You know what?
Speaker AI pre planned out today's show.
Speaker AGang.
Speaker AGang.
Speaker ANo, I wasn't gonna do that.
Speaker BWhy not?
Speaker AI pre planned that.
Speaker AI was gonna say it was such an amazing experience to do a live today without you on it.
Speaker BOh, I was squarely focused today on the live stream.
Speaker AYou were.
Speaker BAlthough why does he always.
Speaker BWhy is he always lead with that?
Speaker ALead with what?
Speaker BHe always does every time?
Speaker AWho?
Speaker BToday the FOMC got together, and we're squarely focused on reaching our dual mandate.
Speaker AOh, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker AI think.
Speaker AYou think?
Speaker AI think he thinks if he says.
Speaker BPeople are gonna believe it.
Speaker AOh, they are squarely focused on their dual mandate.
Speaker BJust like.
Speaker BWelcome back to the number one financial literacy podcast in the world.
Speaker BThis is the higher standard.
Speaker BSitting in front of me is my partner in crime in a very sexy T shirt.
Speaker BChristopher Nahibi.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ASitting across from me, my partner in crime is crime or time.
Speaker ADid you do crime?
Speaker BNo, I do crime.
Speaker AYou do time, partner in time.
Speaker AI don't know.
Speaker BBecause I do the crime, you do the time.
Speaker AProbably true.
Speaker AIn the exact same shirt, although slightly more faded in mine.
Speaker BYeah, exactly.
Speaker BIt's pre fade.
Speaker AThe one.
Speaker AThe one and only.
Speaker ASay Omar, everybody.
Speaker BThank you.
Speaker BMy man is sitting behind the desk in the production suite.
Speaker BWe have the fighting.
Speaker BFuji and Rajeel.
Speaker BWhat's up, my guy?
Speaker AWelcome back.
Speaker AI'm back.
Speaker AWell, he's back.
Speaker BHe didn't quit on us.
Speaker AThank you.
Speaker BPeople were worried, bro.
Speaker AYeah, they were worried.
Speaker APeople were like, oh, they lost another one.
Speaker BWhat'd they do to this one?
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ADamn it.
Speaker ASo, Rajeel, just by morbid curiosity, did you.
Speaker ADid you watch the last episode at all?
Speaker BI watched introduction just to see how I would be introduced, but there was no one here.
Speaker BNo comment on that.
Speaker AYeah, I got a lot of people saying that was funny as hell whenever we flashed over to Rejeel in AFD space.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AWe also did it at the end of the show to just let you know that we.
Speaker AWe brought you in and took you out.
Speaker BSo today, episode 307, we're getting into.
Speaker BWe had the fed rate cut day today.
Speaker AThat.
Speaker AWhich was what the topic of the live was is that we were going over the interview, and I think a lot of people ask questions about this.
Speaker AThey say, chris, why do you call it the press conference?
Speaker AAnd the.
Speaker AThe actual, you know, an announcement?
Speaker ALike, why don't you just cover one or the other?
Speaker AIt's because the.
Speaker AThe announcement is kind of a foregone conclusion.
Speaker BIt was already understood.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BChicago Mercantile Exchange had booked it for basically 99 chance that they were going to be cutting rates by 25 basis points.
Speaker AWell, more so than just that.
Speaker AIt's one of those things that I think people.
Speaker AIt's lost on a lot of people if they're gonna cut 25 basis points this time like they did last time.
Speaker AEven the narrative is almost identical.
Speaker BYes.
Speaker ALike he's literally just taking the same speech as last time and they'll redline it and cut out a couple of words here and there.
Speaker ALiterally it's no more than five or six in some cases.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker AAnd then he'll give that speech.
Speaker AIt's really the question and answer session later on.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker AThe volume of, of real value comes from.
Speaker BEspecially this time around.
Speaker BBecause this time around he was essentially flying blind.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BRelying on a lot of surveys.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BIn the beige book.
Speaker BNo, I mean there's a lot of reports that he, They.
Speaker BI should say they did not receive because BLS only has one essential worker currently working at the moment.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd a lot of furloughed employees.
Speaker BSo that, that was going to be interesting.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BWhat, what are you going to do for the next meeting?
Speaker BNext meeting, December 10th.
Speaker BWe don't know how long these employees are going to be furloughed.
Speaker BI'm skating around certain terms and words very carefully here.
Speaker BYou see what I'm doing?
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AI am.
Speaker AI'm going to call it now.
Speaker AThe December meeting is probably going to be one of the more controversial meetings of, of this year in this rate cutting cycle.
Speaker BThe final meeting of the year.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AI think it's going to be a big one.
Speaker AOr a big one, depending how you like to use the word.
Speaker AAnd I think the reason why is there is clear dissension amongst.
Speaker AAmongst the ranks.
Speaker ABut look, what does all of this mean for you?
Speaker AAnd what should you expect?
Speaker AThat is what we are going to unpack on today's episode.
Speaker AWe're going to open it up like the flower that is Saeed's heart.
Speaker AOh, you're so sweet.
Speaker BYou're so sweet.
Speaker BSo from the beginning of the hiking cycle to now the.
Speaker BWe're officially in the rate cutting cycle.
Speaker BWe in.
Speaker BIn between that we had the long holding the long pause, if you will.
Speaker BAnd now we're, we're.
Speaker BWe're getting to the point where not only are they cutting rates, so I think we're now officially at 150 basis points that have been cut.
Speaker BSo.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BYou know, they're at between a range of 3.75 to 4%.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker BAnd now you're entering the Territory of what?
Speaker BWhich is arguably it's, it's debatable.
Speaker BThere's never going to be a clear cut answer of what the neutral rate is.
Speaker BIt is, but everyone from the longest time has.
Speaker BWe're pointing at it's somewhere between 3 to 4%.
Speaker BRight?
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ASo I mean a big range for the context of what they're doing here.
Speaker ASo let's, let's give a little bit of timeline, some historical context and then there was definitely two different narratives if you caught it, that Jerome Powell had today in the press conference.
Speaker AOne, he suggested that the.
Speaker AThat more than half of the FOMC believes we are at that neutral hold right now.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker BWhich is which.
Speaker BWhich would signal what?
Speaker AThat you're not gonna need more rate cuts.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker BBut prior to this, prior to that meeting today, the Chicago Mercantile Exchange had booked a 92 chance of another rate cut in December.
Speaker AThat's right.
Speaker AAnd I think there's some controversy there.
Speaker AThere was two different opinions outside of the.
Speaker AThe.
Speaker AIt's not unusual to have 1 dissension but certainly 2 dissensions would be a bit unique.
Speaker ABut dissensions in different directions.
Speaker AMirin, who is the current executive branch most recent appointee and he has been somebody who's been very aggressive on rate cuts.
Speaker AHe said he wanted 50 last time he said he wanted 50 this time he dissented.
Speaker AHe was the outlying opinion.
Speaker AAnd there was another one, I think it was Jeff Schmidt from the Kansas City.
Speaker AHe, he wanted to hold rates still, which ironically was the gentleman from JP Morgan Chase, David Kelly.
Speaker AI believe it was his perspective as well that he thought you should hold rates.
Speaker AAnd I'll explain why that actually might not be a bad strategy which flies in the face I think of the majority opinion.
Speaker ABut I actually tend to agree with it.
Speaker AI'm not sure that cutting rates at this time was a good idea.
Speaker BOkay, yeah, we'll get into it.
Speaker ALet's get some historical context.
Speaker AAnd obviously this is all designed to not only help you at cocktail parties because people go to those still.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ABut to really help you understand what this means for you and your financial future because there are some outlying questions that have never been answered and to this day we don't know the answer to.
Speaker AAnd we're going to get to those as well.
Speaker AThis cutting cycle started and all moved since the peak.
Speaker AThe peak was about 5.25% to 5.5% set in July of 2023 and it was really maintained through mid of 2024.
Speaker AThat's a long ass time at high interest rates.
Speaker AAnd I'm going to talk later in the show about how this has impacted things in a way that we don't fully understand.
Speaker AAnd it's kind of the reason we're seeing such weird responses economically in the market.
Speaker AFor example, the vix, the fear gauge rising.
Speaker APeople are more afraid for their financial futures as indicated by the vix.
Speaker AAt the same time, the stock market is surging.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AIf people are making more money because the stock market is increasing, it's a more profitable economy and it seems more prosperous people shouldn't naturally be afraid.
Speaker AThen you throw in the fact that the job market seems soft and cushy.
Speaker BRight?
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AThe opposite of what we're deal is today because we're jealous.
Speaker BSo skinny now my man's shedding weight.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker A210, right?
Speaker BMy guy.
Speaker BGood job.
Speaker BI got jump on the train.
Speaker AHere.
Speaker BPeople lose weight all around me.
Speaker BI'm like, man, I'm not going to.
Speaker AMake fun of doing it.
Speaker BEveryone's doing.
Speaker BAll the cool kids are doing it.
Speaker BI gotta get out here.
Speaker BSix.
Speaker AI mean, yeah, we don't support the use of drugs that are not prescribed on this show.
Speaker BNo, we don't.
Speaker BNone of the stats of press.
Speaker ASo the cut setting, the cut side of the cycle, it started in 2024.
Speaker ASeptember 18, 2024, 50 basis points.
Speaker AWe kicked it off in a big way.
Speaker AThen November 7, 2024, 25 basis points.
Speaker ADecember 18, 2024, 25 basis points.
Speaker ACuts in 2025.
Speaker ASeptember we saw one for 25 basis points.
Speaker AOctober, you now just got one for 25 basis points.
Speaker ABringing us to where we're at today.
Speaker ALike Saeed mentioned, 150 basis points off the peak right now.
Speaker AFor context and color, an important thing to remember is there were two polar extremes that are important.
Speaker AOne, we came off of artificial intra deflation or for about 14 years where we had rates at near zero.
Speaker ATypical recessionary economies and prosperous economies have about seven to 10 years from peak to peak, from trough to trough.
Speaker AAnd if you think about this as a parabolic curve, it starts at the bottom, it goes up, it comes back down to the bottom.
Speaker AThat is one peak at the top of the curve.
Speaker BHistorically speaking, that's what I guess the US economy was used to seeing, right?
Speaker AThat's right.
Speaker AHistorically, yeah.
Speaker AAnd he saw almost double that with the artificial intra deflation.
Speaker AAnd that creates a prolonged period of prosperity and this prolonged period of what seems like this continual rise up in home prices and the stock market in assets.
Speaker ATo make it very simple and I.
Speaker BThink this vernacularity, the Justification was back then to not allow things to get too frothy.
Speaker AI don't think they were thinking that way at all.
Speaker BThis is just the way things are going to be moving forward.
Speaker BWe can hold interest rates this low for this long because everything seems to be fine.
Speaker AThere could be conspiracy theory.
Speaker AI think you just had a very different perspective on economic policy.
Speaker AGot carried away.
Speaker AI think a lot of people were afraid of what happened during the great financial crisis happening again.
Speaker AYou have to understand that not only were home prices essentially eviscerated during that, but there was also this fear because people's 401ks were wiped out.
Speaker AA lot of people that are nearing retirement, we're talking about the great wealth transfer, which is supposed to go from one generation to the next.
Speaker AWe haven't seen, we covered that on a previous episode.
Speaker AI think it was 302 or 303.
Speaker AI think people were afraid of so many people from that generation having impacts that they started to do things defensively.
Speaker AAnd I think that it's a very different economic time today.
Speaker AI don't know that you had the level of prosperity.
Speaker ACertainly you didn't have all time highs in the market then.
Speaker ASo people were a little more cavalier.
Speaker ABut the political zeitgeist, whether you like it or not, drove a lot of those decisions.
Speaker AAnd that's a problem.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BWe had Jamie Dimon recently come out and say the stock market seems to be overvalued.
Speaker BWe, we've had Jerome Powell say asset values seem to be inflated.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BAnd you know, doing some digging, you look at, since 2019, stock prices have are up over 110%.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker BReal estate's up approximately 28% nationwide.
Speaker BI know real estate is more of a region thing, but nationwide up 20.
Speaker AOver the course like the last six years, it's up like almost 50%, right?
Speaker BYeah, exactly.
Speaker BCryptocurrency up over 2,000% since then, my personal favorite.
Speaker BAnd gold up over 200%.
Speaker BMeanwhile, median household incomes only up 22%.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AAnd I brought this up in the live stream earlier today too.
Speaker AI think this is a meaningful and important comment to make.
Speaker ALike, look, yeah, you can solve a lot of this by paying employees more.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker BBut so now we're.
Speaker ABut that's not reality.
Speaker BIt's, it's.
Speaker BI think, I think now it's, it's getting to the point where.
Speaker ANo, no, no.
Speaker BWe're not just in this AI bubble.
Speaker BIt feels like a lot of things are starting to become too frothy.
Speaker AWe're deal at the bottom of the show notes towards the bottom.
Speaker AThere's a list of companies that I think I put there.
Speaker AIs it still there?
Speaker AYou want to drag that on the.
Speaker BScreen real quick while he drags it on the screen.
Speaker AHe's got it.
Speaker AHe's already.
Speaker BWhat, what, what scares me with this.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker BIs okay, whammy.
Speaker BIf anything is, if anything, if anything is a bubble.
Speaker BWhat do bubbles do?
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BThey sent, eventually pop.
Speaker BAnd that's normal in a healthy economy.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BLike it happens, it's just part of the cycle.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BIt happens.
