Trump-Xi Summit, Benioff: "Not My First SaaSpocalypse," OpenAI vs Apple, Multi-Sensory AI, El Niño
All right, everybody, welcome back to the number one podcast in the world, the all in podcast, Episode 273.It's a huge week sacks is out.So we got to get Mark Benioff CEO of Salesforce.I'm the only one left here.
That's how I made it on no software CEOs right to China.There's no software CEOs in China.Interesting.But did you get the invite?
What's your what's your status with this administration?Because you were obviously very famous for you know, being a Democrat on the left.
And I'm not a Democrat on the left.I never have been.Jason, what are you talking about?You're donating to all these folks and now you're in Trump's camp.What is it?Listen, the number one thing is, hey, I'm here to support the country.
That's what I do.
OK.Yeah.So you're right in the middle.You have an allegiance to America.
I hope so.Yeah.I'm not a Democrat or Republican.I am an American.
Okay, I like it.Benioff got the invite to the two hottest tickets.He got the invite to Windsor Castle in tales.And then he got the invite.When Prince Charles came here to I saw he was entails into and also we were at that Saudi dinner to weren't you there tomorrow?
I did not go to that one.
All right.Well, we have a big docket here that Trump she summit has begun.That is the number one story right now after a two month delay because of the war in Iran.This is the first visit to China since 2017.seventh face to face meeting for Trump and President Xi.There are 12 hours 15 hours ahead of us today, Thursday was officially day one.
Here's what happened.China agreed that the Strait of Hormuz should remain open with no military commitment and that Iran should not have a nuclear weapon.So we're in sync on that.On Taiwan, this is a little spicy.She warned that quote, if handled poorly, the two countries will collide or even clash.putting the entire US China relationship in jeopardy.
dangerous situation.Polly market says Taiwan is safe for 2026.Only 6 % chance China invades this year on 23 million volume, which is a lot of volume, 17 % chance, roughly triple that something happens by the end of 2027.There's been a lot of debate.Some people say it will happen after Trump is out of office.Some people think it's going to happen while he's in office on trade.
She committed to buy more soybeans, US oil, LNG, and 200 Boeing jets.She said the talks laid out a vision for constructive, strategic and stable ties.Trump was effusive in his praise for his friendship, giving the disclaimer that people don't like it when he praises she.Let's stop here and have a bit of a discussion.Friedberg you have been a bit obsessed with this relationship and the bipolar nature of it.What are your thoughts here?
And what is the goal for Trump?What is winning for Trump coming out of this?What is winning for she?
I mean, she made comments in his opening remarks that it would be ideal if the United States and China could avoid the Thucydides trap.which, as you'll recall, we talked about with Graham Allison, and we've talked about several times over the last few years, that as a rising power meets a kind of declining power, there's always some moment where you end up in this kind of state of conflict.And the question is, can the US and China avoid conflict and find a path to cooperation, which has happened a few times in history when we found ourselves in this moment, but doesn't often happen.And I think the way to kind of think about the opportunity is if you're in a resource expansive world,you're increasing productivity and increasing production globally at an accelerating pace, perhaps there's less of a reason to have conflict.Perhaps there's a way that both societies, both countries can increase the quality of life for their people without taking it away from the other side.
And in a world where you're more resource constrained or resource static, that becomes less possible.You have to fight and grab land and grab territory and grab resources from the other side.And it seems like in this moment, when we are seeing these extraordinary technology shifts unlocked by AI and automation and biotech, and all of these kind of moments of what could be true abundance ahead of us, it seems like the perfect moment to say, hey, maybe the world can be more multipolar doesn't need to be unipolar doesn't need to be bipolar, but everyone can participate in the expansion of the pie.And I think that that's kind of the idealistic way to look at the opportunity in front of the administration and Chinese leadership right now.Is there a way to kind of look at the next 30 years and ask the question, how do we all share proportionally in growing the pie?and not find ourselves in a moment of conflict where you assume the pie is static.
That's, I think, hopefully the message that comes out of this.From an administration political perspective, it just seems like this is going to be a major coup for the president if he can walk away with a series of trade deals with China that increase job security, increase prosperity, increase income levels, increase investment.in America and American jobs, it would be a huge win.And I think that's the tactical stuff that people will be truly looking for.And I think the big strategic question, which I care most about, which is avoiding conflict, is there a way we can chart an economic and cooperative path that doesn't involve eating each other and involves sharing in a bigger pie?
Tramont, why is Trump bringing all of these CEOs with him?And what doessuccess look like coming out of this meeting?
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Get started freeI think that you find a resolution and a path forward with China through economic cooperation.It's the largest consumer economy in the world.It's still largely closed off.And so I think what this is was about bringing some amount of financial firepower with them so that they could start to penetrate that market planes, cars, chips, you know, very much hard equipment type stuff.I've said this before, but I think the Chinese are very much a top down Confucian societal philosophy, whereas Americans are much more bottoms up, kind of an individualist construction.The fact that we're so different actually gives us a lot of room to find cooperation, and not find conflict.
And I think at the center of that is economic cooperation.I had a friend call me this morning, very prominent Democrat, And, you know, he was the one that called out the media, which I was surprised by.And he said, you know, the media gets it all wrong, because they're talking about why is he bringing these CEOs.And instead, the reality is that the simplest and surest path to no conflict to taunt with China is economic entanglement.And it has to be bi directional, because really, for so many years, it's been one way where they're sending us the cheap goods that they wanted.So I think strategically, it's good.
And I think, you know, I'll just take a slightly different take on what Friedberg said, I think behind closed doors, they're probably just figuring out how to divide the pie.
unpack that for a second divide, which pie the the globe, the economy, the Western Hemisphere versus China, China still needs a lot of energy.
They also need a lot of critical technologies that America provides.And so I think that there is a trade there.And the quid pro quo is there are certain regions of the world where we want them to de escalate their participation in Central South America being probably the mostimportant.And then the second is probably in the Middle East.And then maybe the third is just to find some reasonable view of the Asia Pac region together.
And I think there's a trade there to be done.And in that you kind of start to carve up the world into a pretty easily identifiable bipolar construction.
They also, Mark need customers to buy their goods.And we've had a bit of a mixed signals their tariffs, obviously, last year, sticking it to China in a pretty hard way, the decoupling after COVID.Hey, we need to be independent energy, PPE, drugs, chips from China.Now we're kind of saying, Hey, let's come to the table and build connective tissue.So sort that out for us on a business level, should the two countries be deeply entwined?And then how do we manage having too much dependency on China?
Well, you heard it today from President Xi when he said he wants a wider door, and that means that he wants the door of business to open even wider between the two countries.We have our absolute best salespeople there, not just our president, who has to be one of the best salespeople I've ever met, but also we've got Elon, we've got Jensen selling chips.
Kelly Ortberg selling planes.
Kelly is selling planes.He's already sold 200.He wants to sell financial services.Brian is selling soybeans.Brian Sykes, the CEO of Cargill.You know, Cargill is the world's largest private company based in Minneapolis, and he is going to come away selling a lot of soybeans.
So we have you go through the list of the CEOs.Each one is our best salesperson in this category, and they're going to come back with orders.And it's going to be amazing.By the way, I think you said it very well, you know, this idea of business is this kind of greatest platform for change.They are working together like never before.Don't forget, this isn't Trump's and Xi's first meeting.
These guys really like each other.They are very connected together.You can see they're smiling with each other.They have a sales orientation.So I expect a lot of order books to come back.I have a question for you.
Are you allowed to sell software in China?We, well, with the right, the Chinese have a lot of data residency laws.So, you know, we do it as we don't have any offices or employees in China.We never have.The only time we end up with any residue in China is when we buy a company and they have a presence over there.And then we have to divest from it.
