The Big Picture

The Stock Market Remains Undefeated

 

 

There have been many winners and losers over the past few months. Perhaps none have been revealed for having furious, unbridled power than the US equity markets. That’s right, it was not Carville’s Bond Market that made the White House cry “Uncle!” but rather, it was the US equities market.

Its naked power and abilities to inspire fear, panic, and even terror are unsurpassed. Bonds might drive the intellectual debate around policy, but it’s the equity markets that politicians pay closest attention to…

Allow me to share three historical examples:

October 2008: The month following Lehman Brothers’ September 2008 blowup, then Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke testified to the Committee on the Budget on Monday, October 20, 2008. He reminded the House members that the Federal Reserve’s charter was to maintain high employment and low inflation. The Fed, he reminded us,  was not authorized to manage the stability of the financial system or keep credit markets flowing and unfrozen; it was not the FOMC’s charge to address any of the myriad issues that had endangered the financial system’s functioning.

A fiery speech from someone (was it Ron or Rand Paul?) led to a vote against Bernanke’s funding and authority request. He would not be getting the tools necessary to unfreeze credit and keep the banking system operating.

Sayeth Mr. Market: “Hold My Beer.”

The sell-off began immediately after the vote;1 over the next five trading days, the S&P 500 fell 13.9%, the Nasdaq was right behind it at 13.5%, and the Russell 2000 crashed 18%. ALL IN ONE WEEK.

Congress reconvened and passed both the necessary authority and the dollars that the Fed chairman had requested. By November 4th, all of the losses had been made up and then some.

Don’t fix the credit markets, and put corporate revenue and payrolls at risk?

FAFO.

March 2020: The first hint I had that something was amiss occurred in February 2020. My sister and I were looking at assisted living facilities for my mom. “As long as I’m out here, why don’t we swing by Target to pick up a few things.” She was visiting the ‘burbs from the New York City apartment they moved to once the kids went off to college.

Target was out of hand sanitizer, many cleaning products, Lysol, and rubbing alcohol; they were completely sold out of bleach, and, of course, there wasn’t a single piece of toilet paper to be found. (Strange things were afoot at the Circle-K).

A few weeks later, Congress was debating the renaming of a Washington, D.C. library. The back-and-forth on C-SPAN was as tedious as it was unproductive. (Stalemate, nothing done.) It reminds one of the old joke, “Why are academic politics so vicious? Because the stakes are so low and the issues so unimportant.”

March 11, 2020, a day after the Congress critters couldn’t agree on renaming a library, it became apparent that this was no ordinary flu. There were numerous events throughout the day that were concerning, but once the NBA game between the Oklahoma City Thunder and the visiting Utah Jazz was cancelled — Jazz center Rudy Gobert had tested positive for COVID-19 — things got bad fast.

All hell broke loose the next day. This set the stage for the lockdowns to begin in earnest and tipped the global economy into shutdown mode.

Then came one of the fastest sell-offs of all time, a decline of 34% in just 17 trading days.

Congress, under then-President Trump (45), soon passed the CARES Act. It was the single largest fiscal stimulus at 10% of GDP since World War 2. This $2 trillion legislation was soon followed by the CARES Act 2 ($800 billion), also under Trump. Not long after President Biden (46) was elected, he passed the CARES Act 3, another trillion-dollar bill.2

That fiscal stimulus turned what looked like another GFC crash into a robust recovery and rally once the government acted. Markets rose 69% from their March 2020 pandemic lows to the end of 2020; they gained another 28% in 2021.

Feel free to debate renaming libraries or taking down statues all you want, but close the global economy in a way that dramatically slashes corporate revenue and profits without addressing the impact of what you’ve done?

Good luck, Chuck!

April 2025: President Trump campaigned on instituting tariffs; instituted a variety of tariffs in his first term; called himself “Tariff Man,” and said, “Tariffs are the most beautiful word in the dictionary.”

So why was the market so surprised by the April 2nd “Liberation Day” announcements? Two reasons: First was the sheer size and scope of the tariffs. But don’t overlook the opaque and ham-fisted communications strategy that accompanied them.

