Money Stuff: SpaceX Investors Can’t Complain
Trevor McFedries
@trevvyboi
TAM, lawsuits, DMs, TCI, eBay. View in browser com/s/c/BGUMP7PK7r6vDjsUMEkDkp4MlVF7kpzbVh5WPCD0dxcV78wokjp57pE4mH4N09W2ufkwqU3pw9NHzIW0JMb6kOSDNuuS_PYRgyVTQ3OyOCKXvOP9vTt8VjkaMwrUsdhUV8Z_FQUhl6IJXu-bzmqNVw1pXqHveQBN78efOfPyGaMF8WX7eT7jVhQd_2JfzEw5yXlbdF7v5NAQROovXD2Pgx_xMz1y4DT_
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[image: Bloomberg]
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/cBompPG8_MoBhrdsgEKBCTKKi67uDxS8w74hIaku2InoD_1pzmV2B3B2bp8Re3eNpwz-gpmjpPUl6GuMhOBuht0vgZdFEpKt7AwSa-_FVOT_CtEyMOtTjgvnXHnjccegzHhNFohwOmW47ZmWXIQCMfX5MMU6ACA7bzyGa5ZFeLfL7wDAGbWOe1STXC0tQT38l2XxIp9tpcWFF06u6CbY4quPSuffhGiPC0QUxZiSdAzKifOQemm2-iTavvhvJS1wJqcv_Lw9sGuYj2Cje4YXRtERY8vKjs_M87d5_PBwaYbZxUbQh53-ohq1jigjnIgp20vBLFIzCGMxIwDMLcHpVlEw4J1Z_EOskvSSCisdZeL8Angp1c6dKmX_dQ/2SW8q-Kz6o-Sqb60h5_bSE_dAIbdA75s/20>
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/GQ1mUdpZG2UxC0EOe2cxWsc0jpiIodxrmyJ9msj6f6Od_W1YOCJkJDyuu9WNQr2Yee7j-Ohdenqy9fzxJ7mebOfBjGXVSUbUxDeXUifEVeqyiUrLCxG4LB6JpmGs_lEtb8FbmSKNp7SvNxh-8kPWUSlNRewqSRXjX6UBnTqM2C68Mn2XiQci1gV_MZfJhaIuUc1_Xk0Rx3pPtS1DFeHkySzjJy1aoZA5Ckg4yyoWfbgIcUQFQtuAUjVekGK7hPuZYiZh5VZCwhu71NxDtDISA-eDuY2Gg_a-Dme57QRggYUbVOdE8hcG3kivJHpSaINcj5J7xpoq4sbNZdPUOa0NuSXCWQlMyvp61Zn21S-LNVac2c66X1LENV9oq0sN4IEZMisdPC7U9ZMQKws1iRJ3J2lvNSP6lntrbmfBK1Bs8tVrhGrXvYI0kICNCmpX3Bos1Du6_JEkP3T-uxADltBhFkpA7tf0ZgZQAACtvaK92fJa61FgNPjVpt_UUR_iNbpFj7kq2RpU8IHDD7jOj0JCXmCDtuZdN0uajZ64yLQYfHOtL2JTC4oqHVvqOMC_0kF3nyZ1mAEPP-KB4W52QvyNDXRduCAKEmHHT2J2CcLGSj3Nnm8XbTcXZjw_9mkMymphheE009gZr5bDVoi-6iRdE-eu8Gtemc3TFlGHS4kP3UfK0MPJUFRnDBEQPvWXmtPZQu-O7Oismyh3HoM/bXbRfRw9_G4Q5zBd02z_sP-yrzxb4Dgv/20>
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/z-bg9GWpy1SvNJZHZVPYoAjh0kQ65MIGCoVu9U2LBMYkmZkkvHHImwZWk2Tdo8MTCdN-hbFYDHN9mjLCmO2JW7dXX59axy-uiYqmibhmV-VNwFBGOyybKcTi4-0DbfX23rSP9LAXep3p32vDx2SFdVIPXf2gc--Jsbe5S08t-DWcT1qRJj0ivekbhLrQnV2LRIj8jhiaZMTdibNaH4DuVmTre1rUhG5-2PoSaPEQMfLqSln85XtbIi0UIuMjh9vuR99NCMaFM1wXEjbYQn11wyv7q4F-FcTqa5RCpJVhF9XT1zBsaT_WNgV-Bnd62GPMGBSRWrvA0yIztwWl671P9tZk4nh0PNC9mrnCe2K7Tuo4hMQCba3ULLhRGg_xRIAnKXqDw8kzPBRImKx0zw_QMeGKI370oyFw9Dkjz51cU-C9rH3f7gDPLpwe9bmEyKeCD2hGK0b3Vu7PtBBJyMJZM53WVcMN3vK3WfNArMdV4R0jCaW9q2Yzu0G69gi6EQmoaZmcEwl1xPX6WuzAivb-54jyzfNXRdR0B-j5GZRcO-oIpa-PeP5rbALcY5WePb-9nnmwjV3vabGBKUkX-X2jvJXHXNa_2TwrLSC-XK8Av07DUv9RBkC0a025A8F6zIiuMj8ke_20hg9CfPVj5Eap_UzYg7R6WSbV2JcY6FPGkUFOz_RlUx0hmE1s14IqecQfEdTAIKybFL9ak4k/OIqoetk_sLlhETyQradjXeZoa6rL9r_A/20>
SpaceX: TAM
âWe believe we have identified the largest actionable total addressable
market (âTAMâ) in human history,â says the prospectus for SpaceXâs initial
public offering
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/NSbT7WEbRfXguDrXYNaBDuu8x3CFTHNODr57ZvwOaViI2hUC_h8B7iurZitps8VRwcwHJA_h54430MXLt25_nwWL0EA_VTp-yYKtpU3qnMsgtagVfuSvX3EQT3B2F3YfvjtD9Vu7ygkjpNLd2qIWF4XxW_Z6V8gZXtLEKO8zi2J_3ZDtbPEn5vB7tEXD1IFBMxKOAeADJm22xHlPkbnDVsP343CfXqhAmnaICkKtQWfuHQ73OCalA3m51WBkcLuvrxOkqcrrTKzMphPiQJvOU4i8bfwIIh3bB9WrLp0oECXCPQ0AUb5KK6zpMDmwfgTM6PGL8mSgANJlkD0xzQ5VPSDpTXSQkxqiiajV4js7Op4vtncOJnTy5lXhUg/TDV50MzCe2iD2s2RUKnv-ld3kq8tp9fz/20>,
and,
duh, of course. Every other company in human history has had essentially
the same business model, which is âwe will sell goods or services to people
on Earth for money.â The upper bound on every companyâs TAM has been
something like the number of people on Earth times the amount of money they
can spend, the gross domestic product of the Earth.
SpaceX has much higher ambitions. âOur mission,â it says, âis to build the
systems and technologies necessary to make life multiplanetary, to
understand the true nature of the universe, and to extend the light of
consciousness to the stars.â The upper bound on SpaceXâs TAM is the gross
domestic product of *the universe*. Elon Musk is going to make humanity a
multiplanetary species, and then weâre really cooking. Why sell goods and
services to a few billion people crammed onto Earth, when you can sell
goods and services to a few trillion people spread among the stars? âWe
believe that our current space efforts will catalyze transformative
breakthroughs that could reshape terrestrial industries and lead to the
emergence of new trillion-dollar markets on the Moon, Mars, and beyond,â
says the prospectus. Every other company is stuck in our dreary modern
reality, but SpaceX operates in a *Star Trek *universe with obviously
larger economic potential. [1] <#m_5208210554805681538_footnote-1>
Iâm sort of kidding. Here is SpaceXâs actual description of its total
addressable market [2] <#m_5208210554805681538_footnote-2>:
We estimate that our quantifiable TAM is $28.5 trillion, consisting of $370
billion in Space from space-enabled solutions; $1.6 trillion in
Connectivity across $870 billion in Starlink Broadband and $740 billion in
Starlink Mobile as well as additional opportunities in enterprise and
government; $26.5 trillion in AI across $2.4 trillion in AI infrastructure,
$760 billion in consumer subscriptions, $600 billion in digital
advertising, and $22.7 trillion in enterprise applications. For
illustrative purposes of sizing our addressable market opportunity, we
exclude China and Russia from our global estimates.
The entirety of SpaceXâs estimated market for âspace-enabled solutionsâ is
about half of that for âconsumer subscriptionsâ to AI chatbots.
Substantially all â 79.6% â of SpaceXâs total addressable market is for
enterprise AI applications. SpaceX looks around at the economic
possibilities of extending the light of consciousness to the stars and
thinks âweâre gonna build tools to automate spreadsheets and sell them to
investment banks.â
No no no, Elon Musk doesnât think that. Elon Musk wants to shoot rockets
into space and so forth. (Though, also, he is personally selling the
spreadsheet tools
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/alOxxn7AYqxfnF4723BarlVZ1rq5MUV2fWIYr9fUhF6mjloZTBlG80ptGN_flr2czx4Ov6yLHmRpm2A_2rSL9Lvz23_h1LvNhiKDwHslANzjp3DR8H8dbyO_OHitR-d6bvrid1uRh70JPp4YSocFvCxpI7TQSZRcQT-TOLFBOpZlUznnDshK2tsgzJr9EnNj4e8N7rYFE82qHIT4NFwmzHInNjTbieV2B1IYFylt0Y0-YnLK1tKVKqA3jZ5f98vVPKRLwPPbIpoz0mUNnOGChcO4APMWRSjfnraQLlxV7f8vWZ3OBGvmOFJS0s7O9MqXPeOz_r8HJxDKXZYhETU8EdQWIqSkmJW8exiF4c6phs-dvGBml4BfrEGzaQ/YQE4Q4mhhEi3qGEvlnLpSKmySHV1ZU5w/20>
to banks.) The prospectus begins with a bunch of color illustrations of
rocket launches and Mars colonies seen from space. Muskâs pay package is
contingent on establishing âa permanent human colony on Mars with at least
one million inhabitants,â absolutely straight-faced *Star Trek *stuff.
There is a tension here. SpaceX was, until February, Muskâs space company;
then it merged with xAI, Muskâs artificial intelligence company. Now it is
both. (Data centers in space!) More specifically:
- It *makes *most of its money from space, or really from satellite
internet. In the first quarter of 2026, SpaceX had revenue of $4,694
million, of which $3,257 million came from its Connectivity segment
(Starlink internet), $619 million from Space (rocket launches) and $818
million (17%) from AI. [3] <#m_5208210554805681538_footnote-3>
- It *spends *most of its money on AI: The AI segment had a
first-quarter loss of $2,469 million and capital expenditure of $7,723
million, three times as much capex as in Space and Connectivity combined.
- Its *long-term *aspirations are obviously interplanetary and science
fictional.
- Its *short-term *economic aspirations seem pretty AI-driven.
