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All three hosts in one room: a macro tour through oil, gas and a new Fed chair, then a deep dive on NVIDIA at $5 trillion, the software stack’s capex problem, and the Anthropic export-control fight that turns proprietary data into the next moat.
The Cashflow Memo
Key Takeaways
* Macro (Hunt’s exhibits): Oil sits ~$80 heading toward $70 (vs $60 on its way to $50 when the Iran event started), with backwardation compressing to under $10; natural gas averages ~$3.50 across both ’26 and ’27. New Fed chair Kevin Warsh signaled aggressive balance-sheet runoff (~$750B/yr toward a target near $1.5T) and a possible bias to hike — a lot of paper for the market to absorb against a ~$1.5T deficit.
* NVIDIA at ~$5T is turning into a value stock: free cash flow on a $200-250B run-rate by year-end (vs a record ~$160B). The bull case has shifted from the chip cycle to TAM expansion — server → rack → row → full reference data-center design, an x86-killer CPU, and direct buildouts for cash-rich non-hyperscalers like Eli Lilly (~$20B FCF), Exxon/Chevron, and Citadel — though AI capex at ~3% of GDP raises a law-of-large-numbers ceiling on incremental budget growth.
* Software dispersion is about capex risk: Salesforce screens cheap at ~18x FCF because it owns its own data centers and will likely have to deploy GPUs (capex rising from ~zero), while ServiceNow trades >50x renting AWS; Snowflake stays cash-light on heavy SBC but saw NRR re-accelerate on ~30% revenue growth as its AI product (chat over enterprise data) ramps.
* The Anthropic throughline: a cyber-capable model released to ~40 entities (JPMorgan et al.), Amazon/Jassy lobbying Washington for export controls, the guardrailed Fable version jailbroken within two days, and distillation risk from Tencent/Alibaba (~1 year behind). The hosts read Jassy’s move as AWS self-protection, not public spirit — AWS was almost certainly one of the 40.
* AI economics as a J-curve, proprietary data as the new moat: OpenAI/Anthropic head public with no profits against massive compute rent; the tell to watch is the end of the subsidized-token era (Uber/Lyft tripled fares post-IPO once VC subsidies ended). Microsoft blocked Anthropic’s models internally after a ToS change let Anthropic capture and train on user prompts (i.e., customer code) — a breach of trust that makes walled-off hosting (Citadel on Google) the real battleground.
Show Notes
[00:00] Intro & this week’s Cash Flow Memo Mike sets up the episode and points listeners to the memo at telltales.us.
[00:26] Exhibits A/B/C — Oil, Gas & the Fed Hunt’s five minutes: oil $80 toward $70 with backwardation under $10, nat gas ~$3.50 across ’26-’27, and new Fed chair Kevin Warsh signaling balance-sheet runoff and a possible hike bias.
[04:37] Apple & Snap — foldables, camera AirPods, AR glasses Apple’s underwhelming conference (a 2028 foldable, AirPods with cameras) versus Snap’s see-through AR glasses and why Meta’s audio-only glasses are the best product today.
[07:30] Why Amazon called Washington on Anthropic Anthropic’s cyber-capable model, the limited release to ~40 entities, and the hosts’ read that Jassy’s export-control push is AWS self-protection.
[10:53] Jailbreaking the guardrails & the China distillation risk The Fable guardrailed version cracked in two days, and why Tencent/Alibaba stay roughly a year behind.
[13:46] What is SpaceX worth? — AI’s J-curve to profits SpaceX public and +30%, OpenAI/Anthropic going public with no profits, and how to think about revenue growth that costs enormous compute.
[15:44] The end of the subsidized-token era Jason’s Uber/Lyft analogy: cheap VC-funded tokens today, tripled rates after the IPO.
[16:11] Microsoft’s per-seat agent bet Why fixed price-per-seat plus usage upside is the right model for a slow-moving enterprise base, and the job-displacement question.
