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Happy New Year—I hope you had a great holiday. I’ll start 2024 with a reminder that this is my actual email—and that you can always write or reply to me here with something that you think I should cover. Know anything that the richest people in the world are up to behind the scenes? Heard something surprising in the world of big-money politics or big-money philanthropy or big-money family offices? Make it your New Year’s resolution to anonymously tell me more things.
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The Stratosphere

Happy New Year—I hope you had a great holiday. I spent my downtime hitting my 34th, 35th, 36th, and 37th U.S. National Park, and feel recharged for the year ahead.

I’ll start 2024 with a reminder that this is my actual email—and that you can always write or reply to me here with something that you think I should cover. Know anything that the richest people in the world are up to behind the scenes? Heard something surprising in the world of big-money politics or big-money philanthropy or big-money family offices? Make it your New Year’s resolution to anonymously tell me more things.

Before jumping into my ’24 predictions, a few smaller items…

  • Whale Watching on Oahu: Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s New Year’s resolution is apparently a big fundraising expedition across the country, according to invites I’ve seen. These “Private Receptions with Robert F. Kennedy Jr.” unofficially began on New Year’s Day, with a private reception in Aspen, notably co-hosted by Anthony Kennedy Shriver, one of the few Camelot family members to support his bid. They will continue on Jan. 6 in Lake Oswego, Oregon; then Glendale, California, on Jan. 8; Raleigh on Jan. 12; Atlanta on Jan. 14; and then two spectacular sounding fundraising events in Hawaii.

    On January 16 on Oahu, attendees are invited to wear “aloha attire” for a reception with Kennedy and Cheryl Hines over “heavy pupus and cocktail hour at sunset for maximum donors.” Then, on Jan. 18, you can go whale watching with R.F.K. Jr. “on a beautiful catamaran.” On Jan. 26, he’s fundraising in Charlottesville; on the 28th he’s in Isle of Palms in South Carolina; on Feb. 3 he’ll be in Hayward, California; and on Feb. 10 he will be in Detroit. Of course, Kennedy needs to raise serious money to make the ballot in as many states as he can.

  • Merry Christmas, Sam?: In case you missed it, prosecutors announced late Friday, the last business day of 2023, that they will not proceed with a second trial of Sam Bankman-Fried, on foreign-bribery and other non-core charges. That means there will be no second media spectacle, no second hauling of S.B.F. and his parents before the media, and no second excavation of Sam’s multibillion-dollar fraud. That was mostly expected, given that he’s already been convicted once. “The Government has concluded that the public interest in a prompt resolution of this matter outweighs the interest in holding a separate trial,” said Damian Williams, the U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York. Now, Sam and his friends and family can move on, so to speak, until March, when he’ll be sentenced. More on that below…
S.B.F.’s $3 Billion Complexifier
S.B.F.’s $3 Billion Complexifier
Sam Bankman-Fried’s prescient investment in Anthropic—now worth multiple billions—might help make his defrauded FTX investors whole. How will this impact his parents? His narrative? Or even his sentencing?
TEDDY SCHLEIFER TEDDY SCHLEIFER
In a watershed year for Silicon Valley politics, the overarching theme of 2023 was the backlash to liberalism. It manifested seemingly everywhere, from the fall of Sam Bankman-Fried to the rise of conservative megadonors, like Jan Koum, and conservative influencers, like David Sacks, who are playing for keeps in 2024. Of course, barring some unforeseen blockbuster news event, the presidential election will be the biggest story in the tech money world. And while the primaries seem to be less exciting than we hoped, the general election is actually poised to be much more exciting, given the potential impact of third-party candidates, the legal fracas surrounding Trump, the R.F.K. X-factor, and more.

So with 2024 finally upon us, here are my five predictions for Silicon Valley politics and philanthropy in the year ahead…

I. FTX Drops Litigation Against Michael Kives and S.B.F.’s Parents
During the lead-up to the trial of Sam Bankman-Fried, in October, one major subplot coalesced around whether his legal team would be allowed to point out the success of some of his private investments. Prosecutors, of course, aimed to cast Sam as a profligate spender who made insanely risky investments using customer funds. Sam’s lawyers wanted to counter that narrative by pointing to Sam’s investments that had turned out quite well, especially after the crypto market began to recover from its mid-2022 crash. In the end, Judge Lewis Kaplan essentially ruled that the economic outcome of those investments was irrelevant to the question of whether Sam absconded with customer funds.

