We Study Billionaires - The Investor’s Podcast Network - TIP294: Inflation - Deflation - Which One Is It? w/ Jeff Booth author of The Price of Tomorrow (Business Podcast)
Episode Date: April 26, 2020On today's show, we talk to entrepreneur and best selling author, Jeff Booth. Jeff is the author of, The Price Of Tomorrow, which is a book about why deflation is the key to an abundant future. ...IN THIS EPISODE, YOU'LL LEARN: Why we have too much debt and not enough growth in the world. Why we need monetary policies deflation on a global scale. Why we won’t have a new Bretton Woods. Why technology is massive deflationary. Why and how to invest in businesses that have the best networking effect. Ask The Investors: What does the low interest rate mean to us as consumers? BOOKS AND RESOURCES Join the exclusive TIP Mastermind Community to engage in meaningful stock investing discussions with Stig, Clay, and the other community members. Jeff Booth’s book, The Price of Tomorrow – Read reviews of this book . Tweet directly to Jeff Booth. NEW TO THE SHOW? Check out our We Study Billionaires Starter Packs. Browse through all our episodes (complete with transcripts) here. Try our tool for picking stock winners and managing our portfolios: TIP Finance Tool. Enjoy exclusive perks from our favorite Apps and Services. Stay up-to-date on financial markets and investing strategies through our daily newsletter, We Study Markets. Learn how to better start, manage, and grow your business with the best business podcasts. SPONSORS Support our free podcast by supporting our sponsors: Bluehost Fintool PrizePicks Vanta Onramp SimpleMining Fundrise TurboTax HELP US OUT! Help us reach new listeners by leaving us a rating and review on Apple Podcasts! It takes less than 30 seconds, and really helps our show grow, which allows us to bring on even better guests for you all! Thank you – we really appreciate it! Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm
Transcript
Discussion (0)
You're listening to TIP.
Boy, I am so excited to bring you today's episode because we have Mr. Jeff Booth,
who's the author of the book The Price of Tomorrow.
I like to think that Stig and I read a lot of books, and I can honestly say this is one of the best books I have read in the past couple years.
Jeff's an entrepreneur that started his own company from nothing and built it into a half a billion dollar market cap.
His book talks extensively about inflationary monetary policy and the deflationary,
price impacts that such a policy creates. If you've ever gotten the terminology confused between
inflation and deflation, this is going to be the perfect episode for you to understand some of those
ideas. So, without further delay, you're going to love this conversation with Mr. Jeff Booth.
You are listening to The Investors Podcast, where we study the financial markets and read the books
that influence self-made billionaires the most. We keep you informed and prepared for the unexpected.
Hey, everyone, welcome to the Investors podcast.
I'm your host, Preston Pish, and as always I'm accompanied by my co-host, Stig Broderson.
And my gosh, am I excited to have this conversation right now because, you know, we read a lot of books between Stig and I.
And it's rare that I just, I'm literally jumping out of my seat to talk to Jeff Booth, who's here with us right now for his new book, The Price of Tomorrow.
Welcome.
And I have to tell you, I'm a bit of a fanboy at this point from this book.
It has just been so good.
Welcome to the show.
So excited to have you here.
Thanks so much.
I'm a fanboy right back.
Well, Jeff, I want to start off because you have a ridiculous background, like a super
ridiculously strong background.
And I just want to highlight that to the audience because for me, whenever I first heard
your background, I was like, this guy gets it.
He is somebody who's been in the trenches of building a business, not just a medium-sized
business, but we're talking a large-cap business from ground up.
So what I want you to do is to tell people your background, your experience, the size of the
company that you have built, all that kind of stuff, just to give them a little bit of context
of your background.
I've generally been in technology most of my life after I started a building company out of school
or real estate and then building company.
out of that problem, I started a company called Build Direct.
At first, it was a e-commerce company, and we went through multiple cycles, the dot-com
crash, 2008 and everything else, and we turned that into a platform type of company.
At one time, over a half a billion dollar is a market cap.
And that path took me into the realm of technology, where I've sat on many different boards,
investor and portfolio of different companies and technologies.
right now I'm co-founder of four different technology companies and sit on boards of about
10 different companies.
Where did you start off at at like what level and then what market cap did it arise to?
Zero out of my house and I went to over a half a billion dollars of market cap.
In my opinion, and I'm kind of curious if you've seen this as well, very few people
understand the definition of inflation and deflation.
First of all, would you agree with that?
Yes, I would agree with that.
I would agree with very few people understand how economies work and are constructed,
and part of that is an inflation deflation for sure.
So I think it's vital that we talk about the definition of those terms.
We talk a little bit about if you were going to put them into an application for somebody
to understand the terminology, describe that.
So which one would you like to talk about first, inflation or deflation?
I try to simplify really complex topics to try to make them broadly understood. So I'm going to
do that. If you really understand a topic, well, you can explain it to a five-year-old. So if you just
take inflation and deflation, I would say one seems like a bad word. Most people would say
deflection is a bad word, right? We don't even want to look deeper into the conversation
and what it is. So I'm glad you asked the question. Inflation is when the value of your money goes down
and goods and services cost more.
And deflation is the opposite of that.
The value of your currency goes up, and goods and services cost less.
It's as simple as that there's different winners and losers,
depending if you have inflation or deflation.
But in principle, that's all it is.
So let's just say that we're dealing with a deflationary currency
and I can buy a chocolate bar for a dollar.
Tomorrow might only need 90 cents to buy the same chocolate bar.
But you can also have the opposite, inflation.
For instance, due to an inflationary monetary policy,
and then the chocolate bar could cost me, say, a dollar and 10 cents tomorrow.
And let's just isolate that in both cases, right?
Because then the solutions outside of that, you can design different solutions.
But that is true.
I think people assume if you have deflation, that's a bad thing
and they go to the consequences of the bad thing.
It is true.
It's a bad thing for debt.
If you have too much debt, deflation, you can't pay back that debt.
The debt explodes in real terms and value.
So holders of debt moves in a deflationary environment because it has to be written off.
I'll go one further on inflation to try to get your listeners to really look at this at a different level.
What if a government, instead of saying we had inflation targets, said,
we are going to try our best to destroy the value of your currency?
because it's the same thing.
