(ARE WE ON THE VERGE OF A RENAISSANCE IN NUCLEAR ENERGY?)
May 27, 2024
Hello everyone,
Week Ahead Calendar
Monday, May 27
Australian Retail Sales
Previous:-0.4%
Time: 9:30 p.m. ET
Tuesday, May 28
9 a.m. FHFA Home Price Index (March)
9 a.m. S&P/Case Shiller comp. 20 HPI (March)
10 a.m. Consumer Confidence (May)
10:30 a.m. Dallas Fed Index (May)
Australia CPI Indicator
Previous: 3.5%
Time: 9:30 p.m. ET
Wednesday, May 29
10 a.m. Richmond Fed Index (May)
2 p.m. Fed Beige Book
Germany Inflation Rate
Previous: 2.2%
Time: 8:00 a.m. ET
Earnings:HP, Salesforce, Afilent Technologies
Thursday, May 30
8:30 a.m. Continuing Jobless Claims (05/18)
8:30 a.m. GDP (Q1)
Previous: 3.4%
8:30 a.m. Initial Claims (05/25)
8:30 a.m. Wholesale Inventories (April)
10 a.m. Pending Home Sales (April)
Earnings: Costco Wholesale, Ulta Beauty, NetApp, BestBuy, Dollar General, Hormel Foods
Friday, May 31
8:30 a.m. Personal Consumption Expenditure (April)
Previous: 2.8%
8:30 a.m. Personal Income (April)
9:45 a.m. Chicago PMI (May)
Strong US PMI data last week brought back uncertainty about rate cut possibilities this year.Markets are now predicting only one 25 bps rate cut by the end of the year, with that cut likely delayed until November.US GDP data and the closely monitored PCE inflation rate coming this week could shift the odds further in either direction, possibly affecting USD prices as well.
Are we at the beginning of a resurgence in nuclear energy?
Fifteen years ago, the notion of a nuclear renaissance got shelved due to the political emphasis on renewables and competitively priced alternatives.
The 2011 Fukushima nuclear disaster in Japan also heightened scrutiny on safety.
Now, there are rumblings afoot that there is a resurgence on the horizon.
Electricity demand is forecast to surge due in part to the growth of data centres and artificial intelligence.Demand is growing at the same time that countries are in search of reliable carbon-free energy to address climate change.
After a spate of nuclear plant closures over the past decade, reactors are now being modernized to extend their service life and communities are showing interest in new plants as they phase out coal, according to Morgan Stanley analysts.
Various nations throughout Europe are endeavouring to shore up their energy independence in the wake of Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine. Morgan Stanley analysts expect that 20-25 new third-generation nuclear power plant builds will eventually take place in Europe alone over the next decade.
Curtiss-Wright is one stock poised to benefit from the increasing number of power plants and the modernization of current plants, which is designed to extend their service life.
The company supplies equipment, technical talent and advanced technology and innovative solutions in operating reactors to ensure their safe and reliable operation.
The company supplies all 94 reactors in the U.S. and all nineteen in Canada as well as plants in South Korea.According to management at Curtiss-Wright, modernization of current nuclear plants in the U.S. is a $7 billion opportunity through 2050.
Morgan Stanley estimates that Curtiss-Wright could realize $4.9 billion in revenue through 2050 on AP1000 builds.With this scenario, the company’s valuation rises to $488 per share, implying nearly 74% upside from Friday’s close.
I am not recommending you buy this company now.I wanted to inform you of the interesting developments in this space and the potential of significant investment in this area and be aware of opportunities that will exist going forward.
Market Update:
S&P500 – Advance in progress.
Gold – has succumbed to a short-term correction.We see chart support at around $2270. In the “Bigger Picture” the outlook remains bullish with the next target situated at around $2,530.
Bitcoin -Advance in progress.The next key targets are $71,957, $73,794 and $80,628.Support lies at a max. position of $63,000.(As I said last week, I would not be surprised to see a drop to around $50k in bitcoin at some stage in the future before strong upside rally takes hold).
As I expected, once the NVIDIA earnings were out it proved to be not only the top for (NVDA), but also for every other stock and asset class.
It was “risk off” with a vengeance.
The Dow ($INDU) and S&P 500 (SPY) suffered their worst day in a year. Bonds (TLT) took it on the nose. Gold (GLD) and silver (SLV) gave up their recent 5% and 10% gains, the worst action in eight months. Even the real estate data was awful, even though it lags by a month.
