Motley Fool Money - Should Investors Prepare for a Recession?
Episode Date: March 11, 2025And what’s that mean for long-term stock investors? (00:21) Asit Sharma and Ricky Mulvey discuss: - The tech stock sell-off. - If the investing thesis for Tesla has fundamentally changed. - No more... free bags on Southwest Airlines (for most fliers). Then, (19:18) Alison Southwick and Robert Brokamp discuss Social Security’s funding challenges and how investors should prepare. Companies/tickers discussed: QQQ, TSLA, LUV Build your Range Rover Sport at www.landroverusa.com Host: Ricky Mulvey Guests: Asit Sharma, Alison Southwick, Robert Brokamp Producer: Mary Long Engineers: Dan Boyd, Rick Engdahl, Heather Horton Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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You're listening to Motley Full Money.
I'm Ricky Mulvey joined for the second time today, but you didn't hear it the first time.
It's Austin's trauma.
Awesome.
Thanks for being here again.
Ricky, thanks for letting me come back after that dry run that wasn't so great.
Yesterday was a tough one for tech investors.
The NASDAQ losing 4%.
It was its worst day since 2022, wiping out $1 trillion of value.
Fears if a recession arising, we could hear it this morning, even from Delta Airlines,
cutting their top line forecasts from 8 to 4%.
fewer people are flying or the pricing power isn't quite what it was.
You also got a trade war heating up, often again, on again.
I don't even know where we are as we record this right now.
And I'm hearing a lot of chatter from investors who are prepping for a recession.
The market is overvalued.
Things are already tanking a little bit.
And they're gearing up.
They want to sell.
Should investors prepare for a recession?
And what's it even mean to do so if you're buying and holding companies for long periods of time?
Ricky, I think investors should think about it.
a recession. A recession is when economic growth takes a U-turn, so theoretically, the economy is
shrinking rather than growing. But markets tend to look forward. So I've seen recessions in my
investing career, my long and not so illustrious investing career, in which the recession sort of
came and went, but investors were ahead of the curve before they came, and they got out of that
mindset well before the actual GDP figures started picking up. So part of your question really signals my
answer. As long-term investors, we should be aware that this could be an eventuality, but I don't
think we should make drastic changes. Maybe make some changes to portfolios around the margins,
raise some cash if you're of that bent. But more or less, keep the course. Stay steady.
I'll bounce this take off you. I saw this in Bloomberg. This was from Michael Bailey,
the director of research at Fulton-Berickfield Broneman. And he said, quote,
sell your winners, embrace the bear case, and duck and cover.
This is strong language, and a trade war, if it goes for a long time, Osset, could be economically
disastrous.
It's hard for us to see the future, Ricky.
I'll note that that quote that you just read sounds more like warfare than investing.
We do get caught up in what's right in front of us, and yeah, the market looks scary right
now geopolitics look scary.
But you know, in my lifetime, on this data set that we've got going back to like the 1870s,
this is U.S. market performance, going back well over 150 years, there have only been two periods
and they caught everyone by surprise in which the market went up for eight straight years
or more.
Both of those happened in my short lifetime.
So when we think about this data set, you look at the consecutive down years.
If you start imagining, well, if all of this kind of, if all of this kind of,
comes to pass, can the market just keep going down? It can. But the preponderance of years in which
the market's gone down more than two years in a row, very small in comparison to the uptrems.
And this is tied to our ability just not to be able to see what's coming right after the Great
Recession, which is one of these periods I'm talking about. It's not the last thing anyone thought
that the market would go up year after year after year for so many years beyond that crisis.
And so, yeah, the eventualities and the event horizon shows scary things, but there are also
unseens that could create value in the economy after a short period of even extreme distress.
Markets can also focus on what businesses are doing, and that tends to push towards appreciation.
So you have to be prepared for anything, but I wouldn't let the present scary totally out of the
water. So one thing that I'm counterintuitively excited about is that fear is returning to the market.
When people start to panic, these can present wonderful opportunities for long-term buy-and-hold investors.
Are you looking for opportunities? Where are you looking, if so?
I am looking at opportunities, and I'm looking at the same companies that folks who know me have
criticized me for liking because they were so expensive. So some of these are,
very great innovators in their respective fields. Some are AI-oriented, some are in manufacturing.
But we've had, remember, a run of two years in the market before 2025, in which the cumulative
return was about 51%. So the market gained 51% in space of two years. And so, sure, we had excitement
pushing up some values as the herd came into the markets, capital flowed in, beyond what may be
reasonable based on the expected future cash flows of these companies. The reverse is true, too.
