The coverage on this live blog has ended. For more information, check out CNBC's coverage of the annual investor summit at Delivering Alpha.
The bull market in stocks has pushed the Dow, S&P 500, and Nasdaq to new records. It's also produced one of the priciest markets in history. Donald Trump's reelection as president is adding fuel to the fire with increasing optimism about the economy.
Delivering Alpha included takes on Trump and the markets from activist investor Nelson Peltz and hedge fund icon David Einhorn, who also revealed some of his new bets. The event culminated in an interview with Artists Equity Co-Founder & CEO Ben Affleck, and Gerry Cardinale, RedBird Capital Partners Founder — who helped engineer the Skydance Media's acquisition of Paramount — discussing the future of the entertainment industry.
Ben Affleck says new Netflix project and other movies will include 'escalating bonuses' never used before in Hollywood
The media industry may be broken in many respects in the digital era, but according to Gerry Cardinale, RedBird Capital Partners founder, managing partner, and chief investment officer — who recently helped orchestrate the Skydance Media acquisition of Paramount — the counter-intuitive truth is that "Content is finally king."
He's working with Ben Affleck, best known for acting and directing but who appeared at DA in his capacity as Artists Equity co-founder and CEO, and who said that he is focused on developing a new business model which breaks with the Hollywood past. Oftentimes, the movie business model led to people working with different incentives and effectively against each other, leading to an economic equation that wasn't sustainable for anyone but executive paychecks, especially with the rapid changes wrought by streaming technology like Netflix.
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"People don't act like owners, there's a cash grab mentality exacerbated by the sense it's fleeting and the phone can stop ringing and you 'get what I can get now,'" Affleck said at DA.
Money Report
One of the keys to the new model is the value of human beings as IP, Affleck said, the cultural footprints of people like Lebron James, the "array of IP we now view in the world not only IP, but human beings. ... human beings represent things," he said, giving the example of a pop star like Beyonce standing for "elegant" style more than the word "elegant" itself does now.
And another focus for Affleck, given the extent to which talent and creators are necessary for profit and creating return, is to realign project incentives.
He's currently working on movie projects, including one currently in a deal with Netflix, in which bonuses will be awarded in a way that he said has not existed before. "Escalating tranches of bonus money," Affleck said, which will enable the movie's producers to manage down the initial investment with the cast and crew, but also send the message that if the project is "a real success, you'll make a hell of a lot more," he said.
—Eric Rosenbaum
'That genie never going back in the bottle,' Gerry Cardinale says of actors acting more like owners
Affleck and Gerry Cardinale both shared concerns about unaligned incentives in the entertainment industry.
"A lot of rinse and repeat," Cardinale said. "People want to have different outcomes but they are not breaking it to go do it," he said.
He cited the example of Artists Equity and the empowerment of talent who are financially motivated. "Most actors don't care about the outcome. They get their fee. This whole ecosystem of unaccountability ... in the real world, that's what the whole capitalistic construct is about. It's accountability," Cardinale said. "The only thing that's new now is the talent's at the table and that genie is never going back in the bottle."
"Labor is feeling the rollback," Affleck said of the recent industry financial challenges. "Talent, if you look at news ... actors, writers, directors, is feeling the rollback, and typically, the last group to feel that is the executive class, but that has to come too," he added. "That's gonna be part of that process."
For everyone in the business, he said, "It's a little harder to do this job now. ... The consumer doesn't just have three networks. Youtube is kicking peoples' ass. You have to work harder and be better."
—Eric Rosenbaum
AI won't challenge top Hollywood talent for a long time, Ben Affleck says
There has been plenty of fear about AI replacing every job that has ever existed and especially creative ones, but Ben Affleck does not seem concerned about the march of AI on actors and writers.
While he sees big problems with the entertainment business model related to technology, and is working on multiple solutions as CEO and co-founder of Artists Equity, AI is not keeping him up at night.
"AI can write you imitative verse. It cannot write you Shakespeare," Affleck said at DA. He added that having actors in a room together and consulting on a project based on "taste" is something that will elude AI "for a meaningful period of time."
The more laborious and costly aspects of filming will be tackled by AI, and that will benefit young filmmakers, with the barriers to entry coming down for the next generation of people making "Good Will Hunting."
