I Heart Capitalism

The 10th Man: I Heart Capitalism

By Jared Dillian

Let me begin by saying that if you aren’t on Twitter, you’re making a huge mistake. I was encouraged to get on Twitter years ago by a tech-savvy friend. There is a learning curve. It’s not the easiest thing to get the hang of. Used correctly, it can make you smarter. If you could take a smart pill to make you smarter, you would take it, right? Get on Twitter.

So I saw an interesting table on Twitter—someone had taken a photo of a table out of the print version of Barron’s magazine and tweeted it to their followers. I am reproducing it here:

Nasdaq, Then And Now

Below are the top 10 stocks in the Nasdaq Composite Index.

The first thing you notice is that there’s been a huge turnover. Sun Microsystems disappeared, the box business was so bad Dell took itself private, and WorldCom… well, we all know what happened to it.

But the even more obvious thing is the valuations. If I’d told you 15 years ago that big tech companies like Cisco and Intel would end up with valuations in the teens, you would have called me crazy. And even if you had believed me, you probably would have thought that the P would go down, instead of the E going up.

I mean, think about this. The biggest company in the world—Apple—makes so much money that the stock is almost cheap. Some very smart people think it’s really cheap. I have at times considered making it one of my picks in Bull’s Eye Investor, where I make an effort to focus on value. And it has a $750 billion market cap!

I don’t mean to contradict myself in the span of two weeks, but it’s hard to make the argument that tech (or the overall market) is grossly overvalued judging from the column on the right. For clarification, I think that early-stage financing is out of whack, not big-cap tech.

Hold that thought.

Everything Is Amazing, and Nobody Is Happy

I bought a house recently, and we’re in the process of moving. My friend Adam flew up from Florida to help out. We were taking a break from lugging furniture around, and my wife was putting away some stuff in the kitchen. She took a waffle iron and put it in the cabinet.

“See that waffle iron?” I said to Adam. “We just got that from Walmart. $15. It makes amazing waffles.

“The old waffle iron we got 18 years ago, it made crappy waffles and eventually broke. It cost $80 in 1996.”

Adjusted for the increase in quality, the price of that waffle iron dropped about 90% in 20 years.

Then we started looking around the house at other things that are cheaper today. Ceiling fans. Adam told us that a good, quiet ceiling fan costs about $200 today. 20 years ago, it would have been much more.

Same with apparel, which once took up 11-12% of the average household budget but is now only 3-4%. Why? Clothes can be produced overseas for less. We don’t even have a textiles industry anymore.

Improvements in global trade, better technology, better manufacturing techniques, and better logistics are responsible for cheaper clothes, cheaper ceiling fans, and cheaper waffle irons. Not to mention TVs, which are almost 99% cheaper in real terms.

So of all the pet peeves in the world, probably my biggest is when people (usually on the left) gripe about stagnant incomes over the last 15-20 years without taking into account the truly gargantuan increase in standard of living that we all enjoy, and how much purchasing power we’ve received from the deflationary effects of free-market capitalism.

If median incomes were about $30,000 for individuals in 2000 and are still about $30,000 today, that $30,000 goes much, much further today than it did back then.

So then I start to think: Are human beings really that dumb? Do we need to get paid more every year to think we are getting richer? Answer: Unfortunately, yes. Hence the push for inflation.

You might have heard that Walmart is raising its minimum wage. The company’s management aren’t dummies. They’re well aware that gasoline prices have plummeted and that the freed-up money in the consumers’ wallets is plowing back into its checkout lines—just in time for a price increase. As a client of mine eloquently stated, “Mrs. Walton raised no dumb children.”

The Pessimism Bias

People generally think things are getting worse. No doubt about it: the world is going to hell one way or another—just turn on the news. I actually stopped using the Drudge Report as a news source about a year ago. It’s so relentlessly bearish, it was screwing up my decision-making.

However, things are awesome right now. If you’ve ever seen that Louis C.K. bit on how great things are, he understates it massively. Things are much better than that. You can get waffle irons for $15, and you can get Cisco stock at a P/E ratio of 13.

But I’m always on the lookout for the turn, for when things actually do start getting worse. Like, I’m worried about net neutrality and the FCC’s interventions in the Internet. Surely this will make broadband more, not less expensive in the coming years.