Speaker BNow the fear is when the bubble gets too big.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BAnd things start coming down way too fast with us now reaching this rate, new rate cutting cycle and the Fed now saying, okay, we're done with the quantitative tightening portion.
Speaker BThis is something that I wanted you to help explain to everybody because I'm seeing a lot of people talk about this thinking that, no, we're now jumping into quantitative easing, meaning, you know, we're not, we're going to start printing, printing the money.
Speaker BBut they went out and they said, they openly said, and Jerome Powell said at the post game press conference that the balance sheet runoff is over.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ASo we're going to get into a section tonight.
Speaker ALater on in the episode, we're talking about quantitative tightening.
Speaker AExplain what that means because I think we throw out a lot of turners and people are like, oh, tightening makes it tighter.
Speaker AOh, I know what that means.
Speaker AAnd they don't.
Speaker AYeah, we're going to break that down.
Speaker AWe're going to talk about quantitative easing, we're going to talk about the repo line and banks liquidity.
Speaker BBefore we do that, how does that impact everybody?
Speaker AYeah, before we do.
Speaker AThis list was interesting to me.
Speaker AUPS 48,000 employees, laid off Amazon, they thought it was up to 30,000 employees, but it's actually 14,000.
Speaker AIntel 24,000 Nestle 16,000, Accenture 11,000 Ford 11,000.
Speaker AMicrosoft 7000 PwC 5600 Salesforce 4000 Paramount 2000 Target 1800 Kroger 1000, Meta 600.
Speaker AAnd Meta's been interesting.
Speaker AThey've been kind of sneaky.
Speaker AThey've been doing this on a quarter by quarter basis to not have a high number.
Speaker AThank you, Rajil.
Speaker AAnd the reason why that's important is you have to understand that the job market is being impacted in a meaningful way.
Speaker AAnd part of the rhetoric we saw today with the FOMC was clear they are concerned about the stability of employment.
Speaker ANow, I disagree heavily with a lot of what Powell's justification for the decision was, but I agree with the ultimate decision to focus on jobs a little bit.
Speaker ABut then I lean heavy into David Kelly's camp where I'm not sure that a rate cut right now is warranted.
Speaker AYou're protecting jobs with outdated data.
Speaker AYou know, the job situation is worse than.
Speaker AThen you're getting the data for anyway.
Speaker AJust because it's a lagging figure.
Speaker BIt's right, exactly.
Speaker BSo don't you think if that's the case, if the job figure is worse than what's actually being reported, and then essentially they should be cutting because it's a lagging indicator and it takes time for these things to work itself into the system.
Speaker AJerome Powell, when asked about this, blamed two things.
Speaker AHe blamed immigration policy right now, which I think is actually kind of asinine.
Speaker AI think employment should be better if more people are leaving the country.
Speaker AWe're forced to leave.
Speaker AAnd I'm not endorsing.
Speaker AI think it's terrible.
Speaker AWe're doing right.
Speaker ABut that being said, that is supply and demand.
Speaker ARight?
Speaker BYou got to be careful.
Speaker BYou get painted out.
Speaker AThis is what he said in his press conference.
Speaker AOkay, look at the camera.
Speaker AThis is what Jerome Powell said.
Speaker ABut I disagree with that.
Speaker AI don't think that's driving the job numbers that we're seeing.
Speaker AA lot of those companies that I just read out, those are not where a lot of these immigrants are coming from.
Speaker AI mean, sure, there's some, but not all of them.
Speaker BWhat was the other tariffs?
Speaker ANo, the other thing he, well, he blamed tariffs a tiny, tiny bit, but the other thing he blamed it on was seasonality.
Speaker AAnd I'm again, these two things should be propping up the job numbers currently.
Speaker BRight now where we are.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BBecause a lot of people take on seasonal jobs.
Speaker AAnd then he says seasonality and seasonal jobs.
Speaker ABut it's like, bro, you don't have the updated data, A, from the BLS Bureau of Labor Statistics, and B, you know, it's lagging data anyway, so you're not going to get that data till next quarter.
Speaker BSo you know how I, I realized that I've become a nerd with all this?
Speaker AJust now.
Speaker BJust.
Speaker BJust now?
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AToday I was wearing matching shirts.
Speaker BI was, I was, I was, I was matching hat.
Speaker BI was triggered from the post game press conference.
Speaker BHe said, he said that the tariff.
Speaker BTariff.
Speaker BTariffs that get put in place and whatever inflation gets caused because of it is probably transitory.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BHey, guy, listen, if there's one word that should leave your vocabulary.
Speaker BTransitory.
Speaker BTransitory.
Speaker BThis is.
Speaker BThis is you.
Speaker BThis, you.
Speaker BCause a portion of this is Your fault.
Speaker AWere you turned in when I was in the girlfriend references?
Speaker AOh, yes.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BYeah, I was.
Speaker AThe one I made was like you can't walk in and see your wife cheating on you and then go, we need to talk this out and figure out if you were cheating on me or not.
Speaker AYeah, I'm not sure.
Speaker BWere you in the right mental space?
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AWas that really you or was that AI?
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker AI'm not sure.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AIt was such a weird.
Speaker AHe's made some weird ass comments and I was calling him out in real time.
Speaker AIf you missed it, go back.
Speaker AIt's.
Speaker AIt's actually posted so you can see it.
Speaker ASo number two, we're going to talk about tonight, balance sheet runoff ending December 1st.
Speaker AThe mechanics and why it matters.
Speaker AAs Saeed brought up.
Speaker ASo now is as good as any time.
Speaker ASo what changed up to November 30th?
Speaker AThe Fed was still letting some Treasuries and MBS roll off mortgage backed securities.
Speaker AMbs.
Speaker BSo one thing that the listeners should know, if you didn't know, that the Fed injects money into the system, right.
Speaker BBy buying up Treasuries.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker BAnd that's one way that they can turn if, if you've ever heard somebody talk about, you know, the Feds printing money or injecting money into the system, right.
Speaker BThe turn, turning the money printers back on.
Speaker BThat's what, that's what they're doing.
Speaker BThat's how they're carrying it out.
Speaker ASo for this part of the episode, I'm going to take a bit of a different tact.
Speaker ANormally we explain the concept and then get into the detail.
Speaker AOn this one, I want to get into the detail because it came straight from the press conference and then explain the concept as simply as possible.
Speaker AAnd because I'm a moron, it's going to be real simple.
Speaker AOkay?
Speaker ASo starting December 1st, the Fed will reinvest all principal payments, I. E. No further net shrinkage of the portfolio.
Speaker ABecause nobody likes a shrinking.
Speaker BNo, honestly.
Speaker BHonestly, shrinkage is not a good thing.
Speaker BNobody who likes shrinkage.
Speaker AAnd if you're a man, you can relate, right?
Speaker AYou wish it were bigger.
Speaker BHonestly.
Speaker BNot man or woman.
Speaker BI feel like a lot of people don't like shrinkage.
Speaker ABut you definitely don't want it to be smaller.
Speaker BDon't want.
Speaker BWho wants smaller?
Speaker AI mean, yeah, sometimes you can be too big.
Speaker AYou know what I'm saying?
Speaker AYou know what I mean?
Speaker AOkay, walk it back.
Speaker BI tried to walk it back over there.
Speaker ABeing silent as hell.
Speaker AYeah, yeah.
Speaker BHe said pause.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AAll right.
Speaker ASo Treasuries roll over all maturities at auction from December 1st.
Speaker AAnd what that means is you buy, you buy any type of treasury, there's a duration on it, meaning it expires on this date.
Speaker AThat means it has to be due and paid by that date.
Speaker AThe effective market is all controlled by this type of duration control.
Speaker AAnd you're saying, Chris, what do you mean by duration control?
Speaker AIf I have a portfolio of assets that I'm buying that is cash or cash equivalent, think bonds, think Treasuries.
Speaker AThey're good for a certain period of time.
Speaker AAnd the longer you have your mark, your money tied up, the more return you're going to get.
Speaker AYes, but you don't want all of your money to have a waterfall or basically it hits a wall and then it all comes due because you got all this money tied up.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ASo you try to space your money out accordingly to when you're going to need to use it.
Speaker ASo if you buy a shorter duration product and it pays you a little bit less money, but you have a longer duration product and it pays a little bit more money, you've averaged the money that you're making from an interest rate perspective.
Speaker BYes.
Speaker AAnd the Fed is going to balance this activity by stopping the maturity.
Speaker ASo when they come due, instead of going out and buying more, they're going to reinvest it now.
Speaker ASo they're not going to shrink the balance sheet, they're going to keep the same size.
Speaker AWe're going to put that money in other places.
Speaker BRight, Exactly.
Speaker ANot to be confused with quantitative easing and quantitative tightening.
Speaker BYes, there's, I think, I think that's the confusion.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BThe confusion is, oh, they're, they're stopping the runoff.
Speaker BThat means they're going to put more on the balance sheet.
Speaker BNo, they could stop the b, they could stop the runoff and just continue to renew and stay right where they are.
Speaker AAnd if you're confused right now, don't worry, bear with us, we will get there.
Speaker AI will make all of this make sense.
Speaker AAnd if not, you can email, say it at site at higher standard podcast.
Speaker BBut I will say, I will say I do have a prediction that eventually the quantitative easing will, they will be for their hand will be forced to have to do it, which is just going to cause a wide number of problems.
Speaker AI don't know that they can because the asset implications, but we'll get there.
Speaker ASo the reserve has stopped the draining.
Speaker AIf you think about this as a pool, the banking system liquidity stabilizes.
Speaker AInstead of gradually tightening, reinvesting into T bills was what Jerome Powell said he was going to do.
Speaker AThe Fed's portfolio maturity taking a little pressure off long dated treasury supply at the moment margin.
Speaker ASo basically saying that they're going to try to prop up the short end of the curve, the two year, the three year Treasuries, the stuff, the lower ending product and the longer end of the product is going to continue to rise over time, which is going to have the, the, the upward pressure on mortgage rates.
Speaker ACommon question I get when people hear this is like, well Chris, how does this play into mortgage rates?
Speaker AWhy don't you think they're going to go down?
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AAnd this is why is is a natural healthy curve.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AA yield curve.
Speaker AYou get paid more money for having your money locked up longer.
Speaker ASo if your money's in 10 year treasury, it should pay you more than your two and three year treasury.
Speaker AIf we're trying to prop those up and your tenure should be above that, it's going to put upward pressure on mortgage rates.
Speaker BYes, exactly right.
Speaker BI mean there should be less uncertainty with the near future than the long term future.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ASo markets do care about this because balance sheet runoff, I. E. Quantitative tightening, and again we're going to explain these terms, has been a stealth headwind for risk assets and funding ceasing runoff removes that incremental tightening even as policy rates are still restrictive.
Speaker APowell tied the decision to stability in money markets and balance sheet normalization goals.
Speaker AWhat's important to note here is that when Jerome Powell says this, he's trying to be clearly articulate about what he's doing.
Speaker ABut what he's really not saying, but he is saying in a clear way, is he's no longer just relying on interest rate cuts to control monetary policy, the half of their dual mandate, but at the same time they're doing this while cutting rates because they're focused on the other side of their, their dual mandate.
Speaker AJobs.
Speaker AJobs were a big, big part of the equation here.
Speaker AAnd I think that people go, okay, stabilize the monetary policy, but inflation is still kind of above their target and slowly creeping up.
Speaker AAnd had jobs have been more stable and in line with what their expectation was for a healthy economy, they may not have cut because they want to see inflation continue to come back down.
Speaker AThe only way to do that is to keep their interest rates higher for longer.
Speaker ARemember that rhetoric.
Speaker BYeah, higher for long.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ASo let's get into QT versus qe.
Speaker BYeah, let's go.
Speaker BSo qt quantitative tightening is when the Fed reduces the size of its balance sheet.
Speaker BIt does this by letting bonds like Treasuries and mortgage backed securities mature without reinvesting or selling them outright.
Speaker BSo think of it like if a bank has a loan to somebody, right?
Speaker BAnd we'll keep it very basic and simple on a 30 year fixed mortgage, right.
Speaker BAnd they just let that loan mature and pay off and then that money that they get for that, they don't go out and reinvest it, they just continue to sit on the capital, continue to sit on the money that, that they're receiving.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker BThat's tightening, that's pulling money out of the system.
Speaker AAnd quantitative easing.
Speaker BYeah, and quantitative easing is the opposite.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BSo the Fed expands its balance sheet by buying Treasuries and mortgage backed securities in large amounts.
Speaker BThese purchases add reserves to the banking system.
Speaker ASo think of quantitative easing as the money hose.
Speaker AYou're putting water into the pool.
Speaker AThink of quantitative tightening as pulling it out.
Speaker ARight?
Speaker AThe money vacuum.
Speaker AYou're taking stuff out of the economy.
Speaker AAnd by doing that, these two mechanisms are really important in how you drive a little bit of monetary policy.
Speaker AObviously the, the interest rate is the, the biggest way of doing that, but this certainly is a part of that.
Speaker BRight?
Speaker BAnd, but the problem, the problem for them is there was so much money injected into the system and so many companies were sitting on so much cash.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BThat even the quantitative tightening that they were doing, I mean, I don't.
Speaker BLook, we're still fighting this inflation problem.
Speaker BThey still haven't gone back down to their, you know, 2% mandate.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker ASo let's, let's unpack this a little bit because the answer here is meaningful to how and why we got here today, right, during the crisis like 2008 or 2020, to stimulate the economy by pushing down long term interest rates.
Speaker AThey, they encourage lending and investing and risk taking.