When SpaceX merged with xAI in February, I wrote that
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/PZ34hG3Kvcupb0KWCVoKY4hZTNWDYwE8GEyp89dtPG1nodHVfH5_QABknD2_bRi2R5rsaZHncMxozIjkqxmfEVV6Fbl5rc2UuIXGiNTVljliGxXIu0Pg07WbEfC1LjYeZ34Xju6WZm04jvuNCjXeTtvHTolq6oslGjAQPuuy2IwEI2Hxssu3zt_QEoI3ueGNhtOAlTSE7xHQHuIJVbhCRnEFBpUhAZB0XVC9is1dCyzRUaMOGWlGW4E9Eh-pJm0lXnkt4bX9ri9qIL87PhVnDt_duUbLZXO7lthlKAAmspLvz52WuTqL_qV0rdNmvjMosxphbdi81BNt8UfG1pZ0tGklXI0m0OyCctLJNa8XP4LTLybJmUritELEy7w/Oja9qDzLkS7xIlwnVy-HNOs2GcKcF_HK/20>
the rationale was âletâs use our space rocket business to subsidize our
websiteâs data centers,â and that is more or less what is happening: The
satellite business brings in money and the AI business spends it. But I
also wrote
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/V-KvNrSVB-sVkL-vnRBNXCJJMSHMkmiq2YGm9NIb-NWy1mujqYnNYKlf6QR4YJwT7TinPNMIJTGKfwdFe6GqSxv0rR4ltQkY_9bSwg4DGHo0uXWVoabqhlYKNj3pmmDt4m9aT179wZ4WEab3u9sBM4sPbvaD5p-HmnLEhMfiN9v0IqgH6PnqPzvsAFCcV-esfjAoeqwpjMMwdxxp2ts6-Yf_-ALTxTnbjDTcNPhKmSEjflbmFzDmvNas-TaiYXqQqmD-F14YphdkDvejyzHY5CxiVwb_-rfZ3F1AX2UPCmR_Clk0vXS29PfvZzYiJe9Ua526kEbH0VcWviBgcmfpEXNuSdIpDsFOsL3THHKI-M89MKtWsDFmspKwc7E/5aAz11HxGOy6HxnioWLdUGY02AeJcvip/20>
:
Chatbots today, intergalactic colonization tomorrow. In 3026 our
nth-great-grandchildren will encounter a race of intelligent aliens in a
distant galaxy, and the aliens will be like âhow did you get here,â and our
descendants will say âwell it started with some slop feeds
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/SNFEHjunL9YJmpDT_PDY7CKp7jZdGo-4v0UA_ujHtao8Md99jDWYdlzac02IN_25DYZ4WJTPlWHncld2tUZ3-jpI1KQ73Z41qlMMl7RnbXlrjoHZDYQ5W1-PvP49wWhud2Wa2PHLZ9LpM7nFM-Dt3pTe9nlOvLXMw6PzqQp6wFmzhYWIrhaltJo1j23BZg_kP8IQTJN2UiP1N3MkQeMgPxnPwWuoNotpQiUSuhLRd3B5W-GyLuk6qSp_bJvZSHQC4iCqBY9NeFu-MbSZEN_SskQGQxu1j4gWjLQWOL3zudC3-RwJmo-crPQH9337jH1S2Xg2I_GrDAIKtmzfVK4UaDCqRoJYooYxQii4woo87tF9E9F6fE6vpT8csMY/bUq5j6jWo24-dJE750n0IDowVebDVxLN/20>â
and the aliens will be like âwhat.â Lots of very smart people have had
high-minded ideas about intergalactic travel for centuries, but perhaps it
will turn out that a critical step in getting there is building an app to
generate short-form pornographic video on demand.
The two things reinforce each other. You use satellite revenue to build
data centers to sell enterprise AI applications, and then you use
enterprise AI revenue to build your Mars colonies. You are selling both a
long-term vision of intergalactic colonization, and also a medium-term
vision of the revolutionary economic potential of AI. SpaceX is selling
dreams, and it has a dream for every stage of the timeline. Bloombergâs Sana
Pashankar and Loren Grush report
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/Cp18xedUfKq43g7rubU2sbzD04W_aMp61Papw7ResxLdn1ZlxK2jTfMI4ohFrI4ZLs67Wd0DQoQ4joVvfEbpdzGx3rOteL8XMPUm-FHmlV4dEtrYf8C3eAtbIFYnyP0vNUBTmEaYuMsW61n4TfHgNfVUnY0mpvXZbrtHMbUqa1L0KylQTOJQIgn_NUswv2VP7kCmXZTKiQK7q0sok1k0WQi87JgTxa6LmagW5s-mkpHnzfL9U2dn3sjWoZadJeLAW2xJrja5GXyhoxyvHLMY_w74MjHGwp2si15MlSJfoq1m18Qehhd_JxoB5mqqeEooGmoPtSMnsL5OAvCTDgsK92rmZVQ4RDaZzlIGWSVYrDztelBAr3t-da3ZfEs/NEuKYAMzAQrPJixVwgdwXuQeHNvOGj4f/20>
:
âThe big takeaway for me is that SpaceX is now an AI company,â said Chad
Anderson, an early SpaceX investor and founder of Space Capital. â¦
âInvestors arenât paying for todayâs business, theyâre paying for the
platform that owns the next 50 years of orbital infrastructure,â Anderson
said. â¦
Mike Alves, founder and fund manager of VIDA Vision Fund and early investor
in SpaceX, said itâs a âshockerâ how aggressively the company is pitching
its AI capabilities.
âFor a rocket company, thatâs wild,â Alves said.
Itâs both! In 2126, SpaceX will be making like $4 quadrillion in revenue
selling nutrient slurry to asteroid minors off the shoulder of Orion, but
in 2036 it will be making $4 trillion selling enterprise AI slurry to banks
in New York. [4] <#m_5208210554805681538_footnote-4>
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/DQIucHuRkKrnkRU3gew_qk8UIyNyrUdOraS1bnHbKkKTsbrqCBSkik4yuNtcKOguN45fxCgnXnboPopf5P8ffjcLaKQQZh3JK-tQGZnPBKH-HXMf6-Itn_Tbd8kYZFEvvFsPIsqdiXnzDILiZz5pKQ3VmT8KfIfoi-rTNAMaEon6Wvr2YowpvNzL3nDgTEpZLf9OWeFwxWISpHu36n38HapKr0-Lk7kNdKRN-QTssw8juhsWt-G26xWSCIRLEKCk7yt9LNLIJFWxmr7SB4DFBNL7j69Xb3IK80HOVkJereVjf94vEyJrLNlB7pp6eXPbf8sAkp79rfbsI2ki9AXPCAt4qNUF3bwRorhipZmx8LZUB6WOp2lzRCQGU5JEEiukDxdMdemV8hUCumbUgWS90xS_K1IOD9rGtO8CGg24Ney3gnIBN_MBCRkYR3QkQ5iOVDuIpOrWRvUhrrLMDTJDuy68P-svI3b_YK7-IS7GA-KHCrXeIkrLePnDRY04Dap0saynanL1srj8FwtcFpgaOAg8u5r3Z09RTYBOaxCabVMRInY56MKRgMGzcguz40URK7Hf7rlVNvnevQVDGOYFgVRK1pdEm3hbwNerUsEaXUF34UkmjA8Ywq5pSW_FkLhY4ZxhiNAKZkJByB7SVrkV5InIbuVscfTrKkTcksailiJuy144AXrBCS3G-BZg7y2hdsqJog2u9k-4Bg/tcsdQVeG0PPg-4owApMEdOZU3WSQiEcs/20>
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/uyNQ52yId0HWgs3ByvH7G61NStRFuxff8dt2kfK3hyQItvdAXnR-MSsIfcfv4KeuzxkfqE46efwOIst81tfp3XDCA4x31fXLDk_Kf9GvFTrknJh2ktAyoC3WNbXymwfL7lRh0dFCeYXyK2nvu_p9zX9o7-X73tJjhcpwwCyGifnITcvOkOWCnYc_QV8odJ5eEp4zekJ8CLNSnmhCZGlMfZ9LGZckjlVVu5zIKs5nH5-fkm2l93ckJxujKbRp_hxYh5bom-BIdirK_MzBxP5SlPYHgP5QI2c318vIn6zWzj13oGr7iQqvvu47DB34Me2E0_obqKMmhbYGjvFFN2Yo0Lkb0yRVnQ88i8_WSDemIf2Vum1kByrePFpcd9Khgql13UvIw-hPXGRfzryQ6fQ4bKc2T0LIaceLNYhHU064a1pUIgZI0ivuCE5RjTAmscxFH0QHT3zXtcEU8QXnQ5ileqhFUPwIrxMmvmWnO77able8nOirJq7keMYsFXvcvUR9693bd_285rNDiyubsUbaFCXGSfFyVFQrnS50jXTstKzpEqGbFxlWgv5-saqK5mXWn44XND603j7uGeUk71rwLXjb6XpE1aKrcAYyqdaFbC4oICzahHsK9TiVqJyejGGlAhucDgEJ8q-AqU6cL0HjBONpudJCXIQdRgZqZE6P_WkH96VF_t3sgFjHOSPMmjRuVlLqIGloF7b2gg/dYFKADr48ZWIyrhFs7h-NeeMywo5SfPA/20>
SpaceX: Governance
The deal, with SpaceX, is that Elon Musk runs it however he wants, and he
does weird stuff, and you have to trust him, and if you donât like it you
canât complain. When SpaceX acquired xAI a few months ago, did a special
committee of independent directors approve the transaction? Did Musk recuse
himself from negotiations? Was the price set by independent valuation
experts using a rigorous process? Did outside shareholders sue to block the
deal? Stop. Musk wanted SpaceX to buy xAI, so it did.
The deal with Tesla Inc. is ⦠almost that? But not quite? When Tesla
acquired Muskâs solar power company a decade ago, did a special committee
approve the transaction? Sure. Did Musk recuse himself? I mean, no, but
maybe a little. Was the price set by independent valuation experts using a
rigorous process? It was set by somebody using some process. Did
shareholders sue? Oh yes
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/pYYiItkyrIDVwz0O3yMWVmlIpIt06zQfD5ij-aqFK3fpHBoJoIK4h2A-LtE-SPaA6jTcU-InAHTzrNi2J4IIaQJudtFMhAGbCfTHRQknYvJeu9UM-Ad7ot7iT7m3RtKGDN6hnbr8MuAVEm3WoDp_2cpfQs_ROzFGJYPG9kTCcVhUGFk3lfG78J2bk7gQRYk-VELdmQaicFFJUPf_1GNiesc1JSw5wKPilI48TYa_PPX6_-3OKAn7mhgFycsSEM5DIfjp6Lte_bbKXZvuDuCAOXyxynCUFbyMweOjWaQTRquv0i8bfeAv2a63juvpapbfjjMOJhb5hp_ZWTJqMl2zjnCyTKaYmMoJltFvtyu0xcJIFb-L0fSQwaA1jZU/2XKVGB3s0MLdfzDtCBgVLHL-d-zlQYlh/20>!
They lost, eventually, but it was a whole thing.
Similarly, this year SpaceXâs board gave Musk a billion shares of
restricted stock contingent on hitting various market capitalization
milestones and also the Mars colony. Teslaâs board has given Musk similar
options packages, but at the cost of long-running lawsuits
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/c9ioEkpQDRcptJbufaBc0P2zLyYikHsblbwnlLEpoqQpub03VPHMM3y87GdqrCSZggx5MjdI5pZ5awiebFlRyaQ9z3eQYyI9Z7tGmpLyY8GIiYAE5z2s7gcZJ6KS_P2AYG2Q2BDBlYgmCXdhPPj-WjoyUUiu0lpzpaWwNF1WalOYZc7riQyqHDzkzR9hJ3lVihdjW8We5h5zdgdmSxVP8FLHsJWc49hZjTzkV19xEIiBtuTy5DICyn3VcBA9bXLHeCxmBzp2BfjfkPJDRDnwGDzBKA0Ak8Rb-AZsYX9Spqtldx-NNqdW37BxssK3fPFi2WyIUah_3fI9NtyroJCnztWvxNotzCYfEzM5BaWvNHzRTb1uiunjg-iuQss/ODEOWtVRdQ0SaN_tZ330LAHsazf9tH_x/20>
and much agitation, though again it all worked out
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/3i_cPQ5HsLv75ZbKV1NqcbfLvC2IONmhoTZ_vVRbKGpTiX_xRqs_jn6K2IYvlUZB-PJ0Px3hK3vzXjeMrQrDPs4sU-2MqWKsByarC-YSYIyK39ujDKE2fArgAxm_7jIYeJX6D0OolT05Iidi8UNF3w1zOXtJ_hwsoQhfNArvEN5-9ZJmRmKk68a4kwwTkdyIlfW7FCMGvljS0wwL5yLc1ntVbl0vDLoEzhYJuIqeDXOr4-qkUoOiTxvcsjFey_5sPPgYHHnIt6_S25Ke8jodxiT9cJtT_K9S7u9UbbxhmekUonEJElsO03EyJjPNsfMNxQ_WGbODOuO33jtH6V7IpNQeFpp0OEa8nPdtlA9OZWPdi3YhnTDUr6_sXT0/N3sUi_RU_FXIMH7cgFlZTY61hi6nrUvW/20>
.
