Exploring the frontiers of Technology and AI
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The most famous AI bull on Wall Street just called the top on the entire AI market.
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Leopold Ashenbrennan, the 24-year-old ex-open-air researcher who got fired,
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started a fund, and turned $250 million into $14 billion in less than two years is back.
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And his latest investment portfolio is not what you'd expect.
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He's gone completely bearish the entire stock market. He has taken out an $8
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billion short across the biggest names in AI. We're talking about NVIDIA,
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AMD, Broadcom, and the entire semiconductor supply chain.
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But all is not lost. He also revealed where the next biggest AI investment is
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going to be. It's in power and memory.
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He's doubled down on his investments in data centers, as well as three brand
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new companies. We're going to get into all of this, but first,
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let's talk about the biggest changes.
Ejaaz:
EJ, the largest company in the world, NVIDIA, the poster child for the AI revolution,
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the stock that has made so many investors so wealthy over this run,
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is now in the crosshairs. This is the largest short position that Leopold has.
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And it's not obviously apparent when you're looking at the filing,
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because when you look at the portfolio of what he's most short,
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we see VanEck Semiconductor ETF is number one.
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And just beneath that is NVIDIA. Now, currently he has $1.5 billion of short exposure to NVIDIA.
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And this comes through the form of a put.
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And those who are not familiar with it, a put basically just gives Leopold the
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option, but not the obligation to sell the underlying asset at a predetermined
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price. So he basically buys the right to sell NVIDIA stock at a higher price should it go lower.
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Now, there is a $2 billion position sitting just above this,
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which is a stock that most people may not have heard before.
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The ticker is SMH, and it goes by the name of VanEck Semiconductor ETF.
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Within this ETF, I was looking through the holdings, and the largest holding
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is actually NVIDIA at 20%, which means if you combine the top two shorts,
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you get a $1.9 billion short position on NVIDIA.
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And this is probably disappointing to a lot because everyone seems to believe
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that NVIDIA is on a one-way trajectory north, but Leopold seems to think otherwise.
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In addition to this position, we have Broadcom, Oracle, AMD,
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Micron, ASML, Intel, Corning,
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These are all short positions now. And what you'll know is that,
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I mean, Intel, one of the ones that he made his bread and butter on,
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Intel made him more money than any stock in, I think, the portfolio's history.
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He is now short on Intel. And these are all new positions. He's short on Broadcom.
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For those not familiar, Broadcom is the company that is responsible mostly for
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building out OpenAI's project Stargate.
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That means he's essentially pulling out a short position on OpenAI and Project Stargate.
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So there's some concerning names here if you've been bullish on the AI market
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for a while, even something like Corning, the optical glass company.
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This has been a big kind of beta play after the semiconductor trade.
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And he's pulled up a big short position on this. So there's a lot of shorts
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that are coming on the market.
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There's, like you said, $8 billion of short exposure. That's 40 times more than
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the fund was worth just 18 months ago. So this is a huge position he's taking.
Josh:
Yeah, it's extremely aggressive. And it becomes more apparent when you realize
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that his entire fund thesis was based on a 64-page essay that he wrote called
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Situational Awareness.
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And the core thesis, if you remember, Josh, is a big bet on semiconductors,
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specifically that compute flops will increase on multiple orders of magnitude over the next decade.
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This explicit swing trade that he's made, this $8 billion short position,
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is effectively a bet against that now. So it either indicates one of two things.
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One, he thinks that the market is too crowded for this particular trade,
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and so he's expecting there to be short-term volatility in downwards pressure on price.
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Or he just believes something's broken in his thesis and he hasn't spoken about what that might be.
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Now, not all is lost. If you look on the right side of this chart that we're
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showing, there is a bull book as well.
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So he does hold still massive positions in stock equity positions for specific
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types of companies, as well as taking on call options as well.
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So let's look at what he's positive on.
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So CallWeave, he's maintained his position. And CallWeave has been one of his
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biggest data center or neocloud investments for the longest time,
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since the start of the fund, actually.
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And he's taken levied bets on CoreWeave in many different ways through his own
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private investment or acquisition of Core Scientific, which helps CoreWeave do its thing.
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So for those of you who aren't familiar, CoreWeave is basically a neocloud that
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creates and sets up GPUs and provides them to the biggest AI labs.
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They've signed multi-billion dollar deals with the likes of Meta,
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Anthropic, and the likes of that. And then if you look just below that, Bloom Energy.
