Tuesday, August 28, 2018

Wag the Dog

     Two days from this post, the current President of the United States is going to visit my home town of Evansville,In. This political rally will take place before a packed house at our new arena in the downtown and there will also be a huge crowd of protesters outside carrying signs rallying against Donald Trump. Here is a president who has had two of his campaign organizers convicted of crimes, who has routinely lied to the American public, who has been caught having an affair with a porn actress and a playboy model, then caught buying their silence for the purpose of winning the presidential election and currently is embroiled in an investigation that he colluded with the Russians to influence our election. In spite of all this, he still has the support of millions of voters and can attract thousands of supporters at every event. How can this be? Here's my take; it's the stock market that is the tail that wags the dog. The juice that the Donald has harnessed is the unrivaled ascent of our US stock market since his election. His support is based on bloated retirement accounts, jobs that a healthy economy can support, businessmen who are making fortunes running factories, wall street pros who manage our markets, and wealthy individuals who are getting wealthier by being invested in stocks. The recent tax cut enacted by Congress has given new life to our stock market by increasing the earnings of most American companies. Another powerful force unleashed by Trump is the deregulation of many industries. The combination of deregulation and tax cuts for businesses will prop-up earnings for the duration of his presidency assuming that it goes full term. Forget morality, forget human decency,and the dignity of the presidential office, it all comes down to money and the stock market at this time. On Thursday of this week, the Haves will be inside cheering on their hero and all others will be outside carrying signs of protest. What will change things besides a new chief executive? In my opinion, interest rates. When interest rates get to a level that causes investors to lose interest in stocks and choose safe but attractive alternatives, then some of the steam will escape from Trump's boilers. Right now the Stock Market has little competition for those seeking yield, price appreciation, and the safety of numbers. Our president has recently chastised his Federal Reserve Chairman for his intention to raise rates-a threat to Trumps powers. Further evidence is that Trump routinely uses the Dow Industrial Index as a metric for his performance as president. Someone recently told me that the stock market isn't everything. It is to the Donald.

Saturday, August 18, 2018

Change

 One thing is certain in investing in stocks of companies and that is change. Change in the business of the company, change in the valuation, and change of management. I can't think of a single industry that isn't undergoing tremendous change right now. The computer industry is a perfect example. Back in the early 1980's, Apple computers were the rage. They had 64k of RAM and no hard drive. If you wanted to store your work, you bought an external 5 1/4 floppy drive. The whole outfit with a dot matrix printer cost well over $5000. Suddenly, IBM came out with the PC, causing the Apple 2E and 2C sales to plummet. I used to buy Apple computers at yard sales cheap and clean them up, add some software games, then resell them to people who thought they were left-out of the computer age. Then along came the Internet and some internet provider companies started offering  a free computer for signing a 2 year contract for dial-up internet.That ended my little enterprise abruptly.  Most midsize and large companies used to have what they called a"mini"computer to run their operations. It took up a huge air-conditioned room and cost hundreds of thousands of dollars. Now days, companies just contract with "cloud"providers who run the operations in huge data centers for a monthly fee. The makers of mainframes and minis had to scramble to find new businesses to keep the doors open. Any technology company that can't constantly reinvent itself will either be bought-out or die. Currently, some of the biggest names in tech are trying to stay pertinent by transitioning from a manufacturer or software provider to service providers. Microsoft, IBM, Hewett Packard,Cisco, Xerox and many others are searching for new sources of revenue. The auto industry is also undergoing a huge change. Soon, the autonomous car will be commonplace. It will run on batteries and get recharged from household current. Successsful investors of the future will have to determine which companies will benefit from the new products and changing consumer behavior. I have no idea who the winners will be but I will be watching to see how the established companies compete with nimble upstarts who will try to unseat them. Instead of trying to predict the eventual dominate player in a new technology, I would rather invest in the component supplier who makes a "must have" part that is critical to the technology. At the current time these component makers for cell phones are out of favor due to slowing growth in smartphone sales which has investors spooked. I don't see any alternatives to smart phones at this time so I will be adding to my positions of MU, LAM, and possibly NVDA for AI exposure and autonomous technology.