The difference is that SpaceX is a *private **company *and Tesla is a *public
company*. There are certain rules and norms that apply to public companies
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/KF-4b3oeoUtjAUS2HXYyUq5ERDjuyM9dcIWYKADilfzEdNUWOmY1ili0xVgkVxvegilwAQVi2jbop6-6Xcw2R7KRxZJSIscntk8nF_L6tgaMDLe9axDMi2a-DfiAwrwJD1K-OMyDgcgRBEAm8b8fvo4fx6SC0hfFpxGwwdEddbBM8_nqDGDzyeL9MW6K8CsnlM4BGnhfSD7S3olcT9SlYI5d0dwmAh-h8xdLCbyNLe7jhXEvGEwJRqmBtd5UAlZ0Z6YGEqRCdTkSEMohVO_5m08Dm_41OsSo9WYlIK7vuSyjK8pLlRqT5-sAwQMpJly2L0rO_XioK3Ak_81_t2kGL2PRHHVdLGhfnT9igA1W4Nk_L2w2C6jM_i68ZbE/eUYaM-QeftaapCv5k0bMjEPN6L75Cgy7/20>;
private companies can be run however their owners and managers want. Anyone
can own shares in a public company, and if they donât like what the CEO
gets up to they can sue. Public companies have to disclose material
information, and if that information is misleading then shareholders can
sue about that too.
One obvious sensible goal for Musk, in taking SpaceX public, would be to
keep his deal the same: When SpaceX is public, Elon Musk still gets to run
it however he wants, and he can do weird stuff, and you have to trust him,
and if you donât like it you canât complain. This is a sensible goal for
Musk in part because he clearly has been burned, or at least annoyed, by
the Tesla experience, and he would like to avoid repeating it.
But it is also a sensible goal because *that deal has worked out *for
shareholders. SpaceX is worth, you know, $1.75 trillion
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/QiYCg5C3B3Z0T7Mk-oxOo3LJOhWBT6Kd5O5Qk7eILeRNd6NnB5B8baSDd1BzOx4Z8BQwVjQ2sSwILbM1LQw8QYrG65sXWKShA5b5wsIKKrjgX80AbNc9Ty1COZalFo7wPxBCZXEjMDhoiFsHGhuhXbZFW3nhsXYL7X_Gh-ApCE8av1Xkzy_Oj8PYjLy09Rl4hx3e5tpni2omZpA3AH-gDwPkcmMc3TipQElkV0MYId46lZuN_qCBAYIK35eHcYxNOA7AZiQrvX2XWBomeGyD8vktsRScH51uyMESrgw6PHA2khM8U58mbjx5-wAkrtTL2hJrMgfPgsp42GBz-_Ehuvi3CItevB4kKHsX3dUl2nhNiryc3ahQMuN23AE/nUnJbJOePUVvcIxv8dynyEX3kFv0vr4y/20>
or whatever. Surely SpaceX has created all that shareholder value more *because
*Musk does what he wants than* in spite of* Musk doing what he wants; it is
hard to accidentally create $1.75 trillion of value. SpaceXâs shareholders
signed up for this deal â letting Musk cook â and have been rewarded; the
people who buy into the IPO presumably want the same deal. Not all of them!
Some index funds will own the stock soon without necessarily being Musk
fans, and some, like, municipal pension funds will probably buy some stock
specifically because they *arenât *Musk fans and want to keep an eye on
him. But most of the people putting in orders in the IPO are doing so
because they like what Musk has done with the place and want more of the
same.
As far as I can tell, Musk has accomplished this goal. When SpaceX goes
public, nothing much will have to change about its governance; Musk will
still be in total whimsical control, he can do what he wants, no one can
stop him and shareholders canât complain. Specifically:
- SpaceX will have dual-class stock, with Class B shares getting 10
votes per share. Musk owns 93.6% of the Class B (and 12.3% of the low-vote
Class A), for total voting power of 85.1%. [5]
<#m_5208210554805681538_footnote-5> Tesla does not have dual-class stock
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/fnnk9sKgstl-4YNMGUeM6WJWslh6FW86dEleYly2OIKtzsnoma8w3BEO9Ya9f2ttOtCJMFt1J3D3wH2XBGb1GnKJQeQgH58emfkWbnsPvBUCuH7-jPPQhj-w-jyB_5AViT583eT84mgp09HWTb4yXEwnaQhwUSpJJdPE1ck12nbmqUmsBt-a6HiJRE19KK8bHFKorst_4xchqX-CfKQTJL3ndFXqAWDII6xM-cPpJ_r5lZ4zTFDEo3m59JOHSehGAwAMkqu2ccE5-65ELSzYgKTVg5g9pHitNQ4tDLZ8dmPpNxV2OIOrh7DQI4HpBbSoLLxKDTTQLgkOGx2XkEmWR8D6LVM-aayD5ozgXvbhGcqQEO8JW-zpNRVF3Eo/Qt2t8Xmh_M1CxucAcwDuLeCunCKETRzO/20>,
Musk is a minority owner, and he has worried aloud
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/PyMK7SRBpR-BTjPZI1oYyk005CUkGIGKq9GnuNVT94IouPu_EK8APYbrAwjyaE4XrIP25ofx2YRSmdDn_gVsyEmsYzPeeaZUY_sOq6OnIa6TjT16iE-OJh1he2466vzuxCaVW20eDeM5y-Nq-WBQNk62O0XhiCJxKqPnDHFNgpUSov_v6SFpkSLkcG4AO7odHd06BdWJ793GuQqn_e-bWYqZmULkPKtba39Ofcx2GTdye9DP6gKmqIIlO1BbRNuybe4Swgy_HvzYqOj_aF8_w8WQrkqVzpdd5kH_PHBPgbd1KwOgbOWGd37eDmHw3418cMim_TOePsuVbKZXVUYqxi1Vo0WztOUMT8fXZ2BUe6E5KVDFgy_yBP7giUQ/lgyJCbGyrY640wZ2XhhaN_WuXaMUreHm/20>
about the risk of losing control of Teslaâs robot army because he doesnât
have voting control of the company. Not a problem at SpaceX! Build all the
robot armies you want!
- Because of Muskâs voting control, SpaceX is a âcontrolled companyâ
under stock exchange rules, so it doesnât have to have a majority of
independent directors or an independent compensation committee. So the
board of directors can be made up of Muskâs buddies, and they can pay him
whatever they want.
- Even aside from controlling 85% of the voting stock, Musk gets to
appoint a majority of the board of directors himself, without the Class A
shareholders even voting. [6] <#m_5208210554805681538_footnote-6>
- He can still do whatever extracurricular activities he wants: SpaceX
âwill renounce any interest or expectancy ⦠in being offered an
opportunity to participate in, certain business opportunities ⦠that are
from time to time presentedâ to Musk, âeven if the business opportunity is
one that we or our subsidiaries might reasonably be deemed to have pursued
or had the ability or desire to pursue.â [7]
<#m_5208210554805681538_footnote-7> âMr. Musk and his affiliates are not
restricted from owning assets or engaging in businesses that compete
directly or indirectly with us and will not have any duty to refrain from
engaging, directly or indirectly, in the same or similar business
activities or lines of business as us,â says a risk factor in the
prospectus. âHe does not devote his full time and attention to our
businesses and devotes time and attention to other significant roles (and
may in the future serve in additional roles),â says another. If Musk
decides to spend all his time building a robot army, or space data centers,
or an intergalactic colony nutrient slurry business, in a *new *company,
he can go ahead and do that, and SpaceX and its shareholders canât complain.
More generally, and more importantly, SpaceXâs shareholders canât complain
about *anything*. There are two main venues for shareholder complaints at
public companies: *shareholder derivative lawsuits*, and *securities fraud
lawsuits. *A derivative lawsuit is basically a shareholder suing the
executives or board for breaching their fiduciary duties to the company;
the Tesla lawsuit against Muskâs pay package was a derivative suit. A
securities fraud lawsuit is a shareholder suing the company for lying to
shareholders in its public statements, though as I often say, âeverything
is securities fraudâ and any complaint about a company can be pretty easily
expressed as a securities fraud lawsuit.
SpaceX will limit both of those approaches. To bring a derivative lawsuit,
SpaceX will require that a shareholder own at least 3% of the companyâs
stock, more than $50 billion worth at a $1.75 billion valuation. (This sort
of restriction is allowed in Texas
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/ufYMGYLsYVJ0YzTJgpP71Sn4zLI-uZDj0hN7BpRVk6MxNvrnuUSYZuzcTQVhngXPiA4w9l3SH_iNDgCvUSvLvDobZnQ_luYdgYXS8sVg1oxlBCamJFj6AzIPdRVDqVYBSs6I2UhUqpaj-tdUnQRGATvaw82oIL9H6dvcnlI3jq23NCm82FE8d7rPcJ3IcfH6Wx-FJ28DkwwsQSN1Nznpksi3dcLsEujFdphcCg2n2Uh05aPb-Bky_rzmX3kWquBK1wGr4JOyfW6rIkR4uMPUS5TsfWd5StCF99BPv7WixJQsjszK24_Byb5Y4Hlkqq9pXlbM9XvHSx_AVPDoSZYP1Xq2vahWOBhDUNYAzofGoTUdJgClP8OzBdv36Qc/8H64GPH11DR-UTy9_h3wqq-oArjA839G/20>,
where SpaceX is incorporated, though not in Delaware.) You do not buy $50
billion of SpaceX stock because you are a teachersâ pension fund looking to
nitpick Elon Musk. The only people buying $50 billion of SpaceX stock are
people who want to let Elon Musk cook. (And giant index funds, fine, but
giant index funds donât pick these sorts of fights.) One could guess that,
if SpaceX shareholders sued in Texas over Muskâs SpaceX pay package, a
Texas court would side with Musk
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/YUyGV88gkfYYC_KHx4fHvTx_amZX0kXNNp5g8jybJ34DCEA57PAv-POv7Nxeeb_SgYyMr7_cPq5ME6B-7YcTYbXc3xqAUVbISvXypgy9HG2wy1GG6fHzGDp-hghyCmC2WqxztInE42YApWhkCKdilpmq-CyDk1fSAucuAv2oVQCt_zc9mPMwQv53bD0EflxayhmzzT8PyE2Z-R_3WPlYd9gbLJv_kJpKDYqAirDGnag8q4deTMOhnHoMS974Fs7KnczAJQWiz77Rctu4oCPjeoBUiaF6INETRVmZOsW48RlcqvEtq7zjbc1dYRm0UOZP7WOhFv-Sq5rjo2bn-kftYgyh-N5Gaw-PTOzjswDIRyKj0TceABajjb5AtDw/uOPI7057l06BtIGfoNd4RDSyZQgGXKeo/20>.