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This was his biggest swing trade, our fan favorite of last quarter.
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Bloom Energy creates these portable gas turbines, which you can kind of like
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fly into wherever your data center is and generate energy.
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Of course, one of the biggest constraints for AI data centers right now is that
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you have all these fancy GPUs, but you can't power them up because the energy
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grid that is currently here in the US does not work. It's not really effective.
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So you need to kind of have supplemental resources.
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That is Bloom Energy. He hasn't exited this position, but he did trim off a
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cool $1 billion. dollars.
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And to be honest with you, I don't blame him. His position went from,
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I believe, $800 million to about $2.5 billion potentially over the last three months.
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So it makes sense that he's taking some money off, but he's still maintaining
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about just over a billion dollars worth of Bloom Energy stock specifically.
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And then if you look below this, he's increased a bunch of different companies.
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CleanSpark, he's increased, Riot Platforms, Applied Digital, and Iron.
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Now, if these names seem a little familiar, that's because they play in the
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same NeoCloud market as CoreWeave itself.
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So he's really doubling down on data centers and NeoCloud specifically.
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He's observed that the likes of Anthropic and OpenAI are releasing newer models
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and that compute scaling laws are just continually increasing.
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So his big bet is that GPUs is
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still needed, but right now it's a delivery function that they're facing.
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And these companies solve that versus the actual GPU manufacturer,
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which is why I guess he's short NVIDIA, Broadcom, and all the likes. So interesting to see.
Ejaaz:
Yeah, this is a new narrative trade that we have forming, where we're kind of
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moving away from the semiconductors into more of that infrastructure,
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into the power, into the data centers, into the memory.
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And he's very much doubling down what we saw last quarter, but doing so in a
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way where he's also getting short exposure to the companies that he thinks might not do so well.
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Now, it's important to note that this 13F filing is a snapshot.
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It is a single moment in time that is taken based on the previous quarter's
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trades. So the trades that are in this 13F filing, the holdings in there,
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are from January 1st to March 31st. This is basically where he ended the quarter.
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And Leopold has been right pretty much every single time.
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And we've seen his portfolio grow from $220 million to that,
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what, $13.7 billion in notional value currently.
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But there are some things that he might be getting wrong. When I go back to
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that shortlist and I think about the companies that he shorted,
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AMD is one of those large shorts.
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AMD is up 74% in the last month. And he shorted it.
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So he picked perhaps one of the most expensive moments to bet against this rotation,
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but nonetheless, he thinks that the rotation is happening.
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So is it a timing thing? Is it a general thesis thing?
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Another one that was surprising is ASML.
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I mean, as far as I'm concerned, ASML is still the only company that can do lithography.
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It's a 100% monopoly on these chips, and he's shorting that.
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So clearly, the thesis really is strongly presented towards memory and power
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and infrastructure over the semiconductors. And I think it's just noteworthy to mention.
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Now, we have these two charts, the book by the numbers that shows the stock
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only positions as well as the top options positions.
Ejaaz:
Maybe we want to walk through that briefly just to do a little trace over of
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what he currently holds and where.
Josh:
Well, I think what actually might be more useful, Josh, is if we walk through
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like what his thesis might be for all of these positions, right?
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Because these are pretty aggressive, right?
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You've got like, why is he doing this? We've got like a massive short position, $9 billion.
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That is not a small like number. And then we have this like small,
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weirdly bullish position. but we're unsure because like they're just a bunch
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of near clouds and power companies which we haven't really heard of like are
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these good are these bad so here's my take.
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He's doing a bi-directional trade here for his thesis, and that is he is short silicon.
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So he thinks it's an overcrowded trade. He thinks GPU designers such as NVIDIA,
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Broadcom, as well as maybe manufacturers of the chips themselves,
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TSMC, they're all like overcrowded trades right here. I don't think he thinks
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he's bearish those things.
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I just think that he thinks that they're overvalued right now.
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And then conversely, he's very long power. He understands data centers and GPUs,
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unlike nobody else in this entire market.
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He has researched these things for goodness knows how long. And so he,
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of all people, will know where that next constraint is.
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And obviously, he thinks it's power, energy.
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He doesn't think there's enough energy or ways to get this power and energy to the GPUs itself.
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So maybe it's not that he's explicitly bearish on the semis specifically,
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but he thinks that his money is better spent chasing that next constraint.
