Peak Prosperity - The Fed Cuts, but Wall Street Wanted MOAR!

Episode Date: December 20, 2024

The episode covers Federal Reserve rate cuts, potential U.S. Treasury yield increases, China’s economic signals, market speculation, inflation risks, geopolitical impacts, and investment strategies ...amid global economic shifts.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Nothing in this program should be considered investment advice. It is for educational purposes only. Please hit pause and read this disclaimer in full. We've got this future. Let Elon and Vivek do what they do best. Bring business people in here. Make hard decisions. Rip that band-aid off because if we don't rip the band-aid off now, we're going to lose
Starting point is 00:00:21 limbs in the future if they try to kick this can down the road for their own pride. The following is the audio version of a video released at peakprosperity.com. Visit peakprosperity.com to watch the video and to find other insightful content such as articles, discussion forums, and exclusive subscriber-only content. Hello, everyone. Welcome to this edition of Finance U. I am your host, Chris Martinson, and it looks like December 18th, 2024. Lots to discuss today. We are going to be discussing Fed rate cuts. What is going on with China? You look at their 10 years. Something has happened. We're going to get Paul's reaction to that mine. And then our Treasury is headed to 6%. This isn't some crazy guy on the Internet.
Starting point is 00:01:12 This is the head of fixed income for T. Rowe Price saying that. What happens? What does that world look like? But first, we're going to have to process the Fed rate cut and, more importantly, their forward guidance, which seems to have tanked the markets for the moment. Wall Street's busy throwing a hissy fit.'s how i see it paul you have more delicate language of course i know for all of these things good to see you again i wish i had a little bit more delicate language for that um uh who's show is what i would start out with
Starting point is 00:01:41 it's a three-year-old in the checkout line. That's Wall Street today, right? Oh, my goodness. You know, I had to process that for just a second to make sure I said the right thing. Yeah. Yeah. Well, as everybody can see, I have a new backdrop now.
Starting point is 00:01:56 And this isn't green screen. That's an actual picture. But that's how you know it's FinanceU these days. So, Paul, let me start here with this is what we're going to be discussing today. This just happened just minutes before we came on to start recording this Fed cuts a quarter point. But they're scaling back their 2025 outlook. So before we talk about that, I'd like to look at the dot plot. The context for this for me is that if you don't pay attention to the stupid government inflation, Core CPI, Super Core, the Krugman Core,
Starting point is 00:02:28 I guess that would be one beyond Super Core. I don't know. Anyway, forget that. This is U.S. Inflation Index from Truflation. They're just measuring prices. Would you look at this? Let me get my little dotty pointery thing out here. From September, I would say we're headed the wrong direction pretty steeply.
Starting point is 00:02:46 So that's context. The Fed should not be trying to reliquify cut rates, stimulate, get the animal spirits going again. When inflation is doing that, unless their point of view is we don't really care about the people who get hurt by inflation. Charlie Bilello put it perfectly on November 10th. You know, this is the context for the Fed rate cuts next week, which is this week. Stocks, all-time highs.
Starting point is 00:03:11 Home prices, all-time highs. Bitcoin, all-time highs. National debt, all-time highs. Core CPI inflation, over 3% for 41 straight months. That hurts. People are told inflation is coming down. No, the rate at which your prices are going up has slowed down a little bit but prices have not come down at all which you would know if
Starting point is 00:03:31 you went out to eat or shop with me and evie um stocks 50s s&p 58 record highs of the year feds coming in to cut all of that they do cut and then Wall Street throws its hissy fit. These are old. These are already, it's now twice as bad as when I took this just a few minutes ago. It's already like it's tanking, right? S&P, NASDAQ. We can look at those in a second. But the context for that is just, it's this. The dot plot, the infamous dot plot, each one of these dots represents one of the sitting members of the FOMC, and they vote at every Fed rate cut meeting where they did not vote. They put their dot where they think rates are going to be in the future. So for 2025, they went from, I would say, I'm going to average this out right about here at maybe three and a quarter percent.
Starting point is 00:04:20 That's where they thought on average rates were going to be. You can see it's a range of opinions. One guy or gal thought it was going to be about 4.1 percent. That's where they thought on average rates were going to be. You can see it's a range of opinions. One guy or gal thought it was going to be about 4.1 percent. Other people thought it would be as low as sub three percent. But you average it all out. You get in right about here at about three and a quarter percent. Oh, no. In December, my what a couple of months difference can make. Now it's centered around here, which i'm going to call that about 3.8 percent um that's a pretty big shift and that led to oh no sell stocks paul what do you got you've been this isn't your first rodeo oh this is a call that rodeo well what's amazing for me you know just just looking
Starting point is 00:05:00 at what's transpired over the past six months, we have a panic half percent rate cut markets that are at all time highs. You know, all of that's changed. They're just worse now than what they were before. House price is completely unaffordable. Panic half a percent guides the market that we're going to be substantially lower next year. And then all of a sudden Trump wins. And the one narrative that I'm hearing around the edges is, Oh,
Starting point is 00:05:24 Trump's going to be, you know, policies are going to be highly inflationary. Oh, well, maybe he's the scapegoat for what the Fed's done in the background with juicing the economy and liquidity. You know, liquidity and lending capability is at the same level it was in late 2020, early 2021 right now. So this just doesn't make any sense at all. What I thought was quite interesting was the Fed comes out and says, oh, inflation is going to be closer to two and a half percent instead of 2.1. Right. So, I mean, they're they're they're telling us that we're risking higher inflation. Now, there are some concerning signs underneath the market. But why would you waste a rate cut at this point when animal spirits are high?
Starting point is 00:06:07 I have not seen this much speculation in investors outside of late 1999, early 2000. There's no regard for long-term fundamentals. There's no regard for any of the risks on the horizon. This is just pure party like there's no tomorrow. And it's sucking people in. Like, it's sucking people off the sidelines in a manner that I have not seen in at least a decade. Well, let me just take a quick scan here, see where we're at. Because, again, this is a hissy fit that's being thrown here at the moment.
Starting point is 00:06:43 Let's see. S&P is down's down oh 95 now uh at 59 55 so way below the 6 000 mark the dow peeling off 545 at the time of this recording but this is like one and a half percent one and a quarter two percent and two and a half percent for the russell not liking it gold not liking it um and we can talk about the currencies in just a second but how how are the markets this surprised? Because I just read you, like we all knew this. Like the Fed's obviously under some pressure.
Starting point is 00:07:11 Obviously, it's becoming more of a political thing where you have TikTok now full of young people crying, and they should, about how far their paycheck does not go. How expensive eggs are. How eating well is almost impossible. So you got to eat the toxic stuff that's cheaper, blah, blah, all that, right? So they know inflation is going the wrong way. And they've known this for a long time. And still they went with their emergency half point another quarter and another quarter like I don't get it. So Paul, they must be fighting a battle we don't see. Well, I mean, there are a lot of concerning things that are taking place in Europe.
Starting point is 00:07:49 There are a lot. I mean, China is an issue right now. And China could very well unleash deflation on the rest of the world because of the situation that they find themselves in right now. Are you tired of feeling run down, maybe low energy? You know you've got some pounds you'd like to lose. Maybe you've got brain fog or something like that. Listen, we think we have the answer to all of that, and it begins with your food. If you're like me, you were shocked to hear testimony recently that unraveled and unearthed and exposed the idea
Starting point is 00:08:20 that our food has been made addictive by addiction specialist scientists, the tobacco scientists out there putting things in our food. Maybe it also shocked you to discover that Europe does not allow all kinds of stuff in our food because they know it's toxic. What is the combined effect of all of this? Listen, we know what the data is. It's horrifying. The number of children showing up with type 2 diabetes, the total metabolic disasters unfolding across the land, marked by obesity, sure, but we have cardiovascular issues, concomitant rises in cancers, all of these things, and it all starts with food. Garbage in, garbage out. So what do we do about that? First, it begins with understanding the context.
Starting point is 00:09:05 We've put together a very exciting, comprehensive food webinar that will expose the regulatory side of this and what is being done and why and how this happened to us. We'll be talking with Thomas Massey about that. We've got Dr. Ken Berry talking with us on the practitioner side and the solution side. We've got Tracy Thurman talking to us about the war on farmers and the war on food that has been happening. And Robert Barnes to help us understand that as well. Many, many other guests to both define what the problem is and what we can do about it. And we want to make it as simple as possible. Here's an example. Tortillas. Hey, maybe you're even on keto, and these are carb-wise. So these have low amounts of carbs. See that? Carb-wise. Yeah, these are carb-wise, so keto-friendly.
