Pivot

Trump’s China Summit, Inflation Shock, and Silicon Valley’s Midterm Money

61 min
May 15, 202615 days ago
Listen to Episode
Summary

Kara Swisher and Scott Galloway discuss Trump's China summit with minimal diplomatic progress, rising inflation concerns, the Elon Musk vs. OpenAI trial, and the dominance of venture capital in political funding. They also analyze Anthropic's meteoric valuation rise and the risks of frothy AI company IPOs.

Insights
  • Trump's China visit prioritized business leaders over diplomats, signaling America's shift toward corporate interests over geopolitical strategy and raising concerns about Taiwan's security
  • Male over-reliance on AI, gaming, and porn as relationship substitutes is creating isolation and vulnerability to algorithmic radicalization, particularly among young men
  • Inflation driven by market consolidation and wealth transfer from workers to shareholders requires antitrust action and tax policy reform, not just interest rate management
  • Anthropic's 15x valuation increase in one year (from $61B to $950B) reflects unsustainable AI sector froth similar to Chinese tech IPOs, despite genuine business momentum
  • Venture capital's $115M+ spending on political donations represents the most efficient ROI available to tech firms, enabling regulatory capture and policy influence
Trends
Male social isolation driven by digital substitutes (AI, gaming, porn) replacing real relationships and friend networksChina's strategic pivot from copying Silicon Valley to replacing it through domestic AI investment and market consolidationVenture capital's shift from product innovation to political influence as primary value creation strategyUnsustainable valuation multiples in AI sector (76x revenue for Cerebras vs. 26x for Nvidia) indicating bubble conditionsAnthropic's business adoption overtaking OpenAI (35% vs. 32%) despite lower technical differentiation, suggesting commoditizationInflation driven by corporate consolidation enabling rent extraction rather than supply chain disruptionTech billionaires' ability to determine electoral outcomes through concentrated wealth and political spendingPrediction markets becoming vehicles for insider trading and information asymmetry exploitationGoogle's return to moonshot investing (orbital data centers, unproven space technology) under Sergey Brin influenceFed chair constraints limiting interest rate cuts despite inflation, creating policy gridlock
Companies
OpenAI
Subject of Elon Musk's lawsuit alleging breach of nonprofit charter; Sam Altman testified; valuation at $852B
Anthropic
Valued at $950B in new funding round, up 15x in one year; business adoption exceeding OpenAI; IPO expected October 2025
Cerebras
AI chip maker IPO'd at $40B valuation (76x revenue multiple); heavily dependent on single UAE customer G42
Nvidia
Controls 85% of AI chip market; trades at 26x revenue; benchmark for sustainable AI hardware valuations
Microsoft
CEO Satya Nadella testified in Musk v. OpenAI trial about partnership nature and Sam Altman support
Tesla
Elon Musk's company; relevant to his involvement in OpenAI founding and current litigation
SpaceX
In talks with Google for orbital data center launches using unproven space-based technology
Google
Pursuing SpaceX rocket deal for orbital data centers; history of moonshot investments under Sergey Brin
Andreessen Horowitz
Largest 2026 midterm donor at $115M+; co-founders Mark Andreessen and Ben Horowitz donated $12M to Trump's MAGA Inc.
Alibaba
Planning $53B AI investment; demonstrates China's commitment to replacing Silicon Valley innovation
Boeing
CEO attended Trump's China summit; expected to increase aircraft sales to China as summit outcome
Y Combinator
Holds passive stake in OpenAI; Sam Altman's affiliation relevant to trial testimony
G42
UAE-based AI firm; accounts for 24% of Cerebras revenue, creating dangerous customer concentration risk
The Gap
Referenced as example of successful 80/50 strategy (80% quality at 50% price) that China replicates
Southwest Airlines
Referenced as example of 80/50 business model that inspired China's market strategy
People
Kara Swisher
Co-host discussing Trump summit, AI trends, and political funding; interviewed Joanna Stern on AI book
Scott Galloway
Co-host analyzing economic trends, inflation, antitrust issues, and AI market valuations
Donald Trump
Met with Xi Jinping in China summit; brought 17 business leaders; made controversial Iran comments
Xi Jinping
Met Trump for two-day summit; warned about Taiwan; demonstrated China's strategic confidence
Sam Altman
Testified in Musk lawsuit; denied stealing charity; defended for-profit conversion decision
Elon Musk
Suing OpenAI for breach of nonprofit charter; attended China summit; donated to Trump; left country against court order
Satya Nadella
Testified in OpenAI trial about partnership and support for Sam Altman during leadership transition
Mark Andreessen
Largest 2026 midterm donor ($115M+); donated $12M to Trump's MAGA Inc.; described as self-interested
Ben Horowitz
Co-founder of largest midterm donor firm; follows Andreessen's political giving strategy
Tim Cook
Attended Trump's China summit as part of 17-person business delegation
Jensen Huang
Attended China summit; Nvidia's chip export restrictions to China discussed as strategic concern
Kevin Warsh
Narrowly confirmed 54-45; unlikely to cut rates despite Trump pressure due to 3.8% inflation
Alice Hahn
Guest expert providing analysis of Trump-Xi summit outcomes and China's strategic positioning
Joanna Stern
Wrote 'I Am Not a Robot' about living with AI for a year; interviewed by Kara at 92nd Street Y
Sherry Turkle
Interviewed by Kara for series on AI relationships; noted AI use shifting from niche to mainstream
Aswath Damodaran
Guest on Prof G Markets discussing Iran conflict economic impact and gas price risks
Sergey Brin
Inferred to be driving Google's moonshot investments including SpaceX orbital data center deal
Eric Adams
Referenced for smart service delivery approach including soccer fields for youth engagement
Quotes
"China is no longer trying to copy Silicon Valley. They're trying to replace it."
Scott GallowayChina summit discussion
"Real relationships require friction. And AI removes friction."
Scott GallowayAI and relationships discussion
"I don't think about Americans financial situation. I don't think about anybody. I think about one thing. We cannot let Iran have a nuclear weapon."
Donald TrumpInflation and Iran comments
"This is pay for play. And by the way, Horowitz used to give a lot of money to Kamala."
Scott GallowayVenture capital political spending
"Taxes are our Kevlar and our vaccine from power. We need to stop thinking about taxes as something that is inherently evil."