Prior tariffs had been in a 10-20% range; 100% tariffs applied to 182 countries worldwide – and Antarctica! – It was simply a bridge too far. Markets are a future discounting mechanism for corporate revenues and profits, and the market calculated that a giant U.S. consumer VAT tax would reduce corporate revenues 10 to 20%, and profits 20 to 30% (or more).

Hence, the markets were priced at least 20% too high. A week later, the S&P 500 was down 12.4% from its March highs; the Nasdaq 100 sold off 13.6%, while the small-cap Russell 2000 was hit the hardest -14.1%.

This sent Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent into the Oval Office, pleading with POTUS to pause the tariffs for 90 days. If not, “You’ll be the next Hoover – or worse.”

The recovery began immediately. Five weeks later, all the post-liberation day losses had been recovered.

~~~

While everybody has been focused on the size of the tariffs, let’s discuss the communication strategy. A “compare & contrast” with how the Federal Reserve communicates changes in interest rate policy is instructive.

The Federal Reserve announces new policy leanings three to six months in advance. They discuss it each meeting, notifying stock and bond markets that a change is coming. They review the various data series they’re relying on (PCE vs CPI), they discuss changes in the economy, and we see the dot plot shift during a few meetings prior.

Then, a month or so before, the seven members of the Board of Governors and the twelve Federal Reserve district Presidents fan out to speak in various public forums. They speak at the Petroleum Club of Houston and the Economic Club in New York; they present at Stanford and Yale and everywhere in between.

Say what you will about the Federal Reserve, but they are transparent and informative and do not surprise markets.

Hell hath no fury like a market surprised.”

Look, the rules here are pretty straightforward:

Show respect to the collective insight of the market when it comes to setting prices, integrating risk factors, and summarizing the crowd’s collective psychology. Recognize that current equity prices reflect the probabilities of corporate revenues and profits a year or so out, a future discounting mechanism times some multiple, which itself is driven primarily (but not exclusively) by collective investor/crowd sentiment.

If you imagine yourself more powerful than Mr. Market, take just him on directly. Imagine yourself as smarter, more powerful, able to direct events with greater alacrity and influence.

Surprise the markets and watch the results. You will quickly learn who is the market’s bitch.

James Carville famously said, “I used to think that if there was reincarnation, I wanted to come back as the President or the Pope or as a .400 baseball hitter. But now I would want to come back as the bond market. You can intimidate everybody.”

Perhaps in his day, he was right.

But me?

When I die and am reincarnated, I want to come back as the U.S. equities markets…

The stock market remains undefeated.”

 

 

See also:
The Stock Market Remains Undefeated: AN Interview with Barry Ritholtz
Wall Street Breakfast
Seeking Alpha, May 11, 2025

 

Previously:
What Are the Best & Worst-Case Tariff Scenarios? (April 15, 2025)

The Consequences of Chaos (April 7, 2025)

7 Increasing Probabilities of Error (February 24, 2025)

Why Macro Forecasting Is So Hard Impossible (April 24, 2025)

 

 

__________

1. Some years later, Bernanke disclosed that he had sent his wife to the bank to withdraw as much cash as she could before the system crashed completely.

2. President Biden also drove several other important fiscal legislation – the Infrastructure Bill, Semiconductor Act, the Inflation Reduction Act, and others. These were primarily 10-year spending bills, reflecting his legislative priorities and/or attempt to Fight the spiking inflation caused by all three cares act fiscal stimulus. I don’t consider these a panic reaction to equity prices.

 

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10 Monday AM Reads

My back-to-work morning train WFH reads:

The Stealthy Lab Cooking Up Amazon’s Secret Sauce: The online giant bought a mysterious chip startup 10 years ago. It now looks like one of the smartest deals in tech history. (Wall Street Journal)

Warren Buffett Reveals He Stepped Down After Finally Feeling His Age: The legendary investor, 94, opens up about his decision to hand the top job to Greg Abel; ‘How do you know the day that you become old?’ (Wall Street Journal) see also  7 life lessons from Warren Buffett that have nothing to do with picking stocks: We all have the ability to emulate the Oracle of Omaha in the ways that really matter. (Marketwatch)