We have an exclusive partnership with Alibaba.Everything just goes through them.And we we don't do anything in China.
Is it significant, growing?What percentage of your revenue is it?
Yeah, it's great.It's a great partnership.Key customers of Salesforce, like Louis Vuitton, or Laura Piana.I know Chamath loves Laura Piana.And Laura Piana sells a lot of sweaters in China.And then in all the other stores all over the world, they use Salesforce.
but in China, it's Salesforce on Alibaba.
It's still your code, but then it resides in their servers for data residency stuff.
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Get started freeTheir data residency, their partnership, it's a totally unique relationship.It's the only place in the world that we do such a thing.
Yeah, and it has to be, all the data has to be kept in China, all the data has to be accessible by the CCP.
That's why it's so extraordinary, by the way, what Elon has.Elon has Tesla in China, No partnership.He's the only one.He has a phenomenal relationship with Xi.When you look at Xi and Elon together, notice how deferential and respectful they are of each other.And here is these AI cars with all these cameras.
American made, you know, Chinese factories driving around China.That is pretty incredible.
How do you think he pulled that off?Is that just a one -off exception?
I think Elon's the greatest salesman in the world.
That's how.I mean, the cynical take on it, Chamath, would be they wanted him there and they wanted to study the company and the innovation and they have now become the biggest competitor with their EVs.And so it is a pretty cool competition, I guess.It would be the cynical way.
I want one of those new B .Y .D.golf, you know, what do you call those with the doors that flip up?Gullwing.Gullwing.
I want one of those Gullwing B .Y .D.'s.They have some cool cars.Have you seen those?
They're cool, but they're not safe.They're incredible.Yeah.They're talking in this in this.They said they're talking about bringing some of those cars to the U .
S.That would be incredible.I would hollow out the entire automotive industry here if we had twenty thousand dollars, thirty thousand dollars cars from China, it would be the end of the US automotive industry overnight.And Tim Cook's there, he has to store all his data there.That's been a pretty controversial issue for him.Because Friedberg, if anybody has private information, or as a dissident, Tim Cook has to give that data over to the Chinese Communist Party.
How do you think this plays in America vis a vis the midterms Friedberg Americans feel ignored inflation over 3%.And they look at the Iran war as a betrayal by President Trump.And they look at China as not material to their well being.So when you look at Trump being on a six month timeline for the midterms, and he's only got two more years in office after that, you got she was working off of 100 year playbook,How does that dynamic play out with Trump and the midterms and his core constituency, MAGA, which is now evolving into America first America only.And this kind of isn't is rubbing that group of people the wrong way.
I think the second and third order effects of anything that comes out of China is what's going to be most consequential to the average voter, which is job security and income security and income growth.And then cost of living impact, the cost of living impact would be if there can be some deflationary effect from a trade deal that makes access to goods lower price for Americans.And then anything that America is exporting, there's increased demand, like there's a follow on effect to the soybean export market, there's a follow on effect, obviously, to the oil export market, there's a follow on effect to, for example, technology and software being exported.So that increases economic productivity in the US and increases job security income.And then the other side of the trade deal is can we get stuff that Americans really care about and make it cheaper?Can people now buy stuff at the store that drops in price by 30 40 % where we've kind of tariffed and reduced trade that increases the price of things.
So if those deals kind of get worked out, people will see things get cheaper at the store, and they'll feel good about kind of their income security.And I think that could be, you know, positive.I think that's what's ultimately going to make people make the blue red decision when they go to the polls in November.
That's the schizophrenic nature of this chamath.We have Americans who very much want cheap goods from China.And then we have last year, all these tariffs being put on and we have this great decoupling.So how do you handicap the midterms, Trump's timeline, and she's timeline and what their goals are.And then I guess we'll get to Taiwan after that.
I don't know.It's I think it's a little bit above my pay grade.But what I will say is that the midterms, I thinkare probably going to swing more based on these recent gerrymandering rulings from the Supreme Court and what happened in the Virginia Supreme Court and what's going to happen in the state legislatures of these red states and some of these blue states more than what's going to come out of this summit with with President Xi.So let me just put that over here.And I think that money is getting organized.
There was an article in the New York Times this week, which really surprised me.But the largest donor in the in this election cycle is Andreessen Horowitz.
Yeah, what is that about?
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Get started freeYeah, I think it's because they're they're trying to establish themselves as part of the financial firmament of America, which I think strategically as a business makes a lot of sense, like they're in the AUM business, right?So they can't stop at 100 billion of AUM, they're marching towards a trillion, they're going to be the next Blackstone, which I think is an incredible feat.And they're building a juggernaut of a business.But But I think they also realize that politics is now a permanent part of that if they're going to be investing in higher quantum, more geopolitically influenced parts of the capital cycle and parts of the economy.So I think the midterms are largely that.The money that's gonna be raised plus the gerrymandering that will get done and undone over the next few months.
Again, I think the Chinese and the Americans have a very strong incentive to kind of divide up the world.Like I think the future at this point have these critical resource inputs, China has a stranglehold, you have energy and intelligence AI, where America has a stranglehold on one and effective stranglehold on the other, which is energy.And I think there's a trade there to be done.And as long as you can negotiate what a reasonable give and take is, I think they're just going to find common ground.Like does China reallyneed to be in Chile and Venezuela and Panama?
Probably not.Does America have to have an incredibly strong point of view about the Strait of Malacca?Probably not.And so there's probably a trade to be done so that we can get their rare earths, they can get some more oil, everybody can be happy and we can all find abundance.
Yeah, the the key issue here is China is and most people you know, China phobic, but China has serious systematic issues with population with their real estate, with their GDP, all of this is in decline.And I think she most of all is concerned about another Tiananmen Square, if he doesn't get more people working, they've had the largest growth of any middle class.You know, in history, they have the largest middle class in the world.I think you were sort of referencing that, Mark, with luxury goods and luxury goods providers are going there, but it's tenuous.
And that's the number one, by the way, that is the number one point of focus of President Xi.President Xi's focus has been getting 500 million people from poverty into the middle class.It's not exactly how we think about the world in the United States.That's the main focus of the political leader, and he's achieved that.That has been an incredible accomplishment.
But it's at risk right now because their GDP is falling.They need their factories to operate.They're being undercut by other regions.And then, of course, Taiwan is what they want most of all, and supremacy in you know, their part of the world.
I'm not convinced of that, actually.Okay, say more.I mean, I think we just kind of said it to summarize.They want to have, you know, economic success.They want to continue to grow their middle class.They want to continue to have a healthy economy.
They want more trade.I thought it was interesting that they're talking about, Trump is talking about not only having the Board of Peace now, he'sa Board of Trade.That was a discussion we've never heard before today.Then we have Xi saying, I want the wider door.Then we have all these folks there selling their products.
Two people we didn't mention, the CEO of Visa and the CEO of MasterCard are on the trip.Now, why is that?Because if you look at commerce in China, it is dominated by companies like Alibaba and these organizations who use these super apps.It's not really all the way open for a Visa and a MasterCard.That would be incredible for those executives.So in the same way, that we want to sell airplanes.
We want to sell chips.NVIDIA, the Qualcomm CEO, Cristiano is also there.We want to sell soybeans.We want to sell payment services.We want to sell everything.The more economic collaboration and cooperation you can get between the two countries, the more peace you're going to have.
I agree.
Three hard questions, Mark.Should we be selling them the latest chips?Yes or no, in your mind?