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And he's expressed that as not just power, by the way, it's memory as well.
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He doubled down on SanDisk as well, which, by the way, is up like 40,000% over the last year.
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So you would think that if any trade was overcrowded, it would be SanDisk.
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But obviously, he sees something that we haven't.
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SanDisk is famous for creating a specific type of memory known as NAND flash.
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Which allows you to kind of store temporary memory for AI models.
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Like when you talk to an AI model, it needs to store temporary memory about
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you so that he can remember stuff and recall stuff when you're conversing with it.
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That is explicitly something that SanDisk provides.
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So I think that he isn't necessarily bearish, the GPUs.
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He's just short-term thinking that it's an overcrowded trade and his money's
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better spent on things like power and memory.
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And now I'm wondering, is he bullish or bearish on the market as a whole?
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Because I mean, this is the first time in the fund's history where the short
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side of the book is actually larger than the long side in terms of notional
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value and exposure that they have.
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And this is a really stark difference for someone who's been really up only and long only.
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And when I was first evaluating this, I was wondering, well,
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is this just a hedge? Is this protecting his investments because they've gone up so much?
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Maybe he's just locking it in and he's kind of protecting his downside.
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But if it was a hedge, you'd really
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only expect kind of smaller positions sized to offset the long book.
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And we saw this last quarter where he had some hedge positions,
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but it was mostly a hedge.
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It wasn't a directional bet. But now that the puts are larger than the longs,
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it's kind of a directional bet on the market going down.
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So it seems like this weird pseudo thing where he expects the AA market to perhaps go down.
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Even as a result of that, some of these things, the memory, the infrastructure,
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the energy will continue to go up. And that's the bet.
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So I wonder how that impacts the broader market as a whole, because it puts
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him in this like weird juxtaposed position where the market goes down,
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but yet some positions will not be going down. Does that make sense?
Josh:
We actually have some proving points around that, because I think you're touching
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on something which is basically uncertainty.
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He doesn't know whether in some cases he's right or whether the market will
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go up and down. and you see that with he's matched a bunch of his put positions
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with call positions as well aka.
Ejaaz:
This is a great chart yeah
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He's trading a bi-directional book so what that
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means is uh in typical kind of like hedge fund manner mannerisms if you don't
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know where the market is going to go whether it's going to go up or down you
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hedge positions and you can cream off profit from the premiums that you make
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between these positions so let's say you take out i'm just making this up like
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a $10 million put position on one company,
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you can take out the equivalent on the other side and then like just earn from
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the margins between those different positions.
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If the price goes up or the price goes down, you still get paid premiums,
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right? It's known as like a collar trade specifically.
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So he's done that on four companies, the biggest one being Micron.
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And if he's bullish Sandisk memory, I don't understand how you would also be
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bearish from a thesis level on Micron, which is like the biggest US play.
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You know, Leopold is a purist, I believe.
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And so he's very bullish American stocks. That's why he made his biggest amount
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of money from the Intel trade. He's doing it with Boom Energy, NVIDIA and the like.
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So it would seem weird that he's like taking out a short position on Micron.
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But the way I understand it is he's doing this as a flat trade.
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He doesn't know which way it's going to go.
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He does believe the market is overcrowded. He does believe long term it's going
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to do very well. But he can't play around with, you know, a crazy billion dollar swing trade.
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So he's decided to hedge the market. And I think that's pretty smart, actually.
Ejaaz:
Yeah. And I guess you could kind of reduce this down into four key claims to this new thesis.
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This is the new Leopold thesis. The first one being that the bottleneck has
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moved from chips to electrons. And we have that.
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We kind of know that a lot of chips are available.
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The problem is figuring out where to plug them into.
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And we see that with the most recent deal that was announced between SpaceX
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and Anthropic, where Anthropic is so desperate for compute, they're willing
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to partner up with their rivals in order to get it. That is not a matter of
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not having enough chips.
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It's a matter of not having the correct infrastructure to deploy these chips at scale.
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The second claim is that chip valuations are priced for a world that doesn't really exist anymore.
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That ETF, the SMH ETF that we mentioned earlier, it's up 66% year to date.
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Meanwhile, Intel is up 200%. So while the market is pricing in a world where
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every name and semis benefits equally from this AI demand, Leopold is taking
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account of that. He's saying, that's not how this works.