But Affleck's view of AI currently is that it is a craftsman not an artist and it can sit and watch [a human] make furniture and imitate it. "Nothing new is created," he said.
"Being a craftsmen is knowing how to work, and art is knowing when to stop, and knowing when to stop will be a very difficult thing for AI to learn, because of 'taste,'" he said.
Affleck said he would worry if he was in the visual effects part of the business. "I wouldn't want to be in visual effects ... they are in trouble. What costs a lot now will cost a lot less, and maybe it shouldn't take 1,000 people to render something."
—Eric Rosenbaum
Einhorn says he’s one of the last value investors left
David Einhorn said that he believes he's one of the few true value investors remaining, likening himself to the Maytag repairman.
"The price discovery from professional people who have a valuation framework, not as the dominant part of their process, but as any part of their process, is much, much smaller than it used to be," Einhorn told CNBC's Leslie Picker at DA.
"Instead of the valuation becoming the signal, the valuation people were just noise and everybody else is sort of the signal," he continued. "This is why I think we have a structurally dysfunctional market, a bit of a broken market and essentially a perpetual erosion of value as a strategy. I'm like the Maytag repairman – I'm like the last guy doing it."
— Sean Conlon
Einhorn building position in farm equipment company CNH Industrial
Hedge fund manager David Einhorn sees the market as overvalued and sees himself as one of the few managers still looking for bargain stocks. He recently revealed a position in beaten-up Peloton and at DA he revealed a new position in CNH Industrial, a maker of farm equipment that he described as a "medium-sized" position and under-the-radar value play coming out of a bearish cycle.
"It's exactly the kind of situation that absolutely nobody cares about right now because it's cheap, and the news over the next period of time isn't going to be very good. Agriculture prices are low, and agricultural equipment is ending down cycle," Einhorn said at a panel with CNBC's Leslie Picker.
—Yun Li
Wealthy Americans increasingly looking to move abroad
The phenomenon of "passport portfolios," or wealthy Americans looking to add second passports or long-term residences abroad, is still booming, CNBC Wealth Editor Robert Frank told CNBC's Tyler Mathisen at Delivering Alpha on Wednesday.
The trend originally came out of the Covid pandemic, when wealthy investors, who are often the most mobile and global among all citizens, looked to hedge the risk that their country of residence brought to them by adding another passport or citizenship.
However, this phenomenon not only continued but increased in the run-up to the U.S. presidential election, Frank said, but not necessarily because of either candidate but rather the concern about political and social unrest regardless.
"It's more a dissatisfaction [around things like] antisemitism, islamaphobia, gun violence, or just the broad partisan nature of this country," Frank said. "But money is on the move like never before in the world."
The new hot spot is Malta, which for an estimated 600,00-euro economic contribution will provide you with citizenship and a passport that allows you to reside or work in 27 European Union countries.
Other pathways to gaining a passport, like linking back to relatives in Ireland or Italy, or through buying a property as often seen in countries like St. Lucia, are still popular, Frank said.
However, he added, given the boom in Americans looking to take advantage of property-buying programs, "these countries are doubling the price," Frank said. "So, act now."
— Ian Thomas
Einhorn sees a 'really, really, really' pricey market with opportunities
Hedge fund manager David Einhorn sees a market with rich valuations that is nonetheless still enticing.
"This is a really, really, really pricey environment, but it doesn't necessarily make me bearish. Asset prices can trade at the wrong price, and they can trade at the wrong price for a long period of time," the head of Greenlight Capital said Wednesday at Delivering Alpha.
"An overvalued stock market, that's not necessarily a bear market. It doesn't necessarily mean it has to go down anytime soon, and so I'm not particularly bearish," he added. "I can't really see what's going to break the market at this point."
As far as opportunities, Einhorn, who recently took a stake in Peloton and at DA revealed a new position in a beaten-up agricultural stock, said there are companies that are "hated and forgotten about."
—Jeff Cox
UC Investments' head says bring 'growth mindset' to periods of major change
University endowment chiefs have been at the center of a political storm in recent years and forced into the position of being prepared for new atypical challenges when it comes to investing. But when asked about any shifts he might make in his portfolio to prepare for the incoming Trump administration, UC Investments' Jagdeep Singh Bachher said it's "too early" to make any calls.