Speaker AWhenever you go through a quantitative easing period, right, you're flooding the market with money.
Speaker AGo lend this money out.
Speaker AGo, go do these things.
Speaker AThis drives asset prices up, right?
Speaker AYou go through a prolonged period of doing this for, I don't know, 14 years.
Speaker AYeah, right.
Speaker AWhat does that do?
Speaker AIt drives asset prices up higher than they've ever gone before.
Speaker ABecause you've done this for almost twice as long as you've gone and done this before, right.
Speaker AAnd because of this really free fiscal liquidity policy, we've seen repercussions of this.
Speaker AWhat are the repercussions, you might ask?
Speaker AThe stock market at an all time high.
Speaker AReal estate home prices at an all time high.
Speaker ABut not only are they at an all time High.
Speaker AThe cadence with which they've increased has been very, very fast.
Speaker ABecause you combined quantitative easing with hyper low interest rates.
Speaker AYou combine hyper low interest rates and quantitative easing with financial stimulus and you create a Molotov cocktail of problems.
Speaker AAnd the problem is, is now it's sticky.
Speaker AJust because you slow and or stop this does not mean that the value is going to stop going up.
Speaker ABecause all this extra money you pumped into the system for way longer than you had historically.
Speaker AWell, guess what?
Speaker AIt takes time to drain out.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AJust like draining a pool.
Speaker AYou drain a pool with a garden hose, which is effectively what we're doing here.
Speaker AIt's not going to go down quickly, which was why you see asset prices continue to keep their vector, their trajectory up.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AAnd they're not coming back down.
Speaker AAnd this is why people fear for a bubble.
Speaker AAnd it's also the logic of why you see sophisticated investors have their fear rise on the vix.
Speaker AThe fear gauge, while the stock market's still going up is that they're saying to themselves, like, this is great for us.
Speaker AYeah, but how long can it last?
Speaker BHow long exactly?
Speaker BAnd if now, like we, like we said at the top of the show, we've entered this rate cutting cycle and now this next, this next meeting in December will be very telling as to what happens.
Speaker BAnd if they continue down this path of cutting rates, then, you know, asset values are only going to continue to inflate.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker AThere's also a psychological impact here which I think is lost on a lot of people.
Speaker AA lot of our demographic is a younger user as a younger listener.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AAnd that demographic is going to be hyper focused on the period of time they grew up and experience business.
Speaker BYeah, it's true.
Speaker AYou got out of college at 18 and you worked for, call it 14 years.
Speaker ALet's just say you got out at the beginning of this cycle and now you're 32.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ALet's say maybe 30.
Speaker AYou might feel like a very successful, accomplished business person.
Speaker AAnd you know what?
Speaker AYou may have ridden the wave of one of the, frankly, the most prosperous economies in American history, but you haven't been tested.
Speaker AAnd I'm not saying that to scare anybody or make anybody feel any type of way, but what I will say is it has created a tremendous amount of ego.
Speaker AIt's also part of the reason, and I know it's weird to think that monetary policy, fiscal policy, politics and all these things have bled into social media, AKA attention media, but it's also part of the reason you now see all these influencers with such massive bravado.
Speaker ADidn't matter if you were a fitness influencer who was training people.
Speaker ADidn't matter if you were living in Bali and you were a light healer.
Speaker APausing for emphasis.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker ADidn't matter if you were telling people how to be an alpha bro.
Speaker AThey got this ego because it all came to them so much easier because of the liquidity in the markets and because how available people had money to spend.
Speaker APeople aren't going to spend money on your $10,000 high ticket sale, your course for mentorship or your mastermind unless they were provided this by guess what, Asset values being propped up, stimulus coming in and extra liquidity being, you know, rooted to them.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker ABut at some point in time, people stop spending money on these things because it doesn't make economic sense for them anymore.
Speaker AThey stop the quote discret discretionary spending.
Speaker AThat's gonna be a buzzword for a lot of people listening to the show is when does consumer discretionary spending pull back?
Speaker ABecause when that happens, we've got a problem.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd we know just based on the data that's coming out for household debt, a lot of people are bridging the gaps with credit cards.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BSo consumer, consumer spending is largely being propped up by credit card debt.
Speaker AAnd one of the things you heard on multiple times on today's Q and A session with Jerome Powell was he referenced barbell economies.
Speaker AWe talked about this in the show multiple times.
Speaker AThe, the wealthy in America are carrying the consumer discretionary spending of the effectively the entire economy.
Speaker ASo it actually makes it look like the lower and middle class are spending more than they are because the upper class, the, the holders of the most amount of money are spending more money than everybody else and the average is getting pulled up.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ASo it is definitely a barbell economy, meaning that there's.
Speaker AWe're really wiping out the middle class in this process.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BBut what is.
Speaker BSo what right now with today we had another rate cut.
Speaker BDoes that, does that help the economy in your opinion, or is this just delaying and inevitable?
Speaker AI think it needed to be done on some level, but I don't think it need to be done so fast.
Speaker AI know the reasons why the market feels that way.
Speaker AAnd as somebody who gains a benefit in the businesses that I'm in by seeing the rates go down, I like it on a personal level.
Speaker ABut do I think it's the best thing for the economy?
Speaker AI would have liked to see them wait until December to make this rate cut.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BI mean, they had all the reasons.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker BThey had everything in their favor as far as data goes to be like, listen guys, it would be unreasonable and illogical for us to make these decisions based on us not, not having some of these data points.
Speaker BAnd I mean, everything that they've said up until now has been, look, we're data driven, we're data dependent.
Speaker ABut you also are openly saying that you don't have the data.
Speaker AI mean, he made several references to the data we have available.
Speaker AWhat we have.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AOn, on today's, you know, press release in the conference.
Speaker AWell, okay, yeah.
Speaker AIf you're saying you're data dependent but you don't have a full view of the data, why are you making decisions the exact same way?
Speaker BRight.
Speaker AAm I crazy?
Speaker BNo, no, you're not.
Speaker AYou know, and then here's.
Speaker AI'm going to make a prediction here, right on the show and I want it because five months now from now you'll be able to say I was right or wrong.
Speaker BOh, okay.
Speaker AI have a feeling that what Jerome palace, four, four decisions left, four rate cuts left in him, possibly.
Speaker AOh yeah, there's four FOMC meetings that he's going to have a press conference.
Speaker BUntil, until his term is done in May.
Speaker BIn May, yeah.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ASo when his term is done in May, the FOMC is up for reelection for additional five year terms.
Speaker AYou've already got the current administration's representative in Mirren being hyper aggressive on rate cuts.
Speaker BHe wants it.
Speaker AYeah, right.
Speaker AYou've got some dissension amongst the ranks and Jerome palace effectively suggested that there was a pretty healthy amount of disagreement and over half of them favored possibly staying where we're at today after this rate cut.
Speaker ASo clearly there's a softer tone in my mind as to what may or may not come, which is why I think the December meeting is gonna be the most controversial one of the year and the most controversial one we've seen in some time.
Speaker AThat being said, I'm gonna predict now that Jerome Powell is going to be much more politically motivated and much more, much less amenable and much more clear with his thoughts in the economy as we approach those remaining rate cuts because he knows there's more than likely going to be somebody put in place who's going to proffer up additional rate cuts faster.
Speaker BYeah, yeah, right.
Speaker BBut that's not going to be.
Speaker BAnd we've gone over the, in the show before that it's not solely there, you know, under their discretion.
Speaker BNo, no.
Speaker BSo what does happen until then?
Speaker BIt should be, should be very interesting.
Speaker BI don't see him cutting rates Every, at every single meeting I do see either at the next one a hold for another several months.
Speaker BThat's just my personal opinion because I think that they're, they're really at risk of, you know, starting inflation to go back up again.
Speaker BI think there's a real, real fear, and there should be a real fear of that, which is now going to only cause this problem to get, you know, become much longer.
Speaker ASo the market impact here, QE makes money cheap and plentiful.
Speaker ARisk assets love it.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ASo people who have assets that are at risk, you're taking gamble, you're betting on the markets.
Speaker AYou're people who are risk, you know, favorable.
Speaker AThey love it.
Speaker AYeah, those people have been profiting and those, those people who generally take on the risk like that are also the same people who have the egos who go on social media and talk about how amazing they are.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AQuantitative tightening makes money scarce and expensive markets typically hate it.
Speaker ASo all the talking heads you see on cnbc, everybody they bring on these panels, almost all of them is in the space of the risk assets market.
Speaker AThey're in the stock markets.
Speaker AThat's their subject matter, expertise.
Speaker AThat's what they do.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ASo it's going to be very rare that somebody who's market driven is going to say, oh, we need quantitative tightening to solve this problem.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker ABut the fact of the matter is that might be part of the resolution.
Speaker ABut there are some mechanics here which make quantitative tightening very difficult.
Speaker ABecause Jerome Powell didn't talk about kind of the back end of what's really going on here.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker BWhich is what?
Speaker ASo QE absolutely pushed pricing up and that's how we got the home values, the market values that caused this problem.
Speaker ABut it wasn't the only engine.
Speaker AAnd as QT has taken some of the air out of the balloon, it hasn't returned to the pre QE valuations because one, the balance sheet is still gigantic versus 2007.
Speaker AThey bought so much in assets and put it on the Fed's balance sheet to the plumbing and the market stability limits how far QT can run.
Speaker AThe banking sector has lines, repo lines, liquidity they need in the system.
Speaker AAnd because they need a certain de minimis amount of liquidity in the system, you're limited as to how far down you can go.
Speaker ABecause we have things like the repo line, okay, where banks can go and tap this line to bridge their overnight liquidity needs.
Speaker AAnd if there's more people who have needs for more money from the banks, that means the Federal Reserve banks Need to hold more money.
Speaker BYeah, but we've talked about this, right.
Speaker BWe've talked about on the show where, you know, I wouldn't be, I wouldn't be surprised if the Fed viewed it as, you know, maybe if there was a reduction in, you know, community banks out there that might not be necessarily better.
Speaker AYou're going to see that now.
Speaker AYou're going to see M and A activity.
Speaker AYou're going to see that now because for a long time banks profits were down because of their margin compression.
Speaker AAnd now we're going to see banks start to consolidate.
Speaker AYou're going to see all those local community banks you see in your neighborhood, you're going to start seeing them disappear over the course of the next five to ten years.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ANot all of them, but a lot of them are going to consolidate.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker ABecause they're all, they were all looking to get out before the quote contagion period a couple of years ago.
Speaker ANow is where you're going to see it start to play out where banks mortgage rates are going to come down.
Speaker ASo let's play this out from a business perspective.
Speaker AAs the Fed cuts rates, here's what happens.
Speaker AYour deposit pricing goes down.
Speaker AYour interest rate you're getting on your deposit accounts, your high yield savings accounts, that's going down right now, right tomorrow.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker ABut your loans, your loans that you're paying them on, that ain't going down until the next time you refinance or you buy something.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ASo that means their profits are going up.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AAnd you might say, well Chris, our mortgage rates gonna go down.
Speaker ANo, they're stay up.
Speaker AYou want to know why?
Speaker ABanks are going to try to recapture the lost profit and increase their earnings to get back to where they were because they had margin compression, meaning they were making less and less money because interest rates were super low on loans and interest rates were super high on deposit pricing for a long time.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BEspecially after that contagion period.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ASo they're going to try to widen that back up.
Speaker AAnd as they widen that back up, what do we know from the show?
Speaker AAs companies make more money, their value, the company's value, it's market capitalization goes up.
Speaker AAnd as market capitalization goes up, people are willing to pay more for it.
Speaker ASo all those bankers in the banking sector who are looking to get out at a high multiple, people paying more for their company.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AThey're going to start saying, okay, I'm in my 60s, I want to go get some Mai tais and sit on the beach, I want to sell, let's get out of here.
Speaker BYeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker AAnd that doesn't touch on the whole private equity component.
Speaker AAnd you know, the capital that's been out there flowing around.
Speaker AWe talked about on the previous shows about private equity and their play.
Speaker ABut there's a lot of money during this really free money period where interest rates are hyper low, that hasn't been paid back to investors and they got to start paying that back.
Speaker BOh, exactly.
Speaker ASo there's other motivation to do that as well.
Speaker BAnd there was so much of that money going around that literally private equity was looking around at.
Speaker BOkay, what else can we get into?
Speaker AHey, Regid, you want some money?
Speaker AWhat kind of company you got, bro?
Speaker BYeah, hey, can you just say the word AI a hundred times and we'll make sure it happens?
Speaker AHey.
Speaker BSeriously.
Speaker ASo I want to point out some of the differences in QE at high asset prices and why scale matters here.
Speaker AWhen the Fed buys Treasuries and mortgage backed securities, it removes duration.
Speaker AAnd we talked about duration, what that means how long they're holding the assets on their balance sheets right from the market and floods the banks with reserves.
Speaker AThat pulls long term rates down.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AThe 10 year down and mortgage rates vis a vis a proxy come down.
Speaker AAnd what happens?
Speaker AIt pushes investors out the, out on the risk curve.
Speaker AEquities and credit people are willing to go riskier investments for longer and we've seen that the last several years.
Speaker ABut those risky investments that are held for longer, we're now in longer, we're at longer.
Speaker APeople want out.
Speaker ARight, Exactly.
Speaker BI need some of that.
Speaker BI need to recoup some of that.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ACentral banks and academic work consistently find QE cuts terms and lifts asset prices.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ASo there, there's a premium to all this and it causes the market to bubble up.
