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The Hundred Year Pivot | A New Podcast Series by Demetri Kofinas and Grant Williams

2025/4/14
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Demetri Kofinas: 我和Grant Williams合作推出了一个新的播客系列《百年转型》,旨在探讨当前世界百年未有之大变局。我们正经历一个经济、政治和地缘政治的重组时期,这需要我们发展新的思维方式和投资框架来应对。在这个系列中,我们将与各领域的专家对话,帮助我们找到应对挑战的路径,并为个人、组织、家庭和投资组合做好准备。 我们意识到,当前世界缺乏意义感,这体现在金融市场和政治领域。人们对未来感到迷茫和困惑。这个播客的目标是帮助人们理解这种感受背后的原因,并探索新的社会意义和组织原则。我们将以一种更自然、更真实的对话方式进行,而不是严格按照结构进行。我们的对话可以自由展开,探索任何出现的话题,旨在探索世界变化的原因、方式及其对人们的影响。 通过回顾历史,我们可以更好地理解现在并展望未来。我个人认为,当前的局势与20世纪30年代有很多相似之处,例如贸易战、资本冲突和全球秩序的瓦解。我们需要打破旧的框架,建立新的框架来理解和应对世界。我们需要快速改变我们的框架,因为世界变化的速度很快。世界已经不再像我们以前认为的那样运作了。 我们希望帮助年轻人应对未来的挑战,并为他们创造一个更美好的未来。大多数人对金融市场并不了解,我们需要从不同的角度看待当前的局势。投资者对均值回归的假设可能不再成立。婴儿潮一代的退休、关税政策和人工智能的发展都可能改变市场的运作方式。人工智能的发展可能导致白领阶层的衰退,并对政治产生深远的影响。 Grant Williams: 我和Demetri Kofinas合作推出了一个新的播客系列《百年转型》。这个项目是自然而然发展起来的,而不是预先计划好的。这个播客的名称很好地捕捉到了强大的长期趋势和投资者可以采取的行动。世界正在发生巨大的变化,有很多值得讨论的话题。这个播客的目标是探索当前世界正在发生的变化,而不是给出确定的答案。 人们对当前局势有一种强烈的感受,而这个播客旨在帮助人们理解这种感受背后的原因。这个播客将以一种更自然、更真实的对话方式进行,而不是严格按照结构进行。当前世界缺乏意义感,这体现在金融市场和政治领域。百年转型的一部分是寻找新的社会意义和组织原则。我邀请了一些朋友撰写文章,探讨他们对当前世界局势的感受和看法。这些文章从不同的角度探讨了世界面临的问题,并提出了许多发人深省的问题。 我们正在经历一场考验,这将深刻地塑造未来。股市下跌可能会导致集体牺牲感,尤其是在财富驱动型衰退的情况下。特朗普的关税政策对供应链和经济的影响存在很大的不确定性。当前的经济和政治形势让人感觉像是在探索未知领域。当前的局势涉及到各个方面,从宗教到供应链。人们正在寻找一种新的道德中心或指南。当前的局势让每个人都感到迷茫和困惑。 尼尔·豪斯和比尔·施特劳斯的《第四次轮回》一书为理解当前局势提供了一个框架。当前的局势与20世纪30年代有很多相似之处。尼尔·豪斯的世代周期理论有助于理解当前的转型。理解纳粹党的崛起有助于理解当前的局势。当前的局势正在改变世界运作方式以及各种关系。通过回顾历史,可以更好地理解现在并展望未来。 拉塞尔·纳皮尔对金融和政治经济的分析非常准确。这个播客的目标是为听众绘制未来蓝图。理解塑造当下的力量有助于预测未来。肖莎娜·祖博夫的《监控资本主义》一书为理解当前科技发展提供了框架。理解事物有助于获得满足感。这个播客将邀请那些具有高信号噪声比的嘉宾,以及那些我们认为最有价值的老师。这个播客将以一种更包容和互动的方式进行。当前世界充满了不确定性。人们对未来的预测往往是错误的。这个播客将以一种开放和探索性的方式进行。这个播客将邀请听众参与其中,并利用听众的网络效应。这个播客将改变以往的节目形式。这个播客将定期发布。

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What's up, everybody? I have some very exciting news to share with all of you. My friend and fellow podcaster Grant Williams and I have teamed up to launch a new podcast series we're calling The 100-Year Pivot.

It's a joint effort based on a shared understanding that we are living through a once-in-a-century economic, political, and geopolitical reordering that will require us to develop novel maps and investment frameworks to help us navigate these incredibly consequential times.

