Prof G Markets - What the 2024 Rate Cutting Cycle Could Mean For Investors — ft. Lyn Alden
Episode Date: September 12, 2024Scott and Ed open the show by discussing a judge’s decision to allow bets on Congressional elections, Apple’s newest iPhone, and the fight to change the dual-class share structure at News Corp. Th...en Lyn Alden, independent analyst and author of “Broken Money,” joins the show to discuss the upcoming rate-cutting cycle. She explains why she’s still long-term bullish on Bitcoin and why now could be a good time to invest in emerging markets. Finally, she gives advice for new investors on how to build your portfolio. Order "The Algebra of Wealth," out now Subscribe to No Mercy / No Malice Follow the podcast across socials @profgpod: Instagram Threads X Reddit Follow Scott on Instagram Follow Ed on Instagram and X Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Today's number 93. James Earl Jones died this week at 93 years old. True story. When Luke
Skywalker found out that Princess Leia was his sister, he became best friends with Hand Solo.
Ed, what is the good word? What is going on? Well, wait, we got to talk about what we're
talking about today. We're talking about, oh, I don't know what we're talking about.
Fuck, where am I?
I have so many podcasts.
I don't know where I am.
This is the problem.
Reheat my soup.
Take me for a walk.
Turn on Murder, She Wrote.
I have no idea.
So many podcasts.
Have you heard about the new podcast yet?
I have heard about it.
Raging Moderates launched today with co-host Jessica Tarloff, who is the, in my opinion, the most
impressive person of the five. They should call it for the nine because she's better than the
other four. So they should call it the nine because she gets five. And my favorite joke about
Jessica is that they rant on with their crazy shit, the four of them, and then she shows up
with facts and data. And whenever she speaks right afterwards, they all look as if they've been just caught masturbating. They have absolutely no
idea how to respond or what to say. Anyways, raging moderates. I really like the comments
on your Instagram. Most of the comments are, Scott Galloway is a moderate? Yeah, I don't get it,
though. Do you not see me as a moderate? Where would you put me on the political spectrum? Let's
bring this back to me. I do see you as a moderate, but I think a lot of people see you as a raging liberal.
Claire, where am I on the political spectrum?
I don't know where to place you on the dot plot, but I think just-
I'm an enigma.
The raging part of it is what distracts people.
I think you have such strong opinions that they can't picture you in the middle.
Yeah, that's right.
There you go.
Okay.
All right, Ed. this has been fascinating.
Get to the headlines.
Now is the time to buy.
I hope you have plenty of the wherewithal.
Americans may soon be able to place bets on congressional races
after a federal judge decided that prediction market startup CalShi can list contracts for those elections. As we discussed back in April,
CalShi has gained popularity as a platform for betting on event outcomes. If the judge's ruling
is upheld, it could open the door for betting on the presidential election. Apple unveiled the
iPhone 16 Pro and the iPhone 16 Pro Max in addition to new Apple Watches and AirPods at its Glowtime event.
The iPhone 16 is designed for Apple intelligence, which will enable more natural conversations
with Siri and feature AI writing tools that help draft emails and texts.
And finally, hedge fund Starboard Value submitted a non-binding shareholder proposal asking
News Corp to collapse its dual-class share structure that gives the
Murdoch family voting control of the company. Starboard aims to eliminate the structure to
prevent Rupert Murdoch from passing voting control of the company to his family. Scott, any thoughts?
So betting on elections, first off, I don't know if you can get in the way of this. I think people
should be allowed to lose money if they want. The question I would have is that if you're RFK Jr. and granted his
likelihood of being, the odds on him becoming president had gone way down, but you would still
get, say you bet a dollar against him, you would get a buck or five, maybe a dollar five back,
or I don't know. And you knew you were going to eventually drop out. Say back when his prospects were at their highest,
he was in the high teens, and you would get, say, a dollar 20 for betting a dollar. And he knew,
if he knew personally, he was going to drop out at some point. Is it okay for him to bet? In other
words, are there any sort of insider trading laws? I wonder if when you have asymmetry of information and it's not illegal, what ends up happening is the people
who don't have asymmetric information over the long term just lose money. Yeah, it's a really
good point. I mean, the insider trading laws, it seems this is going to be a huge problem. And as
you say that, I sort of realized that it also, it kind of just accrues more power to famous people who I believe are already kind of the most powerful they've ever been. Because if there's a lot of attention and a lot of focus on RFK Jr., for example, that's going to attract more liquidity, more inflows into an events contract based on whether he's going to drop out of the election
or stay in the election, whatever it is. And then you can start gaming that and sort of
using that public momentum and public interest to start profiting off of it. So it seems like,
yeah, if they don't establish some sort of insider trading rules around this
soon, then we're going to see a lot of famous people ripping off regular people even more.
One other thing that I've been thinking about with this,
just to start, 25% of Gen Z think that gambling is a form of investing.
