They Don’t Pay You at Halftime and a Conversation with Bill Pulte

  • last year
Guy, Dan and Danny discuss the worst first half for the #sp500 since 1970 (1:47), the #crypto crash (11:53), what the mid-term #elections could mean for the #stockmarket (15:53), an interview with Blackstone’s Joe Zidle on CNBC’s Fast Money (20:31), what Dan is buying right now (28:18), the energy space (34:12), what’s happening with Elon Musk and Tesla (38:21). The co-hosts interview Bill Pulte and talk about Twitter #philanthropy (48:04), the #Pulte family (52:45), #bitcoin (1:00:53), and #homebuilders (1:12:14).

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00:01:17 platform visit iConnections.io. In 1974 there were a bunch of great movies. One
00:01:25 of the most underrated movies of that year starred one James Caan. It was
00:01:30 called The Gambler. Paul Sorvino was in that movie. Lauren Hutton, if you recall,
00:01:35 was in that movie. The reason I bring it up is because James Caan played the
00:01:39 aforementioned gambler. His name was Axel and he made a series of bets and he was
00:01:44 out in Las Vegas and he was listening to these games and at halftime he was up
00:01:50 big on all of his bets. He subsequently left thinking that he was going to be a
00:01:55 winner only to find out that all his teams lost. The point is, and one of the
00:01:59 lines from the movie Dan Nathan is, "They don't pay you at halftime Axel." And here
00:02:05 we are at halftime in the market and although a lot of the things that we've
00:02:09 been talking about are playing out, they don't pay you at halftime. So there's a
00:02:13 lot of runway left in this year, but I think first and foremost, it would be
00:02:17 interesting to go back and sort of look at some of the things that have happened
00:02:19 over the last six months. Well, it's interesting, right? So if you were a bear
00:02:22 coming in this year and you look at the S&P 500 limping into the close of this
00:02:27 quarter down what 20 or so percent, we're gonna close in a technical definition of
00:02:32 a bear market. The Nasdaq is down about 30%. There's no victory lapse right now.
00:02:36 When you think about just all of the cross currents in the economy and you
00:02:40 think about so many parts of the stock market that have been correcting for
00:02:43 over a year, many since their highs in Q1 of 2021, the broad market, the major
00:02:50 indices don't really reflect the sort of devastation that's going on in large
00:02:55 parts of the market. So in some ways you're gonna have to wait until the
00:02:59 fourth quarter to get paid if you're the gambler playing for an all-out
00:03:02 destructive period as it relates to equities. And I know that Liz Young gave
00:03:06 us this stat guy earlier in the day when we were speaking to her that she said
00:03:10 the average decline in a recession for the stock market is like 30% or so and
00:03:16 we're very likely to be in a recession and so down 21%. Talk to me when the S&P
00:03:21 has round-tripped all the way back to its pre-pandemic highs from February 2020
00:03:25 which is just below 3,400 which would be a 30% peak to trough decline. Then you
00:03:29 can start talking about how we bought them. Danny, was this time last year you'd
00:03:33 started to bring up the term that everybody's heard of but very few people
00:03:37 were talking about the time stack inflation and so many things that you
00:03:40 were talking about last summer have absolutely come to fruition and Dan
00:03:44 said we're not here to take victory laps. No, we're not. What we are here to do is
00:03:48 sort of point out what's going on and what we think is going on moving forward.
00:03:52 So your calls have been prescient in a word all playing out right before our
00:03:56 very eyes. My question now is how does the rest of the year sort of play itself
00:04:00 out because right now there's many cross currents in the market as I've seen in
00:04:04 quite some time. Yeah I would just add to the first half pain was not just about
00:04:08 the stock market it's about the bond market and so there's really nowhere to
00:04:11 hide as the cost of everything was getting more expensive at the same time.
00:04:13 So you started out with movie The Gambler which is near and dear to my
00:04:17 heart. I was watching Powell speak yesterday or actually that's not true I
00:04:20 didn't watch it speak. I heard about him speaking and then I watched the
00:04:23 recording at this ECB forum on inflation and reminds me of Princess Bride. The
00:04:27 great Vizzini played by Wallace Shawn right. Inconceivable. Remember the whole
00:04:31 thing right. So his quote in Princess Bride was you felt victim to one of the
00:04:35 classic blunders never get involved in a land war in Asia. That made about as much
00:04:39 sense as what Powell's quote was yesterday which was we understand better
00:04:43 how little we understand about inflation. I mean he should resign honest to God.
00:04:48 That is the head of the Federal Reserve. Say what you want about the Federal
00:04:51 Reserve. The fact that he says that is nuts and he said again I will hike into
00:04:55 recession. I will hike into a slowing economy because I'm not gonna make a
00:04:58 mistake on this end. Meanwhile every single data point that's coming out
00:05:02 right now. Inflation still high very high. It's inching lower but the economy is
00:05:07 literally grinding to a halt. Retail sales are dropping off of a cliff.
00:05:11 Gasoline we already talked about demand destruction and guy I'll get to what I
00:05:15 think is gonna happen in the second half here in a minute.
00:05:17 Demand destruction is hurting the price of oil. We said that's gonna be a
00:05:20 conflict of whether to own energy stocks or not. What does that really mean? But
00:05:23 again not once has he said I am paying attention to the S&P 500 companies and
00:05:28 what they're telling us. So today as we sit here it's Thursday afternoon nearing
00:05:32 the close. Last day of the first half of the year. What's gonna happen tomorrow
00:05:35 night? Here's my prediction. This is how we're gonna start the second quarter.
00:05:38 Friday night holiday weekend dirties. That's what you call them okay. Friday
00:05:43 night dirties with a holiday weekend. They're the best time. So you have a lot
00:05:46 of companies which will be able to tell you within five or ten percent exactly
00:05:49 where they stand on the quarter. They're gonna release Friday night. So I don't
00:05:52 know how many we're gonna get but we're gonna get them tomorrow night. So guy
00:05:55 that's how it's gonna start and why the Fed or Powell whether it's not a
00:05:59 common-sense element to this and again money was free for too long. I'm not
00:06:03 disagreeing that they should be raising rates or cutting back liquidity to the
00:06:05 market but Christine Lagarde said yesterday when he said that she goes
00:06:09 well I'm gonna go slower because I think things are gonna slow down. I mean
00:06:13 there's no excuse for pumping as much money as we did globally but that being
00:06:16 said it's a drug we need to wean off of not just come off straight away. So
00:06:19 that's how we're gonna start guy in the second half. Second quarter numbers are
00:06:22 gonna be bad. We will officially be in a recession when second quarter GDP comes
00:06:26 out in a month or so and if not and if it's 0.1% growth who gives a shit. It
00:06:31 feels like we're in a recession we're in a recession people are cutting back. So
00:06:33 recession happens second quarter is gonna be puke for a lot of companies. I
00:06:37 think the market gets to it blows in the third quarter. I think in the third
00:06:41 quarter July August September I think we will hit I'm not gonna try to give a
00:06:44 number but it'll be the low three thousands on the S&P is what I think
00:06:47 happens and I think that's where we find now we may flatten out for a long period
00:06:50 of time and bob around that level but that's what I think is gonna happen and
00:06:53 the reason I say that is I think the Fed will blink I think they will stop and
00:06:58 again I'm not saying that's the right or wrong thing to do I'm feeding on the
00:07:01 animal spirits of the market and what that means and so guy I see a very very
00:07:05 choppy summer. We've seen those Augusts in a couple of times in the last 10
00:07:09 years which have been just brutal. I think we're gonna see that again and
00:07:12 it's gonna be a rocky road and I think we're inverting as we speak. Who cares
00:07:15 about the definition of a recession and who cares about definition of inversion
00:07:19 so it's three BIPs for four basis points between the two and the tenure I don't
00:07:22 need that stuff to happen to tell me what's happening but things are gonna
00:07:25 get bad and may actually feel worse than it actually is for a period of time and
00:07:29 that's when I think we bought them some time in the next three months. So this a
00:07:32 bit of a rhetorical question because I do think I know the answer to it but
00:07:35 isn't this exactly what we need to reset the system I mean isn't this two steps
00:07:39 back exactly what we need to take three steps forward because the path we had
00:07:43 gone on for so long was unsustainable and at a certain point something like
00:07:47 this in my opinion needed to happen in this reset almost by definition whether
00:07:51 it happened too late or not I don't think it's the point now it's happening
00:07:55 so isn't this what we need to sort of get to the other side of this entire
00:07:58 thing? It is but the one thing I did mention there and it's just I can't put
00:08:02 a price on it is geopolitical risk has never been greater both in the United
00:08:06 States and outside the United States right things feel very unsettled
00:08:10 everywhere and that element of that risk adding into the market only makes it
00:08:13 harder to feel comfortable in a position or to feel like the government's got
00:08:17 your back and you think about what's going on in crypto right now and what's
00:08:20 happening right now now people are begging that there was government
00:08:22 intervention they wish it was regulated to protect them billions are going out
00:08:26 the door vanishing and so these things are all occurring in real time and we
00:08:29 can't just hit the pause button and I always joked about crypto people wanted
00:08:33 the stock market to trade 24/7 please people love that crypto trades 24/7
00:08:37 please believe me talk to any crypto professional out there right now they
00:08:40 would love to not have to be salt trading for a day or two so Danny the
00:08:44 way you're talking about how bad things are you're really talking about some of
00:08:47 the financial conditions and as it relates to markets too and guy I'm just
00:08:51 curious your thoughts here because if you're just the average sort of investor
00:08:55 out there and you're feeling these inflationary pressures in your personal
00:08:59 consumption whether it be food whether it be energy you've had the benefit of a
00:09:04 solid balance sheet for the most part a lot of America have during the course of
00:09:08 the pandemic and coming out of it we hear that corporate balance sheets are
00:09:11 really good shape we know that there are pockets of over exuberance and
00:09:13 overbuilding and all that sort of stuff but if you were just that average
00:09:17 American consumer and investor and you're looking at the S&P 500 down 20%
00:09:23 so let's say it's your 401k or whatever are you panicked yet does it feel
00:09:27 horrible do you know that many people who are out of work yet you know any
00:09:30 people who've canceled the vacation because they were spending too much on
00:09:33 gas at the pump so I'm curious because we stare at these screens every day we
00:09:37 overthink all of this we talk about it a lot has it seeped into everyday
00:09:41 Americans and then let's also remember here that it's been a kind of fucking
00:09:45 crazy couple years for we're used to or conditioned to a sort of very volatile
00:09:50 lifestyle right now I'm with Danny on the geopolitical thing I think it's
00:09:54 completely underappreciated by the market but in terms of does it feel like
00:09:58 capitulation has it made its way into everyday America you know the definition
00:10:03 of a recession is your neighbor lost his or her job the definition of a
00:10:07 depression is you lost your job and we haven't obviously gotten to that point
00:10:11 yet but listen we're getting seemingly day by day closer and I think my push
00:10:16 back all the time is what difference does it make if we're in a recession not
00:10:20 in a recession does it really make a difference in terms of the market and
00:10:23 some of the pushback I get maybe correctly so is that definition if in
00:10:28 fact we are there statistically might give companies air cover to do things
00:10:33 they probably should done a while ago and that's problematic so are we at the
00:10:36 forefront yeah in terms of answering your question should people panic I mean
00:10:40 that's such a difficult word to assess people use that word I think they
00:10:45 associated always with selling and I would submit and I've done it for years
00:10:49 on fast money and I've done it here on the podcast that we see panic to the
00:10:53 upside as well and until recently I think a lot of the panic that we've seen
00:10:57 over the last couple months has been to the upside in the form of these six
00:11:01 seven eight hundred point updates seemingly out of nowhere now we're
00:11:05 starting to see potentially a little bit about panic on the downside but should
00:11:10 the everyday person pant no you obviously staying the course has been
00:11:15 the right course of action for decades and it's going to be the right course of
00:11:19 action now but what it should allow you to do almost force you to do is
00:11:24 understand what you own we talk about that all the time and understand what
00:11:29 your expenses and what your lifestyle is like and maybe instead of worrying about
00:11:33 what the other guy and gal is doing which I think has been such a huge
00:11:36 problem in this country for so long focus on what you're doing at home one
00:11:40 of the interesting things I'm reading is that it may backfire this working
00:11:43 remotely and the reason I say that as companies obviously are figuring out how
00:11:47 efficient or inefficient some of their systems are by people that aren't coming
00:11:50 into the office and I think you're gonna see people start to come into the office