Over the course of the series, Grant and I will be speaking with the smartest, most plugged-in people we know to help us chart a path through this gathering storm as we seek to position ourselves, our organizations, our families, and our portfolios for the changes to come.

Premium subscribers to the Hidden Forces podcast and the Grant Williams podcast will have early access to the episodes in this ongoing series. Go to hiddenforces.io slash subscribe to access our premium feed. So the episodes in this series will download automatically to your mobile podcast app whenever we publish.

If you want to join in on the conversation and become a member of the Hidden Forces Genius Community, which includes Q&A calls with guests, access to special research and analysis, in-person events and dinners, you can also do that on our subscriber page. And if you still have questions, feel free to send an email to info at hiddenforces.io and I or someone from our team will get right back to you.

Lastly, because this conversation deals with investing, nothing we say on this podcast can or should be viewed as financial advice. All opinions expressed by me and my guests are solely our own opinions and should not be relied upon as the basis for financial decisions. And with that, please enjoy this first in a long series of conversations on the 100-Year Pivot with my friend and co-host, Grant Williams.

Welcome everybody to the first episode of the 100-Year Pivot. Joining me as co-host on this is my great mate and podcaster supreme, Dimitri Kofinas. Mate, how are you? I'm so happy that we're doing this. Yeah, yeah. We've talked about collaborating for quite some time and we never figure out what to do, right? But this little project of ours is something that's grown completely organically. We didn't sit down with a pad and pen and come up with some kind of great idea we could do.

It just happened. And I think that's such an important component of this whole idea. Yeah. And I love the name that we've chosen. I feel like that name resonated with both of us. We threw out a few titles.

when we were brainstorming over it. I think it was just the same day, within the same hour or so, we came up with this name. And I feel like it really captures both the secular trends that are so powerful, the forces that I use that term for my show, whatever the analogous term that you use. You guys obviously talk about the end game with you and Bill Fleckenstein. And then the pivot, which I think is the actionable part that speaks to investors.

Yeah, absolutely. And since we came up with the idea and the title, I mean, the pivots are happening left and right. There's so much to talk about. But I think it's worth, before we kind of just have a little look at the world now, it's worth us talking about...

what we aim to get out of these conversations. And the beauty of that is, as we set out, nothing, right? That's one of the beauties of it. We're like the Seinfeld of financial podcasts. Right, right. You know, the whole idea of this is to, we recognize there's something going on. And, you know, the conversation you and I recorded back in February, I'm sure your subscribers are the same, but mine, it resonated so strongly with them. And in a way that none of them were expecting, you know, a lot of people said to me, I had the same

response so many times I didn't even know that I was feeling this way until Dimitri articulated it so perfectly and that feeling you know that feeling sometimes you just have to follow those feelings and try and understand what's behind them and that I think is really what we're trying to do here

Yeah, I agree. And I told you what I love about this also is that so many of my podcasts, my MO is like hardcore prep structure. And I love that we're going to do something that isn't that way. And quite frankly, some of the most popular podcasts I've ever released are the ones that haven't been structured. Because at the end of the day, people love... People, I think, don't even realize how much they respond to authentic conversations where they feel like they're actually in the room. So I feel like we're going to be able to accomplish that here. And I'm very excited...

I was telling you this as well, that there are people that not only the people that you've interviewed that I haven't, that we're going to be bringing on the show, but also there are people that I've interviewed that I've really enjoyed talking to that I don't necessarily want to speak to again, because I feel like I've gotten most of what I want. But the idea of interviewing them with you now makes me so excited to speak with them again.

Yeah. And I mean, the same goes for me. And I think the beauty of this is that not only can these conversations go anywhere and be about any kind of subject that crops up, but my questions are going to lead to places that you want to explore and vice versa. And I think having this unstructured idea of, look, these people are thoughtful, interesting people who have perspectives that you and I are both interested in.

where do they take us? Because the world is kind of unanchored at the moment. And so to have a chance to have these unstructured conversations, just explore ideas and try and understand not just kind of what's happening,

But how those shifts are happening, why those shifts are happening, and what it means to people. Because I think there's a... You spoke about this so beautifully, and this whole concept of yours of financial nihilism captures it so well, this loss of meaning. This loss of meaning in financial markets, this loss of meaning of money, people being unmoored from any kind of grounded center...

