represented by, you know,
somebody and they made money on their shares.
So you could even make money and still sue and still win.
So this is all getting, I would say, it was notable.
And now I would say the word on the street is it's concerning people.
You know, when you turn on CNBC, it's become a topic now.
I can't stop reading about it.
The Economist, FT, Bloomberg, everyone's ringing this bell because it's not just that it's
the major companies that are doing this.
Neo-Clouds are also doing a lot of GPU-based debt.
Core weave is of more than $10 billion in GPU back to debt, according to Tamas Tungas.
They were ventures.
We had them on the show.
And also, Lambda Labs has at least a $500 million GPU back to loan as well.
So it's a lot of money, Jason.
It adds up.
And it's concerning to people.
So when it goes from people in our industry talking about it or talking about it on an industry,
an industry-based show like this week and startups, we're all in or whatever it happens to be,
when the insiders in the industry are talking about it and then at some point it tips over into mainstream media,
like you said, FT, economist, et cetera.
And, you know, and then the rest of the world's talking about it.
now people are focused on this, the attentions on it. And that's where, you know, if you look at the
dot-com bubble, people started to say, like, wait a second, if open AI is worth $500 billion and they're making
$13 billion, but they're losing tens of billions a year with this buildout or more, when are they
ever going to get this money back? When does the, when do they get out of the J curve? And then people are
going to start doing, you'll see it. At some point, people are going to,
build a J-curve chart when they finally have all the information on these deals when they
when Open AI files their S-1 and that's when you will be in there and other folks will be in there
with a fine-tooth comb saying hmm this seems like a revenue ramp that's not possible and this is
where the total addressable market it comes into play and I did a total addressable market here on
the show at one point and just broad strokes people spend a couple thousand dollars a year in the
modern world on SaaS products, right?
So if we say this is roughly equivalent and you probably get more value from this,
maybe you keep some of that SaaS,
but you might replace some of that SaaS spend with this.
Let's take 500 million people working in the real world.
Okay, so you got 500 million there.
Let's say they spend $2,000 each a year.
So, you know, what does that equal?
It's a big number.
I'm on it.
Yeah.
So, and then you take another, let's say, go ahead.
No, it's thinking.
Okay.
This is why you shouldn't use, by the way, LLNs for math when you're doing a live
taping because it goes, oh, hold on, let me think.
It's a trillion dollars.
It's a trillion dollars.
Yeah.
So, you know, you got a trillion dollar tam just for the business case.
And I'll include in that, like, the API calls and everything.
Sure.
Just the 500 million people who really work, you know, in the Western world, that's, you know,
the United States, Canada, Europe, et cetera,
modern world spend,
not discounted for local currencies or anything,
just, you know, EU, US dollars.
Okay.
Now let's say there's a billion people as consumers
willing to pay, you know,
roughly what they pay for Disney Plus at Netflix,
30 bucks a month, maybe 25 bucks a month.
I'm going to go with the 25 buck a month.
You got a billion people spending 300 a year
on, you know, consumer-based products.
Okay.
Now you've got another $300 billion, yeah?
So $1.3 trillion so far?
You got $1.3 trillion in revenue.
It's a big number.
That's a lot of revenue.
And if it was worth, I don't know,
five to, I would say seven, eight times price-to-sales ratio
or 10 times price-to-resolution, you know,
the prize is clearly $10 trillion.
Yeah.
And that's not counting any gains that come.
downstream in the developing or frontier markets.
Developing market like China or frontier market,
you know, I guess that would be like maybe some of the countries in Africa,
et cetera, that don't have rule of law exactly.
But they're still going to, doesn't mean they're not going to use some of this up,
but these might use it on average for a buck a person or five bucks a person.
In India, they're breaking out a $5 a month, a chat CBD subscription.
Perfect.
Put a price point on that, yeah.
20% of what U.S. pays, right?
Sure. Yeah, yeah.
You have all that stuff going on.
around the world. That's where I think we're going to wind up. I'm only including the, you know,
first world, the developed world. Developed world is the correct, politically correct way to say it.
So the developed world, I don't know, it's a pretty big tam. It's a pretty big tam.
If you build out, what's the build out? The build out's going to be three, four, five hundred billion.
More than that, more than that. I think, but I just, if you look at what's been announced,
It's like $100 billion from, well, I mean, Sam's a trillion.
We'll just throw that number away.
But let's say there's 70.
I know.
I think that's just him.
Sorry, I know.
I just appreciate that.
How do you spend a trillion dollars?
There's a lot of money.
So let's say there's 10 companies playing in this big game.
XAI, OpenAI, Anthropic, Amazon, Microsoft, Google, Apple, eventually.
you know, you start to get, let's see seven players or, you know, a Tesla, you know, let's say
seven players. Seven players put a, you know, 200 billion in each, 300 billion in each. Now you're
at $2 trillion. So it's quite possible there'll be a trillion or $2 trillion and spend 10 over the next
five, 10 years. But that means per year, $200 billion a year. So it's quite possible that the revenue
from this at $1.3 trillion could actually work out. It could actually work out. It could actually work
out. The math, maths. So for me, and I'll have Kibir work on a model. So somebody let Kibir know
to send them this link here. I'm going to make a model for this and we'll put it in the docket.
And then we'll make the model open source. You all can create new tabs in the model and make it
better than what I explained here. But this is my back of the envelope, which is my speciality.
Back of the envelope, man. Just making some notes. Boat tea. All right. This is what I do.
I tell people in my venture firm, do Boatty.
back of the envelope, just do it in your head.
Man, this breaks people's brains.
To be able to do math in your head is,
I don't want to say a sign of intelligence,
but it's a sign of a hustler.
And they can do back of the envelope math.
That's when you know you don't want to be in a poker game with that one.
All right, I've been another amazing episode of this week and startups.
We'll see you on Friday.
Bye, everybody.
