1 00:00:01,400 --> 00:00:04,120 Speaker 1: Welcome to the Bloomberg Markets Podcast. I'm Paul Sweeney, along 2 00:00:04,120 --> 00:00:06,200 Speaker 1: with my co host of Bonnie Quinn. Every business day 3 00:00:06,240 --> 00:00:10,360 Speaker 1: we bring you interviews from CEOs, market pros, and Bloomberg experts, 4 00:00:10,400 --> 00:00:13,600 Speaker 1: along with essential market moving news. Find the Bloomberg Markets 5 00:00:13,600 --> 00:00:17,000 Speaker 1: Podcast on Apple podcast or wherever you listen to podcasts, 6 00:00:17,000 --> 00:00:20,520 Speaker 1: and on Bloomberg dot com. Well. A huge number of 7 00:00:20,560 --> 00:00:25,520 Speaker 1: investigations are underway inside federal agencies and private sector companies 8 00:00:25,800 --> 00:00:28,680 Speaker 1: trying to determine the extent of the cyber attack and 9 00:00:28,800 --> 00:00:33,240 Speaker 1: massive cyber attack. Of course, Russian hackers are suspected. Let's 10 00:00:33,240 --> 00:00:34,960 Speaker 1: bring in somebody who may be able to tell us 11 00:00:34,960 --> 00:00:36,800 Speaker 1: a little bit more. At least we'll be able to 12 00:00:36,840 --> 00:00:40,360 Speaker 1: tell us what the process is right now for going 13 00:00:40,400 --> 00:00:43,640 Speaker 1: about trying to solve this problem. Jack Divine is former 14 00:00:43,720 --> 00:00:48,080 Speaker 1: chief of c i A Worldwide Operations and its founding 15 00:00:48,120 --> 00:00:50,640 Speaker 1: partner and president of the ark And Group, which is 16 00:00:50,720 --> 00:00:55,200 Speaker 1: a risk consultancy and an intelligence firm. Jack, have you 17 00:00:55,280 --> 00:01:01,000 Speaker 1: ever seen anything of this scope and scale? Um? No, 18 00:01:01,160 --> 00:01:05,160 Speaker 1: I think this is really a critical uh point in 19 00:01:05,440 --> 00:01:09,480 Speaker 1: the cyber war that's taking place. It should be a 20 00:01:09,520 --> 00:01:14,800 Speaker 1: real wake up call. The dimension, the aggressiveness the the 21 00:01:15,560 --> 00:01:20,480 Speaker 1: collecting intelligence around the world is a common, common event, 22 00:01:20,680 --> 00:01:23,720 Speaker 1: but the magnitude of going into our health units and 23 00:01:23,760 --> 00:01:30,279 Speaker 1: into every aspect of of our defense system is really 24 00:01:30,360 --> 00:01:33,480 Speaker 1: over over the top, an extremely aggressive thing. There's one 25 00:01:33,520 --> 00:01:35,880 Speaker 1: other point I'd make. I think we're only looking at 26 00:01:35,920 --> 00:01:39,840 Speaker 1: the tip of the iceberg here, Jack, give us a 27 00:01:39,880 --> 00:01:42,679 Speaker 1: sense of kind of how this has progressed, this being 28 00:01:42,760 --> 00:01:49,640 Speaker 1: kind of Russian state sponsored hacking of US government operations. 29 00:01:49,680 --> 00:01:52,120 Speaker 1: Give us just maybe the history of this and and 30 00:01:52,200 --> 00:01:55,760 Speaker 1: where are we right now in that compendium. We talked 31 00:01:56,040 --> 00:01:59,000 Speaker 1: Paul on the show before about the fact that you know, 32 00:01:59,240 --> 00:02:05,480 Speaker 1: there has been a continuous um continuous intelligence activities by 33 00:02:05,520 --> 00:02:09,520 Speaker 1: the Russians over the last twenty five years. When the 34 00:02:09,520 --> 00:02:12,440 Speaker 1: wall fell down, there was a temper every break, but 35 00:02:12,800 --> 00:02:16,840 Speaker 1: there has been an aggressive operational activity. Was particularly brought 36 00:02:16,880 --> 00:02:21,840 Speaker 1: the light in which we could touch on. So the 37 00:02:21,919 --> 00:02:24,840 Speaker 1: Russians are still using the Cold War strategy of trying 38 00:02:24,880 --> 00:02:27,800 Speaker 1: to keep the United States off balance and the collect 39 00:02:27,840 --> 00:02:32,480 Speaker 1: information inside of our our system. The difference today as 40 00:02:32,639 --> 00:02:37,480 Speaker 1: exemplified by they are so aggressive that they are now 41 00:02:37,600 --> 00:02:41,200 Speaker 1: going beyond the collection to putting themselves in the position 42 00:02:41,200 --> 00:02:44,040 Speaker 1: where they can act on it. And that is something 43 00:02:44,080 --> 00:02:46,440 Speaker 1: that I think people have missed this point, not only 44 00:02:46,520 --> 00:02:49,520 Speaker 1: during the election and shrugged at the fact that they 45 00:02:49,520 --> 00:02:51,960 Speaker 1: were a collection, but they used it. And I'm afraid 46 00:02:52,040 --> 00:02:54,639 Speaker 1: here what we're looking at through these trap doors that 47 00:02:54,720 --> 00:02:58,200 Speaker 1: we are now only getting a handle on partially there 48 00:02:58,200 --> 00:03:01,880 Speaker 1: will be in a position to actually make things happen 49 00:03:02,040 --> 00:03:07,040 Speaker 1: beyond collecting bringing down our utility system, our communication system. 50 00:03:07,160 --> 00:03:09,880 Speaker 1: And I believe they're much more deeply embedded in our 51 00:03:09,919 --> 00:03:14,440 Speaker 1: defense contracting world than it's even represented by this most 52 00:03:14,440 --> 00:03:18,000 Speaker 1: recent attack. You made a chilling comment a moment ago 53 00:03:18,080 --> 00:03:20,079 Speaker 1: saying we're only looking at the tip of the iceberg. 54 00:03:20,520 --> 00:03:22,840 Speaker 1: But before we get to that, I want to ask 55 00:03:22,880 --> 00:03:26,480 Speaker 1: you what exactly are they planning on doing If they're 56 00:03:26,520 --> 00:03:29,920 Speaker 1: you know, standing around in all of our systems in 57 00:03:29,960 --> 00:03:33,279 Speaker 1: the Defense Department and you know, all of the agencies 58 00:03:33,320 --> 00:03:37,960 Speaker 1: and in private companies, what are they waiting for? Well, 59 00:03:38,000 --> 00:03:42,080 Speaker 1: I think not to go to television shows and drama 60 00:03:42,120 --> 00:03:44,240 Speaker 1: and so on. But you know, they have sleepers, and 61 00:03:44,240 --> 00:03:48,760 Speaker 1: they build, and we build as well, capabilities to be 62 00:03:48,840 --> 00:03:53,200 Speaker 1: used in a crisis. So when you use it as 63 00:03:53,280 --> 00:03:55,600 Speaker 1: part of a weapon, it's like having your nuclear weapons 64 00:03:55,640 --> 00:03:57,880 Speaker 1: are all sitting there, And the question is when you 65 