SPEAKER_02: And I think unless you have a really good reason for the
company, you know, to stay private, I think the public markets as Amazon, as Google, as Salesforce, and so many others have proven this idea that you can't innovate in the public markets is total nonsense. This idea, you know, it's a cheap source of capital. It keeps you know, the business efficient and honest. And so my sense is that you're going to see the markets really open up in 24 and 25. We have a backlog because we've had almost no IPOs over the course of the last two years. And so you know, it's just a matter of price. IPO markets are always wide open, Jason. It's just a matter of price. This Week in
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SPEAKER_04: Alright, everybody, welcome back to This Week in Startups. We're trying a new format. Today, we're just doing a little roundtable. And we want to talk about the markets, private markets, public markets, the inter action between those two
and maybe give founders and investors who are listening to the podcast and idea of what 2024 might be like. It's been a pretty eventful 2023 and 2022 obviously at the end of the surf era. So with me, two of my besties, Brad Gerstner and Bill
Gurley don't need any introductions. They both had multi decade epic careers in our industry. And David Weissberg is here with us to moderate and read the news and sort of tee everything up in our little roundtable format here. David has a nice podcast called the limited partner podcast, which I was able to be on. And David, what do we have here to kick us off with markets? Yeah, so let's start you mentioned ZURP. So
SPEAKER_05: 2023 was the year that ZURPS funded startups finally started to die. Although ZURP technically ended in March 2022 companies started to die at scale really in 2023 due to the lagging nature of funding. According to Peter Walker at
Carta, Carta represents roughly 50% of the market. So roughly 1500 or so companies at large died in 2023. This equals the largest death toll for startups since the dot com crash of 2001. The question becomes will more startups die in 2024. john redman from discovery a two and a half billion dollar hedge fund in Connecticut has estimated that roughly 1200 private companies will quote unquote exhaust their financial reserves by the end of 2024, which is a signal of further startup deaths as well as potential uptick in M&A and IPO activity in 2024.
It's likely that 2023 has been the worst and 2024 will be better. One leading indicator is rounds of special terms which are coming down from a record high in q1 2023 to local low in q3 2023. As it relates to liquidation preference, participation terms and cumulative dividends. Given that we have Bill Gurley on a call, maybe we could get his views. Bill, what are your views on the industry today?
SPEAKER_00: Well, I think it's important to just step back and look at this from like a 2030 year cycle standpoint before you just kind of drill in into the details. So, you know, the industry has been inherently cyclical the entire time I've been in it. I've been through two or three of these waves. And they're really powerful. One of the reasons they're so damn powerful is you typically take risk on very slowly and then risk off seems to happen overnight. And you go from a world where you're slowly feeling more glass half full. And every time you take a step along that that journey, people take on more risk, they do riskier things. But the other thing that happens is valuations expand. And so you get this massive multiple expansion as more risk is being taken. And simultaneously, investors and founders are being less conservative, they're being less thoughtful about margins and profitability and all that's being reinforced by the market. And so it is the game on the field, everyone plays it. And then one day it crashes, and it tends to crash pretty fast. Now the thing that's very different about this time period from the previous crashes is so many of the large startups had accumulated so much capital that the effects of the wave crashing are delayed, rather than
immediate. And I think you're seeing this in the data you shared, right? The deaths weren't a year ago, they're starting to happen now. I would I would expect 2024 to be just as bad as 2023. And the the gauge I'm using to estimate the window is just how much capital people had. And so there were numerous LP decks that I was privy to see, you know, a year ago where people brag that 80% of their companies had two to three years of cash. And so the day of reckoning is really where you get to the end of that. And there's a ton of things that complicate this one valuation multiples have collapsed, although they've come back a little bit recently, which was
and so there's zero chance you're going to get to the valuation you raised at two years ago, a year and a half ago, and it takes founders board members, it takes them a long time to get okay with that, like to kind of accept it and then build a strategy that it recognizes it. You have cap charts where you have too much capital, too much lick prep, and those terms that you showed are one way around it. But people just kind of have to get come to grips with that. And we'll see what happens when they run out of money. And then the other thing is, you know, maybe it seems unfair to some, but the,
the expectation for what a good company is and how much risk you can take and how profitable you need to be, and how whether or not your cash flow positive, those rules today are dramatically different than they were three, four years ago, like so. So there's a chance your company can't even get to that place because you started with something that didn't have the fundamentals necessary to get there. And so we have, you know, we're in this place where people are slowly coming to grips with where they were. It's interesting, you know, the number of shutdowns that you mentioned, the press doesn't seem to be paying much attention to this. That's kind of a shockingly large number to me when you when you put it in front of us, not, not, not shocking because of where we went through, I kind of expect it, but shocking just relative to what I've, what I've been seeing and reading. And then, and then one thing, and I don't mean to distract the conversation, because I think what I just talked about is the is the big picture. AI is living
with an exemption here, and is acting exactly like things were two or three years ago. So you have this one, you know, avenue where there's behavior that's exactly like it was, which is also quite, quite unusual.
SPEAKER_02: Hey, Nick, maybe you can pull up the tech multiples chart, just you know, again, in this telescope out, you know, view here, you know, to Bill's point, this is a cycle you're looking at. And this was the cycle since 2012 multiples largely, this is software as an example, this was a forward revenue. So multiples really were hugging around, you know, give or take 10% of that, you know, six and a half, seven times forward revenue line. And then you see this explosion that we all, you know, now understand associated with ZERP, zero interest rate environment in 2020 and 21. And it took this cyclical nature of the venture industry and it amped it up on Red Bull, right? I too have lived through, you know, kind of 99 2008. But in neither of those situations, did you have the federal government, you know, having multi trillion dollar stimulus packages, and frankly, negative interest rates. So that that forced even more equity risk into the pool. As we all know, venture funds were bigger, more of this stuff got funded. And so the bigger the the high, the lower the low. And to Bill's point, you know, when you look at where we are today, you see the blue line on the top half, you know, it's come down dramatically, it's now below that dotted line, the bottom half shows by our estimate is altimeter estimate of all software companies that we're still trading about 12% below the 10 year average multiple. Well, why might that be right? Because this is all else being equal. Well, interest rates are higher than they were during this 10 year average, they're, you know, almost 4%, and they were about 2.7% during this 10 year average, so you'd expect the multiple to be lower growth rates for these companies are actually slower than they were during this 10 year period. But they started to tighten their belts and get more profitable. So that's the offset to growth. So to Bill's point, I think what this chart demonstrates is what we're through the readjustment in the public markets, right, the public market corrects quickly, but we have this delayed reaction among founders and boards who make tough decisions, right to deal with those 1500 companies that are now over capitalized aren't growing as fast they should be not nearly as profitable as they should be. And 2023 was the beginning of the working out of all of those issues. And remember, there are three doors you can choose. Number one is you shut down the company, right, the company may run out of money, or you may choose to shut it down and return capital. Door two is that you arrange, you know, you tighten the belt of the company, you get it on the best path, and you arrange a sale for the company, it may be an aqua sale of the business or an outright sale of the business. And then door three is that the company actually is able to grow in to those huge valuations that Bill talked about, that's the hardest, less than 5% of the companies that were funded during 2021 will ever be able to grow into the valuations from those prior periods. And I think boards and founders now are making peace with this. At first, they were hoping that we would snap back to prior mania. Now they're at peace with the fact that we're not going to get there. So whether it's Instacart, choosing to go public at you know, 7 billion down from its peak of 39 billion in the private markets, right, that's a clearing event. Or whether it's you know, just this week, we see that Eric Vishria over at benchmark, you know, help to manage the sale of airplane to air table, which was you know, an important aqua hire among two great teams of technologists, two important companies, but this is the type of healthy thing that great venture capitalists like Eric and benchmark do, because they say, Okay, we're not going to get to the place we thought we were going to get to. But if we fold these two teams together, we reduce spend, we can get the profitability quicker. And it's better for both teams. Yeah,
SPEAKER_04: it's in just from the field. I mean, it's a great overview for everybody.