When there's fear, what you get is an acceleration of capital outflows, and that tends to
dislocate prices from reality. When they're selling pressure, then prices have to match that
urge to get out. And yeah, I'm looking for those dislocations. Some companies will come back to
fair value, but there are others that are just going to get caught up. If we do have continued
distressed in the market, just get caught up in this maelstrom of, I want out. Sort of the duck
and cover quote you read me before. Let's move on to one company that's having a rough stretch.
We'll see if your shoulders hunch up as you're listening to the show, and that's Tesla.
Yesterday, it's worst day since September 2020 losing 15% of its value in a single trading session.
This is the most polarizing company we can possibly talk about on the show. During an interview
with Fox business, CEO of Tesla, among other things Elon Musk said he is running his businesses,
quote, with great difficulty. I want to talk about this company with you because I think we are in a
fundamental thesis-changing event with Tesla as Elon Musk has grown more political. Now, you may be on
one side of the spectrum that says, I'm grateful for the efficiency that Elon Musk is bringing to the
federal government, the spotlight that he is shining on various areas. You may be,
be on the other side saying that this man is a threat to democracy and that he is doing terrible
things responsible for the layoffs of thousands of federal workers. Or you might be in the middle
where you like some things, you don't like others. But even if you're in the middle, I think,
Osset, maybe you don't want to drive a Tesla because that's become an increasingly political
statement, the car that you drive if you're inside of a Tesla. And I think this one's going to be a
tough one to shake. I think this one is unlike a lot of other sort of brand pivots. So, I
All of that setup. I think we're in a thesis-changing event for Tesla. What say you?
We could be, Ricky. And before I get into why, I will state there's still a bullcase there out on Tesla.
There are many people who believe that the investments in AI, the investments in things like humanoid robots are eventually going to bear fruit.
And this company can swell up again. But we have to also look at it, you know, as we have for the past few years as an automobile manufacturer.
That is still the core of the business case.
And that is getting affected, whatever side of that divide you're on, in some ways by Elon Musk's desire to opine on politics.
So there's a direct correlation there between the expression of opinion.
And as you point out, sort of the brand being a lightning rod for owners, we can look at the sales figures in Europe, which are plunging.
And why I'm not saying anything political here is because it is flying.
in the face of a strategy that Tesla has employed for the last four to five years, which is a cost
volume profit proposition. So this is something from management accounting where you keep investing
in fixed costs, but at the same time, you're trying to reduce those fixed costs. And more
importantly, you're trying to bring down the variable cost of what you produce. Now, this kind of
planning can work beautifully, and it worked beautifully for Tesla because they took the cash flow from
their rising volume and they invested it in production plants which lower the cost on the fixed side
and also helped with the variable costs. But one thing planners of this type of analysis always assume
is that the CEO is not going to go talk down the price of the product in the marketplace,
and that affects everything. It affects Tesla's ability to keep investing in production,
which is what they need to bring their costs down to compete with Chinese electric vehicles,
which are proving to be ingenuity made, subsidized by the government in some fashion,
and presenting a very stiff challenge in the marketplace.
So when we look at this company for what it is today,
and I'm not saying that it doesn't have this burgeoning electricity business, power business,
and it doesn't have other opportunities.
But when we look at the core of it today,
I think that the company is doing two things that are in direct opposition to each other,
lowering the price points by will,
purposefully for whatever reason, and therefore really throwing a wrench into this whole CVP type of strategy.
And I guess, Ricky, we should call this potential, like, at least a thesis that's getting brittle.
I don't know if we can say it's a broken thesis, but it seems to me it's getting brittle.
Well, some of this has been going on for a long time.
Before Musk even got involved with the Trump administration, he had wanted to bring down the cost of EVs.
The promise of a $25,000 Tesla has been around for quite some time.
But I continue to think this is a company that needs to sell cars despite the other businesses.
And you look at one example, being Germany, where sales are down 76% in February compared to where it was a year ago.
That's the largest European market.
Just one example.
Sales are also down in China and Australia.
And I'm not a shareholder.
But I wonder what you would say to those long-term shareholders, maybe even some of the market.
some Motley Fool members who are saying, you know, I hear you saying the thesis is getting brittle.