But it doesnât matter: SpaceX shareholders *canât *sue over Muskâs SpaceX
pay package.
SpaceX canât limit securities fraud lawsuits that way. (If someone tricks
you into buying 100 shares of stock, thatâs still fraud, and you can still
sue.) But it can limit where those lawsuits are brought. We talked last year
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/4l425HCEFqFnUiLJ_4IT1FTbt6EF0IgzkowqbH-jFWFw0XCkNmVToqgHjfcSRtOvgG5zcDiHJD9c70sD1qirS5FzWaVgtJO8O6bwjDkl-zaF_59DjTpsBJiA5Iosj6KQlcREfv27ltKwh_J341s9SWQ-sqxF8-rVAh6G8JXUWnyjdxJgpL66KyzAQyzCNwrPOBbpzxHUpGuYkGT08OifMYToOHR4jlGV8UcPLtLKDmBLMhfv37vKKgBtCrTulrdewhhD5lWXWL6sAybc8f6-70jVRt8S9476q4AlueBEnn0pfNbRmV2jahD1c-jP7wbmFcgilps7XzzmDmWIEnsqiw4DtmGGoj_qGKavZQsyjTz0TZu3GPMrIYpNPHA/xVkicQ5X3Ms3WNFh-QlcTtXlC6jb6nUY/20>
about one approach: The US Securities and Exchange Commission now allows
public companies to require *arbitration *of securities fraud lawsuits.
SpaceX hasnât gone quite that far. But it does say that, if shareholders
want to sue for securities fraud, they have to do so in the Texas Business
Court, which might be friendlier to Musk than most federal courts. Itâs not
entirely clear that this is allowed: âThe law governing the selection of a
forum other than a federal court for certain actions brought under the
federal securities laws is unsettled,â says the prospectus. But SpaceXâs
fallback option is that, if it canât force securities fraud lawsuits into
Texas Business Court, it *will *force them into arbitration. [8]
<#m_5208210554805681538_footnote-8>
The upshot is that SpaceX shareholders canât sue for breaches of fiduciary
duty, and they can only barely sue for securities fraud.
This is âbad corporate governance,â but it is also correct! This is how it
should work! If you are buying SpaceX stock to tell Elon Musk what to do,
you should stop. If you are buying SpaceX stock because you want exposure
to the space/AI business but you have your doubts about current management,
you should stop. If you are buying SpaceX stock because you like Elon Musk
and want to go along for the ride with him, yes, thatâs correct, thatâs the
investment thesis here. If, later, you are disillusioned with Elon Musk, if
you feel like you were misled and he didnât do the stuff he promised to do,
I mean ⦠thatâs also kind of his whole thing? It is possible that, in
hindsight, you will find something bad about SpaceX that was not
specifically disclosed in this prospectus. But at a meta level everyone
knows everything about SpaceX. Muskâs gonna do whatever weird stuff he
wants, and if you donât like it thatâs your problem.
We have talked occasionally about efforts by the SEC to âMake IPOs Great
Again
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/BdIYQbaEurHi3Q2b3dmhYAMKKJfdO0StyTt3F4ouereeSeiSVnG74i4J7fQNy-z_dgDv6rhZTb65tkSKMYT5BGzopvd_zvt_HQW6krLZjBxUgQD7_y1xRA37R6f5lq8TUZBT0o5lEa95NW5dP9z7siFwuTJMUBR_5AlOFTTzhj7kcvii3ogtIg5416H8KOuEGZP7rH0Lw0XNwyQFOt7-N9pSKNLhqv6I-jDRTW813MCdVfhP8c4sm_riLDndVDFCZEg8ftrkpnsDR-3nuAY-O93r0FrV3BQfJVaQpuQbLJwniFnWTRiyOup9UDV9fZfD2wJ1LzsWjggxvAy0Yo5uJ3RwfkT6Ol8W-SHr79Yym5xXStGy7VFJwu8l35E/ecb7RknSXeaOWz4h2G9YSGf2rT9rXlQ4/20>,â
to make it easier and more attractive for companies to go public. The stuff
about securities fraud arbitration is part of that effort, as is the SECâs
recent proposal to make quarterly financial reporting optional
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/oyq-jqNzyuLDIDdcfYInNjdWKM2jVG5_NQZah9fSvk9-EkaJjqBF9DJ5xYYV2nQTCiA5GqHNvx6DCcyTNhGxy1akM6Kx8DLSGC3zDRw2V16MmEkBPBjUHIfB_UZiHElc9fN5AwrnM6ay2CKOeoEHpIukIR0wDgRFwyzgE6sqMGSXYlQJl41qBbMAgwfV1NVuQk6GLLnG8nOhqvjABsEHMx85CKxQcItbMlmfSgEXys3rNewPO4VNl6sIiUA3TXEOuiqlezaN1WixiZp6pFIBL4Hj0WjLYOpDiHvZr0CQBZa7okaNoUIE6WjCvFnefatks5L-t9pkFh_Dds7b-muVne9ov97DvKMzKiSR9xsmjScT2z1tSBZmHWLOUsY/vStMQVzV8DnmCCmdKMcpNxzMkljuYaGn/20>.
Presumably semiannual reporting will make it a bit cheaper for some private
companies to go public, which might induce some of them to do it. But
surely the *main *reason that visionary founders of hot startups are
hesitant to go public is fear that they will lose control of their
companies, either in the literal sense (lose a proxy fight, get fired by an
independent board) or in the looser sense of having their behavior
constrained by fiduciary duties and good-governance advocates and
shareholder lawsuits.
SpaceX, it seems to me, has put together the correct package to solve that.
SpaceX will go public, but nothing will change for Elon Musk. Nothing about
being public will constrain his behavior. I am not sure how much of a
precedent that will set: Heâs Elon Musk, and you arenât. On the other hand,
Muskâs moonshot pay package at Tesla led to lots of imitators
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/MeUp9bbtOdFLmFTGVFTR5200atsj3E-jc9g3TvqA3fljlkK5ZNkclzsv6GrHFnAVKL6xUQKQtDD03fIcjkyjsQqGfwNxQkGJCJ20pb4BM7lAa92_gICQ4sMh0mWfOlOCG1q8F_U8hkdh-UUV_SY-NtFXbbftw1hHpkH3oHbRFy-ykrsayWrw8STyUbWp10dfQ5QRvYXiAnpjJS9w8PuEo5GwZ-IBrQ0-jFJ1CWO93OZRrvKv1HRNQgVQ-bLXuWefMMPQ44qBz0GDKJSV6HHa295NuZxJVmsSuWn_7qPWb-bHbv-Xo1yL1yuyRX0_ANcptqFaBkxUpIVD4whzTAJ6Hu5IcLE4QH-q0nimz7sXlZvojDV2clmvt3GoGAo/Mp-RWNpg7lqwza3kt-Knq7khSg4UDvpL/20>:
Lots of CEOs would like to be Musk, and lots of boards of directors would
like to think that their guy is as good as Musk. The same thing might
happen with IPO structuring. âI want the Musk IPO,â startup founders might
say; âI want to control the board forever and never let shareholders
complain.â Maybe theyâll get it. Maybe then theyâll be more excited to go
public.
SpaceX: DMs
Also, Bloombergâs Sridhar Natarajan and Todd Gillespie report
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/9Hi_amv-XIw6LUMoXCj26FiIkOYr22RZ0LAQxkg8YTujpzaGZU17tPKoPNrEgHB47HW8FGUVsmLTLobbNCL9RxtqFi2WlYdwJuT47ahpXnZD3I1zOlqPYImH7U2FAht-UJxfmZxcNFS8Cfn_T6XgGRtzl2s9Suq_tDmfv5CWTGPaUWVxhGFJrgQey03wpNWEGdUrcdtCuvoaRQMKTJWb86B1CNbNpXYWOCq0-FC1NdQp3iTj8SGt5E7UDE6hjJo-3EjsRYCuHviPk3jo7T_HJh8Olk58tiQbCUb-SvaG1taKmDb5f-vn5tdSAUYJ7ZlhLFvU6PKf7T7HNa0s6O4VOfppDkPNmV4VTb3CtoAs4WogjoM-tt-LGN6zlOk/9X5V0EC2SFwX5ewtTufC_KtxR88WMwhF/20>
:
As Goldman Sachs Group Inc. campaigned to lead SpaceXâs IPO, Chief
Executive Officer David Solomon opened up a new channel to the rocket
companyâs billionaire owner, sliding into Elon Muskâs DMs.
With banks jockeying to get their name first on the deal, Solomon worked
with staffers to message Musk directly on X, his social media platform,
according to people familiar with the matter, who asked not to be
identified citing private details.
Solomonâs move helped highlight the bankâs commitments to Musk and the
mercurial billionaireâs various businesses, which also include xAI. The
move shows how investment banks seek to pull out all the stops to win a
clientâs favor. â¦
Solomon is known for using gimmicks to help win a deal, with one instance
becoming investment-banking lore at Goldman. The CEO, who was banking head
at the time, showed up with a team decked out in Lululemon gear to clinch
the mandate for the activewear retailerâs 2007 IPO.
(Disclosure, I used to work in equity capital markets at Goldman.) A couple
of points here. First, is ⦠sending someone a DM actually pulling out all
the stops to impress them? Like I get that itâs like âooh, we are trying to
do an IPO of X, so we should *use X *to show how committed we are to the
company and how well we understand its products and story.â But itâs a
pretty low-effort communication channel? âI sent a DMâ is not quite âI am a
terminally online X power user.â In another, more relevant gimmick, Musk
apparently asked prospective IPO bankers
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/API-pSWPu0KAGsRMt2ONQXW6z_Cp7GNcEGMQI5F2kzXXqtdKW9Kj_5x9BDwAKrk_1WUX9HeqAQrALjlyB5XpEyD46tyM1_FcX3zxBBCvbxxpwEEQ06rokFAMFqQu68HaPyZkYCT9ELKJSt1Ymomj30mmPT4f-p9y_wDp98My7Z7ukZ5HEztRTb1yGsxLaXbAZy88JIv95ty5D6yFA8UUtCAZbw8l8s1aVsz7cE58xYHyio_ckEtTXosRQhHNQYiPBwOTATu9dIAUOqwCPWsSVf0_ISr_ZitLSfD2G2WL0K7r9omq73Y3BGTxUWn7vEH6gwsC_yfi1KyNw_EhBuRi2_Hel8m5Dwyo9HN249kuMCtWbiQCA3NNV9BaKw8/CKut_3zqrVNL0TYhzix98K8nnSPTW0cg/20>
to pay millions of dollars to subscribe to Grok, xAIâs chatbot; I hope
Solomon at least used Grok to draft his DM.
Second, Solomon âworked with staffers to message Musk directly on Xâ? How
many Goldman employees, in what departments and at what level of seniority,
were involved? Does that mean that he called the senior relationship banker
to be like âget in here and give me five bullet points on the IPO
messagingâ? Or is it, like, he called an analyst and was like âhow do I
email someone on the Twitterâ?