And I think for everyone hearing this,
whenever you heard that you could buy a chocolate bar from 90 cents,
you're thinking, yeah, that's the world I want to live in.
I want deflation.
My cash is more valuable.
But if you're a government entity and you have to pay back debt,
you don't want deflation.
So let's talk about the incentive structure
that effectively occurs after a government,
or really at this point,
we're talking about world governments that have implemented inflationary monetary policies for decades,
that they've lived by the policy of inflationary monetary policy.
So if a country does this for a year, the impacts are not going to be all that noticeable.
But when they do it for decades on end, talk to us about what happens in that incentive structure,
particularly after they do it for so long.
If you can grow your real economy faster, then maybe it's okay, right?
If you didn't have to stimulate, so maybe it's not a bad thing.
I would argue the way that the world has worked since World War II has lifted the world out of poverty.
It's done a lot of good things and everything else.
What's happening, though, today is the same amount of debt to create growth, it's exploding.
Every time you're creating more and more debt to pretend to drive growth and you're debasing currency every time, you're holding asset prices up.
And so we get stuck on this merry go-round.
I don't think it's good or bad people.
I think we're stuck in a system that we don't see we're stuck in it.
And without a bridge to how do we change that system,
we're dealing with really profound consequences of having too much debt in the world and not enough growth.
So let's talk about a concept called price deflation,
which is tied to technology and related to death growth.
Could you please elaborate on that?
price deflation, if prices fall, then the whole premise of my book is technology is creating falling prices.
So you can see it everywhere where technology lives.
In fact, if you look at the consumer price index where technology is, where it is not, you can see it really clearly.
So you have technology overdriving price deflation and really where you get more for less.
the byproduct of that more for less also takes jobs.
And for technology companies, it creates a whole bunch of jobs,
but not as many as the jobs that it displaces in a non-technology business.
So overall economies are finding less jobs if you let deflation happen.
So you have governments that have too much debt and businesses that have too much debt
and the corporates that have too much debt and people who have too much debt.
If that happens, the debt's wiped out.
How do you press reset on that debt?
If the prices fall, you don't have a growth rate to support the debt, then the debt explodes in value.
So a person who's listening to this, who's very skeptical that this time is not different.
They're saying this is no different than what happened in 2008, no different than what happened in 2000 or 1987 or early 90s.
They're looking at this event right now and saying these policies aren't.
going to change. This is just more of the same of what happens during business cycles. How do you
respond to that person? I think they're totally missing the point. I like to go to first principles.
And technology is moving so fast. It's exponential across industries, but we've constructed
economies in a different time. Technology has mean the same thing, how fast it's moving today,
and how fast it's giving benefits. If the people listening to your show looked at you their phone,
The iPhone is only 13 years old. It's not quite 13 years old. So the smartphone, the whole
industry is 13 years old. Look at your phone and look at the home screen and look at all the apps
and ask yourself how many of them you pay for and you'll see it. And that power is moving into
every industry at leavening speed. And in other words, your phone gives you abundance at a way
lower price than what was previously possible. Your Way's app is free. Your Google searches are free. It's
all abundance, and that is exploding across our society, and our policies aren't keeping up.
So in your book, there's a great example of where we are whenever it comes to the speed
of which things are taking off right now, and you use the example of a piece of paper that you
continue to fold 50 times. Let's hear the question and how people typically respond.
And I've asked this question to thousands of people around the world, tens of thousands of people,
and very rarely do I get anywhere close to the right answer.
So if I fold a piece of paper on itself 50 times, you can only fold it seven times.
But if you imagine you could continue to fold it, how thick would that piece of paper be on fold 50?
And the answer is to the sun, from here to the sun.
And what happens generally when people hear that, they don't believe it, they go Google it,
or you can see the shock on their face.
And I don't say that to say I'm smarter than anybody because I would have missed the answer too.
Most people answer about two inches.
What it shows is we're terrible at understanding exponential patterns.
COVID right now is why people misjudge how fast it's moving is just an exponential pattern.
Exponential patterns are really hard for human minds to understand and technology is moving exponentially.
Back by Moore's law, I go through that in detail.
Yes, Moore's law will end.
But the next curve, whether it's quantum computers or the digitization of societies, it doesn't matter.
I think what's happening with AI technology in general, whether it's quantum, AI, everything else, it will feel exponential to us.
And so if we can't understand that fold 33 is from Detroit to Boston, and Fold 34 is double that going to the sun, and we're on Fold 33 and Moore's Law is right, Moore's Law right now,
old 34, we're in this steep step. So people think it's moving faster. It's moving exponentially
faster. And I think it surprises people because they're not looking at the numbers, but it took
$185 trillion of debt over the last 20 years or monetization of debt. Overall global debt has
increased $185 trillion to produce $46 trillion per year of economic return. Those are the stats.
it's crazy. Those are the stats before the crisis. I wrote the book before the crisis. If you think
about the exponential deflation that we'll see, that's going to take exponentially more debt.
If it took $185 trillion over the last 20 years, and that's only driven marginal growth,
then to get the same amount of growth over the next four years, it's going to take that debt again
because technology is moving so fast the other way.
So to pretend we have a society that's a,
he's going to create that much debt.
And then at what debt,
I see all the news reports and the Fed printing,
which is completely logical.
They have to based on where they don't have to,
which is completely logical what they're trying to do
to save the existing system.
If they did nothing,
we would enter a depression.
In fact, in 2008,
doing nothing,
that's what caused them,
people to respectively abandon capitalism, bail out the same people who created the crisis,
because doing nothing means depression.
And all that happened is you kick the can down the road, and it's a way bigger can.
And so trying to escape this crisis by doing the same thing creates a way bigger problem.
And here's the thing, I don't know if we're going to escape this crisis, right,
with how much more printing is going to be required.
If you think about this from a policy standpoint, if we talked about first principles and what has to happen anyways and how we have to raise the intelligence level of the conversations coming out a lot.
But if you think about how this whole system is interconnected, so today the Fed, another $2.3 trillion and high yield debt.
And that high yield debt is a really subprime of 2008 and why they're doing it.
And taking that under the balance sheet, next they're going to take baseball cards.
is because if they don't, the unwind of the system, the assets unwind, and then the banks fail to.