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There are winners and there are losers. And the early winners are the ones that
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are going to keep on winning. And he's going to continue to pursue that as far as he could take it.
Josh:
I just noticed something crazy as well, Josh.
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If we go back to these long positions that he's taken.
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So he's maintained his core position and he's doubled down on a bunch of neoclouts, right?
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These neoclouts, these companies stand to benefit from the exact thesis that
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he's trading with this new portfolio.
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So let's say that semi stocks go down, right?
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Their stocks would also go down, right? Because they own the GPUs.
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But CoreWeave and these other companies own something else that NVIDIA currently
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doesn't have, which is...
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The power access. Remember, he invested in a bunch of these NeoClouds,
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not just because they can run GPUs.
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That's something that any data set it could do. You just need capital to do it.
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But more importantly, they have the licenses and access to existing energy grid
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infrastructure that can serve these GPUs.
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So he's playing both sides of the trade pretty intelligently through just a
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single company that can express both his interest in the power trade,
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but also his bearishness on the semis trade as well.
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Like he can have a win-win. And that makes sense because that's the companies
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that or type of companies that he's doubled down on.
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It's exactly these data center neocards that have access to power.
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It's a pretty smart trade.
Ejaaz:
And he's also doubled down on this fun little Easter egg on where you can actually
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get this power and get this grid capability.
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And those are Bitcoin mining companies. We talked about this briefly last quarter,
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but he's going big on them again.
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And this year, US Bitcoin miners are going to approximately put 30 gigawatts
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of interconnected power capacity online.
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That's roughly, I mean, for comparison, that's roughly the total amount of Microsoft,
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Google, Amazon, and Meta combined in what they announced.
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So this is a tremendous amount of data centers that they're putting online that
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everyone's going to need.
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And because people are kind of pivoting from Bitcoin to AI, they already have
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a lot of the critical infrastructure. They have the power.
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They have the data center's size. They have it built out.
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All they need to do is swap in new chips that are built for AI,
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and they're on their way. And that is a really unique, interesting case that
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I don't think I've seen a lot of people explore other than Leopold.
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It's just taking the Bitcoin pivot, the crypto pivot. A lot of Bitcoin miners,
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they're there to follow the money.
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And when the money's in AI and they could put 30 gigawatts online in a single
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year, that's a huge amount.
Josh:
Yeah, when I zoom out from this, right, everything we've discussed so far,
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there's like a clear view that he's taking here, which is he's doubling down
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on physical infrastructure.
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He doesn't believe that can get commoditized.
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What he's saying, and this is a big statement, is he thinks the design layer
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of semiconductors, the chip side of things, is overcrowded.
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Now, may I remind everyone, NVIDIA doesn't actually make the chips.
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They're a design company. They create the design and they send the blueprints
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to this company in Taiwan called TSMC, and they actually manufacture and build
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the chips for them, right?
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Broadcom does the same thing. Intel creates CPUs and GPUs. AMD as well.
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These are two companies that he's short on this recent filing.
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But again they create the designs for these things
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they don't actually build the thing now intel and amd's intention is
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to eventually do this but they haven't got the necessary factories or infrastructure
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to be able to do this that's their plan in the next like five years so he's
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making an explicit bet which is like the design space for chips is overcrowded
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but the hardware infrastructure layer is where all the money is going and one
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thing that they need as a substrate more than anything is power and so he's making that bet.
Ejaaz:
Yeah. Okay. So we have this one section that talks about where the trade breaks,
Ejaaz:
where this thing can start to break down.
Ejaaz:
Now I mentioned earlier, AMD, he was short on, it's up 75%. That's got a sting.
Ejaaz:
Is this correct? And we have a few things listed here on where it breaks.
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The first being around Nvidia, the largest short position through these two
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holdings that he has of $1.9 billion.
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And it could break in the sense that Nvidia's moat is actually stickier than he thinks.