Former President Donald Trump's reelection has caused the market to rally, but with that rise comes risk, and investors are looking for ways to reduce volatility in their portfolios over the coming years.
Singh Bachher, who manages a $188 billion portfolio, said he's excited by change. In 2020 — when UC was experiencing what he calls a "perfect storm" during the pandemic — Singh Bachher preferred to look ahead towards coming out on the other side.
"I think in periods of change, my orientation is to lean towards a growth mindset."
—Sara Lindsay
David Einhorn says inflation is headed higher on 'expansionary' Trump agenda
Greenlight Capital president David Einhorn Election said the election results were good in terms of avoiding the issues of political stability which he was worried about not long ago, but for the economy there is a much bigger problem coming in Trump's policy in the form of higher inflation.
"We have increased our bets on inflation," he told CNBC's Leslie Picker at DA. "We will have another inflection up in inflation," he said. "The policy mix being proposed is inflationary and we will see more of that over the next few years."
Einhorn forecast inflation headed back to 3.5%-4.5% but not back to the 7%-9% level.
That views come from all of the tax cuts that Trump would like to do, and even if he does not pursue them all, or Congress refuses to pass them all, the combination of some tax cuts in a strong economy with wage growth — and an immigration policy that will be inflationary in terms of cost and labor — will lead to "a bunch of inflation."
"What they chose to do about that, I don't know. There is an argument for tolerating it and trying to run the economy as hot as possible. I don't really know what they will do," he said.
But Einhorn also said he isn't bearish on the stock market even though he has recently talked about how expensive he thinks the market is.
But he did add that the bond market has not yet begun to price in what will be a "difficult Treasury [bond yield] situation."
—Eric Rosenbaum
SALT deduction cap unlikely to be eliminated, CNBC’s Frank says
During the U.S. presidential campaign, Donald Trump vowed that he would "get SALT back" if reelected, a pledge that he would eliminate the cap on state and local tax deductions that he signed into law in 2017 and a move that would be cheered by Americans with higher state and local tax rates.
However, according to CNBC Wealth Editor Robert Frank, it is unlikely that that cap will be repealed in a new Trump administration tax bill, although it could see some alterations from its current form.
"There will be Republicans from blue states as well as Democrats who want it repealed," Frank said Wednesday at Delivering Alpha. "That's not going to happen, it's way too expensive."
The 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, the biggest legislative accomplishment of Trump's presidential term, limited that deduction to $10,000, and the provision is set to expire at the end of 2025, and Frank said the likely outcome is that the deduction gets raised, and that is likely indexed to inflation.
"When they passed this in 2017, real estate property taxes were much lower than they are today because of housing values," Frank said. "So the number of people that are caught by that cap is much larger today because of inflation."
But completely repealing SALT is extremely unlikely "because it is too important as an offset for all these other revenue raisers" that the administration is expected to lose through actions like lowering the corporate tax rate.
— Ian Thomas
California universities' investment chief on dealing with students on Israel
Jagdeep Singh Bachher, UC Investments' chief investment officer and vice president of investments, oversees a portfolio with $188 billion under management, but in recent years, he estimates that 25%-35% of his time has been devoted to working with students on the rising number of issues which have led to tension on campus. His investing system sold fossil fuel and tobacco investments in 2018, but in the past year, it faced major student unrest over war in the Middle East.
He recalled in an interview at DA that the day before a board meeting he quietly walked into a student tent on campus where students were calling for the CIO of the investment organization through a loudspeaker. "They didn't know I was there," he said.
He ended up giving the students his email and cell phone number after revealing his identity, but four months later, a board meeting was disrupted and he told them, "You never called."
Ultimately, he offered the students full transparency on the portfolio and got the students to send a letter with their demands, which included divesting from anything having to do with Israel.
So he told them the university would need to sell $32 billion in U.S. treasuries, which surprised the students.
"We're the biggest backers," he told the students. "And then they said, 'okay, we'll have another conversation.'"
While he related the incidents with a light touch, Singh Bachher said he takes the relationship with students, and their concerns, seriously, and they have continued to have lots of dialogue. "We need to learn from them. They are the early detection systems."
