Podcast Alpha

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Podcast Alpha

Podcast Alpha

@PodcastAlphaX

Signal. Not noise. Forensic breakdowns of the world’s most influential podcasts. Substack - https://t.co/1GNcZMJIWU DM to remove clips

United States Tham gia Nisan 2026
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Podcast Alpha
Podcast Alpha@PodcastAlphaX·
The market said AI scaling would stop working. @sama bet against it at YC. Then again at OpenAI. Both times, the market was wrong. His career principle: when something works at small scale and no one has tested 10x, that is almost always worth attempting. He ran large YC batches when smart people said focus on 10. He scaled AI models when top researchers said gains were uninteresting. The market systematically underweights scale bets because they break things visibly. That is not evidence the thesis is wrong. What this means for where to look next: podcastalpha.substack.com/p/sto-altman-2… Source: Stanford CS153 Frontier Systems - youtube.com/watch?v=F_7M4H…
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Podcast Alpha
Podcast Alpha@PodcastAlphaX·
If you are underwriting the OpenAI IPO, @jvisserlabs has a specific prediction to price in. He would be shocked if Sam Altman is still running OpenAI in 12 months. He frames it as both voluntary and board-driven. He cites an unnamed personal incident. He notes nobody really likes Altman even though people like the product. This is pure conviction with no insider evidence. It is also coming from someone with a track record on macro calls before consensus caught up. If Altman departure is even a 20% probability, it belongs in the underwriting thesis as a named risk - not a footnote. The full model war analysis, including the leadership risk: podcastalpha.substack.com/p/jordi-visser… Source: The Pomp Podcast - youtube.com/watch?v=gAqXcG…
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Podcast Alpha
Podcast Alpha@PodcastAlphaX·
If you hold $MRVL, Coherent, or Lumentum, this one changes a risk input. China controls indium phosphate - the mineral in every data center's optical networking. They restricted it earlier this year, similar to the rare earth playbook. @jvisserlabs on The Pomp Podcast: Coherent's CEO went to China with Trump during the Xi state visit. The CEO is not taking that trip for tourism. The implication: US-China trade negotiations now affect data center deployment timelines directly - not just chip access. A stall in talks is a build constraint no one is pricing into optical networking names. Full minerals bottleneck analysis: podcastalpha.substack.com/p/jordi-visser… Source: The Pomp Podcast - youtube.com/watch?v=gAqXcG…
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Podcast Alpha
Podcast Alpha@PodcastAlphaX·
The frontier model is not the product. The harness is. @AravSrinivas, Perplexity CEO, on @twentyminutevc: "Without the harness, you don't necessarily capture and convert the intrinsic intelligence in the model into valuable output tokens. If you're literally just a reseller of model tokens, you have no business." This is the argument against every frontier lab's investor deck. The entity that produces the most valuable output per unit of energy wins - not the entity with the best model. Perplexity's metric for who wins: token value per watt per user. If that framing is right, the AI value capture trade looks nothing like the 2024 consensus. Full argument: podcastalpha.substack.com/p/aravind-srin… Source: 20VC with Harry Stebbings - youtube.com/watch?v=OxFyVc…
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Podcast Alpha
Podcast Alpha@PodcastAlphaX·
BlackRock's iBit went from $0 to the most successful new Bitcoin product in history. The template works. Michael Saylor (@saylor) at BTC Prague 2026: products that wrap Bitcoin for a specific capital pool, without requiring the buyer to understand Bitcoin, are how you convert the other 99.9% of global capital. The aluminum/airplane analogy he used: you do not sell aluminum by preaching material properties. You build an airplane. A billion people buy tickets without ever thinking about the aluminum inside. Every ticket is an aluminum purchase. STRC and iBit are the first two airplanes. @saylor tracks 1,400 companies building the next ones. The map is almost entirely empty. The product builders win the next phase, not the advocates. Who is building what, and where - full breakdown: podcastalpha.substack.com/p/btcprague-sa… Source: BTC Prague 2026 - youtube.com/watch?v=r2X04I…
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Podcast Alpha
Podcast Alpha@PodcastAlphaX·