It just leads to conversations. I've had plenty of them over dinner in the last couple of years with people that you go for a quick dinner and you end up three and a half hours later and two bottles of wine in sitting there with your head in your hands and having these earnest conversations. And every single one of them has been profound. Yeah. I can't remember the name of the academic who's associated with the term, the meaning crisis, but this is a term that we've heard bandied about quite a bit, especially since the pandemic. And I think that sentiment also filters into financial markets and to politics, and I think

We are part of this hundred year pivot is about finding a new source of meaning and a new organizing principle in society. That's what we're sort of trying to figure out in real time. Yeah. I mean, look, it could come from any one of a number of directions. You know, I published this piece in March with five essays from great friends of mine

many or all of whom will hopefully grace this podcast with us. And I gave them a very, very broad brief. I'd had conversations with them in the last year or so about the world and their thoughts on it. So I knew kind of that they were thinking along the same lines as I was in terms of trying to figure things out. But I gave them a very broad brief. I said, I'm not going to tell you what to write about. I want you to write about how you're feeling and how you see the world and how it makes you feel, not what makes you think.

And it worked beautifully. I got five completely different essays back, each taking a very different line of attack for the problems that the world's facing. And when you put them together, it was an extraordinarily rounded set of ideas and also questions that leave you thinking, wow, what really is going on? And more importantly, how do I feel about it?

I told you that I loved that entire, what would you call it? It was a newsletter, but they were individual essays. Yeah, just a collection of essays. That's all. It was really wonderful. And my favorite one was Rogers. And I told you that it really spoke to me when he quoted Evita, that line from Evita, that I still need your love after all that I've done. And he asks, whose love? Whose love do we need after all that we've done? And I think what he was referring to, if I remember correctly, was forgiveness and grace, the grace of God.

And there is a sense in which we're going through a trial, a great trial as a people, as a country, as a nation, as a world. And it's going to shape the future profoundly, perhaps in the same way that World War II, the depression shaped the post-war generation and the war itself and all of that, and the sacrifice, the collective sacrifices, something you and I talked about. In fact, it's so interesting that you asked this question in the conversation we had

Whatever it was, was it a couple of months ago, Grant? I don't remember when we recorded it.

And you specifically asked, could a drop in the stock market cause that collective sense of sacrifice? And my initial reaction was like, not really, unless it was cataclysmic. It was so significant that it necessitated shared sacrifice. And I recently had a conversation with James Van Galen on the show where we talked about the possibility of a wealth-driven recession, a recession that's driven by a fall in the stock market that's so great

that it has such a substantial impact on consumer spending because of the fact that the top 10% are responsible for 50% of consumer spending and because also baby boomers do so much to support their children. So there are knock-on effects. And then AI could accelerate that. So I think as I reflected on what you said in the last couple of weeks, I think

There may be more truth to that. And we're sort of going to see that playing out potentially here with these tariffs that Trump imposed. Everyone's still trying to figure out how impactful they're going to be because we still live in a complicated internationalized global trade world characterized by global trade. And so there are tons of prices that we can't quite figure out because it's not as simple as...

We slapped the sheriffs on China and their goods are going to get more expensive. They're importing parts and pieces and sending their goods onto other third party nations that are assembling the piece. So all of that together is something that no one could really quite figure out. There's so much uncertainty also in the supply chain and the rhetoric and in the policies of this administration. And so this feels like COVID in a sense, right? In the sense of like, this just feels like uncharted territory.

You know, it's really interesting that that answer you gave there was a microcosm of this podcast because you started off talking about Roger's essay on religion and you ended up with tariffs, right, and supply chains. And that, to me, is fascinating because that's the strange thing that's happening here. And, you know, as I said in the letter I published and I said in our conversation, I'm not a religious man, but there's a spiritual component to this. And I've been really struck by the kind of swell in religion

talk about religion in private emails I've had and conversations that those letters and our conversation sparked. It's fascinating to me to see that this idea of religion, and I don't necessarily mean it in the form of a God, but in the form of, as you said, some kind of moral center, some kind of compass that gives principles and ethics and morals and guidance and all that stuff to

It feels like people are grasping for it. And to go from there to supply chains in the space of a few minutes just shows you how close all this is. And I think how at sea everybody is in trying to figure all this stuff out. And some of the people we've got lined up, when I went through those five essays, there was one thread that ran right the way through them, one reference that was made by each of the five authors.

Which didn't come as a surprise to me, but I think it's very telling and that was our mutual friend Neil Howes and Bill Strauss' book, The Fourth Turning. This idea of a fourth turning and all that it brings in terms of the things we talked about, morals and ethics and principles, that kind of stuff.

It ran through that letter like a seam of gold through a rock. It was really, really interesting. And we're going to have Neil join us on the podcast as one of our first couple of guests to talk about that. And I'm curious to hear your thoughts on that as a starting point for this kind of exploration of ours. I mean, it's right there in the name too, right? Yeah. I think Neil's generational cycles are 80 to 100 years roughly.