It gets worse.
Look at the chart for the Dow Average below and you’ll see that a very clear double top is in place. And now we have commercial real estate REIT’s (SREIT) suspending redemptions and gating investors lest they trigger a run on the bank and force distress liquidations.
I’m not turning bearish. But all this means we have some tough rows to hoe before we reach substantial new highs again. I’m still sticking to my 2024 year-end target of $6,000 for the (SPY). But it might be a good summer to take a long Alaskan cruise, climb a high mountain like the Matterhorn, or catch the latest shows in London’s West End (Kiss Me Kate, Les Misérables, or Moulin Rouge?).
I’m doing all three.
Don’t get me wrong. All this travel does not mean that I have become lazy, indolent, or a skiver. I actually get more work done when I am on the road as I don’t have so many local distractions, like unplugging the toilet (I have two daughters), trapping rats under the house, or getting someone to weed the garden.
In the Galapagos Islands I actually achieved ten hours a day of work because, dead on the equator, you have to meter your sun exposure carefully. Notice that my trade alerts went up in volume and were all good and my original content increased. I actually had the time to write what I really wanted to write.
With Elon Musk’s global Starlink Internet service promising 200 mb/sec and actually delivering 50, the world is my oyster.
And how about those NVIDIA earnings!
They were Blockbuster for sure, and for good measure they announced a 10:1 stock split, Taking the shares over $1,000 for the first time. Talk about a one: two punch for the shorts!
Revenues came in at an astounding $26.04 billion vs. $24.65 billion expected. CEO Jenson Huang called it a new Industrial Revelation. It sounds a lot like my New American Golden Age and Pax Americana. I reiterate by yearend $1,400 target. It’s as if Microsoft (MSFT), Intel (INTC), Dell (DELL), and Netscape all combined into a single company in 1995.
If by some miracle we do get a 20% correction like we had in April, double the position I know you all already have. Oh, and Mad Hedge hit a new all-time high, up 18.01% YTD and 695% since inception.
What’s more important here is not how spectacular a bet on (NVDA) a decade ago at $15 a share a decade ago was, back when it was considered a lowly video game stock. The implications for the global economy are immense. In means the massive $200 billion in capital spending for this year is too low. It also means the future is happening faster than anyone realizes, even me.
You know those popup 15-second advertising videos that have suddenly started appearing on your phone? They eat up immense processing power and drain your battery at an epic rate (more power demands). But they can be entertaining. Think of them as a metaphor for the entire economy.
Let me assure you that I’m called “Mad” for a reason. When (NVDA) suffered its last correction, I doubled up my own personal LEAPS position. That was when the bears were arguing for a selloff in (NVDA) prompted by an air pocket in orders headed into the Blackwell superchip release.
It turns out there’s no air pocket. Customers are buying the old (NVDA) chips as fast as they can at premium prices.
Dow 120,000 here we come!
So far in May, we are up +3.38%. My 2024 year-to-date performance is at +18.01%.The S&P 500 (SPY) is up +10.90%so far in 2024. My trailing one-year return reached +33.25%. That brings my 16-year total return to +694.62%.My average annualized return has recovered to +51.79.
As the market reaches higher and higher, I continue to pare back risk in my portfolio. I took profits on my long in (SLV) right at a multiyear high and just before a 10% plunge. That left me 90% in cash and with a single short in (AAPL) going into the worst selloff in a year.
The harder I work, the luckier I get.
Some 63 of my 70 round trips were profitable in 2023. Some 27 of 37 trades have been profitable so far in 2024.
Copper Slide Continues, down 7% in three days, as the extent of Chinese speculation becomes clear. The route has spread to gold, silver, iron ore, and platinum. Once the Chinese enter a market, the volatility always goes up. Speculators have fled a collapsing Chinese real estate market into commodities of every sort. Buy the big dip. They’ll be back.
S&P Global Flash PMI Jumps, 50.9 for services and 54.8 for manufacturing, a one-year high. Stocks and bonds took it on the nose, taking ten-year US Treasury yields up to 4.49%. Commodities were already taking a bath thanks to speculative Chinese dumping. Inflation wasn’t gone, it was just taking a nap.
