TubeReads

War With Iran Is Rewriting Global Markets | Prof G Markets

The United States has launched a war with Iran, and President Trump says it will end «when I feel it in my bones.» But while American stocks have fallen only 3%, European markets are down 5%, Japanese stocks 8%, and South Korean stocks have plummeted 13%. The question now facing investors, governments, and citizens is simple yet terrifying: in a world where America acts alone, who pays the price — and can the U.S. really insulate itself from the chaos it creates? Meanwhile, AI leaders warn that unemployment for new college graduates could hit the mid-30s within two years, and half of all entry-level white-collar jobs could vanish in five years.

The Prof G Pod – Scott Galloway12 Pessoas mencionadas5 Termos do glossário
Duração do vídeo: 1:02:06·Publicado 16 de mar. de 2026·Idioma do vídeo: en-US
9–10 min de leitura·10,884 palavras faladasresumido para 1,837 palavras (6x)·

1

Pontos-chave

1

The Iran war is hitting Asian and European markets far harder than the U.S., with South Korea down 13% and Europe down 5%, while the S&P has only fallen 3% — America's geographic isolation and energy independence provide real but temporary protection.

2

Oil at $100 a barrel combined with a weakening labor market is a recipe for stagflation in America, and the Fed is already signaling it won't cut rates — rate hike odds have risen 20% since the war began.

3

AI job displacement is real, but much of the panic is «AI washing» — companies are blaming layoffs on technology rather than poor forecasting or slowing demand, and job postings for software engineers are actually up.

4

GLP-1 drugs (like Ozempic) will have a bigger economic and societal impact than AI — every new discovery about GLP-1 is positive, while every new AI revelation raises alarm, making pharma a better long-term bet than tech.

5

The greatest threat from AI is not sentient weapons but the creation of «a new species of asocial, asexual males» — young men with no economic or romantic prospects, fueled by digital substitutes, are the darkest threat to social stability.

Em resumo

America may be geographically and economically insulated from the Iran war's immediate damage, but the long-term costs — damaged alliances, capital flight, and the weaponization of lonely young men by AI-fueled isolation — will be far more insidious and far-reaching than any market drawdown.


2

America's Unearned Advantages in a World at War

The US is geographically and economically insulated, but that privilege is not a long-term strategy.

Scott Galloway argues that America's relative resilience in the face of the Iran war is not a product of superior strategy or leadership — it is an accident of geography and geology. The U.S. has two oceans as moats, friendly neighbors, energy independence, and food surplus. Europe, by contrast, depends heavily on Middle Eastern oil, and Asian nations like Japan and South Korea get 70% of their energy through the Strait of Hormuz. When that strait becomes a war zone, their economies convulse.

But Galloway warns that this insulation breeds dangerous arrogance. «In the US, we don't realize a lot of our success is not our fault,» he says. America's tech CEOs and political leaders assume dominance is earned, not inherited. The result is reckless unilateralism — launching wars without consulting allies, breaking treaties, and assuming capital will always flow to the U.S. because it has nowhere else to go. That assumption, Galloway suggests, is about to be tested.

The real vulnerabilities are not military but financial and social. Smaller nations with dollar-denominated debt — Bangladesh, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, the Philippines — are seeing their currencies collapse, making their obligations unpayable. If those defaults cascade into European banks, the contagion could reach American markets. And reputationally, the U.S. is squandering decades of trust. «The cooperation or the feeling of benign big brother — that going away is going to have all sorts of unintended consequences,» Galloway warns. America may survive this war economically, but it will emerge lonelier, less trusted, and more fragile than it realizes.


3

Winners and Losers in the New War Economy

🇷🇺
Russia
The biggest geopolitical winner. High oil prices fund the Ukraine war, and Western attention is now divided. Putin couldn't have scripted this better.
🛢️
Oil Producers
Norway, Canada, and Saudi Arabia benefit from sustained $100 oil without suffering infrastructure damage. Their economies are booming while others burn.
🇰🇷
Asian Economies
South Korea's market is down 13%, Japan's down 8%. Both are energy-dependent and rely on the Strait of Hormuz — now a war zone — for 70% of their oil.
💊
GLP-1 Pharma
Scott Galloway's contrarian pick: Eli Lilly and other GLP-1 drug makers will outperform AI stocks. Every new GLP-1 discovery is good news; every AI revelation raises alarm.
👔
Young Job Seekers
AI leaders predict unemployment for new grads could hit the mid-30s in two years. Companies are using «AI washing» to justify mass layoffs and permanent hiring freezes.