I think it's irrelevant at this point.I think that the Chinese models are as competitive as these U .S.models, and they've learned to make these models without having the highest end chips.I think the highest end chips is kind of more of an ego gratification for us.We have Blackwell, we have this, we have that.
But when you look at their models, their models are excellent.They fast follow us.You know, the best models we had six months ago, they have now.Should we just sell it to them since they're figuring it out anyway, Mark?We probably should just sell whatever we can at this point.And I think that, as I said, I think the more economic cooperation and collaboration is better.
And if you want peace, I think that this, I think Taiwan, it's kind of a nonsense story.
Yeah.Freeberg, your take on chips?Should we sell them the latest chips?And then Chamath, I want to get the answer to that question from each of you.
I think it's inevitable that they get the chips.By the way, I do think this is one of the key aspects of this deal.I've said this before, but maybe Taiwan becomes less relevant to the US and to China as both China and the US mainland fabs.So as we build out our own manufacturing capacity here in the US, and I know we've struggled and there are fits and starts and issues with it and whatnot, but the TSMC facility in Arizona is running.they're printing and if it works, and they figure out how to scale it, there'll be other facilities in the US and then China's main landing with Huawei, standing up a lot of facilities, they've got a multi I think I talked about this on one of the shows, a multi deca billion dollar government investment in ensuring competitiveness, not just with fabs, but also with semiconductor manufacturing equipment, so that they don't get cut off on the supply chain with companies like ASML blocking sales into mainland.So as they build out their own semiconductor capital equipment, systems and their own fabs.
Does Taiwan really matter?Is there really that much of a security risk to the United States and to China in that sense?And perhaps what everyone's focused on, which is this pivot point around Taiwan, maybe it's not that the US is selling Taiwan down the river, but it's just that no one gives a shit anymore.So you know, there may be this kind of cultural moment for China where they want to, at some point say, hey, by 2040, which I think is what I've heard, they want to be able to kind of, you know, bring Taiwan fully into the sphere.Maybe the US shouldn't care that much at that point from a economic and security perspective.So I think that's, that's one of the things that's happening that so you're in the camp of selling chips to them, and it will demotivate the TSMC, or the capture of those Chinese put it this way, I think the more the global productivity index can climb, the better off all humans will be.
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Get started freeSo the question is, do you really want the West to see their productivity index climb, and then youeffectively forcing conflict and forcing issues with the East?Or if we all grow our productivity index, we all make more stuff, everyone benefits, everyone has better jobs, everyone makes more money, everyone has access to more stuff, the cost of goods comes down for everyone.doesn't that make the world a safer and more secure place?Sure.So I think this idea that like technology should be held to one side of the world and not given to the other side of the world is inevitably going to lead to conflict or increase the probability of conflict.
Whereas if you let technology diffuse and proliferate, everyone benefits and conflict indices go down.
It's because it's commoditized, you know, and everybody has access to it.
So then it becomes everyone a higher standard of living and give everyone's economy a boost.And you give everyone less reason to fight with this issue went there with Saigon.
Should we take our arms sales off of the table Friedberg?And should we ask China to not sell arms to Iran?
Yes, we should have China to not sell arms to Iran.
Okay.
I don't know what there is.What is there to talk about there?
Well, because I think what she wants is for us to not sell arms to Taiwan.So would you make that trade?I guess is what I'm saying.
Oh, yeah.I mean, that's a good question.I think in that context, that's a that's a nuanced one.I don't that's why I bring it up.Because that seems to be generally you're right.Yeah.
I mean, generally, that's probably a trade that, you know, that should be made the trade.
Do the deal.You say make the trade chamath.I mean, I kind of know we're 18 months from Taiwan not being an important moment of conversation the way that it is today.Why 18 months because we are at a point where we're probably one to two nanometers away from being able to do what we need Taiwan to strategically do for us.And so as we scale up our chip fabs, as we get more capacity, and interestingly, there are these orthogonal technologiesbeing developed.
I don't know if you guys saw but Neuralink was showcasing now a machine that is literally operating at the almost nanometer scale to do the brain operations for the implantation all automatically.So when you when you have the dexterity and the capability mechanically to make these things, the real reason then is a very different one than what it is today.Today, it's economic.And if you take that off the table, I think we'll have a very different attitude to Taiwan.That's number one.Number two, sell the chips.
And the reason we should sell the chips is we want Nvidia to win.We do not want to give enough oxygen for Huawei to then all of a sudden emerge and have a version of a chip that works.And what Mark said is totally right.These models are catching up.They're almost at the same pace.So more important thing, Jason is probably we should all agree is just like, let's have a reasonable KYC for how the models get used so that you know, somebody in a basement doesn't cook up some bio weapon.
Meanwhile, sell the chips proliferate, let Jensen win.I'd rather he win than Huawei win.
Mark, I'm gonna give you the last word, but I'm going to force you to answer a hard question.China sets up a blockade around Taiwan, and they decide they're taking it.Should the US defend it?Yes or no?
I've said this for years.I don't agree with Neil Ferguson on that point.I think that this is a nonsense issue.I think China and Taiwan will reconcile.I think that.Well, first of all, I do want to schedule, though, Chamath for that Neuralink next Tuesday.
We can drill your brain, Chamath.
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Get started freeCan I get you?What are you trying to do?Put some empathy into Chamath?
I talked to Elon.He said it doesn't because, you know, you just go right in.
There's a boom and then you can get hooked up.It is the craziest thing.I know.I got you scheduled at five o 'clock on Tuesday.
Hold your hand if you're too nervous.Yes.And by the way, they had a hard time.We want a more connected Chamath.It's going to make for an even better show.
Absolutely.It would be incredible.Yes.And I would laugh and I would giggle.We could get into show tunes here.Freeberg, I know you're, yeah, big on the show tunes.
If I only had a heart.
If I only had a brain.A heart, a brain, and what's the third one?If I only had a Neuralink.You gotta give you courage, Reed Bird.Okay, move on.All right, let's move on here.
By the way, I took Chamath's kids.
Chamath stayed home.I took his kids to the Withered of Oz at the Sphere.It was incredible.If you haven't seen it.
Chamath was like, do something enriching with my kids or hit the craps table.
No, I'll be honest with you.I get a little freaked out in large numbers.Like groups of people?Vans, yeah.No, just like when there's a lot of people, I get very nervous.I don't know why.
Is this because of your newfound celebrity?Is that the issue?
Or is it just always been this way?No, I don't even want to go there.I just have these bad thoughts of like, oh my God, what if something happens?How do we get out?Oh, terrorist attack.How do you get out to the exit?
Panic disorder.I don't know.Yeah, exactly.You have panic disorder.Yeah, I don't like these large spaces with lots of people.I get a little whinged out.
Anyway, your kids had a great time.Great show.Tony Robbins lives very near you, Chamath.Don't you think we can get that to happen?
Let's get Tony Robbins in there to clear that blockage.
You're a Tony Robbins guy, Mark.
Why are you so into Tony Robbins?
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Get started freeI love Tony Robbins.I had him at my conference this week.It was incredible, actually.He did an incredible presentation for an hour.
Did he unlock for you your success?He claims to, that he has you on the roster of $50 ,000 a year CEOs.
I am the number one fan of Tony Robbins.So, I mean, he is pretty awesome.What percentage of your success is attributed to Tony's mentorship?Hey, if it wasn't for Tony Robbins, I don't think there would be a season.force.So actually, no, no jokes aside.
Can you tell us like what Like what, like what were those big kind of blockages and how did you, how did he help you or how did you work through it?
Just focusing on, Hey, the questions, you know, the quality of your questions is the quality of your life.It's that insight.And just, are you asking yourself the right questions?What do you want?What's important to you?How are you getting it?