00:03:58,080 --> 00:04:00,200 Speaker 1: use them. You use them when there's a conference, Asian 66 00:04:00,280 --> 00:04:06,600 Speaker 1: or you want to exercise, um, exercise capabilities. They used 67 00:04:06,600 --> 00:04:08,840 Speaker 1: it in the election. That was the That's where there 68 00:04:08,920 --> 00:04:10,960 Speaker 1: was such a break in the rules that I operated 69 00:04:10,960 --> 00:04:12,880 Speaker 1: and we had an understanding we weren't going to score 70 00:04:12,880 --> 00:04:16,479 Speaker 1: around in each other's internal systems, and they did. That 71 00:04:16,680 --> 00:04:18,480 Speaker 1: was the and I think we just didn't spend enough 72 00:04:18,520 --> 00:04:21,480 Speaker 1: time analyzing that. So today they're in our systems. And 73 00:04:21,600 --> 00:04:23,880 Speaker 1: when I say the defense contracting or when you look 74 00:04:23,920 --> 00:04:26,760 Speaker 1: at the way they approached it, it's just classic. I 75 00:04:26,760 --> 00:04:29,920 Speaker 1: mean they go through an outside contractor they get into 76 00:04:29,960 --> 00:04:33,080 Speaker 1: the software system which then allows them windows in the 77 00:04:33,160 --> 00:04:38,680 Speaker 1: other other other areas. So um, you know, that's to 78 00:04:38,800 --> 00:04:41,920 Speaker 1: my way of thinking, that's that's actually so their preposition. 79 00:04:42,000 --> 00:04:44,800 Speaker 1: Those trap doors were not meant for a one time collection, 80 00:04:44,920 --> 00:04:47,479 Speaker 1: and that's been said by many many commentators on this. 81 00:04:48,040 --> 00:04:52,120 Speaker 1: This was for persistent collection and for use in the 82 00:04:52,240 --> 00:05:00,599 Speaker 1: time of crisis. Check. What should the US response be? Now? 83 00:05:00,640 --> 00:05:03,240 Speaker 1: This is this is one of the trickiest questions I 84 00:05:03,279 --> 00:05:06,000 Speaker 1: think of all that you know, the new administration has 85 00:05:06,040 --> 00:05:09,360 Speaker 1: to deal with it. Um. I think there's been as 86 00:05:09,400 --> 00:05:11,640 Speaker 1: I said, an awareness of this threat, but not the 87 00:05:11,680 --> 00:05:14,600 Speaker 1: full dimensions of it, and there needs to be a 88 00:05:14,640 --> 00:05:20,960 Speaker 1: strategy and an organizational effort to build to build a capability. 89 00:05:21,040 --> 00:05:25,000 Speaker 1: We need to plus up and make additional expenditures and 90 00:05:25,080 --> 00:05:29,000 Speaker 1: looking at the Russian threat, the Chinese threat, we need 91 00:05:29,040 --> 00:05:33,080 Speaker 1: to give it the right priority and UH and develop 92 00:05:33,520 --> 00:05:37,200 Speaker 1: the capabilities. Having said that, it's like the mutual destruction 93 00:05:37,360 --> 00:05:42,800 Speaker 1: It's like the nucletor UH armament race. Eventually we could 94 00:05:42,800 --> 00:05:45,520 Speaker 1: destroy each other and we sat down and started disarmament 95 00:05:45,560 --> 00:05:50,200 Speaker 1: and basically not proliferation efforts. This is even more difficult 96 00:05:50,440 --> 00:05:52,440 Speaker 1: because of the case of the missiles you could see it. 97 00:05:52,640 --> 00:05:55,320 Speaker 1: We need to have new ground rule. New ground knows 98 00:05:55,360 --> 00:05:58,599 Speaker 1: we can start threatening each other and responding and that 99 00:05:58,720 --> 00:06:01,680 Speaker 1: becomes a really dangerou this world. That becomes the Cold 100 00:06:01,720 --> 00:06:06,040 Speaker 1: War two UH area. We need. There needs to be 101 00:06:06,080 --> 00:06:08,680 Speaker 1: a break in this and so far the Russians have 102 00:06:08,800 --> 00:06:11,880 Speaker 1: not seen that. They've seen no indication that they're willing 103 00:06:11,920 --> 00:06:15,120 Speaker 1: to sit down. But there needs to be a This 104 00:06:15,279 --> 00:06:19,440 Speaker 1: is a subterranneal weapon system, so you need a subterraneal 105 00:06:19,920 --> 00:06:21,719 Speaker 1: agreement that there was no one's going to be able 106 00:06:21,720 --> 00:06:23,240 Speaker 1: to get out there and talk about what are the 107 00:06:23,279 --> 00:06:27,400 Speaker 1: parameters of cyber warfare among among ourselves, But there should 108 00:06:27,400 --> 00:06:30,760 Speaker 1: be a diplomatic and intelligence effort to open a dialogue 109 00:06:30,800 --> 00:06:33,760 Speaker 1: about what where are the rules? What are the rules 110 00:06:33,760 --> 00:06:36,080 Speaker 1: of the game. We did have them during the Cold War, 111 00:06:36,720 --> 00:06:39,640 Speaker 1: and we're we don't have them, and we're looking at 112 00:06:39,680 --> 00:06:41,800 Speaker 1: the same type of dynamic that we had with the 113 00:06:41,880 --> 00:06:46,160 Speaker 1: juncular weapons. Other than cyber is not connectic, it's not 114 00:06:46,200 --> 00:06:49,680 Speaker 1: going to not directly going to kill people. But we 115 00:06:49,720 --> 00:06:51,960 Speaker 1: need a new we need a new approach, and we 116 00:06:52,000 --> 00:06:55,280 Speaker 1: need to put this right at the top of our agenda. 117 00:06:56,480 --> 00:06:58,920 Speaker 1: You mentioned that this is only the tip of the iceberg. 118 00:06:59,000 --> 00:07:03,479 Speaker 1: Give us some idea of where you think this goals. Well, 119 00:07:03,520 --> 00:07:05,760 Speaker 1: I think what's missing here is these are a lot 120 00:07:05,800 --> 00:07:08,839 Speaker 1: of the systems. You see the sophistication, you see the approach, 121 00:07:09,440 --> 00:07:13,200 Speaker 1: but what you don't see is how deep into our 122 00:07:13,280 --> 00:07:16,440 Speaker 1: most sensitive secrets are they. And you don't really see 123 00:07:16,480 --> 00:07:19,000 Speaker 1: a lot in this one about what are our defense 124 00:07:19,080 --> 00:07:22,280 Speaker 1: systems that have been compromised. Nobody wants to talk about that, 125 00:07:23,000 --> 00:07:25,560 Speaker 1: but I can assure you that the same techniques that 126 00:07:25,600 --> 00:07:30,320 Speaker 1: are used here against the Energy and Commerce and Treasury 127 00:07:30,400 --> 00:07:32,640 Speaker 1: and so I've been used for years. This is why 128 00:07:32,680 --> 00:07:36,360 Speaker 1: when they talk about March, we're missing the point. This 129 00:07:36,440 --> 00:07:40,120 Speaker 1: particular attack is