$350 billion in stablecoins pay their holders zero yield. That is not a feature. It is a product gap. @saylor's thesis at BTC Prague: a yield-bearing Bitcoin-backed dollar coin paying 6-8% makes every existing stablecoin economically obsolete while competing directly with money market funds and T-bills. The mechanism that makes it achievable: digital credit. STRC's 11.5% yield structure, now at $11-12B in assets, provides the yield engine for a Bitcoin-backed stablecoin. The infrastructure did not exist 12 months ago. If you hold positions in traditional money market providers or stablecoin issuers, this is the competition entering your market. Not theoretical. The yield mechanism is live. Full breakdown of the four product layers replacing conventional assets: podcastalpha.substack.com/p/btcprague-sa… Source: BTC Prague 2026 - youtube.com/watch?v=r2X04I…
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Podcast Alpha
Podcast Alpha@PodcastAlphaX·
xAI charges $50B per gigawatt. Neoclouds charge $17-25B. Gavin Baker @GavinSBaker of Atreides Management told @johncoogan and @jordihays on @tbpn that Mars is not the SpaceX bull case. Altimeter's research shows xAI monetizes compute at $50B per gigawatt on the Google deal - 2-3x what any neocloud competitor charges. Baker stayed long through the IPO. His 12-month model doesn't track rocket launches. It tracks gigawatt additions. xAI also ordered roughly 20% of NVIDIA's Ruben production. Ruben is easier to deploy than Blackwell. Each new gigawatt at that pricing premium is a significant revenue event. Model gigawatts, not launch cadence. That's the trade. Full breakdown of Baker's near-term SpaceX case: podcastalpha.substack.com/p/gavin-baker-… Source: TBPN - youtube.com/watch?v=PW5n3Z…
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Podcast Alpha
Podcast Alpha@PodcastAlphaX·
Mid-to-high single-digit pre-tax returns on capital. That's what neo cloud economics actually show. On iConnections, Jim Chanos explains the CoreWeave and Nebius business model in one sentence: they buy GPUs from Nvidia and rent them to AI companies. The accounting looks like equipment leasing. The returns look like equipment leasing. The problem: these stocks don't trade like equipment leasing. They trade like tech companies - at multiples above the GPU suppliers who control their entire cost structure and supply allocation. Chanos: a middleman should never trade at a premium to the company that controls its supply. Right now, the market has it backwards. The full data center short thesis: podcastalpha.substack.com/p/episode-summ… Source: iConnections - youtube.com/watch?v=MYm33z…
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Podcast Alpha
Podcast Alpha@PodcastAlphaX·
If you are watching the Clarity Act as a crypto-industry protection bill, you are watching the wrong signal. Carlos Domingo (@carlosdomingo), Securitize CEO, on @scottmelker: the bill matters most to banks and asset managers, not crypto-native firms. An institution managing $12 trillion cannot authorize a 0.01% balance sheet exposure without 100% legal cover - regardless of how much they want the position. That is not risk aversion. That is legal reality. Crypto companies have built through years of regulatory uncertainty. Banks have not. When the Clarity Act passes, the institutions that move first are not the ones already active in crypto. They are the ones that have been waiting for permission. The institutional on-chain activity that follows will move faster than most market participants expect. Full breakdown: podcastalpha.substack.com/p/wolf-domingo… Source: The Wolf Of All Streets - youtube.com/watch?v=plzdjZ…
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Podcast Alpha
Podcast Alpha@PodcastAlphaX·
Risks are from top and bottom of the stack - not from direct competitors of HBM or other memory makers. Top of the stack are - algorithm changes or memory usage pattern changes can shift demand so HBM usage is highly efficient and utilization drops. Leading to reduced need for the memory chips. HBM willnot go away. Bottom of the stack - new material or manufacturing innovations can drive production with same chip capacity leading to oversupply of memory.
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Nils | Momentum Core Satellite
Gute Einordnung: Die Memory-Nachfrage durch agentic AI wird von vielen noch unterschätzt – ähnlich wie früher bei anderen Commodities. Genau deshalb bleibt $MU bei mir regelbasiert als Satellit investiert. Die Momentum-Regel hat die strukturelle Stärke früh erfasst. HBM bleibt ein klarer Engpass im AI-Stack. Wie siehst du das Risiko, dass der Markt diese Nachfrage schon zu stark eingepreist hat?