Existing Home Sales Fall, down for the second month in a row at-1.9% to 4.14 million rates in April. The Median selling price rose to $407,600, a new record. The residential real estate boom is back! The nascent recovery in demand from a 13-year low in October is being hindered by limited inventory that’s keeping asking prices elevated
New Home Sales Tank in April, down 4.4%, and 7.7% in March. The median price of a new home was $433,500, 4% higher than it was in April 2023. Builders say they cannot lower prices due to high costs for land, labor, and materials. The big production builders have been buying down mortgage rates to help boost sales, but they are able to do that because of their size.
Weekly Jobless Claims Fall, down 215,000, down 8,000, the steepest decline since September. Federal Reserve officials are looking for further weakening in demand as they try to tame inflation without triggering a surge in unemployment.
30-Year Fixed Rate Mortgage Drops Below 7.0%. The housing market taking a step back in April after a strong performance in the first quarter.
To Monetize or Not? Most of us are still using AI for free. Providers are now facing a dilemma, “Growth at or cost”, or “Take the money and run” for systems that are, with the new $40,000 Blackwell chips, still incredibly expensive to build. Microsoft’s GPT 4.0, Goggle’s AI Overview, and Gemini AI are essentially beta tests that are still free (the black George Washington’s, etc). But Amazon is looking to start charging for the AI elements of its Alexa service. Your biggest monthly bill may soon be for AI.
Thousands of Young Traders are Getting Wiped Out, following the trading advice of London-based IM Academy. The guru, Chris Terry, calls itself the “Yale of forex, the Harvard of trading,” despite his own criminal conviction for theft. Since 2014 IM Academy has grown to 500,000 members taking in $1 billion in revenues. Terry had no formal education and until the late nineties worked as a construction worker in New York. IM is now under investigation by the FTC. Be careful who you listen to, as most investment newsletters out there are fakes.
US to Drop One Million Barrels of Gasoline on the Market, ahead of the annual July 4 price spike. The fuel will come from closing down the Northeast Emergency Fuel Reserve. With the decarbonization of America, who needs it? It takes 2 gallons of oil to produce 1 gallon of gasoline. Hey, what’s the point of being a politician if you can’t engage in pre-election ploys? Another dig at the oil companies.
My Ten-Year View
When we come out the other side of the recession, we will be perfectly poised to launch into my new American Golden Age or the next Roaring Twenties. The economy decarbonizing and technology hyper accelerating, creating enormous investment opportunities. The Dow Average will rise by 800% to 240,000 or more in the coming decade. The new America will be far more efficient and profitable than the old.
Dow 240,000 here we come!
On Monday, May 27 is Memorial Day. As the senior officer, I will be leading the annual parade in Incline Village, this time wearing my Ukrainian Army major’s hat.
On Tuesday, May 28 at 1:30 PM EST, the Dallas Fed Manufacturing Index is released.
On Wednesday, May 29 at 11:00 PM EST, the Fed Beige Book is published
On Thursday, May 30 at 8:30 AM EST, the Weekly Jobless Claims are announced. We also get the second read of the US Q1 GDP Growth Rate.
On Friday, May 31 at 8:30 AM the Core PCE Price Index is announced, an important inflation read.
At 2:00 PM the Baker Hughes Rig Count is printed.
As for me, It was with a heavy heart that I boarded a plane for Los Angeles to attend a funeral for Bob, the former scoutmaster of Boy Scout Troop 108.
The event brought a convocation of ex-scouts from up and down the West Coast and said much about our age.
Bob, 85, called me two weeks ago to tell me his CAT scan had just revealed advanced metastatic lung cancer. I said, “Congratulations Bob, you just made your life span.”
It was our last conversation.
He spent only a week in bed and then was gone. As a samurai warrior might have said, it was a good death. Some thought it was the smoking he quit 20 years ago.
Others speculated that it was his close work with uranium during WWII. I chalked it up to a half-century of breathing the air in Los Angeles.
Bob originally hailed from Bloomfield, New Jersey. After WWII, every East Coast college was jammed with returning vets on the GI bill. So he enrolled in a small, well-regarded engineering school in New Mexico in a remote place called Alamogordo.
His first job after graduation was testing V2 rockets newly captured from the Germans at the White Sands Missile Test Range. He graduated to design ignition systems for atomic bombs. A boom in defense spending during the fifties swept him up to the Greater Los Angeles area.