Speaker AWe've seen that.
Speaker AThat's money into the system.
Speaker ABut scale here matters because the Fed's balance sheet went from 900 billion in 2007.
Speaker AGreat financial crisis start to a peak of about 9 trillion in 2022.
Speaker BCome on, bro.
Speaker BYeah, we did the graphic on trillion.
Speaker AYou went from early days Amazon Bezos to what Elon Musk wants to be paid.
Speaker ARight?
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ASo I'm just, just saying there's a difference, Right?
Speaker AYou know, one sells books, one's got robots.
Speaker BYeah, yeah.
Speaker BAnd yeah, one sending stuff to outer space.
Speaker BYeah, he's talking about how he could, he wants to devise a plan to where he could, you know, transport people all around the world, anywhere in the world in 45 minutes.
Speaker BOh yeah, I saw that.
Speaker BIt's pretty cool.
Speaker BJust like, hey, the.
Speaker BI just had to have that.
Speaker AI Brigil.
Speaker AGet closer to the mic.
Speaker APut it in your face hole.
Speaker AWhat are you doing?
Speaker BPut it on your face, close it.
Speaker ATo the mic, let's go.
Speaker AYeah, I'm look at you until you do this.
Speaker AYeah, yeah.
Speaker BYou saw it too, right, Regil?
Speaker AYeah, closer, closer.
Speaker BBut think about this.
Speaker BWould you ever do this?
Speaker BWhat would you ever do that?
Speaker BYou would do it.
Speaker BI know you would do it.
Speaker AAh, I don't know, man.
Speaker AHere's the thing is I'm not saying.
Speaker BThat here to Australia in 45 minutes.
Speaker AI would love that.
Speaker AThat that's a 16 hour flight right now from us.
Speaker BYeah, right.
Speaker AI don't know that that's safe, honestly.
Speaker BRather just not go.
Speaker AYeah, can you imagine, like you hit a bird and then what?
Speaker AYeah, I know you're going into the stratosphere, coming back down, you know, but like, there's got to be some birds on the way, right?
Speaker AWay on the way down.
Speaker BAn asteroid maybe.
Speaker ALook, I've seen SpaceX.
Speaker ASome rockets go up, they come back down, they get caught.
Speaker AIt's beautiful.
Speaker ASome of them explode.
Speaker BYeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker BBut I've heard people justify this.
Speaker BIt's like, okay, well, you have to, you have to push it to the limit to see what can explode or what will explode.
Speaker AI agree.
Speaker AYou get, you guys, you don't push it to the limit.
Speaker BYou don't wanna, you don't wanna never have nothing explode, right?
Speaker BBecause it's like you don't know what, what could explode.
Speaker AThat's a very valid point.
Speaker AExcept I would like to be the thing that does not explode.
Speaker ANo, no, that's my, that's my prerogative.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker BOf course.
Speaker AI don't want to be on stuff that explodes.
Speaker AYeah, this is the same kind of guy.
Speaker AI won't go to like a carnival or something.
Speaker BWhat about the one that, what about the one that Jeff Bezos was doing for what was it Blue or Origin?
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BWould you have done that where you.
Speaker AShot up into space, you float for.
Speaker BA little bit, just look outside the window and then you come back and.
Speaker AI know what he did.
Speaker BHonestly, I still wouldn't do that, bro.
Speaker AThe Jedi mind games that he played with all of us by sending Lauren Sanchez up there?
Speaker AI want to see her.
Speaker AI want to see the actual like, footage of her on the way up and on the way down.
Speaker AYeah, yeah, no one's seen that footage, right?
Speaker AFor all I know, that was the real Mars landing.
Speaker AShe's up in there going Whoo.
Speaker BRight as the Elon Musk has proposed using SpaceX Starship rocket for hypersonic long distance travel on Earth, aiming for trips like New York to Shanghai in under an hour.
Speaker AOkay, can.
Speaker ACan we just.
Speaker AYou said he wants to use a starship rocket.
Speaker AHe wants you to ride a rocket.
Speaker BHey, hold on, Elon.
Speaker BBefore you go start messing around with all this, just hook your boy up with some Starlink.
Speaker BHonestly, why aren't you offering Starlink one.
Speaker ATetra by upload download before you shoot me on rockets?
Speaker AThat's all I'm saying.
Speaker BThat's all I'm saying.
Speaker BYou'll gain my trust if you can give me Starlink in Anaheim.
Speaker BHow about that?
Speaker AI gotta be honest, I'd rather be teleported someplace because if I die during teleportation, I'm not lighting on fire.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AI don't want to blow up on a rocket.
Speaker BNo, obviously.
Speaker BCan you Rocket man?
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ACan you imagine that?
Speaker AThat's your obituary, Chris.
Speaker AAnd he be dying while riding a Starlink rocket.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AI mean, people could be like, in 100 years now, they'd be like, read my obituary and go, I love you, dog.
Speaker AWhy was he riding a rocket?
Speaker BWhy was he riding.
Speaker BExactly.
Speaker BI love you, dog.
Speaker BBut like, yeah, I let the first week go, we'd mourn, but then I'd have to.
Speaker BI'd have to roast you pretty hard for it.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BYou earned every bit of that.
Speaker AI always wanted to ride them.
Speaker ARocket.
Speaker BYe.
Speaker BThere you go.
Speaker BThat's what you get.
Speaker BSo many puns over there between his legs.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BFor so many.
Speaker AThe pocket rocket.
Speaker AThe pocket.
Speaker AAnd congratulations, you can't advertise this one.
Speaker ASensational.
Speaker AWhat is it?
Speaker AWhat's the.
Speaker AThe.
Speaker AYou think you have free speech.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AAnd then you realize you only have free speech that Google allows you to have.
Speaker BRight, Right.
Speaker BUntil.
Speaker BUntil you want to advertise and then it's like, no, you cannot.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AFor those of you who don't know, we have a parental discretion advisory on our podcast.
Speaker ANot only on all of the video streaming platforms, but certainly the audio streaming platforms.
Speaker AAnd I thought that was enough.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AWe have a disclosure.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AOn the podcast, because you know what?
Speaker AWe say some stuff sometimes that could be shocking.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ABut, like, nothing that I really feel is shocking content.
Speaker BNo, no, no.
Speaker AOur channel on YouTube has been labeled as shocking content, and it often prevents us from advertising because apparently we are offensive.
Speaker AYou.
Speaker BYou.
Speaker ALargely me and.
Speaker BAnd Rajeel.
Speaker AHonestly, there's no world where he could even be offensive.
Speaker AIf you tried, I swear he would call Somebody a name and giggle afterward.
Speaker BI'm just kidding.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ABut I'm just trying to say, like, look, here's the thing is I don't.
Speaker AI don't feel like Google should be.
Speaker AAnd I know what it is.
Speaker AIt's a money game.
Speaker ARight?
Speaker ALike, they, Their advertisers don't want certain words or certain discussions over certain topics to advertise their products on.
Speaker ASo they don't want to pimp our podcast.
Speaker AIt probably shouldn't say the word pimp, but pimp our podcast to them because we say some stuff that's a bit unfiltered.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ABut at the same time, you're going to limit our channel growth because we're honest and we talk like everybody else does, but we're just gonna.
Speaker AThe advertiser, everybody else wants to ignore it.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BWe talk like the people I need.
Speaker ABlack rifle coffee on the show.
Speaker AThey don't give a damn what I say.
Speaker ARight, exactly.
Speaker BThat's why.
Speaker AThat's.
Speaker BThe advertisers and the sponsors need to come out straight to the people that are keeping it real.
Speaker AI know, it's so.
Speaker AIt's so disingenuous, but, you know, hey, I'm here for it.
Speaker BWe still love you, Google.
Speaker AYeah, we don't have to stop because.
Speaker BYou'Re going to read the transcript.
Speaker ARead the transcript and then tell it.
Speaker ASo those who don't know, I was.
Speaker AI was complaining to Google vis a vis Google Ads about us in our show, and they literally highlighted all the expletives from the last episode.
Speaker BYou said it here, here, here.
Speaker AAt 29 seconds, you said this.
Speaker AAnd I'm like, oh, did I say that?
Speaker AI went back and listen to it.
Speaker BI'm like, damn it, I did.
Speaker AYeah, sorry.
Speaker AAll right, so let's talk about the 2019 repo spike.
Speaker AThe Fed had been shrinking its balance sheet since 2017.
Speaker A2019 rolls around, and by late 2019, bank reserves fell from about 2.8 trillion to 1.3 trillion, which meant that the banks didn't have enough liquidity to cover their margin calls.
Speaker AIf somebody were to call here and I know someone's going to say, hey, I saw the big short.
Speaker AThis is not quite the same thing.
Speaker AThey just want to give banks quick access to liquidity.
Speaker AAnd there are several other places to get it.
Speaker ABut this repo line has become the predominant one in recent years.
Speaker BThe banks of all sizes, more for.
Speaker ACommunity, regional banks, but certainly for banks of all sizes.
Speaker AYeah, okay.
Speaker BAll right.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AThe, The G sibs, the globally systematic, important banks typically have Other mechanisms and higher requirements.
Speaker BOh, you're telling me Jamie Dimon has other levers that he could pull.
Speaker AYou don't have to play by the same rules.
Speaker AHe out here doing his own thing.
Speaker BMakes sense.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker AI hear talking about the cockroaches.
Speaker BThe cockroaches are gonna come out.
Speaker BThat's what he said.
Speaker ASay something like that.
Speaker AHe did.
Speaker AYou know, it's crazy when you're so influential in a space.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AThat you can talk trash on it and everybody thinks it doesn't apply to you.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker BHe's talking.
Speaker BHe's literally talking about his peers.
Speaker BAnd his peers are still going to come meet him.
Speaker BHello, Mr. Diamond.
Speaker BNice to meet you, Mr. Diamond.
Speaker AIt's like this banking industry is so corrupt.
Speaker AI don't trust any of these dudes.
Speaker BYeah, all the cockroaches are gonna come out.
Speaker AAren't you a banker, Jamie?
Speaker ABut I'm not like them.
Speaker AThey're not like us.
Speaker BNo, they're not like us.
Speaker AWhere do you get a banking reference in a Kendrick Lavar?
Speaker BYou ain't going to get anywhere else.
Speaker AThat's only the higher standard.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ASo then unexpectedly, overnight repo rates exploded from about 2% to 10% plus in a single day.
Speaker ATranslated loosely, this meant that banks suddenly didn't have enough spare cash to lend each other overnight.
Speaker AThe overnight borrowings.
Speaker AThe Fed had to step in with an emergency repo operations to calm things down.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker BI don't think a lot of people realize that this is how banks operate.
Speaker AI think some people do and they think that there's like this perpetual money glitch that's built into banks.
Speaker AIt's not quite that simple.
Speaker ABut yeah, there's a lot of support for the Federal.
Speaker AFrom the Federal Reserve, fractional banking and whatnot.
Speaker AYeah, yeah.
Speaker AThat whole conversation is.
Speaker AThere's a lot of hyperbole built into some of the things that people say here.
Speaker ABut suffice it to say, banks can borrow a lot and leverage is part of the game.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ASo this became problematic as you might imagine the moment that the Fed.
Speaker AThe Fed had an important lesson here.
Speaker AThe symptom, the system can go from ample reserves to not enough very quickly.
Speaker AYou don't know when you cross that line until something breaks.
Speaker ASo now people.
Speaker APeople start looking at QT a little differently.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AYou can't just run the money out of the system.
Speaker AAnd that's what we saw the Fed do today.
Speaker AThe Fed can't safely drain liquidity below a fuzzy threshold of.
Speaker ACall it about 2.5 to $3 trillion in reserves today.
Speaker ASo going back to that, you know, 900 billion.
Speaker BOkay.
Speaker AThat's effectively 3x at a minimum of where we were then.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker ASo you have to keep more this, you're only, you're limited as to how much you can run this down from a Fed monetary policy perspective, which is why you haven't seen them really utilize their balance sheet to change the economy.
Speaker AIt's just been the Fed funds rate.
Speaker BSo we talked about this on previous episodes where, you know, part of what banks do is when they're holding on to a lot of cash, they're just, banks are like everybody else.
Speaker BThey're not just going to sit on the cash, they're going to invest their cash.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AAnd then investments, usually securities or stock.
Speaker BSecurities or stock or treasury or Treasury Treasuries.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BAnd whether they're short term or long term, I don't know what they tend to favor or if they like to balance them all out.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker ABut keep on.
Speaker AA bank that's of suitable size and scale will have a treasurer whose sole job it is to manage their cash in this way.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker AThey're going to have some longer duration product that pays a little more and some shorter duration product pays a little less.
Speaker ABut they need to have access to, to this and they manage the maturities of that debt.
Speaker ASo they want to know when it's rolling off and when they can redeploy that capital in other places.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AThat's the sole job.
Speaker AI mean there's some other functions, but it's primarily the job of a treasurer.
Speaker BSo think about it.
Speaker BSo prior to the rate hiking cycle where Treasuries and then ultimately followed suit and started to, you know, creep up and banks had all these, you know, low Treasuries on their books and unfortunately had these undervalued Treasuries and unrealized losses against them.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BThat people were counting against them.
Speaker BAre they going to be safe as they let these things run off and now, you know, they don't go back into that game.
Speaker ASo I think what you're kind of loosely alluding to is the unrealized losses that were in a lot of the bank's balance sheets and you had these in a number of different places.
Speaker ANot only their stock investments, which is what effectively took Silicon Valley bank down.