Third, did he call someone in compliance and say âam I even allowed to
email someone on the Twitterâ? It
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/haG9iWboq8Vu_76OhgafKglJF5gRdQIXNrO1dAku3kbh9f-ZERt0vCMD5Yw66nafjPCgEEUQW3P1NvpSNpqZ5ojqBCEk5DXmP0S22CufdI4cdRbSH-seczmeeivlq7rCyU2KahPSyAR-tJhW1c9zz-bgz4lL1P7-TMlZOMK1pwYCfcKuzRp2Ql6EiExNRQJ0TbaxXt3lozDL1We6_YXVrl3A0pDaFxHqo5YxXysAk9Wt4wVLMYQYpTNRegXjzwnsPrG2_XtQlaD2Nu_LAyB9B6OUi-D8aG684LnVRLgVppSNeg24vq6RpY7TLOr_mNM6Dv3W-xcjn7QxGs_FBAzIJyF-tGJBi9_7ynvHRjuRP9YWaA0vKp7rQCZ-Y14/3HkkvHg8wFoYqaFWdGkLALYRt24j5K-M/20>
was
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/jHxCz_71OaT3bKPD4DWr5tIIcb_nC9TK4c6iSwlfd0_vyiGZpd1xdp4FRRabM_y8PTWnFPNhORDkyKKV-p58hiBFSofiNJ5IguRh-dliS1YXcfPeV29P2fKVfvlLGOZue1hnw2dbiYx3njLe_scy1uCpcb9615lxQTm3Vs5vJOYSIEY3JuMTm92RcsjC5q0c7AzoWhZL_T_hmwWZLlrOZYmvU46WLmBbddh5L2iEMdgJTng9BFq5XMRBRbMDcUTONLxuSm0Kn4cTyU8pqG-R9wayebsrrwRe50AdagqNPpgJlYiRE8KONek11dGzk45Uifvzf6tHaQxmmthy6oJJCgpJ5tsIHs7w4ohAaHAjScAKRYhNEEbfdVrr-e0/eKXbBi-jfSjfW1FByZ7in3vjY0fi3gQD/20>
a *long
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/Og6kTZHiuuWHn66e7T9YY2h1mhPZoJo3Od9zcPO-5gNUoEfSvZp0jzcLIkTcJcDxNT-HHS0-gt_20JhprPr9aiX36CBH_VWC74Xw6ka7w0iE3JUjEsAcqEkOtEMxxw_dqgVDcjQwbQ9bCCwnsNFzE4WJQ28QDRX9bFrR0Nt62vecyuMWYjsxpr0raGgRBU7goT3dTf-yKQmQ0tQT6YNWa1u0FJrIKjfRHd-apDpNv-sUHEE4K7jU_25eRVyZ-Mr3xjNfVNgBTukrVzrGZyvOSey-bOEQaL9I8NWdBrlkd5poxvciA6xhSM3dHNtaQxW0M-A0kj1ZPA8XqqM-4FNHDNIBKd1pXy0AfSeRbjE5Z7xwbHr5seYyvyhJWj4/j6QFeeGHsgbKPdjnPreO36vwVoEID5QL/20>-running
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/8csZO_6ZUolkrgHNucY25vpfeiefE5EiCT5pseO3blgdMkL58bfuYvVrAIbORh1UIzDuREQLY8AsE8mKN8Airxi_ZAQeni87qWUiIUKs_WiUUor_VxuCV2UcZvHO-iq7QBk8vlTJ4NhEoDaS8it2uwql-EOdlU-UnapbRzFNPQpWl0_7XI-Ah2d9rWTXsFTj1RzfQqfFXyWMncs9LX7L-wWGy4M-NBUwwKUDPrc55JIRvlk1kmLbXy2hzMBTbKGB4GHIuwOYgJXIOaV_Q-IbRfZ-sFFtOt8mERIJDVyporcJ0F3W1cCTq1cHdn9abYyVhJ5M4fc0WQn2pnhUS9VzZF3wxNE6-BvUnsAphVnOoDHQKkxktsuGWtNCUMM/yHua6jz5dafixQpkYmxQaf2OxLvE13XV/20>
theme
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/NQIDV8tOuKrwQHH-7MJbA9WzHhT670bzNikLobfTxsgSlINJlrQXULk5dzv1-Hf2TUaDBJHyEvd0UQVFFao3lNUmrgAbiDjfvoBfXzEH2RjjZVEOvHsJG-we3NYDGrTumnZNnLYornVAlWsA6xMRzMFcxml2rW4thyrCQUsd3XvaCgwxO_tov5KoLZwocCI4x2pzT7mqz36ATz_iRmSrURKDk-b1nk_ZyatApw4yYYHasEBNrZrYnBcqRpljC-__-EhTXahS9ZJC5Y0_-Baa7BVZ0oiYNe-RSDOFUNYGAXgHAJEceNeoYH-2nTm8IKNg2JK3a48YWZ9mw9gHwy5chT-RArvUIKh1M1K3jq4XVOqnkwXBrQem7Wnpmt0/437GbTE6zkPqRyp7PX6rCGdXN0vDsdEc/20>
*of
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/V6H2x1XchUKeF19-gYgujbGZQZZlTdu8wUuQtipSTBVYPw6nQDRBwlc7oaARj8xF03yD677jQmhRtBqZVZn8UuWgjk7zTG9hcfaspx_GZOHGq-LFw3XC570iNCtU3WzfhZCcsqScGwAHB3q5N7zRQI76rdJ0_SfNCaexds4YHw0qs2v6RHMwAX7_KE2JRguZuJyMa4b2WnAJAugXR80HnSFWJbH6ftY_FXEUgKATCQh9SxAzFkrpqTFHhidsmFoIcD0Wtmc-mcPh6RqdqXp9c0kfcoznW0RDJxqL5xGfOqU5Wa8LKh-AlGPx9IsKIMJreG6-tjuiAsnTZ34_8hlzwTjV-JL5FLlJS6BHzCxygHbrSglo-sNqXiXnWLc/sSsHdT-4wxrso-XaKDy2todoNxS9fuRc/20>
this
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/gHL-5HrD-b2KH3VN94Fs8E1Erp_x7gCuURZBwvGhgrB2BBXLzhRO6TgHhktzUbcyPlGZZaTVbmnK-b7J0ic08bBDQQ78AMiFJkMq5XhXyNgQyZQif1dhXg1CsSks7_Y8DD3HlK5crJFsdIfKhar4QQra6R14c22YamD8lWj8XqbS5KFmiEkqpIPOxxV-M55zVqs0UbiXVzmKk1zVkUXdHxdFqERtpdVDry9NXdHlBEoqSpGDd4TsWDa-rftBQe5HjPfVOL6ONEiL-SssSDt61eqvnLo6Vh0Xz7XA9LMe2noPg4p0w1Xdpp56dPy4EjNJBIUgG207MyKYggiEJ76HKS3goXkY--Nvjo4CvGfp7eKqCc2CbauHyIf_FXo/nJW4du-Gi1rrGo14dW_DDnEfJuRimmr7/20>
column
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/KrL0KfMMoGAUrSMjz3p3_OBJ_3q87ysvuS-PNzAmE0lTZO5_2U3-G_Tr6aQEUMwuZYu6kQocBA4u7HnAbTMeYhmiY4BVxw1CAInrpJdRqwDpb3jRjhSa1jC4rRoU4w_CZZGELK4ayG_GRkdZ0cRUCBPgGNOPdUeqsn_HFc4leMxpTOsj_r21lM4xIdHCEQglnlAGJfIi1wEHJpU0copXVmvxsJKa98ulu3WH2HXvkTw0itPNeVBUlLsLfIfBaRyZa76wjaX9Vt_1A7Qdo3zm680zJpG00jszi_3zKRtxMkkXCPojTv7b_lslNbVXBf7zE2VJxlUjnU2-fkojqyDAN6IvTDTJorgzXBFqxvvARfULLORv5ymdcDAizlk/v1UOBGQrRVROkzCXMLxPr4ZGLG239Kf6/20>
that
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/9BhSeFVysHg9lYeWGQL9rxyQAhvh_0ewyieM3gaxtsA3JxW6jxF9kefHxm5XucfX4hbbXbxh1LRpbG2lIUAuW3cUe-wjGjiU5bHdHH2G4yVO4IlMSomJv5jwNTDgWtt35jKj11DbgKiq36GhOQbhSZcJvpSk80tkOj0Mv5c1oIyEpvN54aGq1sgTf7G5yn2EA5J5Lg7HWp2AtGwR_nlULzy-2XPbqUETXgybBJCogHSPKkWPqhgcdVoPGp4KgP942VqbS8vUOxkbu7wJCCfCq-gtNfn3_Rmq3uCcomtp3Gdn3gUqYRfMrpPzLXfizFvJxPXHU-Iu_K5wuDQdgW-c0kED5cUbrDw7DbEkZ7mjCEfomDnHUxbU9mfZrCc/0sdoj6bCSejKISEIkPWbw94QnbiDUxb3/20>,
in the Biden administration, the US Securities and Exchange Commission
fined big banks billions of dollars for doing business on âunofficial
channels.â Work email, work phones and Bloomberg are official channels,
WhatsApp and personal texts are not, and Iâm pretty sure Twitter DMs arenât
either. (Not legal advice!) Banks paid millions of dollars of fines because
their employees messaged each other on *LinkedIn*
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/m_5NOEa-eAzlyb41MXjt8XDtmIZvW7RvE0BG4TPtfsZlex9Z6haujKqWxN8voKxq9VTDbKswpBdXMb3MHdDASchhuJBzEvavVwNeW6ARCmum_LxhnEnsiBPw0ksRlClpGUE8Q5-KQSBxjF3LZVkty7YcDgQzJvpeN3lV9anKZC9CDtCM_SxuiWOvE79fRl3gYdgvLIgvG0fNHhD3iuWNkfJEgFm2gcqnMeCjVyCHBgoyW-pjfz9aoSSZZx3ZxyY3IBrzSntiScSZl2iQ7Vatumvg06v0gpscKK9IFbeV-KCHumvDNtzIGXQdIqTRuljkZc2PId6tfioAZprqE5i1UwFQVKhmgxfp5vm6w3LVZ_ov8TNxmOgXtLeyPes/slgP0V1xceYKYvK6lMkTNslgQOqPJqkW/20>.
Imagine how illegal it would have been, two years ago, for a bank CEO to DM
a client on Twitter to be like âcan we do ur ipoâ! Now itâs fine.
TCI
There are various sorts of investing firms called âhedge funds,â but I
mostly think about two extreme cases. One is the modern multimanager
multistrategy hedge fund, the âalpha factory
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/GgMOGEfgbXxiSePBF92ayXWDPKX9ro7u6UyCFnZ4UqBrB6l45SjA_vpl0KiU6ldwRQqHAXvJK_kjyjDxx17JwgXPHeyDMd0PbBqgWPOIXVQH4pfOLyV2ktYIVFhaEgALn3PWHFdEheMT_wFkzp4ZTRWpB_xAfxAFxadVqtvtEWbWMO_ODwDYhBsVzssSqlXh_TltjS8nTI4Vj1B5xzs0Anb6lKXqw5RBy-Z3D0GsR4mmtk7fveHFp6ywjNQ9iDRedHYuzdUHuvi1Q-difvoB-5TwGh5rIdQ0ZqEMTVOvh6k8LQiZi0IgMyG6tMU7vGhf51XXN1tKtgew7XhhD7PpV7gZdjpT3QXbHKHnK77TdoKnlUM_1iNccmF-dmE/OCGPL5EGznNTkX2CV-8XNDxzWtz_eOst/20>â
that focuses on getting a steady return in all market environments with no
exposure to the broad market and to identifiable factors. Your business is
about rigorously identifying and evaluating people who can create alpha,
using a quantitative and data-driven approach to demonstrate that their
performance is real and repeatable and not just luck.
The other is, like, you buy a dozen stocks and hold them for a decade, but
they are the *right *stocks. You are acting a lot like a traditional
long-only mutual fund, with the differences that (1) you are probably more
concentrated than most mutual funds, (2) ideally your stocks go up more
than most mutual funds do and (3) certainly you charge higher fees.
