Unqualified Advice
Hello dear show notes readers! This I ask Dan if he's been building anything lately, and we spend the hour discussing the ins and outs of building new tools and products. Two guys, exploring niches. That's the whole episode. Dan is launching Kabu (kabu research dot substack dot com, link below) — a paid newsletter and model portfolio centered on small and mid-cap Japanese equities, anchored on the post-Shinzo-Abe governance reforms and the roughly 2,000 names nobody is covering in English. We get into tier pricing, what makes a paid Substack actually worth paying for, and the practical compliance hygiene around publishing investment ideas — including Dan reaching for Lowe v. SEC, which the fact-check rewards him for. I'm fill Dan in on the real estate brokerage site I've been making for past guess and current business owner, Lindsay Howard, and a property-tax-allocation audit tool I had a vision for. That kicks us into the bigger question hiding underneath: when one citizen with a laptop can audit a municipal budget, what changes? Dan is bullish on the ground-up, people-doing-stuff version. We're both eyes-open about the pitchfork version. The honest answer is it goes both ways. Carve-outs to close: How to Win a Trade War by Soumaya Keynes and Chad P. Bown (the pirate-ship / warship / merchant-ship taxonomy alone is worth the read); Richard Hamming's The Art of Doing Science and Engineering (1990s prose that reads like it was written this week, especially on AI and human uniqueness); and Patrick Radden Keefe's London Falling and The Snakehead, plus the Wind of Change podcast. Go build something this week. Cheers, Sean Books Discussed * How to Win a Trade War: An Optimistic Guide to an Anxious Global Economy [https://www.simonandschuster.com/books/How-to-Win-a-Trade-War/Soumaya-Keynes/9781668221310] by Soumaya Keynes [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soumaya_Keynes] and Chad P. Bown [https://www.chadpbown.com/] * The Art of Doing Science and Engineering: Learning to Learn [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Art_of_Doing_Science_and_Engineering] by Richard Hamming [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Hamming] * London Falling: A Mysterious Death in a Gilded City and a Family's Search for Truth [https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/704979/london-falling-by-patrick-radden-keefe/] by Patrick Radden Keefe [https://www.patrickraddenkeefe.com/] * The Snakehead: An Epic Tale of the Chinatown Underworld and the American Dream [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patrick_Radden_Keefe] by Patrick Radden Keefe [https://www.patrickraddenkeefe.com/] Tools & Platforms Mentioned * Substack [https://substack.com/] — Dan's distribution platform for kabu research * Claude Code [https://www.claude.com/product/claude-code] — Sean's build tooling for the Lindsay Howard site and the property-tax audit tool * Interactive Brokers (IBKR) [https://www.interactivebrokers.com/] — referenced as the broker most likely to give US retail access to Japanese small/mid-cap names * Charles Schwab [https://www.schwab.com/] — Dan's brokerage; reports no issues purchasing Japanese names * GitHub [https://github.com/] — Sean's planned open-source venue for the property-tax tool Companies Discussed * SLB (formerly Schlumberger; rebranded ~2022 to match its NYSE ticker) * Halliburton; Baker Hughes (implied as peer-set) * DynaDrill (an SLB sub-brand Sean works in) * Saba Capital / Blue Owl (referenced obliquely via the private-credit thread carried over from prior episodes) * Bloomberg L.P. * NPR Planet Money (creators of @Botus / Bot Of The United States in the first Trump term) * Wall Street Journal * Lindsay Howard's brokerage (Sean's site project; Florida expansion incoming) Links & References * Maxinomics on YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/@Maxinomics] — Phil Andrews's data-driven economics channel; source of the flatbed-trailer thesis Dan walks through * kabu research on Substack [https://kaburesearch.substack.com/] — Dan's newly launched Japanese small/mid-cap equity newsletter and portfolio * Citrini Research [https://www.citrini.com/] — the independent-research benchmark Sean references for pricing and pre-publish trading discipline * The Science of Hitting (TSOH) [https://thescienceofhitting.com/] — Sean's referenced precedent: publish first, let readers trade, then act * Wind of Change podcast (Patrick Radden Keefe) [https://www.pineapple.fm/wind-of-change] — the CIA / Scorpions story Dan mentions Unqualified Fact-Check 🔍 We said some things. Here's how we did. 🟢 = Nailed it | 🟡 = Close enough | 🔴 = Whiffed it 🟢 SLB rebrand was about four years ago. Dan said "we rebranded four years ago" (in response to Sean's joke). Schlumberger officially became SLB in October 2022. Four years from May 2026 lands at May 2022, close enough for radio. Solid. 🟢 Hamming worked on the Manhattan Project. Dan said Hamming "started his life and career at the Manhattan Project." Correct — Richard Hamming provided computing support at Los Alamos in 1945 before joining Bell Labs in 1946. Where he won the Turing Award (1968) for error-correcting codes. Both true. 🟢 Wind of Change is a real Patrick Radden Keefe podcast about the CIA and the Scorpions song. Dan got the show, the author, and the premise right. The Pineapple Street Studios podcast launched in 2020; eight episodes; explores the (still unconfirmed) theory that the CIA had a hand in writing "Wind of Change" as a Cold War psyop. 