And it's just a domino effect, just like subprime. Remember in 2008, everybody said, oh,
some private is isolated, but the interconnections are not. And the whole system is tied to that amount of debt.
And so if it starts unwinding, you start to see who has it, and the system fails.
So the Fed is boxed, and they're trying it at all cases to stop that asset price unwind no matter what, because then the banking system fails.
And I understand that.
It is a very real problem, and that very real problem could create a depression so severe, but just papering it over is a very real issue too.
And I'm going to go a little deeper on it.
Think about what's happening, papering it over.
So technology is wanting to keep creating everything cheaper.
by manipulating the markets, we're holding asset prices higher, and then a whole bunch of people
who can't pay the rents on those asset prices that are artificially held higher because we
created money to keep them high. We have to bail out the people who can't keep up the cost of living
rise to pay for the prices that we artificially created. It's the most insane system,
and we call that capitalism. We call it, oh, it's working fine, right? If you dig into this from a
first principle at the standpoint. There's nothing in this. It's fine. Let's take a quick break
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Back to the show.
If I was going to summarize what you were saying there and kind of relate to the example of folding the paper, I'm kind of curious if I'm capturing this correctly. So you've got an inflationary monetary policy that's been in effect for a long time, right? The longer that that inflationary policy is in effect, the more that all the people that are sitting there on this money are saying, I've got to invest this money or else it's going to go down in value. That incentive shows.
structure that exist for decades, it compounds on itself. And using the piece of paper that
you fold it 50 times and it goes to the sun and you were saying we're on fold 34, you were referencing
where we're at on Moore's law. But if you would also equate that to inflationary monetary
policy that's been in effect for decades, we're at some fold there that on the next fold,
you're literally jumping from mercury to the sun on that fold. It's almost a mirror image.
Right. You can see if you look at technology and the deflationary trend of technology
and how fast that's moving and you look at how much debt is created in the world to be able to
stop that, it's almost a mere image. And if you add the unfunded liabilities and what's
really happening, it is a mirror image.
One of the questions that I immediately thought of whenever I was, because everything
that you're talking about here just makes total sense in such a simple and elegant way
that you describe it. One of the things that popped out of it, though, whenever I was looking at
the deflationary impact on prices that inflationary monetary policy has, I'm looking at a chart,
and I got this chart, I have no idea where I found this thing. It was on Twitter somewhere,
and it was showing about how there's this giant separation between various items since 1997,
and one of them, you've got the price of a TV has literally gone down 90% since 1997 to buy a TV
of similar size, and it's gotten way better, quality's gone up, and the price has gone down
that much.
But then there's a counter argument to that where you can look at the price of medical care,
and it's gone up significantly since 1997.
How do you describe that in this deflationary price argument due to inflationary monetary
policy?
Let's start with education, because education has gone straight through the roof.
So does anybody believe that the amount of debt created for education and student loans
can be repaid. If all you've done is created an artificial market that's streamed higher because you
threw a bunch of debt at it and without any fiscal discipline, why do you think houses rose so fast
before? Why do you think dot-coms did before that into 2000? When you have free money chasing things,
they go up and press. And the question is, if you never have to pay back that money,
Maybe they go up and price forever.
The only way to never have to pay back that money is to debase your currency, right,
to essentially make the currency worth way less.
And so you have a bunch of incentive structures that aren't right, that don't work.
If you actually take into what's going to happen with technology and medical care,
you're going to see if you let natural forces happen,
the cost of medical care would come way down through technology as well.
It's just starting.
So technology is creeping into every sector is being digitized.
My Apple Watch knows more about me than my doctor.
So let's talk about your thesis, and I love this because it's so contrarian, and you have so
many interesting arguments.
Your thesis is that we need deflation, and not when it comes to conventional price deflation,
because we do have that in many areas, but starting another place, namely with deflationary
monetary policy on a global scale.
Could you please explain your thesis, Jeff?
Economics is driven from scarcity, right?
It's not from value.
And the air you breathe is free.
Why is that?
Because it's abundant.
In a lot of places, the water is free because it's abundant.
In Africa, the water isn't free because it's not abundant.
And so you can see through that, pulling that economics into it.
So it's not about value.
It's about scarcity.
It might be about perceived value if you can,
create scarcity out of perceived value like a brand would do. It's really about scarcity. I argue in the
book that the real scarcity going forward is high paying jobs because of what's happening in technology.
Technology is making more and more jobs. And I go through countless examples of where you're
going to see job destruction out of technology. Google, well, they created a monopoly business,
destroyed way more jobs than they created in that monopoly business. And you see that
technology landscape. I saw it in my own companies, what I see it in companies today. And I can see
the next steps. I can see what's happening. These things are getting digitized. Some of the
companies I'm involved with, they're exploding in value right now. COVID is actually an accelerator
to robotics, an accelerator to technology adoption. It moves things fast. You look at Zoom going from
10 million users to 200 million users. How many of those businesses that are working from home right now
will say, I need four floors of a building. Maybe they want only one floor of a building and they can
get through their work with more efficiently. Technology does that. So if high paying jobs scarce and every
single government around the world is trying to essentially play game theory to protect their highest
paying jobs. What they're doing is what Blockbuster did when Netflix was obviously a death
threat. And if you look at Blockbuster through that lens, people look at it today and say,
why didn't they buy Netflix for $50 million? And hindsight is 2020. The Blockbuster management
had 9,000 stores, right? It looked like their business was perfect. And it looked like in the future
their business was perfect. All they missed is how fast technology was moving. And it made their
is redundant overnight. The entire thing that drove their success drove their failure overnight
when digital when downloads fees went faster. And what did they do? They added candy aisles to the
stores. And we laugh at that. Right now we laugh at that. Like those crazy people, if you look at monetary
policy today, what all the solutions are, rather than candy aisles to the stores. That's what we're doing.
It's driving off a cliff the other way.
It's so evident in everything.
And all of the money is going into protecting the status quo, just like Blockbuster
trying to protect their 9,000 stores.
And it's not just a CEO and a small staff that's adding candy to the aisle.
It's like almost every academic on the face of the planet that's trying to add candy
to the aisle.
When you're talking about monetary policy, this is such a massive global group
think situation that it's almost unfathomable that so many people are trying to add candy
to the aisle?
