Wednesday 21 April 2021

Fwd: Confessions of a doomsayer


This is the first of 3 emails today which we thought are must reads. We hope you agree and are not too concerned at all this extra reading material being thrust onto you. Any feedback will be gratefully received - and fiercely rebuffed as necessary!!
As an aside, just took the car to the local service station for fuelling, checking all fluids and tyre pressures, and a clean inside and out. Unlike most countries these days this is a "service station" worthy of the name. We tip the forecourt guy COP 2,000 - NZD 0.76 or USD 0.55. The highest octane you can get here is 91!! But it is CHEAP. The equivalent of NZD1.42 per litre, even with recent price rises. Sold here in Colombian Pesos per US gallon. This is equivalent to USD3.89 per US gallon. Not as cheap as the US, but certainly cheaper than Godszone!! And the cleaning - outside washed and waxed and gleaming including tyres "blacked" and inside vacuumed and surfaces cleaned and where necessary where UV protection is necessary, they coat that as well. All for a total of 26,000 Pesos = NZD9.96. The little 2007 B200 now looks just like a new one again!! 
Cheers
Jim in Medellin
---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Bill Bonner <feedback@exct.bonnerandpartners.com>
Date: Wed, 21 Apr 2021 at 11:31
Subject: Confessions of a doomsayer
To: <tiare.taporo3@gmail.com>


Bill Bonner's Diary

Confessions of a Doomsayer

By Bill Bonner

Wednesday, April 21, 2021

Bill Bonner

YOUGHAL, IRELAND – A dear reader writes to say we are wrong.

"What these doomsday prophets like Bonner fail to explain is the efficiency of today's supply chain that can quickly produce goods and services to meet demand. The market continues to roar in the face of his daily diatribes. If we were keeping score, we would say Fed: 40; Bonner: 0. I do enjoy reading the columns as I find them highly entertaining."

– Mike C.

And yes, of course, we are wrong about a great number of things. This is partly because the odds are so heavily against us.

If we say "The bond market topped out on August 4, 2020" (which we think it did), we are guessing that it won't go higher and finally top out on any of the 365 days in this year.

And now, in our constant rehearsal of the "sky is falling" forecast, we will be wrong again… until it finally hits us in the head.

When might that be? Well, we don't know. It could begin any day now… or not.

In the meantime, the Federal Reserve will be right… and we will look like an idiot.

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--

Lesson Learned

Today, we enter the confessional. And let's begin by warning new readers that they should never pay attention to our stock market suggestions.

Publicly traded stocks don't interest us; we don't do any serious research on them.

And on the rare occasions when we comment on any particular company, we are as likely to be wrong as right.

(Full disclosure: We do own stocks! They're managed for us by our trusted old friend, Chris Mayer.)

Just this week, we were reminded that, some months ago, in this space, we laughed at investors who were buying Hertz (HTZGQ).

The company had gone bankrupt. But somehow, it had found favor with the young traders who spend their time chatting about such things. They were so eager to buy the stock that the company – then in bankruptcy – decided to issue new shares.

It would have been a first in the history of finance… had not the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) put a stop to it.

"When you're young… in love… at war… or in a bubble…" we concluded, "there's no time to think straight, or even think at all."

Well, wouldn't you know… we're in a bubble. The used car market turned up… and Hertz – like a sleeping beauty, kissed by its Reddit suitors – came back to life. The company is back in business.

The whippersnappers turned out to be right. We turned out to be wrong.

We take no lesson from the Hertz story but that there are a lot of things you can be wrong about. We're working our way through them, slowly.

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A Costly Lesson

Take Amazon (AMZN), for example… please.

One of the most spectacular things we were wrong about was Jeff Bezos' creation. When it came out – this was more than 20 years ago – we called it "The River of No Returns." The title was clever. But the prediction was poor.

Amazon's business strategy was a classic formula for failure. The company cut its margins so thin, it lost money on every sale. Then, it aimed to make up for the losses by increasing volume.

That was never going to work, we opined.

And it never really did. Amazon's retailing business has never made enough money to justify the huge "investment" (losses) necessary to reach its present scale.

So its core business is still a river of no returns – not worth a fraction of its current market price.

But how were we supposed to know that a virus would come along… so that people would stay home and be almost forced to order from amazon.com?

Boom! Amazon's net sales rose by more than $100 billion last year.

And how were we to know that its huge data processing needs would get it into a whole new line of business that would be so profitable?

