*Investors Blog*

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The best thing about BITOG is I get a inside peak at how the Boomer Generation thinks. Its useful knowledge to an investor since for the most part they own all the risk assets. The hubris explains a lot. The generation who most benefitted from all the debt are the ones that complain about it the most. There right, the debt will kill us, but the generation that created it will likely be long gone.
I understand you are analyzing and not "blaming" based on your post to @Pablo
But the blame among all age groups is what we vote for. I dont see the boomers complaining, truly, not at all. If anything they complain like me about the debt.
I live in a golf resort which has a significant boomer population with some younger too.

But if the young want change, then I suggest that they vote. I dont see that though, all I hear from many but certainly not all how unfair life is, they are the ones that benefited, many spoiled. Where they dont even drag themselves to vote. Im not at all taking sides here, the population among all age groups cannot think independently. This debt explosion with no end started after 9-11. Scare the people and you can get anything out of them.
Then 2008 comes along and the debt scale climbs forever higher, now at a point that it's almost unfixable without a 1920's style crash maybe.

Its going to happen, dont know when, I would like to know too so if you got any ideas let me know! *LOL*
Screenshot 2024-05-21 at 10.22.05 AM.jpg
 
My old company, Lam Research, BOD has approved a 10-for-1 stock split and share buyback worth up to $10B, the chip-making equipment firm said on Tuesday, amid signs that its business was benefiting from the AI- fueled jump in semiconductor demand.

AI relies on dense chip geometries, in which the deposition step and layer interconnects are critical. Lam acquired Novellus, which was #1 in dep. I worked for Novellus for 17 years and Lam for almost 10.

Tech for the win. Bring home the groceries.
 
But the blame among all age groups is what we vote for. I dont see the boomers complaining, truly, not at all. If anything they complain like me about the debt.
I live in a golf resort which has a significant boomer population with some younger too.
That was my point. They complain about the debt. Do they not understand the corelation with the massive increase in the debt and the increase in their risk assets? My guess is no - most do not.

Education opportunity for me - of your boomer neighbors presumably you talk shop once in a while. What percentage of your upper middle class retired neighbor's hold their portfolio primarily in stocks, vs fixed income like treasuries and high grade bonds?
 
That was my point. They complain about the debt. Do they not understand the corelation with the massive increase in the debt and the increase in their risk assets? My guess is no - most do not.

Education opportunity for me - of your boomer neighbors presumably you talk shop once in a while. What percentage of your upper middle class retired neighbor's hold their portfolio primarily in stocks, vs fixed income like treasuries and high grade bonds?
I never talk investments with my neighbors.
 
My old company, Lam Research, BOD has approved a 10-for-1 stock split and share buyback worth up to $10B, the chip-making equipment firm said on Tuesday, amid signs that its business was benefiting from the AI- fueled jump in semiconductor demand.

AI relies on dense chip geometries, in which the deposition step and layer interconnects are critical. Lam acquired Novellus, which was #1 in dep. I worked for Novellus for 17 years and Lam for almost 10.

Tech for the win. Bring home the groceries.
AI is junk science and only the latest scam being sold to ignorant end users. The only innovation is faster or near instant responses to database queries. Garbage in = garbage out.
 
...Education opportunity for me - of your boomer neighbors presumably you talk shop once in a while. What percentage of your upper middle class retired neighbor's hold their portfolio primarily in stocks, vs fixed income like treasuries and high grade bonds?
As an early to mid-boomer that I consider mid middle class that planned ahead, I hold zero assets in treasuries or high grade bonds. Nor do I invest in target date funds. Normally my estate is 90%+ in real estate, ETFs, mutual funds, or stocks. I have enough retirement income outside of these investments to meet my basic needs so I don't face sequence of return risks.

The last inflationary period (1978-198X) taught me to tie up money at low to medium rates was a fools errand. Too bad the banks didn't learn that lesson. Most of them are paying the price now, sitting on bonds and treasuries that would bankrupt them if they had to cash them in before maturity.

Right now is an unusual period for me, having just sold a property. I currently have about 25% of my assets in cash, waiting for an entry point in the market, or in other real estate.
 
Inflation is being propelled by deficits running 6 percent of GDP. Plus you have government spending in the low 20s as a percent of GDP - I don’t have the stomach to look at the latest figures - when historically it is high teens (17-18, as a percentage of GDP). That’s why you have inflation. That and a fed that stuck its head in the ground repeating “it’s transitory, it’s transitory.” Powell doesn’t want to be the next Arthur Burns so he will hold but in economic terms there are strong arguments for the Fed to go at least another half point higher, and zero arguments to cut. Plus the Fed doesn’t want more banks to fail like last spring. Want a fun and interesting read? Pull the annual reports for some of the large banks (and brokers like Schwab that have a bank) and look at the notes to the financial statements and compare ‘21 to ‘23 with respect to the reclassification of certain USTs from trading book to hold to maturity. Hold to maturity is a GAAP concept that allows these firms to avoid current marks to market on their bond inventory. If they had to take current marks, they would likely be insolvent from a balance sheet perspective, and the Fed keeps repo lending on these securities at par to prop up these banks. The Fed won’t raise again in part because it will likely create more stability issues for the banks. (How people who run a bank don’t understand that interest rate risk needs to be hedged is a discussion for another day.)