And if you really want to read a book that will make your head explode, go pick up an out-of-print copy of Kiril Sokoloff and Gary Shilling’s 1983 book, Is Inflation Ending? Are You Ready? Monetarists tend to think that inflation arises from too much money, but Sokoloff and Shilling identified another cause: “inflation by fiat.” They looked at the deregulation that was happening in the early ‘80s and predicted that inflation was going to drop precipitously.

Speaking of inflation, you can get the book for a penny on Amazon.

I’m not even saying the stock market will go up (though it probably will). I’m saying don’t be so freaking grumpy all the time. It makes people make really bad decisions.

Skepticism is different from pessimism. Pessimism as a strategy generally doesn’t work. Optimism generally does. But the pessimistic argument is so compelling because it seems smart.

If you time-stamped every doomsday prediction you saw in the news and put them all in a spreadsheet and monitored them over time, you would find that virtually none of them came to pass. Pessimism sells newspapers. You read about the one fatal car accident, not the 999,999 cars that didn’t get into an accident.

It’s okay to doubt. Doubt is the foundation of rational thought. But don’t confuse booms with bubbles, and don’t read any articles with “crash” in the title.

That should be a good start.

Jared Dillian
Jared Dillian

The article The 10th Man: I Heart Capitalism was originally published at mauldineconomics.com.
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27 Comments
Stucky
Stucky
February 27, 2015 10:05 am

NOW is the time to buy, baby!!! Is THAT what he’s saying? hahahaha

“Let me begin by saying that if you aren’t on Twitter, you’re making a huge mistake.”
—- from the article

My first clue that this guy is a fucking moran.
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“Adjusted for the increase in quality, the price of that waffle iron dropped about 90% in 20 years.” ——–from the article

Cheaper waffle irons, baby!!!! LMFAO. I don’t like sharing such personal info …. but …. I now gots me a massive Hard On!! I’m calling Ms Freud’s stockbroker son and I’ll be going all in on Waffle Iron Makers. So should you, bitchezz.
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” …. and how much purchasing power we’ve received from the deflationary effects of free-market capitalism.” ———– from the article

Should read — ” …. and how much purchasing power we’ve received from the deflationary effects of sending jobs overseas where slaves make one dollar a day” …… even if Lloph will say I’m full of shit.

credit
credit
February 27, 2015 11:04 am

we are so lucky!
we get to rent our old houses (now owned by people who bot them with free Fed money), pay $10-15,000/year for health insurance premiums and deductibles, pay student debt off by having it deducted from our parent/co-signer’s social security, pay $ to watch TV and listen to the “radio,” buy our cars with 6 year loans, and fewer of us than ever before are employed. but boy, have we got fuckin’ waffle irons.

Thinker
Thinker
February 27, 2015 11:22 am

Let it never be said that Admin doesn’t offer disparate points-of-view on his fantastic blog.

Aquapura
Aquapura
February 27, 2015 11:26 am

What a bunch of drivel. Jared Dillian, ex Lehman trader, has been spending too much time in the Hamptons and not enough on Main Street. Apparently all I need to live is some cheap waffle irons, ceiling fans and clothing. No mention of what has happened to housing prices in the past 20 years. There sure as shit hasn’t been a 90% collapse in the cost of basic shelter. What about food?? Everybody has to eat, right? I can’t name a fucking thing in the grocery store that hasn’t had massive price inflation over the past 20 years. Energy is another one. Even with the oil price collapse gasoline is plenty higher than the 90’s. Dont even get me started on health care or education. Things are great! I got some shitty SE Asian clothes and a fucking “made in china” waffle iron cheap but I’m starving and living in a box under the expressway. This is the type of person that deserves the wrath of the mob.

Time to go buy some “cheap” Apple stock.

Simon Jester
Simon Jester
February 27, 2015 11:28 am

Twitter is populated by twits and twats… Anything a sizeable portion of the pop-culture addicted populace is addicted to is automatically suspect to me.

I have a cast-iron waffle iron; it didn’t cost me $80 but with proper care my great-grandkids will still be able to use it. Buy quality, and you only have to buy it once.