Scott GallowayWealth inequality discussion
Full Transcript
Support for today's show comes from Atio, the AICRM. If you've ever used a CRM and thought, why does this feel like a second job, Atio is worth a look. Atio is the AICRM that builds itself. You connect your email and calendar and it pulls in every company, every contact, and every interaction already organized in one place. From there, it keeps itself up to date. It understands your customer calls, adapts to how your business works, and the AIA agents take action in the background so you can focus on what matters. If you need an intelligent CRM that scales and grows with your business from day one, that's Atio. You can go to atio.com slash pivot and you'll get 15% off your first year. That's attio.com slash pivot. Support for the show comes from Clavio. Imagine hiring two brilliant employees. The first takes your marketing from idea to full campaign, email, SMS push, and the time it takes to describe it. The second handles every customer conversation, 24 by seven answering questions, recommending products, handling orders, both on brand and always on. Your next hires, Clavio's AIA agents. Get started at klavio.com. Support for the show comes from CoreWeave. Everywhere you look, AIA is expanding what we thought was possible. And at the center of it all is CoreWeave. Medical research and diagnosis, education, complex visual effects for movies, science and technology breakers. CoreWeave powers AI pioneers around the world with purpose-built tech, building what's never been built before. CoreWeave is the essential cloud for AI, ready for anything, ready for AI. To learn more about how CoreWeave powers the world's best AI, go to coreweave.com slash ready for anything. That is the most Kara Swisher thing Kara Swisher has ever said. Hi everyone, this is Pivot from New York Magazine and the Vox Media Podcast Network. I'm Kara Swisher. And I'm Scott Galloway. Guess who I spent several wonderful days with this week. Several. Several. I don't know. My son, Alex, legs. We had a great time. I took him to New York. I had to go up and interview. Joanna Stern has written a book called I Am Not a Robot, which Alex really enjoyed. It was at the 192nd Street Y. But it was really nice. And I have a new proposal for us, Scott. I have a new idea. I think it's really nice to spend quality time with one kid at a time, right? To do something. You do that, don't you? Take one, not both, but one special thing for a day or two, whatever they want to do. What do you think? I think that's a great thing. I have pretty much every Saturday night, I do dinner with one of them. And I take trips. I would say if it's not a family trip, I do a trip with one of them, not both of them. Yeah. I thought that you do that. And I was thinking that. I was thinking that's a really good thing. It was such a nice quality time to... And I don't like the word quality time, but it actually was. Because everyone's, as you know, I have a talky family. So everyone's competing for... It's just a lot of people all at once, but it's just nice to have concentrated time with one kid at a time. I just... Yeah, it's nice. Oh, I went and saw Devil Wears Prada 2. Took an out of bowl, went and got... Why? Did you take your wife? What was the cause of you going to see it? I did my favorite thing in the world. I'm here just solo with the kids. I took an out of bowl. They didn't want to see it with me. And they don't like, they don't go to movies. And I went and I ate at the bar at this place called Lena, which is this Italian restaurant at the bottom of Marlborough, or of Marlborough High Street. Yeah. And then I walked over to the Selfridges Theatres. And I gotta admit, I liked it more than I thought. I only walked out about after an hour. I waited. Don't stop. True story. I waited until I saw you. I thought you looked really good. I waited until I saw Justin. I thought he nailed his part perfect. And then I pieced out. Oh, you don't know what happened then in the end. I know exactly what fucking happened. It's the same goddamn movie again. There's no different. Nolly, you know what's really even stranger? They all look like they've been frozen. They don't look any different. They look good. It was 20 years ago. I know, don't they look great? They look great. Everybody looks exactly the same. But it's the same story. Oh, there's Annie who wants to be a journalist. And she's been a journalist, no journalism. Under attack. It's a huge global hit. I love how you like try to trash. Which doesn't mean it's good. Marvel controls the box office. No, no, no, no. This is doing rather well. All these individualized movies are doing really well. And you love to resist it, but it's the case. People are liking your into story right now. Very much so. And like smaller story. Yeah. And you want to see something that's well done? Watch Running Point. Which also stars Justin. It's great. I love it. Me too. I love everything on the plane back from Europe. It was such a walk down memory lane. I moved to New York in 2000. And that was literally the heyday of magazines. And Condonast was the bell of the ball. And it's such candy. It reminded me. Francis Ford Coppola, maybe you remember this. He did a movie. It was three or four movies in one. And the production values just dripped off the screen. And it wasn't, it reminded me of that movie. Oh, I think it was called New York Stories. And it was just three different, it was a 1989. And it was three different sort of New York Stories. Such great talent, such great production values. But the stories just weren't that compelling. That's how I felt about this. I could have, I just enjoyed watching it because the fashion is so beautiful. And it just takes you back to a really kind of, I think an iconic time. You never realize you're in a golden age until it's gone. Yeah, absolutely. And this was sort of reminiscent of that golden age. And they did pay some homage to the disruption of digital, talking about social media. But the talent, the talent and the visuals and the cinematography and the fashion and everyone's so fucking good looking, that's worth the whatever it was, 12 pounds. But it's a pretty thin story. Oh, I don't know. I think Justin was fantastic. He's great. I think it was, you know, they're so good. Like watching these people do their stuff is just completely pleasurable. Beautifully made is what I like. Agreed. You know, it's like looking at a beautifully made thing. I thought it was actually a lot deeper. And I thought, I think because of the interplay between Justin and Meryl Streep and that one scene, which you might have missed, was really amazing. I didn't see that. I did enjoy Meryl Streep having an HR person following her around. I didn't enjoy that. I know what you said. I feel like, you know what, we'll finish this up. But I feel like I should get someone like that for you. It's like, I want to kill myself. And like, you can't say that. You can't say that. Don't say that. She was wonderful. That actor. She's from Bridgerton. She was in Bridgerton. She's amazing. She's everybody. She's in Bridgerton? Yeah, she's the wife. She's the second last season. Meryl, the other Duke of Earl. She's beautiful. But she was fantastic. The way she, she like, you can't say that. I literally was thinking of getting you one of those. It's like a helper. Anyway. You are that person. I am. That's true. I do. You can't say that. Okay. Let's get into it. Before we get into news, I want to chat about a piece in Wired titled The Sad Wives of AI. Author details how the AI boom has created a wave of women, especially in tech heavy circles, because men working in or obsessing over AI are emotionally and mentally consumed by it. One therapist mentioned in the piece says, our client base is almost entirely women whose husbands are professionally adjacent to AI. Over 70% of AI skilled workers are men. I, I just made me laugh. I'm not, I'm not really a sad wife of AI, but you, you, I was interviewing Joanna Stern this week at the 90 seconds three why she's written a book called I am not a robot where she lived with AI for a full year. And I was thinking, I discussed how much you use it compared to me, which was interesting. I don't know what you think about sad wives of AI, but it's interesting. This article really shook me. And I think it calls on a much bigger issue more with young men, but I think what's going on here is that it's, this isn't about men falling in love with machines. It's about men choosing control over connection. And I think it's a dangerous, I think it's a dangerous trend, especially among young men who are forming their approach for their, to relationships their entire life. And that is the