Issue No. 04 10 May 2026

The lean-ops thesis got five more voices, and the same operating model has a name now: AI founder mode

Brian Chesky coined it — 'AI founder mode' — but Toby Lütke, Adam Foroughi (again), Max Schoening, the All-In panel and the 20VC team independently said the same five things in 7 days. Anthropic raised $50B in 48 hours at $900B and Elon leased all of Colossus 1 to Dario five days after Chamath called the trade. Sacks called Anthropic 'the biggest monopoly in human history' and reverse-engineered Rockefeller. Mag5 went from $150B to $350B in 8 quarters with the mega-cap-to-S&P premium now ~13%. Memory at 5x earnings is the highest-conviction sectoral trade in the issue — Samsung will print more profit than Google. Brad Gerstner date-stamped: Nvidia is the first $10T company; SpaceX + X IPO end of June. And on July 4, every American child born forevermore gets $1,000 stapled to their Social Security in an S&P 500 account.

7 episodes · 9.0 hours

The Threads

Five voices, one operating model: AI founder mode has a name now

Last week the digest’s central observation was the lean-ops pattern emerging from three independent verticals (AppLovin, Kalshi, Baseten). This week the same pattern got named, by Brian CheskyAI founder mode — and five additional voices independently said the same five things:

  1. ‘People-managers-only do not survive the AI age.’ Chesky direct quote; Max Schoening (Notion) independently the same sentence; Toby Lütke (‘every engineer needs to code; even the managers need to code’); Adam Foroughi (‘Anyone on LinkedIn that talks about their team should be fired. Lead from the front with AI’); Brian Armstrong (Coinbase’s 14% layoffs and the ‘I just don’t need anyone at Coinbase that isn’t an individual contributor anymore’ edict). Five independent voices, one week.

  2. ‘There will be no apps in the future — only agents.’ Direct verbatim quote from both Chesky and Schoening this week, independently. When two product leaders at $100B+ companies say the same line in the same week, it’s worth treating as the architectural call to plan around.

  3. The lean-ops financial outcome is now visible. AppLovin: 84% EBITDA margins, ~$10M EBITDA per employee in the 400-person core. Shopify: 7,500-8,000 people targeted to stay flat for 5 more years ‘at 100x productivity per head.’ Airbnb: Project Hawaii — 10-12 person Navy-SEAL teams — produced $200M of internal revenue in year 1, $400-500M in year 2, ~600 basis points improvement on $134B GMV by year 3. The pattern is now a methodology that ships, not just a hiring filter.

  4. Senior engineers + steering beats juniors + no-priors for AI coding. Toby Lütke explicitly changed his mind on this — initially believed AI-native juniors would have the advantage; now: ‘all engineers are massively underestimating how important the steering is.’ Foroughi: ‘10x engineer × AI = 100x. B player × AI = 2x. The gap widens, not closes.’ Direct contradiction of the early-2025 ‘AI flattens the experience curve’ framing.

  5. Context engineering as the new dominant role. Toby calls it ‘context engineering will become a recognisable career role that subsumes more specialised roles.’ Schoening calls it the same thing from the Notion side. Cross-references the Issue 02 PM-debate resolution and Foroughi’s ‘engineers as PMs’ framing. The PM role isn’t dying — it’s morphing into the highest-leverage role if the person has actual technical and product taste.

The most concrete production-deployed example came from Toby Lütke: River — Shopify’s agentic engineering system that lives in Slack, self-named, does ‘a ludicrous amount’ of Shopify engineering, with engineers steering it via public Slack channels so the whole org learns from each other. Combined with Cat Wu’s Anthropic engineering velocity disclosures from Issue 02 (‘6 months → 1 month → 1 day’), this is the operator-side proof that the architectural shift is happening at the production layer of multi-$100B companies.

Where I’d put numbers on this:

Anthropic: ‘biggest monopoly in human history’ — or 4-horse race?

The single highest-stakes framing of the issue. David Sacks on All-In: Anthropic ARR went $10B (Jan 1) → $30B (Mar 31) → $44B (April 2026). If 10x/year exponential holds for 18 more months: $1T ARR by 2027 — bigger than the rest of Mag 7 combined. Sacks calls this ‘the biggest monopoly in human history’ and reverse-engineers the Rockefeller-rebrand: ‘Imagine if Rockefeller had called his company Safe Oil and asked Washington for a new agency to regulate kerosene safety. People would have debated wick thickness while he built the biggest monopoly in history.’

The supply side moved equally fast. Chamath’s prediction from the prior week landed in 5 days: Elon’s xAI leased all of Colossus 1 — 220,000+ Nvidia GPUs and 300+ MW — to Anthropic. xAI shifts training to Colossus 2. Claude Code rate limits doubled. Peak caps removed for paid users. Anthropic’s compute floor lifted (not solved). The same week, Anthropic raised $50B at a $900B valuation in 48 hours — capital was effectively unlimited at the call-and-respond rate, no rights, no IPO blocks. Brad Gerstner on Milken: ‘Demand for Anthropic shares is the highest I’ve seen in 25 years in Silicon Valley.’

Brad’s counter-frame: ‘Team America wins. Anthropic took the lead Jan-Apr via Claude Code + Opus 4.6, but Codex is incredible in the last 3-4 weeks. We have four competent US labs. Profits will split, just like cloud did.’ Adds an important nuance: OpenAI is now ‘distributing all of their models across AWS,’ which will accelerate them via Amazon’s distribution muscle.