Maybe this brand has been permanently affected by Musk. You know, Tesla doesn't necessarily
need Musk to run its day-to-day operations. He's always had other projects taking on Twitter
just, what was it, a year ago? But now, I think that the brand has fundamentally shifted,
and I want to get out. What would you say to a Motley Fool member who's thinking along this?
lines. I'd say make a rational decision based on your position size in Tesla and what you think
the eventual outcomes will be. If you are a believer in the bull case that despite all this
near-term disruption, Tesla will eventually come to market with ingenious goods that combine
physical modalities with a lot of AI and they're going to sell a lot of those, then it may make
sense for you to hang on. If you're investing in this primarily as a car company,
I would say, I mean, there's some warning signs to look at.
One of those being that Elon Musk has really shifted in how he wants to push the levers of margin.
So it used to be that Elon would sleep on the plant floor to really try to get production going and set an example for engineers.
But he's shifted to more of a policy-based, almost lobbying or working with the levers of government to try to get on the margins,
favorable outcomes for Tesla.
And that may be, there are any number of things we can read about,
whether it's the so-called potential contracts to sell a lot of cyber trucks to the US government
or being able to influence tariff decisions, which could be beneficial to Tesla.
It's a little reminiscent of Boeing, the old Boeing, which moved its headquarters
right where the planes were being manufactured to Washington to lobby.
It has a little bit of that flavor.
So if you're looking at this as a vehicle manufacturer, I would take a look at all these pieces of the thesis,
the competition that's ramping up from the Chinese, the willful luring of the price points,
because you can't move vehicles without promotional activity if you're talking down the brand.
And this is why you're pointing to the numbers out of Germany, where Elon Musk, whether you believe this right or not,
has aligned with the far right. That's really caused a maelstrom there.
So I would just try to be rational about it and see what I believe more is the outcome.
and then make a hold or sell or buy more decision.
And Tesla, I'm seeing this more from, this is more on Reddit.
This is more the internet take.
And Tesla has been on and off the most shorted stock on the market.
In the short term, the shorts on Tesla have been correct.
There is a trail of burned shorts previously for Tesla.
But now, you know, you always want to be careful saying this time is different,
but this time is kind of different with what Musk is doing.
What would you say to someone who's thinking, a speculator, who's thinking, you know,
the brand is poisoned, the stock is dropping, but it's still overvalued.
I want to take a short position on this company because I think the stock is going to continue to plummet.
Do they have a good idea?
Is shorting ever a good idea for retail investors?
Sometimes shorting is good for those who just have an irresistible need to try it out.
For me, borrowing money, which in a way is what you're doing,
you're actually barring stock when you short.
Let's not get into that detail.
But using leverage to invest either on a longer short position,
it's not a great way to make money over the long term.
I would be careful advise anyone trying to short any company to keep that position size small.
Personally, I'm not good at it.
I've had this time as different thinking, and I still have the skin grafts on my rear end
where I got burned to prove it that didn't work out for me.
But if you have to scratch the edge, as David Gardner says, keep those position sizes small
for any shorting exercise.
And this one is maybe this time is different, Ricky, but boy, Tesla's burned the shorts,
as you point out so many times.
All right, we can take a deep breath.
We can bring our shoulders to a more neutral posture.
we can worry less about bringing up Tesla.
Maybe one company I'm not bringing up at the family dinner table
when you go get dinner with your extended family.
Let's talk Southwest.
Because starting on May 28th,
now Southwest customers are going to have to pay to check bags
unless you're in their A list, top tier, business class, that kind of thing.
Even if you're a credit card holder, they'll only give you one free bag, not two.
Free bags was a key reason many customers flew on Southwerex.
This is different from assigned seeding because this is something they gave to you for free.
But now, Asset, you have Southwest C.O. Andrew Waterson telling CEDBC, quote, what's changed is that we've come to realize that we need more revenue to cover our costs, end quote.
Maybe there's a little Elliott management there as well.
What do you think of that explanation? What do you think of that move?
Maybe it was inevitable. Maybe that writing was on the wall, Ricky.
Southwest's unit costs have been sort of going up in excess of how much it can raise its prices.
So cost-exceeding revenue on a unit basis, it's slowed its capacity expansion plans from a few years ago,
so it's expanding its fleet at a slower rate.
It's adjusting to changes in the larger economy.
I mean, it was the premier short-haul, low-cost carrier, but the short-haul business is troubled.
Flights are longer haul now, and they're really going back to the legacy networks,
being able to have these huge hubs and service those flights.
So a carrier like Southwest sort of has to read the writing on the wall,
and they've talked about this in conference calls and in their filings that,
look, the way we monetized our business in the past isn't really suited for today's world.
That's why we're sort of charging now for premium seats.
We're going to have more affinity-type revenue.
This one is interesting, though, as you point out,
because isn't this what Southwest is?
I mean, you're going to make me pay to slat my bags onto your airlines.
