Anthropic is in talks to raise money at a $900 billion pre-money valuation, exceeding Walmart's ~$1 trillion market cap despite radically smaller revenues.
Anthropic charges $200/month for Claude but it costs them $5,000/month in compute to deliver it — and they're still valued at nearly $1 trillion.
The Prof G Pod with Scott Galloway
Anthropic charges $200/month for Claude but it costs them $5,000/month in compute to deliver it — and they're still valued at nearly $1 trillion.
TL;DR
Scott Galloway fields three listener questions on AI valuations, advertising careers, and fatherhood trade-offs. He explains why Anthropic's $900B valuation dwarfs Walmart's despite tiny revenues — it's a bet on near-infinite TAM and software margins [1] — Scott Galloway "Anthropic trades at 20x forward revenues while Walmart sits at 1.5x — because investors are pricing in a non-zero probability this becomes …" 03:19 — while warning a bubble is likely but impossible to time [2] — Scott Galloway "AI bubble — likely but untimable: Galloway believes an AI bubble probably exists, but notes the Nasdaq tripled after the dot-com bubble was…" 10:06 . He advises Mark's daughter to pivot from "advertising" toward event marketing and communications, and tells Seth that financial security and family time are trade-offs requiring honest partner alignment, not balance [3] — Scott Galloway "If you think about what it means to be mature, it's prioritizing the future. And that is sacrifice now." 27:03 .
Scott Galloway answers three listener questions: the economics behind Anthropic's valuation versus Walmart, whether advertising is a viable career in 2026, and how to navigate fatherhood and career trade-offs.
Pre-roll sponsor reads for Ferragamo's Father's Day gifting, Aven's home equity Visa card, and Section's AI adoption training platform.
Scott introduces the Office Hours format, invites listeners to submit voice questions via email, Reddit, or the new phone hotline.
Scott dissects the Anthropic vs. Walmart valuation gap — explaining TAM, software margins, Claude's $200 vs. $5,000 unit economics, and why an AI bubble is likely but impossible to time. [1] — Scott Galloway "Anthropic trades at 20x forward revenues while Walmart sits at 1.5x — because investors are pricing in a non-zero probability this becomes …" 03:19 [2] — Scott Galloway "Anthropic charges $200/month for Claude but spends $5,000/month per user in compute. They're not a subscription business yet — they're a la…" 07:40 [3] — Scott Galloway "Galloway says yes, we're probably in an AI bubble. But the dot-com bubble was obvious in 1997 and the Nasdaq still tripled. The right move …" 09:43
Mark asks about his daughter's advertising major. Scott declares broadcast advertising in structural decline, traces it from Steve Jobs to Google/Meta, and points to event marketing as the growth opportunity. [1] — Scott Galloway "Steve Jobs took $6B out of broadcast advertising and built 550 Apple Stores instead. That move crystallized what was already happening: Ame…" 11:30 [2] — Scott Galloway "RBC spent $2–3M on a 36-hour client event. Dreamforce budgets hit $10M. Netflix takes over chalets at Cannes Lions. Physical activations ar…" 15:40
Scott advises finding what you're great at over following passion, recommends STEM and writing as durable skills, and concedes daughters will do what they want anyway.
Mid-roll sponsor reads for Shopify's $1/month ecommerce trial, Cohere's enterprise AI platform, and Indeed's sponsored job credits.
Seth asks about balancing executive ambition with new fatherhood at 40. Scott shares his own story of 14-hour days, missed milestones, and the need for partner alignment — concluding there is no balance, only trade-offs. [1] — Scott Galloway "Galloway worked 14-hour days when his kids were babies, missed physical growth milestones, and has no regrets — but only because he had exp…" 20:21 [2] — Scott Galloway "80% of the business school students Galloway meets expect to be in the top 10% of earners — while also saying they want balance. Those two …" 24:55
Scott wraps up, credits the production team, and a promo for the Vox Media Formula 1 show Red Flags Podcast plays out the episode.
Chapter 1 · 00:00
Pre-roll sponsor reads for Ferragamo's Father's Day gifting, Aven's home equity Visa card, and Section's AI adoption training platform.
Anthropic is in talks to raise money at a $900 billion pre-money valuation, exceeding Walmart's ~$1 trillion market cap despite radically smaller revenues.
Chapter 3 · 02:59
Scott dissects the Anthropic vs. Walmart valuation gap — explaining TAM, software margins, Claude's $200 vs. $5,000 unit economics, and why an AI bubble is likely but impossible to time. [1] — Scott Galloway "Anthropic trades at 20x forward revenues while Walmart sits at 1.5x — because investors are pricing in a non-zero probability this becomes …" 03:19 [2] — Scott Galloway "Anthropic charges $200/month for Claude but spends $5,000/month per user in compute. They're not a subscription business yet — they're a la…" 07:40 [3] — Scott Galloway "Galloway says yes, we're probably in an AI bubble. But the dot-com bubble was obvious in 1997 and the Nasdaq still tripled. The right move …" 09:43
Claims made here
Walmart holds approximately 9–11% share of U.S. retail and is unlikely to ever exceed 20% due to consumer preference for variety and regional friction.