a March attack. But I tried to 130 00:07:40,240 --> 00:07:44,320 Speaker 1: issue since since cyber became an operational backage, you know, 131 00:07:45,080 --> 00:07:49,119 Speaker 1: the turn of this decade. You know, there has been 132 00:07:49,160 --> 00:07:54,560 Speaker 1: a unceasing effort. That's my point. This battle with Russia 133 00:07:54,600 --> 00:07:57,440 Speaker 1: and what has shown up here, it's a texture of 134 00:07:57,520 --> 00:08:00,400 Speaker 1: the relationship that someone was thinking that Russia it's not 135 00:08:00,920 --> 00:08:04,360 Speaker 1: in an adversarial mode. This really should be a wake 136 00:08:04,440 --> 00:08:06,560 Speaker 1: up call because they have been doing this for the 137 00:08:06,600 --> 00:08:11,880 Speaker 1: past years. Yeah, so I think we need to sharpen 138 00:08:11,920 --> 00:08:14,400 Speaker 1: our attention. Hey, Jack, we're gonna have to leave it there, 139 00:08:14,400 --> 00:08:16,680 Speaker 1: just out of time. Jack Divine, founding partner of the 140 00:08:16,800 --> 00:08:21,240 Speaker 1: ark And Group, also author of a new book entitled 141 00:08:21,240 --> 00:08:28,920 Speaker 1: Spymaster's Prison. Well, the scientists have done their job delivering 142 00:08:28,960 --> 00:08:32,280 Speaker 1: that one, but two and likely at least three in 143 00:08:32,280 --> 00:08:35,840 Speaker 1: the near term possible vaccines for the marketplace. Now it's 144 00:08:35,920 --> 00:08:39,080 Speaker 1: up to the supply chain to get those vaccines out 145 00:08:39,280 --> 00:08:42,200 Speaker 1: to consumers. UH to get a sense of kind of 146 00:08:42,200 --> 00:08:44,319 Speaker 1: where we are in that process and how this whole 147 00:08:44,360 --> 00:08:47,400 Speaker 1: process may play out. We welcome Craig Garthwaite, director of 148 00:08:47,440 --> 00:08:50,840 Speaker 1: the Program on Healthcare and a professor in Hospital and 149 00:08:50,920 --> 00:08:54,439 Speaker 1: Health Services at the Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern 150 00:08:54,559 --> 00:08:57,880 Speaker 1: University based in Evanston, Illinois. Craig, thanks so much for 151 00:08:58,200 --> 00:09:01,000 Speaker 1: joining us here. You know, so again, the way I 152 00:09:01,040 --> 00:09:03,320 Speaker 1: like to frame is, the scientists have just done a 153 00:09:03,360 --> 00:09:07,600 Speaker 1: fabulous job of coming up with multiple vaccines and record time. 154 00:09:07,960 --> 00:09:10,559 Speaker 1: Now the question is how do we get them distributed 155 00:09:10,600 --> 00:09:15,400 Speaker 1: efficiently and timely to the marketplace. What are your thoughts 156 00:09:15,440 --> 00:09:19,840 Speaker 1: as to how the US is doing on this front. Yeah, 157 00:09:20,160 --> 00:09:22,600 Speaker 1: thank thanks for having me. I would expand a bit 158 00:09:22,640 --> 00:09:25,800 Speaker 1: on not just it's not just distribution, it's also manufacturing. 159 00:09:26,800 --> 00:09:29,240 Speaker 1: Unlike sort of a treatment for when people get sick. 160 00:09:29,360 --> 00:09:32,280 Speaker 1: We have to vaccinate everyone in the United States. So 161 00:09:32,280 --> 00:09:35,040 Speaker 1: we're looking at needing, you know, three hundred million people 162 00:09:35,080 --> 00:09:38,319 Speaker 1: to get vaccinated. And if it's a two shot process 163 00:09:38,400 --> 00:09:40,520 Speaker 1: like the Fiser and the Madurna vaccines that we have 164 00:09:40,559 --> 00:09:44,520 Speaker 1: approved now for emergency use, right, that's six hundred million 165 00:09:44,600 --> 00:09:47,160 Speaker 1: doses that we're going to need. Um And I think 166 00:09:47,160 --> 00:09:49,959 Speaker 1: the US is, you know, initially doing well. What I 167 00:09:50,000 --> 00:09:52,120 Speaker 1: mean by that is that we we placed orders to 168 00:09:52,160 --> 00:09:55,240 Speaker 1: get up a lot of vaccine for our healthcare workers 169 00:09:55,480 --> 00:09:57,439 Speaker 1: in December and early JUNI worry, and we're doing a 170 00:09:57,480 --> 00:10:00,319 Speaker 1: good job rolling those out. My real con learned is 171 00:10:00,360 --> 00:10:03,520 Speaker 1: that we seem to be are unwilling to really spend 172 00:10:03,559 --> 00:10:06,400 Speaker 1: what's necessary to make sure that in the second and 173 00:10:06,559 --> 00:10:09,920 Speaker 1: third quarter of one that we're getting all of the 174 00:10:10,000 --> 00:10:12,560 Speaker 1: vaccine supplies that we need. And what I mean by 175 00:10:12,600 --> 00:10:16,199 Speaker 1: that is we should be over investing here. We should buy, 176 00:10:16,320 --> 00:10:20,560 Speaker 1: if we can, enough of the Moderna vaccine and enough 177 00:10:20,600 --> 00:10:23,120 Speaker 1: of the Fiser vaccine so that either one of those 178 00:10:23,280 --> 00:10:25,640 Speaker 1: will be able to treat as many Americans as possible, 179 00:10:25,679 --> 00:10:28,320 Speaker 1: because you know, the supply chain could break down, there 180 00:10:28,320 --> 00:10:31,240 Speaker 1: could be a manufacturing problem, uh, there could be any 181 00:10:31,320 --> 00:10:34,880 Speaker 1: number of things that happened with one of the two manufacturers. 182 00:10:34,880 --> 00:10:36,320 Speaker 1: And so this is this is when it's time for 183 00:10:36,360 --> 00:10:39,000 Speaker 1: sort of a belt and suspenders approached to this. Is 184 00:10:39,000 --> 00:10:42,920 Speaker 1: there any indication, Dr Garthwaite that we're not doing that 185 00:10:43,080 --> 00:10:44,840 Speaker 1: or that there there would be the ability to do 186 00:10:44,880 --> 00:10:49,920 Speaker 1: that and somebody decided not to UH for the Fiser vaccine, 187 00:10:49,960 --> 00:10:52,800 Speaker 1: it appears that Fiser had asked us to exercise an 188 00:10:52,800 --> 00:10:55,400 Speaker 1: option that we have in our initial contract to buy 189 00:10:55,440 --> 00:10:57,680 Speaker 1: more vaccine, and for reasons that have yet to be 190 00:10:57,720 --> 00:11:01,199 Speaker 1: explained by the administration, we we have not done that. 191 00:11:01,600 --> 00:11:04,280 Speaker 1: Um from the reporting in the news and conversations of 192 00:11:04,280 --> 00:11:06,680 Speaker 1: how people involved, it seems like Fiser asked to do that, 193 00:11:07,240 --> 00:11:09,480 Speaker 1: to do that several times, we did