Chapter 1: What predictions are made about the U.S.-China AI race?
What is the Trump administration's thinking on a possible war with Venezuela? He's probably thinking in his mind, with a show of strength, I can get a big win on the cheap. I'm John Feiner. And I'm Jake Sullivan. And we're the hosts of The Long Game, a weekly national security podcast. This week, we dig into Venezuela.
the US-China AI race, and game out whether Presidents Zelensky and Putin should accept the US-backed peace deal. The episode is now out. Search for and follow The Long Game wherever you get your podcasts.
What happens when an internationally renowned scientist, the only person to win two unshared Nobel Prizes, gets out of his depth, refuses to back down, and starts one of the most widespread myths in medicine? Even a person who's won two Nobel Prizes won't get everything right. Why we believe the myths we believe. That's this week on Unexplainable.
Follow Unexplainable for new episodes every Monday and Wednesday. We hear it all the time. AI's coming for our jobs. What if that's actually a good thing? I think we can still do the work that we are doing today without maybe the pressures of having to constantly monetize that work. Your work life after the AI revolution. That's this week on Explain It To Me.
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I'm Scott Galloway, and this is No Mercy, No Malice. The past is immutable. The future is the most mutable thing. What will happen? None of us know. But that doesn't stop us. Our 2026 predictions are meant to inspire a dialogue that helps craft better solutions. 2026 predictions, as read by George Hahn. Every year we make predictions.
Our missives on 2025, made in October 24, registered the most direct hits since we first pulled out our Ouija board a decade ago. Our objective isn't to be right, though that helps, but to inspire a conversation that crafts better solutions. Okay, enough of that. Our 2026 predictions. AI stocks correct.
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Chapter 2: How will AI impact job markets and work life in the future?
The question isn't when the AI bubble will burst, but what the catalyst will be. A. China. Trump has changed U.S. tariffs on China 17 times this year. They're tired of having a major trading partner with sclerotic decision-making and the demeanor of a raccoon on meth. Since 2019, China has decreased its share of exports to the U.S. from 17% to 10%.
Meanwhile, China's global exports are up 40%, while imports are flat. Trump's tariff policy is the definition of stupid. Hurt others while hurting yourself. It has not inspired an increase in domestic manufacturing, but a decrease in exports, as reciprocal tariffs take effect and a rerouting of the global supply chain around the U.S. Higher prices, lower growth? Makes for a lousy bumper sticker.
If I were advising Chi, I'd counsel him to go for the jugular by engaging in AI dumping, a repeat of their oughts steel dumping playbook. It's already underway and working. 80% of A16Z startups use open-source Chinese models. Same story at Airbnb. China is registering similar or better performance as the American LLM leaders, but with a fraction of the capex.
Flooding the market with competitive, less expensive AI models will put pressure on the margins and pricing power of the Mag7, taking down a frighteningly concentrated S&P and likely sending the U.S., possibly the globe, into recession. The data center bubble bursts. OpenAI is promising Oracle $300 billion, money it doesn't have, for infrastructure Oracle hasn't built.
We can't see the actual contract, but this is BS. The greatest AI hallucination yet is the assumption that in the next few years we're going to build anywhere near the required grid and power capacity. OpenAI needs 20% of current U.S. electric capacity, equivalent to 250 nuclear power plants, at a cost of $10 trillion. There's a five- to eight-year wait to connect a new data center to the grid.
Meanwhile, China has more than twice America's energy capacity at half the cost. Second greatest AI hallucination? Job creation. The average number of full-time employees at a data center is equivalent to the number of people working at two Applebee's. NVIDIA and OpenAI duopoly comes under siege.
Based on its valuation, NVIDIA is telling the market it will add an additional $800 billion in revenue over the next five years, equivalent to the combined revenue of Apple, IBM, Meta, and Tesla.
OpenAI, which has $20 billion in annual revenue, is projecting it'll add $180 billion in revenue over the same period, equivalent to the combined revenue of Disney, Fox, The New York Times, Paramount, and WBD. Also, OpenAI's $1.4 trillion in spending commitments exceeds Argentina's national debt. Meanwhile, the competition is heating up.
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Chapter 3: What are the potential consequences of AI stocks correcting?