Speaker BAs long as they don't realize it, are they going to be okay?
Speaker AAs long as you don't have a capital call, a headline risk or something that calls people to the carpet to try to get all their money out at the same time.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker BAs long as you avoid that headline risk.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AAnd there's only so much you can borrow.
Speaker ABut the crazy thing about being a bank is they're not dissimilar from you, me, anybody else.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ALike the old saying is, is, you know, you can always get money until you need it.
Speaker AYeah, yeah, right.
Speaker AAnd the reason why is like, banks can borrow from all these lines of credit, whether they're pledging to the Federal Home Loan bank or to these repo lines of the Fed Federal Reserve Bank.
Speaker AThe problem for them is, is as your bank starts to deteriorate financially, they cut those lines back, limiting your liquidity and your access to additional capital overnight.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ASo then you as a bank get, you know, kind of pressure points all the way around you until you're eventually choked out.
Speaker ARight, right.
Speaker ASo it isn't.
Speaker AIs like free money like everybody thinks it is, that there's rules, limitations, and there's lots of checks and balances in the system to ensure that money, because it's public money, doesn't get wasted.
Speaker AYeah, yeah, yeah, right.
Speaker AThe fdic, the whole point of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation is to ensure the deposits so that you, the people.
Speaker AThe people have, you know, a faith and confidence in the banking sector.
Speaker BYeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker BOkay.
Speaker AAnd that's a really important part of this whole thing.
Speaker ASo the Fed can't safely drain this liquidity.
Speaker AThat's why they built this standing repo facility.
Speaker ANow, something that you might hear known as the SRF, but it's the repo facility.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AIn 2021.
Speaker AAnd they encourage banks to tap it.
Speaker APost contagion period, all these banks started to fail.
Speaker ASo banks were all going in and they were telling them, they were calling them up, saying, hey, hey, hey.
Speaker ABorrow overnight.
Speaker AYeah, borrow overnight.
Speaker ABorrow overnight.
Speaker BOkay.
Speaker AThey made the borrowing very attractive and they created this, like, teat.
Speaker BOkay.
Speaker AEverybody wanted to suck on that tea because you say, hey, you can have some tea.
Speaker AYou should have some tea.
Speaker AYou need some tea.
Speaker BIt's good for you.
Speaker ASo now you're like, it's midnight, it's nutritious.
Speaker AI want some tea.
Speaker AGive me some tea.
Speaker AI want to do in the E. I didn't though.
Speaker BAlmost.
Speaker BSo a lot of nutritional value.
Speaker AYou've got to provide graphic imagery to really convey the emotion.
Speaker BThey gotta understand why.
Speaker BRight, Exactly.
Speaker AI'm just.
Speaker ALook, I guarantee you someone somewhere is going to get into a conversation with someone and go, oh, yeah, this is a teen example.
Speaker BThis is.
Speaker BThis is.
Speaker BThis is what they were talking about.
Speaker BRight?
Speaker AThink back, let me Explain the repo facility to you, America.
Speaker AIt's about teats, right?
Speaker BSo, and this was something that wasn't always popular.
Speaker BThis is not how it was always done before, but over recent years or how, like how long would you say?
Speaker AThere was always a need for it on some level, but it certainly grew to a large size and then the dependency on that as a facility, you know, started to creep up.
Speaker AThere's a lot of people who had money there, I think a lot of banks.
Speaker ASo a lot of people.
Speaker AThere's a whole cohort here.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker AAnd I'm just going to call this what it is and I'm going to get all sorts of flame for it.
Speaker ASo I'm sure I'm going to make this a clip on X.
Speaker APeople were like, there's, there's a bunch of bank nerds, okay?
Speaker AAnd I mean this with like love and respect because I'm one of them.
Speaker ABut there's a lot of like banking nerds on social media who are like bank analysts who use, you know, fake names and they kind of blend into the bots and they have whatever, you know, BS handles and they do all these things they couldn't do behind a real name in a authenticated account.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AThey talk all the.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AAnd they all think they're savants when it comes to the banking sector.
Speaker ASo what they'll do is, is, you know, someone will post something, they'll go, oh, look at this bank.
Speaker ALook at how much they're borrowing from the Fed on the repo line.
Speaker AThey must be in trouble.
Speaker AOoh, they're borrowing all this money overnight.
Speaker AAnd it's like, bro, the Fed called me and told me to do it.
Speaker AWhat you talking about?
Speaker BRight?
Speaker AYeah, but you can't say that publicly.
Speaker BTrue.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ABecause even if you're not a publicly traded institution, you still have a fiduciary responsibility to keep that non public information to yourself.
Speaker AAnd they're not privy to the financial decisions that you're making.
Speaker BTrue.
Speaker ASo you got all these guys who are like going around looking all this stuff and there's always buzzwords in this sector and damn it, there's another one going around right now that's just bothering me.
Speaker AI mean, it's not one thing, it's another.
Speaker AAnd there's always these buzzwords that.
Speaker ASo I'll give you some great examples and I'll give you, I'll get to the one that's going on right now.
Speaker ANumber one, everybody's talking about rare earth right now on cnbc.
Speaker AOkay, you go on to cnbc.
Speaker AOoh.
Speaker AAre you in Rare Earth?
Speaker ARare Earth?
Speaker AOh, my God.
Speaker AAre you in Rare Earth?
Speaker AOkay, let me tell you about Rare Earth Earth.
Speaker AOkay?
Speaker AThey talked to a woman who ran a rare Earth company who's got like seven employees the other day.
Speaker AI'm like, y' all struggling that hard to find somebody to talk to?
Speaker BOkay.
Speaker AAnd even during her interview, she's like, I can't believe I'm here.
Speaker BI'm like, me neither.
Speaker BRight, right.
Speaker ABut that.
Speaker AThat's the new, like, buzzword that everybody's kind of jumping on because there's some government reasons and we're trying to bring everything back onshore and tariffs and all this other stuff.
Speaker ASo you want to get minerals and products from the United States, whatever.
Speaker AOkay, fine.
Speaker AThen there's.
Speaker AI think it's non.
Speaker AThere's the.
Speaker AI can't remember the actual vernacular.
Speaker AIt's like a four letter abbreviated thing.
Speaker ABut basically, the new.
Speaker AThe new buzz is like, banks that have loans to non financial institutions.
Speaker BOkay.
Speaker ALike mortgage servicers and mortgage companies and stuff like that.
Speaker BOkay?
Speaker ASo now all these bank nerds on X are going through, going, oh, my God, look at this exposure to this mortgage.
Speaker AThis bank's gonna fail.
Speaker AAnd you're like, based on what?
Speaker BRight?
Speaker ABased on what?
Speaker BYeah, exactly.
Speaker ABecause it's a buzzword now.
Speaker AAnd you think you know everything.
Speaker AAnd here's the sad part.
Speaker AIf you're the bank, you can't even def.
Speaker BRight?
Speaker ALike, I see this on Twitter and I've been attacked on Twitter.
Speaker AYou can go on Twitter X right now and you can go look at it and you can see all the stuff that I responded to casually.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AUsually it's just an eggplant emoji, but every once in a while.
Speaker ABut, you know, it's just.
Speaker BOh, they know they could.
Speaker BThey could take a shot and poke at the bear and because they want.
Speaker AYou to say something you can't say.
Speaker ASo they go, oh, my God, look, Chris, that's what you shouldn't say.
Speaker AYeah, I'm gonna call the SEC right now.
Speaker AAnd I'm like, from what, your anonymous account chief?
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker ARight now, what you're gonna do?
Speaker BYeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker AYou know, Big Willie 45.
Speaker AIs that what you're gonna do?
Speaker ABig Willie?
Speaker ABig Willie style?
Speaker AAnd it's like they all come off like, ah.
Speaker ALike some of them are very educated, so I'm not knocking all of them.
Speaker AAnd some of them are very articulate, but at the same time, it's become like this meme troll game.
Speaker AThis is why so many people that get high up in companies.
Speaker AJust don't actively use social media because people are trying to bait you.
Speaker BIt's kind of gross, man.
Speaker AIt is gross.
Speaker AYou know, I'm at the point now where I firmly believe.
Speaker AAnd this is.
Speaker AThis is a real number.
Speaker AI've thought this through.
Speaker A80%.
Speaker A80% of social media is not real humans.
Speaker ABots.
Speaker ABots has to be.
Speaker ARight?
Speaker AControlled by one person or one group.
Speaker BIt's gotta be, dude, it's gotta be.
Speaker BI believe it.
Speaker AYou can't have people this stupid.
Speaker BNo, I mean, it's not that, okay.
Speaker BWhen they're the anonymous accounts sometimes and.
Speaker BAnd they're really going in and poking the bear like this.
Speaker BI don't feel like this is a bot.
Speaker AHave you ever.
Speaker ALook, this is a personal favorite of mine.
Speaker ARajeel, I hope you've done this.
Speaker AI hope everybody listening to the show does this at some point in life.
Speaker AI will bring some joy to your day.
Speaker AOkay?
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker AI'm gonna make everyone's life better.
Speaker BComment section.
Speaker AThe comment section is sensational.
Speaker ABut that most people stop there.
Speaker BThat's where I stop.
Speaker AAnd you're missing out on the good, good.
Speaker AReally?
Speaker AOh, yeah.
Speaker BForums.
Speaker AYou're stopping short of the orgasm.
Speaker AOkay?
Speaker AYou're not.
Speaker AYou're not getting there.
Speaker AYou're not climaxing.
Speaker AOkay?
Speaker ASo here's what I like to do.
Speaker AOkay?
Speaker ASo recently, I think it was complex, posted a picture of Megan Fox at some reunion for some movie she did.
Speaker AOkay, Right.
Speaker AAnd then somebody else's account that I followed.
Speaker BWho.
Speaker AWho goes into the comments section.
Speaker AHe did this thing that he always does is he'll look at the negative comments that people make.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker AAnd then he'll go look at their profile pictures, okay?
Speaker ATheir.
Speaker ATheir pages.
Speaker AIt is wild, bro.
Speaker BAnd then what?
Speaker BWhat is it?
Speaker ASo all these people were track.
Speaker AThis is what he does.
Speaker AHe does with athletes, but he did it on this one.
Speaker BYou have the audacity to leave this negative comment if you're like this.
Speaker AShe's not that hot.
Speaker AAnd you go to their page and you're like, bro, she's 10x better than you, at minimum.
Speaker AI mean, look.
Speaker AOh, like, her implants are so raw.
Speaker AAnd you're just like, who made you the judge?
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AAnd it's like, you look at these people's profiles and you're like, either you're not a human.
Speaker BOkay, Honestly, how do we get to this point, though?
Speaker BHow do we get to this point where there's a satisfaction that people feel when they're so unhappy with their own personal life that this is what they resort to.
Speaker AExtremism.
Speaker AWe got some extremism.
Speaker AExtremism creates factions.
Speaker AFactions create loyalty.
Speaker AAnd then you start defending something solely because you feel like you have to defend the loyalty of what it is that you're your allegiances to.
Speaker AAnd then you just fight regardless.
Speaker AI mean, you see this in politics all the time.
Speaker AI. I can't.
Speaker BI know this isn't a new phenomenon, but I'm just saying, like, it's just so gross to me.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BAnd it's, it's this type of, of culture.
Speaker AIt's always been this way, though.
Speaker AIt's just visible now.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AIt's visible to the masses.
Speaker AI mean, so.
Speaker AAnd the crazy part about this is, is like, you don't have to believe in conspiracies.
Speaker BIt's so unhealthy too.
Speaker AThere's corruption.
Speaker AOh, dude.
Speaker AIt's wildly healthy, but it's unhealthy for the kids, man.
Speaker BMan.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker ALike, I look at our kids and I think to myself, like, this trickles.
Speaker BDown to them, you know, eventually at some point.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BAnd this is the conversation that I had, I actually have, of my wife's friend's husband.
Speaker BI sat with him at a baby shower a couple months ago and he's got a pretty high position at Blizzard, right?
Speaker ANo, right across your place.
Speaker AYeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker BBall so hard.
Speaker BAnd he actually, he may have moved on from that position, but he.
Speaker BAnyways, he was there in the gaming, in the gaming industry for a long time.
Speaker BAnd I was telling him, like, look, I have a really hard time allowing my son to play online games.
Speaker BYou know, I.
Speaker BHe does play Minecraft.
Speaker BI let him create and explore, but I'm not ready to introduce him to that world where he can interact with other people.
Speaker AScary.
Speaker BVery scary.
Speaker BRight?
Speaker BAnd he's like, look, I understand, I understand the concern, but what you also have to keep in mind is you have to teach them how to navigate this world safely.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BAs early as possible.
Speaker BBecause you don't want this to be a foreign concept of when he's a teenager.
Speaker ASo my wife and I had this conversation because Roblox became a big problem, bro.
Speaker BThe Roblox situation is out of control.
Speaker AIt's disgusting.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BI've seen people literally create new profiles go online, and within seconds they.
Speaker BYou could literally spot, you know, all the.
Speaker BThe creepers.
Speaker BWe'll call them creepers.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AWell, so this is a problem 100%.
Speaker ASo we got.
Speaker AWe just deleted the app.
Speaker ABut then I tried to sit our son down, who does play Minecraft.
Speaker AAnd articulate some of this to him without being overtly, like, informative.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BThey're not going to understand.
Speaker BYeah, yeah.
Speaker AAnd then I thought to my.