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listening to both bills here both p G's. I was just thinking about a couple of boards I'm on where you have late stage investors who their worldview is radically different than the series a investor and radically different than the seed investors. If we get a haircut of 50%, which is literally in one case, what we've experienced, well, that's going from a 5 million to a $500 million valuation instead of a billion, we still feel pretty good about our investment. And we want to keep working on it and growing the company. And
then people who invested at a billion, they're kind of looking
at this wondering if this company's ever going to hit that mark. And maybe they should sell the company. And because they have provisions, protective provisions, as you pointed out there, you know, maybe they're willing to get a push and just get their money back and then move on to the next bet. That's not as convoluted. The number of shutdowns is very real. But I think one of the things built girly that we saw, and I don't know if you saw this was the never ending bridge round the never ending safes the never ending extension of hope. And when you talked about people taking on risk and people having hope and having positivity, there's so much emotion involved in this. And when you lose five or six hands of poker in a row when you are in that negative zone, man, you just feel like placing bets is really hard when you've won, you know, conversely, three or four in a row and you're on a heater, man, you may get loosey goosey and be betting on things you shouldn't feel like where, Bill, maybe you could talk a little bit
SPEAKER_04: about the psychology of private market investors. Yeah, I mean,
SPEAKER_00: well, you highlighted a couple things that are really important. One, I think you it's very easy to get in these situations where different investors around the table have very different kind of return horizons. And you can end up with with a lot of chaos in a company simply because these board members have different agendas for the reasons you exactly than you laid out. And I think for a late stage investor who knows they're underwater or whatever their their goal might just be to move on, you know, to kind of, we still use the phrase burnt waffle, like just kind of get it over with and move on. And whereas there might be people like you and an angel situation where there's still a lot of return left on the table, and you want you want to keep folks in and keep building. And that can be very, that can be very distracting for sure, especially for the founders. How did those
SPEAKER_05:
bill when those play out on the board level, the theater behind that? Can you take us a little bit behind a board meeting where where there's a misalignment on the exit?
SPEAKER_00: Yeah, I mean, if you can imagine, let's just say that four board members, two of them, they're going to lose money no matter what, and two of them are going to still make really decent returns. And you start thinking about discussions about M&A, or should we go public or, you know, anything, and you just you just have you might have two people who are very indifferent, or who just want something to happen fast. Because their odds of getting a return are so low. And they also just might become what I've seen is they become very indifferent to shareholder interest, and then just start, you know, maybe being very generous, you know, with with with employee packages or stuff like that, and becoming less sensitive to the marginal price per share. Let me let me jump, let me jump in there a little bit, because
SPEAKER_02: Altimeter, you know, we do a lot of series A and B, but we also do a lot of pre IPO investing. So, you know, during this period, we were late stage investors in some of these companies. And, you know, I'm going to give you one specific example, I don't think that's been talked about publicly, which is this company Hoppin, which in many ways was a bit of a poster child for, you know, you know, kind of what happened during COVID. This was a company that was, you know, bringing group meetings, you know, kind of a better version of zoom for people to come together and do group meetings, you can imagine what happened to that post COVID post vaccine, and add, you know, every firm, you can imagine it from Excel and GC, and IVP and recent and Altimeter and tiger, etc, down the line. And at the end of 2021, when I saw the numbers, really, you know, starting to hit the wall, we sat down and had a conversation with the founder and the board and just said, Listen, what we've got, you know, hundreds of millions, in that case, nearly a billion dollars of cash on the balance sheet of this company, because we thought it was a pre IPO round, the business has changed dramatically. It's not your fault as the founder that the world's changed dramatically, but it has. And so we have to have a real conversation about the the amount of capital that's on the balance sheet, because, you know, like the game on the field has changed. It took us 18 months, painful conversations among the founder, the early stage investors who had a very different perspective than we did, right? Because we came in later. And ultimately, credit goes to that board of directors, credit goes to the founder of that company, and to everybody who came together. And mind you, these are not easy, and they're not short conversations. But ultimately, what we did is we distributed over half of the cash on the balance sheet, we right size the business, we were able to totally change the nature of the risk reward profile in a way that was good for the early stage, and good for the later stage. But that takes experienced venture capitalists, willing founders, in that case, Johnny didn't have to do this deal at the end of the day. So it really takes a lot of work. And that's why I was pointing out what Eric and the team at airplane and air table did. Those are, you know, there are a lot of venture capitalists that came into the business over the last five years. And they thought, Oh, this, this business isn't about having tough conversations, it's just about going to cocktail parties and doing the fun AI stuff. But the reality is, when you go over the falls in one of these cycles, the job is not much fun for three or four years. Because you have to help these folks find their way you're committed to them in good times and in bad times. And part of the you know, that like that the company hopping is in a much healthier position, you know, today, and the, the, the investors are going to get, you know, a huge percentage of their money back on that business in a way that had you continued to burn 200 or $300 million a year, you may have lost everything. So I think it's important that founders and boards really step up to the moment, we've got 1000 plus more of these companies to work through. And, you know, that's part of the job. It's not just doing the fun stuff on the way in, it's doing some of the challenging stuff on the way out.
SPEAKER_04: And to build on that, imagine the founder and their mindset. Now, in that case, in Hoppin, he had taken some secondary. And so it's a very different kind of situation. But I'm on a board where the founders haven't made any money yet, the business stabilized, it's growing. And they have one group that wants to hire M&A bankers and sell the business. And they want the founders to drive a process with a banker. And then you have me and another investor saying, Hey, what are the new AI features we're adding to the product? And how do the customers react to them? Now, imagine you're this poor founder, and she has to now deal with, you know, one group saying
prepare a deck to sell this, and then another group saying, what AI features are we adding to the product. And then in the middle,
there's the budget, and there's the target, and there's the plan, the budget and the target and the plan for selling a company. I think you would agree girly is a very different market and plan for growing a business. In fact, these could couldn't possibly be I think, any different, you know, in one case, you're trying to dress the business up to make it look better, and more profitable. The other case you're trying to invest. Yep. Yep, yep, not everyone. It's great. The the
SPEAKER_00:
bread that you were able to get to this kind of collaborative result. And I've seen that I've seen. I've seen self imposed recaps, you know, where people kind of come to an agreement to get the company in a better place and other things like that. And it's awesome that you guys were able to do that. But I've also seen the conflicts that Jason's talking about. So they're, they're all part and parcel of what comes with this type of environment.
SPEAKER_05: I think it's the first time that a lot of founders look at the corporate governance on their board on all the non financial terms that they've signed. You find out why it's in the in the document.
SPEAKER_00:
What is the old VC VC joke, you give me the valuation, I give
SPEAKER_05: you the terms. So they they learned that that side of the coin.
SPEAKER_02: But the good thing here is as we start 2024 I think there really
is a high degree of sobriety that if we you know, you think
about that multiple chart that we showed you nobody thinks we're going back to where we were before. So now founders and boards, you know, who are sitting in those positions like they they have three doors, they have three, three choices they got to make. There's no ignoring the reality. There's no kicking the can down the road like, you know, folks were in 21 and 22. You know, and even in much of 23. And so I feel pretty optimistic that the new deals are being priced according to the public market set of rules that exist today, perhaps with the exception of the AI enclave that Bill referenced. And then secondly, I think there is a lot of activity, shut down, get capital back, merge companies together third door, which I mentioned, Bill and I have long been in the camp, that companies should not wait so long to go public. If you have $200 million in revenue, and you're growing, right, get the company public, don't stay private forever. There's a discipline that is good that occurs in the public markets, it will likely be at a discount to that private round valuation you got in 21 or 22. But who cares? It's the truth. It is what it is. Delusion is not a strategy, except the except the valuation that exists in the world, get the company public, and then get back to growing the business to Jason's point, get rid of the distraction of these competing set of founders, wash them out in a cap table process like an IPO, and get back to focusing on and growing the business.