What is preventing you from having it?How will you know that you have it?Just no one had ever said that to me.And then it was just like clear to me, wait, I need to write that down.Like, what do I really want right now?What is my point of focus?
And that is what gave me motivation as soon as I got that clarity.I mean, a lot of us do it automatically, but that's not where I was when I was a kid.That's for sure.
Did you run across the coals?Did you do any of that kind of stuff?Many times.Really?Yeah, of course.Okay.
There it is, folks.Hey, we can go together.Uh, absolutely.We had Tony on the show.I tried to get in there and understand his psychology, but he just had us do breathing exercises.All right.
The all in summit is happening again.fifth year in a row.Wow.We've been doing this for a while all in .com slash events, September 13, 14 and 15.We'll have you back mark in year six.
But when you score so highly on a keynote, we give you two years off so that we can build up the anticipation.So coming in 2027.our guy mark banning off but for this year, all in .com slash events.Okay, topic to AI's impact by the way, real quick, can I can I just do a quick PSA, a public service announcement, public service announcement.
Yes, Nick, just pull up this link.This dog named scooter needs a home.Oh, promise my wife, I do this.Don't get Don't get mad at me.This dog named scooter needs a home.He's in Baldwin Park dogs about to die, lives in Baldwin Park at the animal care and control.
They're overwhelmed in LA.There are so many homeless street dogs that are being collected.They're all being put to sleep.Wow.Someone give this dog a home.Gorgeous dog.
His name is Scooter.Good dog.Link will be on the YouTube channel.Thank you very much.
Are you getting a little emotional, Freeberg, about this dog being put down?
I just don't like these, you know, all these street dogs.Like, they didn't choose that situation they were in, and then they all end up kind of getting pulled in by animal care and control, and then they all get put to sleep.Kind of sucks.You're a dog guy.Come on.
You got to have a heart.No, I have a big heart.Come on.It's $10 ,000 to keep these dogs alive for another week.Can we count on you for that donation?Any purebred white golden retrievers in that bunch?
No, they're just mutts.Just mutts.
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Get started freeWe have a cat that we got at the shelter, actually kind of walked into the shelter, learning, so looking for a cat.All of a sudden we're in the shelter.This cat's like coming at, you know, my kids and all of a sudden they're OK, we'll take this cat.What is this cat's name?This cat's name is Cloud.cloud cat.
Wow.Absolutely.
We have cloud the cat.That's awesome.
All right, AI's impact on software rippling through the market.Mark, you're on the front lines here.
Thank you for reminding me.
Yeah, well, I mean, in pain and suffering are lessons, right?I think the Buddha and Tony Robbins both taught us that and the only way to the other side is through as you know, Mark.So Salesforce down a whopping 37%, 90 billion losses for you, ServiceNow 42%, Workday 45%, 180 billion in market caps been lost.And the assumption, Mark, is that AI is going to make it unnecessary for you to use Slack or Salesforce or HubSpot, whatever it happens to be, that you'll just ask your AI to solve this for you.And we'll all look at a piece of glass and have no Actual software the AI will just tell us what to do.What's your response to the fear the criticism?
And how are you managing this massive change internally?
You're right.It's the cesspocalypse I mean, it's not my first cesspocalypsehonestly, but it's the current cesspocalypse.So we are all now drinking at Salesforce Esmeralda's and we actually have a pet Sasquatch as well.Yeah, we're a little more sassy.That's what I would say.
That's OK.
You bring the sass to sass.
We got to bring the sass to sassy, you know, and then you've always been a sassy guy.Yeah.And then number two is, look, the market is re -rated.It's not a mystery, everybody knows.You guys have been talking about it for a while, I've been living it.So the software market's re -rated.
It happens every now and then, there are cycles.I've been doing Salesforce for 27 years, enterprise software for 40, and the market's re -rated.You mentioned HubSpot.They're trading at two -time sales.I've never seen that before.They just had a great quarter.
We saw a lot of great quarters.I looked at the top 10 major enterprise software companies.They all had great quarters and they're all trading in two -time sales.So why?Because of everything you just said.There's like, you know, a hypnosis around AI and You know, we haven't seen it show up in the numbers yet.
If it shows up in the numbers, maybe people will be right.Right now, all we know is there's still a lot of enterprise software being sold in the world.So you've been through this.It's not your first time.This is not my first SESPACLIPSE.I mean, I remember the SESPACLIPSE of 2020 when COVID happened and all of it, you know, everything collapsed.
There was the great SESPACLIPSE, you know, 2016.
What's that?In all sincerity, what's your strategy and how do you deal with, you know, your internal team?Obviously, they are compensated through, you know, stock.And this is headwind and you have competition for employees from OpenAI, Anthropic and SpaceX.So how do you deal with rallying the troops?And then how do you develop a strategy?
Well, you're right.I mean, it's a lot easier to be a private company right now where you don't have to be rational andby the public markets.If you're in the public markets and you get re -rated, that's the reality of being in the public markets.And I think that for what I tell my employees, what I just told my employees is, look, you can't get drunk on the stock price.If you are like focused on today all the time, and that is how you're getting, you know, your emotional state, it is not gonna work for you.
You have to find a different anchor.So, I try not to pay really a lot of attention to it.I'm focused on my customer success, powers our revenue.Look, we'll do over $46 billion this year, more than $16 billion in cash flow.We have more than 83 ,000 employees.These are the things that I'm focused on.
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Get started freeWhat is the level of customer success that we're delivering?That's really important.I can't control the stock price.There's nothing I can do.And for our employees, they can't control it either.They need to believe in the company and the quality of the success they're delivering to customers in the long term.
And then you look at the market, you look at these other companies, not just us, they're doing great.And I mean, I saw some great numbers, but it doesn't really matter.The market's re -rated.Hmm.
Well, you've got all that free cash flow.You've been great at acquisition.
So I'm sure you're I've bought some great companies, by the way, everything's a little cheaper.I like that.
Yeah.Chamath, what's your take on this?You've been pretty critical of the SAS space in previous episodes, pointing out, hey, how durable are these revenues?
So what's your take?I think the low end of the market is basically finished.I think there there is no safe space.I think the high end of the market where Mark operates, where the large monoliths operate is quite safe.And the tell was this week, the deployment company deal basically shows you what open AI is running into.So you know, you have to put in $4 billion, you get all of these folks, you
them a 17 and a half percent preferred guaranteed return for what, essentially to stand up a competitor to Ernst & Young, Anderson, Deloitte, PwC, Cognizant, etc.If you just look at that, that doesn't actually mathematically make that much sense if you look at what those companies are actually trading at.But why is OpenAI doing this?I think why is because at the high end of the market, where all the action is, What people are finding is, hey, hold on a second, this is a lot harder than we thought.It's not like boop, boop, boop, put in a prompt and beep, bap, boop, it all works.It's not how it works.
And so I think we're a little oversold.And now I think this consolidation and the re -rating can happen in the opposite direction.So what is the opposite trade?The opposite trade is who has constructive net dollar retention, who has negative churn that's been really predictable, which is a way of saying who has the best relationships, meaning they're inside the CXOs and the C -suite, they have relationships with the CEOs, and they're trusted, and they've been around for 20 years.Those guys, I think, are positioned to crush.Because eventually, Jason, the next trade that has to happen is when the public markets become a little bit less breathless about AI, and they ask one simple question.