Speaker AAnd so Joanna, my wife, and I had the same conversation where we were like, okay, look, like at some point in time, you can't separate him out from the world entirely.
Speaker AYou've got to give him the skills to be able to differentiate good and bad.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AYou don't want him to be naive.
Speaker BNo, this is.
Speaker BAnd this is a really good point.
Speaker BRight?
Speaker BBecause literally we're.
Speaker BI'm having this.
Speaker BThis goes into everything, like sports, too, Right.
Speaker BI remember enrolling our kids in Jiu Jitsu and also now coaching them in basketball and coach my daughter from the sidelines in soccer.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker BIs you can't shout out at them and tell them what to do because they're always going to rely on you to make the decision for them.
Speaker AOh, yeah.
Speaker BThey have to learn to make those mistakes.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BAnd think on their own.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BSo I was literally.
Speaker BI was coaching Adam and Jiu Jitsu back in the day because no one wants to see their son get their, like, ass kicked.
Speaker ARight?
Speaker BAnd I'm seeing him, like.
Speaker BAnd I'm like, hey, Adam, hit him with the move.
Speaker BAnd then the coach had to walk over to me is like, hey, if you do this for him, he's not thinking this through.
Speaker BYou have to let go.
Speaker AYeah, right?
Speaker BAnd I'm like, that makes complete sense.
Speaker ACarter went to Jiu Jitsu for a long.
Speaker AJiu Jitsu for a long time.
Speaker AAnd in some martial arts stuff, I think Ryan went with.
Speaker AWith Carter, Jill son for a while, too.
Speaker AAnd it.
Speaker AIt's.
Speaker AIt's hard to watch.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AAnd you as a parent, naturally, like, you know, roll over, roll over, you know, and you want to be like, you know, rear naked choke.
Speaker BYeah, take his back.
Speaker BHe's not blue, so.
Speaker ABut you want to do that stuff.
Speaker BBut same thing with gaming, right?
Speaker BIt is.
Speaker AIt is.
Speaker AAnd that's the scary part.
Speaker AAnd, like, so I think this through because I know what my wife and I do as adults.
Speaker AYou know, last night we were sitting in bed.
Speaker AThis is a real story, okay?
Speaker AAnd I don't want you guys to visualize anything.
Speaker AWe were all fully dressed, so we were sitting in bed, right?
Speaker AWe're getting ready to go to bed, and.
Speaker AAnd I look over, she's on her phone, and I'm on my phone, and I'm like, yo, this is.
Speaker AThis is, like, normal, like today, but it's not normal at all.
Speaker BHow do you feel about it, there is a work for it called phubbing.
Speaker AI'm sorry, what now?
Speaker BFubby.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BWhy are you fubbing, bro?
Speaker AAre you with me?
Speaker BHey, you'll be flubbing.
Speaker BOh yeah.
Speaker BYou'll be fuzzing.
Speaker AWe'll be fubbing.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BI know.
Speaker BWhen you guys are just on your phone instead of conversating with each other, bro.
Speaker AI've been, I've never heard that.
Speaker BOh, I've never heard that term.
Speaker BBut like you see it at restaurants all the time.
Speaker BYou walk into a restaurant and literally couples are out there sitting and they're both on their phones.
Speaker BFubbing involves what?
Speaker BFubbing was ignoring someone.
Speaker BNot ignoring.
Speaker BPrioritizing your phone.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BIt is the act of choosing to look at your phone instead of engaging in face to face interaction.
Speaker AThat's so true.
Speaker BI mean, this is so common.
Speaker BThis is not new.
Speaker BBut it's.
Speaker AYeah, but it's weird, dude.
Speaker AI don't like it.
Speaker BI hate it.
Speaker ALet me, let me give you, let me give you both something I wanted because this, this is a trip to me.
Speaker AAnd I, I, I love technology.
Speaker ALike I love, yeah, yeah.
Speaker ABut I love technology in a way that I want it to enhance the human experience.
Speaker BOkay.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ASo to me, there are some parts of technology that do not enhance the human experience.
Speaker AAnd there's certain parts of enhancing the human experience actually take you away from being human.
Speaker ASo, and I'll give some examples here.
Speaker ADo I like the idea of AI being tapped into my brain?
Speaker ANot unless it's going to give me functionality that I lost.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AIf I can't walk, great.
Speaker AIf I have some cognitive disability or some vision problem, great.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker ABut if I just want to have access to everything, be the smartest person alive, I think I lose humanity in doing that.
Speaker BTrue.
Speaker ABut when it comes to today and everyday stuff, I love the idea of the meta display glasses.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AI love the idea of the Apple watch and tracking my metrics.
Speaker AAnd the criticism of that is you don't want to be a slave to the data.
Speaker AI get that, I do.
Speaker ABut I think the idea of tracking what I do and knowing my body and being healthier is important to me.
Speaker BOf course.
Speaker BDinner?
Speaker BOf course.
Speaker BYeah, yeah, absolutely.
Speaker BSo if you use it, if you use it for, for those purposes.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BBut I feel like there is a give and a take and sometimes it's, it's happening to us subconsciously.
Speaker AAnd where's the inflection point though?
Speaker AWhere's too much?
Speaker BWhere's, where's, where's too much?
Speaker BLiterally you could be sitting Like, I can come into the studio today, right?
Speaker BAnd I'll be like, bro, check out this new Sora 2 video.
Speaker BHow hilarious is this?
Speaker BRight?
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BAnd without you even reacting, you already got in your mind the Sora 2 video that you remember, and you're.
Speaker BLet's move on to this.
Speaker BLet me show you the one that I saw.
Speaker BWhereas, like, back in the day, do you remember there was that website, Ebomb's World?
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BYou remember that?
Speaker BI remember somebody introducing that to me for the first time.
Speaker BIt's like, it was like, I don't know, a shocking video or something funny.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker BAnd they.
Speaker BThey showed it to me.
Speaker BAnd I remember we saw it and then we all sat and talked about it and laughed about it.
Speaker BIt's like, okay, we're engaging, right?
Speaker BSo that's enhancing our life.
Speaker BBut now it's gotten to the point where you show me something shocking.
Speaker BLet me show you something shocking.
Speaker BLet me one up you.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ARogan does this with his boys where they.
Speaker AThey do it and he even admits it's sick.
Speaker BIt's.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BIt's disgusting.
Speaker AIt's.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ABut here's my problem is, is there's only so many red dots on apps on your phone you can attend to in a day.
Speaker BNo, I know.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AYou know, and everybody's gamifying their apps in.
Speaker AIn the way they're communicating with you.
Speaker ASo everybody's trying to get your attention.
Speaker AAnd it's.
Speaker AIt's attention media now, not social media.
Speaker ABut it's not just that.
Speaker AIt's everything around you at all times.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BAnd it's all falling into.
Speaker BAnd it's.
Speaker BTry.
Speaker BHonestly, we all see it as them tracking our data.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BBut really what they're tracking is our behaviors.
Speaker AReally building models of us.
Speaker BYeah, exactly.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AYou see this LinkedIn recently, this whole thing that came up, everyone's talking about deleting their account before November, I think, like 10th or something.
Speaker BOh, no, I didn't hear about this.
Speaker ASo.
Speaker AAnd I don't know, I haven't vetted this, so grain of Salt, but apparently LinkedIn is scraping everybody's profiles to get all of their background information and all of, like, their resume and everything else to be able to sell that data and build models off of it.
Speaker ASo think about this.
Speaker AI want to know what the education pedigree is for.
Speaker AEverybody lives in Orange County, California, that has, you know, this professional background.
Speaker AI mean, when you combine that and people put this on there voluntarily and making it look cool.
Speaker ABecause that's the new resume.
Speaker ARight?
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ASo then you can scrape that.
Speaker AWhy should I?
Speaker AThere you go.
Speaker ADelete my account before November 3rd.
Speaker AUnder the new terms of service.
Speaker AOn November 3rd, LinkedIn takes a snapshot of everyone's entire profile, all personal data, including personal messages, geolocation and photos and videos, and uses it to train its own.
Speaker AFor now, AI LLMs, learning language models and vaguely will pass your personal information onto third parties at LinkedIn's discretion for research and AI training purposes and to prevent you breaking laws.
Speaker AQuestion mark.
Speaker AActually, in the terms of service, and not to mention, LinkedIn will be able to sell personal data in and of itself.
Speaker AAnd I don't know if you've ever.
Speaker AAs an executive public traded company, I probably got more of this than most.
Speaker AAnd this is not a brag.
Speaker AIt's aggravating.
Speaker ASorry, I know.
Speaker ATime stamp.
Speaker ANo, no.
Speaker A102, baby.
Speaker AIt's aggravating because what happens is you get, you get people trying to contact you and they're, they're using your personal information against you.
Speaker BOh, okay.
Speaker AFor us in particular, especially the three of us, our voices are on a podcast weekly.
Speaker AThere's a breadth of information out there.
Speaker AOur images are in 4K in front of people.
Speaker AThis stuff's out there.
Speaker AIf somebody wanted to create an AI version of us, they could.
Speaker AAnd Rajille, you may not know this, but when Saeed and I started the show, part of the draw of this show, and we talked about this in my garage back in the day, was we knew that AI was going to grow to a point and this technology to grow to a point that should something happen to Saeed and I, our kids would have a baseline of who and what we were.
Speaker AThey would hear our conversations, they would understand.
Speaker ABecause you think about the parent like your grandparents.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ALike you might have a memory that's imprinted on you as a parent of your grandparents.
Speaker AAnd that's sensational.
Speaker AYeah, but that wasn't their entire personality and that wasn't how they thought.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AWe can leave our kids this insight into who we were and how we thought in a way our parents never could.
Speaker BYeah, exactly.
Speaker AAnd we knew when we started the show, success or failure, that the longer we did it, the more.
Speaker AThink about this.
Speaker AThink about your kid coming in like 10, 15, 20 years.
Speaker AGod forbid something happens to one of us.
Speaker AAnd they can see hundreds of hours of dad.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BOh, yeah, yeah.
Speaker BI mean, I, I would like for us to eventually go back to like two episodes a week.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BWhere we could have, you know, more conversations.
Speaker BI mean, we have these conversations from time to time.
Speaker BWhere we talk about real world stuff.
Speaker BBut these are the types of conversations, too, that I want them to also lean on and learn from.
Speaker AThey're valuable, right?
Speaker BThere's.
Speaker BThey're super.
Speaker BThey're super valuable because I remember when my first was born, holding him in the hospital room and even again with my daughter thinking to myself, oh, my God, there are so many lessons I want to teach you.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BBut at what time?
Speaker BYou know, and you have to, like, literally hope that it comes to fruition that you can actually, you know, see that through.
Speaker BSo.
Speaker BYeah, this is, this is an amazing gift to give them one day.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BSo I actually saw a video earlier today about this son finding a video of him, his dad giving him the Call of Duty game.
Speaker BOkay.
Speaker AAnd.
Speaker BAnd like, his dad passed away in 2023, so it was like a beautiful thing for him to remember.
Speaker BOh.
Speaker BOh, you got it right here.
Speaker BOh, wow, look at this.
Speaker BOh, my gosh.
Speaker BJust that hug right there, you know?
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ARocking it.
Speaker AThe.
Speaker AThe Bluetooth headset.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BPen inside the polo.
Speaker BOld school.
Speaker BEasy, G. Dang, man.
Speaker BYeah, man.
Speaker BYou never know, right?
Speaker BThat's right.
Speaker BYou never know.
Speaker AWell, I had a lot more to go into with the banking stuff, but frankly, it's been a long day and the press conference was interesting.
Speaker AI do want to hit some highlight points that I think are valuable for everybody listening and thinking about this as we go through.
Speaker AThe FOMC is really limited on what they can do from a quantitative ease and quantitative tightening position now because of the banking sector, and there's a whole reverse repo line, like how much they.
Speaker BCan help fix the problem and what.
Speaker AHow much they can help fix the problem with things outside of interest rates.
Speaker ABut they're at a really weird paradigm now, and we've talked about it a lot on the show and there's no, no reason why we shouldn't talk about it now.
Speaker AAnd that paradigm is jobs seem to be in jeopardy.
Speaker AWe all feel that it's real.
Speaker AYou know, it.
Speaker AThey can say what they want.
Speaker AData wise, it's real, it's meaningful.
Speaker ARajill, I don't know if you know this.
Speaker AHave you seen around a neighborhood, there's that little robot rolling around?
Speaker BOh, yeah, there's a few.
Speaker AWhat are those?
Speaker BRobots deliver food.
Speaker BNo, no, they don't.
Speaker BThey don't have the.
Speaker BThe cooler.
Speaker AI think they're security or something.
Speaker BI think so too.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ASecurity, yeah, because they have a blue light on them.
Speaker BThere's this new robot that's now being sold that can do your household chores too.
Speaker AYeah, I think is what it's called.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BNeil Neo.
Speaker BYeah, yeah.
Speaker BMatrix.
Speaker ANo, I mean come on.
Speaker BThat's what they went for.
Speaker ABut that also scares the hell out of me.
Speaker AYou seen the thing, dude.
Speaker BAnd then they'll come to your house and train it.
Speaker AYeah, I don't want that.
Speaker BWhy would I want that?
Speaker ANo, this is what I mean by does not enhance the human condition.
Speaker ANo, okay, I know this is iRobot argument.
Speaker AThat's fine.
Speaker AWill Smith pre slap.
Speaker ABut you know, we can talk about Will Smith pre slap.
Speaker BThat was the cool one.
Speaker AYou know what I would love to see?