I think he's a perfect guest to start this, because I think when you study enough history, and I am by no means a historian, there are many people who I follow who I would consider to be people that actually have studied history. But from my superficial understanding of history, there is so much about this time that just feels resonant. It feels like we're playing out something that's happened many times before. And there are many

shocking similarities to the 1930s, these trade wars and the potential capital wars and the breakdown of the global order. So I think having on a historian like Neil, who's also developed a framework that tries to put some of that history into a kind of rhythmic order is a very appropriate first episode for the series. Yeah, I think so too. And it's funny, I read that book, I don't know, maybe

15 years, something like that. And I found it profoundly interesting and thought-provoking at the time. But it's funny, with that in the back of my mind, there have been a few things along the last 15 years that I've kind of added and added and added as various lenses to look through things. And that has definitely been one of them. But I've talked about this before. You brought up the Great Depression and World War II and all these echoes throughout history around the last fourth turning.

And, you know, what's fascinating to me is, you know, when I grew up in the UK at school, history was my favorite subject. And we learned about World War II and the lead up to World War II. And that was a big focus of history in England. Obviously, it would have been. And from that day to literally a few years ago, the piece that I could never really understand properly, even though you kind of read about it, I could never really understand it, was history.

you think about how could society reach a point where someone like Hitler could be elected? Elected, you know, this is not someone who stole power. This guy was elected a landslide. And I could never really put myself in that place to understand it. And I listened to a podcast called The Rest is History, which I really, really enjoy. And they did a little five-part mini-series about the rise of the Nazi party in the 1920s and 30s in Germany.

And that brought this period to life. And going into it, not understanding how it could happen, I came out of that thinking, how could it not have happened? And I think that's the important thing for all of us today is to understand the times we're living through are going to be written about for hundreds of years to come. This is a period of time that is changing the entire way the world works, but

It's changing every relationship in the world, not just between countries, but between generations and between classes and between everything is up for grabs here. And we talk about in our little corner of the world, the financial world, we talk about the system being reset and all this stuff. And it's kind of a throwaway phrase because we're talking about the monetary system or the financial system. We don't really know what we're talking about. We just recognize that things are shifting. And for me, as we go through

this journey together, you and I, along with our guests, I think the things I'm trying to really put into place is to help people gain the perspective that they will get in 20 years, but try and get it now by looking backwards. You know, I think it was Churchill that said, the further back you look, the farther forward you can see. And I think that's such an important concept. So hopefully in these conversations,

we can bring ideas and bring thoughts and bring perspectives to the table that will help people in real time gather a much bigger understanding rather than having their heads in the chaos and not being able to step back far enough to see. Yeah, I love that. Actually, I recently stepped away from Twitter and it's been so good for not just my mental health, but also I think also for my ability to do exactly what you're describing. Because it's so easy to get caught up in the noise and not see the big picture.

And I think when we were talking with Neil about doing the show, we were also talking with Russell Napier, who you and I agree has just been ... Look, my personal perspective is that when it comes to finance and political economy, there is no one who I have followed these years who has nailed it better in terms of creating the most coherent, complete, and accurate framework than Russell Napier. Agreed. And to that point, I was saying to both Neil and Russell that when I started the Hidden Forces podcast,

My goal was to try and understand the forces that are impacting the epiphenomena of the world. And we talk about this all the time in markets, what's driving the market. Everyone, no one knows, and you're always trying to extract. We were even talking about this with the case of the supply chains. And no one knows actually what the impact is going to be. The problem is very clear, tariffs, rising in cost of imported goods. Why can't we figure it out? Because it's a complex system.

And markets as a whole are even more complex. And I said something to you guys in an email, which actually I want to give credit to Tim O'Reilly, who inspired this with an episode that we had done. It was sort of a combination of something he had written in his book about the future. It was a book about map making. And what I said was that I feel like, and this applies to the series, what I think I hope to accomplish with this series is that we are able to draw for our listeners a map to the future.

by helping us all collectively, not just helping them, but you and I are trying to figure this out in real time and we're never going to quite know. We're just kind of trying to figure it out by understanding the forces that are shaping the present.

And I think that's the thing that the people, and for me, that means developing a framework, developing maps. And for me, what that has meant in practice is trying to find the people that have developed either the most accurate map or some map of the territory that is illuminating, that creates that aha moment. And folks like Neil Howe have done that with his generational cycles theory. Russell Napier has done that with national capitalism.

And there are others, many that I've, some of whom I've mentioned to you in an email. I even mentioned one who I don't know if she's necessarily for us, but I think it's a great example, again, of this for people to have a sense. When I had Shoshana Zuboff on my show back, this was a long time ago, I think it was episode 79, so this would have been 2018.