Scouts I last saw at age 13 or 14 were now 60, while the surviving dads were well into their 80’s. Everyone was in great shape, those endless miles lugging heavy packs over High Sierra passes obviously yielding lifetime benefits.
Hybrid cars lined both sides of the street. A tag-along guest called out for a cigarette and a hush came over a crowd numbering over 100.
Apparently, some things stuck. It was a real cycle of life weekend. While the elders spoke about blood pressure and golf handicaps, the next generation of scouts played in the backyard or picked lemons off a ripening tree.
Bob was the guy who taught me how to ski, cast for rainbow trout in mountain lakes, transmit Morse code, and survive in the wilderness. He used to scrawl schematic diagrams for simple radios and binary computers on a piece of paper, usually built around a single tube or transistor.
I would run off to Radio Shack to buy WWII surplus parts for pennies on the pound and spend long nights attempting to decode impossibly fast Navy ship-to-ship transmissions. He was also the man who pinned an Eagle Scout badge on my uniform in front of beaming parents when I turned 15.
While in the neighborhood, I thought I would drive by the house in which I grew up, once a modest 1,800 square-foot ranch-style home to a happy family of nine. I was horrified to find that it had been torn down, and the majestic maple tree that I planted 40 years ago had been removed.
In its place was a giant, 6,000 square foot marble and granite monstrosity under construction for a wealthy family from China.
Profits from the enormous China-America trade have been pouring into my hometown from the Middle Kingdom for the last decade, and mine was one of the last houses to go.
When I was class president of the high school here, there were 3,000 white kids and one Chinese. Today those numbers are reversed. Such is the price of globalization.
I guess you really can’t go home again.
At the request of the family, I assisted in the liquidation of his investment portfolio. Bob had been an avid reader of the Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader since its inception, and he had attended my Los Angeles lunches.
It seems he listened well. There was Apple (AAPL) in all its glory at a cost of $21. I laughed to myself. The master had become the student and the student had become the master.
Like I said, it was a real circle of life weekend.
Scoutmaster Bob
1965 Scout John Thomas
The Mad Hedge Fund Trader at Age 11 in 1963
Good Luck and Good Trading,
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/Scout.jpg324306april@madhedgefundtrader.comhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngapril@madhedgefundtrader.com2024-05-27 09:02:442024-05-27 12:22:04The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or The Top is In
Houston, we have a lift-off. And this time, it's not just rockets blasting off, it's the entire AI sector. NASA, the folks who put a man on the moon, are now betting big on artificial intelligence, appointing their very first Chief AI Officer. For savvy investors like us, this ain't just space exploration, it's a sign that AI is not slowing down anytime soon.
Picture this: a universe teeming with data, pouring in every second from missions and satellites. Now, imagine trying to make sense of that data mountain manually. Talk about a headache.
That's where AI swoops in, a supercharged brain that can sift through those data points like a prospector panning for gold, uncovering patterns and insights that would leave human analysts in the dust.
From data crunching to autonomous spacecraft and aircraft, NASA's using AI in ways that'll make your head spin.
And here's the kicker: NASA's not just keeping this tech to themselves. They're partnering up with government agencies, universities, and industry hotshots, ensuring that they stay at the forefront of AI innovation.
It's like a high-stakes poker game, and NASA's just gone all-in on AI. This isn't just a win for NASA, it's a win for the entire AI sector, and investors with their ears to the ground are about to reap the rewards.
Now, let's get down to brass tacks: where can we park our hard-earned cash to ride this AI rocket? Well, with NASA embracing AI like a long-lost cousin, companies developing AI tech are looking like a mighty fine bet.
Take NVIDIA (NVDA), the heavyweight champ of graphics processing units (GPUs). These aren't just any chips, folks, they're the brains behind AI and machine learning. And as NASA ramps up its AI game, NVIDIA's hardware could be the rocket fuel powering the next big discovery in space. Talk about a moonshot worth investing in.
But NVIDIA isn't the only hotshot in this race. IBM (IBM), with its trusty sidekick Watson and a whole arsenal of AI solutions, is a force to be reckoned with. They've got a stranglehold on the enterprise AI market and a track record of innovation longer than a comet's tail. That makes them a prime candidate for teaming up with NASA and other government bigwigs.