Starting point is 00:09:54 I want to note, you note something. See how fresh these look? Yeah? You see any mold in there? Any bacteria, any yeast, any sign of anything, any organism in there? These things expired in June, and it is now November. So what are they putting in our food that even black mold won't eat it? I don't know, but I've decided that if it's not good enough for black mold, it's no longer good enough for me. Once you start down that path, you realize that we have got sugar and preservatives and salt and seed oils, all of the chemicals that are unnecessary, and the fact that the food pyramid is absolutely wrong. So if you like effective information that leads to effective action, this webinar is for you. It's going to be the usual thing that my team and I will put on. It'll be organized, digestible, easily
Starting point is 00:10:46 understandable, and most importantly, it's going to be actionable in ways that you will understand what to do. And I've designed it so that you would be easily be able to send this to anybody that you love or care about, say, can we talk about this and have it as a starting point for conversation. But what we really want, we want you to be healthy. Because, well, who doesn't want to be healthy? Health is the number one form of personal capital you can have, of course. But given everything that's going on in the world, being healthy and vigorous and active are going to be dominant strategies and things you're really
Starting point is 00:11:25 going to want to be carrying in. So folks, it's time to get prepared on all levels. It begins here. It starts at home. It begins with our eating. And let's just make sure that we're not eating stuff that even black mold won't touch. With that, thank you very much for listening. And we'll get back to our regular programming now. Before we go on, I'm going to lose my way. I'm already off my script. Paul, check this out. This is China's 10-year rate just started plummeting hard starting in November. Look at this. This is not consistent with China growing 5.5%, like they say. Their 10-year bond is signaling massive trouble coming for China. That's how I interpret that. Absolutely. It's signaling deflation in China. I mean,
Starting point is 00:12:11 and we have to consider that the bond traders, I know we've said this time and time again, bond traders are the smartest individuals in the room on a typical basis. So, you know, they don't puke assets and yields at that rate lightly. So they're anticipating that deflation is coming into China. And the question is, are they going to export that deflation into the rest of the world? There's a high probability that that can happen. You know, give the Fed the benefit of the doubt. You know, we did see, and this is one chart that I would like to show. So we have had negative breadth here recently. So let me show this chart here.
Starting point is 00:12:51 This is quite interesting. So it's on the Zero Hedge Premium, and I like the market here because they put out some decent information, but the S&P 500 negative breadth streak is in the 100th percentile. So what negative breadth is for the listeners... In the 100th percentile so what negative breadth is for the listeners in the hundredth percentile is that good well the only other time that it gets this high is
Starting point is 00:13:13 you know right late you know 2000 2001 so negative breadth this doesn't give us anything about long-term timing whether this is a market peak or. But what it does tell us is that under the surface, the market is unhealthy. So negative breadth means that there are far more stocks, percentage stocks declining than there are rising. You know, there are some concerning things under the market, but with this euphoria out there, you know, there's really no reason for the Fed to have this quarter point cut. Now they're turning hawkish and the market didn't like that. One thing that was interesting to me is I've been watching the S&P 500 over the
Starting point is 00:13:52 past couple of days or week really kind of consolidate here. And I like these candlestick charts. So this is the S&P 500 short term here. Markets consolidating, waiting on the Fed to give their announcement. So they give the market a quarter point cut, but then they get much more hawkish in the dot plot. And then the market just craters right here in the short run. Now, this is a breakdown here. You know, as of right now, we're down 1.5%, 1.56%. We're still above the 50 day moving average. Is this just a short-term correction, or is this something where the market was looking for an excuse to roll over, and is the Santa Claus rally going to disappear at this point? We don't know. But the market doesn't like
Starting point is 00:14:38 what the Fed said, and I think it's similar to a spoiled child that's wanting a little bit more candy before they get their dinner, and the feds, you know, not giving them exactly what they want, and we're getting a little temper tantrum here in the short term. Now, Paul, like everything, the Santa Claus rally has been advanced. You know, you used to have to wait till after Thanksgiving to get the Christmas music playing over the loud loudspeakers now it happens kind of about labor day so i think we already had our you know you could say we had our our santa claus rally it just happened earlier than it used to you know i think so as well i think it could have don't know but um but i want to talk about this this animal spirits this liquidity like what the fed has done I accuse them of being serial bubble
Starting point is 00:15:26 blowers, and I have a lot of data to back that up. But not least of which is, Paul, when you see this, this caught me by surprise. Again, I am not the world's greatest investor, because I missed this one completely. The fart coins hit a billion dollars in capitalization. I presume this is very. Yeah, it's probably very popular in 13 to 15 year old boys. I'm guessing a lot of lunch money went into this. But, you know, I just. But we got back to this. Remember, we were just there.
Starting point is 00:15:59 And then all these like meme coins blew up. Right. And here they are again. And that's what I mean, a serial bubble blower. Normally it takes time to lick those wounds and forget about the pain. But now with somebody, air quotes, somebody, rhymes with marome wowel, and all his buddies throwing money in constantly, you get this kind of stuff. This to me is just a full-on indicator light on
Starting point is 00:16:27 our dashboard that says we're anything but too restrictive in our monetary policy right now anything but too restrictive i mean especially when you've just got this much speculation and most people think they're investing but they're gambling is what they're doing and yeah and when the fed when the Fed keeps this much liquidity, they keep blowing these bubbles in the short run. There's always some new shiny object for investors to roll the dice on. And we're in an environment where this is like playing Russian roulette. And we don't know when it's going to end but but there there are certainly signs under the surface to tell us that that it's getting closer to the end than it is just the initial continuation and i am actually concerned you know because just all this euphoria that's around bitcoin right now and the cryptocurrencies
Starting point is 00:17:20 are concerning to me because i'm seeing people take ridiculous risk and I'm seeing people that have had their lives changed from higher prices and they're reluctant to diversify and lock in some of those gains because greed has the temptation to take over. So this to me is a little crazy. I can tell you a lot of eyes were opened when Bitcoin hit 100,000. And I can tell you a hell of a were opened when Bitcoin hit 100,000. And I can tell you a hell of a lot more eyes are going to be opened when Bitcoin hits 1 million. And I'm confident it's going to hit 1 million. I think we're all confident in this room that it's going to hit a million.
Starting point is 00:17:57 Okay. So this isn't just anybody, but this is Trump's son, Eric Trump. And he goes on to say he recommended that maybe people mortgage their houses, just empty their 401ks. Like, he's that confident. Just that's it. Just go all in. Like, stuff that would get you and I rightly in a lot of trouble. You know, not financial advice. I didn't put that up there as financial advice for anybody.
Starting point is 00:18:25 Let me be crystal clear about that. But I'm seeing, that's a level of, in my business, I consider that an irresponsible statement to make. This, I guarantee this is going to a million, and you should mortgage your house and dump your 401k and borrow money and put it in. I don't understand. I have trouble with that. I don't understand that at all. There's a lack of respect for the position that he's in to be able to make that statement.
Starting point is 00:18:58 And if this doesn't pan out the way that he's speculating that it is, and the assumption is that he has some type of inside information. Chris, these markets do so much damage to so many people when there's this much euphoria and this much liquidity and this much speculation, because there are desperate people. There are people who want to own a house so bad they can't stand it. And they're going to take their down payment. They're going to put it in there. They're going to make these speculations. And if this isn't the single best investment in the future, then they can be wiped out if it's no different than any other bubble that we've seen in the past. And my concern is, is Bitcoin is supposed to be a medium of exchange, but everybody's holding on to it. It needs to operate as money,
Starting point is 00:19:43 and we're exchanging back and forth. And I struggle with that because of a couple of things. One, it's not been tested during a major downturn. Okay. So what if we have an event like 2008 or a recession like 2000, 2002? Furthermore, it's been tracking pretty much the NASDAQ movements for the past six months. So it seems to be a little bit more of a technological innovation and speculation when you overlay those charts together. I actually have that chart in here somewhere. It is quite interesting. It's busy. But, you know, I don't, you know, we just don't know because it's not been tested and it's a new technology. And here's the next concerning thing. You know, Google announces this Willow quantum computing algorithm.
Starting point is 00:20:31 Who knows how far it'll go? And you know more about this than I do because you were the one that brought that to my attention. But if that can break the encryption, now all of a sudden Bitcoin's obsolete. So the question is, is this a new technology that emerges into something else? You know, is this a new technology that emerges into something else? You know, is it kind of like the cassette tape that was revolutionary when I could, you know, when I was a child and I could put that big old cassette tape on my hip and earphones and
Starting point is 00:20:54 cut the grass and then it moved to CDs and now we're to digital files. So it's just, it's going to be aggressive in nature because it's an emerging technology that can be replaced by technology yeah let me pull this up because because i think somebody put a pretty good thread up around this now listen um a little bit of the willow thing is is pr it's got a little marketing on it right so google wants to talk about um how exciting this is for them but when i pull this up let me see if i can quickly find this because boy wow so many things to talk about these days um my bookmarks are packed here it is i thought this was a really uh this was a good pull this up full size it and we'll come in um so gc cook the graham cook here had a really nice um thread on this and he is a ceo founder making money smarter with blockchain ai author of web3 x google um founded and exited qubit so i
Starting point is 00:21:55 think he knows something about this because the qubit is a measure of computational power within the so-called um quantum computing space so at any rate, this was pretty interesting, what they announced. With their random circuit sampling benchmark, the results are pretty surprising. By our best estimates, a calculation that takes Willow under five minutes would take the fastest supercomputer 10 to the 25 years. That's a one with 25 zeros following it, or a time scale way longer than the age of the universe. This result highlights the exponentially growing gap
Starting point is 00:22:36 between classical and quantum computation for certain applications. Would there random? All right, so, okay, it's solved a fairly famous problem pretty quickly. Well, that's a little geeky. And this was the surprising announcement out of that thing, which was, this is Google saying, yeah, you know, we cracked a pretty fast thing.
Starting point is 00:23:00 And by the way, it lends credence to the notion that quantum computation occurs in many parallel universes all right i don't know how to begin parsing that right um you know and for anybody that's wondering uh it didn't it didn't show up here so but here's the point if you're going to say we want to we want to establish bitcoin as our reserve asset i actually think it's incumbent on the person saying this is what we're going to do they have to at least talk about this new breakthrough and say because a reserve asset like if we said we have golden reserve i'm confident paul that you could lock that reserve up behind a door and in a
Starting point is 00:23:38 thousand years you could open it up it would still be there and we might value it differently but the asset's still there if the encryption for bitcoin gets cracked it no longer functions as an asset anymore it's it's broken right so its value depends on its integrity and and this quantum computing may or may not i don't know when you'd have to talk to actual experts but at some point in the future it represents a threat to that encryption. So I think before anybody says, oh, we should make this a reserve asset, they got to address this head on and say, well, how are you going to protect it? Like, how's it going to be a reserve asset in this world?