So a lot of kids are gambling and thinking that, you know,
this is a good thing to do with my money.
I'm, you know, there's a potential upside here.
And as we know,
gambling is generally speaking pretty bad from a financial perspective. 90% of gamblers
lose money. It's responsible for one in 10 bankruptcies in America. And I think if I were
the CFTC and if I were regulating Kalshi, I agree with you that this should probably be allowed to
exist. But I think one issue that I would have is sort of the
way that Kalshi is branding itself. And that is, if you look at the website, it really feels like
an investing app. It does not feel like gambling. They don't call it a casino. It's called a
prediction market. You don't place bets. You buy events contracts. It's got this very marketsy feel
to it. And I can imagine that if you're a
user of that platform, you could start sort of rationalizing your gambling addiction as some sort
of smart form of investing or trading. It feels almost a bit more sophisticated than gambling.
Yeah, but kind of the retort is, I satisfy my gambling addiction by buying stocks. I mean,
it's been proven that buying individual stocks over the long term is just not a great idea, that stock picking is almost useless for
99% of us, but you get a doper rush. And effectively, that's one person basically
betting that I know more about Apple's prospects than the person on the other side of the trade.
That's effectively speculation and gambling. This is an odd one.
Let's talk about Apple.
I love that Glowtime event.
I got to give it to Apple.
My son came home and said, we got to watch the Apple event.
Really?
And the thing, yeah, he was really excited about it.
And the thing that strikes me is that you're probably too young to remember this, but there used to be the sector that owned tech launches
or product launches was the automobile sector. And it was a big deal. They had these big
unveilings of the new, you know, 1984 Chrysler LeBaron and Ricardo Montalban would be there
with some hot girl in a Rockettes outfit. And Liat Coco would be there talking about how the
new K-Car was a breakthrough technology
and was going to bring Detroit back. Sounds a lot better than Tim Cook and Allbirds. There you go.
Actually, it was much worse. And basically, Apple has kind of co-opted the event launch. And what
they've done is they've taken a page out of the luxury sector's handbook. And that is,
they're highly curated, They're visually arresting.
They usually have very good looking people on stage. And it's basically kind of a modern day fashion show for people who aren't into Hermes or Gucci. They watch these kind of event rollouts.
The thing that struck me is that I'm just, I can't get over, I think Apple, I don't know who's in
charge of strategy at Apple. I think the strategy at Apple has always been, over the last 10 years, other than a mixed reality headset, chewy bag've said, okay, here's AI that helps you sort through your photos.
I can't say, I don't know why you do this.
I get so frustrated on my iPhone because I've taken thousands of photos.
And I think, where's the picture of my son at the Arsenal game?
And my understanding is that this new version or these AI applications will be able to do that.
So it didn't
struck me as anything breakthrough in terms of product, but this, you know, they're hoping,
or analysts who are basically sycophants and stenographers, of which there are a bunch
following Apple, believe that the AI phone could jumpstart the biggest upgrade cycle in Apple
history. And just the idea of a quote-unquote AI phone is very exciting. They're expected to sell a quarter of a billion phones next year, a 12% increase year-on-year.
Anyways, any thoughts?
Yeah, I had kind of a different read on this.
I found this event extremely underwhelming.
I mean, those AI updates are incredibly incremental.
I mean, better interaction with Siri, that doesn't sound like a massive upgrade.
Helping you find photos.
I mean, there have always been AI components in the iPhone
that have sort of incrementally improved over time.
And let's just go through some of the updates for the new iPhone.
This is what makes the new iPhone really different from the other one,
from the previous one.
Bigger screen, smaller bezel,
okay, updated rear view camera, more powerful mic, comes in titanium. So to me, those are the
updates that you make when you don't have any ideas. And this whole event is kind of reminding me of our conversation our antitrust conversation
with professor allensworth where she was making this point that it's very hard to quantify the
lack of competition in tech because we haven't really been able to see any other innovations or
any great products from any companies other than the big tech companies
that we already know. And so I look at this event and this sort of feels like exhibit A in the FTC
antitrust case, because if you look at the new iPhone that they just released this week,
and you compare it to the iPhone from 10 years ago, from 2014, you will find it is almost identical to the iPhone that we're seeing
today. And then you go look and you search up, you know, cell phone 2004, and you look at the
difference between a mobile phone in 2004 versus a 2014 iPhone. That is a completely different
device. So it almost feels as if the past decade of innovation at Apple, when you compare it to
the decade of innovation in tech before that, it's been incredibly, incredibly underwhelming.
And I'm just sort of starting to think, you know, what if Apple and what if Google and
Facebook were truly forced to innovate?
What would this Apple event look like in that scenario?
Because what I saw at that event was a company that's mostly getting quite lazy.
I've changed my mind.
The event sucked.