But again, it's logical when you think, I explain it in the book, but when the top
businesses in the world and Blockbuster was a really top business in North America, and I'm assuming
it's not just a bunch of dummies running the company, right?
If they can't see it because they're in the system, and those are top CEOs, top people
around executive teams trying to protect the status quo of the system, if they can't see it,
if it takes somebody outside of a system to see it, who is outside of the system that we've
created for all of us, enjoy our economic benefits and everything else? And so we're all caught in the
same system. And that radical idea I had, it was really looking at it from round up first principles
and saying, I understand the dilemma of central banks. I understand what it looks like. How do you bridge from
blockbuster to Netflix in a global economy. How do you do that? And so I think that that's the
conversation we should have. How do we transition to something that looks way more digital in nature,
way more technology in nature, and as a byproduct of that, is going to have less jobs?
And the thing is important to understand that the decision makers are not incentivized to want the
deflationary monetary policy. For instance, if interest rates go up, the value of all assets go down
because everything is based on the cost of money.
Then elected officials around the globe want to have funding into the district so they can
get re-elected.
That is their incentive structure.
So they want a lower interest rate because that would be good for the lobbyists that
support them.
And then if you add into this that fiat currencies are not packed, elected officials might
make the wrong decision for the population, but they're actually very rational whenever you
consider the own incentives to not having a deflationary monetary policy.
see. Yeah, and what is it, we have a transition coming one way or the other. It might be too late
to do an orderly transition from Blockbuster to Netflix. I suspect it's too late because we haven't
done the right things before. But what that transition looks like, it could be a reset and go through
a depression and the debt wipes out. It could be center banks getting together around the world
and pegging to it at common currency, like gold before 71, right? But the fact of the fact that
are inescapable. We're breaking society by doing what we were doing. We're driving wealth
into the hands of very few, and we're socializing the losses.
Let me ask you this, and this is a super hypothetical question, which I usually don't like,
but I'm just kind of curious to hear your thoughts on it. Let's say I could snap my fingers,
and goof we'd have a monetary policy that was deflationary. Would that slow down this
breakneck speed of innovation that we're seeing today? Would you see that start to subside?
I don't think so. I think that will still move just as fast.
Let's say you could start over right now. You had no debt in the world.
You had global world order tied to a unit that made sense that you couldn't manipulate,
and you allowed capitalism to take place.
And innovators would move faster to make things that are more efficient.
And technology would be a byproduct of that and the benefit of society.
And those people would still create value.
It just wouldn't be manipulated value if you own a house and,
that you make the currency worthless, the house goes up by that value.
All right, so let's talk through the entire array of how this could play out, moving forward
based on what we know today.
The first one you said was, could this be another Britain-Wart system?
I suspect that won't happen because we're already past the point of governments trusting each other.
And what is the value of a currency?
It's just an exchange rate of trust, right?
So if you lend me money, you lose your utility of money today and I gain more utility of money.
And if you lend me more money the next week and more money and I keep gaining and you keep losing,
my internal economy will look way better than yours because I can hire gardeners.
I can go vacation.
And if you just look at that, I look rich to everybody.
And it's coming from me pulling forward demand with your money and then having to pay you back
later on. And one day I have to pay the pipe. If what I do, instead of paying you back with a
unit in exchange we agreed on, is I changed the underlying currency to pretend I paid you back
with a different base, you lose trust in a currency, right? You wouldn't do that trade again.
And so if every government is doing this exact same thing, you very quickly lose trust in
global trade and any sort of rational trade, exchange rates, debt. There's mispricing everywhere
because of that, especially if you've done it for decades. And again, just like you can't see
the paper pulling going to the sun, it's such a small amount early on that you miss it. So nobody
sees it. It's a tiny little bit. Oh, okay, let's keep going. And then it gets bigger. And we're in a
spot right now that it's such a big problem. At some point, the numbers are just so insane that the whole
system breaks because you'd lose trust and currencies.
Well, Jeff, I want to hear your opinion on this.
So I'm of the opinion even under a gold standard that you have inflation in a monetary policy.
Because when you go back to Bretton Woods in 1944 and we come off the gold standard in 71,
why did we come off the gold standard in 71?
Well, it's as you manipulated the money multiplier for 30 plus years between those two periods
of time, which is effectively an inflation-based monetary policy.
So yeah, and I think I look at it through the
the lens of game theory, right?
So if I think about, so if everybody cooperates,
incentives accrue to the person who cheats.
Not fair?
Game theory.
And then as more people cheat and don't trust each other,
incentives accrue to cooperation.
So you see this cycle throughout history that works like this.
If you look at that lens,
so Bretton Woods was gold pegged and the U.S.
currency. And with Vietnam, not being able to be paid for. So what that says in game theory is
your own personal needs always take precedence of international. Your own family matters more than
everyone else, then your friends, then your country, then everyone else. So it always goes to,
I've got to protect me first. But overall incentives are better when everybody cooperates
through the lens of game theory, then in 1971,
but when Vietnam War couldn't be paid for,
it makes sense for the U.S. to abandon the colds.
Export the problem to other countries.
And at that time, and then we have a be it currency.
But yeah, it became the functioning global currency.
And then for a long time, that still worked, right?
It's in these bigger steps that it's starting to lose trust across the world.
Every other country needs their own currency because if you have your debt denominated in U.S. dollars and the U.S. dollar does what it's doing right now, you just exploded your debt.
Of other countries, gaming currencies and balance of trade, all the trade wars are really currency wars.
The U.S. wants China's dollar to go higher, so more product is produced in the U.S. and less than China without understanding the interconnections of what that looks like.
and China wants their dollar lower so they have more labor so they can sell more goods.
But yeah, if you have a fiat currency that the world order sits on and you manipulate the underlying currency,
you have a whole bunch of problems.
So to summarize what you're effectively saying is that as you transition from a trust-based system
to a system without trust, whenever you're working in a global inflationary monetary monetary system,
Whenever you consider the game theory and there's no trust, the devaluation becomes competitive
on a global scale.
And that's the thing I think people miss when, well, Japan got away with it for 20, 30 years,
right?
Deflation and they kept on printing.
They missed a couple things.
Japan's most of the debt was owned by the president.
It was their own.
And one country might be able to get away with something all that.
If every country does the same thing, it doesn't look the same.