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So currently he's betting on the fact that Nvidia is going
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to become kind of commoditized as it relates to chips likely that
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other companies like google and amazon through their tpus or
Ejaaz:
their trinium chips are going to slowly start to chip away at
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the nvidia monopoly and the reality is
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that that may not be entirely true when you
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see a lot of the purchase orders coming in when you look at the the margins that
Ejaaz:
they have around 80 on these gpus a lot
Ejaaz:
of the volume is still coming into nvidia and
Ejaaz:
a lot of that is due to this thing called kudo which is the platform lock-in
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it's the software stack that runs on top of this hardware and
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it's very custom it's very kind of niche and
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the people that can build for it and there's a world in which that becomes a
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pretty strong molt a moat in which people who are investing
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in nvidia they don't want to leave people who are building
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up these data centers it's just easy because they built it before and building
Ejaaz:
custom infra for all these new chips is going to be complicated is that
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true or not we don't know anthropic is kind
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of taking the route of it not being true they've partnered
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with amazon for um for tranium chips they
Ejaaz:
partnered with google for tpus and they're using nvidia but
Ejaaz:
then you see a company like xai and colossus their entire data
Ejaaz:
center is purely nvidia gpus and just workhorses and they're taking the new
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blackwell chips and they're building them up as fast as they can and they're
Ejaaz:
very much leaning into that coup de moat so it's something that we're gonna
Ejaaz:
have to see this is one of the thesis that that might play out but it could
Ejaaz:
be a little difficult and i mean again nvidia is the most valuable company in
Ejaaz:
the world this is a big company to start to fall apart now
Josh:
Yeah, I mean, we have NVIDIA GPUs that are six to eight years old that are being
Josh:
rented out a year in advance of their contract expiring, right? And people are paying.
Ejaaz:
For more value than they were years ago. So the old H100s from years ago are
Ejaaz:
actually worth more today than they were two years ago. That's unbelievable.
Josh:
I mean, Leopold's trading stock kind of reminds me of another trader that we
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spoke about a few months ago that got burned pretty badly, Michael Burry,
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who went incredibly perish on NVIDIA right at the point that the stock absolutely set.
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So I hope the same thing doesn't happen to Leopold.
Josh:
But to kind of like also pick apart at some of the other kind of like gaps in
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his potential thinking or risks here is Leopold runs a hedge fund, right?
Josh:
Situational awareness fund isn't a VC fund, which is typically like long only.
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It's actually kind of rare to see a hedge fund go super long as aggressively as he did, right?
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So the point being is what you see or what we're speaking about in the 13F filings,
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which is something that he has to submit, his trade breakdown,
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his investment portfolio, every three months, may not be the latest and greatest
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trades that he's currently made.
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In fact, today, as we're speaking about this, after he's filed the report at
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the end of March, he could have changed all these trades.
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He could have done completely something different, right? Another thing I think about is...
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When did he take these put positions? When did he take these specific positions?
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They could have been at the start of the year.
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And like, you know, the fund could have suffered pretty badly.
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Now, the obvious evidence to prove that this isn't the case is the fact that
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the value of his fund went from $5.5 billion three months ago to $14 billion.
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So the point is, he's made money. He's taken off money from the top.
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And it's important to point out that these put positions, these call positions,
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these are kind of like levered bets.
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So when we talk about an $8 billion put position in total,
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he's typically probably only put up like a billion dollars
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worth of actual capital right now he's also paying
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a lot of fees and premiums on that so it's like a short-term trade
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again i must say like he might have existed some of these trades already so
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if you're reading this if you listen to this and you're thinking oh my god i
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need to change my entire stock uh portfolio remember you may not necessarily
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be trading like him you're not doing short-term or high frequency trades you
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might be in it for the long term and that's a very different type of kind of
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like approach and maybe josh this
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is a good time to talk about what the retail audience can do about this and
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like what the actual thesis might be and where you might want to invest your money going forward.
Ejaaz:
Yeah. So we actually have some data to back this up through Polymarket,
Ejaaz:
which shows us that things might not be as bad as we're perceiving them because
Ejaaz:
again, retail is different than what he's doing.
Ejaaz:
I mean, Leopold is a trader. If you're a retail investor, things are a little bit different.
Ejaaz:
If you think that the AI bubble is going to pop and that's what this implies,
Ejaaz:
is according to Polymarket, that's sadly mistaken.
Ejaaz:
There's only a 24% chance of the AI bubble bursting by December 31st of this year.
Ejaaz:
Very low probability. There's also a second market that I wanted to highlight,
Ejaaz:
which shows the largest company by the end of May this month in a few more weeks.
Ejaaz:
Now, currently, NVIDIA is the largest company in the world, and they're pretty
Ejaaz:
closely followed by Google.
Ejaaz:
The reality is, though, according to Polymarket, there's still a 93% chance
Ejaaz:
that it stays this way, that NVIDIA is going to continue to take the crown throughout
Ejaaz:
the course of this month, And I think that's a testament to...