I like your narrative more.
Yeah, I mean, you're right.
The new iPhone, I think this is great marketing.
I think them adopting software and kind of branding it the AI-enabled phone, I think
that's genius. And I do think they'll make kind of branding it the AI-enabled phone, I think that's genius.
And I do think they'll make it more, you know, more consumable or AI.
They'll bring AI to the masses or at least awareness of what AI can do.
But you're right.
It's not.
I didn't see anything I wanted to run out and buy.
Should we talk about Starboard?
Yes.
I'd like to get your take on that. So the Murdochs own a 14% stake in News Corp, but control 41% of the votes.
And Starboard owns 3.7% of non-voting shares and 4.6% of the voting shares.
First off, a dual-class shareholder company is you have 100 shares, but there's a minority
of shares that have more voting power.
It makes no fucking sense.
And initially, the rationalization for dual-class shareholder companies was media companies did it.
Now, why did they do it?
They said, okay, we're the New York Times.
And we're so important in terms of defending democracy and having a newsroom that speaks truth to power and either carries favor or whatever.
We're honest brokers of truth and play an important role in society.
So we can't be subject to the
short-term pressures of shareholders. So we need a dual-class shareholder structure such that the
family that cares more about American journalism will always be in control. And this generally
leads to a company that underperforms because they don't want to make hard decisions,
they have different priorities, and basically all other shareholders are sort of second-class citizens where they pretend to listen to you. I've been on the board of dual-class
shareholder companies, and essentially you're an advisory board because at the end of the day,
when shit gets real about big decisions, the decisions are made over Thanksgiving at the
Sulzberger or the Ford family house. So I don't like these things. This itself is purely performative.
This is Starboard saying, this is a good idea and trying
to put pressure on them. And they're just going to nod and then stick up the middle finger at the
shareholder meeting and vote. This is going to result in absolutely no change because
at a shareholder meeting, which is like election day, you have a vote. And typically somewhere
between, typically around 80% of the shares show up. There's a lot of shares that have a vote. And typically somewhere between, typically around 80% of the
shares show up. There's a lot of shares that don't vote. Yeah, the average turnout is 77%.
Which means if you control 40, you've won. As a matter of fact, when I was an activist investor
and would go into a company, and so gateway computer, I bought 17% of the company and
demanded two board seats. And I knew I'd won.
And the reason I knew I'd won is that if 80% shows up and it's a single class of shares,
then if you have 17%, really all you're jonesing for is if you can get just of the remaining 63
that are showing up, you just need to get 23. A single class shareholder company is technically
always in play. Yeah. I mean, if they want to get this through, they're going to need
90% of the remaining shareholders to vote yes, and they'll also need 100% turnout.
Not going to happen. Yeah, not going to happen.
Not going to happen, Ed. But one thing that Starboard mentioned,
they wrote, quote, if the board refuses to listen, we can then take further action.
So apparently they have a plan B.
You are a former activist investor.
One, do you believe them?
And two, if you do, what could that plan B be?
I don't know.
Hire Tony Soprano?
I could take further action.
Well, I'm scared now.
I don't think the Murdochs,
I don't think Rupert Murdoch scares very easily.
We'll be right back after the break
for our conversation with Lynn Alden.
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Welcome back. Here's our conversation with Lynn Alden, independent analyst, full-time investor,
and the author of Broken Money.
Lynn, thank you for joining us again on Profit Markets.
Thanks for having me back.
Happy to be here.
So the Fed is meeting again this month.
They're going to make their next interest rate decision.
Widely expected to see rate cuts, which will bring an end to this rate hiking cycle, which we've been experiencing
over the past couple of years, and it will usher in the rate cutting cycle. So we'd love to start
out with just your opinions on what that will mean for investors. What are you focused on as we enter
this next era of rate cuts? Yeah, it's a good set of questions. And I'm focusing on basically a
couple of different areas, some of which I think most investors are overstating and some that I think investors
might be understanding. So the interesting thing about this cycle is that during the rate hiking
cycle, the economy was more resilient to the rate hikes than many people thought. And that was
because a lot of the private debt was locked in at low, long-term fixed rates.
And ironically, a lot of the government debt wasn't.
And so basically, the raising rates increased the deficit more than an increased private sector interest expense that's locked in.
Obviously, if you're entering the home buying market right now, that's a very different story. But if you look at the aggregate private debt out there, investment-grade debt, a lot of it was unimpacted by these
rate hikes and only slowly quarter after quarter does some of it get refinanced at these higher
rates. And I think we're going to have a similar effect on the downside, which is cutting by 25
or 50 or even up after a couple of cuts, even 100 basis points, is still above a lot of the rates that people
have locked in. Now, obviously, the long end moves differently than the short end.
