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Brad Gerstner

Founder and CEO of Altimeter, a technology-focused investment firm; investor and BG2 Podcast co-host known for commentary on tech markets, AI infrastructure, and companies such as OpenAI and Nvidia.

Private-Company Secondaries Hit $248 Billion as IPO Alternatives Grow

Brad Gerstner, Gavin Baker and Kelly Rodriques argue on an All-In secondary-markets panel that private-company share trading has moved from a workaround for employees and early investors into a major exit route competing with IPOs and acquisitions. Their case is that companies are staying private long enough to create a structural liquidity problem for employees, venture funds and LPs, while platforms such as Forge are trying to turn that demand into permissioned market infrastructure. The panel also warns that broader access does not make late-stage private shares cheap, especially in famous AI, space and defense names.

All-In PodcastJun 7, 202616 min read

Tech Founders Argue IPOs Can Create More Upside After Listing

At an All-In Liquidity IPO panel, Altimeter’s Brad Gerstner, Cerebras chief executive Andrew Feldman and Planet Labs chief executive Will Marshall made the case that public markets are again becoming a place where venture-backed technology companies can compound, not merely exit. Gerstner argued that investors often give up large gains by forcing distributions after an IPO, while Feldman said more money is historically made after companies go public than before. Marshall and Feldman also described the IPO less as an operating transformation than as a change in capital, credibility and scrutiny, with execution still determining whether the listing creates lasting value.

All-In PodcastJun 6, 202613 min read

AI Compute Remains Supply Constrained as Infrastructure Stocks Pull Ahead

Altimeter founder Brad Gerstner argues that the AI boom remains constrained by compute supply rather than exhausted demand, and says that view explains the firm’s large bets on OpenAI, Anthropic, Nvidia, Snowflake and related infrastructure. In a live TBPN conversation, he ties the investment case to a broader political one: the US must keep building data centers and compute capacity to compete with China, while using initiatives such as Trump Accounts to give more Americans a direct ownership stake in the wealth AI may create.

TBPNMay 29, 202617 min read

AI Value Is Shifting From Models to Operating-Layer Control

AI is shifting value toward those who control the layer beneath the interface: iOS permissions and user context, enterprise token flows, compute capacity, data centres and ownership accounts. John Gruber argued that Apple’s AI test is not lateness but whether it will let third-party agents operate deeply inside iOS, while Brad Gerstner argued that enterprise AI spending can keep growing through optimization because tokens and physical infrastructure remain scarce. Kyle Kuzma’s investing comments fit the same ownership frame, treating athlete access as a way to build long-term stakes beyond basketball.

TBPNMay 29, 202627 min read

SpaceX-Anthropic Deal Highlights Compute as AI’s Revenue Bottleneck

The All-In panel used SpaceX’s compute deal with Anthropic to argue that frontier AI is now being constrained less by demand than by access to power, GPUs and data-center capacity. David Sacks warned that Anthropic’s reported revenue trajectory could make it a historic monopoly if sustained, while Brad Gerstner pushed back that the market is still too early and competitive for pre-emptive regulation. The discussion turned on whether AI safety concerns justify coordination with government or risk becoming an “FDA for AI,” and whether the AI boom will ultimately show up as measurable productivity and profit for customers buying tokens.

All-In PodcastMay 8, 202622 min read