Microsoft (MSFT) is also muscling into the AI arena with its Azure cloud platform and a serious commitment to AI research. As NASA increasingly relies on cloud-based AI solutions, Microsoft could be the wind beneath its wings. Think of their cloud services and AI capabilities as the digital infrastructure of the future – a future you want a stake in.
Then there's Alphabet (GOOGL), the brains behind Google. They're leading the AI revolution with cutting-edge research and a slew of AI-powered products and services through Google Cloud AI. Imagine Google's AI lending a hand to NASA in uncovering new galaxies and alien civilizations. Now that's a collaboration that could send your portfolio into orbit.
And let's not forget Amazon (AMZN), the e-commerce giant that's also a major player in the AI game. Their Amazon Web Services (AWS) platform offers a vast array of AI tools, and they're no strangers to government contracts. With NASA's growing appetite for AI, Amazon could be scooping up those contracts like candy.
There's also C3.ai (AI), the specialist in enterprise AI software. Their laser focus on industry-specific solutions could make them a valuable asset for NASA and other government agencies, and their versatility makes them a dark horse worth watching.
Last but not least is one of the heavy hitters in aerospace and defense: Lockheed Martin (LMT). This is a major player in this arena, and it’s diving headfirst into AI and machine learning technologies. They're not just building better fighter jets. They're developing autonomous systems and collaborating with NASA to push the boundaries of space exploration.
Needless to say, the AI revolution is just getting started, and it's not just happening in the sky. It's happening right here on Earth, in our portfolios, with the potential for out-of-this-world returns. So, keep your eyes on these companies I mentioned and consider the possibilities. Investing in AI now could be like getting in on the ground floor of the next big thing – or in this case, the next big leap into the cosmos.
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/mhai-052424-1.png292512Douglas Davenporthttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngDouglas Davenport2024-05-24 17:24:062024-05-24 17:24:06AI IN THE SKY
The US House of Representatives passed a bill effectively banning the Federal Reserve from creating a digital version of the dollar.
Even though this action doesn’t specifically target the tech sector, the tech sector ($COMPQ) has a lot at stake in this bill.
First, the irony here is how polarized the US Central Bank has become in Washington to the point the Federal government wants to ban something from them.
It’s like taking away a dangerous toy from a baby.
It signals there has been a massive failure at the Fed with its blown “transitory inflation” call that has lasted over 4 years.
The Fed could equally screw up the onboarding of the digital dollar, if it ever happens, the U.S. financial system might never recover.
The vote passed but it still would need approval from the Senate and then signed by the President for it to become US law.
Still, as one of the chief opponents of the Bill, Rep. Maxine Waters, put it, "In fact, if this bill becomes law, we would be the only country in the world to ban a CBDC." Prohibiting "innovation" on the central bank digital currency front seems like a policy miss at first sight.
Waters has this backward.
The U.S. adopting a digital dollar would stifle tech innovation.
Money earmarked for innovation would likely go into capital that isn’t tightly controlled and tracked.
Innovation usually happens when big risk-takers deliver big ideas and the implementation of CBDCs would mean that tracking technology could shut down any “big idea” from the top.
China has tried the e-Yuan which has been a massive disaster with little uptake in the project.
Innovation thrives in an environment that offers freedom for the big picture thinkers, and a 3rd party tracking and monitoring apparatus isn’t good enough.
In fact, if CBDC were implemented, it would be the end of US-led tech innovation in modern history.
Few would take risks because it wouldn’t be worth innovating in this type of currency when there are others that would step over the line of privacy.
Scamming would be off the charts as well in this scenario.
Inserting unparalleled surveillance and individualized control would choke off free business and ideas become sterilized.
Anything new laid out would face a gauntlet of obstacles before getting anywhere near a consumer.
Think about all the middlemen on the way nickel and diming you the death as well. We already have that with the blown transitory inflation call by the Fed.
I am a believer that the less government, the better for tech business.
Europe is the poster boy for government-led innovation stifling.
There are no competitive tech companies in Europe that can compete with Silicon Valley because a tech innovator would be crazy to start and grow a company in Europe.
Europe is hostile to free business and tech innovation. They know how to tax and do it highly.
I could easily see how an integration of digital currency could end up in a dystopian situation if carried out by the wrong government.
Of course, the banning of CBDCs at the House level is a good sign that America is open for business, but it will need to become enshrined in law to have some bite.
If CBDCs are implemented by the Fed in the future, 90% of the Nasdaq market would fail leaving just 7 tech stocks.