🟡 5% of US tractor-trailer supply is flatbeds. Dan paraphrased from memory. The precise share varies by data source — ATA / FTR reporting puts the flatbed share of US for-hire trucking capacity somewhere in the 5–8% range depending on how you cut it. Directionally right; the booked-out condition is the real signal, and Maxinomics is a credible source for it. (Bonus 🟡: the channel is Maxinomics, not "Maximomics" as Sean said. Phil Andrews, not "Max.") 🟡 France requires you to bequeath 75% of your estate to your kids. Dan said "if you want to give your money away, you can't. You can't, and if you have two kids and they're both heroin addicts on the street, you still have to give 75% of your estate to them." The French réserve héréditaire is real, but the reserved share scales with number of children: 50% for one child, 66% for two, 75% for three or more. Dan's directional point (Europe has a structural lock on inheritance vs. the US doesn't) is right; the specific 75%-for-two-kids math is a stretch. 🟡 "You can't trade ten days after publishing — Lowe v. SEC." Dan was citing Lowe v. SEC, 472 U.S. 181 (1985), and the case is exactly on point. Lowe is the foundational Supreme Court ruling that bona fide investment newsletters (regularly published, impersonal, generally circulated) are not "investment advisers" under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 — they qualify for the §202(a)(11)(D) publisher exemption, even when they contain specific buy/sell commentary. This is the shield that lets kabu research, Citrini, TSOH, and every other Substack-shaped equity newsletter operate without SEC adviser registration. So the case is real and correctly recalled. The catch: Lowe itself doesn't impose a "10-day no-trade after publishing" window. That convention is the practical compliance hygiene publishers observe to stay within the Lowe exemption — if you trade around your own publications, you start to look promotional or interested, which forfeits the bona-fide-disinterested-publisher status the exemption requires. The companion anti-scalping doctrine is SEC v. Capital Gains Research Bureau (1963). Dan's instinct (don't pull the rug; pre-publish your exits) is the right one — it's what keeps you protected by Lowe. 🟡 Author's name: Chad Brown. Sean said "Chad Brown" at 42:13 then corrected to "Chad Brown" again — it's actually Chad P. Bown (no E). One letter; the man writes about tariffs for the Peterson Institute and runs the Trade Talks podcast. Sean is forgiven. 🟢 The Snakehead is about Cheng Chui Ping (Sister Ping) and the Chinatown smuggling network. Dan's recollection ("the lady who basically ran it for decades, literally") is correct. Cheng Chui Ping ran the snakehead human-smuggling operation in NYC's Chinatown from 1984–2000, with the 1993 Golden Venture grounding as the inflection point. Patrick Radden Keefe's The Snakehead (Doubleday, 2009) was a finalist for the J. Anthony Lukas Prize. Final Score: 4 green, 4 yellow, 0 red. Solid building-conversation accuracy. The case-law beat was the right case (Lowe v. SEC) — Dan just had to hear "Lowe" through the transcript robot before we got there. Dan, your law school called; they want their Lowe hypo back. Chapters * 00:00 — Cold open: "Been building anything lately, Dan?" * 00:10 — Welcome / an organic weekend * 01:08 — Tariff reshuffling at SLB * 02:12 — What marketing looks like at SLB * 02:53 — "There's a group that just sells dirt" * 03:24 — "See that water feature?" / activists and the case for diversification * 05:25 — Order books: next year strong, this year wait-and-see * 06:48 — Maxinomics, flatbeds, and the middle of the country * 10:19 — Data centers, trades shortage, "at least into 2030" * 11:01 — "Next week or August" and Hayekian tacit knowledge * 11:50 — Dan Loeb and analysts who fly out * 12:49 — Big Short alligator-in-the-pool callback * 13:02 — "Been building anything lately, Dan?" (return) * 13:12 — Gone Building: the Japanese-equities Substack thesis * 15:24 — Why the timing works (foreign exposure, trend-following) * 17:54 — Pricing tiers and product design * 20:14 — Korean equity access and ADRs * 21:26 — Why Japan's culture is changing * 21:59 — France's 75% inheritance law and capital mobility * 23:57 — Launch this week * 24:19 — kabu research dot substack dot com * 26:31 — Compliance: Lowe v. SEC and pump-and-dump prevention * 27:27 — TSOH precedent: publish, then let readers trade * 29:29 — Pre-publishing exits * 32:44 — Citrini, $400/year, the independent-research economy * 33:41 — "Buying IBM because Trump told me to" / Investor in Chief * 34:08 — @Botus and the NPR Planet Money throwback * 34:20 — Hidden government vs. flood-the-zone * 35:55 — Sean's Lindsay Howard brokerage build * 37:32 — The property-tax-allocation audit tool * 39:08 — AI-enabled civic transparency, "ground up, people doing stuff" * 41:52 — Carve-outs begin * 41:56 — How to Win a Trade War (Keynes & Bown) * 43:02 — Pirate ship, warship, merchant ship * 44:34 — The Art of Doing Science and Engineering (Hamming) * 46:50 — London Falling and The Snakehead (Keefe) * 48:46 — Wind of Change podcast * 49:25 — Sign-off: go build something
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