The author is a complete douche…

Satori
Satori
February 27, 2015 12:21 pm

Mr. Sunshine Up Yer Ass leaves out more than one important fact

just an example

20 years ago my monthly cost for health insurance was $45
today it is over $700
and the kicker is
the $45 a month policy covered EVERY expense after a $1500 deductible
NONE of this 80/20 or 70/30 crap that can still bankrupt you

but I am happy that he can get a good waffle so cheap !

dc.sunsets
dc.sunsets
February 27, 2015 1:12 pm

HE’s right. Pessimism bias has hurt me. A LOT!

I don’t know what will happen next week. I don’t know what will happen next month or next year.

What I do know is that when stocks have TRIPLED in 6 years and articles like this show up [ http://money.cnn.com/2015/02/26/investing/stock-market-crash-bubble-investing/index.html ] then I figure the next major tidal flow will be OUT.

AAPL’s long term chart sports three waves of rally, EACH of them quite clearly exponential: 2004-2008 (approx 10X rally), 2009-2012 (approx 8X rally) and mid-2013-now, an approximate 2.2X rally.

AAPL already sports a market capitalization larger than EXXON/MOBIL, and is worth more than the entire GDP of Switzerland.

People LOVE apple. I mean, they think the sun rises and sets over the House That Jobs Built.

Maybe they’re right.
Maybe the P/E ratios cited by this author aren’t artifacts of creative accounting among CFO’s of major corporations. After all, we know that what they report as “earnings” are as clean and pure as the Pope’s underwear.

I’m sticking to my pessimism. Maybe the tide is rushing unnaturally away from shore for reasons OTHER than there’s been a massive undersea quake not too far from here. Maybe my urgent need to abandon all the fun and risk a heart attack sprinting for a nearby hill is just me being stupid again.

It wouldn’t be the first time my Chicken Little dance cost me.

dc.sunsets
dc.sunsets
February 27, 2015 1:19 pm

Optimism works most of the time because numerically, stocks spend more time rising than they do falling.

Bull markets last significantly longer than bear markets. This is historical fact.

What is also historical fact is that long periods of prosperity lead to contemptible complacency, and if the parasitism embedded during complacency is bad enough, bear markets lasting decades can and have occurred.

1995 to now, a 20 year period, is One Big Monetary-debasement Asset Mania. That’s how it looks to me, anyway.

If that view is correct, sooner or later this luxury liner Americans rich and poor have cruised these past 20 years will turn into a LONG TERM Poseidon Adventure.

Only those already sitting in lifeboats will avoid the Adventure of a Lifetime. The problem is that some lifeboats are on Port (gold, cabin in the woods, etc.) and some are on Starboard (cash, skills useful in coming difficulties) and not one of us can predict with certainty which lifeboat to clamor aboard and wait, sweating, while everyone else is laughing and enjoying the party.

Stucky
Stucky
February 27, 2015 1:42 pm

“Let it never be said that Admin doesn’t offer disparate points-of-view on his fantastic blog.”
——— Thinker

I am convinced that Admin does this on PURPOSE … to test US …. to see if, 1) we are actually reading the articles, 2) determine who is a dumb-shit.

Thinker
Thinker
February 27, 2015 1:46 pm

LOL.. of course he does, Stucky!

Llpoh
Llpoh
February 27, 2015 6:42 pm

Ignoring the massive drivel in the article, he did make 2 points of interest, at least to me.

One, if the P/Es he lists are correct, then by historic measures the stocks listed would not seem to be overpriced. Which indeed does argue against a market collapse unless it is tied to a general systemic economic collapse – which may well be nigh.

Second, his point re manufactured goods is absolutely correct, in line with things I have been saying. I cannot think of a product that is not both cheaper and of higher quality being made. Perhaps whitegoods- refrigerators, etc. may not last as long as the ones built long ago. But those goods by every other measure are of much higher quality – refrigerators currently use a fraction, and by that I mean a fairly small fraction, of the electricity the old ones use. Same goes for washers.

Cars are miles better than ones from the 60s, 70s, 80s, 90s, and 00s. Far safer, more reliable, etc. maybe not able to be kept on the road for thirty years, but other than that they are vastly superior.

Furniture is not as good as in past years. That is one of the few industries I can think of where the product is very much inferior.