SPEAKER_04: It's a it's a pattern. I think, Bill, right, you have, you have denial, resistance, acceptance, and that action. And you know,
as a founder, and a board kind of go down this, eventually, you have to take some kind of action, right, Bill? And I think
SPEAKER_00: Yeah, and look, I'm totally with Brad, I think, you know, go cool, who I respect immensely, and I think is one of the smartest people that's ever graced Silicon Valley. I say that because I really fundamentally believe it. But he had a post where he said, like, in order to go public, you got to have 600 million in revenue and all this stuff. And I just don't believe it. I think we're kind of stuck, because everyone's afraid. And, and I think the only thing that kind of keeps people from going public is courage and determinism. And I think you will see you will find that there is a founder out there who's just going to buckle up and, and, and go through it. And yeah, it might be a little bit of a discount. I'm surprised we haven't seen more people do it for the reason Brad just said, which is it does clean up the cap chart, you know, and there might be cases if you have enough capital where you could do a direct listing, go public, and you might be somewhat indifferent to what the price is, at least on the first print, you know, because your your goal is to get public. So, you know,
if you're in touch with evaluations, and you know, everyone should be out there studying it. If you understand what separates good company from bad, I wrote a blog post a long time ago called the keys to the 10x revenue club, where I go through those things, then then in, you know, there's no magic, there's no magic window, 612 18 months from now, we're valuations are going to be five x higher or two x higher, like that's not coming. And so if you're in touch with what your real valuation is, and you're ready to be public, go like just go and if you need help, or like if the big bank is afraid, I'm I guarantee you that the second or third tier bank is ready to go and I'll help you out. Give me a call.
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IPOs and just give founders who maybe were in college when that happened and weren't playing the game or investors who weren't on the field? What the the footprint of those companies
were? And you know, there was a little trepidation I think going public at that time as well for both of those companies. Yeah, it wasn't. Yeah, it was a Google was a little bigger because they did
SPEAKER_00: this whole planned auction thing. And so it was it. I think they were bigger, but Amazon went public. I think, you know, only after a Kleiner invest. I don't think they ever did a beat. And they were they were like 70 million in revenue or something they were really small sales force salesforce went public 60
SPEAKER_02: million of current year revenue, doubling year over year. So it's going from 60 to 121 public at a billion dollars. Yeah, we took
SPEAKER_00: open table public doing $10 million a quarter, so a 40 million run rate. And, and so it's all it's all possible. Like, you know, it's just a question of whether you're cool with the valuation and you got to get a bank who doesn't insist that you raise $200 million because that might not work with the with with the valuation that you're gonna have to accept but but but I do think we'll see some people move through, you know, it's one of those things, it's gonna take a leader, and then you'll have one and then you'll have two and then you'll have three. I don't think likely candidate bill, you would say stripes, the
SPEAKER_04: one blocking everybody's like, project that is like all the big ones, you know, they can go
SPEAKER_00: whenever they want. I don't think that really opens things up. I think we need. I think we need some leaders from from from non mega companies to help to help, you know, build the path,
you know, hey, Bill, one thing that we don't often say, but I think
SPEAKER_02:
might be true as well. What emerged over the last 10 years was a new class of investors, they call themselves maybe venture investors, but I really think of them as investing in quasi public companies. These are companies with over, you know, kind of a billion dollar valuation, they're late stage investors. And you know, they have a self interest in keeping these companies private for a long time, because like private equity, they can continue to put more and more capital in it's like a private club for public market companies that only 50 people can compete for. It's a much better market for you to make money and then the actual public market. I don't think it's better for the founders. I don't think it's better for the companies, but you know, my club, right? Well, I mean, the
SPEAKER_02: names that you know, you know, well, the crossover investors, the tigers, the go twos, you know, the green oaks, the altimeters of the world. But then I think there's, you know, all of these companies, your strike, strike, strike matches
SPEAKER_00: that matches that strike, fight dance, space x, you know, go
SPEAKER_02: through the list, all of these companies could be public. And I think unless you have a really good reason for the company, you
SPEAKER_02: know, to stay private, I think the public markets as Amazon as Google, as Salesforce, and so many others have proven this idea that you can't innovate in the public markets is total nonsense. This idea, you know, it's a cheap source of capital, it keeps you know, the business efficient and honest. And so my sense is that you're going to see the markets really open up in 24 and 25. We have a backlog because we've had almost no IPOs to it over the course of the last two years. And so you know, it's just a matter of price. IPO markets are always wide open, Jason, it's just a matter of price.
SPEAKER_00: One interesting thing that facilitates what Brad was talking about is we've become quite comfortable with secondary. And and in fact, when we were going through ZURP, and there were people with tons of money in their pocket, and they
wanted to cram it into these companies, they would encourage secondary as a way for them to get ownership, because the founders and the early investors didn't want more dilution. So they would literally, you know, knock on doors and say, let us help you do this. And if you're a rather large angel, or early A or B investor, or a big founder, you know, it's hard for you to get liquidity through that type of mechanism, but it relieves a ton of pressure on the management team for the employees to be able to get liquidity. And so you find yourself in a forever cycle, where these companies might, might stay private for a very, very long time. And I think we will see a few examples. And I don't know exactly which company but where that proves to have been a mistake, like for the reasons Brad talked about. And I, my favorite, my favorite metaphor here is to is to imagine a football player that goes from high school to college to pro. And, you know, could you imagine, you know, on draft day, or a week before draft day, the number one quarterback candidate says, you know, I think I'm going to opt out because, you know, if I play on Sunday, they're gonna, they're gonna be way more scrutiny, they're gonna look, they're gonna study all my stats, I don't think I want to play at that level. Or I don't want to play in that environment. And everyone would laugh at someone that did that because, you know, the problem is, once you've started handing
out options to your employees, once you've taken investors on your cap chart, you're in a game where your job is to constantly increase price per share in one day to provide liquidity to those people. And so there's no, there's no way to opt out of that game, you're in the game. And the better you do, the harder it gets. And so it just keeps going up. But that's the obligation you have.
SPEAKER_02: Hey, Bill, did you guys did you guys wait too long to take Uber public? Would you have would you have liked to see an Uber go
public before, you know, gross started slowing and, you know, at evaluation less than whatever it was 50 billion bucks.
SPEAKER_00: And so, you know, we had some pretty big mistakes and leasing and stuff that might have been exposed and dealt with sooner. You know, as as Jason has said on on this and other podcast, if you if you bring up Uber, I have to take a second to just really, really think Dara for all he's done, like, because the first job was to clean things up and put out the fires, which he totally crushed. And then the second job was to increase the value of the company, which is he's starting to deliver on that. And, yeah, makes me very happy. So it's no doubt in your mind, this is we're on the topic of
SPEAKER_04: Uber. And this sort of speaks to conviction, when you see a
billion rides going on, and the company's losing a billion or $2, you never thought like this could never not be profitable, because you knew customers would pay a little bit more money. But the press was kind of fixated on this, this can never be profitable, this can never be profitable. This business is a terrible business. But the same people who are saying that we're using the product every day. And when the prices went up, and the
venture, you know, discount, and the competition with Lyft started to recede, people had no problem paying an extra five bucks a ride, three bucks, my belief, it was all a zerp thing.
SPEAKER_00: And you had massive amounts of capital, you had a clear winner in a network effect business. But the benefits of that winning were delayed, because you had capital being thrown at the second place player in a way that we've never seen before in the history of venture, but we may be witnessing now in the LLM mark, as Bill has described it, which I love, you know, capital
SPEAKER_02:
was used as a weapon of economic destruction, because the cost of
capital was free. And the healthiest and best thing that's
happening to the venture market is the fact that we have interest rates back at three and a half percent, because you can't
have number three, number four, number five, number six raise capital to compete diseconomically against the market leader. And that allows the backers and the founders in the market leaders to emerge with profitability profiles much, much faster.
SPEAKER_00: Yeah, it's interesting as a what a wild experience to see that amount of capital use that way. First time in history.
SPEAKER_04: And people looked at Amazon as the playbook for that bill, I think they said, hey, Amazon was never profitable. They broke even broke even but they built this huge, you know, revenue base, the TAM was huge that, you know, look at all the prime subscribers look at all the adjacent businesses like AWS, they were able to build an advertising business. So there is something to this. I don't want to say lose money at an
alarming rate, but a break even and and build the business for growth. And how do you balance that?