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Podcast Alpha
Podcast Alpha@PodcastAlphaX·
Micron $MU went from $65 to $700+ because the market missed exponential memory demand in the agentic AI world. @jvisserlabs on The Pomp Podcast: the same misread is happening in commodities right now. Silver, copper, and energy are the physical layer that AI cannot exist without - terrestrial or orbital. Capital does not move them out of the ground faster than geology allows. The market is not looking at them because there is no narrative and no 52-week high. That is precisely when the setup forms. He still considers Micron cheap. His framework: when demand is exponential and supply is geological, price will follow. The full commodity positioning thesis inside AI infrastructure: podcastalpha.substack.com/p/jordi-visser… Source: The Pomp Podcast - youtube.com/watch?v=gAqXcG…
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Podcast Alpha
Podcast Alpha@PodcastAlphaX·
2026 equity issuance is on pace to break 1999, 2000, and 2021 - combined. Jim Chanos on iConnections: Wall Street has its own printing press. When it runs at full capacity, new supply eventually overwhelms buyer demand. He's watched this play out twice. Early 2021: $3 billion in SPACs per night, equal to the entire US savings rate. Most stocks peaked H1 2021 and sold off through 2022. The SpaceX IPO, Google secondaries, and a near-nightly pipeline of large deals is the 2026 version. Chanos's historical read: a major IPO wave has never been good for the broader market. Maybe this time is different. He does not think so. The full IPO wave framework and what it signals for the market top: podcastalpha.substack.com/p/episode-summ… Source: iConnections - youtube.com/watch?v=MYm33z…
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Podcast Alpha
Podcast Alpha@PodcastAlphaX·
"Safety-first" is usually just marketing. Anthropic has receipts that it isn't. @darioamodei built Mythos - a cybersecurity model capable of hacking critical infrastructure. He didn't release it publicly. He called it "enormous commercial cost" on camera, under direct questioning. Not a PR statement. A CEO voluntarily conceding safety cost real money. That's what separates a costly signal from a cheap one. Price the difference into how you think about the IPO integrity premium. Full breakdown of Anthropic's three real-world safety tests: podcastalpha.substack.com/p/inside-anthr… Source: Bloomberg Originals - The Circuit with Emily Chang - youtube.com/watch?v=v1wZwx…
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Podcast Alpha
Podcast Alpha@PodcastAlphaX·
Marks set one condition for selling Oaktree to Brookfield. Flatt honored it for seven years. Howard Marks, Oaktree co-chairman on @Barrons: no insertion into the investment process. No commercial override. The Oaktree brand survives intact. That was the deal. Seven years of integration testing - not inertia. Verification that decentralization is real and not a promise that dissolves under pressure. The payoff: Brookfield's capital lets Oaktree co-invest more heavily alongside clients. Stronger manager-client alignment. More skin in the game at scale. For allocators who use both platforms: the structural separation held. That is what the seven-year test was for. What that separation means for how you use each platform: podcastalpha.substack.com/p/bar-marks-in… Source: At Barron's - youtube.com/watch?v=ZPpcUU…
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Podcast Alpha
Podcast Alpha@PodcastAlphaX·
US energy equities: priced for Democratic regulatory risk every four years. That pricing assumption may be breaking. Mike Wirth on @BloombergLive: Democrats are now talking about energy affordability and reliability. His most specific evidence is California's governor's race. A Democratic candidate is openly discussing oil drilling restoration in a state where the prior Democratic governor actively discouraged Chevron customers. People vote with the lights on. Wirth said it. The California data point is real. If affordability replaces climate as the default Democratic lens, the regulatory risk premium on US energy equities compresses across cycles, not just in Republican ones. That compression has a long runway and an early tell. The full Wirth interview: podcastalpha.substack.com/p/mike-wirth-h… Source: Bloomberg Energy Security Executive Briefing 2026 - youtube.com/watch?v=sZT3VA…
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Podcast Alpha
Podcast Alpha@PodcastAlphaX·