Ejaaz:
A little bit less volatility than he may be implying with these earnings and with this 13F filing.
Ejaaz:
So again, it's important to note that this is last quarter's news.
Ejaaz:
The tides have turned pretty considerably.
Ejaaz:
We don't know what's happened over the last couple of months that he's been
Ejaaz:
trading, but I think it's a good testament to the fact that things aren't quite
Ejaaz:
as bad as it may seem on the surface.
Ejaaz:
He's just applying a new strategy that kind of alters the trajectory of this portfolio.
Ejaaz:
And thank you to Polymarket for showcasing these charts. So yeah,
Ejaaz:
I guess we should get back to the question of how do you as a retail investor
Ejaaz:
adjust to this what is your strategy how do you navigate this are you bullish
Ejaaz:
are you bearish you just do you have any ideas on like kind of your your gut
Ejaaz:
take on how you personally plan to position yourself or how people should consider
Ejaaz:
positioning themselves around this new information so
Josh:
I'll give you two answers if i was someone who is kind of like new into this
Josh:
market um and is just reading leopold's 13f filing and are basing their trading
Josh:
decisions off of that, you would be tentative.
Josh:
This isn't a time to go crazy and go all in on a single stock.
Josh:
I would never advise that anyway.
Josh:
But the point is, I think he's being conservative for a reason,
Josh:
which is the market on average has probably run up a couple hundred percent over the last two years.
Josh:
And that in a regular stock market is absolutely huge. If you look at the major
Josh:
increases in the S&P 500, it has primarily been through five top companies in
Josh:
the Mac 7, which have all invested extremely heavily and aggressively in AI.
Josh:
And that money flows downstream into a lot of these companies that we've spoken about already.
Josh:
So he may just be suggesting that it is an overcrowded trade,
Josh:
so just be cautious and careful. That being said,
Josh:
I always have a bullish cap on, Josh. And where my mind goes to right now is
Josh:
in the power and energy side of things.
Josh:
Now, I'm aligned with Leopold on the Bloom Energies and the data centers side of things.
Josh:
In fact, I think it's genius that even if you invest in some of these top neocloud
Josh:
providers who are signing, by the way, multi-billion dollar deals with Anthropic
Josh:
and Meta, you still get to benefit if the semiconductor space goes down because
Josh:
they own the power capacity.
Josh:
That's something new that I've learned from this that I'm feeling extremely bullish on, right?
Josh:
So that's something that I might pop my money in, right? equally so,
Josh:
I'm looking at some of his short positions on the likes of companies such as
Josh:
Corning, which is also a bottleneck, right? It's on the optic side of things.
Josh:
And NVIDIA just signed a massive multi-billion dollar partnership with them,
Josh:
and he's short on them. So he's kind of picking and choosing which bottleneck that he wants.
Josh:
I'm kind of more bullish on power at this point, but I don't know if he's completely
Josh:
nailed it when it comes to some of these optical fiber networks and some of
Josh:
the other short positions that he has. I don't know. What about you?
Ejaaz:
Yeah, I think that, well, the general trend through all of this is,
Ejaaz:
for me at least personally, the way I think about navigating AI is that the
Ejaaz:
two most powerful, two most important things
Ejaaz:
our energy and the physical movement of these atoms, I think the physical world
Ejaaz:
is really difficult and complicated and moves much slower than the world of software.
Ejaaz:
And if anyone has a unique advantage around manufacturing, around actual construction,
Ejaaz:
around gaining the permits to put these things online, that is a huge structural advantage.
Ejaaz:
The second one is the energy. Everyone is desperate for energy.
Ejaaz:
Nobody wants to be the bad guy in kind of absorbing the data centers,
Ejaaz:
using data centers to absorb energy from normal people where they go into cities
Ejaaz:
and they kind of pull off the grid and energy prices go higher.
Ejaaz:
Everyone wants these two things. They want to be able to physically manufacture
Ejaaz:
things in a way that is cheap, easy, fast, efficient.
Ejaaz:
They want to be able to have abundance of energy. If there's a company that
Ejaaz:
has anything that slightly resembles a monopoly in either of these two categories, it's a huge win.
Ejaaz:
And it's probably something to invest in because they're durable.
Ejaaz:
On the chip stack, there's a lot of competition.