People who come from the quant-y alpha-y world tend to be suspicious of the
latter model, in part because it is difficult to distinguish skill from
luck when there arenât very many data points. But there are several famous
proponents of it, people who have done it well enough for long enough that
you canât deny their skill. The most famous is Warren Buffett
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/hBMBpiW8tF9_yCvkyXGbJNz-QZ_B67AQ2x-ODaQyQEwopIkZLN_6glAe334UoEbs0ZU-ju7sKpLIrahD5d_dOHHaO31kILgg49onh2aGdCHpOo9k8xippLuE2ED-CSeGgCRyP2vx-YAUcH_Uuj_a_zuzdax_RKr-DibUIPl1YmNwg158web-wHAZ2uXIcB40ALhENBTHQioOx8NaUL2hwqXXvSGGQY1dChSLFk9RSWPHvJ6alfTl2KS8MDOay3bo7yPlU2A2_2fNb9ph5Rbcrt5vZ6o1NNESLoHAjYC7lpWHr48z0scQiyWfU6RUtt6efRMPoHoppofQ57j8a9Fd3IQ8vrOlZ9zdBdeH5FAIKHJJy-EIzWkxVmkj3GQ/Ho78QWDy_CWGuEXy9ablcZ5bWo6zg9xD/20>,
who started as a hedge fund manager, though he ended up using this approach
while running a public company. Bill Ackman
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/bakyqFzVej2Drs4sap8Jv7tiHsuzEx-EmGzTTExPzUuJpZn2CUOHR-mmzeApFJ7-Fsi-pm14nrODLYr0doYPfezNit7I1ehQjOqU2aeJ4ZvePgjaP8RJ3ANx8dzNgZgWGZ2etz-sr0TiR6RW6lY6vqPvmB0N8-aYBmzwBOcC_151Yrd_Ebeu5Nt_ogis6LJWbqhK6IKTFnoc6WCBtBeXMPIF_MMue_XaHEV0dMKZ0PPCxwhz5kUSPk9S8MBJGwrS9YqEc-Wa5HyydWuBcEWdOX999T64Uz_wchnKaC5SLII9wUQBU1K6Hd7bCQV_k-T7vUD3pjZtFBn4o1hDKlw-66LgRlSR8nUE3YGiXUZkGUdeosyL_okrX2lJplE/CgAv8Ff5o7_995Ghv2tjaDsjDgkHowcf/20>
is another famous example, and has also been trying to get into the
public-company business.
This model has always appealed to me because it seems pretty relaxing. I once
wrote
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/UffC3i2yb9vn6bd6grr3URu4wogffDJ7Bt2RNov2KkDVny3MShc8rw0DcWPhHkunDrtnDHYx-rE37QSOFqpNzBDdQEWJhwkEXHG42ZjWj0UHefu0CQyrvPiLla9tM6-5zMwYDiFHygyZFHHnH22Mc8S8SjHJxIsga4GoaBPhj5T0HbG7A5bRtsBsIR44DPM3sfrvGXLt56WEnhvwx_LH4HZTcTs2yLbOG00T4CxT6-DciWq8DyM6jCG1TFtdpRvBuYYhx5VmkMJDi0hEoNo1PjNr2zDwXZx_JHGohFuC3eEI057TwL8tPCJHVpDvZExsJD14B-d29QAxjiKZu99jpj7l1un6GA8EPdURfzRlLPwouU-hXjPkKYm5On8/CwrHQWqFdQ4nrM8_NvgPrAvkuoO9LyAf/20>
:
Pick stocks, buy them, watch them go up, go to the beach. Or go on Twitter!
(Or, now, X.) Spend your days getting in fights online, because your
lavishly gainful employment only requires like 45 minutes of work per year.
Thatâs the low end, and probably 3,000 hours a year is more realistic.
Buffett spent all of his time reading annual reports, because plausibly you
have to think about stocks all the time so that once every six months you
can sell one and buy another. Still it seems a lot more Zen than, like,
working at Citadel. You might have to read and think a lot, but you donât
have to *react *a lot. You read and ponder slowly, and act rarely but
decisively.
Anyway hereâs a Financial Times profile of Chris Hohn
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/WY8veq-JftlIpoHR1s2xNzVqWkVAQyik3w-AHq1DxWxdDTZ0J17v4AH8Llwcs3iBYbLWm52P9kIfDPkE7JsDvPr3FIt-E9wNxvHGaeF7Jtu76mAAewPnDSNjmw4swyoVFDh308jmG0pkcD0jx4qzRsDxT43ngvidaY-eL0PpnyJrppEUbUpEUJIKt5XVmvGQ6iG9SY-oF76rFHJjIRTFpk96619FdMnj15JAabVQp-IEeHB0-IMcsVY5dxJetRGOw2Cb4JoL1iFF0DMC49Zme9B2qGn8TlmXL-2g29-UmyLRbWR25wYoPkCVQGljYGPxi0foMFUv1F97f8f97V-XwQAUIV43eLps26GeU1BBjtSsinJd3r1m8hGlpko/-v3z3XJEG5rMc7AIzugnYtU-sIidXED8/20>,
of the Childrenâs Investment Fund, another big member of this club:
The UKâs most successful hedge fund manager holds an intense gaze as he
quotes a Hindu mystic, bathed in light streaming in from the windows of his
corner office on Londonâs Clifford Street.
âGod is not a man in the sky with a white beard,â Hohn recites softly,
dressed modestly in a beige suit and white shirt. âClose your eyes, and in
the darkness you can know God and God is consciousness.â â¦
âMost of us see the world in shades of grey, where there are three or five
things which are important to an investment thesis,â Rishi Sunak, the
former UK prime minister who once worked at the fund, tells the FT.
âChris has an incredible ability to think in black and white. He focuses on
one, maybe two things that drive the investment thesis and then has the
confidence to scale up the bet so itâs a big part of the fund.â
The premise of most modern hedge fund investing is that more and
higher-frequency data leads to better and more nuanced decisions. The
contrarian view is âno, the way to make good decisions is by thinking very
calmly about only one thing.â
GameStop bought more eBay
Sure
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/B00Y2rVbS7q092320Nv4dJZ_g57ftWgjxOWWwLGThM4U2xT0VoRo965LM_RKNe6_dhFmwDHbvsj-oZH8-4kspnjPu-ZlpmE8FZy4zIKTHDKGlUTdRvgSdcffvGIl2AUo_F53VbSxshJ75Qm6j_q2s3LM0IKbF3430fC_XGRkwu_bQadj2GzLRoQDp56SiYsD7UNmkMZ58smLEQuw7kqnTRxz_VOAsSPMzjpC9HWY9MJZHzuvvHryFKWcP_B_HSvHWyWizCTMvdo8nEr8-6btKwv5GTz5xv6-znO1ZC7-Qfhj1Jg87-8u0tllCspZEgQZt34nlOYmZcwCwNHqMsAABZXyoVS_8hsP5BRn0w2s0-04TAjoQCvShXhmkHU/ln5VcyGBRoOzU83MV8GSuonz6o7YuMMv/20>
?
GameStop said in a filing last night that it now controls the equivalent of
6.55% of the companyâs outstanding shares, up from around 5%, as it keeps
trying to take over the e-commerce business.
Shares in both GameStop and eBay are little changed in premarket trading.
Hereâs the filing
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/s_z7bQzEoJvJXtBm39y_MF6INZx5Evaw_eD1Yr0THRKYpSD7NcEIn2ZTcZ42djgBkaOB8i-43osXFajBzEw6L4ZNBNLSKfT07Nk7xGwfrEJlo5dcZRv5orfqZw3ZkHpgE2snX8l4Pl8aQxJ1FpxYdfjphziNbNDX1HymO_kuBoHNzU_XxS3I-hWIeubKMzZIEuCW-ZR0y7HRgxfnoR7uSbS_RsOuTnKTQTUCIF0JSxrp5U3Qx-oYXOnyj59NcGZM1NQbTgtrSY1q-9MzI7hakGDzdQCjoqKsk4eq5t7PppiO-uasE7zv79EGIFLjyxZ3W_mVX5Pj20u9-HGxAGouqDeLYOUgJ7YuEl0FrRklEzPDzOKhk4FgLx3GwEA/qgX1fElYLhIUjCeQsb1KlOIEENFblbt3/20>.
I suppose buying more stock could help GameStop win a proxy fight
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/O9uBQXNbbSvN0Nd0XFfezaIit13gxIrT12Rpnb78ZUkefWMtMv3NEXZSa5riwfxDm55QTIJaZ9stTJC7oflgfFJ9756RBf-IlAIlJepR1jgOxxhc_SmSziH43zQ8Kb5P-pNlV_tJh8zjwzZpBoyMqjPIilHL1M4Zc0vRkyMfOW7Mjkno0C-ZFcAl-o0pl8-bq4oCqp0Sb6XN8C08E0nWD4ALteNKsfgblQjEuQBGd0HsNDoYvlZsBZvniawRR37WxnxwMMW5NWtyLCOjaQ6KjPaixOvVjlL2zX_EVMdGjYZPhwRvUSyQ9cOzBzeZ312hU4Oi-xLA2M_HkIZjMwjdutE4IOp2BaZ42Ofd2OlGTyg19IF--JHjljz_gCQ/6ey-h0qQSTPDAjH_YsAss1QvQbbBBQsA/20>
to take over eBay, but itâs apparently too late to nominate directors for
eBayâs 2026 annual meeting
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/M4kFnRLZEZWChaB9xhwm0E-9tatja4NglvSsH0QEuVLW5yn17YhGDgQc6SAbETRE6UKK1HfoG97AKVJs8RquQYhDdcHWKTX5cJgYYf0f5w97jvt6Dp0UJZE1lwwbUFH9_3t2ATqti4TlGdfyY9rzpWTL4G9msHSyr6VZgt-_dHqJrnccnNaUhPQvAjrZMDJSeAzsUNAkIWPZJTZOYe7v58qT5zmu5BxKALkL-9nIqH-t-xywU_3rXgMSr2eFjH1IOppzFgSyAuxeJDUdypq2O6dF9WO5w-ThsVJqXVMBoDaYg1NJAOkuqH1ghHrctQOwsihIrp_EwcyZB_GRC25zvlPKYRbgUU3b-FQzxi2LG9YS11vSjBcOGUlXwsw/SszJZqGnZ2EZMmmWKifO4t6rtbKH1eAm/20>,
so itâs not like GameStop is launching a proxy fight any time soon. âOne
gets the sense that GameStop did not entirely think this through,â I wrote
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/ojfa31M4rLxvripUFaSPsSlBI8ukO88WdCzekWnRFaC99CvXHlhPDBEIEE8yodaK2xO-rTdDML7Z4Pywuo8caCtPrwd6LIXccAAJ4pHcTrWDVetqqiphowMZ0W05megagfNXKbp32m7yvrhfFjM2Xn7umxoy9rRb5gYeFo3PmkT5cC4CUBsV74YYg87wSHRACBRN6ZvemhdbqnJIPXbJ95tqsihhvhpak3HGV9Cy-jQrnJ9dtPiKf8IFi9oj1-EAsbfW7NwERxpu1Rvs-6RYYteJxgRhW9hGrm0UKJ5bvM0gjb5XblY6BFQKScuctSUCUq972Uo4urP-A55KeO-gxmrQ1KfCI9BQejLc9l4kwVikDw6VIsWkvUABCvM/5Tt5gJciRzcBwB4RPuBmJefzGMkH4iXC/20>
when GameStop first launched its takeover bid or whatever for eBay, and I
still get that sense. On the other hand, when eBay rejected GameStopâs bid, I
wrote
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/K9FPWKsekDBWfXIU6L8AzsHs-NED-lsKA2LNB6QqfLJE1hlsglrisgnWj8YL38qTtlrGwal0bb2DmdtUIzzsV9oT4lHaGjMWHKCfYXJrQfcJAMZg2sST0_MOz2gNXN0Bp38X1y9cdXIvougX7029cp4KU1kE_8o8c7_y4vLM2B02Px3_CYelxXy37MHwYjEq8A9KeOTapEufyg5ydoXNzdGVEC3Qb0CM9gTe6Yvh34DiHE8voYEqEVEYtGL4OggAAd_dgXdmP-VyJzsPaWT-hd0tvYzWSdcMIqskmCGLRLh9WTyCz31F_5HY3IUXdBI6AVnbk45AMBuhzBs9_P94pH1JP4tYj5fsukuLL_V40ea4-oAw6XfqNmkStr0/4U9_8D9Aihsv_y1b3ut8ei9W_gR86mls/20>
that GameStop âcould sell [its 5% stake] at a nice profit and go home,â
which seemed like the most straightforward outcome. Instead GameStop has
added to its stake. I guess theyâre really going for it? Or something?