Starting point is 00:24:17 And I'm not smart enough to, I don't know enough about that to address that. No, I don't. I don't either. I think the one thing that everybody agrees on is that our current system is dying our current system is insufficient to handle the needs of the future so that our hard our hard our hard earnings that we have sacrificed to save can maintain their purchasing power right that there's some type something that we can go into that's safe. So I understand, I mean, we all kind of agree that there needs to be a better system, but all I could think of when you were talking about that, that calculation or showing that video on the
Starting point is 00:24:54 calculation six years ago, uh, we hired a specialist to come in and test our systems. So, and, and it was really expensive to bring this guy in for one full day and um you know so renee organized it and when he pulls up for the first hour and a half he sits in the parking lot and i'm you know i mean you you want to make sure you get value right i mean i'm like i'm being this guy to sit in the parking lot so every time i get off the phone and come through i'm complaining to my staff and he walks in and i'm like, first thing I do is like, Hey, introduce myself. So did I pay you to sit in the parking lot for an hour and a half? And he said, as a matter of fact, you did.
Starting point is 00:25:31 I was like, okay, so what were you doing? He said, it took me an hour and a half to crack your wifi code. And I'm like, wait a minute, you were working. So he sits in the parking lot, you know, to, to try to crack our wifi system, which is number one, I pay attention to every car that parks in the parking lot now, which is easy for us. He couldn't get through the firewall, but what he did was use some program that uploads to the cloud for some computer, you know, calculations algorithm. So we had this, we changed our passwords. You know, that's what you do. You test your systems to make sure that you got everything in shape.
Starting point is 00:26:03 So all I can think of when you're showing those calculations that fast on what quantum what you do you test your systems to make sure that you got everything in shape so i'm all i can think of when you're showing those calculations that fast on what quantum computing can do can you imagine with that type of cracking that calculation power they pull up into your parking lot and they crack all your codes and and get in there so i mean that's yeah so that's the problem if they can can crack that encryption with bitcoin now all of a sudden it's an obsolete asset and whoever has that computing power can steal your your coins versus have you know your crypto versus you know if versus the alternative which is the one that has been tested over time is your physical metals you know they've got to get into that vault system they've got to get through the security it can be done but it's
Starting point is 00:26:45 a lot harder to do than just accessing everybody's data over the cloud with massive uh computing so it's concerning to me that's just another concerning thing in the crypto space i believe you know i mean i'm not making a recommendation right now it makes sense to have exposure to the whole future network digital software the hardware the financial banking but we don't know if bitcoin is going to be that answer and and with what eric trump stated is terrifying to me because because there are going to be people that are going to take huge risks there's going to be people that are going to refuse to harvest some of the gains that they have been rewarded with over the past six months for the speculation in that sector.
Starting point is 00:27:30 And unless he has inside information and can predict the future that some new technology is not going to emerge, this could do a lot of damage to a lot of people. And these, you know, this is a speculative, highly aggressive asset. And you have to think very deeply and critically about the speculation you're making in that asset class. Except when it comes to fart coin, just I go all in. Obviously, I'm making a joke. That's just that was not serious advice. Obviously, come on. I can't.
Starting point is 00:28:04 Well, there's one called fart bar coin that's worth buying just for the fun on it not i mean exactly that's why he's doing so well good it's a good name goes far um so so but you're making a point here that's so i'm of an age where i was there when there was no internet and now there is one right i was there when you know i i have boxes of the stuff from when i was in graduate school which doesn't feel like that long ago but i guess it is because we have these things like zip disks i actually have actual three by five floppy disks in there you can't like there's you can't get those to talk to current computers you know unless you go to the smithsonian and rummage out an old floppy drive you know or something i guess i
Starting point is 00:28:43 don't know point is that the technology changes very, very rapidly. And I could foresee easily if we crack into this quantum space, computing space, that all of a sudden we're just caught in one of these never-ending cat and mouse games. Well, now we've made a quantum-resistant, you know, algorithm. Ah, somebody cracked that. That's okay. We made a better one. Somebody cracked that.
Starting point is 00:29:04 This will just keep going until people finally realize that the cost of attempting to push things into that space may be more than it's worth, you know, overall. Because instead, just have stuff out of that space. Like, if you can't shield or protect from what's the development cycle in the digital world, then don't put your assets there, you know? Put them somewhere else. Give me a big deal. Cause we talked about it, the context of Bitcoin, but if quantum computing can just pull up into your parking lot and crack all your passwords, like banking, yes. Brokerage accounts, anything, anything digital is now at risk.
Starting point is 00:29:42 I think we ought to have a larger national dialogue around that, but. We should, we should. And, you know, and I'm not for a lot of government regulation when it comes to, you know, because it is restricted. And I think that's one of the reasons why we have so much hope with small business and just the optimism that's out there. I've talked to so many people that feel like they have some hope again, because we have a chance for the Trump administration to come in, break these ridiculous government regulations and get the boot of the government off the necks of the people. And really, they've surrounded themselves with individuals who have so justified their corruption by saying, trickle down economics, we'll give it to us and we'll trickle it down to everybody else, that we've been in the situation where they have protected the monopolies and the big businesses
Starting point is 00:30:30 and the big donors that come to them. So, you know, if we can get small business innovation where it expands again, then we've got this hope for the future. And if we can get our monetary system fixed, we've got some hope for the future in there as well. Well, I'm hoping, Paul, that we can get to a point where we can flip the script, because I would like to see the right people rewarded and the wrong people punished, you know. And it's been the right people have been punished and the wrong people have been rewarded. And I don't like that at all. Right. You know, so we saw this with the latest pardon set. It was like criminals pardoning criminals is one of the I know every so often, you know, pardon is about commuting the sentence of somebody who's maybe done something unsavory. But these are some bad people. I mean, putting kids in prison and they ended up committing suicide and you kept doing that anyway knowing that you were causing driving kids to suicide for money that's unpardonable but not to the biden administration i guess no no no well and the sheer amount of money you made me think about just the amount of money they're spending going out the door right now. Oh, they're just throwing everything out the door right now.
Starting point is 00:31:47 I just did a signal hour earlier this week on the continuing resolution, all 1,546 pages of that continuing resolution to spend more money. It is a horrifying thing when you dive in even slightly what they're doing in there it's amazing it's absolutely amazing it's washington what do you know what you can do so did you have something on that because that leads me to somewhere uh right away which which really caught my attention um which was this so t-. Rowe Price here in Bloomberg on December 17th. This is important. Everybody who's interested in money finance, you better consider this as a thing.
Starting point is 00:32:32 There's the link down there. So the Fed is busy trying to engineer lower interest rates right now, and then you got this person coming in. Here's from that article, a couple of pieces from that. So this person, Arif Hussain, who is the chief investment officer of fixed income, I think he manages about $140 billion, has a very good track record doing that, says that Treasury 10-year yields may climb to 6% for the first time in more than two decades as U.S. fiscal woes worsen and Donald Trump's policies are going to help
Starting point is 00:33:06 keep inflation elevated, according to this T. Rowe Price guy. So, yeah, 5% in the first quarter 2025, going the wrong way and citing fundamental things, Paul. Persistent U.S. budget deficits, which, by the way, have nothing to do with Trump yet. It could, but that predates him here. And as well as potential tariffs, immigration policies, it would sustain price pressure. So he's inflation. So he's talking about two things, inflation and these deficits. Without talking about the deficits, I already showed it. Inflation is already not doing good things here.
Starting point is 00:33:41 Headed the wrong way and as inflation goes up you might expect to see more um of this stuff he's talking about here and the other thing he talked about was that uh yeah all this stuff we just talked about the inflation everything but check this out falling global demand for treasuries also bodes ill for their outlook according to hussein japan largest holder of u.s sovereign debt sold a record in 61.9 billion in the third quarter of this year 2024 in china another major owner offloaded 51.3 billion in the same third quarter period second largest sum in its own history so that's 111 12 almost 13 billion 113 billion of demand not just demand that's negative demand it's gone that went the wrong way um so what would happen if if i'm i am
Starting point is 00:34:38 not personally prepared for 10 years to go to six percent um in the sense that i haven't wrapped my around that yet. What do you think? Could that happen? Is the Fed losing the long end? Well, absolutely. So, you know, this goes back to a couple of years ago. Well, it's our behavior in the past, just spending too much money,
Starting point is 00:35:03 not taking advantage of low rates and locking MM for a long time. Janet Yellen's been issuing a lot on the short end of the curve you've got inflationary pressures that are continuing to run the fed had their chance i mean they should have just not cut rates in my opinion but who am i shouldn't have cut rates um back in september because the market was already acting throth frothy liquidity was easy house prices are high. Let us have some pain before you do this. So they're signaling both on their side that they're going to suppress rates. You've got the government administration who is spending money like they're, you know,
Starting point is 00:35:38 will never have any more to spend in the future, which they're out of power, so they won't be able to. And then we've isolated the BRICS through all of the weaponization of the U.S. dollar, the sanctions on Russia and everything that's there. So you're driving the large majority of the producers, the producing countries that have been recycling that debt back into the U.S. away from us. So we've got fewer and fewer buyers that are out there. And I'll tell you, one of the things that our tools have said, and this is one of the things that I'm stressing to people when I talk to them, don't own any of the long bonds right now unless it's a speculative trade in the short run.