00:11:54 more out of the insecurity of that so I think we're gonna see a little bit of a
00:11:58 change here people that want to have face time guy to your point about
00:12:00 definition of recession depression whatever I don't think people are gonna
00:12:04 wait I think that's gonna change quickly because people if they're not connected
00:12:07 physically sitting next to somebody just changes and it makes you more insecure
00:12:10 so I think that's gonna happen one of the areas that I think we need to
00:12:14 discuss and not so much the value of Bitcoin and aetherium and all this stuff
00:12:17 is the amount of leverage that's in the crypto system so when the world blew up
00:12:20 in 2008 and 2009 it was because the government had no idea how levered all
00:12:26 these mortgages were in prepackaged and all these different things right CDOs
00:12:29 and all the stuff I think that because crypto is unregulated we're now seeing I
00:12:35 mean I don't even add up the amount of billions that are disappearing by the
00:12:37 day or the bailouts or the leverage and these lending platforms like Celsius and
00:12:41 thank God for SPF a 30 year old genius from MIT that's gonna come in and save
00:12:46 the day and buy things up at pennies on the dollar I don't know all I'm saying
00:12:49 is this is having reverberation much bigger I just say I think of Bitcoin as
00:12:53 a 600 billion dollar 800 billion our entity I think of aetherium as a three
00:12:57 to four hundred million to wherever these things are at this point but I
00:13:00 didn't take into account the contagion that exists because if you start to add
00:13:03 up the leverage on the all these platforms even if it was a quote fake
00:13:07 money that just existed in the ether it existed on people's balance sheets and
00:13:11 it's disappearing by the second I'm just a push back for a second go ahead because
00:13:14 listen it's global though when you think about our stock market is really focused
00:13:18 on a US investor set and so that's one of the reasons why I just pushed back a
00:13:22 little bit about the leverage in the crypto system and the thought that it's
00:13:25 so concentrated here so let me push back on that so there are jobs being rescinded
00:13:31 kids that just got out of college that were going to work at blockchain where
00:13:34 they believe it or not I mean this technology is gonna be here to stay what
00:13:36 form it's gonna be those jobs are disappearing by the second so you want
00:13:39 to talk about where there is a depression and where things are
00:13:41 happening it's that particular area and it doesn't take much my point is that
00:13:44 even if that's one to two to three percent of people's portfolio some
00:13:48 people at 70% those are the doctor those are the same people who are 90%
00:13:52 and AMC but it is a confidence factor in the markets and I think those people
00:13:56 equate crypto exchanges and these things sometimes with investing and with the
00:14:02 market and these things were shells but it was the same thing with people after
00:14:05 the financial crisis and it was the same thing with the people after the dot-com
00:14:08 bus I just think when we really do the postmortem it's gonna look the same as
00:14:12 those things I agree but I think in real time my point is it's adding a lot of
00:14:15 fuel right now to the fire and just the lack of confidence people Dan are gonna
00:14:20 group them together for now if they're gonna say they're gonna think stock
00:14:22 market crypto market whether there's a group of investors that think of it that
00:14:25 way we talked about the gamification a year and a half ago when we started this
00:14:29 we talked about how people view it and my point is it it's a con game it's a
00:14:32 confidence game in terms of how people want to get back in and I'm saying
00:14:35 structurally the confidence has disappeared from that market and what I
00:14:38 mean is that I think that's gonna hurt the average retailer so it's just
00:14:42 another thing that we have to deal with and I agree it's like the dot-coms in
00:14:45 2001 2002 they were going to go to zero there except for the fact there is no
00:14:50 regulator backing this it's this SPF character that's gonna quote come in and
00:14:54 save the day and tether hasn't imploded yet I guess the point is is like okay
00:14:58 it's fine there's only a half a dozen cryptos that really matter and I know
00:15:01 you're focused on these stable coins and you're saying what's the leverage there
00:15:04 I'm looking at a bunch of stocks in the tech market these are products and
00:15:08 services we use every day that we're not particularly worried they're gonna be
00:15:11 disintermediated by blockchain technology so here's a deal Facebook
00:15:15 meta is down 60% Netflix is down this is on the year 71% Lyft is down 70% I mean
00:15:22 the list goes on and on PayPal down this Shopify is down 80% so there's plenty of
00:15:26 much bigger market cap companies that are gonna be more affected on the
00:15:31 employment front on the wage growth front so to me I actually think cryptos
00:15:34 a bit of a sideshow I don't give a shit about it I'm long a little ETH and a
00:15:37 bundle Solana unless you are right unless tether breaks and then we see
00:15:42 what the knock-on effects are I just still don't think that it's just that
00:15:45 big of a thing can I say one last thing crypto will move on I said this for
00:15:48 years why aren't the good actors calling out the bad actors why where are they
00:15:53 like you believe in your industry speak up say something like a range is frozen
00:15:57 right now so I just wanted to add that part to that makes sense you've been
00:15:59 making that point I think that's fair you know what also is gonna come up and
00:16:03 we don't necessarily talk politics here but only through the lens of what it
00:16:07 means for the market and before you know it both of you guys know this we're
00:16:11 gonna be talking about midterm elections and the impact they could potentially
00:16:15 have on the market and I think the impact for this midterm elections
00:16:19 probably as large as it's been that I can remember because I'm thinking about
00:16:23 it now and I don't remember ever thinking about it in terms of the market
00:16:27 for a while but I'll say this Danny you mentioned geopolitical risks there's so
00:16:30 much you know the polarization here at home is such that I think regardless of
00:16:35 the outcome of the midterms people are gonna be pissed off with that said it's
00:16:39 gonna have huge market ramifications as well and like it or not if there were
00:16:43 let's just say some red wave in November one has to wonder could that be the
00:16:49 turning point for the market again not asking your political thoughts just in
00:16:53 terms of history and that playing out Dan listen that first term midterm we
00:16:57 have a lot of data on that and I'm hard-pressed to think that anything other
00:17:00 than a red wave happens here just look at Biden's approval ratings and I think
00:17:04 that it could only get better here I think for the markets or the idea that
00:17:08 we don't have a White House and a legislative body in the same camp here
00:17:13 and I think the approval ratings are telling you all you need to know about
00:17:15 Congress and the job that they think they're doing so in some ways might we
00:17:19 have a crescendo into the fall and to Danny's point I mean listen at some
00:17:24 point there's gonna be a 20% rally off of a low and the lower we go the more
00:17:29 we're likely to rally off of that low and if sentiment gets really bad into
00:17:33 that and the polls are showing this and we know that there's a couple tape bombs
00:17:36 out there that could be a positive thing if we were to see some sort of
00:17:40 de-escalation in the situation with Ukraine a lot of things could align for
00:17:45 a big market rally and they might not have a whole heck of a lot to do with
00:17:48 politics at least the course in which they're going but it might be a
00:17:51 signifying some sort of change for let's say as we get into 2023 and we know that
00:17:56 investors love to turn the page they love to turn the calendar and that will
00:18:00 start to happen late q3 early q4 to your point Danny yeah listen we're over 30
00:18:05 trillion in debt GDP is contracting so you're less than 20 trillion in GDP
00:18:10 you're north of 30 trillion in debt so to think that quote tax cuts are great
00:18:14 or that's gonna be a stimuli maybe there'll be something they'll bring
00:18:17 forward the thought of it may rally the market versus the actual that possibly
00:18:20 occurring or what may or may not occur I think we have a lot bigger issues in
00:18:23 this country than just the stock market at that point but still again it's an
00:18:27 excuse you're right and normally in that two-year cycle when you have opposite
00:18:31 parties controlling Congress and controlling the White House that people
00:18:33 like stalemates they like when nothing can happen I mean that's normally the
00:18:36 recipe for buying the market so we'll see what happens but it's setting up for
00:18:40 extremely ugly summer for sure so many of these things I find fascinating and I
00:18:45 rail about the bond market seemingly every day for years and I think a lot of
00:18:49 people coming around to the way I think Danny we think about these things in
00:18:53 terms of just the volatility and one of the points that I've made if rates were
00:18:57 to go higher from here let's just say as of this taping 10-year yields are just
00:19:02 3% for a round number you know I think rates went meaningfully higher I think
00:19:06 that's negative and I think if rates go meaningfully lower which by the way I
00:19:10 think could potentially happen Danny I think you're in that camp as well I
00:19:13 think that's negative how does that shake out how are you looking at the
00:19:17 bond market now given everything that's transpired over the last six months I
00:19:21 think it really has to do with quantitative tightening and what the Fed
00:19:25 really does do they do what they say they're gonna do do they pull that back
00:19:28 or not I think that holds the key because we already saw mortgage-backed
00:19:31 securities go out way before they even started doing any of this quantitative
00:19:35 tightening why because once the big buyers in mortgage land knew the Fed was
00:19:39 no longer there they were gonna sell ahead of them it's why mortgage rates
00:19:42 have gone up so much Powell doesn't seem to carry likes it right now he wants the
00:19:45 economy to go into recession literally quote yesterday that's what he wants to
00:19:49 keep seeing so I'm convinced that we're gonna be in a inverted yield curve and
00:19:53 I'm not talking to bibs for bibs I'm talking 20 30 40 basis points and that's
00:19:58 just not a great recipe that by nature will slow things down banks don't like
00:20:02 to lend when the curve is like that because it's hard to make a lot of money
00:20:05 doing that so the other issue guy we have to deal with is the one thing
00:20:09 happening right now is people that have home equity loans credit lines or
00:20:13 whatever the consumer I know it's not a huge amount
00:20:15 LIBOR plus or SOFR plus whatever you're switching to is up a lot and I don't
00:20:21 think people realize now when they're carrying an extra balance or whatever so
00:20:24 it's not just the mortgage rates it's consumer discretionary spending gonna
00:20:27 continue to get hit here I believe that the 10-year yield is gonna go much lower
00:20:31 from here and to your point guy neither is good I would actually argue three
00:20:35 and a half to four percent is healthier than two to two and a half percent on
00:20:38 the 10-year if I woke up and you said Danny the 10-year yields at 2% where's
00:20:42 the stock market verse the 10-year yields at 4 you wanted to ask me which
00:20:45 one has the higher stock market 4% has the higher stock market not to Dan we
00:20:49 had Joe's idle from Blackstone on fast money a few months ago and he was
00:20:53 talking about the housing market and obviously Blackstone might be the largest
00:20:58 participant in the US housing market in the country and you push back pretty
00:21:02 hard and I said on the show that clearly Joe was talking his book but in the case
00:21:06 of this they are putting their money where their mouth is but I think you
00:21:09 were prescient enough to point out that hey wait a second there's so many shifts
00:21:13 going on beneath our feet that nobody's taking in consideration by the way we're
00:21:17 gonna talk to Bill Pulte about these things in a few minutes but you've been
00:21:21 ahead of the curve clearly on the housing market now everybody's starting
00:21:25 to come around to your way of thinking thoughts of how important that is in the
00:21:29 next six months of the year well it's funny at the time I mean Joe's been a
00:21:32 great guest on fast money for a long time and Blackstone those guys are
00:21:35 really smart and I just thought it was interesting because he is basically
00:21:39 helping to dictate their house view guy you've talked about this on many
00:21:42 occasions they're one of the biggest buyers of residential housing in our
00:21:46 country and if you don't think that their move into that part of the market
00:21:50 at the time in which they did given the weird dynamics of the pandemic from a
00:21:54 migratory standpoint people moving out of the cities that sort of thing that
00:21:58 does not give me confidence that a company like Blackstone is buying large
00:22:03 swaths of the housing market and keeping prices bid up the other thing that I
00:22:07 just didn't agree with is that he thinks that housing I could come in because
00:22:11 we're at these kind of levels and we had this extraordinary period of low
00:22:14 interest rates but he didn't see unemployment ticking up and I just don't
00:22:18 know how those two things can live in the same economic universe when we see
00:22:22 what's going on with yields we see what's going on with sovereign balance
00:22:25 sheets we see what's going on with inflationary pressures and what to me
00:22:29 seems very obvious for a very long time is that when I hear people say that we
00:22:34 are at 40 year lows in unemployment and I tell you why it's gonna be different
00:22:38 this time why it can't tick up I'm like that's it that's the point and so we had
00:22:43 David Rosenberg of Rosenberg research on a few weeks ago and he was giving us
00:22:47 some data about when you have unemployment tick up three or four