Things happen
U.S. to Award Quantum-Computing Firms $2 Billion and Take Equity Stakes
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/LzUEC5XuuWjOI07cP1P5FCHQrOo83NraOgfJkxPMUUKYV_GfFS-JiBUJr_qKrPbfRS9YSTnzJICl-Smdb_oXLqbxB-DzptZ3U02Nrl3A49aqy3MHjELllgIcCiMTBq25jCyfGekok3G2FrfErRz1UAn8am9J64SxTgljrWTzyArh5lSFJShnN0uGz2r4dLAGWesZ5Sp4a7Y4L_-KEKXmy_htqINFpLKhWTjE7MN3W8SInYPUz30V-tsJ2h7ZaSuyt5tNTaqecaZlLfiR6vcoZsAaJ0FyvicvZTeFcyd4PRZQf2DchATMgK6m-oahfKN06GvYMikaTBTV6FBekGJD7GLrpcBe1nyfcf6ro5w2XZRMqwiBHz6fpkcIEJs/hadRWeAZHTcaBlHqXKqe-I8GBpBLNY_E/20>.
OpenAI Is Preparing to File for an IPO
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/SZuCOoOiVxYhNtqJhdVHUmxj-ROD_FTgB2W3OM9VTEhUscGNgIcS3_yPyUaf2kMSLxfvyM42bhnoLQFlnyZ_e362Jfm6MQABeH0-4C4odTpmnIANPSBT05UXjva5jhFstb0IYtA3_5JMpeprcI_DlibHDkZj8ACC3nncfC7Jznjf_mieXARocyxkUmjt9dHueTkNa8qu6g8EDfgCoQmnCZ8WvQ3yfw5S6sfilJB6iDZlSc89T8yKqyFjfnx5q5wgCuT82nZpnLvA9dDkbQF94OQL8jmn9ajlgTLqN0jXy4K9B4n_rswGRFU9VB-qv-0W5TmzYPYTfOWGryBFtnsrZnHXIJFfNcKIKZCbd04T1jO11optX5d8K3C9y_o/xQxmzYC2C0K-UR1CKYNOdw14vieTXLZd/20>
Very Soon. Mind-Blowing Growth Is About to Propel Anthropic
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/1qD2dK-uUclp9dndKUY69emmuW6ejuDzKt_NANEFe5T-JE1lRpzYX59lWBYBfi30jJ3vCt2-_LU1xCENuLuJ65DgjY70gaZNtdV5B6ti1xF9YkFxJIifkn8zNWGkyUEzmBodyu0zRpihpOvHVjcnffLTfzWXce_j3XHsoTQOeL-ltwjkKfNkrwhf6l6IdYEVj5n8de0Tb2kwukvtTqHXq-YxzXXqoxAgd5HccnzUWYYLzA2LMHyFanM7H6ktkuFbWNWPGdNlmRLl3hjijxPM6D0qAxgeDttogUL5luTbDzB36QE4oC8y8weumJem_2kwRo5Yoxjwy2a4hu9No3LFC7RfAzqcS03sLjnAlLUU19Fyhs6jgcEtKqSX9SM/KYvbsdOcmi9O9kxk7rtkZVgInX5IRpPL/20>
Into Its First Profitable Quarter. Anthropic Is in Talks to Use Microsoftâs
AI Chips
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/pLOIOyW4IZY8gQzwAlX0tPlt4IKhYbea7-uFG-fIQYnJi8FaInTD1IcJV8-wmDU5LUYskmZBn8iC8G-DSpgeXu-5dZ9Ef2er_p04aemJDhiUFbRJopYW63bfhsIu6_xoTQNmszSeVMqKglOHV3wm-xCtH-DZAtddUdnAir6ZaOL3vzvoE8SmQu1NHTskMEgEB-5F2beESJWEO8DDCpdQQyBeRbBRqiW3B87b1JyTIp4HPgS97Qbfy9vVwi1jzjfslp_S490x2o9jzL0JpOmgAR36hXTKXkUYYJ4bPxn7e_8E-HokCeEwCxulsm-RHe57y-3R8tfmdBh5c_jbth1LLMs1f5rcadsTEQnqL17vDe5GQH0JJbi4mjmd70c/oMToGN3zAR7FQt7yUatcelRMmBmPiC6C/20>.
Sam
Altman Offers YC Founders
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/caEjOPjxhx_cOjTu-89eQB5VhcR0WTqC85LGwELuz56NMpAtz0L_LFaL9MqOzUXY7jTOwGe2IuppTL7IUuCqHY6Kpvvo2FjgN78-5mt2YRhU2eDgF72idUP3gF5P44Q11YauyxccHQeCspIM4heBKeoaTZEy2BpAezDKqIBcGwbAQPnHTWc30KGvaFSXlS03qPtaLJ9aw151-mIao6RUk87SDu1wInV-EODL7RzTmOh2FX5TYUipV-ye7S7zuCCcSRrP1-TrKez-4jQocEMjf_NzOESAo18zCCYvJOIbKRiAuPF-FBHK4PiQxpGKHSZg6EvTFJraht_jDXPyjtHa0CbsAGqCfmVj7TbARpuNpFrHM2GZ0OHPpIOnhPU/7LpiGoipH5x6NjlfcfRDY2gTNj2AeYMK/20>
$2 Million in OpenAI Tokens For Equity. Executive Assistants
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/krVNncPE0vqaKvMUnkbpmlzl1Vl17B2grGmf2hQ2gA98z-b5zVvh-wY9SDEZtB1wX8gFzyiLOCFFw9aFDZ2-w6gWqn73XTr_9f0l36FVUkS8UQA6o6G2l8eg1jcoQEcJJfPrVOcDydTs9lGH5GyuRMGZvLA0iXX_XlteP4Dxn_2vqtmFE4AZ-WEQPibKbfwNkZl_IfY1Ykkq-TH8dV7obgrppN-P3aKA7uJqXkXtqsgxIyuBZRnA0Swo0e3W__0DSu1w4GlJ8p-cqAKfbkuPTiNc1x3YlbQpT7ZZ3K-D1N0iMbcKYBrAX8CLlo7Y-6gbBPo4zTS6vCGL6P0OtsUoFvBqK7whaOF1LI_UcioXFhsug1of5lkTHT9M5DE/3QwYD9oolQysxU60jTgXBZWDMh0orKzj/20>
Making $100,000 a Year Are Losing Jobs to AI. Dimon Says JPMorgan Will Hire
More for AI, Fewer Bankers
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/bqThyUIQ7NWW8S-7vpp-Cadx2qmSH2K652i-ArOr89UgEyzsZrxjnG-QW69sBrabZXbG0dN64paGcXqX46Xp_DsBizomsy1XuQKiVGhSLKku5Pg_oTTef5KlPusNSr_fSXidG4oVukUm6-IQtO8BV-ELRKQYS9MR6E_Y_yA38y9ur39GgmnA3pagr2EhpXSKRBoBu5I7xDK0tkohbyHjVMwh-64uiYhuEG7pI79fSE8pqZ_avrLySKM4rwFfH-f3C18Ah29m1LX57Zd7Tiv8M4sGK90IStP3O7PmYwrgTPYVEpkTQVt1MwxnxRLR64rRAwCPZ5lN1VcKS_Zr4V8dDyjG2M-bdxtkiNlFOrmvgONVEd5YEkGfUMx2h60/AXiU2R_hzx5l2-VLuo_aIOU4x7XmctpB/20>.
Meta
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/mLsY-B1LI8zlpQBgEAPqtoWb8QMWUkI65x6HAcT6IYTXzF6wX8Jo_Mv_CvGrLSoH2p-tgunJTS-Qced1OXWbdaIJFN0SlwXKsDQC_VHQAOK1peHzVOrxHnEGkpKwOSrQ2n9v26hxJVMw0MBsUNbUlxO_gxtkrKpMoM28KI4CtR4t5uLg5aPv93TC1ohRCtTFQShRNRo2Gb4u6_16tMgp8IbMYIMuQxoPPUXHP7sqYjnjqb8Niau58im9BH09wsgFOLYstZbXMteyebMKY4qQe4WBrEZ0sVkbulRe8K4YmVQx_jxxq5unyBW60IT9aLOQIIPBeRa76kAW0CnqXH-mCNoRzOjDPXlXfyct_7vBhQbAxQP2x8TG2CU71no/OpRHnK1j0hyBmBPPRPKN6p4NrLf2TjzD/20>
Begins Laying Off Thousands of Employees as It Transforms Around AI. A $10
Billion Banking Scandal Is Tainting Brazilâs Elite
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/K_kUr6_r9VjwBb82DcP8-SFzNClXoX3Nwl-dR0R2Yuoi_bCMQBqVoqnZVF3lhDxAj5xHIntDxxbI0ByElx_HKYyMrZPo9y4Ctt1-L-bR4kddcwbPiLFvD4u2FiAOqtQMwrKio_ROWjKPddofya0TKULswgpzcykRUuNPuFFd0kF4CcQ3qLHIJV_jOLDtUbTcaHL6plBlU_z3NM3cMxCq6QF0YzFA0wroU8venc5Mj2BUlwhwaiA-948gPfB66J8_CrPTjeGicj82Fat2UswJ4-C8XjUra9FiryxXsTvqc7i0jKnWY2m7Sv66amLdp4Fhng8aXn18XpQicy33TwUBisF6CriAx6vrVlJ4bqP1tc0YZqKyfvjMIU8GL9M/7loOSTZr4qbqGo2VfMcZzcVT46O1I_pK/20>.