Okay, guys, you've spent $3 trillion in the last four years, what is the ROI of these tokens?And what's gonna happen is they're going to have to go to guys like Mark and other people and say, please sell my tokens.And that's the next shoe to drop.If you if you had to ask me, so I think you're going to see these revenues, which are like way out of whack, like the multiples on revenue, multiples on assets, multiples of they're not even multiples, if you would tell yet, those will come way back down.And I think these go back upand you'll find a balance.
Yeah.And you've initiated what could only be described as an unprecedented massive stock buyback, Mark, 50 billion.
I think it's one of the largest in history.Yeah, we were, you know, we want to buy back as much as we can.And I would just say that Look, at a high level, there's awesome new capabilities.These coding agents are awesome.Anthropic is awesome.I am going to probably use $300 million of Anthropic this year at Salesforce.
Coding, everything's going to be cheaper to make.It's more efficient.I can do things that I just could not do before.I can go faster than ever before.I can implement my software and sell it at the same time.I've never been able to do that before.
I can break through obstacles that I've had, you know, just by focusing because I have coding agents and humans together, working together.Today, I have humans, agents and headless platforms all interoperating, never before.So the opportunity for my own company and the efficiency that I have in my own company in service and support and distribution and marketing across the board is unprecedented.what I can do for our customers unprecedented.And, you know, to that point, my gosh, have you seen Anthropic?I mean, it is a rocket ship that will not stop because you can use this product to do these incredible, amazing things.
And then and complement it with platforms like ours.It's, you know, it's it's it's impossible to describe what we're going to be able to do for customers.It's going to be awesome.
And never waste a crisis.You've been super focused on the efficiency of the company and headcount.share buybacks, and I'm guessing you're looking at M &A.So it's not your first time.
Oh, we just finished up one of our biggest dealsIt's been awesome because none of this stuff works if you don't have context.You know, the AI is very probabilistic.That is, it can kind of figure things out, but it needs to be grounded in real data, and it needs to have that semantic layer.It needs to be locked down into the truth, into a single source of truth, or it just cannot work well.And so our customers want more harmonized data, federated data, integrated data.
So we bought Informatica.Our customers want our apps to use those large language models to be able to provide not just automation to their employees, but also to their agents, just like we just said.So, like, if you call 1 -800 -NO -SOFTWARE right now, for the first time in 27 years, you talk to AgentForce.Hey, AgentForce, what's happening?But then, after it authenticates you and you get in the system and it doesn't know who you are, then boom, it'll auto escalate you to a human being who says, oh, I can see everything you've been doing.Oh, yeah, you just need to resolve this, this and that.
And so that trinity of the phone, the web and the human being are all together.It's all made possible by this A .I.We just could never do that before.That is awesome.
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Get started freeWas it controversial, Mark, to make Slack headless?Was that a big decision or was that a Was everybody kind of mostly on board with that?
Well, we were the first to, you know, the way that our platform is architected and Chamath, you know it so well, because you're coding your coding agents and the company you're building can run right on top of it and build awesome stuff also.So.You know, number one is we were the first with an XML API, a SOAP API, a REST API, now a CLAI API, MCP API.We always wanted to have a platform that had every API possible.And our apps are not hardcoded where we had to cut the top off of them.They've always been embedded.
our platform.So now we can stream our apps out through a new API called AXL, and I can manifest it into any large language model or device or anything.And it just works better, actually.
I think that, you know, when Jack Dorsey wrote that memo, J -Cal, and part of what he said is he's going to try to run his company by building a world model.My initial thought was, well, where is the context, Mark, what you said before?Where's the semantic understanding to create a world model?And a lot of it, for a lot of companies, is actually in Slack.It's in Slack and email.Yeah, those two places.
I showed you that Slack bot, Jason.I mean, the thing is, because you run your company on Slack, all your DMs, all your channels, we're reading that now through the AI, and we can tell you more about your business than you know, because Slack bot is reading stuff that You know, nobody knew what was happening.And like, I'm using that myself, but I can then connect it into other things.So I have the ability to go into Salesforce and Google and everything.And so when I'm on Slack bot, I can ask it any question about my company.What are my top five deals?
What do, what are my employees upset about?What are the top three things I need to focus on?And then boom, I get the information because it has the data.
I think you should really look at making Slack.more open and cheaper and getting more of that context.Because there are limitations in terms of getting your data out based on like which plan you're on.It's just too convoluted.But once I upgraded to a higher plan, and you know, it's whatever 612 18k for our small company, I was able to get more and more context to my open claw Plexity computer, and Claude we and we're testing all of those.And today I wrote literally before I got on the show, a new project.
that is every two hours in our slack, tell me what decisions are being made, who's making those decisions.And what you would handicap those decisions.If you were my chief of staff, if you were a CEO, or if you were a board member, and I created personas to now evaluate decision making going on just I have to show you the new version of Slack.
You're going to love it, Jason.And you know that open AI and thropping and every AI company is standardized on Slack.Yes.And by the way, and our core sales cloud and service clouds as well.So I got to show you what we're doing.It's so cool.
It's so fun.
What's your advice to, let's say you were running a software company that was like before the AI wave and you're private.Right.There's a bunch of these companies that were supposed to go public, didn't go public.What should they do?Like, what do those boards do?What they want?
There's a Kleenex for them, for all their tears, because they're I mean, I talk to the CEOs.They're crying with my market cap.I'm not getting paid for my work.Guys grow up.You know, that's what I love about the public markets.They rationalize everything all the time.
So, yeah.Great, be in the public markets.You want to be in a private market.Your valuation is fantasy land until somebody is actually going to pay you.So I just tell them, hey, you got to focus on your revenue, focus on your customers, focus on your cash flow, focus on your profitability, focus on your innovation.How are you going to add value to your customers?
That's what's really, truly important.
Freeberg, any thoughts from you?We're doing a big Salesforce implementation at O 'Halo.And I would say that one of my observations over the last six months, because we've talked a lot about using these generative tools, is we've kind of dropped all the vertical software, but we're doubling down our investment in horizontal tools.So like we're investing heavily in these platform capabilities, that then we're able to build apps and workflows on top of them.that are specific to our business, rather than try and buy an off the shelf app or workflow tool.So I think that there's kind of a really interesting moment right now where we talked about this last time, you could kind of discern between founder led and non founder led enterprise software.
I also think that there's this kind of vertical horizontal shift, where they're kind of trading the same right now.But you could probably break them, you can break that trade.So I think there's probably a good arbitrage there.
And I think everyone who wants to sell those potato sleeves seeds, you know, is going to need some tools to sell them.But the thing that's kind of cool is, you know, we have 15 ,000 salespeople now, so they're out there selling these products like Slack and selling to David and so forth.But here's the thing that's interesting.In the last 27 years, we calculated somewhere between 20 and 30 million people.We didn't call back.We did not call them back.
because we didn't have the people to do it.So just this week, I called back 50 ,000 people, you know, just through agents, so I can qualify.I just bought a company called Qualified, so I can qualify the agents, call people back, the BDR, the SDR function, I can go outbound, I can do things I could never do before.That is made possible by this AI automation, linking it then to the apps, you can go to another level.
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Get started freeYeah, okay, breaking news.I want to get everybody's take on this open AI in a breaking news story is considering suing Apple over their chat GPT partnership.As we all know, two years ago, Apple and open AI announced chat GPT would integrate into Siri iOS, Mac OS.But according to Bloomberg, The deal has gone so poorly for OpenAI that they might sue Apple for breach of contract.Here are OpenAI's gripes.Apple chat GPT integration within Siri requires users to specifically say chat GPT to get results.
We probably all experienced this if we haven't given up on Siri, which is the worst thing.assistant ever created.Apple hasn't it's just not see odd to this level.Just discuss the odd with this product.How do you get there first, and you remain worst.Apple hasn't promoted the integration at all.