00:22:51 tenths of a percent off of a multi-decade load he's going back to a
00:22:55 hundred years of history the knock-on effects for the economy are devastating
00:23:00 and then you throw in the point that we have a situation where the Fed has to
00:23:04 raise they have to be hawkish now I know Danny you think they're gonna pivot and
00:23:06 guy you do too and I don't disagree with that I think the pivot that comes in the
00:23:10 second half of this year is not going to be a rate decrease if they lower rates
00:23:14 after going from essentially zero and Fed funds what should be 3% by the time
00:23:20 they pivot in the fall what sort of credibility do I need to redo the quote
00:23:24 he said yesterday again I mean seriously think about the quote I agree with you
00:23:27 listen should they know but you know what it is this economy is slowing
00:23:31 because of inflation not because of prices of things right now
00:23:35 feds rate hikes are just getting in to the economy now okay totally and they
00:23:39 haven't even started oh I do and I are in the same camp so just to put a bow on
00:23:43 guys question the fact that a place like Blackstone has a house view that was
00:23:49 articulated by Joe's idol and Amanda you can put that interview in the show notes
00:23:53 here tells me that they have not had their reckoning yet about how their
00:23:57 house is in order and the things that they see the downside that could happen
00:24:01 in the US economy where I get a little exercise is we can spend a lot of time
00:24:04 talking about stable coins and all this crap this is where people should be
00:24:08 focused on and we've been talking about it why are the banks been
00:24:12 underperforming the way that they have from the heights the banks topped out
00:24:16 before the Nasdaq did in q4 of last year right cuz credits turning all right but
00:24:20 but but but credit hadn't turned yeah but the market's smart but the price
00:24:24 action in the banks were well people to cover banks are nerds small part of the
00:24:27 market is smart trust me people to cover banks are nerds they're projecting way
00:24:30 out there are utility stocks for the most part they have a dividend they have
00:24:33 a buyback they have credit reserve it's very easy actually analyze a bank it's
00:24:37 very predictable you can't predict losses that might come from nickel
00:24:40 certain times you can't predict so the stocks though didn't benefit they
00:24:43 benefited for a short period of time as they released all those reserves that
00:24:47 they had from kovat and the rate curve was steeper the Fed hadn't raised yet
00:24:50 and we were going out and it was steepening it was steepening and then
00:24:53 it all kind of ended like we said last week I mean there have been warning
00:24:56 signs screaming and silence for a year and a half and the fact is the S&P is
00:25:01 only down 21% at the end of q2 here we had a monster year in the S&P last year
00:25:07 we had a monster year in 2020 the year that we actually had a crash and a
00:25:12 recession and a pandemic and so 21% lower on the S&P is not enough to cure
00:25:18 all those ills I've said this again the market shot up much higher than it
00:25:22 should have this 20% that counts as a correction or 30% off it's bullshit to
00:25:26 me that was an irrational number that was in q4 it never should have been it
00:25:29 look where the market was in q3 use that as your correction number and that's why
00:25:33 I think you get to that 32 3300 number in the S&P and I want to make one
00:25:37 comment on your blackstone and all these large and don't listen I know smart
00:25:40 people great company whatever they have to find a place to put their money to
00:25:44 work they're doing in hundreds of billions of dollars right why so they
00:25:47 can go raise another fund and keep that money it works but then they should keep
00:25:50 their strategists at home and now talk about you're gonna come on CNBC and
00:25:54 you're gonna say that I think the housing market's gonna be okay and I
00:25:57 don't think unemployment is gonna tick up but I think inflation is gonna stay
00:25:59 high and rates are gonna go higher that was the sum of what he said to us and
00:26:03 none of it makes any sense it's about as nonsensical is what you said he's
00:26:07 talking to all said yesterday actually guy was brilliant guy said well he's
00:26:10 obviously talking his book right he is talking to somebody and you weren't
00:26:13 doing it in a snarky way either no and not at all I mean you know people who
00:26:17 think that term it's like a term of derision or so not at all I mean he
00:26:20 should be talking his book because they have obviously not billions probably
00:26:24 close to a trillion dollars or so behind it so when I say that I was saying that
00:26:29 here's somebody that's actually putting his money where his mouth is and we can
00:26:33 talk about this in a second but I'll say this for me the last six months or so
00:26:37 it's been a real great learning experience and you get to a certain age
00:26:40 you don't think you learn new things but I clearly have and I remember you saying
00:26:44 Dan specifically back earlier this year it's not coincidental that Blackstone
00:26:50 the stock topped out at 149.78 if memory serves towards the end of November of
00:26:56 last year and it's because we sit here right now it's either side of 90 bucks
00:26:59 that's a pretty significant move it coincides obviously with the Fed pivot
00:27:04 but the housing market starting to give it up as well then you sort of look at
00:27:07 where the home builders top that we'll talk to Bill Pulte about that as well
00:27:10 and it all starts to make sense only in retrospect I get it but at the time if
00:27:15 you go back and look the signs were so clear but for me at least specifically
00:27:21 me either I chose not to see them or I just completely miss them entirely you
00:27:26 know why you can't meme a builder stock you can't meme a bank stock they're
00:27:31 unmeanable they're actually economically balance sheet oriented companies that's
00:27:36 the one thing that's why they're rational stocks let me just say this
00:27:39 talking your book everyone should rest assured that S&P global ratings remember
00:27:43 that rating agency along with Moody's that didn't have down home prices in
00:27:47 their forecast in 2008 9 and 10 they're saying that economic momentum will
00:27:51 likely protect the US economy from recession in 22 those are not the kind
00:27:55 of things that you want to see or hear you want to hear them say we're going
00:27:58 into depression that's a sign to buy Wall Street economists it's up now to
00:28:01 44% think we're gonna have a recession what does a Wall Street economist gain
00:28:05 by coming out and saying we're going into recession they lose their job so
00:28:08 those are things you want to see 80% people get it built into the market and
00:28:12 that's what I mean I think we're gonna have this washout here over the course
00:28:15 of the summer and I think it begs people to be in yes cash is underperforming
00:28:19 inflation I get it but I don't think now's the time to be diving into the
00:28:23 market now if someone pre announces on a Friday night dirty and we open up
00:28:26 Tuesday in the market it's overreacts down 30% you know buy it so I want to be
00:28:29 really clear about this and I think if you're listening to this podcast you've
00:28:32 been listening to us for a while you're listening down the day you know what
00:28:35 you've heard our commentary in a lot of different ways and I've been decidedly
00:28:38 negative we've all been very negative on the economy and the outlook for it and
00:28:42 the pace in which it might have recovered given the post pandemic period
00:28:46 which really never materialized but we've also pointed out in all of our
00:28:50 different let's call them expertise where we see risk that's not being
00:28:54 appreciated since we started so we've done that I will tell you this so I'm
00:28:58 starting to pick at things I grew up as a trader as you guys did short-term
00:29:02 momentum driven stuff catalyst driven stuff or whatever I'm actually for the
00:29:05 first time in a very long time I think the disconnect that we're seeing in
00:29:08 parts of the stock market forget the other stuff I'm not smart enough to deal
00:29:12 with FX and rates and all that sort of stuff I have to go back 20 years or go
00:29:17 back to the financial crisis and I wasn't so focused on financial oriented
00:29:21 products that to see what I think are some multi-year opportunities right now
00:29:24 so talking about buying things guy you and I were just talking about this
00:29:28 earlier today on Thursday is like okay some of these stocks that are down 70 80
00:29:31 percent and companies that you think are gonna be around and they have
00:29:34 opportunities whether it be outside the US and just over appreciated and I'll
00:29:38 just throw a few of them out there I started picking at and I'm just gonna
00:29:41 add a couple more names I told you last month snap PayPal today I bought a little
00:29:46 Netflix last week I bought a little Facebook meta I don't think I've ever
00:29:49 bought that stock other than a cover short so to me I'm looking at
00:29:52 multi-year time horizons and I'm fully prepared for another gap on a headline
00:29:57 downgrade to guidance you know you mean at some point for the balance of this
00:30:00 year but you gotta start somehow no one can just put their finger on what they
00:30:04 think the bottom is so to me that's kind of my mindset but I also agree Danny
00:30:07 it's gonna be a long slog there's no V reversal even when the Fed pivots we're
00:30:12 gonna have a short covering rally people aren't gonna believe it even at 10 15
00:30:16 percent higher off of a low people are gonna start laying into it and coming up
00:30:19 with reasons why we're gonna make new lows and that's the mistake that I'm not
00:30:23 gonna make again is that if the S&P is down 40% I don't mean again I'm not
00:30:28 gonna be pressing that someone else can have that down 50% because the likelihood
00:30:31 that the S&P without a global meltdown is gonna be down more than 50% in the
00:30:37 next couple of years from that high that we made just last year can we all agree
00:30:41 that that's not particularly likely Oh Danny can't got you go you go for it he
00:30:46 can agree no listen certain names I can totally agree with I'm not gonna try to
00:30:49 predict the market I'm not but you asked me where I think things are going
00:30:52 absolutely you think the S&P can be down more than 50% from the high that it made
00:30:57 in the first week of January this year do I think it could be a 2400 it is a
00:31:00 pop-in March 2009 do you believe that anyone in December of 2008 thought in
00:31:06 March 2009 the S&P would hit 666 no it didn't was it the buying opportunity of
00:31:11 a century yes and you know what happened you know when it bottom when housing
00:31:14 starts I was in a meeting with an economist he said listen here's the math
00:31:18 you can't damage housing any more than it is there's no starts it's a finite
00:31:23 amount of homes that now have so here's the demand unless you think that people
00:31:27 are leaving or fleeing whatever the numbers at that point made sense
00:31:29 literally it was the day the S&P bottom so to your point Dan you got to be
00:31:34 willing to take a chance to be early but if you're buying quality companies where
00:31:38 I agree with you a thousand percent who gives a shit if your time horizon is
00:31:41 three five years great if your time horizon is a quarter or two months one
00:31:45 month you're playing with fire oh yeah but guy give it to me here because the
00:31:48 S&P 500 from its highs in 07 to its lows in 09 sold off 58% we know that
00:31:53 financials were a big part of that in the S&P from its high in 2000 to its
00:31:58 lows in 02 I think sold off 51 or 2% or something like that now obviously the
00:32:02 Nasdaq was down 80 some percent almost 90% so I guess my point is sooner or
00:32:07 later if you have investable capital if you avoided a lot of this disaster a lot
00:32:12 of the palpitations in the economy have already started to play out here right
00:32:17 it's not like it hit us like a ton of bricks all the sudden in late 08 or
00:32:21 something like that so I just think that's what's different to me and I do
00:32:25 think that what leads us out of this economic period but also this market
00:32:30 period are gonna be some of the same leaders of the last bull market if you
00:32:34 will and so to me there's nothing in the private markets there's nothing in
00:32:37 blockchain that tells me that the existing incumbents are about to be
00:32:42 massively disintermediated so I look at the world right now if things were just
00:32:46 to continue on current course again obviously have no idea what any
00:32:50 ancillary events are gonna be but just current course I can make a very cogent
00:32:55 argument and I think we've done so for months now that the ultimate landing
00:33:00 spot for the S&P is 3200 if you think about it in terms of the math that would
00:33:05 be a 33% peak to trough decline from the all-time high we saw 4818 or so I think
00:33:11 it was earlier this year or maybe late December but you understand what I'm
00:33:15 saying six or so months ago so that makes sense the math around that makes
00:33:20 sense in terms of what the right multiple in this environment is and what
00:33:23 I think earnings are gonna be and I think that to me is the opportunity
00:33:28 probably to get in the market in a meaningful way
00:33:31 Danny's potential for that cutting in half I mean it's clearly out there if
00:33:36 you look at what's going on globally with central banks right now you look at
00:33:40 global debt to GDP north of 300% I mean these are ridiculous levels in rising
00:33:47 interest rate environments around the world and the potential for a credit
00:33:50 blow-up is absolutely out there without question you saw what happened with
00:33:54 Deutsche Bank over the last couple weeks I mean people say Deutsche Bank is
00:33:58 Deutsche Bank specific okay I'll buy that until I don't so is there systemic
00:34:03 risk in the system potentially but there's a credit event out there that is
00:34:07 potentially gonna happen and quite frankly I think there's probably a 20-25%
00:34:12 of that happening if there is a credit event I don't think that 2400 level that
00:34:17 Danny just pointed out is out of the realm of possibility.