But overall, until they kind of hit some threshold, I wouldn't expect a very large
amount of refinancing, which you normally see during those rate-cutting cycles, because people
use the opportunity to get out of their
higher-priced mortgages into lower-priced mortgages. They unlock more consumer spending.
And there's just not a lot of that ready to be financed. There were very low mortgage originations
over the past couple of years in this higher-rate environment. So the opportunity for refinancing
is fairly low. The area that I'm more wondering about on the optimistic side is foreign equities.
Basically, there's been a huge long period of U.S. outperformance, strong dollar environment,
strong U.S. equities. Some of that's fundamental, some of that's valuation,
a lot of it's capital flows. And one of the few periods where you get a chance for rotation into
international markets is during rate-cutting cycles. And really, you need two variables to
be in place. So one, you need to have a situation where a lot of capital is already stuffed into
U.S. markets. And so, for example, in the year 2000, there was a lot of global capital stuffed
into U.S. markets. The 90s were a big period of U.S. outperformance. And so the rate-cutting cycle
that followed that was very good for international markets as some of that capital dispersed back
elsewhere. So those two variables were present. In 2008, the rate-cutting cycle happened,
but there was not a lot of global capital stuffed into U.S. markets.
The whole 2000s decade after that dot-com bubble was all at the BRICS decade.
So global capital was already kind of dispersed.
And so rate-cutting cycle in the U.S. did not really feed that.
The next rate-cutting cycle was the 2019 rate-cutting cycle.
And that was a situation, again, where it was more like 2000 in the sense
that a lot of global capital was stuffed into U.S. markets. And so that was an opportunity for
potentially some of that capital dispersing. But then when you had COVID, lockdowns,
all the stuff we experienced, that kind of disrupted what could have maybe otherwise
happened. We don't really know the counterfactual. Plus, it was the continued outperformance of the handful of top tech stocks. So I would say that this upcoming rate cycle
is the first major one in at least five years where you have both variables present. A rate
cutting cycle at a time when a lot of global capital is stuffed into U.S. equity markets.
And so the rate cuts could be
fairly beneficial for some degree of international equities.
Yeah, it's good to see you, Lynn. So I felt as if the rate hiking cycle is a little bit of the land
of unintended consequences. And that is, I don't think any economist predicted that housing prices
were going to keep going up as interest rates skyrocketed.
At least I didn't see that coming.
And also that the additional capital that people made on their cash more than compensated for the additional interest costs.
So the economy was more resilient.
If you take the opposite of that, are we potentially looking at a pretty serious drawdown in home values, which are at all-time
highs with respect to some ratios? And could we be seeing a pretty significant decline in stock
prices given that the markets on a P level aren't crazy, but they're definitely rich? It almost
feels like these things have almost the entirely opposite intended effect. I think that's an outcome of fiscal dominance.
And so this was kind of the first rate hiking cycle that happened in fiscal dominance, which is to say that we're running unusually large deficits as a share of GDP outside of a recession.
And we have very high accumulated public debts.
And so when interest rates go up a lot,
the interest expense goes up quite a bit.
When you raise rates at 30% public debt to GDP,
it's a very different environment than raising rates
at 120% debt to GDP.
And so we got into this kind of unique situation
where rate hikes don't necessarily have the effect
that they're supposed to. But when you think of what rate hikes don't necessarily have the effect that they're supposed to.
When you think of what rate hikes are supposed to do, there's kind of two main things. One is
they make your currency more attractive to foreign holders or even domestic holders so they don't go
elsewhere. So you're getting a better rate on your money to strengthen it, which can clamp down on
inflation. And the other one is basically to slow down bank
lending. So for example, when Volcker raised rates, throughout the 70s, there was very high
rates of bank lending. The baby boomers were entering their home buying years, very high
rates of bank lending and money creation from that source. And so raising rates can put strain
on borrowers and slow that down. In the current environment, the deficits are bigger
than net new bank loans per year. And in many years, even bigger than bank loans plus new
corporate bond issuance. And so the effect is maybe not quite as powerful. I don't really
see it as bearish for housing when rates come down. I would be a little more concerned about
equities because a lot of the global capital
that's stuffed into the U.S. is in our equity market. That's one thing that kind of makes the
U.S. somewhat different than other jurisdictions. There's a lot of other jurisdictions capital goes
into their housing market, right? So for example, foreigners will buy houses in Canada or Australia,
whereas when capital goes to the U.S., a lot of it goes into the equity market in particular.
And that's the capital flows that I'd be more concerned about in terms of impacting investment performance.
You had talked a little bit about emerging markets.
Are things shaping up to be 2024 at their time in the sun again?
I think the conditions are there for it.
It's kind of like the phrase, like, you can lead a horse to water, but you can't make
a drink.
It's kind of like you can identify when the conditions are present, which would increase
the probability of it occurring.
And so, for example, I would say in 2019, there were some of the conditions for it,
but it didn't happen.