And users are still overwhelmingly going to the standalone chat GPT app or others.Open AI expected billions of subscription revenue from the deal and it hasn't come to fruition.According to Bloomberg, Apple side of the story is hey, they have concerns about open AI privacy practices.Maybe they don't trust the guy in charge over there, which was a reoccurring theme in the lawsuit.And they're annoyed that open AI and here is the palace entry.They're upset that open AI is building hardware to compete with Apple, and that they recruited their designed guru Johnny Ive.
Mark Benioff, you know the players.What is going on here?And do you trust Sam Altman and OpenAI?
I love him, but let's just upscale this conversation just one second.Listen, what has happened?What happened is we have these LLMs.They're starting to come out.Every company's kind of chosen a slightly different path.You had Elon.
He went out, he had Grok, and he kind of started building these companions and sex bots and all this kind of stuff going on.And that was a huge focus of his, the sex bot focus.Then you kind of had OpenAI and they're doing the Sora video thing, and they're also doing ad networks and crazy stuff like that.Then you had Gemini and they had the Nano Banana.And then, finally, you've got Anthropic and they go, we don't know about those sex bots and we don't know about Nano Banana, but we're going to do coding agents.And it turned out Anthropic was right.
And all of a sudden, the rocket ship took off.And now we've gotlike, whoa, where did Anthropic go?Oh, whoa, they're way up there.And then they're all like, where are we going to do coding agents to?And now they're all resetting.
and getting hitting their buttons and going coding agents everybody focus focus kill sarah kill this get rid of that sex bots off you know cursor on yeah and that's where we are right now and so everybody look this is what's cool about right now is that everybody is such a dynamic moment in our industry it's so exciting that people have to pivot and you have to be ready to focus and refocus and constantly ask the question, like, what do you want right now?And everyone is changing what they really want.And if you looked at where everybody was a year ago and where they are now, they're in a totally different place, because we all know that when Anthropic 46 hit, boom, everyone could code in their companies.And before that, they really couldn't.It was a little bit of a productivity improvement, but not as much as we wanted.Now everybody sees this and goes, wow, this is unbelievable.
We're even working on technology inside Slack to make it easier for everybody to code.So I think it's going to be really breaking news there.You're going to see some cool stuff with Slack and code.I'm not ready to talk about it yet, but there's no question.that we are in a new moment in coding.I mean, Chamath's got a whole company around it.
A lot of people have companies around it.There's going to be, before coding was all about humans, and like, that's where I started.I was 15 years old, Burlingame High School, on hands -on keyboard, writing video games, you know, basic 68 ,000, 6502, you know, no, no.
Now it's like, everyone changed or is it the product manager, the developer or the UX designer?It's all about the creator?
Or did it all blend into one blended together?Who wins?It's allblended together.And by the way, to Mark's point, the hands on keyboard thing, you know, most of our engineers just speak.They so it's like, and so you know, one of our guys just has a foot operated thing.
And it just like, plus, it's all talk, pedal plus whisper flow and talking.There is no cans on keyboard.
Alright, so let's get back to this story here.
We're going for a dolphin flow at Salesforce.
Dolphins on keyboards.
Mahalo for your hollow free bird.Two questions.One, now that Sam has shut down the sex bots, how are you filling that void?And then number two, thank you.And number two, what's your take on the strained relationship here between open AI and the world and specifically the Apple world?
I don't know what to tell you this.There doesn't seem to be a lot of long term partnerships with open AI.That's a very generous way to say it.
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Get started freeWhat should Apple do?Should they just go back to the loving arms of Google where they made $100 billion being partners with them on the search default, your alma mater?
I don't know what to tell.I mean, look, at the end of the day, I think Google has a real opportunity to integrate a Gemini assistant into all of your personal information and Gemini and calendar.your Google Drive, your Google Photos, where all of your personal information sits, it can become your your point of calendaring your point of asking it questions about your personal life.Hey, when did I email this person, etc.And in the enterprise context, I think that's also up for grabs with G Suite.And so Google has a real chance to kind of own that assistant interface, maybe Salesforce does to mark Apple obviously has an embedded install piece, how many people are using Apple services for doing all of their mail for calendaring.
storing their information, I think a good number do.And so yeah, so that may end up becoming kind of the way that the world silos out is like, you'll have an assistant, but the assistant for it to be truly useful to you individually, it has to have access to all of your information, whether it's in an enterprise context or a personal context, Apple is probably going to need to either build their own or white label with a partner could be anthropic could be someone else.Yeah, I get this to really work.But but they're going to be up against a formidable competitor is my point.Because I think Google Assistant is going to end up being kind of a real kick ass product.Once they get this flywheel gone.
Apple has the clearest path to becoming, you know, a top two or three player in AI simply by buying something like perplexity, or Mistral or some AI lab.And then using their hardware footprint, which is extraordinary.I just got this MacBook with 48 gigs of RAM on it with an M five, it is unbelievable.And the new ones with the studio coming out are going to have a terabyte of RAM, they are going to have a clear path to maintaining your privacy running local models.And that's going to solve people's problems.It's going to be very easy to index all your images without giving the data to open AI, which nobody trusts or giving it to Gemini.
And that's, I think, a big part of why they picked the current CEO is because he's an engineer and hardware based.I think the future of this is going to be local models running on extraordinary desktop hardware.And if you have employees on this level of hardware, running these models local, like I have started to do, they become 10 times more valuable than the employees not running it.
I think I don't have a choice for the next year.I'm not a huge believer in these local models.And the only reason why is I think you want persistence.you have multiple devices, you have multiple persona, you're using a web browser in one instance, you're using a different computer at home in the other, and the idea that you don't have personalthat follows you around in 2026, I think is a breaking feature.So I think you're not going to lug around a five pound MacBook Pro everywhere you go so that you can get knowledge.
Oh, wait, you're asking?Oh, wait, I got a diagnosis from my doctor.Hold on a second.
I don't think that's right.I think you're both right.You're both right.The game on the field, though, is you will be able to use iCloud for this as well.So it's going to be, you know, so here's effortlessly.
So well, look, give me your opinion on this.I think the thing that you're assuming is that these form factors don't need to change.And I just wonder, like, don't we have an iPhone moment that we're just all going to be surprised by where somebody shows up and they're like this thing and you're like, Oh my god, that's the thing.Do you know what I mean?Like, yeah, that's, I, there's enough ingredients here where somebody is going to cook something up.And then you have to think about Jason, the sunk cost of like, you know, look, Apple is incredible.
But that's the product of 40 years, 30 years of meticulous process optimization.What do you do if the form factor is totally different and the nature of the device is different?How do you pivot that organization?
You're hitting on something very important.And it dovetails with another story on the docket Mira Mirati, released thinking machines new real time.Well, that was pretty impressive.And this is super impressive.And at the same time has patented putting cameras into your AirPods.So you're right.
And then I use this blog pin.I've talked about it before.These persistent hardware devices, the watch, the earpieces are going to know your entire reality, they're going to monitor entire desktop.And this is going to lead to a use of tokens.That would be 1000 times what user business users are currently using because the way mirrors and we should have her on the pod or at one of our events the way her model.Friedberg is it's watching your desktop, it's listening to all the voices, and then it's watching your webcam all at the same time.
And every 200 milliseconds, it's uploading it to two different models.One is deep thinking and looking backwards, you know, at a maybe a 30 second clip and the other ones in real time.That will 1000x the need for tokens if people are doing this for eight hours a day, because it's not the turn based.Here's my latest prompt.Here's my question.I got a response.