I'm kind of speechless.
I'm just sitting here.
here just shaking my head. It's almost, I don't even have words to describe how mind-blowing
some of this is. Let's transition a little bit here to artificial intelligence. What is something
that you see coming in the next 10 years that will make the audience's mouth just drop to the
floor? Most of artificial intelligence today is dominated by deep learning or machine learning,
But it's doing things today that would blow people's mind.
I use an example of the game of Go in the book.
And the Game of Go is a Chinese game.
It's thousands of years old.
I can't remember the exact number of combinations of moves,
but it's a staggering combination of moves.
And even the top AI researchers didn't think it could be solved by AI for another five years.
But a couple of years back, AlphaGo,
beat Lee Sidol in the game
who was a top human player.
But it was the way that it beat
Lisa Dahl in I think it was game five.
The AI put a chip in the middle of the board
and all the commentators in China
who were following it said
the AI made a mistake.
And it wasn't until after the AI destroyed
Lisa Dull and they said that was the most
creative move we've ever seen.
It was kind of the first time that
AIs were deemed to be creative.
And if you look at what's happening in AI, if your creativity comes from pattern recognition.
Artificial intelligence is moving first in machine learning, deep learning, and now into artificial general intelligence where computers are smarter than all of us.
That is in our future.
What you could say is 10 years in our future, 30 years in our future, five years in our future, 50 years in our future.
I would ask you to think about this.
We know a day will come when artificial intelligence is smarter than every year.
one of us. Not just smarter, but more creative too. I know that people will fight it, but it's already
happening. And if that happens or when that happens, every single job is a function of our intelligence,
everyone. So how could you say artificial intelligence doesn't change the rules? If artificial
intelligence is going to be smarter than us, you can say that's not going to change the rules
to how we construct societies around jobs. Deep learning itself won't get all the way there.
It needs massive data sets and compute power on deep learning itself.
Now, it'll do some things that people have no idea how powerful that is, right?
You think about connecting datasets and what that can do and what that can do and way better
and learn better than us.
It's super powerful.
I am working with a researcher out of the University of British Columbia right now.
He's a top researcher in the subset of AI called Probabilistic Program.
It might be the next piece of artificial general intelligence and everything else.
So this is moving that fast.
And I suspect it's not going to slow down.
So billionaire Peter Thiel is famous for asking a really important question doing his job interviews.
And I think I might see you're working because you might already know where I'm going with this question.
I love the question.
Yes.
So he asked, which important truth?
Do very few people agree with you on?
So I propose the same question to you, Jeff.
I think when I wrote the book, I've launched the book,
I think very few people would have agreed the impact of technological deflation.
And the reason I wrote the book is if you see it, you can't unsee it.
And so if I think about my kids, the world they're going to grow up in,
I couldn't stand by and see that and not say something about it.
today, I think a lot more people are starting to see it.
So when you have this conversation with the typical person, what's their common argument
or what do they usually fight back with? You know, I talk to people about X, Y, and Z,
and you always kind of hear the typical flow of arguments or the typical feedback. And I know
there's people that are listening to this that are skeptical of what we're talking about.
And they probably have the question that you're going to say.
But here's the thing.
I don't know if somebody actually goes through the book and actually
quite this piece of it, but you know I've gone through it in a balanced approach
on the entire thing.
And I don't see this is a fact.
We have technological deflation period and that is likely to move into various society
and move faster.
So what I get typically is not questioning.
that, but I can't do anything about it. Let's just do the old way. But that's not a solve either.
And so what I asked, I know what I would ask audience that is pushing this way back,
defend why the existing system works and why it will continue to work. Defend that.
Like imagine we started today with no debt, knowing anything else, and how do we want to
construct a society? And we had a fresh start. Would we rebuild what we have and why?
because I think that allows people to step out of the existing framework of I can't do this because
of my personal wealth gets destroyed or I can't do this because I'm going to lose my job.
I can't pay my bill tomorrow and I can't do it.
It allows you to step out of the fray and have an intelligent conversation of what things
could look like going forward.
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All right. Back to the show. So a person listening to this might be thinking
I believe everything I just heard.
It all makes sense.
But what do I do?
How do I find the right investments?
What is your response to that?
About 70% of the value of technology companies
comes from network effects.
So in fact, the entire internet itself is built on a network effect.
And a network effect is an easy way to see a network effect is a telephone.
If I'm the only one with the phone, it has zero value.
And one more person adds, one more person.
net and each time the value of the underlying network increases.
The technology companies are built today.
Most of the platforms, especially the monopolies, are all built really understanding network
effects and how to construct them to be able to exploit network effects.
The entire internet is based on a network effect, many of the top companies on top.
From Amazon, most people wouldn't realize that Amazon has over 500 million skews, all competing
for your attention.
competition for your attention means you can go there and get everything you want,
and it keeps getting better and better out of the competition to try to get your attention.
Same thing works the same way Google works with over 130 trillion websites competing
to try to get to number one in each different category.
So companies that can exploit network effects, build products around technology that can enable
network effects have more enduring.
They can create monopoly businesses.
constructing businesses that way is one way to looking for investment opportunities and companies
that have network effects is one powerful way. So you asked the question, what do I do personally?
And I think that what you mean personally is, how do I protect my own wealth with what's coming?
And so that would be one way to look for companies like that. One way that I have a portion of my
portfolio in Bitcoin, and I think, and I can, and I, and I, and,
And in every dip, I'll buy more because I think the chances the asymmetric bet on Bitcoin
of what it's valued at today and what likely will happen as governments can't stop gravity
from happening by printing money.
The likely beneficiary is something like Bitcoin.
There needs to be a new standard going forward.
And I think the most probable right now is Bitcoin.
But gold's running high right now.
Gold is also a decent investment.
but in a land where everybody's destroying currency value.
But why is gold, what is it, a $7.5 trillion market cap?
I would argue the only reason that gold is a $7.5 trillion market cap
is it used to be pegged currency.
But it's no longer pegged currency.
There's just a hope that one day it will be again, right,
by a whole bunch of people who own gold, and that's why they own gold.
It's not that the underlying brick of gold has any value other than it was pegged to currency.
And if Bitcoin has a market cap of $120 billion, I think it's highly likely that the new peg to current regimes is something like Bitcoin.