Yes, the cloud computing business. That's where the money is. Amazon Web Services (AWS) accounts for a bit more than 10% of the company's sales… but more than 60% of its profits.

AMZN gave our dear readers their first big opportunity to get rich. Those who were smart enough to ignore our advice could have bought the stock for under $50. Today, split adjusted, it is over $3,000, giving the company a market value of about $1.7 trillion.

Jeff Bezos got so rich, he could go through the most expensive divorce in history and still have a net worth estimated at almost $200 billion.

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--

Mechanistic Approach

So let's turn back to the Federal Reserve, which is clearly ahead of us – as our dear reader tells us – on points.

There – on the big picture, the macro view – we do pay attention. And maybe there, we are less of an idiot than we appear.

Ours is a "moralistic" view. That is, we assume that if we leave the dishes unwashed, sooner or later, they'll attract cockroaches. But, of course, that could happen any time.

Almost all other observers today use a more mechanistic approach.

They believe you can understand an economy – and are able to predict its next moves – by looking at dials and instruments, as if you were flying an airplane.

Losing altitude? Give the machine more throttle!

The trouble with the mechanistic approach is that an economy is not a machine. It is more like a living thing… infinitely complex, with purposes and prejudices we can't possibly know.

As for adjusting the throttle, forget about it. You can't plot a course… or determine the correct speed or altitude… because you never know where you're going. You won't know until you get there.

And you don't know how to fly a plane, anyway.

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Moralistic Approach

But the "moralist" is always wrong… before he is right. He notices when things seem out-of-whack. But he has no way of knowing when or how they will go back into whack.

That is what happened in 2000 and again in 2008.

Each time, the stock market was in a boom and the mechanics were proclaiming a New Era.

The moralists denied it. "How could investors make money from unprofitable companies?" they wondered in 1999.

Eight years later, they wanted to know how people could get rich by "taking out equity" from their own homes.

Both times, the doomsayers (including us) were way too early, anticipating crashes years before they ever happened.

Then, when the crises came, the Fed gave the plane full throttle – "printing" record amounts of new money. The mechanics saw a recovery. The moralists saw more trouble ahead.

And now, in the greatest bout of money-printing in U.S. history, we doomsayers see another calamity coming – the third major crisis of the 21st century.

Will we be right or wrong?

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--

Bad Ending

The Fed has set off a boom. Everything is flying through the air. The mechanic sees sales increasing… unemployment going down… stocks near record highs.

Even things with no apparent value – NFTs, money-losing businesses, Dogecoin – can be worth billions. Dogecoin, created as a joke in 2013, is now said to be worth $42 billion… or just slightly less than Hewlett-Packard, for example.

We try not to pretend to know things we don't know. And we have no idea why Dogecoin is worth more than HP.

But we believe this boom is going to end badly… like the other two. Only worse.

Boom… boom… Ka-boom!

Regards,

signature

Bill


Like what you're reading? Send your thoughts to feedback@rogueeconomics.com.


MAILBAG

Mixed views on Bill's Bernie Madoff essay

You seem to put Madoff on a pedestal when you compare him to the government. You are a strange individual. If you use the government to compare to anyone... all crooks would look good.

Madoff was a terrible person. He destroyed many lives. He deceived thousands of people. You seem to think if investors got 78% of their money back, they should feel good. You need to remember that Madoff was a crook... plain and simple. Please don't attempt to sugarcoat what he did. You make yourself look foolish.

– Michael P.

It's good to hear you describing the bankers as they are for a change.

– Richard S.

Meanwhile, another dear reader praises Bill for "Fools and Their Money Get Together"…

Thanks for the article. You are definitely a man of letters. Two things came to mind from my days of reading interesting and enlightening stuff. The Bible, Judges 21:25: "In those days, there was no king in Israel. Everyone did what was right in his own eyes."

Our social contracts are breaking down, so people do what they want with their fake money.

– Achilles Y.

Is the social contract in America breaking down, as Achilles believes? What might be America's next crisis of the 21st century? Write us at feedback@rogueeconomics.com.

IN CASE YOU MISSED IT…

Trump Buys Walled-Off Island Complex (What Is He Planning?)

You've likely heard about a "Great Reset" being planned the world over…

How elites want to usher in big changes…

New "green deals"… "fair" pay for all… and how this could even lead to bank balances being wiped out!

And Jeff Brown has just released a new video to connect all the dots…

Click here to view this important video now.

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