Or 2019 as she wrote her book Surveillance Capitalism. Yeah, that was terrific. At that time, nobody ... I mean, I had read some folks like Sherry Turkle who had done great work. She had written a book called Alone Together where she talked about what was going on back in 2013 with social media. But no one had quite nailed it in developing this framework that helped to really explain to folks what was going on. What were the forces that were driving the changes that we were experiencing and putting that into a coherent framework?

And I think for our listeners, I'm sure this is true for you and I know this is true for my listeners as well. My listeners enjoy when they are able to understand something. I'm that way too, right? If you illuminate something for me, if I'm staring at a problem for whatever period of time, a month, a year, 10 years, and someone comes along and they drop something in front of me,

that suddenly changes, something shifts in my understanding. It's kind of like moving a three-dimensional object in space, right? You're seeing only a two-dimensional version of that object. All of a sudden you shift it.

and you see what it is. Yeah. And that is such a powerful experience. And it's not just valuable from an investment standpoint, it's also just deeply gratifying. And I hope that we can accomplish that with the show. In fact, that to me is what I'm most excited about about this program, Grant, is that you and I together will be able to bring on the people that we feel are the highest signal to noise ratio folks.

and sit down and speak with them, and in a sense, through a series, expose our listeners to those people who over the years we have found to be the most valuable teachers. At least that is how I feel. Yeah. The beauty of this for me, Dimitri, is that I come into this with only questions. I don't have answers. I have thoughts and I have perspectives, but really I just have questions at the moment. And I think, it's funny you talked about that three-dimensional object, and I was looking at

thinking about this and what we were going to do over the last several weeks. And in my timeline popped up one of those terrific pictures that are taken from the air. It looks like a drone shot, but of animals in a desert walking. And you see, it looks like a big shadow. And then it says, zoom in. You can actually see that it looks like animals. This was zebras in this case. It looks like a whole herd of zebras. But when you zoom in and look closely, you

It's the shadows of the zebras and the zebras are there. And what you just said just brought that back to me about re-examining this 3D object in space. And it's that. I don't even know what my questions are at the moment. All I know is I feel this great sense of uncertainty and this great sense of unpredictability in the world. And everywhere you go, particularly this last week has been a perfect example of this, you're surrounded by such uncertainty.

faux certainty. Everybody is certain about everything. Everybody will tell you exactly what these tariffs are going to mean, exactly what's going to happen in markets. And it's utter nonsense. From day one, we're guessing about the future. So you cannot be certain. It's a physical impossibility.

So I think this idea that we can just ask questions and just go where those answers take us. And that could mean with that same guest, or it might lead us to another guest, or it might lead us down a completely different avenue. And I have no idea where that's taking us. And I cannot tell you how thrilling I find that idea.

Me too, man. Like I said, I love, again, for me, my podcast so often, not always, but so often is this structured teaching experience where I do a deep dive on a guest or a topic and I try to extract ahead of time what I think the most interesting things are. And then I create a kind of outline so we can explore those things, so I can share those things with the audience. In this case, what I find especially exciting is that I feel like this is going to be a much more inclusive experience.

This is going to be much more about like, "Hey, why don't you come and join us for this conversation as we all try and figure this out together?" And the fact that there's going to be less sort of conscious preparation, I think is a big part of it. So again, I can't emphasize how excited I am, man. This is really going to be an incredible journey. Well, we talked about Neil and the importance that he's had for both of us in trying to figure this out. Talk a little bit more about Russell, because as you said, you and I both come at this from the financial world. That was our route into this whole podcasting space.

You touched on it a minute ago, Russell has been absolutely spot on in just about everything he said and that's why he's probably going to be the second guest in the series to use that as a framework. Well, I can't bring up Russell without first just mentioning that you introduced us. I have to say, again, it's just important to point out that I think this project is possible.

because of how generous you are. And you are, and I don't want to go do the whole congratulating each other thing where people do that on podcasts, but you're a very generous person, Grant, and you've been very generous to not just me, but all sorts of folks with your network. So Russell's an example of that. I met Russell through you. I'm sure what probably happened was I heard him on a podcast episode and I reached out and said, hey, any chance you could introduce me? Because he's just...

And he first came on for an episode on the Asian financial crisis. That's right. He had written a book about his experience in Hong Kong through the Asian financial crisis. And I believe it was, the book was diary entries from 1995 to the height and resolution of the crisis, maybe '95 to '98. And I mentioned that first because that was the way that I was exposed to Russell. I was exposed to his methodology.