Tariffs Won’t Reindustrialize America. Here’s What Will: To revive manufacturing the US needs to borrow from China’s playbook. (Businessweek)

4 Fund Fee Trends to Watch in 2025: What to make of Vanguard’s low-cost stronghold, new but expensive ETFs, and more. Investors continue to pour money into low-cost ETFs, but new ETFs are by and large high-fee. (Morningstar.com)

Tipping Point: How America’s Gratuity System Got Out of Hand: From its shady roots to modern absurdities — why tipping culture in the U.S. needs a serious reckoning. (Scraps to Stacks)

The Old Model of Billionaire Philanthropy Is Ending: The new generation of Silicon Valley elite is far less interested in giving away its wealth. (Bloomberg) but see The Rise of the Selfish Plutocrats: Instead of pursuing philanthropy, many now seek to evade social responsibility. (The Atlantic)

AI is printing the rocket engine that could beat SpaceX at its own game: Leap 71 is developing AI to build rocket engines faster and cheaper than ever before. (Fast Company)

Harvard Paid $27 for a Copy of Magna Carta. Surprise! It’s an Original. Two British academics discovered that a “copy” of the medieval text, held in Harvard Law School’s library for 80 years, is one of seven originals dating from 1300. (New York Times)

Scientists in a race to discover why our Universe exists: The current theory of how the Universe came into being can’t explain the existence of the planets, stars and galaxies we see around us. Both teams are building detectors that study a sub-atomic particle called a neutrino in the hope of finding answers. (BBC)

The Five Days That Destroyed the Celtics’ Dynasty: The Boston Celtics suffered a shocking playoff loss to the New York Knicks. Now they face impossible questions about how to keep one of basketball’s best teams together. (Wall Street Journal) see also The Knicks Have Been Bad-Luck Losers This Entire Century. Monday Night, It All Changed. When the Knicks beat the Boston Celtics in a pivotal playoff game, it didn’t win them the series. But it hinted at a major transformation for one of the longest-suffering franchises in pro sports. (Wall Street Journal)

Be sure to check out our Master’s in Business with John Montgomery, founder and CEO of Bridgeway Capital.  The firm, which was founded in 1993, manages ~$5B in assets; they have become known for donating 50% of their annual company profits to non-profit organizations.

 

Oil Reserves and Oil Production

Source: Information Is Beautiful

 

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Admiral McRaven: 2014 Commencement Address



 

Let’s wrap up commencement season with one of the best of all time — remarks by Naval Adm. William H. McRaven, BJ ’77, ninth commander of U.S. Special Operations Command, Texas Exes Life Member, and Distinguished Alumnus.

 

University-Wide Commencement
The University of Texas at Austin, May 17, 2014.
(You Tube)

 

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10 Sunday Reads

Avert your eyes! My Sunday morning look at incompetency, corruption and policy failures:

This New Investing Idea Isn’t Right for Your Retirement Plan: Why don’t ‘alternative assets’ like private credit belong in your 401(k)? Let us count the ways. (WSJ)

Can Bill Ackman create a ‘modern-day’ Berkshire Hathaway? Hard-charging hedge fund boss faces steep hurdles in bid to emulate Warren Buffett. (Financial Times)

Rugpull: Crypto Is Still for Criming: Crypto has been used to scam naïve Trump loyalists. An investigative report by the Washington Post found that while a handful of large investors made a lot of money from the coin $Trump, tens of thousands of small investors, lured in by the Trump name, bought the coin near its peak and have seen most of their money vanish. (Paul Krugman)

Meta Battles an ‘Epidemic of Scams’ as Criminals Flood Instagram and Facebook: Fake puppies and phony offers of mouthwatering bargains are often seeded by overseas crime networks; employees say company is reluctant to impede its advertising juggernaut. (WSJ date says 2025, but this ain’t much different than 2015). (Wall Street Journal)

The Mess at Airports Is Part of a Larger Pattern: What’s behind the Newark-airport fiasco. (The Atlantic) see also Newark Flight Chaos Shows the Crisis Rocking Air Traffic Control Jobs: The path to alleviating a shortage of air traffic controllers runs through a training academy in Oklahoma City. (Bloomberg) see also Newark’s Air Traffic Control Staffing Crisis Is Dire. It’s Also Not Unique. Ninety-nine percent of the air traffic control facilities in the United States are operating below recommended staffing levels, a New York Times analysis has found. (New York Times) see also This Air-Traffic Controller Just Averted a Midair Collision. Now He’s Speaking Out. Jonathan Stewart says controllers didn’t walk off the job after recent FAA equipment outages; ‘I don’t want to be responsible for killing 400 people’. (Wall Street Journal)