following. Real relationships require friction. And AI removes friction. And I, amongst my friends, and I've talked about this openly and I've said this, I modulate my consumption of porn because I want that energy and that having sex with someone takes real work. And you know what it does? It turns you into a better man. It makes you think about what turns that person on. It makes you think about connection. It makes you think about how you become more attractive. And when men start finding, opting for control in frictionless relationships. It's not just porn though. It's just like spending time with it, right? Like really, This is a substitute. Porn is a substitute for intimate sexual connection. And AI has becoming slowly but surely a replacement for, I sit down, I'm doing a lot of virtue signaling right now. I sit down with my son when I put him to bed every night and he talks to me about his day. I won't let him be on screens in his room because I'm worried at some point he's gonna just start talking to his AI about his school day and asking him for advice. And here's the bottom line. What is usually the right thing is usually the hard thing. And relations, nothing is harder and nothing is more rewarding than relationships. And when you come across, when you're young, you can start believing that real relationships feel unnecessarily hard and therefore less appealing or more bluntly when the alternative is a partner relationship to never disagrees, relationships in reality start looking like a bad deal and we become more disconnected. No, I did that interview with Sherry Turkle for my series and she was like, it used to be a side light. There's always an odd person who used these things like that. And she was, now it's nearly everybody. Like it's very mainstream. And I think, you know, people say it's men and women, but it's largely men. I think it's men. I've been very seduced by AI around business, but I've decided and what I tell young men is you gotta earn your sex. Don't try, really try to modulate your porn. You gotta earn your relationships, your intimacy and your sex. And when you do, that's what makes it really rewarding because memo, it's really hard. When you need advice, go to friends, go to your parents. If you're looking to brainstorm and you're looking for additional data, it's bad for men of my age. It is a fucking disaster for kids under the age of 18. Yeah, and they're consumed by it. You know, one point I made to Joanne in this interview where she used it a lot is, she's like, why do you, she was noting it was many more men than women. And I said, and many more men making it or creating it and everything else. And she goes, what do you think? And I said, I think men can't have children. And this is a version of children. Like they're creating a being. Like they're creating and shaping a being in a way that they want to with control, which is exactly what you said. And I think it's a real, it's a version of that, of total control over a being, which I think is very attractive. We're becoming less memalia. We see declining male participation in relationships. When men don't have a romantic relationship, their friend network goes down. When women don't have a romantic relationship, their friend network goes up. In results in increased isolation, we are men, especially men, are substituting relationships with digital alternatives, gaming, porn, and now AI. And this is what happens. When you become increasingly digital, you become subject to the whims of shareholder value, which want to take you to the extremes and also elevate incendiary content, nationalist content, misogynistic content, content that demonizes immigrants or demonizes trans kids. And you end up with a cohort of people who take their natural aggression, which can be very positive if channeled the right way in terms of risk taking, in terms of saving other people's lives. But when it's channeled through digital means and you start blaming other people, it can lead to nationalism, strong men. I think this is a really big issue. Yeah, it is. I had a really interesting discussion with Alex. I was asking him how he used it. Actually, I found the way he used it. I said, I want to know exactly how he used it. And I think they're very honest with you, my kids. He uses it, for example, he puts problems in it. And then he said, it's like an assistant tutor, right? An assistant tutor that they go through. He has very complex math problems, obviously, with his school, because he's in such advanced calculus and everything else. He said, I walk through like it's a teaching assistant. And then I put it away and do the problems myself. And then I have it look and see where I went wrong. And then I do it again myself. So it's a really, he uses it in a way that I think is smart anyway. But he doesn't use it for, he has a nice girlfriend and, you know, they get into beefs and this and that. But they also have a relationship. And I think that's not a dumb way to use it. Anyway, it's a really sad story, you should read. It's admired. So let's get to the news at the time, speaking of men, men, men, men, men. The photos out of China are really quite disturbing. It's only men at the table here. President Trump and Chinese President Xi have met for a little over two hours right now and attended a state banquet to start off their two-day summit in China. And Xi's opening toast at the banquet, Xi said, achieving the great rejuvenation of the Chinese nation and making America great again can go hand in hand. He's snickering at Trump on his back though. The White House said both sides agreed that the Strait of Hermuse must remain open. Xi warned Trump that mishandling Taiwan would cause clashes and put the entire relationship in great jeopardy. Trump is joined in China by 17 American business leaders, including Elon Musk, Tim Cook, and Jensen Huang. A surprising lack of women on this trip everywhere. We, and also China experts, we asked Alice Hahn, director of Green Matlin Co-host of Prof. G's Own China Decode podcast. For her thoughts on the summit, let's listen to what she has to say. So US President Donald Trump is heading to China. This is the first visit by a sitting US president since 2017 when Trump was last president. I'm carrying a three-point school card going into summit in terms of rating it. Number one, will there be any indication as to tariffs and trade? Number two, will both sides agreed to freeze or maybe even loosen certain export restrictions on chips and rare earths? And number three is the Thorneer geopolitical question. I think both sides will have two very different readouts on Iran, but certainly both leaders will be talking about it. And I believe that Trump will apply some personal pressure on Xi Jinping to help resolve it, although I suspect the Chinese will be reluctant to push back on any kind of collaboration over Iran. I think this will be largely summatory without substance and it does pave the way for more summits to come with potential for two or three other meetings and a Xi visit to the US later this year. One concrete prediction I have for this summit is that China will increase Boeing purchases of aviation equipment. I think the fact that the CEO of Boeing is going there with Trump is an indication of that direction. Interesting. Obviously, she does, Summitry is a really good word. It's interesting because a lot of the coverage out of it is that China thinks we're a declining empire. And of course, who we brought was interesting. You typically bring business people on these things. It's absolutely true. And you brought all mostly tech people or tech adjacent people. I think most people feel that as Xi says, nothing's gonna come out of this and it'll be interesting to see what signals Xi sends versus Trump, I think. I think he's a more important person to pay attention to your thoughts. It's not who he brought. It's the ratio. He brought 17 CEOs with him and three diplomats. So it feels as if America is just becoming an operating system for the wealth of the top 1% and they try to figure out. Yeah, billionaires on a plane, like snakes on a plane. Yeah, and what's the minimum amount of cheap calories and entertainment, bread and circuses we can throw at the bottom 99 such that they don't revolt. And there's no policy, there's no prep. He sounds like an eighth grader with terrible, who's failed English so many times, who's gonna have to take it as English as a second language. It's like, Jesus Christ, can someone buy the guy elements of style before he gives a talk? I mean, he just- The speech was crazy. Chinese restaurants, I didn't even understand what he was talking about. They're laughing at us. You can feel it. And they, I thought the most