And if it doesn't happen first by governments, it's going to happen by institutional players who drive a network effect, who drive it higher and higher in price.
If I was a government right now, what I would do is I would be buying it in the back.
I wouldn't be telling anybody.
I'd be buying it in the background because it's far more likely something like that with.
the network effect around trust, it turns into something that is kind of a store of value for
world currencies. My concern with gold in the coming four to five years, especially as you now
have digital scarce tokens that have been invented, is the speed at which you can clear a transaction
for the gold market. So I think gold's going to do very well in the coming months, but I think once you
have Bitcoin in particular go through its next halving cycle and everything that's going to
kind of play out based on the incentive structure and the scarcity and some of those ideas
that you talked about earlier.
And the fact that it has such a small market cap relative to gold and you start to see
these players come in.
If the price of gold's going up a couple percent, call it, and I'll use a high percentage
two or three percent a day in the gold market.
And you have something like Bitcoin that's going 10 percent.
And you can literally conduct the transaction.
immediately versus something that I need to send you a gold bar in the mail for you to take
possession of.
Then it might take a couple weeks to get it there or if I'm trying to buy it from an entity
or a business that's then going to tell me it's three months in order to receive it.
I think that's a major, major concern.
And I also have a concern with this getting into the technical stuff of Bitcoin, but I think
you're going to have this halving event in May.
and historically the price really hasn't caught on for a couple months until after the
having event just because of how the miners execute the fiat, right?
Well, if that plays out, let's say that you don't start to see the price acceleration
on Bitcoin until call it the fall time frame.
And now you have a lot of people concerned about a currency peg today, right now.
You're seeing the technicals on gold that look like they're ready to explode to the upside.
So I'm concerned that you're going to see the market chase just fly in the gold.
You're going to continue to see Bitcoin sit a little bit dormant because of how the incentive
structure is set up and where it's at in the current halving cycle, only to find that
there's this rocket ship that blows past it six months later after you had everybody go in
there.
They don't want paper gold.
You were seeing the separation in the paper gold market relative to the physical
market.
They're going to get their gold bars three or four months later, only to find, you know,
find out that this rocket ship just zoom past them and they're stuck in this cage of slow
transaction times and nobody who wants to buy it because it's going 3% when Bitcoin's going
15% at that point in its network effect and incentive structure based on how the protocol
executes Fiat.
A lot of these time good things need to investigate what you believe in the second order
and third order consequences of that and then do that for the other side of the argument.
And so what you just did is that it's one of the things I really like following you and everything else.
I think you're measured approaching to you put things into concepts and you'll look at both sides.
So what you just did with gold is that and I agree with you.
I use that example in Venezuela and so people say, well, you can't be a peg to currency because it moves around too much.
And Venezuela, there was 1.8 million percent inflation last year, right?
and the holders of Bitcoin lost 30% of their value.
Well, if you were a holder of Bitcoin last year and lost 30% of your value when that was happening,
you would be happy because you could still heat.
You can move it across borders seamlessly.
You could go anywhere you wanted and you still had wealth.
You think about all those users who have it and it's done that for,
it builds on the network effect of trust.
And so every single person into this that's experiencing this as you have the hit currency is exploding,
country after country builds faster and faster trust to a network.
And at some point, I think you're right, it explodes in value.
So a few years from now, one of the major changes that we may see is the concept of decentralized applications.
You sometimes hear them referred to as DAPS.
Could you please explain what it is and please explain how you see that type of technology integrate into our existing ecosystem of technology?
Let's use blockchain as an example.
The internet had the promise of distributing small companies could make money and everything
else.
And it took the giant monopolies and it said that it's going to redistribute.
What it actually did is concentrated power and fewer hands faster.
And that's not an internet problem or protocol problem.
It's a human being time problem.
So when you say DAPs, it's going to do the same thing.
Or blockchain is going to allow this wave to decentralize.
again, I don't buy it because the power aggregates really fast because we need to go to one
place or something that we can trust faster.
That's why we go to Google.
That's why we go to Amazon.
So it's hard to see our time being able to look at your phone and how many apps you're
actually on versus the 50 million that are available.
We don't have the time to think like that.
So if you could create that, that it comes to you, maybe.
This is interesting because I think I have a different take on this.
So hear me out and shoot holes through my opinion here.
So Jack Dorsey, I want to say this was probably, oh my goodness, four or five months ago, announced that he is effectively going to try and stand up a protocol that he would run the Twitter client through that would be a DAP of Twitter.
It would be a decentralized application or a decentralized protocol of Twitter, and he would try to set up a baseline that any other social platform could use as well.
So the way I guess I envision these DAPs working is you're effectively removing the middleman between a transaction of an advertiser and the end user.
So if I go on, let's just say that we remove Jack Dorsey's overhead and he's no longer there anymore.
and I'm still using my Twitter platform, and advertisers want to advertise on any of my posts.
Well, any time that that post that goes up and it advertises against somebody else and they like the post or whatever,
I'm effectively paid that reward directly from that advertiser and Twitter is basically removed out of that loop.
Now, where Twitter has an incentive to do this is they're going to create an index of tokens,
right, decentralized tokens that run on this protocol that have to be swapped into from whatever
currency, it doesn't matter what it is, but those tokens, by the advertiser, they have to be,
if I'm advertising on Twitter, I have to basically buy those protocol tokens that are in the
Twitter protocol.
And when I do that swap, then now I'm incentivized as a user to post more to do things on
Twitter because I'm being directly paid for my contributions opposed to Twitter, basically
sucking all of my data out of me and I'm getting nothing in return as a person who's making
posts on the platform.
So where I see that this would be interesting if this could be done, and it appears that Jack
is trying to do this, is you'd have all these users that are now, instead of being a victim
of the application that they're using on top of a protocol, they're actually benefiting and
receiving rewards for the use of their data and the use of their interactions on that platform.
Yeah, potentially, but I think that's the same thing. Could that start and could that work
as well? From there, aggregate into something. Here's what would likely happen. If you were the best,
you would aggregate other people into yours. And if you didn't do that, you wouldn't be found
anymore because there's a billion people do it. It's the same thing. So we don't have the time
to go through all of that.
It could start, but it's really hard to scale that.
And it would be good for the people that came out on top early on.