Since then, of course, Sam’s investing record has looked more and more prescient—so much so that FTX debtors might actually be made whole. That’s mostly due to his multi-hundred-million-dollar bet on Anthropic, the effective altruist-aligned A.I. company that, over the course of 2023, raised money from Amazon and Google and is on the cusp of reaching a valuation of $18.4 billion. That’s almost five times its valuation at the beginning of 2023. (FTX and Alameda’s stake in the company is probably worth around $3 billion or $4 billion today.)

FTX’s lawyers at Sullivan & Cromwell claim to have recovered about $7 billion in liquid assets since the collapse of the crypto futures exchange. But that still leaves a hole, which is why FTX is pursuing litigation against entities they claim haven’t returned customer money, including investor Michael Kives’ firm, K5 Global, and S.B.F.’s parents, Joe Bankman and Barbara Fried. But what happens if S.B.F.’s Anthropic investment fills the gap?

Of course, no credit would go to Sullivan & Cromwell, but at that point the white-shoe law firm would have an excuse to declare victory and drop the litigation against S.B.F.’s parents and Kives, or settle it for some smaller amount. Working against this prediction: Sullivan & Cromwell is being paid handsomely for all this work, and FTX is incentivized, as a fiduciary, to maximize returns for all debtors.

II. Sam Gets a Lighter Sentence Than You Expect
In March, Judge Kaplan will oversee sentencing for S.B.F., Gary Wang, Caroline Ellison, Nishad Singh, and Ryan Salame. Wang, Ellison, and Singh each testified in the hopes of avoiding jail time, to which I say: good luck! Salame, for his part, chose not to testify and isn’t formally cooperating with prosecutors, so it’s almost inevitable that he’ll do some time. But there will be a ton of attention paid to the headline number of each charge that S.B.F., himself, receives. That’s understandable—many people viscerally hate the guy, and want to see as many zeros tacked onto the sentence as possible. And Sam didn’t do himself any favors with his attitude on the stand.

But I believe the sentencing won’t be as severe as many expect, in part because of Anthropic. “No harm, no foul” isn’t exactly a legal argument, but there is a line of thinking, among some S.B.F. allies, that the harm to FTX customers will have been minimized if they all (eventually) get their money back. And the feds’ decision to not pursue a second trial also means that S.B.F. will face fewer potential convictions and the possibility of consecutive sentencing. I’ll take the under and predict Bankman-Fried gets 20 years. More than Elizabeth Holmes, but less than Bernie Madoff. We can compare notes again in March.

III. E.A. and Crypto Money Make a Comeback
The obituaries for crypto and effective altruism were written awfully fast, especially after the fall of Bankman-Fried, the Binance/Changpeng Zhao guilty plea, and the boardroom drama at OpenAI. It didn’t help, of course, that S.B.F. was a poster child and pitchman for both movements, right up until the moment he was indicted for orchestrating a massive criminal conspiracy.

But I suspect the backlash has gone overboard. Effective altruism is still ascendant in our political and philanthropic culture, and especially so in Silicon Valley. I agree with Patrick Collison, the always thoughtful co-founder of Stripe, who tweeted the other day that the E.A. movement’s commitment to A.I. safety is “not a crank view” and that it should be credited for being among the first to address the risk of both pandemics and artificial intelligence. “Assessments that deride E.A. as a cult while failing to acknowledge these counterintuitive successes strike me as unreasonably uncharitable,” he continued. “If asked ‘which 2018 community now looks most prescient based on how the intervening 5 years unfolded?’, I think it’s hard to come up with better nominations than E.A.”