not, and so 194 00:11:09,559 --> 00:11:14,200 Speaker 1: instead Fiser then gave the option to the European governments 195 00:11:14,200 --> 00:11:16,080 Speaker 1: that also had a similar options, who might have moved 196 00:11:16,080 --> 00:11:20,080 Speaker 1: ahead of us in line. And I just can't understand 197 00:11:20,120 --> 00:11:23,599 Speaker 1: any reason why we would not be trying to exercise 198 00:11:23,720 --> 00:11:25,959 Speaker 1: every option we can to get access to as much 199 00:11:26,040 --> 00:11:28,920 Speaker 1: vaccine as we can as fast as possible. There's given 200 00:11:28,920 --> 00:11:32,839 Speaker 1: the amount of economic and sort of public health destruction 201 00:11:33,080 --> 00:11:37,880 Speaker 1: that the pandemic is causing, there's just no rationale, particularly 202 00:11:37,920 --> 00:11:39,959 Speaker 1: at the prices that are being talked about, why we 203 00:11:40,000 --> 00:11:42,880 Speaker 1: wouldn't be trying to buy literally every dose we can 204 00:11:42,920 --> 00:11:45,400 Speaker 1: get our hands on, because the worst cases will over 205 00:11:45,520 --> 00:11:47,160 Speaker 1: buy and then we can give it to other countries 206 00:11:47,200 --> 00:11:50,959 Speaker 1: when we don't need it. So, Craig, you say we 207 00:11:50,960 --> 00:11:54,600 Speaker 1: we should buy, I'm not sure who we is? Is 208 00:11:54,600 --> 00:11:57,600 Speaker 1: it the federal government we've because we really haven't had 209 00:11:57,640 --> 00:12:00,760 Speaker 1: a federal government presence during this whole endemic. To begin with, 210 00:12:00,800 --> 00:12:03,640 Speaker 1: it's really been left up to UH states, who is 211 00:12:03,720 --> 00:12:07,800 Speaker 1: the we that goes out and you know, acquires the 212 00:12:07,840 --> 00:12:11,439 Speaker 1: stock of vaccines, so that we is the federal government 213 00:12:11,480 --> 00:12:12,920 Speaker 1: in this case. And this I agree with you that 214 00:12:13,080 --> 00:12:15,480 Speaker 1: overall the federal government has really fallen down on the 215 00:12:15,559 --> 00:12:18,240 Speaker 1: job yet, except when it comes to the focus on 216 00:12:18,280 --> 00:12:21,800 Speaker 1: developing vaccines, where there has been there's been a lot 217 00:12:21,840 --> 00:12:25,160 Speaker 1: of funding given. So the Maderna vaccine was was funded 218 00:12:25,600 --> 00:12:29,120 Speaker 1: entirely by the US government. Feiser did not accept money 219 00:12:29,120 --> 00:12:31,240 Speaker 1: for research and development, but did accept what we referred 220 00:12:31,240 --> 00:12:33,880 Speaker 1: to as an advanced market commitment. And all that means 221 00:12:33,920 --> 00:12:35,880 Speaker 1: is that we agree that if your vaccine works, if 222 00:12:35,880 --> 00:12:38,040 Speaker 1: you get to prove, we're going to buy it, guarantee 223 00:12:38,080 --> 00:12:40,000 Speaker 1: we will buy it. And we said we would buy 224 00:12:40,000 --> 00:12:43,000 Speaker 1: a hundred million doses with an option for five million more. 225 00:12:43,280 --> 00:12:45,080 Speaker 1: And that's what that's what we didn't exercise. But this 226 00:12:45,200 --> 00:12:48,319 Speaker 1: is all being organized by the federal government. So if 227 00:12:48,320 --> 00:12:51,120 Speaker 1: you were designing how to go about this, because certainly 228 00:12:51,120 --> 00:12:54,520 Speaker 1: that the PPE rollout and that's a light chain never worked, 229 00:12:54,559 --> 00:12:59,640 Speaker 1: still isn't working, apparently, how would you design this? I mean, 230 00:12:59,640 --> 00:13:02,560 Speaker 1: I think think you run into some difficulties when it 231 00:13:02,559 --> 00:13:05,760 Speaker 1: comes to the vaccine. That the public health authorities in 232 00:13:05,840 --> 00:13:08,120 Speaker 1: every state have a lot of power as how things 233 00:13:08,120 --> 00:13:10,680 Speaker 1: get distributed, and so the state of the government is 234 00:13:10,679 --> 00:13:13,920 Speaker 1: really working with the state government. I don't think to 235 00:13:14,200 --> 00:13:16,840 Speaker 1: date what we're seeing though, is a problem on the 236 00:13:16,920 --> 00:13:20,520 Speaker 1: distribution of the vaccine to the states. But I think 237 00:13:20,840 --> 00:13:22,880 Speaker 1: you know, we're we're getting it the people, We're getting 238 00:13:22,880 --> 00:13:25,680 Speaker 1: it out relatively quickly. What we really need to be 239 00:13:25,720 --> 00:13:28,400 Speaker 1: focusing on is making sure that we have the commitment 240 00:13:28,400 --> 00:13:31,680 Speaker 1: from the manufacturers that we get the vaccine as fast 241 00:13:31,720 --> 00:13:35,240 Speaker 1: as possible, and that that's it gets into what we 242 00:13:35,280 --> 00:13:38,199 Speaker 1: sometimes referred to as vaccine nationalism, where you know, this 243 00:13:38,280 --> 00:13:41,520 Speaker 1: is a global problem. I understand, but the federal government 244 00:13:41,600 --> 00:13:43,559 Speaker 1: is supposed to be looking out for the United States 245 00:13:43,559 --> 00:13:45,480 Speaker 1: citizens first. That's what we elected with them to do. 246 00:13:46,040 --> 00:13:48,680 Speaker 1: Um And once we get the vaccine sort of pandemic 247 00:13:48,800 --> 00:13:50,959 Speaker 1: under control here, then we can think a bit more 248 00:13:51,000 --> 00:13:54,560 Speaker 1: magnantiously about the rest of the world. Alright, So, professor, 249 00:13:55,120 --> 00:13:59,840 Speaker 1: if I'm a viser or Moderna or you know, Astrosencare 250 00:14:00,040 --> 00:14:02,680 Speaker 1: Johnson and Johnson, if the US government comes knocking on 251 00:14:02,760 --> 00:14:06,720 Speaker 1: my door and says I want everything yet, got I mean, 252 00:14:08,040 --> 00:14:11,200 Speaker 1: how do I say? No? Yeah, I mean they do 253 00:14:11,280 --> 00:14:13,559 Speaker 1: have contractual obligations, right, they did sign things with the 254 00:14:13,559 --> 00:14:17,640 Speaker 1: European Union. But I'm very sympathetic in your position. No. Um, 255 00:14:17,679 --> 00:14:20,800 Speaker 1: we've been debating why the United States pays high drug 256 00:14:20,840 --> 00:14:23,280 Speaker 1: prices and higher drug prices and the rest of the 257 00:14:23,320 --> 00:14:27,560 Speaker 1: world for over decades now. Um, I would hope