Starting point is 00:36:15 And to be clear, I do have a speculative trade in the short run, the 20-year, but that's a high-risk, high-reward in the short run. I think it's going to be a failed position trade in the short term, but it's saying danger across the board. I mean, really, with the government policy out there and their willingness to let inflation run higher, Powell's cutting rates, and then he's coming out and telling us, oh, we're moving it to 2.5 instead of 2.1,
Starting point is 00:36:41 and the trajectory of inflation higher. Why in the world would you risk owning 10, 15, 20, 30 year debt right now? Because what's their playbook, Chris? We all know what they've done. You know, things get bad. We're just going to print print money and we're going to hope that that solves the problem. And we're going to let inflation run high to deal with the debt. So the debt is so high, you've got default risk. And on one hand, if they allow deflation, on the other hand, you've got inflation risk with the Fed that's just willing to, what was it Bernanke said, you know, we'll print money about long-term debt. I'm extremely concerned about the retirees that are out there that own bonds that are maturing 20 years from now, thinking that that's going to be an inflation hedge for them from a long-term standpoint,
Starting point is 00:37:35 because I don't think it is based on where their actions are. Yeah. So let me, let me pull this up real quick because important point here. So these are bonds. So remember, for everybody listening, when prices go down, yields are going up and vice versa. If prices are going up, yields would be going down. So the 30-year bond has been selling off, came from about 120 to 115. A 10-year note, been selling off. So yields have been going up. And this is from October,
Starting point is 00:38:05 November, December, okay? But let's just look at how the bond market interpreted today's little bit more hawkish view here. Obviously, not liking it all that much. So 10-year interest rates are going up. Interest rates are going up across the curve as a consequence of this. The interest, the bond market was not expecting that hawkishness today. I think it's fair to say the bond market was a little surprised. That's sort of a, that's a surprise right there. That's a knee-jerk reaction. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:38:34 Well, that's a computer knee-jerk. That's a computer knee-jerk reaction. And I like to show, you know, we call that a chip twitch. A chip twitch. A chip twitch. I like that. A chip twitch. We've got to update our language there. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:38:50 So, you know, and one thing that I'll show just a different version of that, because you're showing the prices, but I'll show actually yields. So this is in the day, so it's not going to be updated until tomorrow. It doesn't reflect what's taking place today. Yeah. Look at that though. Going up. If we go back to September, this is the half point rate cut and what did the market do hey it was anticipating
Starting point is 00:39:09 anticipating anticipating now i've been meaning to take the time to go back and study and see but i've heard people say that this is unprecedented throughout history but yields go higher okay we get the next cut and now we're gonna i'll have to mark today's cut that's in here but yields are ignoring this they're starting to work up the only thing that's working down is the one thing that the fed can control which is this purple dotted line right here which is really reflective of the three-month yield which is treasury now i want to jump down to the 10-year here chris because this is important to answer that question so this is the tnx this is a candlestick chart of the 10-year treasury now i'm going to move this for the sake of of allowing
Starting point is 00:39:52 everybody to see this is this is um the yield as of right now so they're spiking today okay and what i'm going to pull down here is a resistance chart so support and resistance is important so what i see here is one two three four and now our fifth time the question is are we going to fail here if we break out of this this tells me that yields are wanting to go a lot higher and that's a different environment than what we had back in the spring because in the spring you know the market started anticipating that the fed was going to cut. It did. And then it sold that news. And in addition to that, we've got a potential inverse head and shoulders right here, which means that this would be a very bullish breakout for yields going higher. And the question is, is how is that going to affect the economy? So this is a very important level where we are today. I'm curious to see what's going to happen over the next week or two. But if this pattern executes to the top side and we break out of that range, then we're probably going to see yields head substantially higher over the next 12 months. And what's that going to do to the underlying economy? Well, two things. It's probably not going to help this out,
Starting point is 00:41:07 which we've talked about before, but this is commercial mortgage-backed security. So this is in the office space in particular. There's lots of different types of commercial real estate. This is just looking at the office component. But the CMBS for office is just as bad as at the height or depth, depending on how you think about it, of the great financial crisis. Yeah, that's that's not going to help. Rising interest rates will not help those delinquencies. No, they're not at all. And Chris, Chris, think about this, because on that chart right there. So so that's pressure. That's pressure on the banks. OK, so if yields go higher,
Starting point is 00:41:48 what took Silicon Valley Bank down? What did they do? Well, that was my second point was the mark to market losses because of that, right? Yeah. Take us through that dynamic. Yeah. So what took Silicon Valley Bank down was they were, you know, yields were so low, banks are limited on the investments that they can purchase. So they went way out on that yield curve to buy these longer-dated treasuries. They had a lot of 20-year, a lot of 30-year. So when rates started going up, like a seesaw on the playground, when rates go up, the value of that bond goes down because you have to sell that bond at a lower price to get your yield to maturity at what the market is. So that mark-to-market accounting is what really took Silicon Valley Bank down because they speculated that rates were going to stay lower for longer. I'm assuming that they speculated.
Starting point is 00:42:34 In hindsight, that's what it looks like. They're trying to maximize profitability for their shareholders. They're thinking that the Fed's got their back, and then all of a sudden, boom, yields go a lot higher. In other words, like Buffettett says the tide went out and they were swimming with that they were swimming naked and it took them under so if you have yields going higher which is further going to put pressure on delinquencies and we're seeing delinquencies and credit cards we're seeing delinquencies and auto loans we're seeing delinquencies and commercials specifically, that's more pressure
Starting point is 00:43:05 on the balance sheets of the banks. And that may be one of the reasons why individuals are saying that we're headed towards a potential credit crisis here over the next six to 12 months, potential. And if yields break out, I think that's going to increase the likelihood of that. Yeah. Well, just to round out that story, too, that's all exactly right. Tracy Shuchart Chee Girl on Twitter, who I follow. Yeah, good. So we just talked about this black line rising ominously, poking its head over 10%. That's the office component. Hospitality's been pretty fine, just sort of like, you know, hanging around five. Retail, no worries.
Starting point is 00:43:48 Mixed-use starting to climb. And multifamily, surprisingly, normally very, very low. I know it's a lot lower than these other ones, but it's higher than it normally is. Industrial having no problems, and probably I wouldn't expect it to for quite a while, because I think we'll see a lot of onshoring of uh industry under trump that would be my guess but anyway so now you can see the different components of the cmbs space there and how they're how they're breaking out um but the office space that's i don't think that's coming back anytime soon that's a trillion dollar boondoggle right there i don't know what's coming back anytime soon. That's a trillion-dollar boondoggle right there.
Starting point is 00:44:25 I don't know what the Fed's going to do about that one. I don't know what they're going to do. We've been papering over it for a while, but can't do that forever. You know, the most surprising part of that chart, Chris, was multifamily housing that's breaking out. Because right now, housing is so unaffordable, there's so many people that are required to rent. My question is, if those delinquencies are coming from the really smart players that have offloaded some of these properties at top prices,
Starting point is 00:44:54 and you've had inexperienced speculators come in and buy these things, and all of a sudden, inflation has gone up to where they didn't have enough profitability in there to do the repairs and the upkeep that they needed to. I'm curious about that one actually. It depends on the mortgage type, but if you had some kind of a five-year fixed but then floating, and you pick that up in 2018 at 2.5%, 3%, but now it's going to reset at 7.5%, 8%, a lot of these deals don't make sense anymore. They're cash flow negative. And so now you have to decide,
Starting point is 00:45:28 are you going to sit there and throw cash at it waiting for the market to turn around from a capital basis? But that's not where people make money in multifamily. It's got a cash flow. So there's going to be some upside-down cash flows, even though on paper it looks like it went up in price. And rents are still strong. But it doesn't matter.
Starting point is 00:45:46 When you're paying four extra points on your mortgage and you had a cap rate that was three, it's just hard to get by on that. That's right. Depending on the specifics. So we have those resetting yields that are coming in. That does make sense. But the question is,
Starting point is 00:46:03 yields are going higher with the Fed cutting right now. So what good is that doing with yields going higher while they're cutting in the short run if they can't, what are they going to do, step in at some point with yield curve control? That would be an absolute nightmare for long bondholders, and it's going to further eliminate our measures of inflation to anticipate where they are. So this could be very devastating for the bond market. Well, I actually think, too, on top of that, I think there's a wild card here, and it's Elon. All things come back to Elon. I don't know how he became the most powerful man in the universe, but probably because he bought Twitter.
Starting point is 00:46:41 Editorially, Paul, I love people like oh he wasted 44 billion on twitter like a no he didn't it's still worth something so he didn't lose all of it b it's the most powerful news organization in the world right now i can't imagine he's lost money at it at this stage we'll find out so anyway he keeps talking about curbing the deficit america's in deep trouble he says if we don't do this no different than a person who gets in too much debt. This is music to my ears, Paul. This is what I've been saying for years. It's just common sense. So you now have a very powerful man with a much larger pulpit, obviously, saying common sense stuff. And the one thing that our government fiscal monetary situation doesn't do is comport with common
Starting point is 00:47:25 sense. And we all know that. So this is part of the narrative structure. Now, I think you have more people going. This looks like a problem because it is obviously it's a big problem. Yeah. What do we got here? GDP growth of 184 percent spending growth, 267 percent.