[18:54] Software dispersion — Salesforce, ServiceNow & Snowflake Salesforce at 18x FCF and a coming GPU capex bill, ServiceNow renting AWS, and Snowflake’s NRR re-acceleration.
[21:34] Oracle, Broadcom & NVIDIA at $5 trillion Oracle and Broadcom’s pivots, then NVIDIA as a record-FCF value stock.
[24:45] NVIDIA’s next TAM — racks, rows, x86 & selling direct From server to full reference data-center design, going after the x86 CPU market, and building private clouds for enterprises.
[25:53] Healthcare & the cash-flow hunt — Lilly, Exxon/Chevron, Citadel NVIDIA chasing free-cash-flow-rich customers: Lilly’s walled-off AI buildout, oil majors, and Citadel’s Google deal.
[29:48] Proprietary data as the new moat Microsoft blocks Anthropic’s models after a ToS change to capture and train on customer prompts — a breach of trust.
[32:31] Next week & sign-off A teed-up deep dive on protecting proprietary data: defense versus offense, and whether anything can truly be walled off.
If these conversations have earned a place in your week, send the show to one person who’d genuinely enjoy it. Download the Cash Flow Memo at telltales.us.
Cashtags
$AAPL $AMZN $AVGO $BABA $CRM $CVX $GOOGL $JPM $LLY $LYFT $META $MSFT $NOW $NVDA $ORCL $SNAP $SNOW $TSM $UBER $XOM
This post and the information herein are intended for informational purposes only. The views expressed herein are the author’s alone and do not constitute an offer to sell, or a recommendation to purchase, or a solicitation of an offer to buy, any security, nor a recommendation for any investment product or service. While certain information contained herein has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable, neither the author nor any of his employers or their affiliates have independently verified this information, and its accuracy and completeness cannot be guaranteed. Accordingly, no representation or warranty, express or implied, is made as to, and no reliance should be placed on, the fairness, accuracy, timeliness or completeness of this information. The author and all employers and their affiliated persons assume no liability for this information and no obligation to update the information or analysis contained herein in the future.
By by Top Mark Capital5
66 ratings
All three hosts in one room: a macro tour through oil, gas and a new Fed chair, then a deep dive on NVIDIA at $5 trillion, the software stack’s capex problem, and the Anthropic export-control fight that turns proprietary data into the next moat.
The Cashflow Memo
Key Takeaways
* Macro (Hunt’s exhibits): Oil sits ~$80 heading toward $70 (vs $60 on its way to $50 when the Iran event started), with backwardation compressing to under $10; natural gas averages ~$3.50 across both ’26 and ’27. New Fed chair Kevin Warsh signaled aggressive balance-sheet runoff (~$750B/yr toward a target near $1.5T) and a possible bias to hike — a lot of paper for the market to absorb against a ~$1.5T deficit.
* NVIDIA at ~$5T is turning into a value stock: free cash flow on a $200-250B run-rate by year-end (vs a record ~$160B). The bull case has shifted from the chip cycle to TAM expansion — server → rack → row → full reference data-center design, an x86-killer CPU, and direct buildouts for cash-rich non-hyperscalers like Eli Lilly (~$20B FCF), Exxon/Chevron, and Citadel — though AI capex at ~3% of GDP raises a law-of-large-numbers ceiling on incremental budget growth.
* Software dispersion is about capex risk: Salesforce screens cheap at ~18x FCF because it owns its own data centers and will likely have to deploy GPUs (capex rising from ~zero), while ServiceNow trades >50x renting AWS; Snowflake stays cash-light on heavy SBC but saw NRR re-accelerate on ~30% revenue growth as its AI product (chat over enterprise data) ramps.
* The Anthropic throughline: a cyber-capable model released to ~40 entities (JPMorgan et al.), Amazon/Jassy lobbying Washington for export controls, the guardrailed Fable version jailbroken within two days, and distillation risk from Tencent/Alibaba (~1 year behind). The hosts read Jassy’s move as AWS self-protection, not public spirit — AWS was almost certainly one of the 40.