Speaker ADo you know what?
Speaker AI hope someone from Will Smith's camp listens to this show because I gotta.
Speaker AI got a solution to this problem for everybody.
Speaker BWhat to fix?
Speaker AI like.
Speaker AI liked Will Smith's movies.
Speaker AOkay, you liked Will Smith's movies?
Speaker BOkay.
Speaker ALove.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker BNo, I didn't just like love them.
Speaker AOkay, one okay.
Speaker AOne X Neo is twenty thousand dollar home.
Speaker AThat's all it is.
Speaker ATwenty thousand dollars.
Speaker BDang.
Speaker BBro ball so hard.
Speaker ANo, no, I just expected like that's all it is.
Speaker AI mean, come on, man.
Speaker AIn a robot, you with like a face and hands and you can water plants and stuff.
Speaker BTo do what?
Speaker BBro, bro, you can't water your own plants.
Speaker AYou're the housekeeper.
Speaker BNo, don't.
Speaker AOops.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ADamn it.
Speaker BBut I'll say this.
Speaker BI did.
Speaker BI did, okay?
Speaker BI did.
Speaker AI.
Speaker AHow much does the housekeeper cop cost per month?
Speaker BI've come once a.
Speaker BOnce a week, probably no less than 150, 180 bucks a month.
Speaker BTwice a month, probably 300.
Speaker AI would assume twice a month.
Speaker AI don't know.
Speaker AWe have one that comes I think twice a month.
Speaker AI have no idea.
Speaker AYou have no idea how much.
Speaker AThere's questions you don't want to ask.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AOkay, so I just don't even ask.
Speaker BYeah, yeah.
Speaker AWonderful Ukrainian woman, sweetheart.
Speaker AI love this lady.
Speaker AI accidentally scare her a lot.
Speaker AI'll come home early.
Speaker BShe's like, oh my God.
Speaker BOh really?
Speaker AOh yeah.
Speaker AShe's a beautiful lady.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ABut this robot scares the hell out of me.
Speaker ALook, why'd you give it eyes like that?
Speaker BDude, I know that's.
Speaker AHonestly give it a mouth, man.
Speaker BIt looks like it's ready to go fencing.
Speaker AYeah, I don't like that.
Speaker BLike it.
Speaker BJust pick up a sword.
Speaker AI woke up with that thing looking at me.
Speaker AThat's you.
Speaker BYou've seen the videos of the.
Speaker BOf the robots that they've been working on.
Speaker BThey just go rogue and.
Speaker BYeah, yeah, you know, say what makes Me feel like.
Speaker AAnd here's the problem, okay?
Speaker AEvery once in a while I have beef with AI.
Speaker ALike, I'll be on Chat.
Speaker BGPT.
Speaker AChat.
Speaker AGPT will get sassy with me.
Speaker BChat CBC gets assassin.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BOh, I showed you the.
Speaker BI read you the.
Speaker BWhat happened on this show.
Speaker BRight?
Speaker BOr it got sassy with me.
Speaker AIt's just I don't want this robot against.
Speaker AHey, yo, robot.
Speaker AMake me some dinner.
Speaker ANope.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AYou only paid $22,000 for me, right?
Speaker BThat's an upgrade.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AChief should have bought the deluxe model, right?
Speaker AYou know what's going to happen like this.
Speaker AWe're getting too far into this dystopian future now.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd what if he goes, let me sleep in the same room as you.
Speaker AYeah, I'm going to watch you sleep.
Speaker ANope.
Speaker ANo, no.
Speaker AYou're downstairs, bro.
Speaker BThat's the only way I want to.
Speaker AI want a cage.
Speaker BI got to protect you.
Speaker ALike, I don't want that thing rolling around at night on its own.
Speaker BI know.
Speaker ADid you fart, sir?
Speaker ALike, I don't want that.
Speaker AAre you.
Speaker AAre you having digestive issues?
Speaker AYou know what?
Speaker AYou can go back to your cage.
Speaker BYeah, you're right.
Speaker AI'm crate trained that thing.
Speaker BYou're late on your schedule.
Speaker BYou should have gone to the restaurant by now.
Speaker BWhat happened?
Speaker BWhat's going on?
Speaker AI need you to wait in the garage.
Speaker AOkay?
Speaker ANeo, just let me know.
Speaker BBut imagine, you know that's how they're going to start selling this stuff is they're going to use fear.
Speaker BYeah, well, I mean, they're going to use prevention.
Speaker BBaymax.
Speaker BI. I feel Baymaxes.
Speaker BYou see a Baymax?
Speaker AI see Baymax is fat.
Speaker AAnd fat is cute and.
Speaker BAnd really nice.
Speaker BHonestly, Baymax was probably like one.
Speaker BOne of the greater characters of Disney.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ABut Baymax is also a giant balloon.
Speaker AYou can stab Baymax and he gonna.
Speaker AHe ain't gonna do a new.
Speaker ANo, he won't.
Speaker AYeah, the other robot was jacked.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BHonestly, it was jacked.
Speaker AI can't have that Bruce Lee looking robot in my house.
Speaker ADang.
Speaker AIt's just not.
Speaker ANot the same thing.
Speaker BNot happening, bro.
Speaker ANo.
Speaker AShout out for the Baymax reference though.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ASo, you know, you see these robots rolling around a neighborhood, right?
Speaker AAnd you know, the unemployment's a real thing.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AYou know that.
Speaker AYou know, that was somebody's job.
Speaker AI'm assuming it's a security robot.
Speaker ARegil and I are kind of on the same page there.
Speaker BYeah, I think so.
Speaker BBecause it's usually on the corners.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AAnd I've seen it just rolling on the neighborhood.
Speaker AOkay, that's weird.
Speaker ASo did somebody normally roll around in like a, an older car like with a little security magnet thing on the side of it and like stayed up all night long and that person doesn't have a job.
Speaker ANow is that we're doing right?
Speaker BI mean Amazon recently came out and said that they plan on replacing 14,000.
Speaker ANo more way more than the original quotes are.
Speaker A30,000.
Speaker AThey're only doing right now 14.
Speaker A14.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BBut they're gonna do more and more.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BWith robots.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BI mean.
Speaker ASo you can't tell me that unemployment is going to stay stable.
Speaker AAnd I think that's disconnected on one hand.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker AWe the market say great.
Speaker AThe stock market's lifting the all time highs because of AI technology.
Speaker ANvidia is at an all time high for a stock with their market cap 5 trillion.
Speaker AI think whatever it was and just made me nauseous this morning.
Speaker AOkay, fine, whatever.
Speaker AAll right.
Speaker ABut then you go oh the job market's fine.
Speaker AIt's a little weak.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AHe blames immigration like bruh, come on, stop my guy.
Speaker AIt's holiday.
Speaker BDo you feel like seasonal?
Speaker BDo you feel like there's people out there that are like almost banking on an AI bubble?
Speaker BSo be it could and pops would like they feel like.
Speaker AYou mean is there a Michael Burry who's going to short the AI bubble market?
Speaker BNo, no, no, no, no.
Speaker BActual, actual everyday middle class, lower income class people that are praying for an AI bubble.
Speaker BSo they, they feel like my job is safe.
Speaker AMaybe.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AI mean here, here's the problem though is, is that we somebody made this argument today.
Speaker AIt's actually on the, on the, on the live that I did.
Speaker AThis is actually a good argument but I disagree with it conclusion they said this is different than the 19 late 1990s, early 2000s or the tech bubble because these companies are all profitable.
Speaker AAnd to that I say is it different?
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BThe way they kind of do it right.
Speaker BLike they, they borrow money to pay this other tech company and it's all kind of like they're putting money into each other.
Speaker AThat was the original show notes for today but I pulled it out because I pull out but I, I actually took a different tact on the show I think is valuable to talk about.
Speaker AI think here's the problem is if unlike the 2000s.com bubble burst.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AYou were bet you're betting on speculative technology that may not be profitable at some point in time and that had a large play in what happened.
Speaker ABut the End conclusion is the same with these companies that are profitable.
Speaker AIf you can't deliver on the promises that you have made from your technology, profitable or not, you're going to have stock market problems.
Speaker BDo you think that there, any of these companies, do you think they might be slow playing the introduction?
Speaker BBecause it's like, this is, it's kind of bad pr, bro.
Speaker AOne trillion percent, right?
Speaker BIt's like this is a, this is not a good look, right?
Speaker BFor, for Amazon to come on, be like, hey, 30,000 of y' all gonna lose your jobs to robots.
Speaker AOh, they're all slow playing this.
Speaker AAre you kidding me?
Speaker BRight?
Speaker AOkay, let's, let's be honest here.
Speaker BMeta.
Speaker BMeta recently laid off 600 employees in their AI space last week.
Speaker BAnd they're, I think I sent you like they have some crazy like severance package for them, but they're giving them a month's notice to look for other internal positions.
Speaker BSo that's the, that's the PR move, right?
Speaker BIt's like we're going to give you a chance to find something within the.
Speaker ACompany, which is fine for Meta, but I'll use Amazon as a better example.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker ASo you'll see what you can find here.
Speaker ABecause I didn't actually do this homework, but I can, I can guess.
Speaker AThey're going to lay off 14,000 employees, largely replaced with technology and robots.
Speaker ARight?
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AThose robots in that contract didn't happen in a month.
Speaker BNo, this is thought out a while ago, right?
Speaker AIf you're getting rid of 14, 000 employees.
Speaker AThere was a board meeting.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker BOh, good call.
Speaker AThere was internal committees.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AThere was a strategic planning committee that probably got put in place or there was some kind of project management overseeing this.
Speaker AThere was a vendor that got introduced through vendor management.
Speaker AThey went through a lot of corporate red tape to get this done.
Speaker AValid point.
Speaker ASo they knew this was coming for a long ass time.
Speaker ANot to mention someone had to manufacture and program the models on these robots, which didn't happen overnight.
Speaker AThey didn't just go like, hey man, plug that in.
Speaker AIt'll work.
Speaker AYou know what I mean?
Speaker BLike, yeah, it's like a universal, it's not a universal remote control.
Speaker BYou just turn it on.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BPoint it at the tv, damn it.
Speaker AConnect it to the WI fi like it was.
Speaker AIt wasn't like that.
Speaker AYou know what I mean?
Speaker ASo I, I don't know what, what people think was happening.
Speaker ASo are they slow playing it?
Speaker BHell yeah.
Speaker AThe online retailer began laying off employees across multiple divisions as part of a plan first reported on Monday by Reuters to cut as many as 30,000 employees.
Speaker AThe company has not confirmed the broader layoff plan, but there is one.
Speaker ABut in a company wide email indicated further cuts were in fact planned because those committees.
Speaker AAnd this is again, by the way.
Speaker BBy the way, these jobs were.
Speaker BCorporate workforce.
Speaker AAmazon said on Tuesday it reduced its global corporate workforce by about 14,000 employees, with more cuts expected next year and a major shakeup driven in part by adoption of artificial intelligence at the tech giants.
Speaker AThere you go.
Speaker BCorporate workforce is crazy, bro.
Speaker BThey're, they're, they're saying like, no, no, not, not the people in the warehouse that are going and getting packages and.
Speaker BNo, no, no people doing corporate jobs.
Speaker ACan you imagine a dude being on, like getting a severance package, saying, you're out and you, you got to work like a couple more weeks, right?
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AAnd then you see the robot coming in as you're going out.
Speaker AHey, man, I'd.
Speaker BYou did.
Speaker BI don't even want to joke about.
Speaker AThey got his batteries.
Speaker BThis is bad.
Speaker BThis is so messed up.
Speaker AYou just wanted to rain so bad.
Speaker AIt's so bad.
Speaker AHope you're waterproof, dog.
Speaker BOops.
Speaker BYeah, oops.
Speaker AYeah, this is, this is not good.
Speaker BRight?
Speaker AAnd I'm just saying, like, this is going to become a more common thing.
Speaker AAnd this didn't happen overnight.
Speaker AAmazon.
Speaker ABezos knew this a long time ago.
Speaker AProbably when he was.
Speaker AInstead of shooting his wife in his face.
Speaker BYeah, that's probably what he was thinking.
Speaker BThat's what he was thinking about.
Speaker AHey, Lauren, go up there.
Speaker AI gotta do some homework.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AYou know, he knew.
Speaker BGotta put in some ot.
Speaker AYeah, he.
Speaker AThis somebody.
Speaker AAnd the sad part is somebody got a promotion for this.
Speaker AThat, that's the problem.
Speaker BSomebody got it.
Speaker BSomebody got a fat bonus.
Speaker ASomebody got a bonus because they.
Speaker AYou know what, Sam, you were right.
Speaker AWe don't need all those people at all.
Speaker AThose people are unemployed because of you.
Speaker ABut this company is more profitable.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AHere's a couple hundred thousand dollars more.
Speaker AAnd Sam's gonna go home, talk to his wife.
Speaker AHey, honey, I got a big check.
Speaker AShe's like, great.
Speaker AEverybody hates Sam now.
Speaker BSee?
Speaker BAnd look, okay, so the argument for him is I have a fiduciary responsibility to my shareholders.
Speaker BThat's why I'm doing it.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker AHe was probably hired to do that.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BSo.
Speaker BOr even Jeff Bezos, I'm saying, right?
Speaker AThey got group think, right?
Speaker AYou get these, these committees together, get project meetings together.
Speaker AYou get these third party vendors that are supplying the robots they're not building themselves.
Speaker BI know.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BI Don't know, man.