It's in real time, always querying an LLM, which is going to require a hardware upgrade to the average desktop.Mark Benioff, what are your thoughts on this brave new world?
It's one small step for man, one giant leap towards AGI.I think that you said it really well.I mean, we've been so kind of think the LLM is the be all end all, we're going to go to AGI.I don't really understand how large language models, which are only about language and words, and we know how it works.It's one word, one word, therefore the next word is this, is going to get us to where we want to go to, which is Minority Report or all the science fiction movies that we've seen.But what we saw And I think, Jason, you've really articulated that super well, by the way, multi -sensory models.
And multi -sensory models, well, here's a good one.Oh, yeah, me, I'm a multi -sensory model at a biological computer.I'm a multi -sensory model.I've got these eyes, ears, mouth, you know, work sometimes, some brain, heart, whatever, and some other things going on, too, that I don't even understand.And it's all running in this biological computer.I'm not exactly a large language model, though I do have one sometimes.
I would say that multi -sensory models are the next big wave for AI, but we're still not at AGI at that point.But those demos, like the demo ofthat model, that was pretty, everyone should see like that was pretty awesome.And then I think we can kind of say, hmm, where are we now on this, on the path?But I think every model company is kind of go, hold on, pivot, you know, again, pivot, right?Say and pivot, everybody's pivoting and you're going to have to pick your poison.
And where, where are you going next?You know?
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Get started freeand you can't do everything you can't you said you were spending 300 million on tokens with anthropic now imagine what this would do to an average you know employee if they needed 1000 times the tokens they have now.So instead of spending 150k in tokens, you got to spend, you know, 100 million.
But you have some I don't think that's true.I don't think that that I think we're getting brainwashed on that.Okay, so I think that's a mistake to think that way.See, I think we are wasting a lot of this token.So I'm coding.Here's my guy.
I think I convinced you this.So here's a here we're using $300 million of Anthropic this year.And we're coding, we're coding, we're coding, right?The vast majority of those tokens don't need to go to Anthropic.There needs to be some intermediary layer that's saying, oh, that one has to go to Anthropic.But these ones can handle by smaller models.
You need a micro that can route it to the most affordable for the job.
No, we're like, it's such an early moment.You know, it's an early moment.And I want to connect back to what you said before, which was brilliant, Jason, which was the importance of the edge, because the edge and the cloud are going to come together.Okay, and yes, you're going to have more distributed intelligence.It's going to work together.That's going to make a ton of sense what you said.
What Chamath said was also completely right.You were both right.Then you combine it to this idea.Let's put it together where we're going.Yes, we're going to have more distributed intelligence.We're going to have intelligence on the edge.
We're going to have multi -sensory models.And yes, you're going to do coding, and it's going to be more efficient, though.So to think that it's going to be always so expensive, that is just the moment of time that we're at right now.And I think there's going to be a hot new company that's going to come along and say this, I'm going to sit between you and me.Anthropic and open AI and I'm gonna make sure that they all you only need their tokens when you actually need them And that is not really where we are right now.Like yeah, does that make sense what I'm saying?
Like totally you're like It's like oh, I need a shower and okay great all the water.No, no, no Okay All right, listen, we have two final topics here.
We can talk about anthropic unrolling the dark SPVs and the impact that has on the market or we can go to everybody's favorite science corner.
I'll do both just do a quick around the around the neighborhood.
Yeah.Okay, lightning round on what we'll do SPVs last freeberg.What do you got in science corner?Everybody all this all the freeberg fans just destroyed when we skip it.So let's give them a good one.Mark, do you like science corner?
No, you do.I do.Come on.Yeah.
Only if it's about the oceans.Mark is the greatest salesman in Silicon Valley.He loves it all.And he wants to hear more.Mark, how did you learn sales?How do we become half as good as you?
I'm not a good sale.I'm like, I'm a geek.You are.But you know how to like.I learned it all at a Tony Robbins seminar.Let's go.
OK.
Walk over the coals together.
Let's roll.We're all going to Tony.Put out the coals.We're walking across them.
Nick, let's pull up the first chart.This science corner is about the dreaded El Nino season that is coming up.And so this is a forecast for sea surface temperature anomalies.And basically what this means is that the ocean at this point has heated upmuch that there's now a forecast on ocean temperatures that are going to exceed anything we have seen in recent history.So we're kind of looking at temperatures that might be four degrees above normal.
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Get started freeThat doesn't sound like a lot.But let's just look at this image.That top image is the sea surface temperature anomaly.That means how different the sea surface or the ocean temperatures are.Why does that matter?And this is compared to 1877, when we had the biggest El Nino year ever.
And I'll explain what that means in a moment.But why does this all matter?The reason is the oceans are the battery of weather.What happens at one part of the year is that the oceans absorb heat energy.And absorb, absorb, absorb gets hotter and hotter and hotter.And then that heat energy is released into the atmosphere.
And then the atmosphere drives the weather events that happen all over the world.And it becomes somewhat predictable that you can estimate what the weather over the next year is going to be like based on how the temperatures are sitting in the ocean today.And at this point, there is so much excess energy stored up in the oceans.I'll give you guys a statistic.It's about 11 million terawatt hours.The whole planet Earth uses 25 ,000 terawatt hours in a year.
So 11 million extra terawatt hours of energy is currently stored up.That's 500 years worth of human energy in this ocean.And over the next few months, that energy is going to be released into the atmosphere.And that will absolutely 99 % confidence that will make the upcoming year the hottest year on record by far that humans have ever experienced, or at least that we've experienced in recent history where we didn't have data going, going back a long time.It changes the trade winds, which changes how a lot of the weather evolves from a normal season.It changes the moisture in the atmosphere in certain parts of the world.
And I'll just give you some highlights of what this means over the coming year.There will be major atmospheric river events where you just get water dumped all overthe southwest in California and the Gulf Coast.You'll have very low snowfall and very high heat waves in the northern part of the US going up to Canada.You guys remember all those fires a couple years ago in Canada.Interior regions of the US like in Phoenix and so on, they're already seeing temperatures at 106 degrees in May.
A super El Nino like is forecasted for this year could extend that duration of these heat domes, which could create temperatures that we've never seen in those areas.Southern Argentina, Chile, Brazil could see record shattering heat waves.And this is where things start to get a little nasty, because when that happens, the crops start to fail.And in many parts of the world, Brazil, India, Australia, these are critical local consumption for large populations, but also major ag export markets.So if Brazil's crop fails, If Australia's wheat crop fails, Australia's wheat crop goes to places like Indonesia and the Philippines.Hundreds of millions of people depend on that wheat crop.
Hundreds of millions of people depend on the exports out of Brazil.Brazil's the world's largest ag exporter.And the scariest one of all is if the monsoons fail, which is now a very high probability event in India.150 million farmers in India that depend on their agricultural output or they don't make any money, they can't survive.and one and a half billion people that depend on that food.So the importance of this El Nino event goes beyond just like an interesting weather anecdote.
But if you think about the second and third effects of this over the next year, you could see energy prices spiking and electricity spiking and the grid failing in parts of the southwest, commodity prices spiking all over the world, And then you would see places like India, the Philippines, Vietnam, starting to face some sort of unrest if there isn't enough food supply that's coming into those markets.And then the question in India is a really nasty one, because there isn't a really good solution.India and markets like it that are significantly dependent on having their monsoon event, but alsocurrently facing a shortage of nitrogen based fertilizer because of the crisis with Iran and the Strait of Hormuz, which we've talked about as a double whammy.So over the next year in South Asia, you could see a calorie deficit, and a major kind of economic crisis that starts to emerge.So this El Nino event, I just wanted to kind of bring it up as an interesting science corner because the data now seems pretty confirmed that over the next few months, we're going to have this record breaking El Nino.