I was exposed to how he thinks. One of the things I really love about Russell, and I look for this in all the high signal to noise ratio people that I identify, there's a process for coming to an understanding. And part of that process involves a baseline level of humility.

Now, what I also love about Russell, and the reason I bring this up actually in the context of the Asian financial crisis is because he was looking at his diary entries. He went back and published and analyzed what he thought at the time. Not what he thinks he thought now, but actually what he thought at the time, what he was saying, what he was writing, and that is a level of accountability that I think is something we should all strive for, and it comes across in the quality of his analysis.

The other thing I love about Russell is that he's a historian. Again, I don't think it's a coincidence that we're picking two historians. And in fact, I put together a list of names that I shared with you about some people that I think might be interesting guests to have on. And there are certainly historians in there. And of course, Russell's the keeper of the "library of mistakes," a library of financial mistakes.

And I can't tell you how much I've, like I said, I've gotten so much value from him. I also love that, and I think this is really important too, Grant. I'm trying to think about where I recently spoke with someone about this. But in any case, let's go back to this thing about frameworks. Ah, right. It was a conversation I had with George Friedman where this came up. So this is the thing about frameworks, right? Actually, you know that I'm a father. I recently became a father. My son's now seven months or something. And there's been something really magical about watching him awaken.

Like there's a kind of awakening that happens with every day that he grows older. And what I also noticed, and I knew this already, so I already had a quote framework around how this works in childhood development, but you can see that he went from being born where everything is just stimuli, unstructured streams of information, colors, lights, sounds. He has no way to say that sound, oh, that's an elephant, or that's a door.

All he sees is some sort of like just overflow of information. What I've read about this incidentally is that it's somewhat like being on psychedelics or having a stroke in your left hemisphere. It's like you just lose the ability to have any kind of... Everything just kind of melts into each other. And I feel like what happens as we get older is we bring structure to experience. We structure the world around us.

And that's what these frameworks are about. We need the frameworks. We need frameworks to navigate the world. This also brings us back to questions about God and all else, which is that reality is not as it seems to be, right? Because so much of what we do is we bring order to experience. We structure the reality that this chaotic world of information that comes at us so that we can navigate it.

But the maps we use to navigate it should not be confused with the territory. And as we get older, we develop these maps and some of us get exceptionally wedded to those maps. And what I think is so special about the series is that what we're doing is

We're breaking, we're acknowledging that those maps no longer work and that we shouldn't be attached to them as though they are the territory. And the people, and this is my favorite quote by Russell, is that the worst thing you can do, and I'm paraphrasing now, he doesn't say this exact thing. He does say the worst thing you can do, but the worst thing you can do in sort of periods of great change, the kind of change that we're talking about here, is to ask to get all the right answers to all the wrong questions. And what that really means is what framework are you using?

What are the sets of questions that derive from what framework that you're getting answers? You think you're getting all the right answers, but you're using the wrong framework because those frameworks are outdated. Your models no longer work. Your maps no longer accurately represent the territory that you're seeking to navigate. When you go through these cycles...

Everything has to change. Your baseline assumptions have to change. So one of the things I really love about Russell as well is that he has that sort of deep bottoms up analysis and he's not dependent on a framework. And those people are exceptionally intelligent. They tend to have, if not an academic historical background, they certainly have an appreciation for history because you have to be willing to break the old

and to build something new. So that's what I love about Grant. I love about Russell. And I think what's great about Neil, and again, why I think he's such a great person to start the episode with, is he helps his framework and his model helps explain why we're going through this transition. And then again, Russell's is about building a new model to understand the political economy

of a changing global order, of a changing economic order, and what that world looks like, what will increasingly look like, and how to navigate it. You know, I can go in so many directions with what you just said. Remind me to come back to the fatherhood thing in a second, because there's a component to that that I want to talk about. But the one piece of that I would add to what you just said there is,

is the time element. You have to be able to change your framework quickly because we've grown up in periods of long, slow-moving trends. Globalization has been a 40-year trend that has now kind of reached its apogee.

And we haven't had to really function quickly apart from if you've been in the markets, you've had the odd day of chaos where you've had to react, but you haven't really had to completely adjust your framework quickly. You've had to deal with a 10% down day in 2008 or deal with whipsaws when the markets have rallied in the middle of bear markets and stuff.