00:34:19 I agree we don't know what that's gonna be but there's certainly gonna be blow
00:34:22 ups in a down economy tide goes out there's a lot of shit sitting there and
00:34:26 it will be bad the one area I think that continues to be a struggle I think for
00:34:30 all of us is energy and we're seeing now what demand destruction is doing to oil
00:34:35 on the margin because certainly there's no geopolitical reason that oil should
00:34:38 be down but this is just waning demand a little bit and I don't know how long it
00:34:42 lasts and I think that will be a sector I do believe that should be bought on
00:34:45 weakness I think these stocks should be bought on weakness over time only
00:34:48 because they're gonna screen so well and so we do come out of this Dan and people
00:34:52 have belief in the market again that would mean that people think the economy
00:34:54 may start picking back up again and unless oil is under 85 or $80 I still
00:34:58 think that energy is a place that you can be not a huge allocation here and I
00:35:02 know people came in last in first out and bought at the top and then have sold
00:35:06 here a little bit but I feel like that sector is gonna bottom out and I think
00:35:09 that's the one to watch it's gonna tell us a lot about the economy that I really
00:35:13 do from a demand destruction I'm looking at weekly I told you guys when we open
00:35:16 the show weekly gasoline demand people are going to the pump they're not
00:35:20 filling the car up they're down it's negative so people are it's taking a
00:35:23 bite out of people's wall and that's really what we're seeing right now and
00:35:26 just in terms of the energy conversation Dan and I'm just gonna throw it back to
00:35:29 you you've had a wonderful call in terms of you didn't think it was sustainable
00:35:33 in terms of WTI and the price appreciation and that's coming to
00:35:36 fruition I'm confused in energy here I can make a very coherent argument why
00:35:42 the stock should be significantly higher and then you look around the landscape
00:35:47 and look at these companies that in large part could go the way of the dodo
00:35:51 bird five to ten years from now and say how do you invest in these names that
00:35:55 probably aren't investing in themselves so the cross currents for energy are
00:35:59 severe with that said again status quo I think these energy names given a 35 40
00:36:06 percent declines we've seen in some of these names are just too cheap in this
00:36:10 environment and you mean the drillers in just a short period of time absolutely
00:36:14 not only just the drillers but even the big cap integrated names are down
00:36:17 significantly over the last couple weeks not nearly commensurate with the
00:36:21 move in the underlying commodity we spent some time over the last I don't
00:36:25 know six to nine months talking about just what's leading what right is it the
00:36:28 commodity or is it like the underlying we've seen to some dispersion in the
00:36:32 price action and some of them guy you've made a really good case for a long time
00:36:35 of the under investment and the changing supply-demand dynamics and I am no
00:36:39 expert as it relates to the energy thing I just feel like crude is probably gonna
00:36:44 go the way of a lot of other commodities that we've seen that they've already
00:36:47 signaled that they've kind of peaked and we've seen that in copper we've seen it
00:36:51 in steel we've seen it in wheat we've seen it in a bunch of other commodities
00:36:55 so to me crude topped out on that parabolic move in early March it tried
00:36:59 to get back up there and now it's broken that uptrend that's been in place since
00:37:03 early December after the Biden administration tapped the strategic
00:37:06 petroleum reserve so to me it really feels like divorced of fundamentals of
00:37:10 some fundamentals that a lot of smarter people than me feel feels like the
00:37:14 momentum is broken and maybe the stocks start to firm up and act better to your
00:37:18 point about the companies in the investment that we might see in them
00:37:22 because the whole ESG thing has been turned upside down by a global pandemic
00:37:26 by deglobalization by a break in supply chains by a shooting war listen Europe
00:37:32 is getting off their reliance on Russia that's one thing that's happening no
00:37:35 matter what I'm not getting our energy they're not getting off yet no they're
00:37:38 trying to get off by rationing I mean looking out years oh yeah that's trades
00:37:42 done so there's gonna be a glut in Russia and so I just feel like in the
00:37:45 future there's probably better parts of the market I think that energy is gonna
00:37:49 go back to being a low single-digit percentage the S&P but let me just say
00:37:52 this I'll end with this we can tie a bow on this is that second quarter is now
00:37:55 coming to a close so I'm gonna start to look at which stocks are gonna put up
00:37:58 good numbers in which you can have momentum the energy stocks are gonna
00:38:01 crush it again in the second quarter so you can sit there hold your nose you can
00:38:04 put a blindfold on and not want to buy them my point Dan is that there's no
00:38:07 models for 110 120 or the models are really 80 85 and my point is that you
00:38:13 got to go a lot lower before you can say these stocks don't make sense and I'm
00:38:16 just saying and I'm not heavy in the names at all I'm just saying pockets in
00:38:20 the market where you can be safe and earn it decent dividend with a lot of
00:38:23 stock buybacks with very little risk and I would just say this if all goes below
00:38:27 $70 we have reached the Great Recession potentially depression so forget about
00:38:33 everything else at that point that's all we can wrap that up so I don't want to
00:38:36 dwell on this we've gone 40 minutes now without talking about Tesla I mentioned
00:38:41 Tesla god damn it as we sit here once again it has a 600 and change handle on
00:38:48 it and it's fascinating to me that since their last quarter when the stock traded
00:38:54 almost $1,100 a share you've had some bounces along the way but it's
00:38:58 effectively been upper left to lower right and I think they say the tides
00:39:02 going out well the tide appears to be going out we haven't heard from Elon
00:39:06 Musk on Twitter for quite some time there's some strange things going on
00:39:09 there Danny I'm not looking to wind you up but it's happening right before our
00:39:12 very eyes. Something happened in here. Can I say one thing really quickly Danny
00:39:17 before you go into it I actually feel like the fact that Elon Musk has not
00:39:21 tweeted since June 21st okay so it is June 30th right now I think any comment
00:39:27 that we make about his proof of life I think they won't age well I actually
00:39:32 feel like if you want to be snarky and I'm not saying you I'm saying you want
00:39:35 to tweet something smarky it's actually might look really bad I think this guy
00:39:39 who has been addicted to tweeting whether they be dumb memes about
00:39:43 whatever whether they be his actual stuff about his business which you would
00:39:47 say a lot of it should be fact-checked or this and that whatever he desires this
00:39:51 attention something must be going on right now for him to be off this
00:39:55 platform for nearly 10 days. Yeah it could be a bender it could be a lot of
00:39:59 things listen they just laid off 200 people in an office closed an office in
00:40:02 California what was that office in charge of autopilot what is the
00:40:06 government investigating these crashes what was the recommendation by the
00:40:10 government the NTSB the NHTSA is that something's got to be done they had
00:40:14 exponentially higher rate of accidents Gary Black can wax poetic about what the
00:40:19 freaking deliveries are gonna be who cares what the deliveries are gonna be
00:40:22 in the second quarter this thing doesn't trade on fundamentals it doesn't matter
00:40:27 it incrementally trades on various news points which by the way every item has
00:40:30 been extremely negative and I'll tell you you didn't ask me but Danny when is
00:40:34 the market bottom I've been saying it for years it bottoms when this thing
00:40:37 gets taken to the woodshed finally because that tells me the froth is
00:40:40 completely out of this market and Carter's note yesterday Carter Braxton
00:40:43 where I saw your little market call with his diamond triangle to the down that
00:40:46 got y'all geeked out so he put a note out after that saying he sees 450 and I
00:40:50 will just tell you this from a psychological standpoint I know you
00:40:53 think lower no no but if you see 450 you're gonna see 100 but November 2020
00:40:57 the stock had actually broken from its highs it was down at least 20 some
00:41:00 percent or something and the S&P announced that it was going into the
00:41:04 S&P 500 and the stock doubled in a matter of months I mean what's like
00:41:07 parabolic so I think psychologically getting back to that 400 level makes
00:41:11 sense I think Carter's target was 450 to put this point again if they're
00:41:15 negotiating with the feds over whatever the fact that he has been off this
00:41:19 platform for 10 days given his need for attention something's going on did you
00:41:23 see Larry Ellison's comments about leaving the board no there were none oh
00:41:26 that's why there's clearly something going on you point about deliveries I
00:41:30 think the number for fiscal 22 expected is 1.39 million deliveries or something
00:41:35 and we're gonna hear from Tesla over the next couple weeks in terms of earnings
00:41:39 and I don't know if it matters necessarily but there's so many strange
00:41:43 things going on and it's not a Tesla story per se in my opinion but what does
00:41:48 it mean to the broader market because that's been such a sentiment stock for
00:41:52 so long and it's a big part of the S&P 500 it's a huge part we were looking at
00:41:56 the consumer discretionary ETF the XO why it's 18% of that and you don't even
00:42:00 like so think about it it's an inconceivable I one quick point about
00:42:03 him so he started the month on June 3rd by saying that he has a really bad
00:42:07 feeling and paraphrasing about the economy which was by the way was after
00:42:11 what he recorded May 30 for rats so the mate and that's what I was gonna say so
00:42:15 when he said that giga Berlin and giga Austin were money-burning furnaces that
00:42:20 came out in mid June correct okay but he had already said that right Ellison left
00:42:25 in the middle of all of that yeah Ellison left then they announced layoffs
00:42:29 then he went back and forth salaried workers not salary workers whistle
00:42:32 blowers got fired for complaining about working conditions keep going suing them
00:42:35 I mean like this is all happening in June and the report from the from the
00:42:38 government came out about the safety record of this stuff and full self
00:42:42 driving does not exist they charge $10,000 for a product that does not
00:42:45 exist if they have to repay if that's what this is about they have to repay or
00:42:48 take them from cars or compensate people so then some of the banks that said
00:42:53 they were gonna provide the debt for his Twitter acquisition said maybe not so
00:42:57 all of this is going on the lower his stock goes the more commitment that he
00:43:02 has to do to an equity standpoint it just seems like a big heaping pile of
00:43:06 shit quickly I think the only reason why the media is not talking more about it
00:43:11 is because there have been bigger stories to talk about not least of which
