Lame Thinking Is the Bull Market’s Secret Sauce

Rick’s Picks avidly follows the stock market’s ups and downs each day, as well as the way it is influenced by the Fed’s silly obfuscations. On some days it feels as though the cheerleaders at The Wall Street Journal et al. are overdoing it, generating enough hubris to stand economic logic on its head. But let’s not kid ourselves. Whether this rally has a week to go, a month, or even a year, the central bank’s narrative of an economy so strong that it could overheat and produce inflation is a con-job. For in fact, every penny of debt we’ve accumulated over the last 40 years represents pent-up deflation waiting to implode in some unscripted moment-from-hell.

Economists have made a fine science of explaining these boom times with data that ignore a darker reality.  Let me clarify just how grim our predicament is with a simple question:  Do you actually believe that millennials who can’t find good jobs, who owe $55,000 on average and live with their parents will be able to foot the bills for the Baby Boomers’ Medicare and Social Security?  Try and argue that monetization, or perhaps an explosion in household savings, will cover the shortfall and you’ll only sound like an imbecile.

Public Pension Sinkhole

The public pension system is in equally bad shape, and although this tectonic sinkhole is at least talked about, no one has a clue about how Illinois, California, New York, New Jersey, Connecticut and a bunch of other profligate tax-and-spenders will be able to keep retirement checks flowing when their respective treasuries are empty. For now, though, nearly every dime that states can raise with new taxes or deliberately mischaracterized bonds is going toward pension liabilities. And while the pols would have us believe the added revenues will help keep the public retirement system solvent, we can be pretty certain the next bear-market/recession will lay waste to even their most conservative assumptions.

That’s why keeping the bull market going is such a crucial concern for policymakers. Unfortunately, market leadership has narrowed to the point where the health of the stock market — or rather, the illusion of health — has come down to manipulating a small group of stocks higher and higher. One of them is Boeing, whose shares are in a parabolic blowoff (click on inset). Unlike Google and Facebook, which are just ad agencies on steroids, Boeing actually gets its hands dirty making real goods. This is rare in an age when so much capital is thrown at virtual providers like Uber (last valuation: $160 billion). It also explains Boeing’s wild popularity with money-men in need of a good ‘story’ to hawk their wares.

Uber’s Competition

Do those who get paid to throw Other People’s Money at Uber et al. even understand that the ride-hailing company is as vulnerable to creative destruction as the taxi fleets it has wrecked?  It’s not as though the entry barriers are formidable. There are probably a thousand entrepreneurs in America capable of starting their own version of Uber with homegrown software, plentiful labor and good word of mouth. Uber insiders had better pray that these ‘independents’ don’t start turning up on Sand Hill Road, bound for SFO, SJC or Tamarine Restaurant.

  • none February 27, 2019, 1:44 pm

    WW and Kraft this week, these were about a 100 per share in 2018 and take note of the 25-30% one day fall in price, 10b-18 a call being issue.

    Buffet he has had about 100-120 billion in cash for years no one seems to put that together that things could be changing a little bit more than most think.

    Winfrey, 65, is worth $3.4 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index. Most of her net worth is held in cash.

    Treasury stock once the company is pass that ipo are use to float for buying back or covering options issued out, so its just like any other trading account towards margin rules. Treasury stock is a debit and it still has to be counted towards the closing price for value. It’s the same towards margin rules if that value decreases then the debit raises, so you still would have to sell it off to meet a called from a declining market. It’s the same in any trading account, look at what could happen.

    Again have a great day Rick.

  • none February 27, 2019, 8:09 am

    The stock market meltdowns in 2018 obliterated $1 trillion of the fortunes of the world’s richest individuals, according to a list by wealth compiler Hurun Report.

    The U.S. had 584 billionaires, followed by Germany with 117.

    DEFICIT STOCKHOLDERS EQUITY!

    Home Depot earnings came out this morning (02262019) and the financial statement shows HD with DEFICIT STOCKHOLDERS EQUITY!

    in millions February 3, 2019 January 28, 2018

    Total stockholders’ (deficit) equity (1,878) 1,454

    —————————————————-

    10b-18 stock buy back stock repurchases are underwater from the Trump Tax Cut Date (Jan 2018) and massive ‘all in’ Buy Back year of 2018.

    10b-18 Buy Back year of 2018 = 2007 2008 CDO mortgages stock market crash

    Have a great day.

  • John Jay February 27, 2019, 1:59 am

    As far as Public Pensions go, the States you mentioned already have a solution…………..
    Just raise taxes to the point of Confiscation.
    Illinois is planning to give State assets to the pensions, California is working on killing Prop 13 so they can make 20k a year property taxes on a 60 year old termite infested shack a reality, None of them are backing down on taxes.
    Good luck finding a Judge anywhere that will rule that pensions must be cut to balance the State budget.

    The population of Connecticut has remained more or less stable for decades, but the size of Government budgets has tripled.
    In California, 13 million people are on the Medi-Cal state health care program.
    Anyone with an interest in history can see the accelerating drift into Feudalism.

    Twenty two million Government “Workers” who produce nothing of any value, paid two or three times what the job should pay, with Gold plated pensions, health plans and who can’t be fired.

    The Government has no qualms about de facto confiscation of real estate, cars, boats, aircraft, whatever, to keep the taxes rolling in.

    When the Roman Empire was in it’s death throes, it faced the same problem of Tax Fugitives.
    Their solution?
    Simple.
    Laws were passed that forbid anyone to move away from their locality, or to pursue any career other than the one of their father.
    And so the Dark Ages and Feudalism came to pass!
    Oh yeah, that solution is in the On Deck Circle, you can be sure about that!