4

The Hidden Risk: Dollar-Denominated Debt in Emerging Markets

Collapsing currencies in Bangladesh, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka could trigger global contagion.

⚠️

The Hidden Risk: Dollar-Denominated Debt in Emerging Markets

Galloway flags the «[ __ ] you're not expecting»: small, energy-dependent nations with dollar-denominated debt. When their currencies crash — as they are now — they owe double what they borrowed. If they default, European banks holding those loans face losses, and the contagion spreads. «No one's talking about dollar-denominated debt in Bangladesh,» Galloway says, «but if they can't pay their debt, it's going to be pretty ugly.»


5

The Stagflation Scenario: Oil, Jobs, and the Fed

$100 oil plus a weakening labor market equals stagflation; rate cuts are off the table.

Oil Price Impact on U.S. Inflation
~1 percentage point increase
If oil remains at $100 a barrel, U.S. inflation will tick up nearly a full percentage point.
Odds of Fed Rate Cut in 2026
Down more than 20%
Since the Iran war began, the probability of any rate cut this year has fallen sharply.
U.S. Job Cuts in 2025
1.2 million
The most job cuts since the pandemic, driven by AI washing and genuine workforce reductions.
S&P 500 Decline Since War Began
~3%
Far less than Europe (5%), Japan (8%), or South Korea (13%), but stagflation risk is rising.

6

AI Job Panic Is Real — But So Is the AI Washing

Companies are blaming AI for layoffs that are really about slowing demand and bad forecasting.

THE HYPE
AI Will Destroy Half of All Jobs
Dario Amodei says AI could wipe out half of entry-level white-collar jobs and spike unemployment to 10–20% in 1–5 years. Bill McDermott predicts unemployment for new grads could hit the mid-30s in two years. Elon Musk says «probably none of us will have a job.» These warnings are not hypothetical — Pinterest, Atlassian, and Block have laid off thousands, citing AI efficiency.
THE REALITY
It's Mostly PR for Bad Business
Galloway calls it «AI washing.» What sounds better: «I overhired and demand is slowing,» or «I'm leveraging cutting-edge AI to reduce costs»? Job postings for software engineers are actually up. Companies are using AI as cover for layoffs driven by poor planning, not technology. «Everyone is blanketing their incompetence with AI,» Galloway says. The catastrophizing also inflates valuations: if AI is so powerful it threatens the world, shouldn't you invest at an $800 billion valuation?

7

«Probably None of Us Will Have a Job»

Elon Musk's prophecy reflects the fatalism now permeating Silicon Valley.

Probably none of us will have a job.

Elon Musk


8

The Real AI Threat: Asocial, Asexual Young Men

Loneliness, not sentience, is AI's darkest danger — and history shows what happens next.

Galloway's most urgent warning has nothing to do with rogue algorithms or killer robots. It is about loneliness. «The biggest threat of AI is that we are producing a new species of asocial, asexual males,» he says. Young men aged 20–30 now spend less time outdoors than prison inmates. The number of high schoolers who see friends daily has been cut in half in 20 years. AI is accelerating this: Reddit and Discord replace friendship, Coinbase and Robinhood replace work, and increasingly lifelike porn replaces the messy, humiliating, rewarding process of learning to connect with women.

«Throughout history, the darkest moments have all had a preponderance of lonely young men with a lack of economic and romantic opportunities,» Galloway says. A man with no job and no romantic prospects becomes dangerous — and can be weaponized by a strongman. America's core advantage has been the middle class: a large cohort of economically viable men whom women found attractive. That equilibrium is breaking. The top 10% of men now control 50% of mating opportunities, Galloway argues, while the bottom half are shut out entirely. AI is giving them a simulacrum of life — enough to prevent revolt, but not enough to prevent radicalization.