For a lot, you know, for any number of reasons that came after it, it didn't happen. For any number of reasons that came after it, it didn't happen. This 2024 setup
is yet another environment where the conditions are pretty right. That combination of lots of
global capital stuffed into US market with a rate cutting cycle coming up. That's basically dry
tinder that emerging markets potentially could take the baton from. The vicious or virtuous
cycle that happens there is that a lot of emerging
markets, kind of what defines them, is they have a lot of dollar-dominated debt. And it's not even
mostly owed to the US. It's owed to China. It's owed to European lenders. Some of it's owed to
the US. It's owed to all these different entities that lend in dollars. And whenever the dollar
strengthens relative to their local currencies and cash flows,
it's kind of like if you took out a mortgage in Swiss francs and then the Swiss franc doubled relative to the dollar, you'd be in trouble with the value of your property and the cash flows that
property can generate. You'd have trouble with your liabilities. It just hardened.
The same thing kind of happens to them, except it's the dollar that's going up.
And then more capital wants to get out of there. When that's happening, it goes into the U.S.,
which then ironically strengthens the dollar further.
And so you get this kind of vicious cycle
against emerging markets.
But then the good news is the opposite can happen
on these other cycles,
which is that once the dollar's strong,
no capital is in the bricks.
It's all in U.S. and a handful of other places.
If around the margins, not like this big giant capital flow, but around the margins, there's
a rate cutting cycle.
These other places are cheap.
The ones that kind of survived the strong dollar cycle, the marginal dollar can go to
them, which can alleviate the strength of the dollar, can support their currencies a
little bit.
They start showing signs of life, and then
more capital wants to flow in. And so you get that reversal effect, that virtuous cycle. So what I'm
looking for is to see if that engine starts kind of kicking off and to really start seeing if we
get follow through. And last time we spoke, we had a pretty lengthy discussion about Bitcoin. I feel like you kind of crypto-pilled Scott in a strange way. But anyway,
since then, Bitcoin has fallen around 15%. And we've also seen Bitcoin popping up in political
news. Trump has been talking about Bitcoin. He's very pro-Bitcoin, pro-crypto. He spoke at the
Bitcoin conference. I'd just love to get your updated take on Bitcoin. And has anything changed since we last spoke? So I'm still long
term bullish. And I wouldn't say I'm big on crypto in general. I tend to be pretty skeptical of the
majority of the crypto space. For me, it's so far been really Bitcoin and stablecoins that I think
are the most interesting. And then there's little pockets elsewhere that are kind of also kind of interesting. But, you know, for the most
part, it's pretty concentrated. I'm long term bullish on Bitcoin still, nothing really changed
with that thesis. The way that I'm interpreting this year is that the ETFs pulled forward a lot
of excitement. You know, you start to get really people start to get really bullish in like February
and March of this year.
And we've seen kind of a slow draining of these kind of overinflated expectations since then.
The big metrics that Bitcoin tends to track, and actually I've commissioned a report from
an analyst I like, and I'm advising it, that we're kind of quantifying this a little bit more.
But Bitcoin tracks global liquidity better than any other major asset class.
So better than stocks, better than gold, better than emerging markets, better than bonds.
And there's different ways to measure global liquidity.
In that report and in general, I define it as global broad money supply,
but denominated in dollar equivalents.
So you get both a credit expansion
or credit contraction component, and then you get that strength of that dollar relative
to the other major currencies. And basically, if that goes up or down in a given 12-month period,
Bitcoin has the highest likelihood of other assets to do the same direction, which is over 80%
in Bitcoin's case. So I put a lot of that focusing on global liquidity
when I'm thinking about, say, a two-year or 12-month Bitcoin price.
I don't really try to judge month-by-month or quarter-by-quarter Bitcoin price.
For the political component,
most Bitcoin conferences are not that political.
This particular one that happened in Nashville is the biggest one in the world, and it's during American election season. So obviously Trump was there. There are a number of senators and
representatives that were there. But I think what went under the radar is that there were some
Democratic politicians there as well, like Ro Khanna, for example. And then he and over a
dozen other congressmen wrote a letter to the DNC saying that they need to embrace that industry
a little bit better than they have. So right now, if you look at,
there's actually a study recently by Troy Cross,
a professor and another professor,
I can't remember his name,
but they found that they kind of looked at a sample,
pretty big samples, a well-designed test
as far as I could tell.
And they wanted to see if there was difference
between Bitcoin holders and the general public
on a number of metrics, including politics.
And they actually didn't find that much difference.
Yeah, the two biggest areas that stood out were Bitcoin holders skewed male and they skewed younger.
But they didn't skew left or right, which was actually kind of surprising.
Because when you look at politicians that embrace it, it certainly has skewed right.