SPEAKER_00: Yeah, I mean, well, well, yeah, if you know, if you know, you have a network effect, like how far do you want to push it? And how aggressive Do you want to be in Bezos, you know, push, you go back to that moment in time, you know, between 01 and 04, there were multiple times where the press was convinced that that Amazon was going bankrupt. And he did have people chasing him, especially in in in verticals, and he he put them all under part of it was, was what we started the podcast talking about is just the cycle. And he had to adjust his game to the cycle. So in in 797 9899, he had unlimited capital being thrown at him. And when that changed, he had he did he did cuts like he had to do cuts, he had to get to break even. And eventually he did. Um, yeah, so but look, he's one of the there are, if you look at at Bezos, Benny off, and let's say Reed Hastings, they all push the edge of this like like trading off profitability for growth. And I think they all did it in a way they were rewarded for. But it makes for a ace a somewhat frightening ride for the people on the on the yacht. It's like going up and down the PCH at like 70 miles an hour,
SPEAKER_04: you're just right along the edge. You're like, shouldn't it be a guardrail here or something? No, we don't need guardrails. We'll just we'll build those later. If your
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SPEAKER_05: So moving on, given the reset in the market, what do we see in
2024? Looking forward, maybe Brad, what do you look at at the market today? And where where will it be in 2024?
SPEAKER_02: Well, maybe just a level set, Nick, do you have that chart of so this this is the state of series B and series C for software deals. So we just looked at pitch book all the software deals that were done, you know, and as you see, we're down, you know, 90% in 2023, in terms of BNC software deals from the peak and 21 in many ways back to the 2017 trend, which makes a lot of sense to me, given that we're back to 2017 level of interest rates, etc. But you know, what this means is that we add in 2021, this explosion of early stage seed and series A software deals that were done. And the reality is they're not finding a home. And so now maybe I click in a little bit to altimeter. And I think there are a lot of private
venture deals. And I think there are a lot of people who looked at that period of time. And frankly, prices had not adjust back to Bill's point, the market was delayed in the in the venture industry into getting its head around the fact that the world had totally reoriented around a different axes with respect to interest rates. And then you know, if I just look at the list for altimeter, here's the deals we did nine deals in Q3 and Q4 last year, we did four series A, two series B, and three pre IPO deals, okay, late stage deals. And I think that is reflective of the opening up the, you know, prices coming that back down to planet Earth, the prices that we invested in are back to 2013 2014 level pricing, again, set aside the AI enclave that the bills talking about. And so that's what I see happening in the world around us. Those were competitive deals, with, you know, the sequoias and Andreessen's and red points and all the other funds that the folks know about. So I think the market is getting healthy, because pricing is resetting. And you know, Jason can comment on what's going on in the earlier stage market. But unless firms like ours are willing to do those series B and series C deals, then you got a real problem of the pipeline of seed and series A, they can't find a home. And Brad, you look like a genius today. But at the time, you must
SPEAKER_05: have been getting a lot of pressure from LPS, a lot of a lot of people internally, how did you resist that pressure? And what was your operating principles on doing so few deals?
SPEAKER_02: You know, really, we didn't get a lot of pressure from our LPS LPS were pretty pissed off at the cadence of activity in in 2021. Right, like venture firms were not getting the message. There were a lot of venture firms that were accelerator to the floor through Q2 of 22. Because remember, venture firms are not in the public market business. So it's easy just to say, Oh, that's a public market problem. That's not our problem. The problem here, though, was that the melt up the balloon was created by a macro event, namely ZERP. And the and the deflation was created by ZERP. So I think because we have a foot in both markets, we were quicker to the set of concerns that caused us to hit pause. And, you know, I would also say that, you know, founders don't stop doing interesting things. In fact, I think the most interesting time to back founders are during the tough periods. And that's why you've seen these nine deals we've done over the course of the last couple quarters. It's, you know, these are some of the best series B and series A deals that we've done in a long time in terms of the quality of the team, the TAM, the revenue profile of the businesses, the product market fit the efficiency, they all they all took the religion and got fit. In fact, every inbound that we get that it starts with, we've, you know, we've read your letter
SPEAKER_02: time to get fit, we're efficient, you know, like nobody's coming in, you know, burning insane amounts of money anymore. And I think it's that health restored to the market that's causing venture firms like altimeter to be pretty, pretty foot forward in in market as we head into 2024.
SPEAKER_00: If you want something to put a lot of optimism around, I do believe it'd be an incredible time to go start a company. If that's something you've been thinking about doing, it's just a much more rational environment in the whole ZURP environment, the number of competitors you would have would be dramatically lower, your ability to hire people is obviously a ton easier than it was before. If you happen to want real estate, it's near free.
SPEAKER_03: We'll pay you to come to the office, just to make it not a ghost town.
SPEAKER_00: And so you know, it's an incredible time to start a company and benchmark and others are wide open for series a deal. So you know, reach out to every need to reach out to but like, it's a it's a fabulous time to start something. And I think history has shown that these windows of pessimism are a really good time to get going. And and so I would I would highly encourage anyone who's kind of been debating starting something that this is actually a fabulous environment.
SPEAKER_04: Yeah, just on the early stage to build on that the the biggest issue for the past 10 years that I hear from a founder is not raising money. Raising money was easy. Go to an accelerator.
They're they're trying to fill seats at accelerators, you get your first hundred k or maybe get 50k from your friends and family hundred k from your accelerator raise a 500 k to $2 million seed round, pass the hat party round, it was also easy raising money. But then once they had money, they couldn't find a CTO, they couldn't find a VP of engineering, they couldn't find a sales executive to be their first sales executive. And when they did find those people, they said, Well, I've got an Uber and Airbnb and a Google offer. And I'm going to try and get a Microsoft offer. And you know, then they'd come back and say, Well, I need 300 400,000 in total comp. Now, this is a startup that's raised a million. So they're going to get 400,000 out of the gate, they can't match the Facebook offer. And now, Facebook, Amazon, Uber, everybody's on a hiring freeze. And they're still doing, I believe, the quiet gentleman's riff where, you know, maybe the bottom 10% of people are cut in a performance review on a rolling basis across the entire organization. What this means is, now we see applications for founder university or pre accelerator of two or three former Uber Airbnb execs who are working on a side hustle, and they're not incorporated yet. So the the talent availability is incredible. It is incredible. And when you don't have really, yeah, comparatively, yeah, when
SPEAKER_04: you don't have those, it's also become international. So there's a there's two very subtle things I want to point out that founders at the earliest stage, I'm talking year zero founders where we invest, there's two things they're doing that
nobody's paying attention to one is they are so good at running
remote teams, that they are able to manage a developer in Argentina, India, Ukraine, or in Silicon Valley, or we know
working at Lake Tahoe, but demanding a Google level salary. But once you learn how to manage those people, in a slack room on
zoom, using huddles, whatever it is, you don't need a Silicon
Valley person anymore. You don't even need an American. And now they're telling me, Oh, well, I'm getting people in Portugal for 60,000 a year as a developer. I'm getting people
in Manila, for my, you know, EA operations role, SDR roles for three k a month, two k a month. And they know how to manage
that. So their burn rates are coming down. I'll see people who have 12 employees and they're spending 50,000 a month total. That's their spend, not their burn bill. Yeah. And I'm like,
SPEAKER_04: how's that possible? That's 4k a month per person, like we have no office. We got 100,000 in free credits from Azure, or 250,000 from Azure and 100,000 from Google and 50,000 from whatever Amazon. Yeah, and we're hiring people internationally.
SPEAKER_04: And then the second piece is AI. And the idea that you would hire
somebody to write copy, to make a logo to be a designer, with co pilots writing content faster with SDRs researching things. Everybody's getting 20% faster 30% faster at their job every
quarter. So now you see 345 person teams hitting a quarter
million in revenue, 10 person teams hitting a million in revenue. And this is what gives me massive hope, the efficiency
that founders have, and they expect this round of funding to be their last they when they raise that 500k or $1.5 million seed round, they're telling me, we're gonna get to break even on this. We don't want to be in the series they race, we don't want to be dependent on venture capital, we just want to have seed investors get our 500k checks and preserve the cap table. So I think this is going to be a revolution in funding. And this vintage I think will be the best vintage since the Uber vintage, the Airbnb vintage. Jason does does your selection
SPEAKER_05: criteria change in a post post AI posts or market versus the prezerp pre AI market? Are you fundamentally looking for different teams? Or is it just different valuations? It was a great question. I think when you're a venture
SPEAKER_04: capitalist, listen, I've gotten to sit at a poker table with Bill Gurley for over 20 years, and as a journalist, ask him questions and ask other folks rule off Michael Moritz, you know, I've literally had a group of unofficial mentors who have been able to ask questions to. And that's helped me refine
process. Because if you think about what a venture capital success is based upon, and I've really studied it, it's based on their brand, Bill Gurley's got a great brand, Brad Gerson's got a
break, and he just said before, when people contact me, they first say, Oh, we're fit. So what Brad did by writing that fitness letter was he put out a flag and said, Hey, if you are a fit company, come talk to us. And so he's now he's got a dealflow that is different and differentiated from other venture firms. It's the fit people come to him. Right? Or Bill Gurley has the people with network effects, because Oh, he
did webvan Oh, he did Uber Oh, he did you know, this other network. Oh, he did eBay, they want people who understand networks. So your deal flow, and then your decision making,
and then your ability to double down on investment, I believe those are the three criteria for success and venture. Everybody's got different theories on this. And I'm an LP and 20 funds that aren't mine. And I look at those things deal flow, decision making, doubling down on a decision making basis.