that 258 00:14:27,640 --> 00:14:30,600 Speaker 1: one thing we've gotten for being such good customers now 259 00:14:30,640 --> 00:14:32,600 Speaker 1: and I promise to be good customers in the future, 260 00:14:33,000 --> 00:14:34,880 Speaker 1: is a little bit of preference when it comes to 261 00:14:34,880 --> 00:14:37,600 Speaker 1: getting access to things like the vaccine. UM. And so 262 00:14:37,800 --> 00:14:41,000 Speaker 1: I do think that the door is not shut, probably 263 00:14:41,080 --> 00:14:44,680 Speaker 1: on those visor doses. I think there's more negotiation that 264 00:14:44,720 --> 00:14:49,200 Speaker 1: will happen. And I really just want to implore policymakers 265 00:14:49,240 --> 00:14:52,480 Speaker 1: to not be pennywise poundful. Is here right that you 266 00:14:52,960 --> 00:14:55,520 Speaker 1: pay extra for the vaccine. I don't care pay sixty 267 00:14:55,560 --> 00:14:59,240 Speaker 1: dollars a dose, given what it can do for the 268 00:14:59,280 --> 00:15:01,800 Speaker 1: economy for of a country. Thinking about we're passing a 269 00:15:01,880 --> 00:15:05,840 Speaker 1: nearly one trillion dollar stimulus again to try and keep 270 00:15:05,880 --> 00:15:09,560 Speaker 1: the economy limping along. Right, if we just get all 271 00:15:09,600 --> 00:15:11,440 Speaker 1: of the vaccine we need, we don't have to worry 272 00:15:11,480 --> 00:15:13,280 Speaker 1: about today. Most we can get people back to work, 273 00:15:13,320 --> 00:15:15,840 Speaker 1: we can open back up businesses, and so they're really 274 00:15:16,320 --> 00:15:19,400 Speaker 1: at the prices we're talking about, it is almost impossible 275 00:15:19,480 --> 00:15:21,440 Speaker 1: to overpay for the vaccine. And we should make that 276 00:15:21,520 --> 00:15:24,560 Speaker 1: clear to manufacturers that our checkbook is open if you 277 00:15:24,600 --> 00:15:27,200 Speaker 1: will give us the supplies. How do you price this 278 00:15:27,400 --> 00:15:29,960 Speaker 1: if you're a fiser or a cover or or or 279 00:15:30,000 --> 00:15:33,440 Speaker 1: a Maderna or somebody with a vaccine that's maybe a 280 00:15:33,480 --> 00:15:37,680 Speaker 1: little less desirable. So so for the fiser over there, 281 00:15:37,720 --> 00:15:40,960 Speaker 1: they've actually I think shown remarkable restraint in terms of 282 00:15:41,000 --> 00:15:43,760 Speaker 1: the amount of value of their vaccine capture or creates 283 00:15:43,880 --> 00:15:45,640 Speaker 1: that they're trying to capture with their price. So we're 284 00:15:45,640 --> 00:15:48,040 Speaker 1: looking at about four dollars for the two dose vaccine 285 00:15:48,360 --> 00:15:51,680 Speaker 1: for fiser um and that's, you know, given what that 286 00:15:51,760 --> 00:15:53,920 Speaker 1: vaccine is doing for someone that that's a pretty low 287 00:15:53,960 --> 00:15:56,240 Speaker 1: price and well below a lot of you know, food 288 00:15:56,280 --> 00:15:58,520 Speaker 1: vaccines and other things that people take that off far 289 00:15:58,680 --> 00:16:01,880 Speaker 1: less efficacious um. And so I do think that they're 290 00:16:01,880 --> 00:16:04,160 Speaker 1: going to earn a lot of money, Let's be clear, right, 291 00:16:04,200 --> 00:16:07,360 Speaker 1: because forty times a billion doses is you know a 292 00:16:07,400 --> 00:16:09,960 Speaker 1: lot that that that no one's gonna be upset about that, 293 00:16:10,120 --> 00:16:12,000 Speaker 1: but I don't think that the pharmaceutical companies are trying 294 00:16:12,040 --> 00:16:14,920 Speaker 1: to take too much value. Yeah, it really is a 295 00:16:14,920 --> 00:16:18,760 Speaker 1: phenomenal thing to watch playoffs from a safe distance. Of course, 296 00:16:19,320 --> 00:16:22,840 Speaker 1: our thanks to you, Professor Craig garth Waite. He's director 297 00:16:22,840 --> 00:16:26,160 Speaker 1: of the Program and Healthcare at Northwestern University's Kellogg School 298 00:16:26,280 --> 00:16:31,400 Speaker 1: of Management. It is time for Bloomberg Opinion were joined 299 00:16:31,440 --> 00:16:36,000 Speaker 1: this morning by Bloomberg Opinion columns Brian Schapatta. He covers 300 00:16:36,040 --> 00:16:39,840 Speaker 1: all things on the fixed income site and fascinating column 301 00:16:39,880 --> 00:16:45,080 Speaker 1: out Brian has uh Jamie Diamond gets his thirty billion 302 00:16:45,120 --> 00:16:48,200 Speaker 1: dollar buy back wish. Brian, thanks so much for joining 303 00:16:48,320 --> 00:16:53,320 Speaker 1: us here. Boy, Jamie Diamond wasted no time in announcing 304 00:16:53,440 --> 00:16:56,160 Speaker 1: this significant buyback program. Give us the background of what's 305 00:16:56,240 --> 00:16:59,760 Speaker 1: happening here with the big banks. Yeah, it was pretty incredible. 306 00:17:00,280 --> 00:17:03,120 Speaker 1: Just ten minutes after the Federal Reserve released its second 307 00:17:03,200 --> 00:17:06,240 Speaker 1: round of bank stress tests, they decided to do another 308 00:17:06,320 --> 00:17:09,760 Speaker 1: round because of the coronavirus pandemic and obviously it's impact 309 00:17:10,000 --> 00:17:13,919 Speaker 1: wouldn't be clear for many months to come. So the 310 00:17:13,960 --> 00:17:17,240 Speaker 1: Fed released its stress tests and basically said all the 311 00:17:17,280 --> 00:17:20,359 Speaker 1: banks passed with flying colors UM, which was which was 312 00:17:20,400 --> 00:17:22,879 Speaker 1: a clear bill of health, and as a result, they 313 00:17:22,920 --> 00:17:26,480 Speaker 1: sort of loosened the restrictions on whether banks could buy 314 00:17:26,480 --> 00:17:29,639 Speaker 1: back stock. And so within ten minutes of that announcement, 315 00:17:29,960 --> 00:17:33,160 Speaker 1: Jamie Diamond and and uh JP Morgan came out late 316 00:17:33,160 --> 00:17:35,560 Speaker 1: Friday after markets closed and said we're starting a thirty 317 00:17:35,560 --> 00:17:39,680 Speaker 1: billion dollars buyback program. Overall, eleven billion dollars among the 318 00:17:39,720 --> 00:17:44,080 Speaker 1: sixth largest US banks uh could potentially be bought back UM. 319 00:17:44,240 --> 00:17:46,280 Speaker 1: So it's a it's a big win for the banks, 320 00:17:47,000 --> 00:17:49,480 Speaker 1: a pretty decent win for the bank shareholders, and for 321 00:17:49,560 --> 00:17:51,760 Speaker 1: