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Not Investment Advice
11 Episodes
Reverse
00:05 - Anthropic, DoD, Supply-Chain Risk, and Political Risk for AI Vendors
01:02 - Government Alignment and OpenAI vs. Government Stance
02:27 - Supply Chain Risk and Vendor Diversity
07:27 - Open Letter Discussion and Investor Dynamics
12:56 - Middle Eastern Capital in AI
15:34 - The “Agent Future” and AI Representations
17:11 - AI Clones and Founder Outreach Experiments
23:39 - Personal Updates and AI-Washing
28:05 - Prediction Markets and Insider Trading Concerns
37:03 - Netflix/CNN Media Deals and AI-Native Media
43:32 - Personal Bets and Closing Thoughts
Follow the Hosts:
Eric: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ericbahn/
Ian: https://www.linkedin.com/in/park-ian/
Kevin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jiangkevin
Chapters
* 00:00 Introduction and Catching Up
* 21:50 The Advancement of Chinese Robotics and AI
* 27:20 Robinhood's Entry into Private Credit
* 33:27 Private Credit Market
* 40:28 Lucid Motors and EV Industry
* 47:12 Venture Capital and Accelerators
* 58:13 Social Media and Addiction
Follow the Hosts:
Eric: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ericbahn/
Ian: https://www.linkedin.com/in/park-ian/
Kevin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jiangkevin
00:00 The Exhausting Pace of Silicon Valley News
02:54 Anthropic's Rise and Competition with OpenAI
05:49 The Twitter Culture and Its Impact on AI Leaders
08:40 The Introduction of Ads in AI Models
11:50 The Future of AI: Local Models and Customization
17:47 Kakao's Discounted ChatGPT and Market Dynamics
22:25 Brian Johnson's Immortality Program: A Cult or a Trend?
29:25 The Cult of Longevity
33:10 Cerebras vs Nvidia: The AI Chip Showdown
43:07 The SPV Dilemma in Venture Capital
45:12 AI and the Future of Work: A Cautionary Tale
Follow the Hosts:
Eric: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ericbahn/
Ian: https://www.linkedin.com/in/park-ian/
Kevin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jiangkevin
00:00 Super Bowl Predictions and Initial Thoughts
00:58 The SaaS Apocalypse: Market Reactions
05:59 The Future of SaaS Pricing Models
08:40 Elon Musk's Consolidation of Assets
12:07 The Anthropic vs. OpenAI Ad War
18:23 Waymo's Expansion and the Future of Autonomous Vehicles
25:51 The Future of Car Ownership
29:25 Humanoid Robots: Promise and Challenges
35:53 The Rise of Stablecoins in Startups
39:37 Rethinking Revenue Metrics in Startups
EP 7 : SpaceX & XAi, Clawdbot, Claude Cowork, Future of Work
Chapters
* 00:00 Tech Market Volatility
* 05:27 Impact of Automated Excel on Finance
* 11:03 Tesla's Business Strategy and SpaceX Merger
* 26:29 Voice Interfaces and AI in Technology
* 33:32 Literacy Challenges and Reduced Reading
* 40:57 AI Bots and Their Impact on Society
Follow the Hosts:
Eric: https://x.com/ericbahn?lang=en
Ian: https://ianpark.vc/
Kevin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jiangkevin/
Chapters
- 00:00 Early Morning Podcast
- 05:10 Comparing Brex and Ramp
- 12:10 OpenAI and Trillion-Dollar Valuations
- 18:46 Anthropic and Valuation Trends
- 24:09 Funding Frenzy in the Tech Industry
- 35:36 Strategies of Tech Giants
Follow the Hosts:
Eric: https://x.com/ericbahn?lang=en
Ian: https://ianpark.vc/
Kevin: @jiangkevin
In this New Year 2026 episode, Eric, Kevin, and Ian kick off the season with a wide‑ranging conversation on Sam Altman’s circular investing and OpenAI conflicts, Google Gemini’s “personal intelligence,” on‑device AI and voice interfaces, Meta’s acquisition of Manis, and whether 2026 will be the year of mega IPOs and overhyped “AGI” claims.
[00:00]Intro: CES, Koreans in Vegas, and networking vs. real tech
[02:00]Sam Altman’s BCI startup & OpenAI conflict of interest
[09:30]Circular investing, mega‑founder “camps,” and normalization of conflicts
[15:30] Google Gemini “personal intelligence” and privacy backlash
[21:30] Security gap and need for stronger authentication
[24:30]Apple, Gemini on iPhone, and the “fast follower” strategy
[29:30]Whisper Notes, on‑device AI, and voice interfaces
[34:30] Meta acquires Manus: agents, geopolitics, and China–US tension
[40:00] Why sell a hot AI agent startup for “only” ~$2B?
[44:30] 2026 “Mega IPO” year? SpaceX, OpenAI, Anthropic & Databricks
[50:30]Staying private vs. going public, and VC fund incentives
[55:30] Inflection/“Mira” drama and the risks of team‑only mega rounds
[1:02:00] Sequoia’s “AGI year” essay and hype frustration
[1:08:00]What they’re excited about in 2026 & sign‑off
🔑 Key Takeaways
Sam Altman & conflicts: OpenAI’s investment into Sam’s own BCI startup symbolizes how mega‑founders can blur governance lines, echoing SoftBank‑style circular deals and normalizing significant conflicts of interest.