I was having this talk with rule off. Two weeks ago, we had lunch and he said, as the number as your deal flow goes up, your
you can become more discerning, right? You can you can expect more. So now when people come to me with a deal that's 30 times revenue, and there's no technical person, and it's a
solo founder, and you know, they, the customer churn is too
high. Well, we have other competing deals that have three founders and two of them are technical. And they have a lighthouse customer and they're asking for 12 times revenue. So
you can actually skim the cream as it were. And I think when I
started my career, it was just investing in my network, but then over time, as your deal flow goes up, we have 20,000 applications for funding a year now. And we invest in 100 new companies per year. So 50 bits, you know, one in 200. And so
I've really thought about that question a lot. And basically, more deal flow equals a higher benchmark, so to speak for
investing. What a David one of the things that Jason reference, and I'd be
SPEAKER_02: curious, Bill's point on this, because I don't think we've ever seen this in our 20 some years, Bill here, that if you look at the expected the consensus headcount growth in engineering in 2024, for meta, for Google, for Uber, etc, it's flat to negative, right for these companies. And this is coming on
the heels of a year where you already saw negative headcount growth for Google for meta, etc, as they tighten their belts. And this is because of, you know, their teams getting to 20 to 30% more productive out of the gates with copilot, and their view that that will continue for years. So this point to Jason, if the finite resource in Silicon Valley is engineering and technical talent, right, if that is the most important resource, that's the that's the resource that you couldn't find, and you couldn't afford during ZURP. It's not just that ZURP's ending that would have in and of itself
created a much better environment to Bill's point to start a company. It's the ZURP is ending at precisely the same
time that we have this inflection in AI driven copilots, which is causing the biggest companies in Silicon Valley that sucked up all of the talent that set the price level for all the talent. They're no longer hiring those those folks and so you have two major factors contributing to this abundance in terms of technical talent at this moment in Silicon Valley that I think is unique. It certainly compared to past cycles. Yeah, I agree with that. And I think that's one of the reasons
SPEAKER_00: one of the many reasons why it'd be a great time to start a company going back to the people availability. I do. I do push back a little bit on this notion that Oh, you'll always be able to run a company with only four people. What I've seen in the past is we evolve with our tools. There was a great, a great story about Bjorn Borg trying to make a comeback and he insisted on using the wooden racket, even though everyone had moved to the graphite racket and he got his ass kicked. And like once once we get the benefit of the graphite racket, like once everyone has it, then you're just back to where you were right. And so then you're then you're competing on all the same term. So I don't think there's, I don't think there's an infinite lift in productivity because it eventually gets whittled away by competition. And if you don't use it, you die. So that that's true. The thing that I'm curious, Bill your take on if it is, as things
SPEAKER_04:
got cheaper to start companies, the outcomes became much more dramatic in venture. So cloud computing was a thing that
maybe the biggest one where, you know, and we work, you know,
getting rid of that quarter million dollar check that you needed to give to a landlord, and getting rid of the AWS getting rid of the quarter million or half million dollar check you had to give to, you know, a co location facility and having to hire a chief security officer and a bunch of folks. Now with AI does feel to me like, you know, three people are
going to be able to get companies to 500 k a million in
You didn't see anything like that in the first part of your
career, the road to a million in revenue. What did that take back in the day in terms of investment to get that first million in revenue?
SPEAKER_00: Yeah, I think I think you're absolutely right, Jason. I think there's a flip side to that, though, that is, you know, if you want to build a company that's gonna do a billion in revenue one day, like, you're eventually gonna have to hire people, you're gonna have to spend money, it's gonna be a great opportunity. So, you know, maybe maybe there's more opportunity for angel back companies to never do, you know, venture rounds and sell it 20 to $50 million. And that's to be a huge win for those founders and, and their early investors and and and all that gets into people understanding whether the
SPEAKER_00: opportunity they have in front of them is something that how you know, potential is really there in that opportunity and how much value can be created and how much runway do you have run room? You know, how big can it be and then adjusting your capital strategy to that opportunity? I don't think you know, the other thing I would add to prove that point is if you happen to be on something that is a really big opportunity, there are going to be two or three other startups. And if you're the one sitting there, saying I'm only gonna hire five people and someone else you're gonna lose against it base style, then you'll get run over. Yeah, I mean, there
SPEAKER_04:
were competitors to Uber before Uber, right? We had sidecar, I think came out before it and taxi magic. There were a couple of other folks that you had you had, you had actually met with them. Yeah. Yeah. And they didn't have the ambition of our
SPEAKER_04: guy. Who? Absolutely. So you got to get you got to get all that
SPEAKER_00: figured out. So let's talk a little bit about AI investments
SPEAKER_05: in AI in 2023. And 2023, there was a total of $87.1 billion deployed by VCs into AI. A lot of that went to a small handful of companies, you had open AI that raised $13 billion. Anthropic raised $4 billion from Amazon and apparently is at a run rate of $850 million, as reported by the information. Inflection AI raised 1.3 billion, just those three deals made up over 20% of all VC AI funding. So the question is, will 2024 will we see the same amalgamation of capital among the incumbent startups? Are we going to see more of a distributed funding of new AI startups? Hey, David, I want to
SPEAKER_00: clarify one thing because I think this happens quite a bit. I want you to go back and find that information article. And I think what you'll see is they they claim that they would hit 850 million in 2024. So their actual run rate 100 million. And this is the this is a classic little trick that people play.
SPEAKER_04:
No, no, I think it's actually good. No, no, I think it's a good learning in there. Because people hear these numbers in
SPEAKER_00: the they start saying they're real, even though that was just a forecast that they had put out. No, I think it's the
SPEAKER_04: nuances is super important. And I've had founders take last weeks. They're like, let's say they had a record week. They take that week and they times it by 52. And they're like, you know, like, but that's because like some sale came in of a quarter million dollars. And they're like, oh, quarter million dollars times 52 is this amount. So that's our run rate.
SPEAKER_00: Look, this stuff's unbelievable. Like, like, you can't sit here and say that, that it's all a hoax. It's all scam that it's all like, like, there, there is real revenue coming in at very high volumes. I mean, you can see it in the Nvidia sales. And so it's happening. And it's interesting and people care. And that's why this is an exception. And it's a mania and it's still acting like Zerv.
SPEAKER_05: It could be that gap revenue is one of the only regulatory things that are positive in today's market.