Jamie Diamond, who has been counting the table wanting to 322 00:17:51,800 --> 00:17:54,680 Speaker 1: buy back his stock when it's been so low over 323 00:17:54,720 --> 00:17:56,879 Speaker 1: the past year. It's a big win as well. What 324 00:17:57,040 --> 00:18:01,359 Speaker 1: were the assumptions made presume They were pretty harsh to 325 00:18:01,760 --> 00:18:06,000 Speaker 1: allow for the pandemic, But were they harsh enough? By yeah, 326 00:18:06,119 --> 00:18:08,320 Speaker 1: I mean one of the things that I looked at 327 00:18:08,480 --> 00:18:11,359 Speaker 1: most closely was the unemployment rate that was assumed. And 328 00:18:11,440 --> 00:18:13,800 Speaker 1: so there were a couple of assumptions with the unemployment 329 00:18:13,880 --> 00:18:17,800 Speaker 1: rate would spike to twelve percent and either come back 330 00:18:17,840 --> 00:18:20,720 Speaker 1: pretty quickly, or with spike into the double digits and 331 00:18:20,840 --> 00:18:24,400 Speaker 1: recover more slowly, and in both of those scenarios, UM 332 00:18:24,600 --> 00:18:26,320 Speaker 1: the banks did find. It was always going to be 333 00:18:26,359 --> 00:18:29,600 Speaker 1: a question of whether UM the sides looking at slightly 334 00:18:29,640 --> 00:18:33,640 Speaker 1: the right metrics, whether uh it's it was harsh enough. 335 00:18:33,680 --> 00:18:35,880 Speaker 1: But I think what we learned over the course of 336 00:18:35,920 --> 00:18:39,679 Speaker 1: this year especially is the SET itself can step in 337 00:18:39,880 --> 00:18:43,119 Speaker 1: and and do a lot to uh stymy any um, 338 00:18:43,600 --> 00:18:46,840 Speaker 1: any major crisis. UM. I won't expected that it could 339 00:18:46,840 --> 00:18:49,160 Speaker 1: be a potentially for a long recession when we were 340 00:18:49,280 --> 00:18:51,360 Speaker 1: staring at the worst of it in March and April, 341 00:18:51,440 --> 00:18:54,199 Speaker 1: and it turned out to be to be pretty short lived. UM. 342 00:18:54,600 --> 00:18:57,800 Speaker 1: Congress came through with obviously with a fiscal package on 343 00:18:57,840 --> 00:19:01,320 Speaker 1: the SET as well on the market side. So, Brian, 344 00:19:02,680 --> 00:19:05,879 Speaker 1: how do how do we characterize the I guess the 345 00:19:05,880 --> 00:19:08,560 Speaker 1: financial health of some of these big banks here as 346 00:19:08,600 --> 00:19:11,280 Speaker 1: they think about you know, buy backs and and things 347 00:19:11,320 --> 00:19:13,840 Speaker 1: like that. Are they in I guess the FED feels 348 00:19:13,840 --> 00:19:18,520 Speaker 1: pretty comfortable at this stage. Yeah, only little BRAINERD potential 349 00:19:18,560 --> 00:19:20,879 Speaker 1: candidates to be the next SET chair actually just sensed 350 00:19:20,920 --> 00:19:23,159 Speaker 1: and said that she would prefer that they don't do 351 00:19:23,200 --> 00:19:25,480 Speaker 1: that and and hold on to more of their cash 352 00:19:25,480 --> 00:19:28,000 Speaker 1: and their capital. UM. But I mean I think the 353 00:19:28,040 --> 00:19:30,199 Speaker 1: moral of the story is that it was such a 354 00:19:30,240 --> 00:19:34,440 Speaker 1: sharp snapback that even though you saw these massive loan 355 00:19:34,520 --> 00:19:37,879 Speaker 1: lost provisions from the banks earlier this year, UM, a 356 00:19:37,920 --> 00:19:40,640 Speaker 1: lot of those loans are performing now and it's not 357 00:19:40,680 --> 00:19:43,959 Speaker 1: necessarily going to be as bad as initially feared, in 358 00:19:44,040 --> 00:19:47,320 Speaker 1: part because there was a tremendous fiscal stimulus package. I mean, 359 00:19:47,359 --> 00:19:49,640 Speaker 1: make no mistake, there's still a lot of pain out there, 360 00:19:50,000 --> 00:19:54,200 Speaker 1: but it's not quite as widespread and potentially systemic as 361 00:19:54,240 --> 00:19:56,200 Speaker 1: I think a lot of people feared. There are pockets 362 00:19:56,200 --> 00:19:59,480 Speaker 1: and weakness as opposed to put all over the board. 363 00:20:00,040 --> 00:20:02,040 Speaker 1: On the face of it, I can understand how the 364 00:20:02,080 --> 00:20:04,240 Speaker 1: FED would give the go ahead. Right we're hearing a 365 00:20:04,240 --> 00:20:06,720 Speaker 1: lot about how markets are at all time highs. The 366 00:20:06,960 --> 00:20:10,919 Speaker 1: Khad recovery means that affluent people are not really experiencing 367 00:20:10,920 --> 00:20:13,560 Speaker 1: a recession, and of course it's affluent people that are 368 00:20:13,600 --> 00:20:16,879 Speaker 1: invested in the stock market and in banks. At the 369 00:20:16,920 --> 00:20:19,760 Speaker 1: same time, the FED itself has suggested that it doesn't 370 00:20:19,760 --> 00:20:21,480 Speaker 1: know what's going to happen next year. We don't know 371 00:20:21,520 --> 00:20:24,080 Speaker 1: how much of this unemployment is going to be structural unemployment, 372 00:20:24,160 --> 00:20:27,600 Speaker 1: and we don't know if there's going to be more 373 00:20:27,720 --> 00:20:31,080 Speaker 1: pain when we expect demand to return, Will that demand 374 00:20:31,119 --> 00:20:34,000 Speaker 1: return or will have habits have changed forever? Is that 375 00:20:34,080 --> 00:20:37,560 Speaker 1: taken into account at old Bryan, Yeah, I think that 376 00:20:38,000 --> 00:20:39,560 Speaker 1: the real thing that's going to be an issue for 377 00:20:39,560 --> 00:20:41,879 Speaker 1: the FED going forward, all of your you know, like 378 00:20:41,920 --> 00:20:44,240 Speaker 1: you said, they don't have a clear sense of what's 379 00:20:44,280 --> 00:20:47,679 Speaker 1: going to happen with the economy. But even still, I 380 00:20:47,720 --> 00:20:49,480 Speaker 1: think they have to be started starting to be looking 381 00:20:49,480 --> 00:20:54,200 Speaker 1: at financial conditions today, notwithstanding um and just thinking, wow, 382 00:20:55,000 --> 00:20:58,200 Speaker 1: the markets are wide open. People are people are happy, 383 00:20:58,359 --> 00:21:02,000 Speaker 1: people are seeing their stock work ohios go up. Anybody 384 00:21:02,000 --> 00:21:04,359 Speaker 1: who wants to borrow, whether it's a large corporation or 385 00:21:04,400 --> 00:21:07,800 Speaker 1: a small municipality, is able to do so pretty easily 386 00:21:08,000 --> 00:21:11,200 Speaker 1: at record low interest rates, And so I think they're 387 00:21:11,200 --> 00:21:13,479 Speaker 1: trying to balance that that. There is still a lot 388 00:21:13,480 --> 00:21:16,119 Speaker 1: of pain out there. The labor market is very uncertain, 389 00:21:16,280 --> 00:21:19,439 Speaker 1: and inflation outlook looks better than it has been but 390 00:21:19,560 --> 00:21:22,720 Speaker 1: still kind of dicey. On the other hand, financial markets, 391 00:21:22,760 --> 00:21:27,000 Speaker 1: which they have a large hand in, are doing incredibly well, 392 00:21:27,080 --> 00:21:30,720 Speaker 1: so that I think they're trying to balance both of those. Alright, 393 00:21:30,720 --> 00:21:35,000 Speaker 1: we will see certainly the banks are performing just find 394 00:21:35,160 --> 00:21:39,000 Speaker 1: day daping Morgan itself of three even as this market decreases. 