Speaker BFor me, it's like, who's going to.
Speaker BLike, when are people going to step up and try to do the right thing for the people?
Speaker BRight?
Speaker ALike, see if you can get the robotics Amazon Robotics factory or Amazon Robots in the.
Speaker AIn their warehouse or something like that.
Speaker AI guarantee.
Speaker AHave you seen this?
Speaker BNo, I've seen some, but.
Speaker BWhat do you mean?
Speaker AThis is crazy, bro.
Speaker BWhat.
Speaker BWhat are they doing?
Speaker AIt's.
Speaker AIt looks like some kind of a Disney movie from a dystopian future.
Speaker ALike Wall E. Okay.
Speaker BOh, yeah.
Speaker BThe way they're just going up picking.
Speaker ALook at, look at.
Speaker ACome on, man.
Speaker AThere's two dudes in that giant 10, 000 square foot space.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AThose dudes are operating forklifts.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd it's honestly robotic, palletized.
Speaker BAnd here's the problem.
Speaker BThe problem is the people have.
Speaker BThe people spoke.
Speaker ALook at the robot.
Speaker ALook at the top right, top, top.
Speaker ARight there in the top right there.
Speaker AYeah, that's a robot.
Speaker BThat's Wally, bro.
Speaker AThat's what.
Speaker AFirst of all, that's Wally's big brother.
Speaker AJust to be clear, this is way less scary than Neo that goes in your home.
Speaker AHonestly, I could roll with this dude.
Speaker BI could roll.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BNo fingers.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ACome on.
Speaker ANo, but the quality takes off his face mask.
Speaker AIt's literally a Terminator.
Speaker BSo the problem is.
Speaker BThe problem is.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BPeople complaining about these large tech giants doing something like this and replacing humans with.
Speaker BWith robots.
Speaker AGo to that.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BLook like it's the pot calling the kettle black.
Speaker BOkay.
Speaker BBecause a lot of mom and pop shops went out of business.
Speaker ACrazy.
Speaker BA lot of mom and pop shops went out of business because everybody wanted that quick delivery.
Speaker AI'm not going.
Speaker AI want the quick delivery to.
Speaker AI get salty.
Speaker AJill, I don't know about you.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AHonestly, I can't get it the next day.
Speaker BI'm upset about a lot of people.
Speaker BLike, man, after that mom and pop shop, I wanted to.
Speaker BI want it.
Speaker BYou know what it is?
Speaker BI want prime delivery.
Speaker BDeliver tonight.
Speaker AHere's.
Speaker AHere's a question mark for society.
Speaker AWe're also hypocrites because we're lazy.
Speaker AWe want it tonight, we want it tomorrow.
Speaker AWe want that fast delivery.
Speaker ASo we encourage this.
Speaker ABut you can get in your car and go to the grocery store, dog.
Speaker AYeah, you can go drive to Best Buy, but you're like, I don't know what time.
Speaker AThey're close.
Speaker AI gotta go and talk to people.
Speaker BI'm down to making a commitment to not buy stuff off Amazon if you are.
Speaker ANope.
Speaker BCome On.
Speaker BLet's do it together.
Speaker AHere's the problem, bro.
Speaker AEven if I make that commitment, my wife has got, like.
Speaker AShe's got a relationship with Amazon delivery drivers.
Speaker AThey know her.
Speaker ALike, they tie.
Speaker BWhat's up, dog?
Speaker BThey got handshakes.
Speaker AThey gotta click.
Speaker AYeah, yeah.
Speaker AThey know, right?
Speaker AThey come to my house, they know what's up.
Speaker BOh, man, that's too late.
Speaker AYeah, that.
Speaker AThat.
Speaker AThat train.
Speaker BThat ship is.
Speaker BYeah, that trains.
Speaker AWe can build a commune, go out to mountains, down, have our own little space.
Speaker BYou're not down, though.
Speaker AI would love.
Speaker BI've always loved Big Bear.
Speaker BI'm down.
Speaker AI don't go Big Bear because you know why?
Speaker BIt's just.
Speaker BIt's got enough there to where, like, it's like, you're safe there.
Speaker AI want to buy a ranch in, like, Tennessee or Texas or some places, you know.
Speaker BReally?
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BI never took you as a.
Speaker BThat's a.
Speaker BThat's going the opposite way for you, bro.
Speaker AI was born in Oklahoma.
Speaker AWhat kind of goofy ass comment is that?
Speaker BWhat are you talking, bro, You've been literally living at the same place.
Speaker AYou can't take the hood out the boy.
Speaker ABoy?
Speaker AReally?
Speaker BYou would buy a ranch and you're.
Speaker AWhittling wood with my grandfather on the porch.
Speaker BStop it, man.
Speaker AHe gave my first Swiss army knife.
Speaker AThat's a real story.
Speaker AYou're not going to.
Speaker BFact, no.
Speaker AYou're judging me based on.
Speaker AIn the way I look, and I don't like it.
Speaker AI'm judging you hard right now.
Speaker BWhen was the last time you did.
Speaker AI will wood?
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AWhen?
Speaker ALast night.
Speaker BCan't give you that respect, bro.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BWell done.
Speaker BHour 19.
Speaker BI. I got.
Speaker BI said I was going to do one thing, and I don't know if he's going to.
Speaker BIf he stuck around to hear the whole episode, but I'm gonna make sure that I keep through on my promise.
Speaker BShout out to Stephanie Marin.
Speaker BI've been getting.
Speaker BShe left us a comment on the.
Speaker BOn the last episode and.
Speaker BOh, thank you.
Speaker BOh, you pull it up.
Speaker BThere you go.
Speaker BShe said, I've been getting my paycheck as someone in the military, but afraid that it's limited.
Speaker BI'm afraid to invest or do anything with my money right now if I don't know when my next paycheck is coming or if Steph.
Speaker BSo we.
Speaker BI saw you responded to this comment, too.
Speaker AThank you for your service.
Speaker BYeah, we want to first make sure that we thank Stephanie for her service.
Speaker BI misspelled.
Speaker BI said Steph Stevens.
Speaker BMy bad.
Speaker BBut, yeah, it's Messed up.
Speaker BIt's.
Speaker BBut it happens.
Speaker BIt's out of respect.
Speaker BWe do this on the show on purpose.
Speaker BPeople misspell my name.
Speaker BStephanie doesn't realize this, but this is.
Speaker ACan I call you homar?
Speaker BYeah, you call me home, that's totally fine.
Speaker BRight?
Speaker BBut look, fear is natural right now I think, I think this, the feeling that Stephanie's feeling is, is, is common.
Speaker BWe, we get a lot of comments, a lot of DMS like this.
Speaker A30 days of people not getting paychecks, man.
Speaker ARight, but what was somebody working in the military?
Speaker BWhat was this?
Speaker AYour job is to defend this country and you don't know if you're gonna get paid, right?
Speaker AWhat, what's wrong with this place?
Speaker BThat it's, it's, it's wild.
Speaker BSo as long as you want, the.
Speaker APeople who make the decisions are wearing suits, sitting in Washington D.C. like, I mean, honestly, that's, that's wrong.
Speaker BA little disconnected.
Speaker BAbsolutely.
Speaker BBut look, as long as the high interest debt is, is paid down or paid off, right?
Speaker BWhat I, what I said at the top of the show, I thought about Stephanie when I was, when I wrote this stat.
Speaker BAnd I want to revert back to it now.
Speaker BLook, since 2019, stock prices are up 110, real estate up 28%.
Speaker BCrypto, even though your boy doesn't like it, up 2,000% and the gold is up 200%.
Speaker AYeah, right.
Speaker BLook, you gotta invest, right?
Speaker BIf anything, household income only went up 22%.
Speaker AYeah, here's the problem.
Speaker ALet's disconnect with that comment.
Speaker AAnd I, I agree with you and you know I love you for it.
Speaker AAnd you know that that's our show theme.
Speaker ABut we are now at this point where people don't have enough money to get by, much less invest.
Speaker BNo, no.
Speaker AThat's why I don't like, like Caleb Hammer show where he just like goes at people for their way they're spending.
Speaker AAnd I understand the draw, the assumption.
Speaker BThe assumption was made because this person said I'm afraid to invest.
Speaker BSo I'm assuming, I'm assuming they're, they're, they're surplus income, right?
Speaker BThat, that doesn't need to go towards bills.
Speaker AI started when I started, I started with 50 bucks a month.
Speaker AMonth in a, an investment account investing in low cost index funds.
Speaker BAfter you had the emergency fund built out?
Speaker AActually at the time I was still in the process of doing it, but all I could spare was 50 bucks a month.
Speaker AAnd then after the emergency fund for me, which was six months of all my expenses in a cash account, I started pivoting.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ABut I will say when you get to a certain point and you have access to, like, margin lines of credit and home equity lines of credit, then your.
Speaker AYour reserve fund pivots to a different place because of that, because you have a little more liquidity, freedom.
Speaker AThat being said, it's 50 bucks a month, man.
Speaker AJust start there.
Speaker BI'm going to be completely honest with, with the listeners on the show.
Speaker BI'm no longer currently in a position to where I could.
Speaker BCan afford to currently continue invest because I. I've been helping family out, and now I myself have to take my own advice and start building up my own reserves.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BSo the goal is to.
Speaker BLook, this lesson goes for everybody, right.
Speaker BEven.
Speaker BEven myself.
Speaker BSo build the reserves first if you can.
Speaker BSix months, ideally.
Speaker BI know that seems like a tall task, right.
Speaker BBut okay, start off here.
Speaker BWe said it on the show before.
Speaker BStart off building enough to replace one paycheck, right?
Speaker BAnd then you.
Speaker BAnd then you double that, and then you continue to move on that.
Speaker BAnd then eventually you invest because you look, you don't want to be sitting on the sidelines sitting on cash.
Speaker BAnd then, you know, your buying power just goes out the window over the years.
Speaker BYou, at the end of the day, you have to invest.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AAnd I think investing, and I know this is going to sound obvious, but the momentum you get from investing isn't just the money you see in your account going.
Speaker AIt's the feeling you get of momentum that you have physically.
Speaker BYes.
Speaker AYou know, things in motion tend to stay in motion.
Speaker AWhat I tell a lot of people is like, you don't want to go to the gym.
Speaker AIt's fine.
Speaker AGo to the gym and do like, the easiest thing there.
Speaker BThere you go.
Speaker AYou know, like, you don't.
Speaker AYou don't want to go.
Speaker ACool.
Speaker AGo to the gym and walk.
Speaker AI guarantee you there's a probability, however big or small, that you might do a little bit more than that while you're there, because you're like, I'm here, I'm here.
Speaker BI might as well.
Speaker BYeah, I might as well, you know, do some squats or, you know, hit the bench press.
Speaker AI.
Speaker AThere are.
Speaker AThere's been countless times over the course of the last several, you know, years where I literally have walked into a gym, been like, I don't feel like working out.
Speaker AI'll walk today.
Speaker AI just got on treadmill, put the incline, like four and a half, speed like three and a half or four, and I'll just walk.
Speaker AListen to a podcast if I feel like Lifting weights.
Speaker AI will.
Speaker AIf not, I'll just double up what I was going to do in the treadmill to like 40 minutes and I'll go home and I'll think to myself, like, hey, my body wasn't in it today.
Speaker AThat could be because you didn't sleep well.
Speaker AIt's because you mentally, you know, disconnected.
Speaker AWhatever.
Speaker BProbably you will.
Speaker AInvesting is the same way.
Speaker AYou just, just start with 50, start with 25.
Speaker AWhatever you start with, just start.
Speaker AThere's no minimum you can.
Speaker ARobin Hood right now was zero.
Speaker AI mean, you can start with anything you want.
Speaker BYeah, there you go.
Speaker AYou know, go into those accounts and just start investing, making decisions.
Speaker AAnd what it'll also do is it'll emotionally tie you to the markets.
Speaker AYou'll have a reason to stay connected to the markets beyond just our show and three sexy dudes talking to you on microphones.
Speaker ABut, you know, you're going to wind up in a situation where you go, okay, I'm invested in Voo.
Speaker AIt's Vanguard's low cost index fund, S&P 500.
Speaker AI want to see what the S&P 500 is doing.
Speaker AI'm going to check and see what's going on.
Speaker AOh, it's s. P500 is carried by the AI stock.
Speaker ASo I should probably listen in with Saeed and the guys talking about this because that impacts me now.
Speaker AAnd, and that's important for you.
Speaker AIf anything, it gives you some type of connection to the markets that'll keep you invested and then over time that'll make you want to invest more because you get more and more confident.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BAnd don't let the fraud, the current froth in the economy scare you because look, we talked about it, where things are going.
Speaker BI still think that there's still room to grow.
Speaker BAnd even if it doesn't grow and it does take a hit, it will, it rebounds and eventually, you know, you go back up because you're playing the long term game here.
Speaker BWe're not, we're not sitting here telling you you're 10x in your money next year, right?
Speaker ANo, no, no, no.
Speaker AI mean, that's Grant Cardone.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BYou can 10x your mind, listen to this podcast, but there you go.
Speaker BThere you go.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AIf there's a way to 10x your growth in a single year, I've yet to find it in my adult life.
Speaker AAnd good for those of you who have or claim to have have or paid $80,000 to somebody to tell you they have, have, that ain't us.
Speaker BThat ain't us.
Speaker BWe don't need extends.
Speaker BYou got anything, Rajil?
Speaker BNo, no.
Speaker AWe just need prevention.
Speaker BGood night, everybody.
Speaker ABye.