Skip to content
Home » FULL TRANSCRIPT: Mark Cuban on TRUTH Podcast With Vivek Ramaswamy

FULL TRANSCRIPT: Mark Cuban on TRUTH Podcast With Vivek Ramaswamy

Read the full transcript of entrepreneur Mark Cuban’s conversation with Ramaswamy on TRUTH Podcast #58 (August 7, 2024).

Listen to the audio version here:

TRANSCRIPT:

VIVEK RAMASWAMY: So, we’ll talk politics for a second. We’ve got Mark Cuban here, by the way. This is a guy who I’ve actually, I’ve loved this guy from afar. He entertains me because I learn something new when I hear him talk about anything other than politics.

Politics, maybe. But I wanted to get your take on just, you know, as a market participant myself, what do you think is going on in the markets right now? And, you know, I want to do the preface. If you don’t mind sharing with the audience, too, your brilliant move when you sold your first company. You’re a guy who knows what direction markets are going. You’re a macro trader.

MARK CUBAN: No, I wish I was a guy who knew what direction markets were going, right? I just, you know, I tend to be somewhat conservative, unless it’s an industry I really, really know. But, you know, today, as we’re doing this, obviously, the markets had a rough day. And I think it’s a function of the fact that…

VIVEK RAMASWAMY: Rough week. I mean, it’s been a while.

MARK CUBAN: A whole rough week, yeah, for sure. Rough couple of weeks. And so, I think when things are working really, really well, people forget the past. And so they tend to assume, you know, the trend is your friend, and it’ll just keep on going in that direction.

And, you know, and that also leads to people taking on a lot more debt than they otherwise would. You know, things like the Japan, the JP White trade. There’s just so many ways where people like, wait, it always goes up, right? This is just a pullback.

The Dot-Com Bubble

We saw that in the late 90s with the internet bubble. And I’m not saying it’s a bubble now, but you’re seeing that now. And the minute something happens, particularly when there’s multiple things that combine to create a problem, then you tend to see a more aggressive pullback.

VIVEK RAMASWAMY: When did you sell your first company, the tech company?

MARK CUBAN: No, the first company was a company called Micro Solutions. I sold it when I was 29. That was in the 80s. And then we started a company called AudioNet, which turned into Broadcast.com. And that was the start of the whole streaming industry. We were the first streaming company.

VIVEK RAMASWAMY: And when was that sold?

MARK CUBAN: We sold that in 2000.

VIVEK RAMASWAMY: Right. So this is the famous one. I always liked this as a guy growing up.

So I got my first job, I got into the world of hedge funds in 07. So I was a biology guy, graduated in 07, and I got into biotech investing, which I could tell you more about my background. And actually, for people to know, this is the first time Mark and I are meeting, but we texted and messaged each other a lot. But anyway, so in 2000, the reason you were famous, in my mind, was actually not even the company you sold, though. That was an interesting story.

MARK CUBAN: The hedge I put on afterwards.

VIVEK RAMASWAMY: The hedge. Yeah.

Mark Cuban’s Famous Hedge

VIVEK RAMASWAMY: So how did that work? So it was a stock for stock deal?

MARK CUBAN: So here’s what happened. We sold Broadcast.com to Yahoo for stock, no cash. And the rules back then were I had to wait six months before I could do anything because I was not in sire.

VIVEK RAMASWAMY: Was that the rule or was that a demand of the acquirer?

MARK CUBAN: No, no, that was a law. That was the law. And so I couldn’t do anything for six months. And so with that in mind, I went and shorted this one index that had Yahoo that was 5% or less, but it was everything else was just internet stocks.

And the idea was that that would get me through my six months after which then I could do what I was going to do. So I put every penny I had for the most part into shorting this hedge fund. And I figured if the internet stocks cratered within that six months, I would be OK. And if not, fortunately, then I could put on this color.

So it didn’t crater. I pretty much lost all my money on that short. But now I have a lot of money in Yahoo stock. And so what I did was I sold calls and bought puts. I hedged it. And I did it over a multi-period of time. And as it turns out, a lot of people, not just me, expected the internet stock market might drop considerably. Well, it did. And I ended up actually making more money from the hedge than I did from selling Yahoo to Yahoo.

VIVEK RAMASWAMY: And it was called one of the top 10 trades in Wall Street history. And actually, the stock for stock exchange, that’s even a tax free trade basically, right?

MARK CUBAN: Well, you do stock for stock, but not when you put calls and puts on it, right? No, no, no.

VIVEK RAMASWAMY: But the stock for stock merger was tax free, but the calls and puts-

MARK CUBAN: No, no, because yeah, effectively, it could have been, but it wasn’t, right?

VIVEK RAMASWAMY: OK, got it. Because of the hedge fund. Anyway, that was legendary. Yeah, that was a legendary hedge fund move.

MARK CUBAN: Because everybody was telling, because I remember going on CNBC, because I told people I put this collar on, and Yahoo was still going up in price. And they were like, “Don’t you feel stupid that you put this collar on and Yahoo’s still going up?” I’m like, “No, you know, I’m sitting on my G5.