As an example, I bought a lawn mower for a couple hundred bucks maybe 10 or even fifteen years ago. I have never changed the oil. Have not touched the blades. No new plug. Nada. One pull and away she goes. I check the oil, but in all these years it has never needed any. Unbelievable. If it stops, I will go blow another $200. Any effort at maintenance or repair is wasted given how cheap a new one is. HSF would be appalled, but I use cost benefit analysis, and the cost is not worth the benefit. Compared to the mowers I used as a teenager, which I worked on constantly, it is a leap forward.

The costs that are/will skyrocket are those associated with real estate, health care, education, and anything associated with industry that is and will be reliant on human labor (childcare, county services (a misnomer, I know), public education, etc.). Those costs will continue to climb steadily.

Look at some of the stuff you buy – say that waffle iron. Ask yourself – how can it cost so little? That waffle iron would have $5 in materials, $4 in transport, and maybe $5 in retail mark-up. That means there is $4 in labor, overhead and manufacturing profit.

To make that product, a US company would need to manufacture it in 2 or 3 minutes, including packaging and packing it. Bwahahahahaha! Not possible.

China is going to rule the world.

El Siete
El Siete
February 27, 2015 7:16 pm

China’s slave factories are American manufacturer’s wet dream.

llpoh
llpoh
February 27, 2015 8:53 pm

Siete – not in my experience. Business goes where it goes to maximise profits. It is not malicious. Business exists to make profit for the owners, and any benefits that flow to society from that are merely coincidental. The countries that demand corps act in certain ways toward employees – Germany for instance – are often the most ruthless towards other nations in business. Go figure.

Kill Bill
Kill Bill
February 27, 2015 10:26 pm

Apple?

They are making money off of FREE SOURCE software [Free BSD] sure they came up with Cocoa… That is why they are killing Microsloth. Who doesn’t like that?

Kill Bill
Kill Bill
February 27, 2015 10:27 pm

TES

starfcker
starfcker
February 27, 2015 11:42 pm

Llpoh, what are you, a second year B school shlub? Business exists for whatever reason society decides it does. Only clinton changing the definition of anti-trust allows the economic traitors that are the multi-nationals to exist. Other people besides multi nationals have economic interests, too. Fuck apple. Fuck china. That being said, hearing you’re handy with a lawnmower, if your gig don’t work out, I’ve got a couple of acres I’m too lazy to stay on top of, and I like to look real nice.

starfcker
starfcker
February 27, 2015 11:56 pm

On the serious side, certain things really are made massively better. Ford f-150s, made in kansas city, are basically immune to time. 10-15 years old, 250-300,000 miles, and everything still works perfectly, no rust, paint still shiny, leather still soft, no major repairs. They eat brakes and tires, other than that, rock solid. We don’t trade them in, they just hang around. I’n not really sure what to do with them.

Llpoh
Llpoh
February 28, 2015 12:15 am

Star – you are totally wrong about business. Society cannot force business into existence. If there is no incentive, business will not exist. It really is that simple. Business exists to make its owner money. Society cannot dictate otherwise. Or it will simply cease to exist. Take a look at how communism went for exhibit A. Communism tried to dictate to business. Oops. Venezuela tried. Want some toilet paper to wipe your ass? Oops. Cuba? Oops.

The minute no profit is available, sayonara, it is all over red rover.

My gig worked out already. But thanks for the offer.

starfcker
starfcker
February 28, 2015 1:16 am

No, but it can sure break some apart with anti-trust. All that went wrong when we let the fed counterfeit a million million dollars a year, and lend it to their chosen, at 0%. Who do you think ends up the ‘owner’ of everything that matters? It isn’t our kids.

Llpoh
Llpoh
February 28, 2015 2:08 am

Star realizes he stepped in the shit, reverses course, abandons the discussion on capitalism, and throws the fed in the mix in hope that he can cover up the smell.

The fed has nothing to do with capitalism. It has nothing to do with the reality of business existing to make profit.

Society can make rules and regs, but virtually every time they do they make the business environment worse. By strangling the opportunity to make profit, or by over-taxing that profit, society makes it more and more likely business will seek greener pastures. The US has made it difficult indeed to run a business in the US, or even to incorporate a business in the Us.

The US is the only country on earth that tries to tax businesses incorporated there on money made in other nations.