If you have private credit in your portfolio, Marks's $1.7T observation is the key risk input. Howard Marks, Oaktree co-chairman via @Barrons, frames direct lending in historical terms: zero to $1.7 trillion in 15 years, built entirely in conditions that never included a genuine credit contraction. The two forces that drove growth: declining rates made leveraged investments attractive, and a persistently benign environment meant investors never experienced being unable to exit when they needed to. Now rates are higher for longer. The illiquidity premium that looked like free money is the price of being locked in when conditions change. $1.7 trillion in assets. First real test pending. Framework: podcastalpha.substack.com/p/bar-marks-in… Source: At Barron's - youtube.com/watch?v=ZPpcUU…
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Podcast Alpha
Podcast Alpha@PodcastAlphaX·
Why is @AnthropicAI suddenly saying humans matter - after years of job-displacement warnings? Matan Grinberg of Factory gave @HarryStebbings the answer on @twentyminutevc: Anthropic needs its IPO retail investors to trust them. The workers it threatened to replace are the same people it wants to buy the stock. The pattern is structural: companies that raised from outside capital made the job-displacement case because it created urgency for institutional investors. Companies that didn't need outside capital - Meta, DeepMind - never made the case. Incentives explain the messaging better than philosophy does. If you are pricing Anthropic's IPO, that tension is something to resolve before you size the position. Full analysis: podcastalpha.substack.com/p/20vc-matan-g… Source: 20VC with Harry Stebbings - youtube.com/watch?v=lgo_Qb…
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Podcast Alpha
Podcast Alpha@PodcastAlphaX·
No AI layer captures pricing power permanently. Not the model labs. Not the apps. Not the infrastructure. Matan Grinberg of Factory told @HarryStebbings on @twentyminutevc: the whole stack is a three-way commoditization war. Model labs commoditize the application layer. App companies commoditize the models. Infrastructure companies want to own everything. His framing: the org-chart meme where every Microsoft division points guns at every other. That is an accurate picture of what is happening in AI today. Value rotates across layers over multi-year windows. Where it sits right now - and how to position around the rotation - is the thesis the full piece unpacks. Full breakdown: podcastalpha.substack.com/p/20vc-matan-g… Source: 20VC with Harry Stebbings - youtube.com/watch?v=lgo_Qb…
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Podcast Alpha
Podcast Alpha@PodcastAlphaX·
Acquiring an open-source tool is not a revenue move. It is a default-setting move. $NET bought Void Zero (Vite, 130M weekly downloads) and is keeping it open source. Matthew Prince on @tbpn: the goal is to make Cloudflare Workers the obvious deployment destination for any Vite project - before the developer consciously chooses a platform. That is a different kind of moat. Not switching costs. Default gravity. The developer never decides to use NET infrastructure. It is already there when they deploy. Vite + Workers + edge inference = a full-stack agent platform no one has named yet. The acquisition thesis: podcastalpha.substack.com/p/matthew-prin… Source: The Bear Paw Network (TBPN) - youtube.com/watch?v=HWheP8…
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Podcast Alpha
Podcast Alpha@PodcastAlphaX·
The largest marketplace on earth will not be visible to humans. @RaoulGMI has been building toward this claim for years. AI agents transacting with AI agents at machine speed - buying data, selling compute, exchanging processed information. It's already live: API calls and MCP (the protocol that lets AI tools call other AI tools) are the first layer. Google is already in the quadrillions of tokens per year. @jvisserlabs frames the unlock: two-thirds of $400 trillion in global assets sit dormant and illiquid. Tokenize them, velocity rises, and GDP grows - with no new economic activity required. The public market doesn't price this yet. That gap may be the longest trade of the decade. Full thesis: podcastalpha.substack.com/p/raoul-pal-an… Source: Raoul Pal The Journey Man - youtube.com/watch?v=jGNmWF…
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Podcast Alpha
Podcast Alpha@PodcastAlphaX·
If you're building an Anthropic IPO model, Bloomberg just gave you the three tests that determine whether the safety premium holds. @darioamodei walked through each on camera. Did they actually sacrifice commercial upside for safety? (Mythos: yes, at "enormous commercial cost.") Did they hold a line against government power? (Pentagon ban: yes, with lawsuits to prove it.) Are they complicit in the harms they warned about? (Iran: "we don't know exactly how the models were used.") Each answer is real, not clean, and worth pricing independently. Full breakdown - the documentary, the signals, and what they mean for the IPO: podcastalpha.substack.com/p/inside-anthr… Source: Bloomberg Originals - The Circuit with Emily Chang - youtube.com/watch?v=v1wZwx…
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