China is putting out comparable models at a fraction of the price, see above. Anthropic has captured the lead for enterprise users, and, as I predicted last year, the empire, Alphabet, is striking back. Gemini summaries are improving, and arguably the greatest concentration of AI talent resides at Alphabet.
OpenAI could be our era's Netscape, i.e., the disruptor that enjoys a moment in the spotlight before being eclipsed by an incumbent. Big tech pick, Amazon. I'm bullish on Amazon, even though it underperformed the Mag 7 this year.
The collision of AI and robotics is the champagne and cocaine cocktail fueling Amazon's retail margin expansion, catalyzing a 2x increase in the gross merchandise value of its largest business, retail, by 2033, without adding any human workers. Just as Ford's assembly line slashed automotive production time by 88%, Amazon's robotic investments have reduced the time from click to ship by 78%.
The rest of the Mag 7 capitalizes on the elevation of information, bits, over objects, atoms, while Amazon is leveraging bits to move atoms faster and cheaper. Notably, the market hasn't priced this in yet. In 2025, Amazon stock traded at a P-E ratio of 33 compared to its historic average of 58.
The greatest accretion in shareholder value from AI will be at companies that leverage others' AI, specifically Amazon. Space, the next big thing. When technology gets cheaper, startups form. The ecosystem attracts cheaper and cheaper capital, which spurs innovation and so on and so on.
The cost of the personal computer decreased 58% during the 15-year dot-com boom, and US IT spending increased 200%. The same pattern is happening now with AI. the cost of GPU operations has fallen by 74%, while global AI funding has risen by 280%. The key metric for space? Over the past 15 years, the cost to get a kilogram of payload into orbit is down 89%, while private U.S.
space investment jumped 6x. SpaceX is dominant, registering 84% of U.S. space launches in 2024, up from 18% in 2008. If I were running investor relations, I'd position SpaceX as follows. Google owns 93% of information with search. Meta controls two-thirds of social connection. Amazon has half of e-commerce. SpaceX controls 90% of everything else in the universe.
Everything is a subset of the addressable market that is space. TikTok success underscores the biggest mistake marketers make, believing choice is a good thing. It isn't. Consumers spend five days per year deciding what to watch on Netflix. TikTok has only one channel, and it's the best one you're ever going to watch. 43% of Americans 18 to 29 get their news from TikTok.
We also spend more time on average with TikTok, 54 minutes per day, than with friends, 35 minutes. When I say TikTok is our new best friend, I mean CCP spy. But I digress. The math on TikTok's forced sale doesn't math, though, unless you're one of the president's cronies. TikTok's U.S. ad revenue was $12 billion in 2024.
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Chapter 4: How is the global supply chain affected by U.S. tariffs on China?
Applying a 10x PS ratio, its U.S. business has an implied value of $120 billion. Accounting for a revenue share with China, Trump's deal values U.S. TikTok at $28 billion. But I'm a Democrat, so I'm not allowed to invest. These insider deals reduce people's faith in the market, raising the cost of capital for everyone. U.S. economic policy could best be described as corrupt but stupid.
Short-form video and AI meteors strike Hollywood. Hollywood is the new Detroit, but with better weather. For creatives, the return on human capital is inversely correlated to the size of the screen. 78% of Americans age 10 to 24 watch TV and movies on YouTube and TikTok.
The Kids Diana show on YouTube averages between 2 and 10 minutes per episode, perfectly calibrated for young people's shrinking attention spans. The show registers 137 million subscribers. Disney+, has 128 million subscribers. The other meteor headed for Hollywood is AI. What AI will do to Hollywood is what podcasting is doing to TV.
The Late Show with Stephen Colbert employs 200 people, costs $100 million, and makes $60 million. When Colbert shifts to podcasting, he'll take eight people with him and make just $20 million, but it'll only cost $5 million to produce. The means of production are being arbitraged. There will be outrage from the creative community who believe they're too precious to face disruption.
But consumers, much less the Ellisons, don't give a shit. Waymo dominates. Automobile deaths kill 40,000 Americans annually, equivalent to prostate cancer, Parkinson's disease, and breast cancer combined. Autonomous driving may be the equivalent of a cure for some types of cancer.