So you haven't had to really break things down to their roots and then rebuild them again. And that's what we're talking about here. We are talking about a world that we all believe, to your point, we understand how it works and we simply don't. And that has already happened. The world no longer works the way we all believe it does. And so the quicker we kind of figure out how it's changed and what that means for us and what we have to do to adapt to it,

the better for all of us. But we want to come back to that fatherhood thing because I know, and it's been such a cool thing to watch you on this journey as a father of a young child because I've got two grandkids now. I'm at the other end of that spectrum. But for me, this is such an important part of this because I don't really spend much time worrying about me and I'm worrying about my place in this and how I'm going to deal with this because I am far enough down the track and I've lived a life and I've built a family. I've done all those things.

The thing that I spent all my time thinking about and worrying about is how do my kids navigate this? And now I look at this beautiful six and four-year-old girls who are completely oblivious to this. And my questions are all about what's the world they're going to inherit like? And how can we...

Either prepare them for it, ideally, or try and provide some sort of haven from it if it's really bad. Those are the questions that I really want to dig into because if we can help the people who are going to have to deal with this in ways that we aren't, we're simply not going to have to deal with it in the way that someone who's 15 now is going to have to deal with this world. We're just not. We're going to be through that stage where it's the kind of thing that overwhelms your most productive life.

years. So that's a big component to me and that you know this fatherhood the piece and again through these conversations and through the the essays and everything I keep getting that back people talking about their kids and talking about their families and talking about you know we become inured to this when you're staring at markets you become inured to volatility really because it's part of your job for a lot of people it's how they make their money you know they embrace the volatility and

But if we take the last couple of weeks, for example, out of the way, and I'm sure I won't speak for you, but I've looked at this, or I've been forced to look at it, I should say, through a financial lens, because the news feeds that I'm getting bombarded, the emails I'm getting are all from people who are financial practitioners and trying to understand the world through that lens. But if you step back for a moment and try and imagine the last two weeks without headlines about stock markets down 20% and without

talk about recessions and without talk about financial aspects of this,

What does that world look like to someone who's never read the Wall Street Journal in their lives or doesn't have a 401k or if they do, it's in a company pension plan, it's manageable. They don't think about the stock market ever until it's front page news or until it's on 60 Minutes about the crash. That's a very different world that those people are living in. That's the vast majority of people. We are in a minority. And so again, there are so many different

ways that we can take this, but there are also so many different vantage points that you can stand and look at it from that will, to your point about the wrong questions and the right answers, give you a completely different vector upon which to travel towards this thing. Yeah. Well, that also, again, brings me back to frameworks. One of the things that, I don't know if you and I talked about it, but I've spoken about in recent episodes is that, I feel like we've just gotten to the point now where investors have become comfortable

with the idea of mean reversion. They've become really comfortable with this idea that, okay, yeah, we had the 2008 crisis. That was really scary, but the markets rebounded. We had COVID, scary, but the markets rebounded. Every time the markets come back, and I'm not saying that markets don't come back or that the world's going to end. That's not what I'm suggesting.

But I think the setup this time could be one where the markets don't revert back to the previous paradigm. And there are a lot of reasons to think that that's possible. One is the baby boom retirement wall. You have people that are going to increasingly be pulling their money out.

You have this tariffs and this intention, at least stated intention by the Trump administration to rebalance wealth and income in society, which also will change those dynamics and will change dollar recycling, which has been a big, huge source of asset price appreciation. And you also have AI, which is something that I just don't think

is spoken about enough in this context. And this is again, something that I spoke about recently in my episode titled, "Are we about to enter the first white collar recession?" And I mentioned the wealth driven effect, which is that if stock prices go down,

substantially down, if one's net worth declines, especially if they're nearing retirement age or in retirement age, they become much more risk averse about spending. Consumer spending is so heavily tilted towards the higher echelon income brackets, that could drive a recession.

Firms that were previously reluctant to experiment with artificial intelligence, large language models, may become more willing to do so because they've already let go of people and they're cost conscious. And so ChatGPT went from being not good enough to maybe just good enough.

And so that kicks off, that ignites the beginning of a multi-year, multi-decade reordering of the economy, technological revolution driven by AI. And that also has huge political ramifications. Maybe that finally gives the Democratic Party

whose base consists of white collar workers who previously were organized around the banner of some of this woke ideology to now being focused around UBI and the effects of losing their jobs and losing economic opportunities. In other words, maybe we end up seeing happen to the white collar workforce what happened to the blue collar workforce. And that has profound implications for politics. Now, I don't know exactly how I got on this train

Grant. I don't know how, I don't remember exactly what your question was and why I got here, but I guess that's in the spirit of the podcast. Yeah, no, look, exactly right. Exactly right. And like I said, this whole thing is going to be such an adventure. And I'm very conscious of us doing a podcast, talking about a podcast. Again, Seinfeld, it keeps coming up. I know, right? Podcast about nothing, podcast about a podcast. Yeah, exactly. So we won't make this episode too long, but we wanted to share the beginning of this journey with you and what we're going to do. Dimitri and I will

We'll publish these conversations and we're going to make sure that everybody gets to hear them because I think this is profoundly important questions We will publish them to our subscribers probably a week before they go public just so they get the benefit of that for supporting our work But I think you know Dimitri a big part of this is going to be the audience out there whether they email you or they email me and Ask us the questions and it suggests people that they've heard of that brought an interesting perspective on

to the way they try and order the world around them. Because you and I have our networks and the network effect of those networks is terrific.