When you look at the economic policy, or not even policy, the economic plans,
the thing that really has jumped out about Trump was this embrace of tariffs. And the thing that
jumps out for me with Vice President Harris is, there's a few things actually, price controls and subsidies for first-time buyers. Do you have any thoughts when you look at their policies and the impact on the markets? that the kind of polarizing forces of Congress will prevent some of their tail outcomes happening.
So, for example, that we'll get more tariffs, but they won't be as huge as Trump, you know,
is kind of narrating that they will be. Because, you know, I think that obviously the issue with
bigger tariffs, and many critics of the proposal pointed this out, that a lot of those costs do
get passed back on to American
consumers in many cases. If those companies are not making the profit margins, they'll either
stop selling to America or they just increase the prices so we effectively pay for it one way or
another. And so that can be all around the margins inflationary. The Democratic propositions,
on one hand, there are things that are more disinflationary, like the tax increases that were proposed. And some of those are pretty tail outcomes, like taxes on
unrealized capital gains and things like that. I think, again, the market's kind of like how
they're assuming that Trump wouldn't get enormous tariffs through, just kind of tariffs around the
margins. I think they're assuming that Harris wouldn't get an unrealized capital gains tax
through. Or even that other one, the more broad capital gains that is just an increase to the current capital gains.
I think the market is kind of discounting that somewhat. I find both tails not productive
in general. That'd be my take. I did a 50-year analysis on how the economy performs, how markets perform, how inflation performs under Republican or Democratic presidents.
And it's more complicated than that because you'd have to incorporate the Senate and the House.
And the government's not just one entity.
But in general, over those 50-plus years, the economy did better under Democratic presidents.
So did the U.S. stock market.
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We're back with Profit Markets.
It feels as if inflation has kind of come down to its sort of target level or is fast approaching its target level.
Is there a fear that it could crash through its target level and we could enter into stagflation or recession?
When you look at the different barometers for inflation, what do you see?
So it came down from officially measured like 9% to 3% fairly quickly.
And then it got kind of stuck in that like 3 plus percent corridor for quite a while,
kind of sticky above target inflation.
In recent period, it kind of came down to slightly below 3, but still above target,
but obviously nowhere near kind of the headline issues that it was before.
I think the Fed is correct in the sense that I don't particularly endorse the idea that central
banks even set interest rates, like that basically there's price controls on money,
but to the extent that that's how they operate now, they do have these mandates between employment
and inflation. And clearly the risks have moved
from, you know, when you have 9% inflation, that's kind of a four alarm fire for inflation,
and you got to get it back down. Now that inflation is in the ballpark of three or the
high twos, and unemployment is still low, but has increased from 3.4% to 4.2%. And historically,
that tends to, when you get a move like that, more often than not, it keeps going.
So if you're the Fed right now, you're saying, well, one is a little high but headed down,
the other one's low but headed up. They're more shifting to the one heading up now.
Also, if you look at the Fed's projections of where unemployment would be over the next couple
of years, 4.2 was kind of their median,
you know, where they expected to go.
So if you start to get any sort of increase above that, they would grow more concerned.
And they, and the, you know, the chairman's already said that they don't really want to see any more employment softening than they've already seen.
You know, we're outside of that really hot market where like you couldn't really hire
people.
Now it's kind of more balanced.
And so I think from their standpoint, from their mandate that they follow, it makes sense for them
to be more balanced between the two. There obviously is a risk we could go down further
and kind of approach more recession territory. A theme that I keep pointing out is that when you
go into recession, when you're already running 7%
of GDP deficits and deficits normally expand in a recession, that tends to be a different type
of recession. I think that a lot of investors kind of fight the last battle. They think of 2020,
they think of 2008. I think that a recession under these types of deficits would be a little
bit more stagflationary. So maybe not as disinflationary as we think, but also maybe not as high unemployment as we think, because there's kind of a lot of pre-stimulus going into that recession. So I tend to kind of model it a little bit differently than average. And do you have any thoughts on the likelihood of a recession? I mean, there were some debates
and some slightly overblown panicking
earlier in the summer.
But where do you stand on recession
and the probability in the next year or so?
So one thing I've had to do
over the past couple of years
is break out sectors.
Because we have an unusually large divergence
between very high fiscal deficits,
so very loose fiscal policy and very tight monetary policy. And that divergence is bigger
than normal. We've got bigger than normal divergences between sectors. And so if you
look at, for example, in 2022, when many people were forecasting a recession, we did not get a National Bureau of Economic
Research. They didn't define an official recession. But if you looked at, for example,
the misery index, which is inflation plus unemployment, that reached recessionary levels.
If you look at consumer sentiment, it reached almost record low recessionary levels.
If you look at, and this is the interesting one,
bank loan tightness.
So if you look at what they do,
surveys of senior loan officers at banks,
and they say, are you tightening credit standards
or are you loosening credit standards?
And almost always when they have a big tightening period,
it's recessionary.