It would in fact amplify the lack of competition that we are facing these days in the US tech sector.
I am bullish on the tech sector if integration of CBDCs by the Fed and Congress are banned.
https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png00april@madhedgefundtrader.comhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngapril@madhedgefundtrader.com2024-05-24 14:02:512024-05-24 14:16:11CBDC Banned By The House
“Someone's sitting in the shade today because someone planted a tree a long time ago.” – Said Legendary American Investor Warren Buffett
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/warren-buffet.png932738Mad Hedge Fund Traderhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMad Hedge Fund Trader2024-05-24 14:00:412024-05-24 14:15:45May 24, 2024 - Quote of the Day
On Wednesday – the International Day for Biological Diversity – the International Union for the Conservation of Nature released a report that found that more than half of the world’s mangrove ecosystems are at risk of collapse due to development, pollution, and sea level rise, the latest evidence of the growing threat to nature.The United Nations Environment Programme has called for a ‘whole of society approach,’ including the private sector, to address both climate change and biodiversity loss.
While there are thousands of companies around the world that are taking action to monitor, disclose, and reduce greenhouse gas emissions, few widespread mechanisms are in place to systematically measure and reduce business impacts on nature.
So, what are businesses doing to reduce other harms to nature?
It’s not just about the half a dozen or so gases that we measure in terms of greenhouse gases.The rest of nature also needs attention.
The Taskforce on Nature-related Financial Disclosures (TNFD) was launched in 2021 as a partnership among financial institutions, corporations, and market service providers with the goal of developing business disclosure practices that would better account for impacts on nature.
Executive Director, Tony Goldner, said the 40 task force member organizations realize that many aspects of business and industry depend on services nature provides, from clean water to the pollination of crops.The estimated economic value of these “ecosystem services.” as scientists call them, amounts to staggering sums.
Let’s consider the role of the humble insect.The U.S. Department of Agriculture said the pollination of crops adds $10 billion in benefits annually just in the U.S.Globally, pollination contributes more than $3 trillion to the world economy.
We are not looking after the insects on our planet.In fact, they are getting a raw deal.Several studies have documented sharply declining populations of insect pollinators in industrialized parts of the world, and scientists link those declines to business activities such as the conversion of natural areas for agriculture and heavy pesticide use.
Goldner points out that if we degrade the systems that provide these benefits to our businesses, those benefits won’t continue to flow into our business models.
At the World Economic Forum’s annual conference in January in Davos, Switzerland, TNFD announced its early adopter companies, and the list has since grown to some 370 companies that have committed to nature-related disclosures.
The task force is part of an emerging effort to get nature on the ledger sheets along with the other assets and liabilities companies track.Proponents argue that this is not just important for environmental improvement, it is a business imperative.
“The hard business realities of the 21st century - you must know your impacts on climate and biodiversity or risk disruption.” (Ethan Soloviev, chief innovation officer at How Good).
1) A huge demographic tailwind has kicked in during the 2020’s
2) The last time this happened was during the 1980’s when stocks rose twentyfold
3) Don’t believe today’s doomsayers, America is the first place to invest and will remain so for decades
4) It all sets up a Pax Americana that could continue for the rest of the century.
Remember the 1980’s, when investing was as easy as falling off a log? If you indexed your portfolio rose twentyfold.
Well, have I got some great news for you. We are about to see a repeat.
I believe that the global economy is setting up for a new golden age reminiscent of the one the United States enjoyed during the 1950s and 1980’s and which I still remember fondly.
This is not some pie-in-the-sky prediction. It simply assumes a continuation of existing trends in demographics, technology, politics, and economics. The implications for your investment portfolio will be huge.
What I call “intergenerational arbitrage” will be the principal impetus. The main reason that we are now enduring two “lost decades” of economic growth during the 2000’s and 2010’s is that 85 million baby boomers are retiring to be followed by only 65 million “Gen Xer’s.”
When the majority of the population is in retirement mode, it means that there are fewer buyers of real estate, home appliances, and “RISK ON” assets such as equities, and more buyers of assisted living facilities, health care, and “RISK OFF” assets such as bonds.
The net result of this is slower economic growth, higher budget deficits, a weak currency, and registered investment advisors who have distilled their practices down to only municipal bond sales.