* AI economics as a J-curve, proprietary data as the new moat: OpenAI/Anthropic head public with no profits against massive compute rent; the tell to watch is the end of the subsidized-token era (Uber/Lyft tripled fares post-IPO once VC subsidies ended). Microsoft blocked Anthropic’s models internally after a ToS change let Anthropic capture and train on user prompts (i.e., customer code) — a breach of trust that makes walled-off hosting (Citadel on Google) the real battleground.
Show Notes
[00:00] Intro & this week’s Cash Flow Memo Mike sets up the episode and points listeners to the memo at telltales.us.
[00:26] Exhibits A/B/C — Oil, Gas & the Fed Hunt’s five minutes: oil $80 toward $70 with backwardation under $10, nat gas ~$3.50 across ’26-’27, and new Fed chair Kevin Warsh signaling balance-sheet runoff and a possible hike bias.
[04:37] Apple & Snap — foldables, camera AirPods, AR glasses Apple’s underwhelming conference (a 2028 foldable, AirPods with cameras) versus Snap’s see-through AR glasses and why Meta’s audio-only glasses are the best product today.
[07:30] Why Amazon called Washington on Anthropic Anthropic’s cyber-capable model, the limited release to ~40 entities, and the hosts’ read that Jassy’s export-control push is AWS self-protection.
[10:53] Jailbreaking the guardrails & the China distillation risk The Fable guardrailed version cracked in two days, and why Tencent/Alibaba stay roughly a year behind.
[13:46] What is SpaceX worth? — AI’s J-curve to profits SpaceX public and +30%, OpenAI/Anthropic going public with no profits, and how to think about revenue growth that costs enormous compute.
[15:44] The end of the subsidized-token era Jason’s Uber/Lyft analogy: cheap VC-funded tokens today, tripled rates after the IPO.
[16:11] Microsoft’s per-seat agent bet Why fixed price-per-seat plus usage upside is the right model for a slow-moving enterprise base, and the job-displacement question.
[18:54] Software dispersion — Salesforce, ServiceNow & Snowflake Salesforce at 18x FCF and a coming GPU capex bill, ServiceNow renting AWS, and Snowflake’s NRR re-acceleration.
[21:34] Oracle, Broadcom & NVIDIA at $5 trillion Oracle and Broadcom’s pivots, then NVIDIA as a record-FCF value stock.
[24:45] NVIDIA’s next TAM — racks, rows, x86 & selling direct From server to full reference data-center design, going after the x86 CPU market, and building private clouds for enterprises.
[25:53] Healthcare & the cash-flow hunt — Lilly, Exxon/Chevron, Citadel NVIDIA chasing free-cash-flow-rich customers: Lilly’s walled-off AI buildout, oil majors, and Citadel’s Google deal.
[29:48] Proprietary data as the new moat Microsoft blocks Anthropic’s models after a ToS change to capture and train on customer prompts — a breach of trust.
[32:31] Next week & sign-off A teed-up deep dive on protecting proprietary data: defense versus offense, and whether anything can truly be walled off.
If these conversations have earned a place in your week, send the show to one person who’d genuinely enjoy it. Download the Cash Flow Memo at telltales.us.
Cashtags
$AAPL $AMZN $AVGO $BABA $CRM $CVX $GOOGL $JPM $LLY $LYFT $META $MSFT $NOW $NVDA $ORCL $SNAP $SNOW $TSM $UBER $XOM
This post and the information herein are intended for informational purposes only. The views expressed herein are the author’s alone and do not constitute an offer to sell, or a recommendation to purchase, or a solicitation of an offer to buy, any security, nor a recommendation for any investment product or service. While certain information contained herein has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable, neither the author nor any of his employers or their affiliates have independently verified this information, and its accuracy and completeness cannot be guaranteed. Accordingly, no representation or warranty, express or implied, is made as to, and no reliance should be placed on, the fairness, accuracy, timeliness or completeness of this information. The author and all employers and their affiliated persons assume no liability for this information and no obligation to update the information or analysis contained herein in the future.