Starting point is 00:47:43 That's your deficit right there. And it's getting worse. COVID was bad, but it didn't come all the way back, and it's still bad. So at any rate, we have a spending problem. And I don't know how you cut it in time without causing a giant recession, which I don't think Trump is going to go for politically. That's the question. I mean, I keep going back.
Starting point is 00:48:07 So Obama comes in in 2008, the market craters. 2008 was just a disaster in the markets. Of course, they printed money. I wish they had taken the time to just let the system clear itself back then. Indeed. But they juiced the system. They stop it. Things are looking better by the time 2012 comes around.
Starting point is 00:48:27 What I really wish that Trump would do is just go in there, let the pride go away. That's the one thing that concerns me. You know, if it's pride or maybe, you know, something we don't know, but it seems like pride to me. And just let these markets deflate over the next 12 months. Let housing deflate. Let that 12 months. Let housing deflate. Let that go down. Stop the bragging. Don't worry about who they blame it on.
Starting point is 00:48:49 Get rid of this reckless government spending. Fire all of the government employees that aren't having a specific function that's working for the American people. But also get rid of the regulations like Malay did down in Argentina. And I think if you get rid of all those regulations and you free business back up so the American spirit and ingenuity and innovation can come back full force, then we're going to find the floor without the government having to destroy our future financial situation. Because most people forget that all debt is, is simply pulling future consumption into today. Now, it makes sense if you're going to do it for business, because you're pulling future potential business into the day, that business is going to generate the revenue to pay that debt off. If you buy a rental property at the right price, you're borrowing money, and there's tenants who are going to pay it off. The problem is, is even rental properties now, people are having to pay, you know,
Starting point is 00:49:48 it's going to take 40 years to pay off the note if they're borrowing that. If they're paying cash, it's a little bit different, but still the math doesn't add up as great from a long-term standpoint. But if he'll take the opportunity to go ahead and just let the system clear in the first year and then get the government off the back of the people stop protecting the monopolies and let innovation come back even if the market isn't back to the level that it is right now four years from now that hope and the american dream will recover with the average american person and it won't just be the magnificent seven that is pulling everything along that's where i think that, that you can,
Starting point is 00:50:26 he could build a base to where now we've got this future, let Elon and Vivek do what they do best, bring business people in here, make hard decisions, rip that bandaid off. Because if we don't rip the bandaid off now, we're going to lose limbs in the future. If they try to kick this can down the road for, for their own pride. Well, you either stop on your own terms or some other terms right you know it's either how did john michael greer put it back in the days like the choice is between voluntary simplicity or involuntary
Starting point is 00:50:59 simplicity you know well you one you have a little control over the over the circumstance but um so so again i don't talk about specific issues shares because i'm making any specific recommendations for or against i don't do that just to be crystal clear about that but i do like to talk about the ones who i think have a leadership position paul navidia, we've talked about it a bunch. AI, AI, AI, all of that. What do you make of this chart here as a chartist? So this, according to bar chart, looks like a textbook head and shoulders pattern. This is the head. Oops, let me get my little laser pointer back. This is the head. That'd be a shoulder. That'd be a shoulder. This would be what's called the neckline. And obviously they drew this chart the neckline was sitting there right
Starting point is 00:51:49 at about 132 it just closed out at 129 so just poked below that uh here when market just closed seven minutes ago at the time i'm saying these words um what what do you see so one we need at least three percent breakdown on the bottom side of that i have a have a full execution but i mean that's just that's a classic uh topping pattern and when you take the psychological psychological environment behind on nvidia and ai right now you have max hype but yet you've got this clear behavioral pattern where you've got sellers that are entering and getting more aggressive in selling. So I do see a topping pattern there. I saw the warning that occurred earlier in the year with that one spike, we had a correction, and then you had the
Starting point is 00:52:39 final blow-off phase. And in that final blow- phase after the split you know it's amazing to me just how much demand from retail investors that a split announcement brings to the table it is interesting it is you know and this is what i explained to investors i'm like look if you get a 10 to 1 split yes future potential is higher but in in today in today's environment all you're doing is taking a hundred dollar bill and swapping out for 10 tens okay or if it's a two for one split you're taking a hundred dollar bill and swapping it out for 250s but just just the hope and the dream that that split brings and there was amazing just the just the push of demand that i saw or inquiries come in for NVIDIA upon that split.
Starting point is 00:53:27 So that looks like a topping pattern to me. And that's a warning that that AI bubble is potentially about to burst. All right. And I think you can see all the way down here, it's 409, so the market's closed at four. NVIDIA closed at 128.91, so right way below that 132 neckline. And then it's
Starting point is 00:53:46 continuing here in the after hour. So it closed at four. In the next nine minutes, it peeled off another 1.6%. So I don't know what's happening yet, but this is not my first rodeo, Paul. This is what it looked like when I was watching all those former high flyers tank back in the day, once in the housing bubble and prior to that, the socalled internet craze um i was there i have i have i have war wounds i was a proud owner of something called worldcom at one point there was worldcom lucent aol yeah enron enron's back by the way i don't know what that means but is anyone seriously seriously back did somebody buy that name and decide to start trading the stock it hasn't come across my radar if it is
Starting point is 00:54:30 I there was an ad that came out and it said we're back but I'm I didn't chase it down to I'm pretty sure I got punked on that one so I think that's I don't know I don't know it wasn't worth my time but um but that's what it looked like what what I just showed there, this, you know, where you see, you know, things fall and they continue falling in the after hours. They don't get rescued. Something's happening, you know. And I'll have to turn to my friend who does volume analysis to find out if that was it in his estimation. Because what happens is you get these huge bursts of volume right at the end. And if you could de-unpack that volume, I bet you would find institutional players were busy getting stale product off their shelves.
Starting point is 00:55:10 You know, this is... And where do they want it? In retail hands as much as possible because that's the name of the game for Wall Street, usually. Well, it is. I mean, unfortunately, Chris, and this is one of the things I tell clients, I always remind them this, I've taught my kids this, is there are people that
Starting point is 00:55:29 are close to you that you can trust, okay? There are people that they want what's best for you, but the average individual that you come across, all they want to do is reach into your pocket for their own benefit. So when you take that on Wall Street, Wall Street pulls those types that are chasing a greed. agreed unfortunately you know i spent a lot of time in prayer just lord protect me from the sludge of the industry that i'm in right there's so many temptations that pull at you so um you know that's the classic play you know and that's why legendary investors like everybody admits that that Warren Buffett's a legend. They quote his quotes that are so apropos for the environments that we're in. And he says, be greedy when people are
Starting point is 00:56:13 scared and be scared when people are greedy. So this is a period of time where there is so much euphoria. There is so much optimism. And I think we're overestimating how quickly a lot of these changes are going to take place. And this is a time for investors to look at their big picture and say, okay, if I have been fortunate enough that I haven't woken up to the concerning issues that are taking place under the economy, but I'm, but I've been red pilled and I'm waking up now harvest some of those profits, right? The question is, is how much is enough? And this is what I do when I go with the planning through people. It's like, okay, how much do you need to be able to retire? Peel that much off the top, get out of debt, park that over here and run it
Starting point is 00:56:56 into a diversified strategy. Now you can afford to let the rest of it run. But those people haven't seen situations like I did. And all I can think of right now, Chris, there was this lady in 1999, 2000. I ran into her. She was a secretary at Lucent Technologies. Her 401k was $1.6 million back then. Okay. That was when 1.6 million was a lot of money. She had never made more than $50,000 a year. So she was an executive secretary and she was following exactly kind of what, what Lucent was doing, all Lucent stock. And I ran into her and I was like, look, you could retire right now and actually double your income, um, uh, from where you are right now after tax income and be set for
Starting point is 00:57:42 the rest of your life. And she's like, no, I, you know, I really want to hold it till we get to three million. Well, then the market turns, right? So the stock craters. And she's like, it's a buying opportunity. I'm a long-term holder. And then, you know, it balanced and had a chance for her to get out. And then it cratered again. Well, by the time it was over, she only had like $ fifty thousand dollars left and ended up having to work a lot longer so she had a life
Starting point is 00:58:08 changing opportunity in that interim period of time that all she had to do was diversify but just that euphoria and and that euphoria at its base case is greed and that's what we have to do as investors to be successful from a long-term standpoint is when there's this much euphoria out there, we have to counter our natural indication for greed and pull, peel some off the table and, and make sure we're in this foundation. You don't have to sell everything, but if you've had a life-changing increase in those asset classes, and some people have that have speculated on these asset classes it's prudent to pill some off because you got to look into the future and say okay what happens if i pill off enough to where i'm set no matter what happens and i can retire comfortably and have the freedom to pursue
Starting point is 00:58:56 the desires that i want to pursue then you know but you've still got some over here and it doubles or triples. Yeah, you could have had more. But for each individual, it either is going to work out or it's either not going to work out. That's kind of doesn't matter what the statistics are. It boils down to are we impacted by those statistics? So what I worry about is the individuals that had the chance right now to peel some off, set themselves up for life, and now they can really let the less, I'm not saying that you stay overweight and I can't give that recommendation, but,
Starting point is 00:59:33 but now they're in a position where if it blows up, they're okay. And if it takes off, they're a lot better off than what they otherwise were. But now they've got a foundation of which, if they fall, they fall back to this foundation to where it's still life-changing. If everything goes away, This is the environment where people are tempted not to do that. They allow greed to take over. I'm a big believer that when everybody is scared to death and nobody wants to buy a house, nobody wants to buy stocks again, which is exactly the environment we were in 1974, that's the time that you want to be aggressive. That's the time you want to err towards you know putting all your chips on the table right now is not the time to where you want to err
Starting point is 01:00:10 towards putting all the chips on the table in my opinion i agree i you know obviously you know what paul it's not different this time it's just it's just never different this time so this is we've just come through one of the most unusual periods this is i think you know bubbles always have blow-off tops but what we just experienced you know you and i've talked about this my view is this is we're in a grand super cycle of bubbles right and this one was massive right in 2019 it included 18 trillion dollars of negative yielding sovereign debt, whatever that means, right? Negative yielding debt.