Personal AI vs. privacy: Gemini’s deep integration across Google products shows how powerful “personal intelligence” can be, but also why security, opt‑in design, and cultural attitudes to privacy will determine mainstream adoption.
On‑device AI & agents: Cheap, small models (e.g., Whisper Notes) plus voice interfaces point toward a future where on‑device agents hold your private context and act autonomously on your behalf across work and life.
Geopolitics & AI talent: Meta’s Manus deal illustrates how Chinese founders are moving to places like Singapore to access U.S. capital and exit markets amid a tightening China–US tech divide.
IPOs, mega‑funds & AGI hype: 2026 could see marquee AI IPOs pushed by mega‑VC liquidity needs, even as many AI companies remain unprofitable and public investors remain cautious; alongside this, AGI rhetoric is increasingly seen as marketing rather than a meaningful technical milestone.
Disclaimer: This content is for entertainment purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.
(01:00) K-Beauty Boom,
(12:55) OpenAI invests in Thrive,
(24:52) New form factor for AI (Zuck’s New Bet)
(36:55) Sachs vs NYT
Follow the Hosts:
Eric: https://x.com/ericbahn?lang=en
Ian: https://ianpark.vc/
Kevin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jiangkevin/
In this pre-Thanksgiving episode, Eric, Kevin, and Ian break down Nvidia's earnings, the looming Private Credit bubble, and why Google’s Gemini 3 might finally win the AI race. They also debate Cursor’s $2.3B valuation, expose the misuse of "ARR" metrics by startups, and discuss the internal turmoil at Sequoia Capital.
00:00 - Intro: VC hibernation mode
01:26 - Nvidia Earnings & AI Bubble anxiety
03:53 - The Private Credit Bubble explained
08:49 - Gemini 3: Why Google will win
14:00 - Excel vs. Google Sheets debate
18:40 - Cursor’s $2.3B valuation & multiples
23:45 - The AI Retention problem
26:10 - The "ARR" Lie: Why metrics are misleading
31:27 - GenSpark & VCs chasing hype
35:11 - Sequoia Capital: Turnover & missed deals
39:09 - Why VCs are behind on tech
42:56 - Mega Funds vs. Emerging Managers
45:34 - Outro
🔑 Key Takeaways
Private Credit Risks: Lack of diligence is creating a "subprime" risk in corporate debt.
Google's Advantage: Vertical integration (Chips + Cloud + Apps) gives Gemini the long-term edge.
Metric Manipulation: Investors need to look past "ARR" (Annualized Revenue Runway) and check actual contracts.
VC Shakeups: Even top firms like Sequoia aren't immune to leadership turnover and missed opportunities.
Disclaimer: This content is for entertainment purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.
In this week’s episode of Not Investment Advice, Eric, Kevin, and Ian break down the most important tech and AI stories from the past few weeks in Silicon Valley.
As always, this show reflects our personal views and is not investment advice.
00:00 – Introduction
00:35 – Why Silicon Valley news cycles feel faster
02:10 – AI-generated music reaches Billboard #1
05:10 – Personalization and the rise of consumer AI music tools
06:45 – The Pope’s statement on AI and healthcare ethics
09:45 – Human connection vs AI interaction
11:00 – The future of relationships in an AI-driven world
13:00 – Legal AI: Harvey raises at an $8B valuation
16:40 – AI margins: OpenAI vs Anthropic
20:30 – Token costs, price wars, and switching friction
24:10 – LLM memory and user lock-in
26:05 – Gemini vs ChatGPT: workflow differences
30:40 – Yann LeCun leaves Meta to launch an AI startup
33:10 – How much capital he could raise today
36:20 – Founder energy and late-career entrepreneurship
38:10 – CLUE, virality, and the limits of hype
42:30 – Retention, product value, and competitive note-taking apps
44:10 – McKinsey’s AI 2025 report: enterprise adoption status
47:40 – Sequoia leadership transition and industry rumors
51:35 – Closing thoughts & next episode preview
In the inaugural episode of "Not Investment Advice," emerging managers Eric Bahn, Ian Park, and Kevin Jiang, VCs of Asian descent, tackle representation and cultural barriers in Silicon Valley before diving into the week's hottest market debates. Topics include the legitimacy of prediction markets (Koshi/PolyMarket), the AI infrastructure "bubble" theory (trillion-dollar commitments and model convergence), the hyper-competitive AI talent war (billion-dollar contracts and the rise of the agent), and the profound threat of Sora deepfakes on intellectual property, public trust, and identity (Worldcoin, virtual actors).
00:00:00 Podcast Introduction and Identity
00:09:49 Discussion on Prediction Markets and Gambling
00:19:20 AI Data Center Investments and Market Bubble Concerns
00:30:41 AI Talent Compensation and Industry Impact
00:48:31 Sora, Deepfakes, and the Future of Reality
00:54:25 Host Introductions and Podcast Closing