Ejaaz:
There are a lot of people competing directly with NVIDIA. We see it with Amazon and their chips.
Ejaaz:
We see it with Google and their TPUs. And there's a lot of other companies like
Ejaaz:
Cerebris, we mentioned last week, had their IPO and they have this brand new novel architecture.
Ejaaz:
There's a lot of competition there that might flatten margins a little bit.
Ejaaz:
Granted, they're still incredibly high, but there is a chance.
Ejaaz:
Now, in terms of what to look for moving forward, because these are a few things
Ejaaz:
that I'm going to be interested in, kind of fact-checking Leopold,
Ejaaz:
seeing if he's actually doing as well as he performs.
Ejaaz:
NVIDIA has their earnings coming up pretty soon, May 28th.
Ejaaz:
And if they guide above $78 billion dollars for the next quarter there's a pretty
Ejaaz:
good chance those puts get get crushed um they might not be doing too well so
Ejaaz:
we have these earnings reports that are coming towards the end of this month
Ejaaz:
we have amd has an analyst day in 2026 we have some pretty serious bloom energy
Ejaaz:
deployment milestones that we're going to look into
Ejaaz:
Those are going to be kind of checkpoints that we could then cross-check against
Ejaaz:
Leopold's portfolio to see if it is accurate.
Ejaaz:
But I think thematically, the
Ejaaz:
idea of energy and infrastructure are two that are not going to go away.
Ejaaz:
And when I'm investing and when I'm considering allocating my portfolio,
Ejaaz:
those are the two categories that I'm probably most interested in.
Josh:
Well, I probably then want to do a little bit of a victory lap for us because
Josh:
about a week and a half ago, maybe two weeks, you know, I don't want to brag too much.
Josh:
We did an episode that broke down where some of the top AI investment trades
Josh:
might potentially be in the future.
Josh:
And we went down this infrastructure stack, right?
Josh:
And we walked all the way from model labs flowing down to hyperscalers and AI
Josh:
platforms, such as the Mac 7 that I mentioned earlier, as well as these GPU semiconductors.
Josh:
And the point that we made on this episode was that the money is going to flow
Josh:
from these GPUs and semiconductor trades, so like the likes of NVIDIA,
Josh:
AMD, Broadcom, these are all companies, which by the way, he took out the massive shorts on,
Josh:
all the way down into the memory and storage layer and the power and infrastructure layer.
Josh:
And these are the companies where, you know, overall, he's going pretty bullish
Josh:
on, right? He's expressing it through NeoCloud's data centers.
Josh:
He's expressing it through SanDisk and specific kind of like memory verticals
Josh:
and power infrastructure companies.
Josh:
But the point is, we potentially may have called this earlier on,
Josh:
and we're just following along at Limitless where these different constraints
Josh:
and bottlenecks are, because it's very important to understand that AI isn't a one-to-one trade.
Josh:
You can certainly buy and hold a company such as media and maybe you're better
Josh:
off over the next decade I think directionally that's probably going to be true
Josh:
but you'd be remiss if you assume that it was just park your money in one sector and
Josh:
you're good the point is the money is flowing through this into AI is like kind
Josh:
of like a car you kind of like it ingests gasoline and like it uses it across
Josh:
all its entire infrastructure and then comes out the other end as exhaust fumes
Josh:
we are currently I don't know,
Josh:
two-thirds of the way through this car, Josh? I don't know.
Ejaaz:
We're making our way down the stack.
Josh:
We're making our way down the stack. And I just want to point out that,
Josh:
like, this isn't just, like, a thesis that we have, like, pulled out of thin air.
Josh:
It's based on actual factual numbers.
Josh:
Like, for example, memory prices are absolutely sky high right now.
Josh:
It's gone up on an average of 3% to 500% across all the top memory manufacturers
Josh:
over the last nine months.
Josh:
And if you look at any of their capacity, they're booked out for the next year,
Josh:
actually, until the end of 2027. So it's like a year and a half at this point.
Josh:
So these are very real numbers. Now, whether more supply will come out,
Josh:
whether more power generation kind of pops out of thin air, we don't know.
Josh:
But directionally, the bet that he's making is in line with our thesis that
Josh:
we have on the list. So that's pretty cool to see.
Ejaaz:
And if you've been tuned in, yeah, you're up to date. You know all these things
Ejaaz:
already. You're familiar with the AI stack. If you haven't seen this episode,
Ejaaz:
we released it last week. It performed really well.