important statement because you can be clear, while he's sort of improvisation with a mic, you can bet she calibrates every word. Yes. And the words that she said that I think should send a chill down everyone's spine is he said that he hopes that America's current approach, something in the effect of America's current approach towards Taiwan could result in a clash. And Trump hasn't really said a lot about Taiwan. He's not flying to Taiwan with Speaker Pelosi and publicly cementing our relationship with the ally there. He's basically- It was a warning. It was a warning. Yeah, or not even a warning. I saw it more as like a preview that we are gonna start, we are seriously considering some sort of soft or not so soft repatriation, acquisition, invasion, whatever, use whatever word you want of Taiwan. And I think had Trump had more elegant diplomats with them, they would have immediately responded and put out a statement along the lines of, we are all, both nations are committed to peace. And just as I'm sure we've witnessed the incredible fighting force of Ukraine when armed with technology, they can repel a much larger aggressor, which in my opinion would be an elegant way of saying, stand the fuck down when it comes to Taiwan. Right, he doesn't sound like he was. And he would never, he doesn't think, he doesn't have the diplomats of the IQ to respond to what was really the only substantive statement that was made at this summit. And sending long over, Jensen used to have 90% share of chips over there. It's gone to zero. Because China's figured out that if I provide my local entrepreneurs with the incentives to catch up, they just might. And our trade has gone from 23% of their exports used to come with us, now it's 17%. They have bigger trade with the, with ASEAN, the Asian, the Association of Southeast Asian Nations. And also they do more trade now with Europe. Yes, they do. So we showed up, it looked less like diplomacy than sort of two casino owners trying to refinance each other's debt. But she is the house right now. Trump came in as the guy asking for an extension on his marker as credit. We are mutually, each of us has a foot, should we decide on the other's carotid artery. They own 70% of rare earth minerals and 90% of the processing. We own or control with Taiwan 80 to 90% of sophisticated chips. Which is why Jensen was there to be able to sell. This is something Trump barred by the way. And then now he wants to sell the chips into China. Yeah, so. Can I make a comment about all the business people, as you said, I mean, it really was. There's so many important issues. Like there should have been a discussion about global AI standards in warnings, just the way we could. With this group, cooperating on scary shit. That's right. And this group is all in on whatever. There's nobody who is, everything they do, nobody is a critic of it. This is like, you know, flying billionaires on a plane to China to get shit seems problematic from a visual point of view. You're exactly right. This should have been an opportunity to develop the modern day equivalent of Interpol. We have cooperation even amongst Russia and China around nuclear weapons. We cooperate and we go kill people if we think they're trying to mix up a biological, you know, a bio weapon. We cooperate and we go find those people and we arrest them or kill them. We should be doing the same thing of cooperating around AI. Publicly, publicly. I suspect there's behind the scenes stuff happening. But of course there is. But at the same time, with this gang, just like with the advisory council on AI, it has nothing to do with safety and AI or anything else. It has to do with let's do some business here. And as long as it's good for us and my rich friends, I'll do it. But it was so, it was, he looked tired. He looked old. He looked addled. He's both us. He's all those. And then he was tweeting his, were truth in his little heart out. Like with his apparently the piece in the Wall Street Journal. I don't know if you saw that piece. What was it? 200 truths in a four hour period? Whatever. It's this lady who helps him, this young lady who was a startling resemblance to Ivanka, who stays up with him late at night and does this. And even the White House people don't know what to make of the situation. Though a journal was implying some stuff, like they were trying not to, but she facilitates him posting this crazy stream of lunacy and must have- I'm old, I just hope I have someone facilitating me. Anyway. I've already got it planned out. His name is Manny. Okay, I know. I know Manny is gonna, the soft hands. Manny with the soft hands. I'm looking for me. Anyone named Manny with soft hands, call me. And I'm gonna get you ready for Scott, which should be in about 10 years. I tell you well, you should know that. 10 years, don't you think? I'm difficult, but I'm very generous in terms of compensation. I know you will. When do you think you'll be going down? Like going down? No, I think the correct term is went. Went. No, but really going down, like hard. Going down hard. When you say going down, you mean needing help? I mean like in the need for a Manny. In the need for a Manny. I'd say 82 for you. Jesus, that early? Thanks. My dad, I'm assuming I'll follow the pattern of my dad. At about 93, my dad needed help. 93, okay, yeah. All right, okay, Manny, get ready, somebody might not be born. Yeah. But just back to for a moment, back to the summit. Okay, sorry. Trump doesn't recognize the evolution of China since the last time he was there. China is no longer trying to copy Silicon Valley. They're trying to replace it. That's correct. Alibaba alone is gonna spend $53 billion on AI. We're so focused on the hyperscaling and the CapEx here. You know, U.S. hyperscalers are spending $650 billion, but $53 billion from one company. China usually typically has the ability to make their dollars go much further. And what they offer is the fastest zero to a billion dollar companies in history have one general business strategy. And we like to think it's the innovator. No, it's not. The second mouse gets the cheese, or specifically the shareholder value. And the most dramatic or the most accretive business strategy in history is to provide the following. 80% of the leader for 50% of the price. My first strategy engagement of profit was basically this idea, and that was a lot of people couldn't afford the gap in the 90s. A lot of people think of it as being kind of a middle-class retailer. The gap is expensive for a lot of people. Most people can't afford $22 pocket tees. And the idea was let's tap into this huge population of single mothers who are very conscious about their children's confidence at school and offer 50%, well, I'm sorry, 80% of the gap for 50% of the price. Old Navy, fastest $2 billion retail on history. Southwest is essentially, when it started, 80% of the majors for 50% of the price. China's entire strategy is we'll give you 80% of a seaman cell tower for 40% of the price. Yep, they're very innovative too. Let's say, you know, this idea of what they're, they are a very dynamic autocracy. Let's just, they are a very like dynamic and nimble autocracy. Incredible. Yeah, and they have tons of problems. There was just an interesting, I mean, similar stories, declined in marriages, declining in kids. They certainly plan that for- On demograph, I mean, they have their own issues. Youth unemployment, demographics, a real estate, over-leveraged real estate. Morale, stuff like that, yeah. Which is more problematic in an autocracy, but it's problematic here too. All right, Scott, we'll see what happens. Nothing, it's a nothing burger. We'll see if they do more, but I agree with you. Taiwan is where we need to fake focus. That will be a disaster. That will be our greatest crisis of this year, I think. Okay, Scott, let's go on a quick break. When we come back, Sam Altman takes the stand. Support for the show comes from Quince. It's hard to get everything you want, especially when it comes to your clothes. 