It would just aggregate again.
No, you're exactly right, because then you'd have all these people that would then start
to effectively build their own social networks of particular topics.
Instagram stars.
New technology comes out.
A whole bunch of new stars, they aggregate up.
Do you see this playing out?
Do you think Jack's going to be able to successfully implement something like this?
I think he could make that work because of who Jack is and I have tons of respect for
who he is what he does.
So I think he could make that work in the beginning, but I don't think it would solve
the problem that you're talking about.
One of the things that fascinates me so much about this is you look at something like Facebook
and you say, oh my God, there's no way that that company could ever fail.
And these are the things that we say about Sears and these are the things we said about
all these massive companies that don't look like they could ever have a competitor step
into the marketplace. But from Jack's standpoint, if he cannibalizes his application platform that
runs on top of the internet protocol, and he turns his application Twitter into a decentralized
protocol with tokens associated with it, and he basically cannibalizes that, but he onboards all
of his users, his clients, into that protocol, why can't he do that with Facebook? Why can't he
create a Facebook protocol that devours them or a LinkedIn protocol?
that devours them because it's completely decentralized.
The winners of the aggregation will just move up the channel, right?
Otherwise, the audience is a really tiny audience.
And think about the cost that you load on to advertisers to find all of these little audiences.
So the costs explode. So not that it wouldn't work, but it would aggregate back out.
All right. So, Jeff, talk to us about the book, actionable gamification. I really like this.
So it came across this book written by Yu Kai Chow.
And it was one of those books that I like you, Preston, I read about 50 books a year.
And it was one of those books that stood out in a way that others haven't.
And I'd already read a lot on social psychology.
I think that if you think about behavior, group behavior, how we make decisions, everything else,
if you really understand how we make decisions and some of the biases in our decision-making process,
I think you can both invest better.
I think you make better businesses.
You understand human nature a lot better.
And he said there's eight different triggers that you can drive human behavior,
that human beings, all behavior comes from these eight different triggers and using them together.
And he used it.
I won't go deep into the book or any of the triggers.
I'll use a game as an example.
So we believe that we play a game, whether it's Candy Crush or something else,
We believe we play it because we want to.
That's not the way it looks like from a game designer's standpoint.
And if the game is too hard to win at first, you bounce from the game.
So they design the rewards that are easy to win at first,
and it gives you a feeling of accomplishment.
But if the game is always easy that when our brain gets bored and we don't stay with the game,
those triggers get longer and longer, the game gets harder,
when we work and we put more energy into that game.
And think about it.
We think we're doing it for our pleasure
and we're putting more and more energy into that game.
And then they combine that trigger
with kind of superpowers in the game
that make us better than other people.
And that gives us kind of a fear of loss
because we don't want to lose our superpowers
if we don't come back to the game.
So it gives us a fear of loss
that triggers us to stay with the game.
All games are designed that way.
And when I thought about that on a more broad spectrum, I thought about that, I thought that this book is a really important framework for life and how I raise my kids and what they are triggered on.
The things that you think versus what is actually happening, like if you think most of the sports that you would be good at are because you were better at them earlier than friends and people reinforced you positively and you wanted to do them more so you practiced more.
and that practice made you better and the practice made you better and better.
And the sports that you're not good at, you might have been laughed at early on or what you're not good or you might have been laughed at and you never laughed at and you never practiced.
So designing behavior hooks and everything else into technology products is the core of all technology products.
It's what I do in a lot of the different technology companies.
And I try to do it in a positive for humanity way instead of because it has negative consequences.
If you look at Facebook, all of those triggers are designed out of the same kind of function.
And it can be manipulated badly.
So it's easy to manipulate us.
But I'd say the book gave me a new framework for thinking about motivation, why we do the things we do, what things I might want to question a little deeper.
So, Jeff, we covered a lot of ground here today.
A question that we really like to ask our guests, especially whenever they are as ultra successful
as you, is that we like for them to give a piece of advice to the audience, whether it's
about business or in life.
And I know that you define success very differently than most conventional metrics.
So please tell us about how you define success and then which type of advice you would leave
our audience with here today.
So when you say ultra successful, I actually measure this success very different than probably
most people. I measure the success by the positive impact I have on other people. By that measure,
I am the luckiest person that we're around. I have so much abundance, friends, family. So those are
the important things for me. And if I said that, those things can't be taken away for me no matter what.
Money could be, this could be, but actually the most important things in my life couldn't be taken
away from me. It's because it's how I think about people generally, and that seems to feed back on
itself. I believe all of us and me too through kind of learning, evolving, thinking things I didn't
know come into view how to get better. But I think every person I meet is having a sign on their
forehead, pointed outwards, the sign on the forehead tells everybody around what's stopping them
from what they really want. And what we do when we come into contact with that person, let's call it
a friend. What most people do is they won't tell them what's written on the sign. So most people
can't see the thing that's written on the sign is stopping them from everything they want. And their
friends won't tell them. And their friends tell themselves a story that goes something like this.
I don't want to hurt your feelings. But if you actually investigate that, it's actually not that.
What you're really saying to yourself is, I care more about what you think of me than you.
because if you invert that and you say the two or three most important person people in your life,
the people that made all change in your life that you had a zero to one type of change,
they did the opposite of what that person did.
They would never tell anybody else.
They would turn the sign around so you could read it in a way that came from the heart.
And in doing so, they say this.
I care so much about who I have to tell you this.
I'll never tell anyone else, but you need to know.
If you actually invite people like that in your life and you only have people like that in your life, it's staggering how much better you get and how much better the people around you get because you really care about them.
We all make mistakes and how fast you can accelerate your growth by inviting that.
In fact, if you just think through a timelines, why doesn't everybody do that?
I think most people don't do it is because when they have done it in their past, a lot of the times the person receiving that can't handle it, right?
So my co-founder, Bill Direct said to me, you make everybody cry and they love you for.
And here's, I think, the thing, it's not about me.
So when the person doesn't receive it well, it's because you've said it about you.
I don't care if the person changes at all.
It's a thing I would never tell to anybody else that I need them to know it because otherwise,
I feel disingenuous in the relationship.
Think about this in your own and everything else.