SPEAKER_00: Yeah, I mean, in the end, there's some interesting, there's some interesting elements of AI in that in that because these big companies have at least today, I'll say, gotten away with, um, giving away credits for equity. These companies now have credits. Most all of them want to be the, the
revenue of records. So they, you don't pay them separately from the hosting service. You pay them with the hosting embedded and this creates massive opportunity for gaming, gamifying revenue because you're reselling hosting services. So if you lower the price enough, you're, you're definitely going to create revenue. And so it, uh, it, it's a world that could get sloppy, um, because of everything that's happening and all the components. And, and when I say that, it's really important to say, I know there's real stuff happening too. So, uh, it's not, it's just, it's a manic world. Like it was in a one for everything else. And so you're going to see a lot of really good, positive stuff and you're going to see a lot of crazy manic stuff, simultaneous. And that's really the lesson,
SPEAKER_02:
you know, that I would apply from that 99 to 2001 period. It's very difficult as an analyst and we're all analysts. We study the world around us. We study the world of startups. We try to make sense. We try to predict the future and we try to make, uh, you know, an asymmetric bet in our favor. At
this moment, you have to hold two simultaneous truths, right? One that this thing in 99, it was the internet. We knew it was going to change everything in our world forever. Right? And I think now we would probably say there's probably consensus on this panel that AI may very well be bigger than the internet itself, bigger than mobile, bigger than cloud computing. We'll be investing against it for the next several decades of our investment career. But the simultaneous truth you have to
hold is that there's a lot of stuff going on that is radically mispriced because there's no ability to forecast durability of revenue, whether LLMs are going to be important, getting smaller, getting bigger, etc. And the prices that are being paid are applying a discount to them that almost assumes certainty, like a certainty of the forward view. And so if you believe that AI is as big as I believe, and I think everybody else here believes, it's going to play out over decades, right? Not play out over days or weeks or months. And so you have two camps that have assembled, you have the dogmatic camp that thinks it's all a fad, everything's radically overvalued, you shouldn't do anything. And you have a dogmatic camp that says, you know, AI everything. And the
truth is, you've got to be in the game, you've got to be studying, you've got to be understanding what's working, what's not working, what are the end use cases that are driving productivity for enterprises? How is this going to change search forever? You know, what does this mean for Google, all of those questions. And then as Warren Buffett, you know, has famously said, the hardest thing is to do all that work, and then do nothing to wait to let the next card be turned to
understand a little bit more, right, whether or not you truly have asymmetric risk reward. And I think that's kind of this moment we're in every venture firm in Silicon Valley in 1997 9899 was scrambling to get a search logo, Alta Vista excite info seek, you know, go go through the workout, like goes, etc. They all thought they were smart. And guess what, they got most of the bet, right? They knew the internet was going to
SPEAKER_02: be huge. They knew search was going to be the gatekeeper to the internet, it was going to be the tax collector, and that would absorb a lot of the profits, right, but you would have been better off not placing any bets, and investing in the IPO of Google in 2004. And you would have captured 98% of all the profits ever generated by internet search. And so you know, being too early is tantamount to being wrong sometimes. And I think this is one of those moments, whereas a firm, we're just trying to study work hard, but be cautious.
SPEAKER_04: I think what you just described with these language models, and it was very interesting when these language models got funded, they skipped the normal startup path, they just went
right to late stage funding, which, you know, I think is a function of the deep mind people were so rich, these AI folks were already making 345 $10 million a year with packages and places. So the money instantly came in in nine figures for these language models. I think the language models could be like, oh, six site in that, you know, there, it may wind out,
there's just one of them that just is superior to all the ones and it's most updated. And who knows who's that's going to be? Or it might just be that there's 20 of them, like
publishing platforms, like WordPress, and other publishing platforms on the web. And the whole angel community didn't get to participate in language models. And then what I see with startups, is they're taking the same prompts the same code, and they spit it out to five language models, and whoever, and they're looking at it, and they're telling me like, yeah, chat, GPT four is a little bit better, but Claude is good. This is good. So I think they're, they're going to quickly get commoditized. And I don't I think they're going to be indistinguishable for 90% of jobs. And if they're all indistinguishable for 90% of jobs, it's a commodity business, it might be like storage, it might be like compute, does anybody care where they're storing their images or videos? You know, what do you think, Bill?
SPEAKER_00: And the open the open source models are particularly disruptive play here, launched by meta and then Mistral has really good numbers out of Europe and and, you know, to the extent that Amazon and and others can host those without fees, like it would be very, very, I personally based on everything I've studied in conversations with with our friends, Sonny, I do think that the the variables that have been
used to drive the nonlinear growth both in the parameter count and in the in in the window where they where they study relevance, I think those are probably topped out. And they're trying to differentiate based on merging multiple
models, but the user experience on that is janky and slower. And so I do think there's a chance that we're up against a on the LLM is up against a bit of a of a ceiling. And we'll see though, that and and I think that's why the startups that you're seeing are finding that there's not much difference because they're all kind of hitting toward heading towards the same ceiling. Well, I will say I will say coming out of last summer,
SPEAKER_02: we already started to see a cooling in terms of valuations and up rounds for these AI startups. I think that a lot of firms are coming to that same conclusion. I don't think it's quite as euphoric as it was in q1 and q2 after chat, GPT came out and there was this mad scramble. I think everybody's trying to discern what is real. And remember, David, the valuations and the companies that you pointed out almost, I think in every one of those cases, it was set by a non financial investor, right? If Amazon or Google or Microsoft or
one of these companies is marketing or leading one of these investment rounds, right, you should significantly discount the importance of that valuation. Because while there may be some financial investors who jump on that bandwagon, they're not setting, you know, that price in the market. And so, you know, I think that we've seen a relative cooling, I think LLM has been where what consumed a lot of the action, we're starting to see applications emerge. I'm personally very excited as Jason and Bill know about the impact this is going to have on Google and what's coming next for the consumer. And so whether it's the work, the really interesting work that humane is doing humane.ai, or whether it's the work that's going on at Apple, I think Apple is going to have a large language model and a full new Siri come, you know, q2 q3 this year, you know, llama threes coming in q2 of this year's sucks going to be in that game. Microsoft wants to be back in the consumer game. What's the best case Brad for meta being a leader in AI Bill
SPEAKER_04:
just sort of mentioned, hey, they did this disruptive thing. They're behind they know they're behind. So they did the open source model. They may have even leaked some of it. What's the
best case for meta? Is it that their products are just that
much better and their feeds are more addicting? Or is there a new product that comes out of meta where they just heads on compete with chat, cheap, et with an app with a co pilot? What's the best case scenario for meta in AI? Yeah, so I would, I would direct you in three, three directions.
SPEAKER_02: Number one is reducing friction from existing products to make them way more pleasurable to the to the end user. You know, thrill customers. So you know, if you talk to people today, the number one source of apparel leads for anybody in the apparel business is Instagram. But it's still a lot of friction, I'll hover over something and then I have to go to a sub site, I have to fill out all the information, etc. Instead, there's just going to be an agent that says, Hey, do you want to buy this? I'll take care of it for you. Right? So it tells us Brad's wearing
SPEAKER_04: this shirt right now. Right click here to buy. So shopping age shopping agents are coming in 2024. That I think they'll
SPEAKER_02: radically unlock a whole new level of commerce and activity that occurs on Instagram. Number two, WhatsApp. Remember, the
SPEAKER_02: interaction model for so much of this is chat. We see startups in South America that have 20 million ma use that are bots built on top of WhatsApp as a platform. So expect in 2024, you're going to have vertical agents and horizontal agents that are built on top of WhatsApp. This is a platform that's two and a half billion da use, right in India and South America and other parts of the world. This will be the platform of choice for launching your agent into the world. And then of course, you saw Mark last year experiment with things like meta AI and characters. You know, expect a lot more on that, I would say this company from the time, you know, the fall of 22, the time to get fit letter, it's extraordinary to watch the turnaround. Mark singularly is doubled down on AI, the whole company is focused on AI. And I think there's going to be a tremendous amount of innovation. And I would say one of the if you said what's a surprise prediction over the course of the next two years? Remember, everybody got out of the hardware game. Right? Yeah, Apple won the game. Siri was
your agent. I think this opens the door for everybody to get back in the hardware game. Ray ban glasses, I think when meta reports in Q, in January, their Q4 returns, meta meta glasses, I have everybody in my office is wearing them. They've been a blockbuster hit this season, killer use cases listening to music, but you're going to charm. You're going to see a lot
SPEAKER_02: more innovation coming, whether you have devices that are in your pocket, like humane, that are going to connect you because it allows you to bypass the operating system, it allows you to bypass iOS. And Apple knows this, which is why they're coming with their heater in Q3, Q4 this year, and you're going to have I think they're going to scrap Siri, I think they're going to go to a fully new LLM enabled AI that's going to drive your search experience. They're sitting in pole position, they ought to be able to win. But I think you're going to see Microsoft and everybody else back in the game. Girl,
SPEAKER_04:
what do you what do you think in terms of those Magnificent Seven type companies? Google with their blue links is the franchise at risk with just getting an answer. meta with the glasses, Apple may be throwing a Hail Mary and Siri 2.0 actually working. What do you what do you think of those major waves? I
SPEAKER_00: as Brad hinted at, I do think voice recognition is a key part of all this if we're gonna, you know, a lot of a lot of the major disruptions out there that that that had happened over the past 30 years, relate to the UI that the customer is using, you know, when we went from mainframes to PCs, to browsers to mobile phones, like they all change the UI. And it's hard for
me to imagine AI being great without voice recognition. Like the efficiency of talking to something is so much better than having to type, you know, and, and we also got excited about like chatting as a potential UI. And there were actually startups created like four or five years ago, and it never happened. I just don't know that people want to hype I think if you could get the talking right. So I do I think kind of combining a great llm with great voice recognition is a is a really important milestone. Such a great insight because if you think we've we've
SPEAKER_04: been trying to have this voice interface for 20 years, right, Bell dragon dictate, you probably looked at some of these companies in a day. And I my perception was the payoff from
SPEAKER_04: speaking was very low. Siri, lower the music, Siri, pause the
music. Like it's not enough of a payoff for me not to just click the volume up and down button. But if you say, what are get me a reservation at one of the five best sushi restaurants within 20 blocks of me while I'm in Manhattan, and I wanted in the next hour, and it actually does that. That's a major lift. That's
a major payoff. So I'm willing to do that. And I found myself when I was skiing this time. I answered and reply to Siri can do this where you can like reply or you know, and I find myself doing that. And then on the iPhone 15. I don't know if you gentlemen have it. There's a thing called the action button. Do you know about this the action button, the action button is just a button that you can program to go directly to an app, I set my action button when I press it, it does a shortcut. And my shortcut is the chat GPT for interface voice interface,
SPEAKER_00: voice interface. So I'm driving in my car, I got my Tesla and
SPEAKER_04: self driving. I got this and I just press the button. And then I'm having a conversation with chat GPT for about history. You
know, and I was with my daughter, and we were having a conversation, she wanted to know the history of a certain war, and a certain people. And it was unbelievable. It was like having a tutor in the car with me. And so I agree with you. I think
this could be the big breakout.