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And check out Claude Pro, which includes access to all of the features mentioned in today's episode, clod.ai slash pivot. Scott, we're back. It was Sam Altman's turn in the hot seat this week at the Elon Musk Open AI trial. Sam denied Elon's claim that he tried to steal a charity and said Elon supported Open AI becoming a for-profit company as long as Elon had total control. That sounds pretty accurate, as far as in my experience. Let's go through some of the other highlights from Sam's testimony. Sam described, quote, a hairy, but not a very hairy, but a very, very, very, very,哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎 He holds a passive stake in the company through Y Combinator. I also want to mention that Kara Swisher came up in the trial this week. I was surprised not more while Microsoft's CEO is such- I was surprised not more. No, because I was texting a lot with all of them. That is the most Kara Swisher thing Kara Swisher has ever said. I was surprised I wasn't mentioned more. I texted with them all during this time. The Microsoft's such a Nadella was testifying. Elon's lawyers were questioning Nadella about the nature of Microsoft's relationship with OpenAE and pointed to comments he made during an interview with me after Sam's firing. He was all in for Sam during that period. Closing arguments are getting underway right now. So again, I don't think there's any more last-minute surprises. Elon was not supposed to leave the country, by the way, according to the judge, but he did anyway. He was supposed to be on call essentially, but he doesn't care. Any last-minute surprises, anything? It seems like it's going the way we talked about, thoughts with this jury. I don't have any additional color here. Again, I think this is grievance cosplaying a legal argument. So this is a traditional jury trial and the jury decides this. It's a jury decision and then the judge will decide remedies. So if Musk wins, they might say, well, we're leaving it as it is and going with the California thing and they can pay him money or whatever. We're not going to get rid of the CEO. That's one of the things he's asked for. I think this jury can't possibly sign with him. Ultimately, I don't think they proved anything. It's a sort of he said, he said kind of thing and Elon's the most loathsome of the pair, by far, by a country mile. So I think Elon's made a spectacle of himself. If he wins, it would be something else. I'll tell you that. But I can't imagine the jury thinks this guy got a short end of the stick or that he's stupid and didn't know what was happening to him. I think that's really... He's sort of played this, I'm a genius. Well, if you're a genius, how did this happen kind of thing? You're not a dupe. And so I think they probably think he's lying. And there's enough evidence that he is. Or just as you said, grievance theater. In any case, I have a feeling it's going to be quick, but we'll see. It would be a real shocker if he won. And the latest inflation numbers are out and the news is not good. Consumer prices rose 3.8% last month, the biggest increase in three years. The cost obviously accounted for more than 40% of the monthly increase. With gas prices up 28%, grocery prices rent and airfares also climbed sharply. President Trump, however, does not appear to be overly concerned. Let's listen to how he answered reporters' question as he left the White House for his China trip. When you're negotiating with Iran, Mr. President, to what extent are Americans financial complacent, motivating you to make a deal? Not even a little bit. The only thing that matters when I'm talking about Iran, they can't have a nuclear weapon. I don't think about Americans financial situation. I don't think about anybody. I think about one thing. We cannot let Iran have a nuclear weapon. That's all. That's the only thing that matters. Oh, wow. That was some quote. That was like an ad. Like, they just, he cut an ad for them. It was, that was astonishing, I have to say. I mean, it's what I think he thinks. And this nuclear weapon thing, we're less safe now than we were during the Obama days when we had most of the enriched uranium in a deal and the state of Hermuse was open. So any thoughts about what he's doing here? Why? Or he's just just an old, outled man who just says whatever's on his mind. I don't know. Yeah. So look, with this administration, so the quote unquote objectives of regime change. Oh, wait, no, no nuclear weapons. Oh, wait, unconditional surrender. I mean, there really isn't, it's so back and forth and erratic that it's difficult for him to outline or be taken seriously. Having said that, I do believe that loosely speaking, the way what he said there is how presidents should approach wars. Wars are more than gas prices. Wars involve killing people and putting our own men and women at risk. And I think, and he's not the guy to do this, but I do think the president should be willing to have an adult conversation with the American people and to say that the reason we have decided to put our own men and women in harm's way and commit this type of treasure and talent and potentially kill many of their citizens is because we think it's worth it. And this is why we think it's worth it. And quite frankly, we don't go to war unless we, as your leaders have decided that the American public are going to have to sacrifice. George Bush told us we could go to war and cut taxes. And Americans believed him. So I think in adult conversation with the American public around, we have consulted with Congress, we have consulted with our allies, and we believe whatever the objectives are, are worth some sacrifice. I think that is the right thing for a president to say. This requires an adult conversation, more leadership, more gravitas and clear objectives. And none of those things are evident with this president. But again, I think the president should be the person to say to the American public, I'm not going to take you to war unless I think it's worth it and also unless I am willing to ask you to sacrifice. That's not how he asked it. He's like, I don't give a... Agreed. He doesn't have any objectives. It's worse than before. He's made it worse. And it's not a war. He's kind of right. It's something else where it's just a big fucking mess, the same as this casino's. And everything he touches turns to this in some way. Just even the New York Times story about the reflecting pool, what a mess he gave it to some group of people who can't fix it. There's already leaks already. It's being painted a color that's not going to let it reflect. It's going to be the non-reflecting pool. What he does is shoddy and haphazard and unplanned and with a huge whiff of stink of corruption attached to it. And then telling them, I don't really care about you is really, I think, disastrous. That's why his numbers are going down is nobody believes him about anything that he says, except that he doesn't care about you. And I think that's a... I agree that the president should say things honestly, but I don't think this is honest. I think this is just, he could give a fuck is what he's saying to you and doesn't have any plan except for disaster. Well, there's the perception and there's the reality. And I think the perception after kind of eight or 10 very bad weeks for the president, I think he's actually had a good couple of weeks. I do think he looks presidential with she... Although nothing got accomplished other than some saber rattling from she. The Virginia... I think Virginia is a big deal. The Supreme Court rejecting the attempt to redistrict. I think he's had actually a decent couple of weeks. I actually don't. I think the Supreme Court is going to give it to Virginia because it gave it to everybody else and I think it's going to turn... Oh, I'm sorry. Can I give it to Virginia? It's going to the Supreme Court. That decision is going... The Supreme Court has to decide. Oh, you think the redistricting will be allowed? Yes. I think it'll be allowed because they've allowed it everywhere else. It's very hard not to allow it if they've allowed it everywhere else and they... I hope you're right. We said last week, he can do whatever he wants, cheating, but polling doesn't lie. Polling is showing that he can't outrun the polling no matter how many times he cheats. I think he has had a bad couple of weeks actually and he looks older and more adult than ever. I think that this was a typical... He's just saying whatever is on his brain. He wasn't doing it to be tough with the American. He didn't do it with care. I don't care what anybody's like. I don't think about anyone's financial, Americans financial situation. I don't think about anybody. That's ridiculous. And he, you know, we were safer before and we're less safe now. Once the last time you think he had a good two weeks here? When he won. Okay. When he won. I don't think it's, I think this has been, I thought part of his first term, some of the stuff was okay. So it's been 78 weeks of constant. No, I do think, no, I think when he won, I think when he won and he had a real opportunity. Yeah. I think it's been like a series of, like the, one forgets the immigration disasters, the shooting of US citizens, the all the stupid people he's hired, the drunken cash Patel, the lunacy of RFK. I don't think there's any, well, we shouldn't have dyes in our food. Yes. Sounds