00:43:14 the broader market and other things but clearly there's something going on so
00:43:19 for me it bears watching without question and it's not a Tesla thing per
00:43:23 se but what does it mean in terms of the ramifications for the broader market I
00:43:27 think you absolutely have to take that into consideration you listen the way it
00:43:30 works normally not just with Tesla per se but large companies it is a huge
00:43:35 company the government doesn't want to be responsible for effectively being
00:43:38 blamed for putting a company out of business or really damaging right what
00:43:42 they do do is they wait for it to get crushed and then they come after it you
00:43:47 see that all the time you see government file lawsuits on companies that commit
00:43:50 fraud the fraud comes out but the frauds already come out and the stocks already
00:43:54 $2 from 12 then they say oh DOJ suing SEC coming after this and the other I
00:43:59 mean look at some of these other EV companies right which have come out which
00:44:02 tried to follow the Musk playbook they're all $1 $2 $6 whatever they might
00:44:07 be they're gone right so he's just self-fulfilled himself to this position
00:44:10 so we'll see what happens we like to end on sort of some high notes I will tell
00:44:14 you that in terms of sectors and stuff you look at the health care sector and
00:44:17 for me this will be a continued theme the rest of the year health care is hung
00:44:21 in extraordinarily well when you look at the big cap pharma names names like UNH
00:44:25 and such I think these names are gonna be not only extraordinarily defensive
00:44:30 going forward but actually taking play offense with them as well so for me at
00:44:34 least through my lens that's something to watch in the second half Dan yeah the
00:44:37 only thing I just say is that on June 8th when Exxon was making a new all-time
00:44:41 high I think the fever pitch about energy sector and the excitement around
00:44:45 it and the changing dynamics and the valuations and the increased investment
00:44:49 that we're gonna see and all that sort of stuff I remember being on the set of
00:44:52 fast money and we had Brian Sullivan was filling in for Melissa Lee and Brian
00:44:56 that is his beat energy and we had some strategist on from RBC which is very
00:45:00 focused on that sector and they had just come from a conference that they held
00:45:03 and they literally were like jumping out of their seats and I'm like guys new
00:45:08 all-time highs after everything we've been through in Exxon from 14 I'm like
00:45:12 this is not making me particularly excited so everybody got all in on one
00:45:16 side of it what happened the XLE which is 40% Exxon and Chevron sells off 25% in
00:45:21 a straight line over the next couple of weeks so to me I get a little nervous
00:45:24 when we start focusing too much on the defensive areas we saw it utilities we
00:45:29 saw it in staples this is all in the last month and my last point about that
00:45:32 is when we start seeing investors come to their senses about defensive areas
00:45:37 that they think are cheap and they should be that's usually when we see
00:45:41 correlations go to one that's what we saw in June and that's why also I think
00:45:44 that this rally that we saw off of the lows this month was the weakest one that
00:45:49 we've seen over the course of 2022 it does feel like something's about to
00:45:53 happen here I thought we were ending on a positive note guy you in particular
00:45:57 you had a great call off of the lows Danny you try to get constructive on
00:46:01 some stuff I also did my time horizons a bit longer and just my scar tissue about
00:46:07 bear market rallies is not one that they really should be played for more than a
00:46:11 few days or a week that's just my experience trading in the financial
00:46:15 crisis trading in the post comm bubble if you are bearish it feels like
00:46:19 absolute dogshit to get caught long in a bear market rally when it fails well
00:46:23 anytime you can use the word dog shits good way to end we're 18 months into our
00:46:27 podcast and you know we've done a lot of really interesting things but given
00:46:31 what's going on in the world I feel like we're just getting started the second
00:46:34 half of this year is gonna be fascinating gonna be a lot of
00:46:36 opportunities hopefully we're able to present them to you in this format Dan
00:46:42 Nathan and Danny Moses but when we come back we're gonna have one of the great
00:46:47 philanthropists here in the United States Bill Pulte join us on the tape
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00:48:56 important disclosures at masterworks dot IO slash disclaimer Bill Pulte is CEO at
00:49:03 Pulte Capital and the Blight Authority he's also the inventor of Twitter
00:49:07 philanthropy a concept of direct giving on social media Bill has received many
00:49:13 accolades in his life including being named in Forbes magazine's 30 under 30
00:49:18 list he's passionate about entrepreneurship his community and the
00:49:23 belief that there's strength in numbers he is the grandson of the founder of
00:49:27 homebuilding giant Pulte group so every once in a while on Twitter somebody
00:49:33 follows me and I'm like holy shit that person followed me for example recently
00:49:37 Niels Lofgren of the E Street Band followed me I thought that was pretty
00:49:42 cool Miami Steve Van Zandt people like that professional athletes I'm always
00:49:46 fascinated but a few years ago out of the blue seemingly somebody followed me
00:49:50 that I was really taken aback because I've obviously heard of the company I
00:49:55 knew the man and took a little time but we became I want to say Twitter friends
00:50:00 but I consider more than that and I got to tell you something if you don't
00:50:03 follow Bill Pulte on Twitter you're doing Twitter wrong I think he currently
00:50:07 has about 3.2 million followers but that's not the reason why the reason is
00:50:12 he's taken philanthropy to a new level and we're going to talk about that but
00:50:16 it's a great deal of honor that we welcome Bill Pulte to on the tape Bill
00:50:20 how are you? I'm great thanks guys for having me. Now thanks for joining us and
00:50:25 let's get into philanthropy real quick because I think that's really important
00:50:29 I don't want to bury the lead here but what you've done with what you call
00:50:32 Twitter philanthropy with your I think you call them your basically your
00:50:36 teammates it's really extraordinary the amount of money you've given away and
00:50:41 the amount of people you've given money to. Yeah we believe that the future of
00:50:45 philanthropy is going to be direct donations given to individuals cutting
00:50:49 out the red tape cutting out the overhead cutting out the fancy balls and
00:50:53 really just trying to go ahead and send money to people who are in critical need
00:50:57 so guy what we do every day is basically we get on Twitter and through
00:51:01 teamgiving.com as well as my Twitter we give to people who are dying of cancer
00:51:06 people who can't afford rent because they're out of work due to chemotherapy
00:51:09 people who don't have teeth people who need diabetes pumps but can't afford it
00:51:14 these are the things that in my opinion technology should be used for and
00:51:18 there's such hate such division in this world right now that to me it's like we
00:51:23 use technology for all this hate why aren't we using it for some of that good
00:51:27 so that's what we try to do and we try to keep it entertaining at the same time.
00:51:31 You do an amazing job and you mentioned the hatred that we all get on Twitter I
00:51:35 think at a certain point we all are subject to it but even when you're doing
00:51:39 the right thing you're succeeding at doing the right thing there's still
00:51:43 people that push back I know it's got to frustrate you but how do you combat the
00:51:46 trolls that we all seem to endure? Well what I learned a long time ago was that
00:51:51 you really have to push back on these people because if you don't then it can
00:51:54 become a problem and so I try to address it straight up and so for example if
00:51:59 somebody says to me well you know you gave this guy thousand dollars for his
00:52:03 teeth you should have bought him a house as well that's just a ridiculous comment
00:52:07 that people make it's not even the person saying it because the person who
00:52:10 doesn't have teeth they don't need a home in addition to teeth they just want
00:52:13 to have teeth so they can smile so I try to call out these trolls and I think
00:52:17 it's actually pretty effective because what we're doing in my opinion is so
00:52:21 positive that we just have to address those who are hating on it because often
00:52:25 the people who are hating on it frankly they have teeth they're not dying of
00:52:29 cancer they don't need diabetes insulin pumps it's only the people who don't
00:52:33 need those things that find some way to bitch and moan about everything under
00:52:37 the Sun. A lot of these people I wouldn't even think have the means to be on
00:52:40 Twitter I mean yes they have a cell phone but it's not something they engage
00:52:43 in so if they're not on Twitter how do you bring them there in order to make
00:52:47 this transaction work? It's a great question I mean look I'm only trying to
00:52:51 do one piece of the whole puzzle in my little corner of the universe and so far
00:52:55 I have about a million seven teammates as I call them on Instagram so I have a
00:52:59 fairly large following on Instagram but I haven't found that many of these other
00:53:03 social networks are as viral and where people can really put their needs out
00:53:08 there for instance like on Instagram how would you be able to show for example a
00:53:12 photo that you don't have teeth it's easier to do that on Twitter so I
00:53:15 definitely don't have all the answers we're definitely not solving the world's
00:53:19 problems here well we're just trying to our part in that corner of the universe
00:53:22 which happens to be a growing universe I mean I think Twitter is going to continue
00:53:26 to be bigger and bigger over time and so hopefully we are able to get to more and
00:53:30 more people. Luke 1248 to whom much is given much is required and I'm not
00:53:34 suggesting you've been given anything but I think you would acknowledge that
00:53:38 you're fortunate in so much as the family that you grew up in can you speak
00:53:42 to your family Pulte Homes changed their name I think in 2010 to Pulte Group but
00:53:46 the company was I think founded in 1950 so it's 72 years old extraordinary if
00:53:52 you think about it can you speak to sort of the origins and how important your
00:53:55 family's been along that and I'm really interested if you really want to drill
00:53:58 down because we have the forum to do it here. Sure so my name is Bill Pulte the
00:54:04 founder of Pulte Homes was my grandfather where I was very close with
00:54:06 his name was Bill Pulte and so it's often not worth convincing people but
00:54:10 believe it or not 15% of my net worth was inherited 85% I actually made
00:54:15 through doing essentially leveraged buyouts in the building products
00:54:19 industry and I'm still doing that day in and day out I have eight portfolio
00:54:23 companies out of college I went and worked in private equity and so I
00:54:26 learned how to do essentially leveraged buyouts right out of college and that's
00:54:29 what I've been doing. Now in 2014-2015 I have new approach my grandfather we had
00:54:36 been working with each other for a few years the founder of Pulte Homes Bill