A study evaluating tens of millions of miles driven by Waymo found that its autonomous cars were involved in 96% fewer vehicle-to-vehicle crashes, resulting in 90% fewer bodily injury claims and 92% fewer pedestrian injuries compared to cars driven by humans. Waymo went from 38,000 paid rides per month in 2023 to 1 million just two years later.
The company is lapping the competition, logging 100 million fully autonomous miles compared to Tesla's 1.25 million miles with human safety monitors. The second horse to watch is Uber. It's technology agnostic, choosing to pour capital into the consumer experience. As former CEO Travis Kalanick said, the most expensive part of the business is the person in the driver's seat.
Humanoid robots equal self-driving cars of 2015. Similar to self-driving cars circa 2015, humanoid robots are another musk weapon of mass distraction designed to draw attention away from the fact that Tesla is a car company. Tesla's market cap per car sold is 77x what it is for GM and Ford, 28x Toyota, and 24x BYD.
According to Musk, Tesla's Optimus robot will be an infinite money glitch that ends poverty and performs surgery. It's as if he's on ketamine. According to MIT robotics professor emeritus Rodney Brooks, we will have plenty of humanoid robots 15 years from now, but they will look like neither today's humanoid robots nor humans.
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Chapter 5: What role does Amazon play in the future of AI and robotics?
Prediction markets leverage the wisdom of crowds. In turn, crowds supercharged by integrations with news brands create a virtual self-propulsion marketing machine. Participants may be deluded into believing they're engaging in an intellectual pursuit when they bet on an election's outcome. But it's gambling, just more fun and interesting.
What GLP-1s did to fast food, prediction markets are doing to the gaming business. Aristocrat Leisure, Caesars Entertainment, DraftKings, Evolution Gaming, Flutter Entertainment, and MGM Resorts are down 22% year-to-date, on average. Las Vegas tourism is down 8%. Nobody will be in Vegas once Vegas is on everyone's phone. The externalities are huge. Half the men in the U.S.
between 18 and 49 have a sports betting account. Among sports bettors, 23% say they're addicted. The share jumps to 37% for Gen Z. One in five people with a gambling addiction attempt suicide. Personal bankruptcy filings increased by 28% in states that legalized sports betting after a 2018 Supreme Court ruling.
There are also civic externalities, as prediction markets represent the mother of all insider trading opportunities. Wagering on what Musk will tweet next, Trump's Fed pick, the speed of a pitch, or when a candidate will drop out of a race invites corruption into every aspect of American life. Synthetic relationships take center stage. There's a use case for AI companions, but it's uncomfortable.
A sad story about lonely old people. One quarter of Americans 65 and up are socially isolated, increasing their risk of stroke and dementia by 30% and 50% respectively. The share of the population aged 65 and older is projected to reach 21% by the end of the decade. In one year-long analysis of older Americans living alone, 95% of participants said bots reduced loneliness.
If synthetic relationships can make older people less lonely and stave off dementia, that's great. The problem? Young people aren't developing the skills to navigate life's hardest and most rewarding thing, relationships. Google's search volume for how to make friends has increased 5x since 2004, while the share of Americans who say they have no close friends increased 4x from 1990 to 2021.
I believe synthetic companions are the next opioid crisis for young people. On Character AI, 79% of the users are under 35. The average session is 93 minutes. In any given week on ChatGPT, 560,000 people show signs of mania or psychosis, while 1.2 million people engage in conversations that indicate they have a plan to self-harm.
Unfortunately, Congress is the walking dead meets the golden girls. They see the danger from synthetic relationships about as clearly as the propaganda threat posed by TikTok. The college is dead narrative collapses. Some of the most successful people of our age are college dropouts. Mark Zuckerberg, Larry Ellison, Oprah, You should assume your son is not Oprah.
Despite the noise about employers removing degree requirements, the share of workers without a degree increased only 3.5% between 2019 and 2024, while 45% of all firms made no changes to their hiring practices. In pure economic terms, the median household income for a college graduate is more than 2x what it is for someone without a degree.
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Chapter 6: How is SpaceX positioned in the evolving space industry?
Hey, I can dream. The best way to predict the future is to make it. I hope the new year brings you the perspective and presence of mind to realize that if you live in America, are healthy, and have people who let you love them completely, 2026 will be the best year of your life. Life is so rich.