good. Like, I don't know what to say. I think it's a very small little wins. And, and I think the stock market's done well, but I don't think it's, I think it's detached from everyone else's experience. And, you know, billionaires have had a good time. That's for sure. Tech billionaires. But this rise in inflation to me is the only thing that matters at this moment for most people. What people miss, we're very focused on unemployment. We think that unemployment causes unrest. It's actually not unemployment that causes the greatest levels of unrest. It's what really upsets people and moves them to political action. And sometimes even some form of revolution, which I think we're already in, is not people who aren't working. It's people who are working and yet still hungry. And that's what's going on here. The unemployment rate is 4.5%. That's not what ails America. What ails America is that people have two jobs and can't afford healthcare. So when, and when now we have inflation or prices outpacing wages, that just translates to the following. The quality of your life goes down. And, and the problem is America, and I lay a lot of this, Trump doesn't have the IQ or the integrity or the honesty to do this or the competence around him. But I would also argue that America isn't ready for an adult conversation because if you're gonna be serious about inflation, it's very long-term difficult things. It's, there's a relationship between, essentially the economy breaks into three buckets. There's labor, that is the earners, there's shareholders, the owners, and then there's consumers. And because of a lack of antitrust, because of tax policy, we have decided to massively transfer power and economic wellbeing from consumers and earners or laborers to shareholders. And everything we do, every tax policy, keeping minimum wage low, riding off all catbacks, subsidizing certain industries, everything is about how do we consistently take money from earners who minimum wage was 725, 15 years ago, it's still 725. Despite the fact that the NASDAQ has quadrupled and push more and more money into shareholders. And also the most boring thing that no one wants to talk about is that when you go from 12 chicken companies to three, when you let pharmaceuticals consolidate, when you let health systems consolidate, when you let healthcare verticalize, when you let one company control 90% of search, 50% of e-commerce, 78% of social media, they will extract greater and greater rents from consumers and earners and transfer it to owners. It requires antitrust, it requires really interesting or more severe, quite frankly, entitlement policy where we reduce our entitlements. You're gonna have to reduce the military budget, you're gonna have to increase taxes, 40% AMT across corporations and millionaires. And then slowly but surely, create more competition, lower rents on consumers and a transfer of capital back from the owners to the earners. But the American public doesn't have a political election cycle that creates a serious conversation around these things. No, I get that, I get that. I'm talking about people feeling it, like at all levels. And you do when you go out. I mean, I was, I know it sounds dumb, but I do do, Amanda and I split the grocery shopping, but I went to get a quart of milk and I was like, what? It was like six or $7. And I was like, are you fucking kidding me? And it's not just looking at the gas pumps or there was something I was in an airport and there was a sandwich and they were like $14. I'm like, what? Like it was, you know, I didn't get it. I was like, well, that's a lot of money for a sandwich like kind of thing. And so I don't begrudge them having to raise prices. It's that it was, it's just, I think people who are price-resist, like price insensitive are noticing it. You can't help if, unless you're just holed up in your house, you can't help but notice things have gotten a lot more expensive. But there's shock and there's a reduction in the quality of life. And then there are threats to your own personal safety. Correct. And those, when you see affordable care accessities go away, you have someone who's literally dependent upon diabetes medication for their life, see their insurance bill go from $178 a month to $1700. And it's as if the government has said to them, we don't care that you're working hard. We've decided that you're gonna die. And those are the, I think those are the kind of what I would call, you're going to have, I think we have that kind of policy, the results in inflation and a decline in prosperity. What is unacceptable is that someone is worried when someone starts rationing their prescription medication. That should not happen in America. Or it cuts off, you know, there's a really upsetting story in the New York Times, a woman writing about her kid who died of cancer, but like they've cut cancer, pediatric cancer things. And so these, you can't get in these studies because they don't even, they suddenly disappear, these advanced studies and everything, because, you know, he doesn't say, we're not gonna help pediatric cancer anymore. What he says is we're cutting all over the place. So in essence, that's what we're doing. Anyway, the rise of inflation comes as Kevin Warsh takes the reins as Fed chair. Warsh was narrowly confirmed by the Senate this week in a 54 to 45 vote. It's usually an unanimous, which is where we are. He certainly qualified. The question is most people don't think the rates are gonna be cut. And so juggling this inflation with Trump's demands to lower interest rates, most people think he will not be lowering interest rates at this moment, given the inflation numbers are so high and there's no signs that they're going down. Just very quick thoughts on that. We like to talk about, we like to simplify things in the media that this guy's gonna come in and cut rates, but people don't wanna actually pay attention to the mechanics of the Federal Reserve. And that is the Federal Open Market Committee is the one that decides whether to cut rates or not. So while the Fed chairman has to bully pulpit and sets the agenda, he's one of 11 or 12 votes. And Powell is still there, as you said. Yeah, so no, interest rates. Kevin Warsh, while a really disappointing testimony at a Senate confirmation hearing, he's not stupid. And he doesn't wanna go down in history. He's the guy that ignited an upward spiral of inflation. So there's not going to be a rate cut. And as a matter of fact, Cal State says there's a 72% likelihood there's no rate cuts for the rest of the year because you still, these Fed governors don't wanna be known as the people that created bread lines. And when you come off a print of 3.8%, there's no fucking way. If Warsh started making noises that we should cut rates, those guys would go on background to journalists saying, this guy's fucking insane in threatening a YMR Republic like inflationary economy here. Yeah, I mean, I think it's the deficit and everything else. Maybe they should consult Zoran Mandami who balanced the New York budget. What did he cut? I'm curious, I haven't been following it. Some consultants stuff, a bunch of things. He's doing a rather good job with services. He opened the streets for the soccer, the FIFA matches in front of schools. He closed off streets so kids could play soccer, like learn to play soccer and brought in all these soccer players and stuff like that. Very good at services, this guy. I'm just saying, I think Trump's gotta focus in on providing services to citizens. That's what you're talking about. The idea of that people get something out of government and it's not to be kicked in the fucking teeth. And I think that's really the difference between lots of cities and a lot of, both Republican and Democratic governors and mayors who are providing people better services in a smarter way. Anyway, that's to me is the goal for everybody. Anyway, we're gonna go on a quick break. When we come back, we'll talk about the biggest donors for the midterms. Support for the show comes from Klaviyo. There's only so many hours in a day. Klaviyo's two powerful AI agents can make sure your team spends them on big things. The first Klaviyo AI agent turns your marketing ideas into reality instantly. Describe what you want, a holiday campaign, a VIP re-engagement series, and Klaviyo builds it instantly. 