00:54:39 Pulte my grandfather and we had been talking and doing a bunch of different
00:54:44 things I had a bunch of as I mentioned portfolio companies in the building
00:54:47 product space obviously he was a genius especially when it came to designing
00:54:51 products in homes so we worked on my countertop business we did a charity
00:54:55 together as well and slowly but surely we just really hit it off and not to say
00:55:00 when I was a kid that I didn't hit it off with him but he has 14 kids he has
00:55:03 25 grandchildren none of them were in the family business at all none of them
00:55:07 and I was fortunate to really hit it off with him and we got talking about his
00:55:12 business and he says man I wish you were older because I probably would have
00:55:15 figured out a way to have you be in the business and around this time and Danny
00:55:20 knows this we were running in a situation where the stock was stagnant
00:55:24 they'd traded up to about 45 $46 in the peak right before the global financial
00:55:29 crisis and then it had crashed down to $3 and change and then it had rebounded
00:55:33 like a lot of the builders up to about $17 a share but the stock price was just
00:55:37 really really stagnant and so I got to frankly really lead that charge with my
00:55:43 grandfather and some of the other Pulte Homes executives to turn that business
00:55:47 around we really started to do our due diligence in terms of really coming up
00:55:51 with a game plan what we were going to do starting in kind of 2014 2015 by 2016
00:55:56 my grandfather was fully on board with it so we kicked out the CEO at the time
00:56:00 we put some new directors on the board I went out and located Elliott Management
00:56:05 which interestingly Elliott huge activist fund they're usually on the
00:56:09 opposite side of families in this case they were actually a proponent of the
00:56:12 family so that was kind of new for everybody involved my experience with
00:56:15 them was great working with them guys like Danny and other people supported
00:56:19 that whole movement and you know I feel very passionate about it I mean
00:56:22 obviously it's my name it's a fortune 500 company it was the number one home
00:56:26 builder in the country now it's number four but we're gonna keep trying to help
00:56:30 it in any way we can I remember meeting you guys obviously we talked about this
00:56:33 when Porter and Vinny were on the spaces that we had a couple weeks back and you
00:56:37 came in there and it was so genuine and I think that's the one thing that I would
00:56:41 say about you certainly the work that you do for people giving money away is
00:56:45 that you're genuine and you actually care and you come across that way and
00:56:48 that resonated with us and I remember the stock it was 2016 it was you're
00:56:52 right it was between kind of 14 and 19 trying to find its direction and
00:56:55 eventually it certainly found a direction higher much higher no it's
00:56:58 come off here we had rates move higher and things in building we can talk about
00:57:01 that later but certainly it found its footing and I think the culture of the
00:57:05 company with your grandfather and I know your father was a builder down in
00:57:09 Florida but was not involved directly in Pulte but I think just the
00:57:11 understanding of the business resonated and that's key I don't care what
00:57:15 industry you're in I don't care what you're managing I think we always talk
00:57:19 about meeting CEOs meeting board members and you guys came across as clear honest
00:57:24 people and to us that was the most important I think for homes more for us
00:57:27 and her firm we kind of rented them no pun intended as trades because they are
00:57:32 so cyclical not as bad as airlines but they are cyclical and you got to pick
00:57:35 your points it was no question that that was a great point to enter and I think
00:57:38 you helped us make a lot of money so I appreciate that I wanted to go back to
00:57:41 you and I both had dreams of being sports broadcasters and when I looked
00:57:45 you went to Northwestern the number one broadcasting journalism school in the
00:57:49 country sorry Syracuse sorry Dan and then you ended up obviously going into
00:57:53 private equity doing other things I had the same experience I was gonna be a
00:57:55 sports broadcaster and then I found out all my friends from college at Emory
00:57:59 were moving up to New York and I'm like well I guess I'm going there that seems
00:58:02 like more fun than covering high school football in Iowa or something so similar
00:58:06 it's funny how he seems come back but I think one of the reasons I'm guessing
00:58:10 you wanted to be sports broadcasting is you're energetic you're passionate about
00:58:13 everything that you do and all the side businesses that you had in college and
00:58:16 all the helicopter license that you got because you were inspired by Jack Bauer
00:58:20 in 24 you're that kind of person and if everyone else was like you this world
00:58:24 would be a much better place and I just wanted to say that I think you're a
00:58:27 great role model I think in business and both personal for really setting the bar
00:58:31 for people to look up to well thank you and you did your homework Jack Bauer I
00:58:34 hadn't thought about that in a while but yeah that sounds great and I appreciate
00:58:37 it and we get a lot of heat people say oh you should be doing more honestly I'm
00:58:41 just trying to do my little piece mother Teresa said something and I'm in no way
00:58:44 I'm like the opposite of her but mother Teresa said something like you try to
00:58:48 throw a rock in a pond or something and the waves reverberate that's all we're
00:58:52 trying to do with Twitter philanthropy is just vibrate the surface area of the
00:58:55 world for charity and philanthropy so Bill you get a ring you hear that these
00:59:00 guys from Seawolf Danny Vinny and Porter the movie the book they're already out
00:59:03 the big short these guys made their bones right shorting the US housing
00:59:08 market how did it feel when you heard that these guys are interested in
00:59:12 getting long Pulte home and obviously it sounds like you were very integral and
00:59:17 repositioning the company in the post financial crisis yeah I think it was
00:59:20 only me and Wall Street analysts who went met with the guys and I was I don't
00:59:24 know Danny I think I was 26 or 27 at the time so if I didn't know a lot now I
00:59:28 definitely didn't know a lot then but that was some good times and I was
00:59:32 obviously I was nervous I think we had seafood for lunch and I'll tell you I
00:59:35 went and met with probably hundreds of investors I had already met with Elliot
00:59:39 by that time and everything and nothing against the guys at Elliot but the
00:59:42 questions that Danny and his team were asking me what about this what about
00:59:46 that I think I answered them correctly because my interest in the business is
00:59:50 genuine and that came across and so you guys obviously took a leap of faith and
00:59:54 I appreciate that we always had a rule and we were notorious for being quote
00:59:58 short sellers but I think really notorious for being skeptical and 80% of
01:00:02 the time we couldn't get a meeting because either companies would assume we
01:00:05 were short and so they didn't want to talk to us but that to us was always a
01:00:08 red flag and to be perfectly honest we were not short Pulte at the time at all
01:00:12 that I know 100% as a matter of fact I think we were probably long it but
01:00:16 my whole thing is if you're short a company and I'm a CEO of the company and
01:00:20 I have nothing to hide and I would go into that meeting as fast as I could to
01:00:24 talk about the thesis and why I may be wrong and conversely if we're long a
01:00:28 company and I would want to talk to the largest short sell I would go find a
01:00:31 short seller to find out what I might be missing so I think we garnered a lot
01:00:34 from each other in that meeting but like I said a few minutes ago I think the one
01:00:38 thing that came across and I think that you were only 26 or 27 at the time it
01:00:42 was a huge advantage you had no scar tissue you didn't know enough to know
01:00:46 about what maybe it transacted on Wall Street at the time or how home prices
01:00:50 were so crucial to everyone's thesis across all financial products in general
01:00:54 and that's what I think was so great about it is you kind of came in there
01:00:57 eyes wide open and so do we so my grandfather I think he was 79 or 80
01:01:01 years old God love him but he wasn't a spring chicken anymore and I knew that
01:01:06 at some point he'd passed away and he's now passed away but I had to get the job
01:01:09 done and I had to get it done before he passed away so to me there was no choice
01:01:13 I'll say this though it's been fascinating because to your point about
01:01:17 people and not going to meet with investors and stuff is they'll go with
01:01:21 the pre-screened investors they'll go with the safe people the public company
01:01:25 CEOs but it really takes in my opinion a very confident public CEO somebody who's
01:01:30 confident in themselves to go and meet with somebody like yourself because
01:01:34 these guys are making 10 15 20 million dollars some cases more than that per
01:01:39 year so for them to go into that room with you guys even though the seafood
01:01:43 look great a lot of these public CEOs they hide under their bedsheets because
01:01:47 they don't want to get questioned you never know who's gonna emerge in the
01:01:50 crypto world and I gotta tell you we've been doing fast money as Danny's
01:01:53 unfortunately come to know for the last 15 and a half years and we only started
01:01:57 talking about Bitcoin I think in earnest somewhere in the middle of 2017 ish but
01:02:04 you were long before that I think you started getting into Bitcoin around
01:02:07 2015 or so Bill so I'm curious what was the catalyst for you you're a
01:02:12 Midwestern guy you're not obviously from one of the coast you're not sort of
01:02:16 groomed in that classic sense of you know the technology people from the West
01:02:21 Coast or some of the high-flying bankers out here on the East Coast yet Bitcoin
01:02:25 captured your fancy almost seven and a half years ago. Well I'll tell you this
01:02:29 one of the things that really increased my conviction in Bitcoin and I do think
01:02:33 that it trades obviously very volatilely and I think it's a commodity who knows
01:02:37 if it'll be a currency one day but that's just my opinion but guy when I
01:02:41 saw the virality of Bitcoin on Twitter I said to myself wow this thing is going
01:02:47 places and this I don't know this is probably when I said $3,000 a coin and
01:02:50 what I mean by the virality is especially when you have a bigger
01:02:54 account which you guys all do you know you get to see things that are happening
01:02:58 in the world at scale and you get to see how people react to things at scale and
01:03:02 my conviction has only grown in Bitcoin over the years. I remember this guy I
01:03:07 started really giving out Bitcoin over the internet meaning sending it to
01:03:12 people in 2019 and I'll say this the frequency by which people are
01:03:17 communicating with it in the beginning people were very skeptical now it's just
01:03:21 normal. So here's my view on Bitcoin and I'm curious as to your thoughts I think
01:03:24 Bitcoin was born out of this concern that central banks globally were running
01:03:29 amok and was a fear of fiat currencies all exploding simultaneously and that
01:03:34 was true for the lion's share of the life of Bitcoin that was absolutely true.