Walmart's fiscal 2025 net sales were $675 billion with an adjusted operating income of $30 billion and an operating margin of 4.4%, giving it a market cap of approximately $1 trillion.
Claude Pro/Max costs $200/month to subscribe to, but costs Anthropic approximately $5,000/month per user in compute and chips to deliver.
Anthropic's ARR trajectory grew from $87 million in January 2024 to $1 billion by end of 2024, $9 billion by end of 2025, and $30 billion by April 2026.
Anthropic's current annual revenue run rate is approximately $40 billion, according to people with knowledge of the company's financials.
Anthropic's valuation was $380 billion post-money at Series G in February, with talks underway to raise at a $900 billion pre-money valuation.
Internal Anthropic documents project a $14 billion loss for 2026, with no positive free cash flow until 2028 at the earliest.
Anthropic has raised roughly $72 billion in total funding and does not project positive free cash flow until 2028.
Anthropic trades at 20x forward revenues while Walmart sits at 1.5x — because investors are pricing in a non-zero probability this becomes the most valuable company in the world. The TAM feels infinite; the software margins, once breakeven hits, will be extraordinary.
Walmart's adjusted operating income is ~$30B on $675B net sales, an operating margin of 4.4%, valued at roughly 1.5x revenue.
Shareholder value comes down to three lines: perceived value, price, and cost. Walmart relentlessly compresses the cost line and passes savings to consumers — widening the gap between price and perceived value, which is why they expand share.
Anthropic charges $200/month for Claude but spends $5,000/month per user in compute. They're not a subscription business yet — they're a land-grab funded by $72B in investor capital.
Anthropic grew from $87M annual revenue run rate in January 2024 to a current run rate of approximately $40B ARR by 2026.
Internal documents project Anthropic will lose $14 billion in 2026, with no positive free cash flow expected until 2028 at the earliest.
At a $900B valuation and ~$45B ARR, Anthropic trades at roughly 20x forward revenues, compared to Walmart's 1.5x.
Anthropic's biggest threat isn't slower growth — it's open-weight models out of China commoditizing the LLM market. Add regulatory risk with bipartisan support, and the bear case for a $900B AI valuation becomes real.
Galloway says yes, we're probably in an AI bubble. But the dot-com bubble was obvious in 1997 and the Nasdaq still tripled. The right move isn't to time the market — it's to stay in it via diversified index funds.
Galloway believes an AI bubble probably exists, but notes the Nasdaq tripled after the dot-com bubble was obvious in 1997 — timing the pop is nearly impossible.
Chapter 4 · 10:40
Mark asks about his daughter's advertising major. Scott declares broadcast advertising in structural decline, traces it from Steve Jobs to Google/Meta, and points to event marketing as the growth opportunity. [1] — Scott Galloway "Steve Jobs took $6B out of broadcast advertising and built 550 Apple Stores instead. That move crystallized what was already happening: Ame…" 11:30 [2] — Scott Galloway "RBC spent $2–3M on a 36-hour client event. Dreamforce budgets hit $10M. Netflix takes over chalets at Cannes Lions. Physical activations ar…" 15:40
Claims made here
Steve Jobs redirected $6 billion out of broadcast advertising to open approximately 550 Apple retail stores.
The cost to advertise on the Academy Awards has gone up fivefold while the audience has declined by two-thirds.
The word 'advertising' is the problem — the actual skills (communication, storytelling, figuring out what moves people) remain valuable. Pivot to events, activations, and direct customer engagement. The ad agencies that were once masters of the universe are now running Irish bars at Cannes.
Steve Jobs took $6B out of broadcast advertising and built 550 Apple Stores instead. That move crystallized what was already happening: Americans no longer sit in front of three TV channels for five hours a day, and broadcast advertising's pricing power has inverted — costs up 5x, audiences down two-thirds.
Steve Jobs redirected $6 billion out of broadcast advertising into Apple's retail stores, marking a pivotal shift from pre-purchase branding to distribution investment.
Claude Pro/Max is sold at $200/month but costs Anthropic roughly $5,000/month in compute to deliver, meaning they're massively subsidizing growth.
The cost to advertise on the Academy Awards has gone up fivefold even as its audience declined by two-thirds, illustrating broadcast advertising's broken value equation.
The majority of high-margin brands do one of two things: make you feel closer to God, or signal that you'd be more attractive to a wider selection of mates. Ferrari doesn't sell cars — it sells the fantasy of desirability.
RBC spent $2–3M on a 36-hour client event. Dreamforce budgets hit $10M. Netflix takes over chalets at Cannes Lions. Physical activations are where brand money is flowing as broadcast collapses.