UnitedHealth’s Collapse Has Nothing to Do With Luigi Mangione: The company’s stock tells a darker story about how American health care really works. (Slate)

Keep calm (but delete your nudes): the new rules for travelling to and from MAGA America: Many people have decided a trip to the US isn’t worth the risk after recent border detentions. But if you are going, what do you need to know? Immigration lawyers explain it all (WTF?!?). (The Guardian)

Trump’s Real Secretary of State: How the president’s friend and golfing partner Steve Witkoff got one of the hardest jobs on the planet. (The Atlantic) see also Trump radically remade the US food system in just 100 days: The people who grow and sell America’s food no longer trust the USDA. We made a timeline to show you what happened. (Grist)

The ‘R-word,’ embraced by Joe Rogan and Elon Musk, inches back into the mainstream: Many still consider the word a disability slur, and while its use has percolated in the comedy world for years, only recently has it — and discussion of its return — become more common. (NBC News)

Creepy: Why is Maga-land so obsessed with Kai Trump turning 18? Do you really need to ask? The birthday of Donald Trump’s granddaughter has been forced upon my consciousness because an awful lot of people are being weird about it. (The Guardian)

Be sure to check out our Master’s in Business with John Montgomery, founder and CEO of Bridgeway Capital.  The firm, which was founded in 1993, manages ~$5B in assets; they have become known for donating 50% of their annual company profits to non-profit organizations.


Half of American Households Hold 97.5% of the National Wealth


Source: Bloomberg

 

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~~~

To learn how these reads are assembled each day, please see this.

 

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10 Weekend Reads

The weekend is here! Pour yourself a mug of Colombia Tolima Los Brasiles Peaberry Organic coffee, grab a seat outside, and get ready for our longer-form weekend reads:

Microsoft’s CEO on How AI Will Remake Every Company, Including His: Nervous customers and a volatile partnership with OpenAI are complicating things for Satya Nadella and the world’s most valuable company. (Businessweek)

• Trump Blinked ‘Big Time’ on China Trade, Taking Worst Case Off Table: U.S. and China’s agreement to ratchet back retaliatory tariffs and hit a 90-day pause to talk trade sent markets soaring by taking the ugliest scenario—a messy and quick decoupling of the two economies—off the table. That doesn’t mean no damage has been done. (Barron’s) see also China Called Trump’s Bluff: There is a lesson here for anyone Trump threatens. (The Atlantic)

Across America, Big Cities Are Sinking. Here’s Why. A major reason is too much groundwater is being pumped out, new research shows, threatening buildings and infrastructure nationwide. (New York Times)

Trump’s Real Secretary of State: How the president’s friend and golfing partner Steve Witkoff got one of the hardest jobs on the planet (The Atlantic)

The Inside Story of Oculus Rift and How Virtual Reality Became Reality: Oculus has found a way to make a headset that does more than just hang a big screen in front of your face—it hacks your visual cortex. (Wired)

Intelligence Evolved at Least Twice in Vertebrate Animals: Complex neural circuits likely arose independently in birds and mammals, suggesting that vertebrates evolved intelligence multiple times. (Quanta)

9 Federally Funded Scientific Breakthroughs That Changed Everything: The U.S. is slashing funding for scientific research, after decades of deep investment. Here’s some of what those taxpayer dollars created. (New York Times)

Cartoon Network’s Last Gasp: The irreverent animation factory once cranked out hits, talent and profits. But with David Zaslav’s retreat from streaming kids programming, the future of the network is in question. (Businessweek)

How often do lead characters die in movies? I logged the fates of 27,000+ lead characters to uncover how death on screen has shifted by genre, decade, and cause. (Stephen Follows)

He Spent $12,495 to Be Gene Simmons’s Roadie (and Got More Than Expected): A father-son pair ponied up for the V.I.P. experience last week and got a glimpse behind the scenes of a rock ’n’ roll show, and into a notorious star’s heart. (New York Times)