And when they're loosening it,
it's, you know, at least in rate of change terms,
like fewer of them are tightening,
you're coming out of recession.
And in 2022, we went through a classic bank credit tightening cycle
that looked like recession on the bank, you know, senior loan officer survey. It was like
basically everything about that survey screened recession. And we did not have a defined recession
in large part. It's because, you know, we're at that point, we're two years after peak lockdowns,
and we're still on the tail end of COVID-era things. The environment was just very different.
You didn't get that unemployment cycle. That's kind of like a main driver of recessions.
So I think that ahead, there is more risk of a classic unemployment recession. I don't have
a high conviction. But then the weird thing
is on the other side, I'm actually seeing there's also indicators suggesting emerging out of a
recession. Like the bank loan tightness is easing rather than getting worse. Or for example, the
manufacturing purchasing managers index that was in recession like throughout 2022, 2023,
that was in one of the longest contractions of manufacturing
in a long time. And that's kind of stabilizing to some extent. So I think we could get a reversal
of what sectors have been doing better or worse. And that's how I'm trying to think of it,
is which sectors could be entering or emerging from recession rather than thinking of a purely binary outcome of recession or no recession.
Are there any sectors or specific stocks that you're especially bullish or bearish on?
I have concerns around some of the very expensive tech stocks. I treat each one independently.
I don't like when people kind of classify them all together.
I don't really like that approach.
I like to treat them individually.
Actually, I'll give you a more specific one.
So back in the dot-com bubble, everybody was focused on the high valuations of the tech stocks, right?
But what went under the radar is that Coca-Cola was trading at over 50 times earnings in the late 90s.
Walmart was trading at like 50 times earnings in the late 90s.
And what happened was throughout the 2000s, they continued to grow. They were high quality blue chip companies. They continued to grow, but their stocks had like a 10 year dead period
because their valuations went down from 50 times earnings to like 20 to 25 times earnings as their
earnings doubled. So you had just basically the stock going nowhere.
Right now, everybody's focusing on the Mag7. But for example, Costco is trading at like
55 times earnings. And it's a wonderful business. I mean, it's actually one of the few businesses
that shareholders, employees, and customers like. I mean, who doesn't like Costco?
But I wouldn't pay 55 times earnings for it.
When you look at the peg ratio, it's a price to earnings to growth, it scores very poorly
on those metrics. And it hasn't mattered yet. I mean, Coca-Cola has spent a very long time
overvalued and so did Walmart. And so it's actually, I think there's a bubble in some blue chip risk off names where everyone says
this company's bulletproof so i want to own it and then the problem is maybe maybe the company's
bulletproof but the stock might not be bulletproof and ironically i mean costco is trading at higher
valuations than a lot of the mag 7 you know we look at price earnings or other kind of metrics
like that that's crazy yeah higher. Yeah. Higher valuation than Alphabet, higher valuation than Meta, higher valuation than Apple. It's one of the more
expensive stocks out there when you look at kind of traditional price to earnings or price to cash
flow or price earnings growth metrics. So it's not just Costco, but I think that basically I have concerns around very high quality, low fundamental volatility.
So low earnings fluctuations, all these different quality metrics.
There's a lot of capital kind of stuffed into some of those names.
Anything you're especially bullish on?
I'm looking for this potential emerging market rotation.
I want to see if we get follow through with it.
I wouldn't layer on more risk until you start to see more follow-through.
But basically, I think this could be like a three to five-year period
where the S&P 500 stops outperforming some of these places.
The S&P 500 already stopped outperforming Latin America
for the past two and a half years, at least on a
total return basis. Maybe we go back to outperforming, but at least so far, that's a trend
that's kind of been paused. The biggest kind of bullying outcome is China right now, just because
the stocks are so cheap, the fundamentals keep getting better in many cases. But then you have to kind of weigh that tail risk, right?
So what is the chance that you just,
that, you know, you wake up to some headline
three years from now and, you know,
you get kind of zeroed out of your positions or something.
The interesting thing is that if anything like that happens,
I mean, stocks like Nvidia are in big trouble potentially.
I mean, you know, they make all their chips in Taiwan.
Apple would be in big trouble. Tesla would be in big trouble potentially. I mean, they make all their chips in Taiwan. Apple would be in big trouble.
Tesla would be in big trouble.
So on one hand,
investors are very much fine
with Chinese geopolitical,
like Chinese-US geopolitical relations
because they're fine with really big US tech stocks
that have a presence there.
But then nobody wants to touch Chinese stocks
with a 10
foot pole, which I would say, you know, high probability they outperform in the next three
to five years. But then you have to tweak that with the tail risk of, you know, what if something
crazy happens? I'm just looking at your portfolio, your multi-asset model portfolio here, which you publicize.
And, you know, you're totally transparent about your portfolio, which I love.
And I think it's really valuable for people getting into investing.