So US corporations, instead of bringing profits home, let trillions sit offshore. Literally trillions. And I for one do not blame them. It is the height of absurdity to tax made in other countries.

If society is too stupid to elect officials that cannot be bribed, or who cannot make sound decisions, business will respond in an effort to keep making profits – by bribing, by moving overseas, etc.

Also, the double taxation of business profits is a disgrace. First, the US levies the highest corporate tax rate in the world – 39%. Then it tacks on 20 per cent on dividends.

So if I own a business that makes 100$, I have $61 after corporate tax, and lose another $12 when I take the dividend. I end up with $49 out of every $100 in profit – a 51% effective tax rate for running a business.

What a stinking pile of shit.

Any wonder business spends millions, perhaps billions, lobbying and influencing.

starfcker
starfcker
February 28, 2015 2:54 am

Are you completely fucking stupid? I address every point you bring up, and you never touch what I bring up every time. Global corporatism is killing america. That doesn’t have anything to do with capitalism vs communism. Do you understand the concept of morality? I’ll bet you’re wet spotting your panties at the prospects of a jeb bush presidency.

llpoh
llpoh
February 28, 2015 3:14 am

Global corps are killing the US? Unbelievable.

Everything us killing the US. The FSA. The Fed. The Banks. Personal and public debt. Poor education. The list goes on and on.

Corps go where there is profit. And the US is losing there.

llpoh
llpoh
February 28, 2015 3:23 am

Corps are very simple beasts. They are neither good nor bad. They react predictably. They go where it is easy to make money and avoid places where it is not. If the grass is greener elsewhere off they go.

If politicians can be bought legally, they will buy them. US politicians can be legally bought. If the market wage is $10 an hour, that is what they will pay. If taxes are lower elsewhere, that is where they will go.

Blaming corps is like blaming a cat for killing a bird.

It is very easy to influence Corp behavior. Instead we make it difficult for them, or we reward bad behavior.

starfcker
starfcker
February 28, 2015 3:58 am

Or we bust them up. If the grass is greener, let them go. tarriff them and tax them on the way back in. These people are scum. Legal? I didn’t ask if you understand legality. I asked if you understood morality. And you whiffed again. On another thread, you mention runnng away. What do you think you’re running away from? The wreckage caused by global corporatism, and all the corruption it has spawned. Get your head out of your ass. Your kids might not be so lucky.
.

Llpoh
Llpoh
February 28, 2015 6:47 am

Hey star, go fuck yourself. Running away? Just had enough of being the cow.

You know zip about business or you would not make such stupid suggestions.

I have said what the problems are – taxes, regs, etc. but you suggest covering them up with tariffs.

I have written tax checks in excess of 9 digits in my life. Well over $100 million dollars into govt coffers I have generated by my skill, willingness to invest, and willingness to risk. How about you, Star? What exactly have you contributed? What a dolt.

If anyone should really object to large companies taking business overseas, it is me. But I know it is happening not because business is evil, but rather that the politicians allow corruption, that sheeple allow the corruption, that the tax rates, rules, regs, EPA, etc., are disadvantageous. And so the grass is greener elsewhere. And business loves green grass.

Tariffs are not the answer. The US can compete just fine. If they get a level tax and regulatory playing field.

The other thing nitwits do not understand is the vast magnitude of US exports. Putting tariffs in place will destroy a huge segment of US manufacturing and agricultural export.

By the way, manufacturing is a dead duck, no matter what else happens. Nothing can save it. It cannot be relied upon to create jobs. The world must change.

Stucky
Stucky
February 28, 2015 7:50 am

“I asked if you understood morality. And you whiffed again.” ———- starfcker

If I may jump into the shitpile for a moment ….

You WANT companies to me moral. I WANT companies to be moral — ie, do the right thing. Sometimes they do the right thing, sometimes (often?) they don’t (Pinto, Bhopal, etc etc).

But, morality has ZERO to do with anything in business. Ultimately, it is, as Llpoh says … making the owner MONEY. It’s always about the money. More often than not, such a “value” system leads to “immoral” results …. especially for large corporations, where everyone can hide behind the “it’s not my fault” excuse. Smaller companies, such as Llpoh’s have more of a conscience.

I appreciate your posts starfcker. It gets Llpoh’s juices flowing … and his responses are a learning experience for me.