Be sure to check out our Master’s in Business with John Montgomery, founder and CEO of Bridgeway Capital.  The firm, which was founded in 1993, manages ~$5B in assets; they have become known for donating 50% of their annual company profits to non-profit organizations.

 

Chances are that the stock you own is going to go down 50% at some point in the next five years

Source: @MebFaber

 

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~~~

To learn how these reads are assembled each day, please see this.

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MiB: John Montgomery, Bridgeway Capital Management

 

 

This week, I speak with John Montgomery, CEO, Founder and Portfolio Manager of Bridgeway Capital Management. His responsibilities include the firm’s strategic direction, investment management and risk oversight, portfolio management, and mentoring. John holds a Bachelor of Science in Engineering, a BA in Philosophy from Swarthmore College, and graduate degrees from MIT and Harvard Business School.

As a student at Harvard, he investigated methods to apply modeling to portfolio management and began applying these methods to his own investments in 1985. He left the transportation industry in 1991 to perform full-time research on his investment models prior to launching Bridgeway in 1993.

A list of his favorite books is here; A transcript of our conversation is available here Tuesday.

You can stream and download our full conversation, including any podcast extras, on Apple Podcasts, SpotifyYouTube, and Bloomberg. All of our earlier podcasts on your favorite pod hosts can be found here.

Be sure to check out our Masters in Business next week with Ron Shaich, Ron is the founder and former Chairman and CEO of Panera Bread and of Au Bon Pain (Sold for $7.5 billion in 2017). He is the current Chairman and lead investor in CAVA, (NYSE: CAVA), a fast casual Mediterranean restaurant chain; as well as Tatte, Life Alive, and Level99.

 


 

Current Reading

 

Books Barry Mentioned

 

 

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10 Friday AM Reads

My end-of-week morning train WFH reads:

Consumers Prop Up the Economy. They’re Showing Signs of Strain. The U.S. consumer has seemed unstoppable in recent years, spending throughout soaring inflation and the highest borrowing costs in decades. That resilience helped to keep at bay a recession that many thought inevitable after the pandemic. (New York Times)

Walmart Becomes Biggest Retailer Yet to Pass Through Tariff Price Increases: Company plans to raise prices this month and early this summer; other retailers likely will follow. (Wall Street Journal) see also Confused about Trump’s tariff policy? Join the club. So too are economists, trade experts, political prognosticators and Trump himself. Their bewilderment has only intensified with the White House’s recent announcement of trade “deals” with Britain and China. Those quote marks are proper, because it’s unclear how much of a bargain Trump has struck with those countries despite his triumphalist rhetoric. (Los Angeles Times)

Shifting Product Priorities: What Firms Have Added in the Last Five Years: New polling data shows asset managers prioritizing alternatives, ETFs, and personalized investment solutions to meet evolving investor demands. (Institutional Investor)

Why Are Muni Bond Funds Losing Money in 2025? Vanguard’s Malloy says that muni underperformance has these funds as ‘cheap as it gets.’ (Morningstar)

Jimmy Kimmel Roasts His Employer and Boosts ‘60 Minutes’ at Disney Upfront: The late-night host also took his usual potshots at rival networks and streamers. (Hollywood Reporter)

Two Million Meat Sticks a Day Isn’t Enough for Chomps’ CEO: Rashid Ali, head of one of the US’s fastest-growing food brands, can’t keep up with demand. (Bloomberg) see also The End of Chicken-Breast Dominance: The price of boneless chicken thighs is finally catching up with the price of white meat. (The Atlantic)

How to Live a Miserable Life: Inversion is a mental model that flips the script on traditional problem-solving. Rather than look at a problem in a linear, forward, logical manner, you think about it in reverse. It forces you to think differently about the problem—to see it from a new angle, from a fresh perspective. It provides a unique lens to simplify the complex. Well, there is one complex, foundational problem that is truly universal: How do you live a good life? Let’s harness the power of inversion to address it: Here are 20 ways to live a miserable life… (The Curiosity Chronicle)

The rise of the regretful Trump voter: Trump is squandering one of his biggest 2024 electoral accomplishments. (Vox)