I mean, this brought me to the door.
So I think they're going to lose some customers, but the question is,
a company like this has probably done the math and understands they have to make the tough decision to change
and go where the wind is blowing, not to make a bad pun, because we are talking about an airline.
And so they probably are already, you know, spreadsheeted out in industry parlance.
They know exactly how many customers they'll lose.
And if it sinks the brand a little bit in the near term or changes the brand,
I guess they're okay with it.
Yeah, but cynically, one can say that all the other airlines charge for bags.
So it's not like you're going to go from Southwest to an airline where they give you free bags.
Yeah, there's loyalty stuff going on where you can get a free bag.
But, you know, how important is it, though, that Southwest seems to be making a long-held brand promise?
It may not be all that important in the end result, because Southwest is still set up where it has those shorter flights as the lowest cost carrier.
In so many cases, we won't really see that change, even when they start charging for bags.
They'll still feel a little less expensive in many markets.
It may not be the value proposition that it once was.
But I'll tell you, Ricky, I was sitting sweating in the finance team of a company and manufacturing.
to work for many years ago, talking to an insurance agent, we were trying to close out some
insurance for the company. I was like, well, if we move this here, what about this? If we move this
part here, and he told me, you know, look, insurance is going to get you either way.
Think health insurance, whether it's a high deductible plan, low deductible plan, any which way
you choose, at the end of the day, insurance is going to get some money. And I think flight is like
that now in this day and age. The airlines are going to get their money one way.
or another. So this is really just changing how Southwest gets its money from us. The days of
these super low-cost carriers and so much differentiation in the marketplace are sort of long gone
after the pandemic. So it's a brave new world and Southwest has to find its way in that world.
We'll leave it there. Appreciate being here. Austin Sharma, thank you for your time and your
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Up next, Alison Southwick and Robert Browcamp
talk about the future of Social Security
and why savers should hope for the best,
but plan for the worst.
This year marks the 90th anniversary
of the passage of the Social Security Act.
The program has become the foundation of retirement
in America providing 31% of income
for people over the age of 65.
For 39% of men and 44%
of women over 65, Social Security provides the majority of their income.
Now, the program is funded primarily by taxes assessed on working Americans. Employees pay 6.2% of their
earned income into Social Security and employers pay another 6.2%. Self-employed workers pay the entire
12.4%. Yet, despite more than $1 trillion going into the program each year, Social Security is in
trouble. Yeah, unfortunately, payroll taxes aren't enough to cover the payout. So this shortfall
has been anticipated for decades, which is why Congress and then President Reagan passed the Social
Security Reform Act of 1983. The bill did a few things. It gradually increased the full retirement
age from 65 to 67, as well as increased the payroll tax rate. It also made Social Security
benefits taxable, at least partially for the first time. And at that time, it only affected
households that were maybe in the top 10% of income earners. However, because the Social Security
tax brackets haven't been adjusted for inflation, more than half of current recipients pay taxes
on a portion of their benefits.
All the extra taxes that have been collected go into a trust fund, and Social Security
has been able to honor its obligations.
Unfortunately, though, the trust fund is in trouble.
Yeah, so according to the latest report from the Social Security trustees, Publissus S May,
the trust fund will run dry in 2033.
And at that point, the program will only be able to cover about 79% of benefits.
However, even that may be optimistic, because back in January, Congress and then President Biden passed the Social Security Fairness Act, which boosted benefits for about 3 million government government government government government government government service, which boosted benefits, which was named the windfall elimination provision.
The other was the government pension offset.
So these extra benefits will exhaust the trust fund six months sooner, according to the Congressional Budget Office.
And then there's President Trump's campaign promise to eliminate taxes on Social Security benefits.
because those taxes go right back into the system and are used to pay benefits, eliminating those
taxes would move up the exhaustion date of the trust fund by two years, according to the Penn Wharton
budget bottle.
So some recent developments may exhaust the trust fund even sooner, but it was in trouble already,
largely thanks to a declining worker-to-retiree ratio, a trend that has been getting worse for decades.
In 1950, there were 16 workers paying into the system for each person receiving.
benefits. In 1960, just 10 years later, there were five workers per beneficiary. Today, the ratio is
around three to one. This is the result of people living longer, baby boomers getting older,
and younger generations having fewer kids. So those are the challenges, but what can be done to
fix the program? If and when Social Security's underfunding conundrum gets solved, it'll likely
be a combination of things like higher payroll taxes, higher full retirement ages for future retirees,
adjustments to the benefits formula that will result in lower payouts for some or maybe all
beneficiaries. Last September, the Social Security Administration published a report that analyzed more
than 100 reform ideas and how much they would reduce the program's shortfall. We're obviously
not going to cover all of them, but here are several that have been proposed. So let's start with
taxes going into the system. So right now, there's a cap on how much income is subjected to
Social Security taxes. It gets adjusted every year, and in 2025, it's 176, $1,100,000.
