Search for a command to run...

Timestamps are as accurate as they can be but may be slightly off. We encourage you to listen to the full context.
In this episode of the All-In Podcast, hosts Jason Calacanis, Chamath Palihapitiya, and David Friedberg dive deep into market dynamics, housing affordability, and global technology trends. (00:00) The discussion begins with Michael Burry's controversial AI shorts and media miscommunication around his Palantir position, then transitions to America's housing affordability crisis where the average first-time homebuyer age has jumped from 33 to 40 in just four years. (20:31) The hosts explore practical solutions including portable mortgages and building more housing supply, with Jason providing concrete examples from Austin's successful housing market. The conversation also covers the H-1B visa debate following Trump's recent Fox News comments, solar storm risks to global infrastructure, and the growing trend of wealthy Americans seeking international alternatives amid concerns over "the great confiscation."
Angel investor, entrepreneur, and host of the All-In Podcast and This Week in Startups. Former founder of multiple companies including Weblogs Inc. (sold to AOL) and Mahalo, Jason is known for his early investments in companies like Uber, Robinhood, and Thumbtack. He's a prominent voice in the startup ecosystem and has been involved in over 300+ angel investments.
Founder and CEO of Social Capital, former Facebook executive, and SPAC pioneer. Previously served as VP of User Growth at Facebook during its explosive growth phase and has been involved in multiple successful public offerings through his SPAC vehicles. Known for his contrarian investment philosophy and outspoken commentary on technology and markets.
Founder and CEO of The Production Board, former founder of Climate Corporation (sold to Monsanto for $1.1 billion), and founder of Metromile. Known as "Friedberg" on the podcast, he brings deep expertise in agriculture technology, climate science, and sustainable innovation to the discussions.
The CNBC misreporting of Michael Burry's Palantir short position - confusing $9 million for $900 million - highlights a dangerous trend in financial media. (00:56) Chamath suggests this could either stem from complete financial illiteracy or intentional market manipulation by reporters who understand options mechanics but know their editors don't. This creates artificial market movements that shouldn't exist, as a $9 million position would be unremarkable while a $900 million position grabs headlines and moves markets. The incident demonstrates how media incompetence can amplify market volatility and potentially benefit short positions through manufactured fear, uncertainty, and doubt.
The housing crisis stems from artificial supply constraints rather than insufficient government support. (24:57) Friedberg explains how rent control in LA (limiting increases to 90% of CPI with 1-4% caps) creates disincentives for new construction and building upgrades. Meanwhile, Jason demonstrates that Austin's housing market works because they build units - rent has dropped 20% in three years due to supply increases. (30:13) When you build luxury units, wealthy renters upgrade from older apartments, creating a filtering effect that benefits everyone. The solution is removing regulatory barriers to construction, not adding more government subsidies that inflate prices further.
The current H-1B system suffers from gaming by large corporations that file hundreds of thousands of applications to maximize their chances in the lottery. (37:56) Chamath proposes two key reforms: preventing mass application abuse by requiring specific job matches, and introducing a $100,000 fee to signal genuine economic need. Jason suggests taking this further by auctioning half the visas to the highest bidders, turning what's currently a cost center into a profit center. This would generate revenue for vocational retraining while ensuring only the most valuable positions get filled, naturally separating legitimate high-skill needs from wage arbitrage schemes.
Solar storms pose existential risks to our electron-based civilization that few people understand. (43:36) Friedberg explains how the recent G5-level geomagnetic storm created radiation levels 1,000 times normal background levels, forcing flight path changes over polar regions. These charged particle streams can short-circuit electronic equipment permanently, potentially wiping out GPS, communications, and power grids in a Carrington-level event. (49:46) While Earth's magnetic field provides protection, we remain vulnerable during solar maximum periods in the 11-year cycle. The transition to photonic and quantum computing systems would eliminate these risks, but current copper-wire and semiconductor infrastructure remains highly susceptible.
Smart professionals are leveraging geographic arbitrage rather than fighting expensive coastal markets. (29:53) Jason demonstrates how a couple making $130,000 in Austin can keep housing costs to 10-15% of income and buy a new home for $500,000, while the same people in San Francisco would struggle with $5,000+ monthly rent and never build equity. (51:54) The emerging trend includes international diversification, with tech professionals establishing backup plans in Japan, Singapore, and Malaysia through golden visas and network states. This isn't just about tax optimization - it's about positioning for long-term wealth preservation and lifestyle optionality in an uncertain political environment.