01:03:38 I don't think it's coincidental Bill I'm curious as to your thoughts that Bitcoin
01:03:41 topped out in the fall of last year around the same time our Fed pivoted
01:03:45 from being extraordinarily accommodative to extraordinarily hawkish and trying to
01:03:50 fight inflation finally. What are your thoughts on that because I do think at a
01:03:54 certain point this Fed will pivot once again and I happen to think that's gonna
01:03:57 be the green light for Bitcoin to go higher. Yeah to me I think there's two
01:04:00 things there's the use case for Bitcoin and then there's the price of Bitcoin as
01:04:04 it relates to what you're talking about in terms of the Fed pivot raising
01:04:07 interest rates obviously that's going to materially affect the price. From my
01:04:11 perspective just from a philanthropic perspective and from a I call it
01:04:15 virality Mr. Beast who I've worked with quite a bit the big youtuber he's
01:04:19 taught me a lot about how to make things go viral and how to get the large
01:04:22 audiences interested in it. From a use case perspective guy I will tell you
01:04:27 this if Twitter continues to take market share internationally and even if
01:04:31 Twitter doesn't I think that the use case for Bitcoin will continue to
01:04:35 expand. Now you say Bill who the hell's really using Bitcoin? You go to these
01:04:39 third world countries you look at the people in Africa you look at the people
01:04:43 in Brazil you look at the people in South America who are all messaging me
01:04:46 every day on Twitter and many of them get wiped off because they're they're
01:04:51 viewed as bots but some of these are actually human beings. I mean the use
01:04:55 case for Bitcoin to me is to take a lot of these impoverished countries out of
01:05:00 poverty that are dependent on these corrupt dictators for currency and
01:05:04 whatnot. Now I know there's a lot of controversy around Bitcoin and the El
01:05:09 Salvador guy is doing you know maybe he's gone to the full other end of the
01:05:12 spectrum but my point being is if you're in some remote village in Africa would
01:05:16 you rather have somebody send you electronically Bitcoin or the local
01:05:19 currency in terms of preserving your wealth and that to me I think is the
01:05:24 biggest thing for Bitcoin and frankly something that can drag people out of
01:05:29 poverty. Bill I would just add one thing and you know the debate very well and so
01:05:33 it really is right now for a lot of people in these third world countries is
01:05:37 not easily accessible to the banking systems that exist and so your point
01:05:41 about the depreciation of local currencies in some of these third world
01:05:45 countries is also an issue. I also think there's two kind of mindsets is it going
01:05:48 to be something that the unbanked can tap and kind of enter this global
01:05:53 financial economy that exists in the developed world or is it really
01:05:58 something else that is a store of value that can help as you say pull people out
01:06:02 of poverty. Right now it seems like we're still in really early phases of all of
01:06:07 that. There's just been experiments guy just mentioned back in 2017 here in the
01:06:11 States there was this retail frenzy and with it came ICOs and a bunch of scams
01:06:15 and then we had this long crypto winter and then we have finally institutions
01:06:19 come in and start seeing other sovereigns start taking a look at it
01:06:23 you're seeing a lot more development in and around it and still to your point it
01:06:26 still has the promise. We've talked to Michael Saylor on numerous occasions guy
01:06:30 and myself over the last year and a half or so and this is his long-term vision
01:06:35 also but then again you get to a point it was like the on-ramps aren't that
01:06:39 easy there's still a lot of scams we're still really early on and it's kind of
01:06:43 funny this is all developing in front of our eyes here and a lot of people would
01:06:48 say hey listen PayPal works pretty good too. What are you saying to the naysayers
01:06:51 now that we have Bitcoin at 20,000 down from 69,000 in a matter of seven or
01:06:58 eight months or so? Well again that's the price frankly I think the price could go
01:07:02 down way more but I think that's independent of the use case to your
01:07:05 point we don't know how the future is gonna unravel people could say well the
01:07:09 use case is bullshit for Bitcoin to which I would say the two things that
01:07:13 I'm watching in terms of the use case for Bitcoin and you're saying with the
01:07:16 on-ramp and I think it's a great question is I would watch Jack Dorsey
01:07:20 and what he does in Africa and then I would watch Elon Musk and with these
01:07:24 satellites because this may sound crazy but in five or ten years maybe not so
01:07:29 much where if Jack can get into Africa and get into these other places and
01:07:33 create those on-ramps with those banking institutions Bitcoin might have a very
01:07:38 very promising future almost as a global reserve currency. Now you could say
01:07:41 that's bullshit but is it a possibility or a probability I don't know I'd like
01:07:46 to think it's more of a probability than in five or ten years those on-ramps have
01:07:49 been built the Jack Dorsey's and the Elon's of the world have penetrated I
01:07:53 mean Jack Dorsey was gonna go move to Africa for a year now a lot of people
01:07:56 made fun of him but the guy's worth a lot of dough for a reason I think so I
01:08:00 just would keep an eye on him. So Bill I know your grandfather passed away I
01:08:04 think in 2018 if I'm not mistaken. Yes. Later stages of his life but I would
01:08:09 love to know what he thought about Bitcoin if he had a thought on that the
01:08:11 reason I asked that is because traditional finance people certainly
01:08:15 guys that build with their hands probably think what is this thing so
01:08:18 that's my first question my second question is a lot of bad actors as Dan
01:08:22 just mentioned within Bitcoin and the problem I have right now and with all
01:08:26 these stable coins and tether is I don't see enough of the people that truly
01:08:30 believe in Bitcoin to the example that you're giving calling these people out
01:08:34 more and these frauds and these lending platforms I mean we've had every other
01:08:38 day there's been billions of dollars that are absconded with or that turned
01:08:42 out to not be really on account so first question and then the second question
01:08:47 did your grandfather ever get to really see Bitcoin or have an opinion on it I
01:08:50 love to get that well I think that he wouldn't necessarily understand
01:08:54 computers the way that we all would and he definitely didn't I can't tell you
01:08:58 how many times I tried to get him to use email and those type of things but I
01:09:01 think generally speaking the principles of Bitcoin I think why it's so
01:09:04 attractive and again it gets to the anti-corrupt nature of it now yes you
01:09:08 could say that there are human beings who use Bitcoin for corrupt purposes
01:09:12 like these crazy yields and all these things but I would argue that Bitcoin in
01:09:16 and of itself is not corrupt and so I think that my grandfather would really
01:09:20 like that being a Depression era boy seeing the corruption I mean even saw it
01:09:25 at multi homes how the CEO he used to say power corrupts and absolute power
01:09:29 corrupts absolutely and that's what often happens with a lot of these public
01:09:33 company CEOs and so the idea that there's not somebody who can
01:09:36 theoretically corrupt Bitcoin I think is extremely attractive and then your
01:09:41 second question I think that that's why I have more respect for the Elan's and
01:09:47 the Jack Dorsey's and I know Elon's hype and dogecoin and those type of things
01:09:50 but these guys who are buying this Bitcoin on this tremendous leverage and
01:09:55 these yields and this kind of stuff to Dorsey's credit at least I don't know
01:09:58 what Elon does I don't think that they're leveraging the Bitcoin that's on
01:10:02 their balance sheet but Dorsey's always been really consistent said hey look
01:10:06 Bitcoin is the gold standard don't believe all these other ICOs I don't
01:10:09 know if you saw but he came up with this web 5.0 to mock web 0.3 point oh so he's
01:10:14 trying to call bullshit out on a lot of these ICOs and scams so I agree I wish
01:10:19 people would be doing it more but I'm sorry but if people are gonna be putting
01:10:23 in their money into these kind of leverage vehicles and keeping their
01:10:26 money on exchanges I mean at some point people got a smart enough for themselves
01:10:30 I think you know bill we get pretty granular in terms of the market on fast
01:10:34 money we do it obviously on the tape here your views from 35 40,000 feet are
01:10:40 much different I'm sure there's some similar views as to what we have but
01:10:43 what are your thoughts I know the economy in the market are two different
01:10:46 things but just if you can sort of wax poetic about what you're seeing and what
01:10:50 you think is going on right now well and Danny mentioned the GFC and Dan was also
01:10:54 mentioning it a lot of people look at that as a crisis I looked at it as a
01:10:57 huge learning experience for the housing industry and I think all the big home
01:11:01 builders learn that lesson their balance sheets are very strong I don't know if
01:11:05 you guys know this and Danny you may know this but the builders around 2000
01:11:10 had about 10% of the market share the big builders today they have over 30% of
01:11:14 the market share and it's very hard to build new homes after the great
01:11:19 financial crisis it was very hard to get financing for new homes and so I guess
01:11:22 what I'm saying is I share many of the same concerns we do about the slowing
01:11:26 growth the rising inflation but I would just say structurally I think the
01:11:30 builders and Danny I'd be curious as to your perspective are in much better
01:11:33 shape because they learn those hard lessons but I think that you're gonna
01:11:37 start to see an economy that's gonna slow down I think it's been slowing down
01:11:40 frankly I've been out of the market since about January I've got I guess I
01:11:44 call it luck I've been a hundred percent cash since January so I guess I got
01:11:48 lucky on that one but you know that's my perspective. Well real quick before you
01:11:52 say you got lucky I also know that you reach out to a lot of people I know that
01:11:55 because you've reached out to me over the years you know what are your
01:11:58 thoughts on the market you ask very thoughtful questions in terms of what
01:12:01 I'm seeing so I think harder you work the luckier you get and I think to a
01:12:05 large extent that luck was based on a lot of different conversations you have
01:12:08 had over the years maybe you can speak to that as well because I know you do
01:12:11 reach out to a lot of people. Yeah I mean I had pretty much a hundred percent of my
01:12:15 net worth and accused I had like a 15 million dollar position in Tesla which
01:12:19 was just ridiculous for me to have and I sold that damn near the top as well I
01:12:23 kind of momentum traded those things I made a bunch of money this year and last
01:12:27 year but I've really got an appreciation for kind of the growth and inflation
01:12:32 and some of the Ray Dalio stuff and the stuff being in rate of change terms and
01:12:36 the slowdown I'll tell you this too one of the things my grandfather was used to
01:12:39 tell me was housing is the first to go out and it's the first to come back in
01:12:43 and so when I started to see the kind of softness in the middle of last year in
01:12:49 fact I remember I was telling my dad because Pulte stock was at $62 a share I
01:12:53 said wow because that was damn near the peak but when I saw the builders start
01:12:58 to take a haircut first and then I saw some of the growth and inflation data
01:13:01 that's what got me to just say get me out of these queues and can be out of
01:13:04 the Tesla we've talked about on the show many times that builders were the only
01:13:09 rational sector at the time they were actually showing us what was happening
01:13:12 at the time or what was going to happen so you're a hundred percent right and we
01:13:16 always look at the bond market as kind of the indication for equities but I
01:13:19 think housing has both inside of it right it did it in 2018 as well then the
01:13:23 builders actually let it back out because people were saying oh we going
01:13:27 into recession back in 18 when the Fed blinked yeah but I think that the cost
01:13:30 of materials for the builders was hitting them first while the housing
01:13:33 market was still apparently strong so the margins were getting squeezed and so
01:13:37 builders were caught in a predicament I mean they could certainly sell on SPAC
01:13:40 and do this but they would have to build and I think their costs were going up so
01:13:44 dramatically that they took a pause and I'm sure you were sensing that and got a
01:13:47 feel for that which was the impact we're seeing now that the Fed was misreading
01:13:51 inflation and I've seen you quoted that you did not ever believe it was
01:13:54 transitory you thought it was sticky and so good on you you were right on and I'm
01:13:58 sure that helped you in your thesis of getting out of the market in general
01:14:01 that people were underestimating but the one thing I think and I know you're a
01:14:04 young guy but you grew up and you were a teenager when the global financial
01:14:08 crisis hit but you've seen what the Fed has done and what the Fed has done in
01:14:12 terms of pumping money into the system had a direct impact and a tailwind for
01:14:16 housing specifically one by buying mortgage-backed securities which keep
01:14:19 mortgages cheap and two by buying treasuries which in effect keep
01:14:22 everything cheap and a bailed out the mortgage bond market in 2020 the last
01:14:27 two years of housing would have been a disaster correct and so all that wrapped
01:14:31 up into one I think you're not giving yourself enough credit for really having
01:14:35 your finger on the pulse there so you're way beyond your years and you're much
01:14:38 more sophisticated than 95% certainly of the people at your age and probably 90%
01:14:43 of the people that are out there trading and the problem we're having right now
01:14:45 in this market is there's a whole generation and they're actually your age
01:14:49 and the average age on Robin Hood is 32 years old and it's dropping by the
01:14:53 second because people are leaving the platform or they're losing their money
01:14:55 but the point is that they hadn't seen a cycle yet and I just think your
01:14:59 grandfather and your family instilled and you were very observant and I think
01:15:03 that's a real key component of this understanding the markets most people
01:15:06 think that I inherited my money and stuff and it's almost not even worth
01:15:09 convincing people of so I appreciate you recognizing that though it's definitely
01:15:13 not worth trying to convince what I've learned on Twitter is people are so dug
01:15:16 in it really doesn't matter what you say they're convinced regardless and it
01:15:20 becomes somewhat futile but what's not futile I don't think is serving the
01:15:25 public in politics I guess you get the politicians you deserve in this country
01:15:29 and that's on both sides of the aisle right now I mean I could rattle off ten
01:15:33 names both Democrat and Republican that I'm hard-pressed to believe would be
01:15:37 elected dog catcher let alone congressman or woman with that said you
01:15:42 seem like somebody that would be a perfect candidate for something mayor
01:15:46 governor senator those types of things you're shaking your head no but I think
01:15:50 you could do an extraordinarily great amount of things for a large group of
01:15:54 people in that type of forum any thoughts on that my goal really is to
01:15:59 it's kind of like my grandfather did with Pulte Homes where started out with
01:16:03 one home and then a subdivision and then productionized it I'd like to do that
01:16:07 with philanthropy I believe that Social Security Medicaid and you guys know the
01:16:11 numbers better than me I don't know how we're gonna afford this stuff going
01:16:15 forward in the country and so to me call it a safety net you could call it
01:16:19 whatever to me it's like if we can figure out a way where people can donate
01:16:23 to each other that can have a tremendous impact on helping people so that's
01:16:28 really where my interest is I see these politicians and stuff number one I don't
01:16:32 even know how much they can get done I mean you guys tell me what you think but
01:16:35 I don't even know how much they can get done and number two is it's just a
01:16:38 miserable way to live you don't get anything done most of the time and then
01:16:42 it's just filled with such hate. Now I hear you what you can and can't get done
01:16:46 and a great way not a great way to live you live in a pretty cool life can you
01:16:50 speak about other than the philanthropy other than things you got going on talk
01:16:55 to me about Bill Pulte the husband and what you have going on in your life. Yes
01:16:59 I got two kids two year old and a four year old two girls so very excited about
01:17:03 that my wife and I got married about five six years ago so just starting a
01:17:07 young family and doing that and that's why I was happy you know I said it was
01:17:11 luck but watching the housing and then seeing growth slow down especially with
01:17:15 a new family and we want to have more kids and we live a pretty nice life
01:17:19 where do you guys think that people can invest right now I mean other than cash.