SPEAKER_00: But by the way, one cool kind of tactical minor example of this is the Roku remote, which experience using
SPEAKER_02: not now.
SPEAKER_02:
Now people know what you're really connected to Jake out
SPEAKER_00:
both both on the mobile app and on that small remote that Roku has, there's a microphone button. Yeah, you can say, fast forward 10 minutes or turn the volume up or turn the captions on or turn the captions off. And it's awesome.
SPEAKER_04: Well, again, the payoff to put captions on is like five or six
SPEAKER_04: steps, right. And so when the payoff is greater, and AI kind
SPEAKER_04: of makes the payoff greater, then it's worth doing it right. The the juice, the squeeze is worth the juice, the juices.
SPEAKER_00:
There's a second part to get to the reality you talked about. So I think this first hurdle is can you get voice recognition? Great. And combine it with an LLM. The second part is equally difficult, which is can you build an infrastructure for transactional? You know, things on the in a digital world that you described, Jason, and I think it's harder than people realize. I think Google struggled over the years with can they do deals with, you know, the aggregators in a way that's mutually beneficial. And for the most part, there's just been a
ton of friction and trying to make that happen. And if you don't, what's an example of that, like Expedia, or something
SPEAKER_04: to work with Expedia or booking, you know, calm, because there's
SPEAKER_00: an ad relationship and Google always wanted there to be a jump ball competition between the players, but the user that that example you just shared, you don't want it to come back and say, Do you want me to get a quote from booking and a quote from Expedia and a quote from like, you don't want that overhead, right? Reservation. Yeah, yeah. So how do you make that happen? Because if you can't work out a deal with an aggregator, that's mutually beneficial, that's hidden under the covers, now you have to go out to each individual small business to make this all work. And that's nearly impossible also. Yeah, that's a multi decade process. Well, this, this, this
SPEAKER_02: one, though, I mean, I you know, you got me in a place of passion build this, this one is the one that I think is going to get cracked. This isn't Jason a 10 x moment, this is 100 x moment. This is when we talk about having a personal assistant in each of our pockets. Personal assistants don't just tell you, you know, some information about World War Two, they actually do
that makes your life easier, better. They booked the restaurant, they booked the hotel, they booked the airline ticket. I've talked to lots of friends at meta at Google, at Apple, etc. They would all echo Bill's point, it's harder to do than you think. Kaparthi, in fact, went to open AI, I think in 2018, tried to do this, worked on a project called world of bits, and said it was much harder than you think, but he thinks now is the time. The timeline they give me is that, you know, you have the rebirth of these models on devices like Apple this summer, but it doesn't get you to action. The action bot is sometime in the 18 to 24 month time horizon. I will say that Apple and Google have a huge advantage in this regard. Because if you think about the app ecosystem, they have payments on both sides, they already have a relationship in the App Store with booking.com with Expedia, etc. And so they're able to connect that plumbing up in a way that may be harder for meta to do maybe harder for open AI to do. But that's that's the work that's going on now. Sounds to me like an argument, Brad, that the incumbents
SPEAKER_04: OpenTable Yelp, you know, United has a great app now or Emirates when you and I go to the Middle East, we take Emirates typically, they're all starting to have good apps, it might just be you do just ask Siri to open OpenTable and that OpenTable
gets you the reservation. Yeah, I think for certain, my mind, I've thought about this, I think
SPEAKER_00: for something that's a very important transaction in your life, like, you know, real estate or something, you might have a separate AI relationship with with someone for the more tactical stuff. You know, I don't think that's gonna work. I think it violates the premise of what you you you said. And the other thing I would highlight that I think the premise being simplicity. Yeah, yeah, yeah, you just want it to happen. One
SPEAKER_00: click and done. The the the other problem I think all of the incumbents have with this second part of facilitating this transaction. They've all had monopoly like power, and they've all tended to treat partners in a win lose way. And I would put that on nearly every one of them Google, Facebook, Amazon, they don't play nicely Apple. They don't they don't they haven't they haven't built win win relationships with partners. And that's an opportunity for somebody. No, they just they
SPEAKER_00: always Google in particular, like was born were putting these people up against each other and actually led to revenue growth and all that. But But yeah, they've just they've had so much market power that they've they they've they've they've created cultures where the attitude is, we win you lose, squeeze,
SPEAKER_00: squeeze the partner to death. And Facebook has done that. I
SPEAKER_04:
mean, they name, they name the companies that have been built
SPEAKER_00: on the backs of these companies like Facebook. I remember Mark
SPEAKER_04:
Pink is telling me that his personal relationship with Zuckerberg would allow Zinga to flourish in the Facebook ecosystem. And that's where all their apps would work. And then he woke up one morning, and Zuckerberg's three is slit his throat. So like, so I just think, like, whoever figures it
SPEAKER_00: out, I think they're going to have to have a bit of a mindset shift. Because if they could work out a win win deal with one of the leading partners, it would allow them to knock off some of these verticals seems like a good possibility there.
SPEAKER_04: If they just let each if they just let everybody do it for free, for the 20 bucks a month on the pro version, that seems to be that's not do it for free. This is a huge moment of potential
SPEAKER_02:
massive disruption to these monopoly models. You know, I've said, Google is the greatest monopoly in the history of capitalism. They're in the best position, but they also face the biggest innovators dilemma. It's almost impossible to me to see how they go from the age of 10 blue links to the age of answers and actions and maintain the same monopoly profits. They'll be in the pack of competitors. But to maintain the monopoly profits, you have to assume that everybody else in the game possible, you know, on a per user on a per visit basis is impossible.
SPEAKER_00: Truly appears to be impossible.
SPEAKER_00: I would say that maybe another solution is that the the the leading LLM lets the consumer choose which of these services companies they want to work with, and then they have open, you know, connections to each of them, and then it uses what what you have selected. That's another way. That would be wonderful. I mean, just trying to get another
SPEAKER_04: browser to work on your iPhone as the default is just so much lift and so hard. Or like when you ask Siri for music, just automatically goes to Apple music, I want to use Spotify doesn't make it easy. They kind of put these hurdles up and you know, Siri doesn't go deep into Spotify.