Ejaaz:
So I would highly recommend going to check it out. We're going to continue covering
Ejaaz:
this, monitoring the situation. We had the Cerebrus IPO.
Ejaaz:
We now have Leopold's new filings. There's a lot of new coverage to talk about.
Ejaaz:
We have some funny memes as well. This one from Nick Carter that is using Leopold
Ejaaz:
as a joke that says, I don't want to play with you anymore.
Ejaaz:
He's kind of throwing away the AI industry because he's sick of them.
Ejaaz:
And this is a good one. The last thing Intel investors see before they panic
Ejaaz:
sell. Poor guy, man. Intel bulls. Intel bulls. He turned on you.
Josh:
I'm an Intel bull. He turned on me.
Ejaaz:
He made billions of dollars and then he slammed the cell phone and he said,
Ejaaz:
I'm done. I don't want you anymore. more.
Ejaaz:
So we'll see. We'll be following it. I mean, over the next couple of weeks in
Ejaaz:
particular, as we see these earnings reports roll out, as we start to see the
Ejaaz:
market reaction to this filing and the new narratives wind shift over to memory,
Ejaaz:
over to infrastructure and energy.
Ejaaz:
We'll just continue to monitor the situation. So thank you so much for joining.
Ejaaz:
I think that's a wrap on the 13F.
Ejaaz:
We kind of now are fully up to date. We know the new positions.
Ejaaz:
We know what he pulls on. We know what he's bearish on.
Ejaaz:
He just, what's the prompt for everyone? How should they kind of think about
Ejaaz:
navigating this as they leave this episode and go sit there and stare at their
Ejaaz:
portfolio and ponder what changes to be made? Do I need to react based on Leopold?
Josh:
So here's how I feel at the end of this episode, Josh.
Josh:
And here's what I'm going to prompt people to do. How I feel is I'm the biggest
Josh:
fan of Leopold. Don't get me wrong. I think he might have some stuff wrong here.
Josh:
So what I want people to point out in the comments is what part of Leopold's
Josh:
thesis do you disagree with?
Josh:
And let us know why you disagree with it. Because I think, like,
Josh:
I'm not going to speak on behalf of Josh, but I feel like a little unsettled,
Josh:
and I'm unsure whether Leopold knows what he's doing.
Josh:
In fact, I think given his trading breakdown, I think he doesn't know what he's
Josh:
doing either. He's playing it safe.
Josh:
So tell us what we're missing, and maybe Limitless will guess it or preempt
Josh:
it before it actually happens.
Ejaaz:
If you had to pick one thing that he's missing or he gets wrong,
Ejaaz:
do you have any top choice?
Josh:
NVIDIA. Why are you?
Ejaaz:
I was going to say the same thing.
Josh:
If NVIDIA goes down, all your stocks go down, dude. Like that's the way I see it. So yeah, NVIDIA.
Ejaaz:
Yeah, 1.9 billion short on NVIDIA seems a little suspect. I'm a little confused
Ejaaz:
what's going on there, especially because those margins are high.
Ejaaz:
Everyone needs Blackwell. We're just starting to get the early versions of those
Ejaaz:
Blackwell models. And if you'll remember, the first one that came out of it was Mythos.
Josh:
Yes.
Ejaaz:
Clearly, there's like a tremendous amount
Ejaaz:
of value stored up in the NVIDIA infrastructure stack in the software.
Ejaaz:
It is up only. It is the most valuable company in the world.
Ejaaz:
And to not continue to bet on the winners seems like a losing strategy.
Ejaaz:
But as always, we'll see.
Ejaaz:
We'll check in. We will stay up to date and we will keep all of you updated
Ejaaz:
in the loop every day as we follow this journey along the frontier of AI investing
Ejaaz:
and all of the crazy technologies.
Ejaaz:
So thank you all so much for watching. If you enjoyed this episode,
Ejaaz:
don't forget to share with a friend.
Ejaaz:
Don't forget to leave a comment on YouTube. perhaps give us a thumbs up and
Ejaaz:
a five star review on your favorite podcast player
Ejaaz:
With that, we're done. That's a wrap. You're now up to speed on Leopold.
Ejaaz:
Yeah. Do with this information what you will.
Josh:
Not financial investment advice at all. Yeah. All right. See you guys.
Josh:
All right. We'll see you guys in the next one. Peace.