01:17:23 Well first things first Bill a little pro tip here I don't know if your wife
01:17:27 is gonna listen to your podcast here but about five or six years ago married I'm
01:17:32 just gonna tell you you want to tighten that up a little bit I've been married
01:17:35 for 22 years I like to be specific as possible okay on that one. Five years
01:17:41 five months how about that. There you go well interesting to hear that a lot of
01:17:45 your investable capital was in the queues last year and it seems like obviously
01:17:50 some of your age group you've grown up with some of these companies that have
01:17:53 dominated the Nasdaq 100 if you will and then obviously Tesla and I also
01:17:58 understand why Tesla and Elon Musk capture the imagination of people let's
01:18:04 say who came up it let's say in the 90s or something like that in many ways he
01:18:08 appears to be a visionary as it relates you mentioned the satellites but also
01:18:11 really trying to transform the electric grid and obviously space and all that
01:18:16 sort of stuff so I get it and I'll let Danny in on that if he wants to say
01:18:19 anything in and around that but one of the things that I find really
01:18:22 interesting about the Nasdaq 100 is that I think when we come into this next leg
01:18:27 of a bull market whether that's six months from now a year from now two
01:18:31 years from now who knows I don't really see anything in the public markets right
01:18:35 now that are going to displace the importance of those top five or six
01:18:39 stocks Microsoft Apple Google Amazon meta and those five stocks make up 25%
01:18:45 the S&P 500 they make up more than 40% of the Nasdaq 100 so I actually think
01:18:50 the QQQ is very interesting here I think that especially as we get longer into
01:18:55 this bear market there's dozens of stocks in the Nasdaq 100 are down 60 70
01:19:00 percent or so so they've just had over valuation reset some won't come back
01:19:05 some of them won't but you're gonna get plenty of them that are up to 300% in a
01:19:09 few years and then you'll probably have the mega cap names continue to lead to
01:19:14 the upside so to me I actually think the QQQ is very interesting I think it's a
01:19:18 way to really get a diversification between the tech monopolies which I
01:19:22 don't think are really gonna be regulated ever we've been talking about
01:19:25 the potential or the fear of regulation for a long time and to your point about
01:19:30 politicians they just don't seem to have their act together or actually even know
01:19:34 how to regulate these companies and so to me that seems like an interesting
01:19:37 place to be I'd be interested to hear if there's a price in which you'd ever buy
01:19:41 back into Tesla there is I definitely would again maybe I come at this from a
01:19:45 little bit different of a perspective maybe it's frankly not having all the
01:19:49 experience that you guys have around guys like an Elon but I bought a Tesla
01:19:54 do any of you guys have a Tesla you're asking the wrong crew I did though out
01:19:58 of spite I bought a Mustang Mach-E a Ford last year fully electric I loved
01:20:02 it it was an amazing car and I think it's actually compared to let's say the
01:20:06 lower end Tesla's and I've driven them I've ridden in them I think it blows
01:20:10 the doors off personally my generation and not that much older but a lot of my
01:20:16 generation doesn't know those cars doesn't know the cool cars of the 50 60
01:20:20 not that that was your era or 70s 80s even the 90s so you know I think to a
01:20:25 lot of people my age anyway it's simple it's straightforward who knows about
01:20:29 this full self-driving I mean I kind of like using it sometimes frankly don't do
01:20:33 that you're too important to society don't do that and Bill please do me a
01:20:36 favor I'm gonna give you my phone number just before you buy back stock just call
01:20:39 me please if you ever listen to me again if you value my opinion at all let's
01:20:43 have a discussion on that let me ask you this like an Elon for example anybody
01:20:48 who can figure out how to land a rocket ship on a barge I mean that guy's not a
01:20:51 dumb person right can I push back in a second here so did Elon do that you know
01:20:56 he's not an engineer right and I think there's this hero worship about him
01:21:00 doing all these different things okay you just said you're married for five
01:21:04 and a half years you have two kids are two and four years old you're a devoted
01:21:07 father you're devoted husband you run a business you run a charity you're active
01:21:12 on Twitter how much more time do you have do you have time to run three
01:21:16 companies experiment on these other things live tweet your life all day I
01:21:20 think he's full of shit I honestly think that we're gonna see that he is that man
01:21:25 behind the curtain that a lot of people suspected for a very long time I just
01:21:29 don't believe that he is the one who figured out how to send a rocket to
01:21:33 outer space and landed on a dime in the middle of the ocean or something like
01:21:37 that John Doerr was in an interview with Kara Swisher on her podcast sway on New
01:21:42 York Times a couple weeks ago and he said that Elon Musk has single-handedly
01:21:46 advanced the move towards EVs by five years now do you think that's the sort
01:21:52 of thing that we should all get down on our knees and revere don't you think it
01:21:56 was kind of moving along anyway and I make that point that that guy has been
01:21:59 for 50 years one of the best investors in the world and he's giving him props I
01:22:03 just think that if he got hit by a bus tomorrow and I'm not wishing that on him
01:22:07 and didn't exist I think all the stuff in space and satellites in electric
01:22:12 vehicles in Dogecoin it would all still exist it would also be moving forward
01:22:16 bill just before you answer I just want to let you know he didn't start Tesla
01:22:19 need to invent the car none of that it was started before and he came in and
01:22:22 took it over I just want to make that clear and one other thing if I told you
01:22:26 a Pulte homes was building a house that generated its own air-conditioned
01:22:30 generated its own heat you know was a fully whatever it was when you sold a
01:22:33 house and I bought the features that were supposed to do X it was such a cool
01:22:37 house so much ingenuity associated with it I fell in love with kind of the
01:22:41 concept and I bought the house but nothing worked like I thought it was
01:22:44 supposed to and these all these additional things didn't work like they
01:22:48 were supposed to and I realized there's other homes being built now in the next
01:22:51 three to four years which will have the technology that he's talking and will be
01:22:54 run better and anyway not to draw a comparison the point is I'm with Dan
01:22:57 that I think he sold a bill of goods here but more than that he's hurting
01:23:01 people you could argue that by him purporting that they have full
01:23:04 self-driving capabilities I don't know if you saw the documentary anyway Dan
01:23:08 just sent me down a path I didn't even know we were gonna get into Tesla today
01:23:11 I cut you off go ahead I am definitely not on my knees for Elon Musk so point
01:23:16 number one point number two all you asked me was would I buy back the stock
01:23:20 answer was yes because it's a momentum play and at some point maybe it will be
01:23:26 interesting so I just want to be totally with that so before we get out of here
01:23:30 I have a little anecdotal thing and then I'm curious as to your thoughts so a few
01:23:33 years ago is on a plane I had my ass in a seat a family comes on the plane the
01:23:38 husband was sitting in one row the wife and the two kids in another row so I
01:23:42 turned to the husband I said listen if you want to sit next to your wife I'll
01:23:46 move I'll do whatever you need for me to do in order for you to be with your
01:23:49 family and they were able to do that I had no idea who the guy was the next day
01:23:53 I got a call from CNBC and said somebody wants your contact information is that
01:23:57 okay I said absolutely it was Doug yearly and I know you know who Doug is
01:24:01 so he's obviously the CEO of Toll Brothers and he was just so thankful he
01:24:06 happened to be watching the show over a course of a few years which I always
01:24:09 found fascinating but Toll Brothers was created by Robert Toll I'm sure your
01:24:14 grandfather and those guys probably had a lot of really interesting
01:24:18 conversations did he ever fill you in on some of the things they were talking to
01:24:21 their contemporaries about because all these companies were built effectively
01:24:25 by one person. Well not only did he tell me those stories but I was fortunate
01:24:30 especially in the last 10 years or so to get to know a lot of those people
01:24:33 personally so gotten to know Bob Toll gotten to know Stuart Miller of Lenar
01:24:39 and many of the other peers I don't know if you know this but you look at Eli
01:24:43 Broad you look at Lenar Miller which was Stuart Miller's dad you look at Don
01:24:49 Horton Bill Pulte Bob Toll Dwight Schara these guys they were all part of that
01:24:54 generation and Dwight Schara just stepped down as chairman of NVR I don't
01:24:58 know if you saw that last month so that's kind of a changing of the guard
01:25:02 so to speak in the home building industry and it'll be really interesting
01:25:05 to see what happens for the next generation. Bill we've loved having you
01:25:09 on you've been extraordinarily generous with your time and you're also
01:25:13 extraordinarily generous with your wealth and the wealth that you created
01:25:17 for yourself and I think that's important to bring up once again so
01:25:19 thank you so much Bill Pulte for joining us on the tape. Let me know when I can
01:25:23 get back in the market right Danny and Dan? You got it.
01:25:26 Tesla hits double digits it'll be your sign but we'll keep in touch for sure.
01:25:29 Thanks Bill. Thanks once again to CME Group for sponsoring this episode of On
01:25:35 the Tape. If you liked what you heard make sure you hit follow and leave us a
01:25:40 review. It helps people find our show and we'd love hearing from you and we also
01:25:44 want to hear from you via email at on the tape at risk reversal dot com any
01:25:50 time of the day. Follow and connect with us on Twitter at on the tape pod and
01:25:54 we'll see you next time. On the Tape is a risk reversal media production. This
01:26:00 podcast is for informational purposes only. All opinions expressed by me, Dan
01:26:04 Nathan, Guy Adami, Danny Moses and any other participants are solely our
01:26:08 opinions and should not be relied upon for specific investment decisions.
01:26:14 [BLANK_AUDIO]

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