There is already a growing schism within the so-called rationalist community about whether E.A. should return to its stripped-down focus on investments like anti-malaria bed nets and other data-backed, real-world interventions, and veer away from zanier, “long-termist” concerns like nuclear war and A.I. armageddon. But either way, I’ll bet that effective altruism will still be a major player in politics and philanthropy in five years.

There’s a similar correction coming for crypto’s role in politics. Look no further than the news that a group of investors has put $78 million into a super PAC, Fairshake, backing pro-crypto candidates, far eclipsing the amount that crypto interests spent in 2022. It’ll be particularly interesting to watch the political plays of Marc Andreessen, Ben Horowitz, and their eponymous firm, which are among the leaders of the push. The two have stayed largely out of politics over the last few years, especially since Trump was elected, but they’re now being very public about their desire to reenter the fray and beat back anti-crypto (or more broadly anti-tech) candidates in primaries.

IV. A New Power Set in Silicon Valley Politics
The big story of the year will be the Trump-Biden rematch—a surefire bloodbath that will shake up the power rankings in Silicon Valley. Before Trump inevitably wraps up the nomination, I wager that Jan Koum—the billionaire WhatsApp co-founder turned G.O.P. megadonor—drops a few more coins on Nikki Haley, the pro-Israel candidate who has stolen his heart to the tune of $10 million. I can even see Koum remaining a player in the presidential election if Trump wins the primary. Sure, he’s not a Trump guy, but many pro-Israel Republicans believe there’s no better candidate for Israel. However, would Koum be able to stomach Trump’s opposition to aid for Ukraine, his homeland?

I’ll also bet that Peter Thiel returns to the political fold to boost Trump, despite telling Barton Gellman in The Atlantic that he wanted to go on-the-record about his desire to sit out 2024, specifically so that he couldn’t back out of it later. I don’t doubt that Thiel wants to stay out of politics, given his disappointing foray in the 2022 midterms and Trump’s efforts to strong-arm his support. But I also know that Thiel loves being in the media and cultural mix; that he would love to repair his relationship with the possible next president of the United States; and, frankly, that he will feel tremendous pressure from the MAGA establishment to help beat Joe Biden.

The right-wing backlash to progressive ideas in Silicon Valley has been one of the major themes of my reporting since 2020, when Biden’s victory empowered conservatives to express their politics without having to defend Donald Trump. With a Democrat in office, there’s been a renaissance in Republican political engagement within the tech industry, who sometimes argue politics these days as if we’re in a Trump-free universe. Short of Elon Musk’s acquisition of Twitter, the apotheosis of this trend has been the sensational rise of the All-In podcast, and the groupies that surround personalities like Chamath Palihapitiya and David Sacks. I’ve argued that they are legit political players in the post-Trump era. But if Trump becomes the nominee, I’d bet that they become less involved in politics, and focus more on their media ventures than partisan combat. In short: Tech’s conservative backlash will be challenged by Trump’s return.

V. Tech Mobilizes for Biden
For years, Democratic operatives who deal with the billionaire class have lamented to me that Trump’s Mar-a-Lago exile led to sagging fundraising for the progressive universe. After Trump left the stage (well, the White House, anyway…), some donors have returned to their own hobbies and businesses and put politics on the back burner, even if they won’t admit it. But if Trump becomes the nominee—not the hypothetical nominee, but actually nominated at the Republican National Convention—things will get real for megadonors, and real fast. I’ll bet that, beginning in the summer, once the threat of a second Trump administration is front-and-center, Biden has no trouble whatsoever raising money. I think Trump-inspired Democratic megadonors like Dustin Moskovitz will be here to play in 2024. They’ll just have to hope it’s not too late.
FOUR STORIES WE’RE TALKING ABOUT
Box Office Omens
Box Office Omens
On the foreboding signs for the ’24 box office.
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Disney’s Three-Headed Monster
Disney’s Three-Headed Monster
Crowning Hollywood’s Villain(s) of the Year.
MATTHEW BELLONI
Biden Impeachment Math
Biden Impeachment Math
Teasing out the strategy behind a doomed inquiry.
TINA NGUYEN
’24 Media Narratives
’24 Media Narratives
A talmudic reading of four consequential media plotlines.
DYLAN BYERS
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