Now do I think we are in store for Great Depression 2? Not at all. But there are problems with the current trajectory and overall levels of our federal spending and resultant debt relative to GDP, and it will, at some point, manifest itself in a way that no one can foretell. The biggest thing in our favor is the Europeans are socialist and so while the Euro is stable there is little economic growth or dynamism there and that limits them to second fiddle. And no serious investor really trusts the transparency of the Chinese and the resulting stability there is questionable. For all our faults, we don’t hide them and they are plain to see. And thank the good Lord in Heaven that we still have people here, a slim majority, but a majority nonetheless, that understand that handing out free stuff to otherwise healthy people is pointless and wasteful. We have 60 years of the great society to thank for a lot of this nonsense. As an aside, as awful and morally wrong as segregation was, it did not break the black family. But you know what broke the black family, and has now spread to other groups as well? Welfare and giving out free stuff.

But back to investing, all of this is another reason to simply stay well diversified and keep costs low, as an inflation hedge, and keep taxes low for the same reason. Everything else is talking heads on tv trying to sound smarter than they are. Have a good day everyone.

I believe things will grind higher until the election, Santa Claus rally in December and correction in the 1st quarter of 2025.

Things will continue to be propped up till the election.
 
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As an early to mid-boomer that I consider mid middle class that planned ahead, I hold zero assets in treasuries or high grade bonds. Nor do I invest in target date funds. Normally my estate is 90%+ in real estate, ETFs, mutual funds, or stocks. I have enough retirement income outside of these investments to meet my basic needs so I don't face sequence of return risks.

The last inflationary period (1978-198X) taught me to tie up money at low to medium rates was a fools errand. Too bad the banks didn't learn that lesson. Most of them are paying the price now, sitting on bonds and treasuries that would bankrupt them if they had to cash them in before maturity.

Right now is an unusual period for me, having just sold a property. I currently have about 25% of my assets in cash, waiting for an entry point in the market, or in other real estate.
I don't blame you one iota. Which is why I think they will prop up the stock market at all costs - too many average people especially retirees, that are 100% in the market.

As for the banks - yes pretty stupid. But there only allowed to treat high grade debt as reserves, and t-bills paid zero at the time. Honestly they were in a tough spot. What they should have done is sold all that junk when rates started rising, like Jamie Dimon did - and took there lumps then.
 
That was my point. They complain about the debt. Do they not understand the corelation with the massive increase in the debt and the increase in their risk assets? My guess is no - most do not.

Education opportunity for me - of your boomer neighbors presumably you talk shop once in a while. What percentage of your upper middle class retired neighbor's hold their portfolio primarily in stocks, vs fixed income like treasuries and high grade bonds?
You know? You brought up an interesting point but we don’t talk finance. I thought maybe strange now that you brought it up but we didn’t in our last community either, Then I saw @Pablo commented the same 🙃

I suspect many but not all of my neighbors could care less (sort of) on their returns based on what I see. But I’m not in that camp *LOL* I’m comfortable enough to not have to worry but not enough to go buy an EV5 or 6 and use as a second car that goes unused days (or more) at a time 🧐 Kind of person? Yet they may think differently because we have our boat still and Harley and always running around doing things.

I don’t know what I am except much of my wealth is tied up in a mixed use building that provides good income where in retirement I am still cash positive and able to save. Still it’s time to divest maybe in a year or so. Looking forward to it, a bit complicated. It’s not just me.
 
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I believe things will grind higher until the election, Santa Claus rally in December and correction in the 1st quarter of 2025.

Things will continue to be propped up till the election.
It’s interesting because I know you are leary and rightfully so with 35 trillion in debt.

This is not scientific in anyway, but it can be an indication. I want to stress way too soon as it can be just a blip.
But out of the blue, not talking economy, my wife who handles promotional materials around the world and deals with companies around the world who supply them and the end-user companies tells me at dinner last night.

Just in the last couple weeks she has noticed that companies re-ordering materials have cut back from what they were ordering from last year. Some of these companies are large enough that at least a few people in here would know the names but not common household names so not that big.

Just to stress this doesn’t mean it’s an indication, but it will be interesting to see what happens and if the trend continues in her little microsphere of the economy

Edit - I just found out after I posted this, its not just her but same topic among co-workers.
 
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Target taking a hit, just saw this after posting about the conversation with my wife in the post above. Yet WMT is killing it soooo … got me

“Target's first-quarter earnings missed estimates, as its sales fell about 3% year over year.
The retailer saw consumers buy fewer everyday items like groceries and paper towels along with discretionary goods like apparel and home decor.

CEO Brian Cornell said the results show "continued soft trends in discretionary categories.”
Source= https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/22/target-tgt-q1-2024-earnings.html
 
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