395 00:21:39,040 --> 00:21:42,240 Speaker 1: So we'll see how long that good feeling lasts. Daping 396 00:21:42,280 --> 00:21:47,200 Speaker 1: Morgan itself with a thirty billion dollar buy back. Brian Chapatta, 397 00:21:47,359 --> 00:21:50,880 Speaker 1: thank you very much. Brian is Bloomberg opinion columnist and 398 00:21:51,040 --> 00:21:55,640 Speaker 1: has written a great column today on this stress test results, 399 00:21:55,640 --> 00:21:59,200 Speaker 1: which children banks are weathering the pandemic and can actually 400 00:21:59,560 --> 00:22:04,200 Speaker 1: give it's some dividend payments and also start buying back 401 00:22:04,240 --> 00:22:07,200 Speaker 1: their own shares about six months earlier than people have 402 00:22:07,320 --> 00:22:09,480 Speaker 1: been forecasting. So a little bit of a surprise after 403 00:22:09,480 --> 00:22:14,760 Speaker 1: the close on Friday, very excited to talk to our 404 00:22:14,800 --> 00:22:18,760 Speaker 1: next guest, who is the CEO of Wild Alaskan. It's 405 00:22:18,760 --> 00:22:23,440 Speaker 1: exactly what it says on the tin, literally, Aaron Callenberg, 406 00:22:23,600 --> 00:22:26,320 Speaker 1: Thank you so much for joining us on the seafood industry, 407 00:22:26,359 --> 00:22:30,040 Speaker 1: on its supply chain and on business. You say, it's 408 00:22:30,080 --> 00:22:33,639 Speaker 1: up four times from the start of explained to us 409 00:22:33,760 --> 00:22:39,640 Speaker 1: how that manifested itself. Thanks for having me. Uh yeah, 410 00:22:39,840 --> 00:22:41,880 Speaker 1: just a little bit of background. You know, Wild Alaskan 411 00:22:42,160 --> 00:22:45,480 Speaker 1: Company is a monthly seafood membership service. We said, ship 412 00:22:45,520 --> 00:22:49,160 Speaker 1: a curated box of wild Cot Sustainable seafood two members 413 00:22:49,200 --> 00:22:52,600 Speaker 1: all across the country. And it's true, you know, UM, 414 00:22:52,640 --> 00:22:57,119 Speaker 1: we have grown about four x this year over a 415 00:22:57,200 --> 00:23:02,680 Speaker 1: hundred yeah, over a hundred and forty thousand members. UM. 416 00:23:02,760 --> 00:23:06,680 Speaker 1: You know, obviously the pandemic has been a global tragedy, 417 00:23:06,760 --> 00:23:10,040 Speaker 1: but Wild Alaskan is very grateful to be part of 418 00:23:10,080 --> 00:23:14,200 Speaker 1: the solution of bringing sustainable seafood to members across the country. 419 00:23:14,720 --> 00:23:16,560 Speaker 1: So Aaron, give us a sense of just kind of 420 00:23:16,840 --> 00:23:19,920 Speaker 1: take us back to maybe pre pandemic kind of how 421 00:23:20,000 --> 00:23:23,520 Speaker 1: your business was trending, and then you know how it's 422 00:23:23,560 --> 00:23:27,640 Speaker 1: evolved over the last you know, nine to ten months. Yeah, 423 00:23:27,680 --> 00:23:30,480 Speaker 1: you know, the business was doing quite well prior to 424 00:23:30,560 --> 00:23:33,120 Speaker 1: the pandemic. UM. I would say that we are now 425 00:23:33,240 --> 00:23:36,240 Speaker 1: in a position we had planned and projected to be 426 00:23:36,800 --> 00:23:39,560 Speaker 1: three years from now. So really, you know, we've stayed 427 00:23:39,560 --> 00:23:43,240 Speaker 1: the course. It's just been accelerated into a shorter amount 428 00:23:43,240 --> 00:23:48,320 Speaker 1: of time. UM. And you know, nothing has really changed, 429 00:23:48,359 --> 00:23:50,199 Speaker 1: you know in terms of our our targeting, you know, 430 00:23:50,280 --> 00:23:54,119 Speaker 1: our ability to scale and accommodate UM. You know, the 431 00:23:54,200 --> 00:23:59,679 Speaker 1: subscribers is really a tribute to uh, the Alaskan seafood industry, right. UM. 432 00:23:59,760 --> 00:24:05,000 Speaker 1: This the fully domesticated product UM caught and processed in 433 00:24:05,000 --> 00:24:07,320 Speaker 1: the United States, so we weren't dependent on any foreign 434 00:24:07,320 --> 00:24:11,640 Speaker 1: supply chains for the seafood or for our packaging material, 435 00:24:12,000 --> 00:24:14,000 Speaker 1: and so we didn't really have any supply disruptions. It 436 00:24:14,040 --> 00:24:18,800 Speaker 1: was business as usual, just accelerated. So, Aaron, I'm curious, 437 00:24:19,960 --> 00:24:22,800 Speaker 1: has Breggsit presented any opportunities for you or is that 438 00:24:22,880 --> 00:24:25,240 Speaker 1: something you stay away from entirely? Is there is there 439 00:24:25,280 --> 00:24:27,760 Speaker 1: a way for you guys to help out with the 440 00:24:27,800 --> 00:24:33,800 Speaker 1: fisheries problem, let's say by providing your fish. We don't 441 00:24:33,880 --> 00:24:38,080 Speaker 1: currently ship outside of the U s um It's something 442 00:24:38,119 --> 00:24:41,320 Speaker 1: that's on our long term mid the long term, uh 443 00:24:41,359 --> 00:24:43,920 Speaker 1: you know roadmap, you know, to part to start uh 444 00:24:44,920 --> 00:24:47,640 Speaker 1: booting up for filming centers in other countries. But right now, 445 00:24:47,960 --> 00:24:51,240 Speaker 1: you know, we're servicing the American domestic market. I will 446 00:24:51,280 --> 00:24:55,840 Speaker 1: say that, you know, Alaska seafood in general is consumed 447 00:24:55,880 --> 00:24:59,040 Speaker 1: primarily abroad. It's kind of ironic, you know, Americans don't 448 00:24:59,080 --> 00:25:01,760 Speaker 1: actually eat their own seafood, the seafood from their own backyard. 