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That's why over thousands of businesses have made the switch, so why not you? Try Odoo for free at Odoo.com. That's Odoo.com. Complex and unprecedented, the Spanish authorities are calling it. Antes del desembarco, asintomáticas. Passengers who'd been stuck aboard the Hanta or maybe Hanta virus-stricken Dutch cruise ship disembarked in the Canary Islands this weekend, prompting the highest stakes game of where are they now since maybe COVID? Some of the evacuees, American and French, have since tested positive for the virus, and yet public health officials seem remarkably calm. We do know that the virus is a very common disease remarkably calm. We do have one individual who was taken to the biocontainment unit early, early this morning, and we assess that individual. They are doing well. Possibly because this is not the one to freak out over. Today Explained drops every weekday afternoon. Scott, we're back. The biggest donor for the 2026 midterms may or may not surprise you. It's Andres and Horowitz. The VC firm and its co-founders, Mark Andresin and Ben Horowitz, have already spent more than $115 million this election cycle, outspending both George Soros and Elon Musk. Most of the money is spent on the right. It's Musk, Jeff Yass, and these two. Soros is one of the most popular and most popular midterms in the world. Soros is the opposite, but much smaller in comparison. A major chunk of that money is going towards pro-crypto and pro-AI super PACs. What a surprise. That's where their investments are. Trump and the GOP are also benefiting. Andres and Horowitz and his founders have together donated roughly $12 million to Trump's super PAC, MAGA Inc. And a trust link to Mark Andresin gave nearly $900,000 to the Republican National Committee in March. You know, not a surprise. This guy has moved firmly. It's mostly Mark, but Ben is right along with him as always because he's this little follow puppy. Just typical. Just typical. I mean, this is not a surprise. And then he tells nonsensical stories about how he went right, none of which are true. Your thoughts? It's smart. It's wrong, but it's smart. It's the greatest ROI any firm can get right now. I think he's figured it out. This is pay for play. And by the way, Horowitz used to give a lot of money to when he thought Kamala was gonna give money to Kamala. Mark used to be a big gore person, as I recall, a long time ago. He wasn't ever, people are like, oh, he used to be democratic. I was like, if you spent any time with him, he certainly wasn't. He certainly was, Mark is one thing which is self-interested in the most extreme way you're ever gonna meet someone. He's very interested. That's called a corporation. I agree, but I'm saying it's really quite, it's really quite, he doesn't even pretend. He's really the most selfish person I've ever come. Scott, I get it, but you've never seen him. It's about incentives. It's just, if the greatest ROI, if you're the CEO of a company or the head of a venture capital firm and the greatest ROI on any spending is not hiring more people, it's not investing in planned property equipment, it's to give money to a president who will pass legislation or block legislation that takes the value of your portfolio companies up 10, 20, 30 billion dollars, that $115 million investment is the best money you can invest. Absolutely. I agree. It's the boring shit. Term limits on the Supreme Court, no gerrymandering, get rid of Citizens United. Until we do those things, you're gonna have strong men or women or fascism from the far left or the far right. You're right. You're always gonna have it. And we're outraged at Andreessen Horowitz, Soros, okay, they'll be Democrats, they'll do it. I bet Jensen Huang is about to bride a $300 million check to somebody. Who knows? You know, it's interesting, because look, they have shifted, right? But my point is, Mark was never, never liked anybody. Like that's all I'm saying. I doubt he does now. He never did, never, he likes himself and his things, and that's it. It's very, I agree with you, it's the right corporate thing to do. I've never met someone who is so anti-people in my life, just has such disdain for humanity in a way that's really remarkable, actually. It just doesn't like anybody, like essentially, and he would do it to the left or right, depending on what suited him. Someone was asking me, well, there are left-wing people are gonna give me, I'm like, I don't want, who knows what they're gonna be next week? And I don't want any like individual rich person left or right to be able to take advantage of this way. It seems unfair. Other people don't get an audience with the president, and they have an unnecessary advantage based on money, and that's kind of gross in some ways. It should be a much more- Elon Musk, after the SpaceX IPO, might be worth between $700 billion and a trillion dollars. $1 trillion, yeah. If he takes 1% of his wealth or $10 billion with his command of technology, he can decide who the next president is. He can, that's what I mean. Is that what you want? Taxes are our Kevlar and our vaccine from power. We need to stop thinking about taxes as something that is inherently evil and slows down the economy. That's bad taxation. Taxation protects us from, I don't wanna call them billionaires because I don't wanna demonize them, taxes protect us from an unhealthy aggregation of power. Due to money. 100%. We shouldn't have any individual. I don't care if it's Soros, I don't care if it's unions, I don't care if it's Lorraine Powell Jobs, although I think she's a wonderful woman. This isn't a character assessment. You can't have an individual with this much power and taxes are the only way, our only protection are Kevlar against the aggregation of this type of power and Citizens United. Gotta get rid of it. Speaking of which, all my friends have decided you've become a lesbian because of Piedata. Piedata. Really? They were like what? Like they were like, huh? They weren't expecting that? No, I was not either. By the way, a lot of my friends are like, sending me messages like, what the fuck? Shut up, buddy. Piedata, Scott is a lesbian from San Francisco now, speaking of virtue signature. I can't issue by issue. I get it, I get it. Speaking of, I get them getting more money besides Elon becoming a trillionaire anthropocas and talks to raise new funding that would value it up to $950 billion if completed the company's valuation be 2.5 times what it was just three months ago and higher than open AI's valuation of $852 billion. And of course there's the overhang of that trial with open AI right now. It's a huge thing overinflated. I don't know, I don't know. Look, we've never seen a company scale like that. So, and we've also never seen Pepsi Overtake Coke or Avis Overtake Hertz as quickly. We've never seen this type of transition or pivot or reversal in fortunes. And also I still think open AI's valuation by POS probably gonna be a hit. So get this, in March of 2025, Anthropoc's valuation was 61 billion. So it's up 15 fold. It's up 15 fold in the last year. A lot of parties in Silicon Valley. Well, okay, it was 9 billion in annual recurring revenue in December. Last month it was 30 billion. They think this month it's on track to reach 50 billion. For the first time, more businesses are using Anthropoc with an open AI, 35% versus 32. Anthropoc's business adoption quadrupled over the past year while open AI is basically flat. And so a board decision on this financing is expected later this month with the, and they think the IPO might happen as early as October. Yeah, it's the fall. And Kalshi is saying it's the 70% chance it goes public this year. And then there's also a 60% chance that they have the best AI model at the end of the year. I don't know what that means. Like I don't, this company is, it's just absolutely firing on all cylinders. Having said that, my thesis is that go long, GLP one and short AI because I don't think, I think it's impossible to maintain a lead in AI with AI. And that is if you look at the technical specifications, it's moving more towards parity than differentiation. And I think it's gonna be difficult for anyone company to maintain a technical lead here. And then that will drive down margins. And then when these open-weight AIs, when she starts engaging in AI dumping, which is what I would do if I were him, I think it's gonna drive down their margins. And the good news is I think similar to vaccines or PCs or jet transportation, the winners will be us, not these companies. There'll be one or two companies that will dominate. Probably, Anthropic is one of them at this point. Interestingly, probably Google is the other. Yeah, it'll be really interesting. But when you look, we have become used to any innovation resulting in a small number of companies capturing trillions of dollars in shareholder value. Again, my thesis is that AI might be more like jet transportation, vaccines and PCs and that no one company is able to sequester shareholder value. Yeah, I get your point. So it'd be funny if Apple spent nothing and ends up benefiting them all. Which is probably a good thing. Oh, that's, yeah. That's, it'll be sweet. 