Starting point is 01:00:47 It's an oxymoron, right? It's like that live dead person over there, right? It's just, it's a weird thing to say, right? You know, so that was a component of the bubble that enabled this huge blow off in all kinds of governments, just not just the US government, just borrowing like crazy and doing it stupidly. Like if my government had decided to throw a trillion dollars of 100-year paper out the window at 1.5%, I'd be like, yeah, you should have done that. Buyer beware.
Starting point is 01:01:15 Obviously, there'd be a lot of sad people on the other side of that trade. But if you could have, that would have made sense. But they didn't. They took the low rates and levered up on the short end. Thanks, Janet. Not as smart as she looks. and she doesn't look that smart. And then we have stocks, and 75% of the world's total aggregate value of stocks belongs just to the U.S. stock market. Anyway, so signs, signs. We've talked about all those signs. So here's another sign I want to
Starting point is 01:01:41 talk about, because I like omens and signs that may be meaningful. So we've talked about Brent Johnson's dollar milkshake theory, the idea that, hey, come hell or high water, guess what? The U.S. dollar is going to do OK because there's so many of them floating around out there. I have a different theory. I call why the dollar is going to go up. Even if it looks like it's no longer the best horse in the glue factory, right? Because there's so many of them and you have to floating around, you have to unwind the bets. One of the things I've been looking for,
Starting point is 01:02:20 Paul is that last sign of late stage dollar milkshake converting into Roach Motel behavior is the dollar is going to spike higher. OK. This is the euro today. OK. In the context of this slightly more hawkish Fed thing, it just peeled off another one point one seven percent. But look at that. We're not that far away from breaking parity. One euro to the dollar.
Starting point is 01:02:47 It was 120 a while ago. You know, cost you $1.20 to get a euro. Now it costs you $1.03. So I'm just saying, this is now trade. You know, obviously Europe is sick, but it's not just that. We just saw the Canadian dollar take another big, you know, hike today. And it went from $1.3 back there in late September. Now it's at $144.
Starting point is 01:03:10 So Canada's dollar actually, for all of 2022, was hanging around $135. I mean, 2024. I mean, it was just hanging around, just sort of up and down. But now, let's call it since October, it decided uh it's going to really sell off hard here this is the kind of stuff paul that i you know maybe we could talk about in terms of tariffs and you know trump bashing canada is like the 51st state trudeau's government is now busy collapsing which i'm just like yay you know that's that's good news i didn't like the guy that's my political statement for the day but i actually think we might be able to interpret this in terms of this is what happens when the big bubbles unwind. Yes. Potentially. Well, and we're starting
Starting point is 01:03:52 to see movement in the currency markets, which is something that hasn't really taken place since 2013. I mean, I have several currency trading strategies that I implemented individually, not for clients, that just died in 2013 around that area. And now we're starting to see movement in currency markets, which tells me we're starting to get back to a more normal regime or they're losing control of the clamps that they have put in place. And I want to say, I'm glad you pointed out that milkshake theory with Brent Johnson because when he first came out with that, it was kind of shocking.
Starting point is 01:04:28 And I was like, no, I don't think he's right, but he's a very smart guy, so I'm going to start really digging. And I mean, I've listened to everything I could. I read everything. I spent hours and hours trying to argue against, you know, not argue with him, but argue against his thesis between me and his thesis. And it actually helped us be better investors to, to look at that because that was something that I hadn't taken into consideration. It didn't make sense to me initially, but he did such a good job of explaining it. I think he helped a lot of people and he took a lot of heat over that
Starting point is 01:04:59 initially until everybody did kind of what I did. And then they're like, yeah, you've got a really good theory there. And it's kind of played out that way so far. Well, well, it has. Now, you know, we just had some news, too, that it was on Zero Hedge that China said, well, we might have taken five tons off of London, but they took 55 tons of gold in October. And so, you know, the BRICS sort of came and went out of the news because of that October 22 to 24 meeting that was in Russia. You and I talked about it. I don't think that's off the table. I think it's still cooking along in the background. So it's kind of, this is a really hard environment for investors to sort of stay focused. Because look at all the things that
Starting point is 01:05:41 could distract you, Paul. We haven't even talked about drones and syria falling and you know whatever might happen like there's huge things on unfolding here will we even make it to the inauguration without something weird happening you know it's it's very high uncertainty period of time and for investing that makes it even more uncertain plus we've had like the market's not sending signals for a while. Just like they're bulletproof. They don't care. Nothing matters. Anything goes, right?
Starting point is 01:06:09 They go up. That's the rule. Well, maybe we just saw a hiccup in that story today. But I think you and I both know that if the hiccup comes at the end of bubbles, what do they say? It's an escalator up and an elevator down. That's correct. Meaning, you know, you sort of stairway up and then, but when it goes down, it tends to be pretty quick. So you kind of have a strategy. You got to know what's coming
Starting point is 01:06:30 beforehand. You have to know what you're going to do, right? What does it say behind you, right? Invest your plan, not your emotions. That's right. That's right. And now that you brought that up, I pulled this up earlier. I want to share a picture. There's a guy by the name of Carl Richards. He wrote a book called The Behavior Gap. And I purchased this years ago, so I have the rights to be able to show it, but I also want to give him credit. Behaviorgap.com if you want to look at simple advice. The difference between an investment return, those who follow Buffett, or any investment strategy, right? The difference between that investment return and the investor return. So the average investor doesn't make as much as what the average mutual, you know, even the mutual funds they invest into or the strategies
Starting point is 01:07:14 that they invest with. Warren Buffett's investors typically don't make as much as what Warren Buffett does because he stays the journey. And that allowing those emotions to take over it and that behavior gap is the difference between an investment's return or an investment strategy return and the investor return. So the one thing that I want to encourage people is you've got to have a strategy, understand the strengths and weaknesses,
Starting point is 01:07:40 study it, and then once you join that journey, you have to follow it through a full market cycle to be able to be successful. And hope is not an investment strategy. We hope that an investment turns out well, but we stack all of the odds in our favor and, and euphoria, optimism, you know, optimism can help you be a good investor. It can help you be a good speculator, but, but, you know, you have to follow a strategy to help uh deal with these ever-changing market environments and you had mentioned how stressful this environment is it's probably one of the most stressful environments that i've had in 26 years of of this industry really you know
Starting point is 01:08:18 working right now because you know negative breadth is high it's in the hundred percentile and only lines with the year 2000 we've got all kinds of things that are lining up with market tops in the past so i've been so laser focused on watching what each position is doing you know the past two weeks we've seen the magnificent seven take off in leadership again that's what's controlling the whole market russell 2000 has not broken out to new highs. S&P has been unable to break out to new highs, but the NASDAQ has, and you've got all this speculation. And Bitcoin, we don't have this broad, uniform market rally, okay?
Starting point is 01:08:54 That's really concerning to me because the optimism can be powerful, but at the same time, the optimism can lead to complacency that can lead to speculation without knowing that. And you have a road pull where that elevator goes down and takes away, you know, the little gains that people have had over the past 24, 36 months. And if it's not different this time, you know, valuations are so high. And if we get back to efficiency and pulling out all that extra fiscal stimulus that's been juicing everything, and we go back to a real sustainable spending from the federal government, 50% below here is not outside the realm of possibility.
Starting point is 01:09:36 I don't know when it'll come, but it is a high possibility and even a probability that we have a 50% to 60% decline. So, you know know this is a concerning environment uh to me right now it's stressful because you you have to play the game by the rules that are forced upon you but you got to be ready to bolt for the exits you don't want to bolt too soon uh because you don't want to you know you just got to trust what your your tools are telling you and follow accordingly are they flashing any like amber lights yet? Yellow?
Starting point is 01:10:07 Anything? I do have some amber. You know, I have basically yellow on all of my charts right now for the S&P 500 because we're in a warning period. So be careful, be cautious. Error towards buying something that's at support. Don't chase anything at its top. So yeah, I have a lot of warning signs that are up right now it's not flipped to red it's not flipped to start walking
Starting point is 01:10:31 to you know start running towards the door but it's telling us to start itching towards inching towards the door and be ready to react quickly you know if this continues to escalate. Today's just another, you know, data point to let us know, hey, is this a short-term correction? Are we going to resume the trend? Or are we going to start that battle back and forth at the highs to establish a top and that resistance to where we break off on the other side? I don't know, but we're being ultra diligent. Maybe you can help me understand this one because I hadn't encountered this chart before. I think I know what it means, but I'll ask you instead and find out what it actually means. So Eddie Elfenbein on Twitter saying that the S&P value ETF has just been closing new lower lows 13 days in a row. Do you know what the value ETF is? Well, I don't exactly know the value
Starting point is 01:11:27 ETF because we run a value stock strategy. So I don't really necessarily track that sector, but it's anything that would invest, that would qualify as a value stock, lower price-to-range ratio, high quality management, established business, got a mode around it. Basically, then investments that Warren Buffett would qualify for is the type of investment, that style of investing. And that's another thing that's concerning to me because you've had such momentum and euphoria chasing the speculative investments. Value's getting hit hard. When's the last time we saw that warren buffett was down 20 in 1999 when the s&p 500 was up 20 you know and everybody said he didn't understand the new economy so this is just another sign of a of a potential market peak because they're selling the high quality stuff
Starting point is 01:12:20 that they're going to wish that they continue to own probably 24 months from now to chase the speculative things because nobody's saying it out loud, but it's the new normal. Well, this certainly isn't part of the narrative that I was reading on Yahoo Finance News and anything like that, right? You know, 13 days in a row. And I call that sneaking out the back door. Those aren't giant. You see the trading ranges overlap. There's no big gaps. That's what sneaking out the back door. Those aren't giant. You see the trading ranges overlap. There's no big gaps. That's what sneaking out the back door looks like, right?