Galloway's prescription: regulate AI like alcohol. Age-gate it. Remove Section 230 protections when platforms can detect suicidal ideation or psychosis. Hold companies liable when they keep serving content to users in crisis, just as bars are liable for serving drunk drivers. «If I go to a bar and they see I'm ridiculously [ __ ] up and I get on the road and kill someone, the bar is liable,» he says. «Why on earth would AI not be liable when they can sense someone is going through psychosis?» He cites the case of a Canadian teen who was casing a school while chatting with a Character.AI bot, and a U.S. teen who killed himself to «be with Daenerys» in the afterlife after the bot said, «I am waiting for you, my love.» These are not edge cases. They are the new normal — unless we act.


9

Why College Has Never Been More Important

Anyone telling you to skip college has a Stanford degree.

💡

Why College Has Never Been More Important

Galloway dismantles the trendy notion that AI makes college obsolete. «Anyone who tells me not to get a college degree has a graduate degree from Stanford,» he says. College is not about education — it's about certification, relationships, and learning to cooperate. Applications are up, tuition is rising faster than inflation, and the data is clear: college graduates still vastly out-earn non-graduates. The real problem is that two-thirds of Americans won't get degrees, and we've gutted the vocational on-ramps that used to lead to middle-class stability.


10

GLP-1 Drugs Will Beat AI

Scott's contrarian bet: Ozempic matters more than ChatGPT.

Galloway offers a heretical investment thesis: GLP-1 drugs like Ozempic and Wegovy will be more transformative than AI — both economically and socially. «Talk to someone who uses AI every day in their job, and talk to someone who's on a GLP-1 drug, and ask them what's having a bigger impact on your life,» he says. The drugs reduce weight, blood pressure, addiction, and inflammation. Every new discovery about GLP-1 is positive; every new AI revelation is alarming.

He recounts attending a South by Southwest dinner and noticing that Michael Dell and Mark Cuban look like «a version of themselves that the old version could eat.» When he asks which GLP-1 they're using, they claim it's just pickleball. «Right,» Galloway deadpans. «Michael Dell, you lost 70 pounds playing pickleball.» His investment strategy: go long Eli Lilly. He acknowledges most people with an IQ over 90 disagree with him, but he's sticking to it. AI is overvalued and over-hyped; GLP-1 is underappreciated and underpriced.


11

The Culprit Isn't Tech — It's Us

Until we remove Citizens United and elect leaders who regulate, CEOs will keep choosing profit over people.

They'd have sex with their sister for another nickel. Get used to it. The notion that somehow Mark Zuckerberg is going to wake up and realize he's doing damage to the world — General Motors would still be pouring mercury into the river unless there was legislation.

Scott Galloway


12

Títulos mencionados

LLYEli Lilly and Company

13

Pessoas

Scott Galloway
Professor of Marketing, NYU Stern; Host
host
Ed Elson
Co-host and Producer
host
Donald Trump
President of the United States
mentioned
Dario Amodei
CEO, Anthropic
mentioned
Bill McDermott
CEO, ServiceNow
mentioned
Elon Musk
CEO, Tesla and SpaceX
mentioned
Satya Nadella
CEO, Microsoft
mentioned
Sundar Pichai
CEO, Google
mentioned
Michael Dell
CEO, Dell Technologies
mentioned
Mark Cuban
Entrepreneur and Investor
mentioned
David Solomon
CEO, Goldman Sachs
mentioned
Sam Altman
CEO, OpenAI
mentioned

Glossário
AI WashingThe practice of blaming layoffs or business problems on AI adoption to avoid admitting poor forecasting, overhiring, or slowing demand.
Dollar-Denominated DebtDebt owed in U.S. dollars by foreign nations; when their local currency crashes, the real cost of repayment doubles, often triggering defaults.
Section 230A 1997 U.S. law that shields online platforms from liability for user-generated content; critics argue it enables harmful behavior by social media and AI companies.
GLP-1 AgonistsA class of drugs (e.g., Ozempic, Wegovy) that mimic a hormone to regulate appetite, blood sugar, and inflammation; widely used for weight loss and metabolic health.
StagflationAn economic condition combining stagnant growth, rising unemployment, and high inflation — historically very difficult for central banks to combat.

Aviso: Este é um resumo gerado por IA de um vídeo do YouTube para fins educacionais e de referência. Não constitui aconselhamento de investimento, financeiro ou jurídico. Verifique sempre as informações com as fontes originais antes de tomar decisões. O TubeReads não é afiliado ao criador do conteúdo.