449 00:25:02,160 --> 00:25:06,840 Speaker 1: Most Alaskan seafood is exported already. So Wild Alaskan Company 450 00:25:06,920 --> 00:25:09,320 Speaker 1: is an attempt to get Americans to eat as beautiful, 451 00:25:09,400 --> 00:25:12,399 Speaker 1: sustainable seafood that that by and large they're ignoring in 452 00:25:12,440 --> 00:25:15,520 Speaker 1: favor of farm farm fish. You know, that's being imported now, 453 00:25:15,600 --> 00:25:19,800 Speaker 1: so so so quite the opposite from our perspective. Alright, 454 00:25:19,840 --> 00:25:21,600 Speaker 1: So Aaron, I'm I'm you know, what I know about 455 00:25:21,640 --> 00:25:24,440 Speaker 1: Alaskan seafood and fishing is kind of when I watch 456 00:25:24,520 --> 00:25:26,520 Speaker 1: on TV with the Wildest Catch or whatever it's called, 457 00:25:26,560 --> 00:25:30,760 Speaker 1: these crazy people going out and is just incredible rough 458 00:25:30,800 --> 00:25:35,160 Speaker 1: seas of the Alaskan waters. There. Talked just about sustainable 459 00:25:35,720 --> 00:25:41,880 Speaker 1: fishing market or the sustainable fishing business in Alaska. Yeah, 460 00:25:41,920 --> 00:25:45,080 Speaker 1: I mean, Alaska is the seafood industry is really the 461 00:25:45,119 --> 00:25:49,240 Speaker 1: global gold standard for sustainable management of seafood. Um. And 462 00:25:49,280 --> 00:25:51,439 Speaker 1: you know, my family, you know, had a lot to 463 00:25:51,480 --> 00:25:54,800 Speaker 1: do with that. Actually, my my grandfather was born in Manhattan, 464 00:25:54,840 --> 00:25:58,560 Speaker 1: but he moved to rural Alaska. He began fishing in 465 00:25:58,560 --> 00:26:01,640 Speaker 1: a wooden sailboat, and um, you know, he actually went 466 00:26:01,720 --> 00:26:03,879 Speaker 1: back in nineteen fifty two to the East Coast and 467 00:26:03,920 --> 00:26:08,159 Speaker 1: received a master's degree from Cornell University. He wrote his 468 00:26:08,240 --> 00:26:10,560 Speaker 1: thesis a study of the Red Zamin of Bristol Bay, 469 00:26:10,600 --> 00:26:14,560 Speaker 1: with particular reference to teaching its conservation. He eventually went 470 00:26:14,600 --> 00:26:17,560 Speaker 1: on to serve to serve as the chairman of the 471 00:26:17,640 --> 00:26:20,520 Speaker 1: Territory Border Fisheries. A lot of folks don't know, but 472 00:26:20,560 --> 00:26:24,119 Speaker 1: Alaska actually incorporated as a state in large part to 473 00:26:24,119 --> 00:26:27,320 Speaker 1: gain control of the fisheries over the federal government. And 474 00:26:27,400 --> 00:26:30,399 Speaker 1: by doing that they put a mandate into the state 475 00:26:30,400 --> 00:26:34,560 Speaker 1: constitution which mandates sustainable yield and that has over the 476 00:26:34,640 --> 00:26:39,840 Speaker 1: years produced um the global gold standard for sustainable fisheries. Wow, 477 00:26:39,880 --> 00:26:42,280 Speaker 1: that is really fascinating. There is a book in there, 478 00:26:42,320 --> 00:26:45,760 Speaker 1: I think and Paul, deadliest catch is what you're thinking of. Yes, 479 00:26:46,840 --> 00:26:50,280 Speaker 1: it's it really is. It can be a deadly profession. Aaron, 480 00:26:50,960 --> 00:26:53,400 Speaker 1: what were the types of things that people ordered most 481 00:26:53,480 --> 00:26:56,280 Speaker 1: this year? And I'm also desperate to know if you've 482 00:26:56,280 --> 00:26:58,600 Speaker 1: been approached by people that are looking to take you 483 00:26:58,680 --> 00:27:03,480 Speaker 1: public through his back. So, our most popular species is 484 00:27:03,520 --> 00:27:07,240 Speaker 1: definitely the sack salmon. Um. There's five commercially harvested species 485 00:27:07,240 --> 00:27:10,240 Speaker 1: in Alaska, soak salmon is the most popular. Most folks 486 00:27:10,280 --> 00:27:14,960 Speaker 1: like to get some salmon in combination with whitefish, plibate cod, 487 00:27:15,359 --> 00:27:19,080 Speaker 1: sable fish, rockfish, uh wild a last capolic, But the 488 00:27:19,119 --> 00:27:21,520 Speaker 1: salmon is really that you know that the cornerstone of 489 00:27:21,560 --> 00:27:24,920 Speaker 1: the Alaska sea food industry. In terms of going public, 490 00:27:25,040 --> 00:27:27,800 Speaker 1: you know, we we look at you know, capitalizing the 491 00:27:28,200 --> 00:27:31,679 Speaker 1: company UM in conjunction with our mission based approach to 492 00:27:31,760 --> 00:27:35,920 Speaker 1: accelerate humanities transition to sustainable food systems. To that end, 493 00:27:36,320 --> 00:27:38,880 Speaker 1: you know, we are a private company. UM, We're focused 494 00:27:38,920 --> 00:27:41,840 Speaker 1: on stewardship. You know, I often say Wild Alaskan is 495 00:27:41,840 --> 00:27:46,520 Speaker 1: a three generation overnight success. Obviously it takes capital to 496 00:27:47,119 --> 00:27:50,240 Speaker 1: grow the company, but you know, I think down the road, 497 00:27:50,240 --> 00:27:52,159 Speaker 1: the public markets would be a great place because a 498 00:27:52,160 --> 00:27:55,879 Speaker 1: lot of the public is really ultimately aligned with our mission. 499 00:27:56,040 --> 00:27:58,640 Speaker 1: You know, makes maybe more so than private private institutions. 500 00:27:58,680 --> 00:28:01,399 Speaker 1: But right now, we're really just focused on stewarding that 501 00:28:01,480 --> 00:28:05,320 Speaker 1: mission and uh right, you know, building the best business 502 00:28:05,320 --> 00:28:09,080 Speaker 1: we can. That's really fascinating story. Aaron Collinberg, thank you 503 00:28:09,160 --> 00:28:11,320 Speaker 1: so much for joining the CEO of the Wild Alaskan 504 00:28:11,359 --> 00:28:15,720 Speaker 1: Company based in Get This Homer, Alaska in Brooklyn, New York. 505 00:28:16,880 --> 00:28:19,480 Speaker 1: Thanks for listening to the Boomberg Markets podcast. You can 506 00:28:19,520 --> 00:28:23,280 Speaker 1: subscribe and listen to interviews at Apple Podcasts or whatever 507 00:28:23,400 --> 00:28:26,760 Speaker 1: podcast platform you prefer. I'm Bonnie Quinn, I'm on Twitter 508 00:28:26,960 --> 00:28:29,320 Speaker 1: at Bonnie Quinn, and I'm Paul Sweeney. I'm on Twitter 509 00:28:29,359 --> 00:28:32,200 Speaker 1: at pt Sweeney Before the podcast, you can always catch 510 00:28:32,280 --> 00:28:33,840 Speaker 1: us worldwide at Bloomberg Radio