I'm just seeing, I don't see Apple, I don't see Meta, and I don't see Tesla.
Why not those three?
It looks like you have the rest of the Mag 7,
but why are those three missing?
So Tesla, I'm not very bullish on fundamentally.
Right now, their growth metrics are not great.
I generally view them as structurally overvalued.
Apple, less extreme case,
but basically I would say it's a value stock,
a very high quality value stock priced like a growth stock. So you pay, it's not like Costco, but you're paying pretty high valuations
for a company that's, a lot of the growth now is coming from a fairly static top line.
And then they buy back their own shares, they adjust their prices with inflation. You're kind of this wide moat, but slower growing entity now.
It doesn't excite me.
Meta is more borderline.
I've been back and forth on that.
There are periods of time where I've owned it.
That one I'm kind of more neutral on.
That could go either way for me.
Whereas a lot of the other MAG7, I think they have reasonable valuations relative to their
current and expected growth rates.
Just one last question from me. For our listeners who are maybe just starting out
investing, just about to build their portfolio, would you have any,
if you could give one piece of advice to someone in that position, what would it be?
So the way that I approach portfolio in this environment is a three-pillar portfolio. So it's like one big part stocks, one part, those more kind of like cash or short-duration
bonds and things like that.
And then one chunk is that little more inflationary thing.
So energy producers or gold, Bitcoin, things like that.
I mean, another thing that's outperformed the S&P 500 for a while
is the S&P 500 has underperformed gold since late 2021. Not by a lot, but basically,
the S&P 500 to gold ratio over the past century, you get these really big sine waves.
And if you include dividends, the S&P 500 is
greatly outperformed. But it goes through these five-plus-year periods where it greatly underperforms.
And there's current signs of a rollover, like we're in one of those down periods where the
S&P 500 does not outperform gold. And I think of gold anyway, more like a bond replacement, or if I have a 60-40 portfolio,
maybe I take 10% of it and put it into gold or 5% of it and put it in gold. And so I think that
my approach generally is rather diversified portfolios so that you can focus your attention
on what you do best.
Isn't it at the end of the day, buy an index fund
and then just try and focus on what makes money?
Yeah, I think, I mean, probably buy a handful of index funds
to reduce the probability of a lost decade.
I think the only risk of that approach
is that a lot of that kind of came out
during this 15-year period of just buy this, be a funder, and win.
Whereas there are decades where that can not do well,
and having a handful of different indices together can really kind of structurally just keep going up,
which then, yeah, you can focus on your work, you can focus on your family, you can focus on everything else. I think the majority of people shouldn't be spending a ton of time on investing unless it is, again, they're, you know, unless they either love it or it's their way that they earn income.
Lynn Alden is a full-time investor, independent analyst, and the author of Broken Money, Why Our Financial System is Failing Us and How We Can Make It Better.
Her work has been featured in the Wall Street Journal, Business Insider, Market Watch, and CNBC. And she's also served as a
consultant to startup companies, hedge funds, and executive committees. You can find her research
at lynnaldin.com. Lynn, we always love having you. I think we've got to get you a jacket. I think
you've been on five times now. Somewhere around that, four or five, I think. There you go. Thanks
again. Thank you, Lynn. Thank you.
Algebra of Wealth.
Scott, Lynn mentioned that we could be in for a period of outperformance among international stocks.
I'm wondering what you think of that
and how you think about geographic risk in your portfolio.
Yeah, it just makes sense.
My sense is almost every market is cyclical
and everyone gets their time in the sun.
And the time to get really worried
is when everyone sort of decides
we're in a new economic era
and that, oh, it's just the U.S. forever
and that the U.S. has moved to a new
economic model of innovation and will always outperform. I remember in 99 reading the Wall
Street Journal that perhaps the internet had ushered in a new era of a different type of
company and valuation metric and we shouldn't be thinking about how overvalued these companies are.
That's when you really should run scared. I believe in diversification, not only across companies and sectors, but across markets. So I have, I don't know,
I would say about 20%, maybe, and that's not a lot, but it is some, I guess, maybe it's 20,
25% of my net worth tied up in, maybe it's close to a third, in non-US companies.
My biggest investment actually
is in a hedge fund that a friend of mine runs
named Orlando Mochant.
It's a fund called Tyrion
that invests in kind of unloved stocks,
mostly in Latin America.
Yeah, so I diversify across regions
and there's no doubt LATAM and China are going to come back.
It's just, we don't know when.
This episode was produced by Claire Miller and engineered by Benjamin Spencer.
Our associate producer is Alison Weiss.
Our executive producer is Catherine Dillon.
Mia Silverio is our research lead.
And Drew Burrows is our technical director.
Thank you for listening to Profity Markets from the Vox Media Podcast Network.
If you liked what you heard, give us a follow and join us for a fresh take on markets on Monday. In kind reunion As the world turns
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