$500. If that were eliminated, and all wage income was subject to that 12.4% tax, then 53% of the
shortfall would be eliminated. But that assumes these higher income earners would get a bigger
Social Security benefit in exchange for paying higher taxes. If they didn't get a bigger benefit
and they just paid more taxes, then 73% of the Social Security shortfall would be eliminated.
Now, what if the payroll tax rate, which is currently 12.4% went up? Well, if it were increased by
0.1 percentage point each year from 2027 to 2032 until the rate reaches 13%. That would eliminate
16% of the shortfall. So those are two ideas related to the taxes. What about adjusting the benefit
amounts? Well, here's one idea. Currently, Social Security is based on your 35 highest earning years.
What if instead it was based on your 40 highest earning years, which would likely result in more
lower earning years being factored into the benefit, which would likely result in a lower benefit?
Facing this end between Dow and 233 would eliminate 13% of the shortfall.
Another adjustment to benefits would be reducing how much the annual payouts get increased
each year for inflation.
So if the cost of living adjustment were based on a different measure inflation than what
it's currently based on, specifically if they use the chained version of the consumer price
index for wage and salary workers, that would reduce the annual COLA by about 0.3 percentage
points, and this would eliminate 18% of the shortfall.
Finally, let's look at a couple of age-related adjustments, because after all, one of the biggest
reasons that Social Security is underfunded is because we're living a lot longer than we did in
135 when the program was created, and even longer than in 1983, which was the last time
the full retirement age was increased. So maybe the age at which we can claim should be higher.
So if the full normal retirement age, or the full retirement age, which is currently 67 for most
people, if that were increased two months per year until it reaches 68 in the year 2030, 15%
of the shortfall would be eliminated. And the final thing to consider here, what if you think
the age should be even higher and that the age should go up a little bit over time based on the
assumption that we're going to just continue to live longer and longer? Well, if you increase the
normal retirement age by two months per year until it reaches the age of 69 in the year of 2036,
and then it continues to go up one month every two years, then 38% of the shortfall is eliminated.
So those are just six of the many, many ways that the program could be adjusted.
And you can see how it'll take probably a combination of a few things to fully fund the program,
which will happen. I wish I knew.
What I do know is no one in Washington is currently making this a priority,
which means that if and when the problems are fixed, the solutions are going to need to be more drastic
because the longer we wait, the worse the problem gets.
All right, bro. So let's wrap things up with explaining, how can you factor all this uncertainty into your retirement plan?
Well, Social Security is eventually going to need to be fixed by our elected officials, and I have no ability to predict what those people are going to do.
So I'll just tell you how I, as a worker in his mid-50s, incorporate Social Security into my retirement plan.
I take the Social Security trustees at their word, and when I use a retirement calculator, I assume that my wife and I will only get about 75% of what is currently projected.
And I believe that's probably the prudent assumption for anyone who's in their 50s or younger.
I think that those who are closer to or in retirement will likely be spared from benefit reductions.
That would be the right and politically expedient thing to do, but nothing's guaranteed.
Here's what I do know.
You will still get likely most of your projected benefits, and maximizing those benefits will still be a significant factor in your retirement,
which generally comes down to when you claim benefits, since the longer you wait, the bigger the payout.
So I suggest that people use a tool or if you determine the right claiming strategies for them,
some tools to consider. One is open social security.com, a free tool created by CPA and author
Mike Piper, great guy. Tiro Price also has a free tool. Just do an online search for the Tero
Price Social Security optimizer. And then there's maximize Social Security, which costs $49,
but I think it's worth the money. As you use the tools, adjust the inputs for a reduction in
benefits that you believe is appropriate for your situation. The bottom line for me,
is when it comes to Social Security, I think it makes sense to heed the old saying,
hope for the best, plan for the worst.
As always, people on the program may have interests in the stocks they talk about,
and the Motley Fool may have formal recommendations for or against,
so don't buy ourselves stocks based solely on what you hear.
All personal finance content follows Motleyful editorial standards
and are not approved by advertisers.
The Motleyful only picks products that would personally recommend to friends like you.
I'm Ricky Mulvey. Thanks for listening. We'll be back to you.