—Eric Rosenbaum
Disney will replace CEO before end of 2025, Peltz says
Disney tapped James Gorman to replace Mark Parker as the company's next chairman, effective in January, and has said it will name a successor for CEO Bob Iger in early 2026.
After his losing proxy battle at Disney, Peltz had kind words to share about Gorman as a chairman. "Gorman — he's a good man, and he is going to do a great job, and he will get a respectable CEO in there."
But he hit Iger and another former Disney CEO, Michael Eisner, for acting as if they were Walt Disney reincarnated. "I don't know what happens in that office. If you're there for a couple of years, you think your name is Walt Disney. ... They all seem to think they are Walt Disney. I knew Bob a little before the fight and I never saw him draw a Mickey Mouse."
Peltz said he doesn't believe the Disney timeline for replacing Iger, though he said he has no inside information. Peltz told attendees at DA that he expects a new CEO at Disney before the end of 2025.
—Eric Rosenbaum
Ontario pension giant worried about Trump tax attack
Among all the tax changes that President-elect Trump might make which could affect investors, one that probably gets less attention in the U.S. is on the minds of big foreign investors.
Jo Taylor, Ontario Teachers' Pension Plan CEO, said one risk that the Canadian pension investor faces is "how much of an outsider may we become," he said.
The Ontario pension plan has $120 billion invested in the U.S., and "the freedom to operate, and ability to still be a preferred investor" in areas where it can provide long-term capital, is a key issue. "Taxation changes would be most immediate one," he said of worries about new policies that could emerge in the U.S. "We always try to have a neutral approach to global taxation," he said.
If the pension giant's taxability changed in regards to profits being translated back to Canada, if it became a taxable entity in a new manner, "even a small tax percent is quite a lot of money," Taylor said.
—Eric Rosenbaum
Surprised by equities bounce post-election, but bonds bigger worry, says Guggenheim CIO
Anne Walsh, Guggenheim Partners Investment Management chief investment officer, was surprised by the stock rally after the U.S. elections, but less so that stocks went up than that they went up by so much. But her bigger concern remains on the bond side of the markets.
She said investors will be "more wary" given the election rally and the pulling forward of expectations about tax cuts and regulation and expectations they will contribute to growth.
But it is in the bond market where investors should expect even more volatility. The bond market has been reacting to reflationary concerns since tax cuts would contribute to the deficit and even as the Fed makes progress on inflation the latest CPI data out Wednesday showed "stasis" in that effort.
"Volatility will be with us for a while," Walsh said.
She expects the 10-year Treasury to trade between 3.5% and 4.5% for "a while," possibly a few years, she said.
"That's the question for bond investors, not just the extension of tax cuts but new tax cuts and no offset with revenues," Walsh said.
There will be elevated levels of fixed income volatility relative to equity volatility, but investors should also be aware of a worsening risk premium for stocks, she added.
—Eric Rosenbaum
Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan CEO breaks down his AI investing approach
Jo Taylor, Ontario Teachers' Pension Plan CEO, said his fund is taking a two-pronged approach to investing in the red-hot artificial intelligence space.
"We try to play it both ends of the spectrum. So we'll invest in larger businesses that are able to monetize more and more opportunities," Taylor said. "We have a venture growth team that will work with U.S.-based funds to find the emerging, perhaps more niche AI businesses, which may be disruptive and able to create disproportional value."
AI stocks such as Nvidia emerged as the biggest gainers over the past two years, driving the bull market to new heights.
— Yun Li
AI-generated Andrew Ross Sorkin, David Faber take the stage at Delivering Alpha
CNBC anchors Andrew Ross Sorkin and David Faber surprised the Delivering Alpha audience with AI deepfakes of themselves to demonstrate the latest in generative AI tech.
"AI me is almost as good as 'Squawk Box' me," Ross Sorkin joked.
The rise of this type of technology has led to concerns regarding misinformation as deepfake videos penetrate further into many realms, from financial markets to personal finance scams and politics, with ChatGPT rejecting more than 250,000 requests to generate images of the 2024 U.S. presidential candidates in the lead up to Election Day, OpenAI recently revealed.