25 Years of AudaciousSmoke-FreeMolecularBurger-CentricHipster한식#InfluencerOutdoorNostalgic Dining in New York City: A timeline of major food moments — restaurant openings, innovations, fads, pop culture cameos, blackouts and bans — that changed life in New York City in the first quarter of the 21st century. (New York Times)

Nicolas Cage is NFL coach John Madden in upcoming film: Amazon MGM Studios released a first look at the film “Madden.” (NBC News)

Be sure to check out our Master’s in Business with John Montgomery, founder and CEO of Bridgeway Capital.  The firm, which was founded in 1993, manages ~$5B in assets; they have become known for donating 50% of their annual company profits to non-profit organizations.

 

A Market Puke and Rally

Source: A Wealth of Common Sense

 

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The Trouble with Surveys

 

Hey, just back after taking the redeye home from Futureproof Colorado, and getting my feet back under me. But I wanted to briefly discuss tomorrow’s release of the University of Michigan (UMich) long-term inflation expectations.

You probably know my thoughts on both Inflation Expectations and Sentiment Surveys.

ICYMI, Inflation Expectations are a backwards looking exercise in the Recency Effect. But even worse, they typically lag actual inflation by 6-12 months. As i explained in 2023:

“Jerome Powell and the Federal Reserve spend a lot of time worrying about Inflation Expectations. They shouldn’t. Generally, Sentiment Surveys are useless — most of the time — the exception being on rare occasions at the extremes.

They aren’t merely lagging, backward-looking indicators, but instead, inform us as to what the public was experiencing about 3-6 months ago. Typically, it takes people a few weeks or months to subconsciously incorporate broad, subtle changes into their internal mental models, and longer to consciously recognize those nuanced shifts.”

The chart gives the entire story away:

Future inflation expectations were at their aboslute nadir just before the biggest inflation spike in decades occurred. And when future inflation expectations were at their highest levels? We were about to start a 12 month collapse in CPI/PCE inflation measures.

So, mostly useless — at least as a predictor of longer term inflation rates. But they are great at telling you what the inflation of the past 6 months was.

As to general sentiment surveys, well the chart at top showing political bias should make you realize how flimsy this is as a measure. Especially when consumers say one thing, but then do the exact opposite with their money.

The chart at top is from Bank of America; here is their take:

The UMich survey shows substantial divergence by political affiliation (Exhibit 1). Long-term inflation expectations have surged among Democrats and Independents, to 5.1% and 4.4%, respectively, in recent months. However, expectations have cratered to 1.5% among Republicans. This stark divergence has led some analysts to dismiss the UMich survey, arguing that the results are being driven by political preferences rather than an actual assessment of inflation dynamics.

All of the above is before we get to issues prevalent in both mainstream and algorthmic social media

 

 

 

Previously:
What Else Might be Driving Sentiment? (October 19, 2023)

More Inflation Expectations Silliness (July 5, 2023)

Is Partisanship Driving Consumer Sentiment? (August 9, 2022)

More Sentiment Nonsense (July 28, 2023)

The Trouble with Consumer Sentiment (July 8, 2022)

Sentiment versus Spending (XXX)

Is Partisanship Driving Consumer Sentiment? (August 9, 2022)

The Trouble with Consumer Sentiment (July 8, 2022)

Sentiment LOL (May 17, 2022)

Sentiment

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An Evening with Michael Lewis, from “Liar’s Poker” to today

 

 

 

A bonus LIVE episode of Masters in Business:

I speak with bestselling author and financial journalist Michael Lewis, live, from the Landmark Theater in Port Washington, NY.

Our wide-ranging, 90-minute conversation covered the full arc of his career, from “Liar’s Poker” to this year’s “Who is Government.” The informative – and at times hilarious – conversation included his experiences turning Moneyball into a film (including on-set hijinks from Brad Pitt), how his career as a writer evolved, and what he is working on next.

You can stream and download our full conversation, including any podcast extras, on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, and Bloomberg. All of our earlier podcasts on your favorite pod hosts can be found here.

You DO NOT want to miss this fun, rollicking live episode of Masters in Business.

 

 

 

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