But I've lost count of how many interesting people I've come across over the years that I'd never heard of before. And you have these conversations with them or you read something they've written. And to your point, right, it suddenly turns a torch on in a corner that you've been trying to squint into for quite some time. And so, you know, having the audience be a part of this and join us on this exploration is going to be a huge component of it. Absolutely. I couldn't agree more. And I'm very excited by the prospect of

Hearing back from people, again, I go back to this thing of there's something really exciting to me about changing the format of the show. Again, I'm still doing my podcast. You're still doing your podcast. But you have actually done series like this before with other people. I have never done anything like this. I've been doing the show for eight years now, roughly speaking, and it's been roughly the same format. It's been me interviewing people,

nerding out on their material, constructing an outline and sort of quizzing them and occasionally more conversational programming and occasionally kind of more panel stuff. But it's been more or less the same and certainly just me. I'm very excited by this idea of doing it with somebody else. I can't tell you how excited I am and doing it with you of all people. Well, mate, I agree. As I say, we've both been trying to find the right way to collaborate for quite some time now and I'm delighted we found it. Well, listen, let's wrap things up there. The first episode of this will be out

Sometime in the next couple of weeks when we can, of course, the big problem, Dimitri, with doing this with the co-host is you have three calendars to align, right? That's the single biggest impediment, especially when you're all in different time zones. I've recorded podcasts at four in the morning in Australia and I've done all kinds of things over the years. You're lucky because you're right in the middle. So you should be fine. So in terms of publishing, the plan is to publish this to the whole world so that everybody gets a chance to join us on this journey because we both believe it's profound. Our own subscribers...

we'll get it first. We'll probably publish it a week before it goes public, but anyone that's not a subscriber will have the chance to listen to these conversations. Absolutely. So I think we were still trying to figure out how we would publish the public feed, but we're going to both publish this on our private feeds branch. So your premium subscribers will get it. My premium subscribers will get it. And then what we're probably going to do is we're both going to publish it on our own feeds publicly. We also talked about maybe when we publish it publicly, maybe we'll put it on a

on a regular feed, but we can hash that out for people when Neil's episode comes out. We'll have a lot to talk about and we'll mention that too at the top. Hey, we did tell people we're doing this on the fly, right? There's the proof right there. It's authentic. Exactly. All right, my friend. Well, listen, we'll reconvene when we can pin Neil down and we'll be back with this in the not too distant future. In the meantime, Dimitri, just let people know where they can follow all the great stuff you do at Hidden Forces.

Yeah, you can go to hiddenforces.io to learn more about the podcast. I do have a Twitter feed, but like I said, I've taken an indefinite hiatus from Twitter, but my Twitter handle, if you want to go through it, is @cofinus with a K. And I also have a Twitter handle @hiddenforcespod.

that you can follow. Yep. And I'm pretty easy to find, grant-williams.com. My Twitter handle is at ttmygh. And boy, did I wish I was taking hiatus from Twitter at the moment. It is becoming almost unbearable. It is not a very fun place. I also should mention, if you want to mention it too, Grant, I have an email address that you can reach out to, info at hiddenforces.io.

And all the emails get forwarded to me. So feel free to reach out through there if you need to connect. Actually, and the same goes for me, info at grant-williams.com and they will come to me too. All right, my friend, this has been terrific. I look forward to this journey with you. I don't know which one of us is Sancho Panza and which one is Don Quixote, but I guess we'll figure that out as we go along this journey as well. I'll talk to you soon. Awesome. You too. Take care of Grant. If you want to listen in on the rest of today's conversation, head over to hiddenforces.io slash subscribe and join our premium feed.

If you want to join in on the conversation and become a member of the Hidden Forces Genius Community, you can also do that through our subscriber page. Today's episode was produced by me and edited by Stylianos Nicolaou. For more episodes, you can check out our website at hiddenforces.io. You can follow me on Twitter at Kofinas, and you can email me at info at hiddenforces.io. As always, thanks for listening. We'll see you next time.