Apartment Owners AvalonBay and Equity Residential
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/D4JPanSFrp63W-nakZ_FgnIPLL0n-4ZJ0R4lDYBqq-qGTEMXxfRox-HcUye0ohnaQiWWslWVSzwM5zCTYA2jaVZxThcKpO4ZOW8ZWbHtkK-UPOPxGE7WqNzMSqZ28_tCeITeGACTUxV3WdYiLKzPBqtSZI5Bn6lL2lFLmn6doiU7qGE1z8KYuNZHVS2IYhaJZpjeK_LNFC7LSU4a6JlxzhetXtk4q3u91EBPhdxwE0lBbX7RxFpDI4KDMb0JwlKqC7W_I3yRUT8DQ-3q871IMSVl07Fq5jE5lZ5ZEpjJIigbbQ-Zs4ydajdC8eRHkBhp0j_0ZJYIazcdxenmYrtNhVAS0MO5v99GWP5EyK_5-33wKXkufcDSGzORFk8/UBKxfRWij0t_Go9I_tLiGlNYhPdX-4Op/20>
Agree to Merge. Barnacles and jellyfish
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/UIRwnz1Ok_1O82OTPZm19viyU29S0BzD7oODpi78A2lcmfNl_0Hb17pSWF1UQy_gIbEgX4J_Q3uOiO8B_C7m_wIDa1LCwXibyCIlbGSP3g4qQcDKsv2WTRC3ucAle9rrGQzSAvUrby0jMs6mkDVfACoYaSeGSfvCysxTI_5FPLt7zUDmQKmPtNt_VZowkJzdms7BofZbaphSAhfhp0guowWe83sVSXXtBVRBEXpCR4necZ-sATh562kFOJDcF-vo3S2kd9f69de4tiWtPk8AomgKfVhkVwSvJ03xHYB3BMAZ4KdLae1kFH0kVn43aK0CJnX4cWlrBP02kf0SghuQRYdC4wP56AGbRFopWD_Hf3xruH0FbL5B5qTokmw/frknajKZAbxbUvoFVs_hA9FHpADMizO5/20>
infest ships trapped in the Gulf. Pizza Hut's AI system
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/fgIMUmgFb1bKvb-bTpLjDuXx0fUvMBJ1kP6ZXKwLzrmy300rpBDxYSSl0G7vkx4DUXZxO12mNsN1BSYsQrgsNOVs8BJSPOslPU4Co1UblsT1n5IX3qbUQ1Me2nd4HQv-r1nDcjUlXW9C3bd8uKyGBUDsFZygi69GbCmJo8xFjPZtVs6AS8D6DF1samz8-G7O3HVCSgUlGnyMJW-qjDuL_dK_RTZLEk2t6zW3vn2mYCLP9aNHbq4152vqQAnPUgmyGy4vMSoxiqtItF45ipwQ9TYPcBYtOtWTzq09w8rkgJXJKc4dN0X1vEvZxFXDWuDmAMI4GsaxRGubBi9L48p0QwkBJqzzM8F_AqFNZhtPDprbSqzNVPsoFGlRcm8/om4zj1y3YegYWjre5Dh1ze4BC3eBTgWw/20>
caused 'cascading' problems and $100M in damages, franchisee alleges in new
suit. Whatâs MMTLP
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/-qjJsPnnBlSDDspuSlynW31MQu6OJriSLamwh2aSEkZf8iWiiD9M80ZWXkTKhKUuPwACZalSoeRS1n86Lopczp1aVrBiMeIVPt0qrQd5vB5v5mdzPUQIF1PxtVotuaoYbEqwaLAT0US_B2ZSpBOZl05-vUP5okZccQRgp2UAbGaoxlrTEo2u5nD_mHotLDpkg92tjU0xc_B3Y2f7HLRi1L0BRN1poKwPsOeAURlR9SV3Hgx05Cn_rDvABaCi1Ji9P48-aYekwINx1j8Cg-RMocP12IljbsLJvdniYa0Gl610FOLWTpQtwdcYqS2_raBSk99MzQ1wDAsqWECy2WeYEUafeQR9tLDSyOnkmYsCagpMDkCNntMOjpaBJZc/JdSys_7PSv35z0_bK3xZcZVPyXX7oNNF/20>
up to? ( Earlier
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/khH74yoHrdEx3JGqEJTsl7XtBkNjF9Fn0HmWjA8AWndmXeB6mm6geARvYWx-rd0AHbVyYRGuKYtbctBv5MVunuXMnHpsDbDoSIUwuEIoOAKiQ0Yp5OO-2ovBNRxHGAse72OWIUIcNDusYrCMOGvRhXZZKlS0mZ1UpXkOcB7GFQFGx5wljENn2gdt55nS77zMlRuWdBeNcxkyakCtByhcBW4hIwqvO0Lkqli0J3kVQJV95D-FsRLd4EwOWQ25JhVw1ULw29zlcfBWU86CD-O5AncCmuqmkcVwDWCav8IOZyWUCmcahHPUKrx9iv2TgK1rF4nAoBfV5A4pXLkkmaEE5IHbqhHgY8xBtBN8-h1NfthzkoOwOi1gFC7Bp80/2hbN0x6ZSwDnHDvLbPweS56wYqRvkKTx/20>.)
Did Trump Accidentally Buy Stock in a Sushi Restaurant
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/gVWMIW4HFPx6eJutIJJIAEGre4IsczLaRVuAzwTJAkCDeH9ENSsiI6IImzqAi5GCQqcBTDi_aqKGU4KHcJ1lDtmjNYvgfr4p30B5hiWJd9ElD3vKO9mmjjJz_hy_PmaOdWeyxIe-MousbEhkCXfLppO_Y5pPUeT3nDvitVlMQQPAcEysXs1WRtpaG_l5kf7TIgM5nayrk1MtZbiWfb7Jw_aqFXb2rHeUGv4XXmzNQC2BueubmeCyRCN3ixzHyd6FqFLnJWzxqn4l9vH3iDkDy4tOx1LH9QmZEzPyhSbqL1nu4ga1jFr061t-LYMUQ320YD1mrAMbhFJs-2ze_HbSKBatD8tpnw17xoL66cV6GU_qbyU-yW3Rak-K6Zw/MzxiJicPMtWjRTmD0FVC24oZF-y-68oj/20>
Instead of a Tech Company?
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Thanks!*
[1] Donât email me to be like âactually the Star Trek economy â¦,â I know,
Iâve read Trekonomics
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/YLqJnnhnF6WtgKuijxn_8kte6aLvJTeWQE9V0Qs6j9CkD1hWZvJv8A5IOJokIFGcNNkzoHhGqy2DmLEYK5sWtslTe3TsT6elJY06rj5A6pbJ2i-EAz--BYcnUhRBuGAevPgAKQD78NMqPv3_IrN4cSeHj8ERU4S5FeLhJxj2i0REUmpt0k8xpQXh2s1HtNDlrIZYjE6eo7e2303-WAktecD1Ir-xMVgaklhk2Yb7prD3QVVK6bPd9mgWyLSuhLwmI9JVeHB6ZtrKecF-oCwpbK752Xb1fdWBJdfgQ2HGkBV-cRVWQiu4zMhFMu-NUmfmkiN-0z2B62nLLvAeYwpzlu8UYw_msQYQdmdqY_tSx0V58tJzC2B7VDThOXs/FWSB52Scnsrg6lIzdZp5glicAxvCwotT/20>
.
[2] Here is an estimate that the GDP of the Earth is about $124 trillion
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/LTegZhLWTkZSslaUono89XlrotcISkHzFlIkM2F0qCeTlz_q02uwZsdDCh5sp-12JOnVyq7BzZK7TIDjWZOVii2hoYUqKdJQSKJsIFPIe3V4Q9NO3RWf99-mlsQEwI3jngWqXxnT8TVjmmbHLjPMP2uRXOkJtoTKW28JTtXmnkFwrFHAxDtmtHDJUiURQ1RPmhe7HjHlY2oQyVkqBV7-3OR7cKMFAjTUDgu1YjVsKIMSTmicLefOaCVw6LZUYbhVcES6t9KdUNTFdWWGqgNa-hcmBnhSYloYV5GmEDe74AGL8JpBhvPDXXpn1I_rS6M-Ms92a_OYS8JzvCLW4J8OLzLzFqFPQ1kFlrAnt7PgvNDQikPK_gv2mwAGdDU/OYA8V5wNuLznpOxbhi6kGoKDUUO3fFzz/20>,
so SpaceX is well within that upper bound. Excluding China and Russia gets
you to about $100 trillion. I suppose the implicit argument here is that
enterprise AI could be 20% of the global economy. Sure
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/onF6vOYtWd4-xHYO--QYa_MY3gAX6qw0PzGbCKa95ttsvltluYkQk5VoewzIEWmXw3lJRq-nPbpaVnltxZ4FtYdaCzuswA4XAyshhdLhWu5BVqvu7vMJJnsRHpC-LVB_Tcx9DKfSpDPDpPXh7EPzfBxzP0_VXbbkijQ6OdqGD-52AwcJS7OkQwiRzGiY2K9HK5BwDJ9BqADYYl95I3ZbAjOUmSKsc27qgLgC00DzZiGnVNWyzaZQJSXn4H7h81k01CyJgskEs8X-W2o5jKDjYp8MKdZhyIhydnErGeeICbwxMQ3ZWj1Lra4DbLpDCaDreqhmhYqrgOB-4WhLAja5ctL6CLLsuRYt8I71GLxyLa0Iydtf-jGs3CYKLhI/DYpRwd6QmMKbtwq1hO02bKcF0ZtBpa-_/20>
?
[3] That will increase, though, as SpaceX is renting computing power to
Anthropic PBC for $1.25 billion per month
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/c3Gg0OHBZLRN6xuNqKJ4VA53YKjK494WhfV38JQrdRjRU2Nqk1c4qY7YZlhosQchGo89AKpCk-MptTNP3xaXjFCS_iCSfjrze-ZIyy8doS86O6r5xw5X-qmiI-boBS3DrOBYDy2Sdz2yPEbfq9CBPQzP64tu7f8JR5FhVJupudXmoeWu0wgAc3c6w5jYp6rmA6lcABIvtIAh3L4NXPpzXyxgxdS-WQZ29p4r3LsvtdB87MAG3UcLGUvtMakom1ryoqvrN6ImUjFWKbH4SO1iGf5C_Vy14X2eLfauSiCkk3vJzRjdKh55njIIJti1SiqZL7pjCc05xTnwZPLE6NzBI_0p5u8O_pTSxi90PIWU5j85J8i61Rb2lCBWkBk/x5aaeJ2qi4XANJZhdrxKG3LNUrcI2urL/20>
.
[4] Not investing advice, lol.
[5] That's before the issuance of new Class A shares in the IPO, so
post-IPO his voting control will be a little lower, but not much.
[6] See page 229: âUnder the terms of our charter, the holders of our
outstanding Class B common stock, voting separately as a class, will have
the right to elect 51% of the total number of authorized directors, rounded
up to the nearest whole number (the âClass B Directorsâ). Holders of Class
A and Class B common stock, voting together as a single class, will elect
the remaining members of our board (the âCommon Stock Directorsâ)." This
seems like belt and suspenders, at least for now, given that Musk has 85%
of the voting power for the *other* directors.
[7] See also Article IX, Section (C) of SpaceXâs charter
<https://links.message.bloomberg.com/s/c/r_DKfAIqIjlSOFmKwJ3KiRkdZyXmjlpbu6sV8PB-Citb-nIZyWabqcMzlddmO-yE2J6rUXvM5qrXmIVJX_Kd_V2O8XtC742SjjYYW9yO3Ud5xSYFRLwGKiUWL70psFnZbSybv3-3JenzM9nSf9i-7JOuLK4fO6Jna0QntIEk4-w_PlLd3uiOQUbhSG0Woatnq9bIrN83-5MO9WbtmKQKZAH7QxdVA-f0wlyj_vZXoqdh7whjEqlM-Gz3M5BZCZstGkHldCr83w_gpJAxSHPUa6Uo67YnYfql8ULzxDG87ob5pvGBHA_i5__k17bXszDx-AGhMoeReLi0wKs5ivN0nIJIfJ9znNw479boVwKm0ejKKB3uvWi_VPYk__U/nZaDqaXmvjpwCi9PY_rjCNhUsiMsujTL/20>
.
[8] See pages 61-62 of the prospectus for the mechanics here.
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