Starting point is 01:12:50 I like that. That is true. Well, that's kind of what our strategy is telling us to start walking towards the exit, right? You don't have to run. You don't have to panic yet. But a walk can turn to a jog to a full sprint so that you're out that door. Because what happens in these speculative euphoria is when everybody gets all in. And there's another good chart that I can show right now that's another data point that gives us an indication that we're closer to a top than not. So this is from the marketeer.
Starting point is 01:13:20 Good data. So stocks over cash. Add it to the crowd that's getting very bullish stock so if we pull this up and take a look at it the net percent overweight equities versus the net percent overweight cash okay so overweight cash october of 2008 that's a time that you want to get really aggressive september 2022 that's a time where it made sense to be a little bit more aggressive. Now, February 11th and 2010-11 wasn't a major market peak,
Starting point is 01:13:54 but this does show you that investors are highly overweight stocks at the second highest level that they've been going all the way back to 2001. So that's just another sign that we're in the midst of this kind of euphoria. At the same time that you've got, you know, stocks in the 100th percentile with negative breadth, that those are data points that are telling us, be careful right now. Just be careful. So this is October. I don't have more recent data than that. But, you know, I really like advisor perspectives, Doug Short.
Starting point is 01:14:28 This is a sort of this is an other side of what you were just talking about there. So this is margin debt. So, yeah, if we're a little light on cash, heavyweight stocks, maybe we've got margin debt, too. Right. Let's take this out for a second. So I think we're looking here at the S& P 500 and sort of this teal light blue line. Purple is margin debt. Obviously we were a lot higher back here in 2021 in a total aggregate.
Starting point is 01:14:53 That was well over a trillion dollars of margin debt, but I think it's easy to see here that these things kind of go up and down together. So margin debt is still pretty high, hanging out $800 billion of margin debt. That means people have borrowed to speculate or invest, depending on which term you like to use, in the market. And again, these would be margin borrowing. This is all the stuff, Paul, that you and I talked about that got exposed in this idea of the great taking that these would be the types of accounts where if that 800 billion suddenly got in trouble for some reason the associated accounts potentially the associated accounts of those intermediaries clearing houses etc could be exposed because there's 800 billion dollars sitting there
Starting point is 01:15:38 of margin debt which i don't know that sounds like a big number to me you know that's a big number a hundred billions a big number yeah but generally speaking the line goes up uh and and but they are coincident sort of like behaviors between these things here and so there you mentioned december of of 2022 that was the moment there where people were pretty heavy cash and maybe the market was going to go that way for a bit. Now we're here. Yeah. Right here again. So what is interesting to me is that's typically institutional investors that are going to leverage margin. I mean, you really have to be a professional in the margin that much. I know individual speculators do, but you've got all of this euphoria in retail but those margin numbers aren't showing the
Starting point is 01:16:25 euphoria and institutions at this point i could be wrong on that maybe but but there's a little bit of a disconnect and you've got insiders that are selling at the largest pace that they have in quite some time you've got institutions that are that are careful i mean you've got major institutions that are coming out and then and talking about the excess euphoria and weren't warning that the future may not be as bright as what people are expecting as far as the markets go. So, but we have generated the perfect environment to offload shares onto the, uh, average retail individual that's hopeful right now that just doesn't understand the speculation and the risks that they're carrying in their portfolios. Yeah. And this is a margin debt. There's whole portions of the markets we can't see anymore and we don't understand or know.
Starting point is 01:17:15 And I don't think anybody does. If they do, they don't share it widely, which is how much, how much are derivatives in or out of the money? Right. That doesn't show up on a margin debt, you know, chart. No, it doesn't. It doesn't, you know, and that brings me back. One thing that I kind of want to share and, and you, you know, I think the work that you did on the great taking webinar is still valuable and, and still useful information to me. But for you listeners that are out there, if you're not using margin in your brokerage
Starting point is 01:17:45 account, make sure you're in a type one account. And that just means that legally, that broker cannot rehypothecate those securities. So what our industry does from time to time is put people in type two accounts. And it's one thing if you're going to borrow against your stocks for a business purpose or short term car purchase to avoid having to pay capital gains. Typically, you have to do that in a type 2 account. But just make sure you're not in a type 2 account because if you're not using it for a specific purpose, you can always turn it into a type 2 account in the future and use margin.
Starting point is 01:18:22 But there's no reason to keep it in a type 2 unless you're utilizing that in the future and use margin, but there's no reason to keep it in a top two, unless you're utilizing that in the short term, keep it in a top one because the top two accounts are at the greatest risk from the great taking. Yeah. And, and if you don't know what any of that means, you should, if you have, if you have brokerage accounts, you need, you need to know what Paul just said there. So the great taking series, we'll get to that. And by the way, you just, I have to, I, one more thing. I always have one more thing. This is really important. I got to find this real quick. Uh, I know. Okay. It must've been a couple of days ago. Ah, here we go. So part of that great taking, um, series was with, uh, Suzanne trim bath,
Starting point is 01:19:03 uh, who knows more about the plumbing event than anybody I've met, particularly around the idea of what's called failure to settles, right? So when you and I trade a stock, you sell a share, I buy a share. It goes through this whole labyrinthian complicated thing, and it's book entries on a variety of intermediaries,
Starting point is 01:19:23 but fundamentally a settle is you gave up your notional ownership, took cash i took ownership of that gave the cash right so that has to go through a step right if it turned out i bought the share from you and three days passes and you're like i don't have it that would be a failure to settle because we couldn't settle the account right okay so with that, Suzanne Trimbaugh said, I frequently compare fails to deliver or stock settlement fails to a game of musical chairs. I call it musical shares. I like that. All right. In musical shares, as long as new money keeps flowing in, everything kind of looks fine. Once the money stops, and this is where the allowing
Starting point is 01:20:03 settlement fails, FTD is like enabling a Ponzi scheme somebody ends up without the shares now get this when the global markets collapsed in 2008 lots of people found out they did not have a seat governments around the world bailed out banks and brokers leaving taxpayers burden with public debt and individual investors are eight times more likely to be holding phantom shares meaning you bought something that did not exist you're on the receiving end of the of an ftd a fail to deliver in their brokerage account than institutions like i said paul wall street likes to make sure it's well taken care of all that so it's against that backdrop this really made my um eyes ears go up, eyebrows go up, ears open.
Starting point is 01:20:48 Did you see this the other day, just two days ago? A Dubai-based company, they were naked short selling something, we don't know what, but they were selling shares they didn't have, resulted in $126 million losses, right? And they had to close it all down and you know all that stuff and it's in receivership and all that um but it was a dubai based company but they were operating out of the caymans and there's a couple dudes here so um anyway so they are poof now 126 million were people let's say it was you and i on the other side of that we thought we bought whatever these gentlemen they were selling shares they didn't have could have been say GameStop or
Starting point is 01:21:29 Exxon doesn't matter. They were selling something. We would have bought it. We would have seen it in our account. It may have gone up or down in the intervening time. This happens. And then they have to quietly come in and go, um, those shares never actually existed. Now the question becomes what happened to the money that we paid for those? Because these things might have been sold months ago. Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm. Do you get that money back?
Starting point is 01:21:54 What's the restitution process? Who's at fault here? You know, they're operating offshore. Is the SEC really involved? This is international financing now, but how are international companies selling shares short on the U.S.? It's a very complicated affair, really involved this is international financing now but how are international companies selling shares short on the u.s it's very complicated affair but this is the kind of warning when you
Starting point is 01:22:10 see something like this is usually paul hidden they usually sweep this stuff under three rugs and then put a cinder block on it you're right so when i started hearing about stuff like this this also is one of those little creaking popping sounds you sometimes hear at market tops or returning points. Right. Not saying it is, but I'm just this is interesting. Yeah, the only thing that we can do is gather evidence because, you know, and I hear people say, well, technical analysis doesn't work. OK, no, it it doesn't work perfectly. Nothing works perfectly, but what it does is give you repeatable measurable places that you can analyze data and attract supply and demand.