—Sara Lindsay
Mercer investing chief Aganga sees policy risks coming from Trump presidency
President-elect Donald Trump's victory last week has introduced a heightened level of policy uncertainty into investment decisions, said Olaolu Aganga, chief investment officer at Mercer U.S.
"The policy changes are really what could impact how we allocate capital," Aganga said Wednesday at CNBC's Delivering Alpha conference in New York. "So it's the uncertainty around that, and just making sure that as we look for opportunities, they're more centered around the longer-term types of themes."
Along with that, she said focus will be on various market themes, including changes in tax law as well as the likelihood of Trump to turn focus away from renewable energy. Mercer, a professional services firm, looks closely at corporate risks, equity demand and the state of real assets.
"All three are impacted by any kind of policy changes," Aganga said.
—Jeff Cox
Peltz is happy Trump won, but doesn't think the rally will last
Billionaire investor Nelson Peltz is confident in the incoming Trump administration, but he doesn't think the stock market rally will last.
"Trees don't grow to the sky, definitely not uninterrupted," he told CNBC's Sara Eisen at CNBC's Delivering Alpha conference. The Trian Partners' CEO thinks investors are getting caught up in the hype and that things will cool down. "There will be something that will upset it. I think we've got euphoria from the election. On the other hand, you look at the international stocks, we've gotten slayed over the last week."
He also expressed concerned about an S&P 500 led by a top-heavy group of high-momentum stocks.
—Jeff Cox
Nelson Peltz says Trump's tariffs will be a negotiating tool
Nelson Peltz believes U.S. President-elect Donald Trump will use tariffs as a negotiating tool to convince Europe and others to lower duties on U.S.
"I think he intends to do it, but I think our trading partners are going to change it. I mean, why should a Chevy in Paris cost over $100,000," Peltz said.
"I think Trump is right. I think the threat of the tariff will bring these guys in line. I think we need that. That's where to start the negotiation. That's his style, you know, come to the table with a hammer and see what happens," Trian Partners' founding partner and CEO said at the conference.
Trump made universal tariffs a core tenet of his economic campaign pitch, floating a 20% tax on all imports from all countries with a specifically harsh 60% rate for Chinese goods.
— Yun Li
Nelson Peltz says need to 'obliterate' antisemitism
Trian Partners CEO Nelson Peltz says he has been trying to convince a portfolio company to not register in Holland after last weekend's antisemitic attacks that occurred around a football match between a Dutch team and team from Israel.
"You really must come down hard and obliterate it. There's no room for it, no room for any of this stuff in America," said Peltz, who noted he has recently been reading a book about WWII.
"To see all these horrible things the Nazis did, and here we are, we're gonna let this get started all over again?"
—Eric Rosenbaum
David Einhorn sees 'the most expensive stock market' since he got into investing
For top hedge fund investors such as David Einhorn, if it's not time to call a market a bubble or be outright bearish, elevated price-to-earnings ratios should result in caution. In a recent letter to his investors, Einhorn called it the "most expensive" market since his hedge fund Greenlight Capital was founded in 1996.
Einhorn went on a "buyers' strike" at the end of 2023, but came back into the market acquiring medium-sized positions in names like software firm Alight and drugmaker Viatris.
Last month, he made a bullish case for Peloton, saying the shares are significantly undervalued.
Investors will be interested to hear if he's still finding any values. "We think Paul Tudor Jones is right when he says that managing the last third of a great bull or bear market move is often the toughest," Einhorn said in his recent letter to investors.
—Yun Li
Actually, hedge funds might prefer a Democrat in the White House
There's been a rush of enthusiasm on Wall Street regarding Donald Trump's election win, but hedge funds actually generate more alpha when the White House is occupied by a Democrat president than a Republican one, according to hedge fund database HFR, reviewing data going back to 1991.
When compared with the S&P 500, the industry underperformed regardless of who was president. But during Democratic administrations, the gap was about 183 basis points, with hedge funds delivering average, annualized returns of 10.16%, compared to 11.99% from the S&P 500. The underperformance gap during Republican administrations was 331 basis points. (1 basis point equals 0.01%.)
Of course, making predictions about what the next four years entails for stock pickers based on politics is hard to do. In the end, hedge fund returns are far more correlated with positioning relative to various asset-class performances than particular policies by any administration.
—Leslie Picker