And you'll go to, you have that thought with somebody that you spend a lot of time with that
person. And you'll tell everybody in their network except for them about that. You'll go tell all their
friends about what's on their sign and they have no idea. I don't think I could possibly ask
another question after that. Well, no, because it's just such a profound piece of advice.
And I think something that is not evident at face value. And when you explain it to somebody and
they hear that, you can't help but intuitively know that it's just total truth. And it's something that
everyone can work on and think about.
Jeff, the name of the book is The Price of Tomorrow, Why Deflation is the key to an abundant
future.
Where can people learn more about you?
Give them a handoff.
I know you're active on Twitter.
Yeah, Twitter at Jeff Booth.
My personal website is jefferybooth.com.
Well, Jeff, I really thoroughly enjoyed this.
I want to do it again.
We'll have to do this again in the future.
and your expertise in so many different areas are just such a breath of fresh air to listen to and to learn from.
And thank you for making time out of your very busy day.
I know your time is valuable to come on the show and spread your knowledge.
Thanks so much for having me.
All right.
So at this part and time in the show, we'll play question from the audience.
And this question comes from Manish.
Hi, Stig and Preston.
Thank you for taking my question.
I was wondering if you could talk a little bit more about the interest rates.
What does it mean when interest rates are down to zero or negative interest rate?
What does it mean for average consumer?
Can I get a home loan for negative interest rates or can I get a home mortgage for 0%?
Can you elaborate a little bit more on that?
Thank you.
So, Manis, I absolutely love that question.
And I think it ties perfectly into our discussion about inflation and deflation that we
having here today. Another reason why I love this question is because, as you might know, I'm living
in Denmark where the interest rate has been not just zero, but negative for years. And we had this
discussion a long time about how this negative interest rate environment, or zero if you want,
what does that mean as consumers? And especially if we want to have the mortgage. So I'm really happy
that you raised that question. And the first thing I have to say is that, unfortunately,
Fortunately, you don't get paid to take a mortgage.
However, you're sort of doing theory.
So please allow for me to explain what I mean by that.
So right now, you'll be paying a negative 0.11% interest on your mortgage.
And this is just an example.
I'm actually taking from the biggest bank here in Denmark.
Negative interest rate effectively means that a bank pays a borrower to take money off their hands.
meaning that you would have to pay back less than what you borrowed in the first place.
I know that sounds ridiculous.
Now, in reality, you will still be paying your bank for your markets.
Now, it won't be called interest rate, so whenever you look at that statement,
it would still say negative interest rate,
but there will still be a handful of different costs that the bank has added
into the final calculation of that monthly installment.
So please don't be fooled if anyone is not.
telling you that you won't be paying interest on your loan. It might not be called interest,
but I don't think you really care because it's still real dollars flowing out of your bank account,
and that part hasn't changed. It might be called handling fees, processing fees, whatever you want
to call it. You're still paying your bank for that service. The other thing is that you have to
consider what is the real interest rate, and that is calculated as the normal interest rate
minus inflation. If the interest rate is 0% and inflation is minus 2, meaning you have a deflation,
your real interest rate is still similar to an interest rate of 2 if there is no inflation.
If you had debt, you would rather have inflation than deflation since it makes the future payments
smaller in real terms. The other thing to consider is that you might not be deemed credit worthy
for a loan, especially in times like this. For instance, JP Morgan recently tightened their lending
standards. Tighten here, meaning that you would need more taxable income, perhaps you would also
need other assets. There are different ways that the banks can tighten and say, hey, you used to
be eligible for a loan, but you're not anymore. And what you see now in the world economy
is that we as consumers can't service our debt, for instance due to job loss or loss in our portfolio.
So banks are much less inclined to grant us any loans. And that's also why you see central banks
globally doing everything in the can to pump out as much liquidity to make sure that credit
doesn't freeze or at least mitigate some of that contraction that we see. And keep in mind
that as crazy as it sounds, that trillions are pumped into our system. Trillions are also being
taken out of our system and huge debt amounts are being defaulted on at a rapid rate.
Now, looking away from mortgages and more what it means in general for consumers, it has the
interesting effect that the Fed and you as a consumer do not have the same goals.
Because the intention of a low interest rate is to make it as cheap to borrow as possible
and encourage people to invest and to consume. That method worked temporarily before the
coronavirus. But now that we are in a depression, perhaps you can't even borrow if you wanted
to and perhaps even if you could, you don't want to because you're just looking for safety more
anything else. So you just want that, for instance, to be in cash. You don't want to invest in
bonds since you can't get any yields. You might also be uncomfortable investing in stocks.
You know, you can not all over the worries like you might be losing your job. Whatever the reason
is that you might be holding on to your money, as much money that's being pumped out there,
we are still going to be in this vicious downward spiral. Perhaps not for you as a consumer,
but for the economy as a whole, which the second order derivative of that is also on you as a
consumer.
So manage to sum up in many ways a low interest rate is good for you as an individual.
However, you need to look at the real interest rate first, and while it may appear to be
attractive, for instance, when taking out a loan, given that we're in a depression, the low
interest rate environment or even negative interest rate environment is not as attractive as it looks at
face value. All right. So, Monash, the only thing that I would add in addition to what Stig
just highlighted there was this last comment where he said that it's really good for somebody who's
borrowing because interest rates are so low. And I completely agree with that. If I was only going to
put one caveat onto that comment, particularly in the housing market, if you're locking in an
interest rate really low right now, let's just call it zero percent. And let's say interest rates do go
up for whatever unknown force that we can't understand. Let's just say the interest rates do go up.
I would expect the valuation on that house to go down if we start seeing interest rates go up.
So if you're in the market and you're planning on selling your house, let's just say you move
around a lot due to your job or whatever, and let's say you suspect that you're going to have to
move in the next five years. If interest rates would go up, which could happen, you might expect
the valuation of the home to actually go down in that type of environment.
So that would be a risk for people that are planning on moving out of that house in the short term
if interest rates would in fact go up for whatever reason.
If you plan on living in the house forever, that risk, in my opinion, isn't something
necessarily that you'd have to worry about.
So with that, Monash, thank you so much for asking such a fantastic question.
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So thank you so much, Monash, for asking an awesome question.
All right, guys, Preston and I really hope you enjoyed this episode of the Ammasters podcast.
We will see each other again next week.
Thank you for listening to TIP.
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