The constraint thesis from Issue 03’s three-floors-of-compute got reaffirmed at every layer:

The ‘FDA for AI’ panic deserves a sub-thread. NYT reported Trump considering an executive order for an AI working group reviewing models pre-release. Kevin Hassett mentioned it on Fox Business, Scott Bessent softened it, Susie Wiles walked it back via official statement. Sacks: ‘No senior official supports this. The political reaction to Mythos is real but the executive-order path is fake news.’ Polymarket ‘Trump federal review of AI by May 31’: 21%.

Where I’d put numbers on this:

Memory at 5x earnings — the highest-conviction sectoral trade of the issue

Three independent voices converged on memory as the cleanest sectoral trade this week, with quantitative specifics:

The three observations form a coherent investment thesis: (a) the demand is real and growing (Mac Mini stealth inflation = end-user willingness to pay through); (b) the supply structure is consolidating with Brad expecting industry restructuring (more collaboration with hyperscalers); (c) the durability is what’s mispriced — boom-bust expectation is dragging the multiple.

Companion trade Brad date-stamped: ‘Nvidia will be the first $10 trillion company. As of May 2026.’ Currently $195/share, 13-14x fully-taxed earnings, $1T in forward orders, trading lower than 6 months ago. Vera Rubin LPX clusters shipping later this year — comes from the Groq acquisition at the end of last year. Brad’s actual moat metric is token-per-watt-per-dollar, not peak FLOPS.

Where I’d put numbers on this:

‘No apps in the future, only agents’ — Chesky and Schoening, independently

This is the architectural call most likely to be wrong — but it’s worth pinning. Both Brian Chesky and Max Schoening said the exact same line in the same week: ‘There will be no apps in the future — only agents.’ Two product leaders at $100B+ companies, independently. Neither hedged.

Chesky’s strategic response: ‘Airbnb’s atomic unit moves from a home to a person.’ Building three pillars: most-authenticated identity on the internet (‘proof of personhood is going to be really important in an age of AI artificial’), richest preference library, real-world social graph + membership program. Plus sandbox ‘radically different Airbnbs’ built in parallel. Direct strategic positioning to be the identity layer for the agent era, with 50-70 verticals on top instead of the current 3.

Schoening’s response is broader: malleable software as the thesis. Currently software apps are immutable squares on your phone — we accept this because we have to. The next decade’s product innovation will come from rebuilding the user-software relationship, with Ink & Switch doing the foundational work.

The competing counter-thesis: SaaS is more durable than the agent-replaces-app framing suggests. Schoening: ‘Software is a garden — you need a gardener. The as-a-service is the maintenance and specialists.’ Slack is the OS for Anthropic — ‘you’d think they’d rebuild it; no, they use it like crazy.’ Workday too. Brad on Milken: ‘these are some of the most under-valued long-duration franchises in the market.’ Lemkin’s SaaS-apocalypse partial walk-back (Atlassian +29%, Twilio +20%, NS8 +23%) supports this view.

Reconciliation: the apps-die call is right about consumer apps with thin business logic; the SaaS-endures call is right about deeply embedded systems-of-record with maintenance moats (Jon Gray’s framing from Issue 03). Both can be true.

Where I’d put numbers on this:

Date-stamped capital-markets calls: SpaceX June, Trump Accounts July, Nvidia $10T

The clearest set of date-stamped market predictions in any issue to date. Worth logging carefully:

Reality check on retail from Brad himself: ‘Buying a company at $1 trillion in value is not a get-rich-quick scheme. You’re hoping to compound at 20-30% for a long time. If hoping to double or triple, it’s unlikely.’ Honest caveat from the public-markets veteran — most of the value capture has occurred in private markets.

Where I’d put numbers on this:

Two short notes worth keeping

Toby Lütke’s counter-narrative. The most controversial position of the issue: ‘AI is a Girardian scapegoat for COVID-era overhiring. Those aren’t AI layoffs — those are companies that were really slow and overhired.’ But his operating destination is identical to Foroughi/Chesky/Schoening — Shopify staying flat at 7,500-8,000 people for 5 more years at 100x productivity, >50% AI-coded already, agentic engineering via River in public Slack channels. Sub-text: the narrative will get fought over, but the operating model is converging.

The Foroughi $6B buyback → $50-60B value mechanics. Senra’s deep-dive confirmed the exact mechanics: identified the ~50% of the cap table that was going to sell anyway (forced-seller PE + ex-founders), bought directly from them rather than the open market. ~⅓ of today’s $140B market cap is from this single capital-allocation move. Plus the 2016 Chinese cross-border deal mistake (CFIUS stuck for 12+ months, restructured to a convertible note as workaround) as the strongest ‘why founders need boards’ anecdote we’ve seen on the show.


Seven episodes, 9.0 hours. The operating-model consolidation that started as a pattern in Issue 03 now has a name and five independent advocates. The Anthropic monopoly thesis is no longer fringe — Sacks is willing to say the words. Memory at 5x earnings is the cleanest investable expression of the issue. And the capital-markets calendar got specific: SpaceX in June, Trump Accounts in July, Anthropic $1T ARR by 2027. Next week: watching whether the ‘AI founder mode’ framing travels to sell-side analysts, the SpaceX IPO pricing range, and whether Polymarket adds a ‘Trump Accounts signups by July 4’ contract.

This Week's Episodes