Fast forward to today when the reverse happens and the baby boomers are exiting the economy, worried about whether their diapers get changed on time or if their favorite flavor of Ensure is in stock at the nursing home.
That is when you have 65 million Gen Xer’s being chased by 85 million of the “Millennial” generation trying to buy their assets.
By then we will not have built new homes in appreciable numbers for 20 years and a severe scarcity of housing hits. Residential real estate prices will soar. Labor shortages will force wage serious hikes.
The middle-class standard of living will reverse a then 40-year decline. Annual GDP growth will return from the current subdued 2% rate to near the torrid 4% seen during the 1990s.
The stock market rockets in this scenario. Share prices may rise very gradually for the rest of this decade as long as above-average 3.25% growth persists. That will take the Dow to 120,000 by the 2030’s a mere triple from present levels.
Technology and Emerging stock markets (EEM) with much higher growth rates do far better.
This is not just a demographic story. The next 20 years should bring a fundamental restructuring of our energy infrastructure as well.
The 100-year supply of natural gas (UNG) we possess through the new “fracking” technology will finally make it to end users, replacing coal (KOL) and oil (USO). Fracking applied to oilfields is also unlocking vast new supplies.
Since 1995, the United States Geological Survey's estimate of recoverable reserves has ballooned from 150 million barrels to 8 billion. OPEC’s share of global reserves is collapsing.
This is all happening while EV’s are taking an ever-growing share of the new car market, 7.6% in 2023, or some 1,189,043 vehicles, up from 5.9% in 2022. Total US gasoline consumption is now at a ten-year low. Alternative energy technologies will also contribute in an important way in states such as California, accounting for 60% by 2030 and 100% by 2045.
I now have an all-electric garage, a Tesla Model X (TSLA) powered by solar panels and Tesla Powerwalls, allowing me to disappear from the gasoline market completely. Millions will follow. The net result of all of this is lower energy prices for everyone.
It has already flipped the U.S. from a net importer to an exporter of energy in a huge way, with positive implications for America’s balance of payments. That eliminated our once-largest import and turned it into an important export, which is very dollar-bullish for the long term. A strong greenback further reinforces the bull case for stocks as it attracts more foreign buying.
The US is now the world’s largest oil producer at 13 million barrels a day and we are now fueling much of Europe with our natural gas exports, replacing Russia.
Accelerating AI technology will bring another continuing positive. Of course, it’s great to have new toys to play with on the weekends, send out Facebook photos to the family, and edit your own home videos.
But at the enterprise level, this is enabling speedy improvements in productivity that are filtering down to every business in the U.S., lowering costs everywhere. Humans are being replaced with Chatbots at blinding speed. When was the last time you talked to an actual human in customer support?
This is why corporate earnings have been outperforming the economy as a whole by a large margin.
Profit margins are at an all-time high. Living near booming Silicon Valley, I can tell you that there are thousands of new technologies and business models that you have never heard of under development.
When the winners emerge, they will have a big cross-leveraged effect on the economy.
New healthcare breakthroughs will make serious diseases a thing of the past, which are also being spearheaded in the San Francisco Bay area. I tell my kids they will never be afflicted by my maladies. When they get cancer in 20 years they will just go down to Wal-Mart and buy a bottle of cancer pills for $5, and it will be gone by Friday.
What is this worth to the global economy? Oh, about $2 trillion a year, or 4% of GDP. Who is overwhelmingly in the driver’s seat on these innovations?
The USA.
There is a political element to the new golden age as well. Gridlock in Washington can’t last forever. Eventually, one side or another will prevail with a clear majority.
This will allow the government to push through needed long-term structural reforms, the solution of which everyone agrees on now, but for which nobody wants to be blamed.
That means raising the retirement age from 66 to 70 where it belongs and means-testing recipients. Billionaires don’t need the maximum $36,156 annual supplement. Nor do I.
A Pax Americana would ensue.
That means China will have to defend its own oil supply, instead of relying on us to do it for them. That’s why they have recently bought a second used aircraft carrier. The Middle East is now their headache.
The national debt then comes under control, and we don’t end up like Greece.
The long-awaited Treasury bond (TLT) crash never happens.
Sure, this is all very long-term, over-the-horizon stuff. My markets are discounting this now. That’s how we got to Dow 40,000, up from 600 when I first entered the US market 42 years ago.
Dow Average 1900-2024
Another American Golden Age is Here
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