100%. That's sweet. Just last thing, Google, speaking of Google, is in talks with SpaceX for a rocket launch deal to put orbital data centers in space. The deal is based on currently unproven technology that Elon said is the next frontier for his rocket company. I kind of like this idea. It's totally unproven. And Google has a history of investing in wacky schemes. At one point they had, they were investing, this sounds like a Sergei Brin thing happening here. They used to beef over some girl, but now they're getting along, I suppose. Anyway, this is something Google has done this. They had wind, they had wind up in wind kites at one point. They were going to do a chair lift in San Francisco. They had a ship, an energy ship parked off the city in San Francisco. This is nothing, this feels, smells like Sergei Brin to me. And so he would try anything and this would seem cool to him. So sure, why not? Why not invest in it? What's the difference? If it works, it works. If it doesn't, it doesn't. I think these guys, they want to put ships down and options on anything they don't have insight into so they can get investor updates, have a chance to work with them. It's smart. Everything is so interconnected. Those graphs that look like a God's eye, remember those in the 70s where everyone is invested in everybody else and everybody's suing everybody else. Yeah, just like Anthropic is doing a deal with Musk. Not everyone was like, how dare you, Dario? I'm like, are you kidding? Of course he did. Of course they do. They don't like beef and then they mug. It's like the mob. Anyway, one more quick break. We'll be back for predictions. Buzzwords like progressive and affordability are thrown around all the time in politics. But what do they actually mean? For me, being a progressive means at least two things. One, being willing to unite lots and lots of people, all of the folks that are getting screwed over against the powers that be, that are making your life worse. And then second, being progressive is essentially a hopeful enterprise. That you think, I think that the world can be much better, that we don't have to settle for crumbs or settle for the status quo. And is there a difference between what it means to the elected officials and what it means to the people? So money is essentially the root of everything. I don't care if you're gay, I don't care if you have all that. That's like secondary, third. That's not a priority. That's This Week on America Actually. Let's dig in. This week on Criminal, a man leaves his girlfriend at the top of a mountain. He's charged with her death. And then at the trial, his ex-girlfriend testifies that the same thing had happened to her too. She screamed. She felt dizzy. And at that moment, she realized she was completely alone. Thomas apparently left her. On our other show, This Is Love, a story of another couple on a mountain. There's no ledges. There's you're trapped. I had confidence that there's no way this many things can go wrong in a row. You can listen to both episodes right now on Criminal and This Is Love wherever you get your podcasts. This week on Net Worth and Chill, we're diving into another edition of Am I the Asshole? Finance Edition. And trust me, these money dilemmas will have you questioning everything. I'm breaking down real stories from real people who are navigating financial situations that range from mildly awkward to absolutely unhinged. And I'm giving you my unfiltered take on who's in the right and who needs a serious reality check. Because let's be real. When it comes to mixing relationships and finances, someone's always asking if they're the asshole. Learn how to set boundaries, protect your wealth, and avoid becoming the villain in your own financial story. Listen wherever you get your podcasts or watch on YouTube.com slash your rich BFF. OK, Scott, let's hear a prediction. I will note that people should, something we have talked about and have been in our predictions, a New York Times investigation, which you should all read, found that over 80 polymarket users have placed bets with suspicious characteristics and won money across nearly 30 topics. The insider trading stuff, this stuff is just getting started on all these predictions markets. So we thought this might happen, but just please go read that because it's a really interesting piece. Go ahead, Scott, predictions. So my prediction, chip maker Sarah Bross won public today at a $40 billion valuation, and that's up from its $23 billion valuation in February and $8 billion in 2025. And I believe it's over. I believe it's playing into this massive historic run-up in chips. And after an initial pop, I think it'll fall. Since last year, its revenue has increased less than 2x while its valuation has increased sixfold. And the $40 billion valuation implies a 76 times revenue multiple. In other words, this shouldn't be a public company. It's drafting off of what has been an unprecedented increase in value in the sector. So as an example, Nvidia trades at 26 times revenues and still controls 85% of the AI chip market and is growing faster. Sarah Bross tried to go public in 2024, but withdrew. They're filing at the last minute over intense scrutiny of its heavy reliance on a single customer. The Emirati AI firm G42. I don't remember if you remember these guys. It's basically like actual giant big chips, physical giant big chips. It strikes me as quite frankly a shitty company. And this is simply massively benefiting from an unprecedented updraft in chip stocks. And anyways, my prediction is that the initial pop, this company, which I think is actually a fairly mediocre chip company trading at 78 times revenue, is not gonna sustain and... I like the highly specific stock thing. And then that same customer, which makes up the lion's share of the revenue group 42, accounted for 24% of revenue last year and a state owned UAE university accounted for 62% of revenue. Given what's going on in the UAE, given their dependence on one customer, given the 76 times revenue, this feels like one of those bad Chinese firms that could just go down 95%. Well, it's a good warning for people. Anyway, there's a lot of froth happening for sure. And so it's hard to separate the good from the bad. Anyway, we wanna hear from you. Send us your questions about business tech or whatever's on your mind. Go to nymag.com slash pivot. To submit a question for the show, I'll call 85551 pivot. Elsewhere in the Karen Scott universe. This week on ProffDMarket, Scott spoke with Aswath Demotorin, professor of finance at NYU Stern School of Business, one of Scott's favorites to break, and he's terrific, I think so too, to break down what's standing out to him in the market so far this year. He shared his thoughts on how the conflict with Iran could ripple through the economy. Let's listen to a clip. The catastrophic risk here is not that all gas prices stay higher than they were before the conflict is whether they'll go even further up because there is a chance of that happening. I think if in many ways what the market seems to be building in is the economy can survive with gas prices being 450 or five, depending on what part of the country you're in, and that it might not be as robust as you thought it was three months ago, but it's okay. But I think the worry still remains that this crisis, while it's in a slow boil at any point in time could become a fast boil, at which point you could say, what happens to earnings now? No, that's interesting, 455, I've seen 67 now. It's really across lots of cities. Anyway, that's the show. Thanks for listening to Pivot. Be sure to like and subscribe to our YouTube channel. We'll be back next week. Today's show was produced by Larry Niemann, Zoe Marcus, Taylor Griffin, and Todd Wiseman, earning a retired engineer this episode. Thanks also to Drew Bros, Miss Avira, and National on the Shock Cross, Fox Media's executive producer of podcast. Make sure to follow Pivot on your favorite podcast platform. Thank you for listening to Pivot from New York Magazine of Fox Media. We'll be back next week for another breakdown of all things tech and business. Kara, have a great weekend. Support for this show comes from Harvey AI. The future of law is agentic, not just tools that assist, but AI agents that navigate complex matters. That's why Harvey created agents that can do the work from end to end. They build a plan, pull from the secure data sources, run subagents in parallel, and draft work product ready for your review so you can delegate work and own the judgment. 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