SPEAKER_00:
Yeah, and then there's other there's some of these some of these potential players have vertical services that might compete with it. So anyway, that's it. There's a lot to that has to happen to get it right. It's super fun to watch. So when you have a fiduciary working in the background for
SPEAKER_02: your be on your behalf, right, it's not gonna be an auction.
That my meta will simply say, Hey, Brad, do you you know, do you prefer booking or expedient? I'll say you know, booking or expedient though, as they'll say, Do you prefer Uber or Lyft? And I'll say Uber, they'll say, Do you have an Uber number? And I'll say, Yeah, I'll text it to you in a minute. I'll text the Uber number to him of my frequent flyer, or my loyalty on Uber. It's, it's going to be this ambient thing that's really, you know, seamless that occurs in the background. They asked me once just like my personal assistants. And once it's done longitudinally, it gets better and better and better every single day.
SPEAKER_00:
It's assuming the LL the leading front end LLM doesn't say well, only do that deal if Uber or Expedia or whoever bends over and gives me crazy economics. The reason I don't think that
SPEAKER_02: happens is because this is no longer a, you know, Google, you know, determining the terms, we're going to have seven or eight people. And by the way, for meta who gets zero money in the travel vertical, why wouldn't they do it for free? Why wouldn't chat GPT do it for free? They disrupt the hell out of their competitors. They deliver a more thrilling consumer experience. Your margin is my opportunity. Right? I
SPEAKER_04:
mean, this is I hope that I hope that's what happens. I really do.
SPEAKER_00: I've just I've lived through the past 15 years of these companies not respecting the vertical marketplaces. So it'll be interesting to see. So I'm gonna I'm gonna force a decision
SPEAKER_05: on you guys. So you've been talking about a lot of the Magnificent Seven, alphabet, Amazon, Apple, meta, Microsoft, we didn't talk as much about Nvidia, but obviously, Nvidia is a very significant player. And of course, Tesla. If you had to
choose one prediction for 2024, in terms of the best performing on a relative basis and a worst performing, what would your choice be? We'll start with Brad.
SPEAKER_02: Well, first, I would say that I think 2024 and 2025 will again be two more years that tech oriented companies that are represented by the Magnificent Seven will outperform non tech. So if you look at the performance of the NASDAQ versus the spy or the SMP x technology, I think you're going to continue to see meaningful outperformance because of all the benefits of AI that we've just talked about. You've also heard us say that the all seven of the incumbents, right generally benefit from what's going on here, right? All their cloud businesses get bigger, all this AI stack has to get built. But if you put a gun to my head today, I would say the non consensus pick I would have on the long side would be Nvidia. You know, it's trading low 20s, PE multiple, I think the demand is going to continue to outstrip their supply for a long time. I think the runway is still very long and very wide. And there's a wall of worry about Nvidia. A lot of people like Chima think that they pulled forward all the demand for the next two or three years. And you know that this is like dark fiber in 2001. And so that that wall of worry causes the multiple to have compressed pretty dramatically over the course of last year, I think they will continue to surprise to the upside. And then on the downside, again, I think I would pick Google, I think Google will still be positively returning in 2024. But I just think it's very challenging for their multiple to expand in a world where 10 blue links are clearly dying. I don't know how long that timeline will be. It's not going away overnight. They've got an incredible team over there. But I think it's very challenging. The only way I think I'm wrong on Google is if Ruth and and and team get really aggressive on the cost side, they were probably the least aggressive in terms of getting fit in 2023. And I think there's massive opportunities for them in the future to tighten their belt. Yeah, I you know, I'm going to
SPEAKER_00: choose a biased answer on the long side and and go with Uber. I think that the new CFO brings a mindset on cost management that the company hasn't had. And we saw the powerful stock performance that Metta was able to deliver when that kind of attitude was kind of brought into the company. And and I'm hopeful that that can happen here. And it's coincidental or simultaneous with the core business just having, you know, a lot of wind at its back with lifts inability to kind of fund losses forever off the table. It's just a really powerful dynamic for the company. And then on I would probably echo the Google comment on the on the other side, when when the world is worried about disruptive to your business, it's just really hard to have any multiple expansion whatsoever. And so you find stocks that look cheap on a PE basis, but they just can't get anywhere. And Jason, you get the
final word? Well, I'm Yeah, I'm obviously long Uber as well. And
SPEAKER_04: I do think, yeah, they're more financial management is a great
thing, they could probably do what they're doing with half the number of employees. And I'm not advocating for half the people
to lose their job. But the point is, what we saw at Twitter, x and what Elon did there, it is probably the case that every
tech company could cut half their staff and still perform at a high level, and they might even function better. And we saw
that when Google cut, and Facebook cut 10 20,000 people each. So I'm super long Uber. But when we look at the magnificent seven, I think Apple has some fundamental problems in that. And I like anecdotes about consumer purchasing behavior,
because I do think that they can be super insightful, especially
in a company that's launching a lot of products and has a lot of buzzwords, etc. I skipped for the first time, iPhone 14, I
skipped a generation of iPhone. Now I was the person who would send somebody to line up and pick up a phone for me. And I would always buy the interim. So between, you know, iPhone five and six, you know, they would do the s or something, and I would buy that too. So I would literally just trade in my iPhone every year for the newest one, because it really had, it felt like such a profound change. Now I skipped, I went from 13 to 15. And my reason for skipping was not financial, it
was just I didn't want to go through the process of unboxing it. There wasn't literally there wasn't enough juice from that
squeeze of unboxing and setting up the phone that one hour for me to buy it and upgrade it. And then I talked to my family this Christmas. And some family members are skipping three or
four generations are going from 10 to 1511 to 15. And you're starting to see that in the revenue numbers. And I don't think the glasses the goggles are going to make up for it. I don't think they have new enough new products. And I think it's like, the Steve Jobs product roadmap has been exhausted. And
I don't know that goggles gets them there or services gets them there. So I think Apple's got a lot of headwinds. Google, I'm actually bullish on. I think that the franchise of search is going to take a long time to deprecate. And I think people are going to do more searches, and they're going to do more queries, because it's going to be so fun to do queries. So I think that the lift from doing more queries will will outstrip the disruption and what they have in YouTube as a base for a language model and what they have in your Gmail, and what they have from the browser and what they have from Android. You might remember they have like 567 billion user franchises from Android, YouTube search, obviously, Doc's. What am I missing in their billion franchise. So I feel like they're going to get a lot out of that data. So I don't think they're out of the game. So
SPEAKER_00:
13138 138.83 you can write that down. Yeah. Well, why do we what one area where Apple has momentum I think is Apple Pay. Like, oh, yeah, really on fire on fire. So yeah, both online
SPEAKER_00: and all.
SPEAKER_04: You know, it's interesting. I was when I was skiing. And because you can't get service people in ski towns now, right? It's just like a major problem. Any tourist town, people because of Airbnb, etc. People can't live there. So you people can't
drive to Lake Tahoe to work. What they did is they replaced like with the toast kind of system, whatever the ability to order from your seat at the lodges. And because of Apple
Pay, you know, the idea of typing in your credit card is just, why would I do that if my watch does Apple Pay where my phone does it instantly, and I'm starting to see Apple Pay come up for like close purchases. Like I didn't think it was going
to get there so quick. It's not just like getting yogurt, you know, frozen yogurt. It's, it's happening everywhere. So yeah, I agree with you. That's a really interesting business.
SPEAKER_02: That's your negative pick for the year, right?
SPEAKER_04: I think Apple is a negative. And I think I'm not long. Sorry, Google, I'm trying to figure out who I'm long in that. You chose you chose Apple is your short and you chose Google
SPEAKER_02:
as your long I heard it. No, no, I'm just that I'm not.
SPEAKER_04: The magnificent negative on Google. I think I'm trying to think I think if we're betting on stock prices, you probably would go with Nvidia because of that reason. So I would have to
SPEAKER_04: pick my long being Nvidia and Apple being my short.
SPEAKER_02: So he's already changed from the
SPEAKER_04:
No, no, I'm just saying I think you guys are the wall of worry of Google. And I think it's a little overblown. Okay, I think they have opportunity opportunities. Anyway, but it's
SPEAKER_04: been an amazing episode. David. Great job. moderating read the news Bill Gurley. Awesome. And brag or amazing. We'll see you all next time on this week's service. Bye bye.