And these are the sorts of consequences that will play out over the next year.
This is scary.God damn.What do you do about the the food problem?That's a big problem.
That's a big problem.And this is the commodity markets are wild for this, right?
This did this happen the last time we had an El Nino?
Yeah.So when we have El Nino, there's a severity of these sorts of events happening.
No, I mean, do we have a food shortage problem in the last El Nino?
Oh, yeah, when we have El Nino's, there's food shortages that come out of Australia, Brazil, you see these events, that's a regular part of the thing.The problem this year is the index is so off the charts, it is so far beyond anything we've seen.And it's correlated, obviously, with the severity, that it triggers a crisis that may be, you know, really difficult to manage in a lot of places.So the US is a net ag exporter.So from a US perspective, our big issues to worry about are the fire season.By the way, this does decrease Atlantic hurricanes, you're going to have fewer hurricanes this year in the in the south.
But you know, you have these kind of major storm events that happen in California, the heat waves, electricity prices were probably more stable than other parts of the world.But think about the Brazil, the ag export market is such a significant part of the economy.And Brazil has a debt problem that this could end up becoming an economic problem in some parts of the world, including Brazil.So the commodity markets are trading this El Nino event pretty actively right now.It's become kind of a focal area for a lot of folks in commodity markets.Can your super seeds help or no?
That's a longer term solution.
But I mean, look, we're like at the end of the day,having, it's actually a good point.But having genetics, a crop genetics that can adapt to a more rapidly changing climate is going to be critical over the next couple of decades.
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Get started freeThat's a big kind of macro for another part of this Friedberg that as certain places heat up, they actually become viable places to put crops, ie Canada, or the northern part of the United States.So we're seeing the actual places you can grow certain crops, independent of genetic modification is expanding.In other words, farmlands expanding because of global warming, right?
So we increasingly grow soybeans in Canada, that was not the case two decades ago, through both plant breeding, where we've made the genetics adapt, but also the warmer temperature, the shorter winters and whatnot, they've been able to grow that crop further north.But if you guys go back a couple of years, there were major heat waves and droughts in Australia.Huge fires, yeah.Huge fires.But remember that wheat goes to Indonesia, it goes to Vietnam, it goes to these countries with hundreds of millions of people dependent on it.And then they got to go scramble and find it elsewhere.
Now, on a global basis, there's always a bit of a give and a take.But in a year like this, when you have this much energy pumped into the atmosphere, you may not have the give and the take.And that's where things start to buckle.
All right.
So, yeah, it's just like an early warning sign.
I know I've given food warnings, food crisis warnings twice before on the show.You gave a really good one for Ukraine four years ago, and it turned out that that warning resulted in a negotiation to allow wheat to flow out of Ukraine that Russia, Ukraine and other folks made a specific carve out in their war to make sure that famine didn't spread.
And the fertilizer export was negotiated at the start of the war as well, which was critical.Yeah, for sure.
But I think you play a role in raising awareness for that.So I give you credit there, Freeberg.Mark, thanks for coming on the program.Sorry that at the end of the program, we all want to commit to that.here.But you know, we have Dr. Doom, and he always loves to end the show.
There he is.
Do you want to wrap with an upbeat anthropic?
Avengers Doomsday, starring David Friedberg coming to the Marvel franchise in December.Yes, you thought Robert Downey Jr. was playing him.It's actually Friedberg.Here's your meme.It's not Mark Benioff's first time here in the sas -pocalypse.There it is, first time.
He's like, I've been through this before, boys.I'm buying my stock back.Somebody cut that rope.
Yeah, absolutely.All right.Listen, I'll just lightning round this one.Anthropic has had enough of the shenanigans of the multi -tiered, multi -layered SPVs being sold to dentists for 10 % load -in fees.I think we all knew this day was coming.Since it's becoming the Wild West, they called out specific platforms.
And they said we're going to negate them Chamath, Tempest in a teapot or long overdue punishment for bad actors.
Love.Mark said it right.All these companies should go public and get evaluation and focus on the higher order bit.And all of these ticky tacky mechanisms that people can use to stay private longer need to get a bullet put in its head.And these SPVs are the worst the layered SPVs on SPVs on SPVs.By the way, and I will guarantee you this, once SpaceX goes public, once Anthropic goes public, once OpenAI goes public, you're going to see a litany of these lawsuits back and forth between the purveyors of these SPVs.
They should not be allowed.they should be all negated if possible.You can't now you can't unbreak the egg.So I guess you just have to call it what it is. I hope every company adopts this.And I hope as a result, these companies go public soon.and they rationalize their equity structure faster.
I think it's the right thing to do.So I like the fact that anthropic just say, scratch.
Yeah, well, it's not disgraced.Yeah, I just I just think a lot.
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Get started freeYeah, no, well, you're gonna have a lot of people that are going to be very upset once this SpaceX thing comes up, because inevitably, because it happened in Uber, somebody gets screwed in a layered SPV somewhere that they didn't know.And they're gonna be like, what happened?
Read the fine print, you're getting double carry, and you paid 10 % on the load in fee, and you paid a price 10 % over what the last round was.So it's a recipe for disaster, the fine recipe for disaster recipe for disaster.Hey, Mark, great job.Thanks so much.Yeah, come back anytime.You were great.
Hey, you're Pete.There's a we have a fan question here.This is a fan question that came in written by your PR department.They want to know, when you do your charity work, or your innovation as a founder, are you worse?You know, at this stage in your career, you're known for both of these things.Are you more Steve Jobs or more Lorraine Powell right now?
Your PR department works very, very deeply on that question.
The best decision I ever made, the best.When I started Salesforce, we put 1 % of our equity 1 % of our profit and 1 % of all of our employees' time into a foundation.Today, we've done more than 10 million hours of volunteerism.We've given away more than a billion dollars in grants.And we run over 50 ,000 nonprofits for free on our platform.That's just Salesforce.
Every company should do this.It's amazing.Pledge1percent .org, that's my advertisement for the show.Everybody should jump on the 1 -1 -1 platform.Best decision I ever made 27 years ago.
Irrespective, I've obviously done a huge amount of personal philanthropy to five hospitals, all those things.
You did one that was really, I think, personal.Susan Wojcicki.died of cancer.
And you're going to get me crying.Let's not go there.This is my best friend, bestie, my bestie.She was a special person.She's a star.The best.
She was the best.
Just I mean, I'm not kidding.
You're I'm not going to tell the audience what was so unique about Susan.
Tell them it's a good time to do a remembrance.
She, this was one of the great people on the planet, incredible woman, mother of five amazing children, and two amazing sisters, great family.Everybody knows Anne, her sister, her sister Janet at UCSF.Sorry, my eyes are tearing up.I'll just tell you that, you know, she contracted a very rare form of cancer, passed away too young, a couple years ago now.And she was on our board.She was one of the great people of all time.
I'm so grateful that her family is focusing on building a new foundation to go after this rare cancer.We're backing it.I think everybody should.Look, everyone should try to be a Susan.She was one of the absolute greats.And I have an altar in my office.
When you come to see me, you'll see what the photos of her and me and I think about her every single day.day.And my heart just stays with her, her husband, Dennis, all the children, the sisters, the whole Wojcicki family.Amazing.And one of the great institutions in Silicon Valley.We're lucky to have the whole family.
Yeah, she was fantastic.Well said.Rest in peace, Susan Wojcicki.Thank you.
All right.We'll see you all next time on the Allianz Podcast.
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Get started freeLove you, boys.
See you guys.Aloha.Bye -bye.
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