Starting point is 01:22:54 But we're in one of those environments right now where, especially in these euphorias, you don't know how much longer that euphoria is going to last. I mean, you know, you started to see some of the stocks that were struggling, and then Google comes out and announces Willow, and then poof, you know, Magnificent 7 takes off again. The belief that we're going to have this continued semiconductor run all the while, NVIDIA's got this, you know, head and shoulders pattern developing. So it's impossible to know how much longer this will last. But we need to be discerning and pay attention to the details under the surface right now more than ever so that we can protect ourselves. Because if it isn't different this time, and all of history is any gauge, and I haven't been able to hang this picture that's got the history of all the bubbles going back to the tulip bubble. This is a repeating pattern that we go through because we allow our emotions, our fears, our greeds to drive us at the market extremes. And that's what your sharks on Wall Street,
Starting point is 01:23:57 your professional investors, your professional traders, they don't know you. You're just a number out there somewhere. And if they can get the media on their side to help fuel this psychological bubble, then they're reaching into your pocket without you knowing it and pulling money out for their own benefit. So they create an environment where they can offload their shares on others. Now, you have to be a long-term investor, but you have to know how much risk you need to carry for yourself to be successful. We don't, we shouldn't drive down the road any faster than we have to, to get to our destination on time. So, so that's why it's important to know where you are on your retirement plan journey, have some analysis of that. And then at least you're educated at the risks that you're taking.
Starting point is 01:24:41 Most people are walking down a dark alley thinking that they're investing and they're speculating and reality is going to hit them in the mouth like a baseball bat out of the blue. And they're not going to see it coming because this cycle has been extended for so long that they've been trained that the Fed's going to come in and bail out. But we got the Fed trying to bail the markets out right now at all-time highs for whatever reason, but yields are starting to go up. So this is completely different than what I have seen in the past during my career. And it's telling us it's a dangerous time.
Starting point is 01:25:20 Indeed it is, which is why if people are going to have their money managed, it has to be by somebody who takes that risk managed approach, especially at a time like this. I would submit to you, Paul, that we are at the tail end of a very long story that honestly began with Alan Greenspan's bailout in 1987. And the Greenspan put kicks the can. We had 1998 long term capital management. Then we had the 2000 crisis, but then we had Ed Van Bernanke's 1% blowout rates that gave us hairdressers in Vegas with 19 homes. And, and, uh, they had to bail that out and they've bailed that out. And so it's just been a never ending series of can kicking bailing moments without ever anybody asking the fed one question, which is, what's your exit strategy here?
Starting point is 01:26:08 How do we get off this treadmill, right? You know, I feel like we're just running faster and faster on our treadmill, and the bailout plan is we're going to step off and face plant, you know? Well, there's nowhere else to go to right now, Chris, and this is one of the things that we hear the everything bubble, but people don't think deeply about what that is. So to give a little bit of context to that, in the 1990s, we had the technology bubble. Okay, the NASDAQ was the bubble. It pulled all kinds of speculation in.
Starting point is 01:26:39 I remember television, CNBC was talking about day traders renting out offices, high-rise offices in Atlanta. And when the technology bubble burst, it was over. But Greenspan fueled, and then you had this kind of political backdrop that came after Clinton. Everybody needs to own a home. Housing was not in a bubble when the technology bubble burst. And as that's down 80%, low interest rates fueled the housing bubble. Well, when we had the housing bubble in 2007, we were not in a stock bubble. I mean, yes, the stock market was high and the market got cratered, but it wasn't ridiculously
Starting point is 01:27:19 overvalued historically. But when the financial system, the liquidity dried up, then you had the stock market drop too. Now we're in the midst of the everything bubble. So unlike the technology bubble burst where you had housing that was able to take that baton and keep things going, after 2008, you know, you had, you know, the system nearly collapsed in and of itself, which I wish they'd have just let it collapse and have a good foundation to go forward from. Now we've got the everything bubble.
Starting point is 01:27:50 Okay, so what else is going to help U.S. investors? And that's why I'm now concerned that we may be similar to what Japan experienced by the time this is over because you've had U.S. investors chasing the U.S. markets. You've had international investors chasing the U.S. markets. You've had international investors chasing the U.S. markets. So if this bubble bursts, right, where's the thing that's going to save it from a global standpoint? It may be U.S. investors have to have a new play card because they don't have any more bubbles to inflate. We're just going to have the pain of higher inflation, credit defaults,
Starting point is 01:28:26 and a credit crisis on our side. And U.S. investors are going to have to adapt and not be 85 to 100% invested in the U.S. and recognize that there are other investments around the world from emerging markets to developed markets, not necessarily Europe right now, that have learned to live within their means and their fine-tuned machines that the money is going to flow to. Because that's what happened in 2000 and 2003. Everybody was selling what Buffett wanted to own in 1999 to chase those technology stocks. But when that bubble burst, they realized we need large companies that are fairly priced, that pay good dividends, that have a good business that may be boring, but it's a proven business that can generate
Starting point is 01:29:12 good capital over time. That's what we need to be looking for as investors. And then you have those opportunities like this, where you can peel some of those profits off and these euphoric runs to build a better foundation for the future. Just hard times are going to come. We just don't know when. Well, you know, the thing I despise that the Fed has done is they've done this habituation program where they just got everybody habituated to the idea that numbers go up and to the right. Yeah. And that's not healthy, for all sorts of reasons. But least, not least of which is the idea, Paul, that I actually's reward everybody who's already been playing the game, but we're not going to let new people in this game, right?
Starting point is 01:30:09 And that's just immoral, right? Young people should have affordable homes and should be able to buy into reasonably priced equities and participate in the same game. This whole thing the Fed came up with, which is like, oh, no, it should only ever go up to higher and higher levels. Again, I want somebody to ask and answer the right questions, right? Come on, Fed. Tell me, okay, what's the exit strategy and how is that fair?
Starting point is 01:30:33 That's right. Because they're engineering it, so they ought to answer for it. I'd like my kids to be able to start out at much more reasonable levels. I'm not a person who fears falling prices. You probably people have already detected. It's like, I actually want to buy, I want to buy Exxon for half the price it currently is. I think that'd be great. I would like to get into some of these technology shares at fractions of their current price. Oh, I would love to too. The businesses are going to be there long-term. I mean, you take amazon cratered from the year 2000 took it 12 years to get back 11 or 12 years i'm going off of memory so so give me some margin for
Starting point is 01:31:11 error there there's 11 or 12 years before it got back to that 2000 price but that euphoria just overestimated how quickly the business was going to grow and you look at where amazon is today i mean that's a household name from a convenience standpoint so these technologies are still going to be there but i think this euphoria and just investor behavior in the short run turns into speculation without knowing it and you know they're going to wish that they had some some dry powder because here's the problem if if you're in a buying whole strategy and you're fully invested at all times and you never pull anything off the table profits off the table,
Starting point is 01:31:48 then when you have that inevitable downturn that has happened throughout history, um, then what do you have to invest with? Especially if you lose your job in that downturn, um, or have some major emergencies come up. So please, listeners that are out there, if you don't have 12 to 24 months of money in emergency savings, pill some off the top, put it to the side. Don't worry about how much it makes. It's there for when you need it, okay? Use this euphoria and this backdrop of the market environment to put yourself in a better situation. Okay?
Starting point is 01:32:27 Because if you never harvest some of those profits, then you're at risk of, you know, it's just play money until you actually harvest some of those profits. Indeed. And as I, at the close of this, Paul, I'll just scan very quickly, you know, some red, obviously, but nothing. It's weird that the one thing that stands out green is UnitedHealth, of all things. That's what I was going to ask. I couldn't tell what that was. That's massive carnage in the market right there.
Starting point is 01:32:55 Yeah, health care plans turns out to be the only winner today. I'll have to analyze that. I don't want to speculate for the moment, but it's pretty broad-based. It's around every little sector and even consumer defensive in this upper right corner, which was hidden there as a little bit. Not that bad. But, I mean, overall, yeah. Can I speculate on health care? I want to speculate on health care a little.
Starting point is 01:33:22 Health care has been crushed since Trump was elected. Yeah. So, so that's the one asset class that was down relatively substantially outside of Eli Lilly. Yeah. Healthcare in general. Yeah. Healthcare in general,
Starting point is 01:33:36 weirdly, um, GameStop, uh, which we mentioned, um, no, that's CME group.
Starting point is 01:33:44 Um, I was hoping it was games. I thought it looked like a G to me. But then I was like, 237, no way. Somebody died if that happened. So CME. Financial data stocks and exchanges, yeah. That's it.
Starting point is 01:33:56 So who knows? We'll see. So with that, hey, Paul, thanks for your time today. Another great conversation. And I guess we're going to take next week off. Cause that would be Christmas week. And so, Hey,
Starting point is 01:34:11 we have great holidays for you, Holly, your kids, um, have just a wonderful time. And, um, at peak prosperity,
Starting point is 01:34:18 we'll be running, uh, obviously everybody's holiday favorite, no Christmas or holiday season is the same without it that would be dave columns year in review um which is you know everybody's pick me up uh feel good read of the year i'm so looking forward to that coming out it is it is fun i i admit it is a guilty i like it guilty secret pleasure i like it's fun it's fun so um with that and i know it is the holiday season,
Starting point is 01:34:45 but if anybody here watching this is interested in having their portfolio reviewed, their strategies reviewed, having a conversation with somebody who sees the world the way Paul and his team do, please go to peakfinancialinvesting.com, fill out a simple form, and somebody will be in contact with you within 48 business hours, unless that's a big, major old holiday. So we'd have to tack that on to the 48-hour window. I think the office is closed Christmas Eve and Christmas Day. So we'll have Monday and Thursday if somebody sends in. So be patient week of Christmas.
Starting point is 01:35:18 There we go. Probably also the same thing on New Year's Day. So with that, Paul, thank you so much for your time today. Really, best holiday season to you. Thank you. Many blessings to you and Evie and the family, and may God bless your time together. Thank you.

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