RBC spent $2–3 million on a 36-hour event for top clients in Vancouver, illustrating the boom in high-value event marketing activations.
Galloway's advice to college students: don't follow your talent or passion. Find what you're great at. Take STEM. Learn to write. Storytelling is the one enduring skill that AI hasn't commoditized.
Chapter 7 · 20:12
Seth asks about balancing executive ambition with new fatherhood at 40. Scott shares his own story of 14-hour days, missed milestones, and the need for partner alignment — concluding there is no balance, only trade-offs. [1] — Scott Galloway "Galloway worked 14-hour days when his kids were babies, missed physical growth milestones, and has no regrets — but only because he had exp…" 20:21 [2] — Scott Galloway "80% of the business school students Galloway meets expect to be in the top 10% of earners — while also saying they want balance. Those two …" 24:55
Claims made here
People in the upper income decile live seven to ten years longer than people in the lowest income decile.
Approximately 80% of ambitious business school students expect to be in the top 10% of earners, and many also expect work-life balance.
The global average per capita income is approximately $16,000 to $18,000.
Galloway worked 14-hour days when his kids were babies, missed physical growth milestones, and has no regrets — but only because he had explicit partner alignment on the trade-off. There is no balance. There are only conscious choices.
People in the upper income decile live seven to ten years longer than those in the lowest decile, making financial security a literal health issue.
80% of the business school students Galloway meets expect to be in the top 10% of earners — while also saying they want balance. Those two things are incompatible. Nobody reaches the top without enormous sacrifice.
Galloway estimates 80% of the ambitious business school students he meets expect to land in the top 10% of earners, yet most also claim to want work-life balance.
The average per capita income globally is $16,000–$18,000, meaning anyone wanting more must be more innovative, work harder, or enjoy geographic advantage.
No indexed bits in this chapter.
This episode
The annual advertising industry festival used by Galloway as a barometer of how power has shifted from agencies to digital platforms.
Salesforce's flagship annual conference cited by Galloway as an example of major brand event spending (~$10M).
Central to the episode's first question — its $900B valuation versus Walmart's market cap is used to explore AI bubble dynamics.
Used as a contrast to Anthropic — a massive, profitable retailer with a lower market cap than a money-losing AI startup.
Referenced via Steve Jobs' decision to redirect $6B from broadcast advertising into 550 Apple Stores as a pivotal shift in brand-building strategy.
Mentioned alongside Anthropic as a comparable AI company trading at extreme revenue multiples with delayed profitability projections.
Cited as one of the platforms that sucked advertising spend away from traditional agencies and broadcast media.
Mentioned alongside Google as a dominant digital advertising platform that displaced traditional agency models.
Used as the archetypal example of a luxury brand that generates irrational margins by selling desirability and status.
Used as an example of a brand investing in experiential activations (Cannes Lions pop-ups) as part of its marketing strategy.
Mentioned as one of the contenders for 'most valuable company in the world' alongside Apple, with a ~$5–5.5 trillion market cap.
Cited alongside WPP and IPG as a legacy advertising conglomerate that has lost its dominant market position to digital platforms.
Grouped with Anthropic and OpenAI as companies trading at 30–100x revenues based on perceived infinite TAM.
One of the legacy advertising holding companies Galloway describes as having been 'masters of the universe' but now largely irrelevant.
Anthropic's AI assistant product; cited to illustrate the extreme unit economics gap between subscription price and actual compute costs.
Stats
This episode
Factual claims made this episode, and whether a source was named.
Anthropic's current annual revenue run rate is approximately $40 billion, according to people with knowledge of the company's financials.
Anthropic's valuation was $380 billion post-money at Series G in February, with talks underway to raise at a $900 billion pre-money valuation.
Internal Anthropic documents project a $14 billion loss for 2026, with no positive free cash flow until 2028 at the earliest.
Anthropic's ARR trajectory grew from $87 million in January 2024 to $1 billion by end of 2024, $9 billion by end of 2025, and $30 billion by April 2026.
Anthropic has raised roughly $72 billion in total funding and does not project positive free cash flow until 2028.
Walmart's fiscal 2025 net sales were $675 billion with an adjusted operating income of $30 billion and an operating margin of 4.4%, giving it a market cap of approximately $1 trillion.
Claude Pro/Max costs $200/month to subscribe to, but costs Anthropic approximately $5,000/month per user in compute and chips to deliver.
The cost to advertise on the Academy Awards has gone up fivefold while the audience has declined by two-thirds.
Steve Jobs redirected $6 billion out of broadcast advertising to open approximately 550 Apple retail stores.
People in the upper income decile live seven to ten years longer than people in the lowest income decile.
The global average per capita income is approximately $16,000 to $18,000.
Approximately 80% of ambitious business school students expect to be in the top 10% of earners, and many also expect work-life balance.
Walmart holds approximately 9–11% share of U.S. retail and is unlikely to ever exceed 20% due to consumer preference for variety and regional friction.
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