Gregory Bergman
Editor-in-chief, CapitalWatch
Barr. Bezos. Hearings. The Fed. Earnings. More earnings. Tweets from the president suggesting he will contest the election.
An overwhelming barrage of market-moving news this week.
Also, did you know Kodak is a pharmaceutical company? Neither did I. Well, they are now.
A Kodak moment to cherish for shareholders, the stock hit a high of
$47 per share after a dismal year which saw the stock fall to $1.55 per
share in March.
Kodak's picturesque rise was due to a $750 million loan from the
Trump administration to make active pharmaceutical ingredients (API) so
we don't have to rely on India and China. As the Middle Kingdom finds
itself at the center of global controversy, this is a good idea. Spurred
on by more than 63,000 Robinhood.com trades, Kodak is now one among the
best-performing stocks, up 614% year to date.
But Kodak? Why not a pharmaceutical company? I have no clue. Maybe
it's time for me to take another look at Canon to see how their vaccine
is coming along.
In all seriousness, Canon (NYSE: CAJ) just hit a 5-year low and is in
oversold territory. Even sans a vaccine candidate, it is a long-term
buy.
Welcome to the Yang Gang
"We are all Keynesians now," conservative economist Milton Friedman
once said, a quote whose later iteration "I am now Keynesian in
Economics" was uttered by President Richard Nixon. Nixon reluctantly
embraced interventionist policies after a career of railing against
them.
Now, it turns out, we are not all Keynesians, we are all Yang
Gangers. In a Verge article, Yang was called a "fringe candidate," often
dubbed as the "candidate for the end of the world." And while the end
of the world isn't yet upon us, it took the emergence of a microscopic
novel coronavirus for some to see the big picture. Once scoffed at by
both the left and the right during his presidential run, Yang and his
signature policy prescription, Universal Basic Income (UBI), suddenly
don't sound so silly.
First proposed by the English radical Thomas Spence in the 18th
century, UBI has found adherents as wide-ranging as the
socialist-leaning civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. to the
aforementioned conservative economist and the subject of many a Ted Cruz
adolescent wet dream, Milton Friedman. Now, why would someone like
Milton Friedman support such a government giveaway? Well, two main
reasons: 1) Friedman saw the welfare state as a poverty trap, an
entangled web of disincentives; and 2) Sending people checks directly
avoids the perennially mismanaged, Byzantine bureaucracy.
Work, Like Life, Is Meaningless...Only Less So
There is this Protestant ethic which seems to have stayed with us
throughout the centuries. It is the idea that our work is integral to
who we are as human beings, critical in our efforts to extract meaning
from our short time on this planet. Freud said the two most important
things in life were sex and work (porn stars might be on to something).
We have been sold a meme our entire lives that not only will the kind
of work we do serve as our salvation, but that work in and of itself
(even terrible work) is somehow rewarding spiritually. Sounds good,
until you enter the coal mine.
Even Bernie Sanders, the geriatric poster boy of "socialism,"
criticized Yang's "Freedom Dividend" UBI proposal based on this a priori
assumption about human nature.
Sanders, who's never really worked a job outside politics, said that
"people want to work" and that the desire to "be a productive member of
society" is a "very deeply ingrained feeling that people have."
Right. Tell that to my brother who makes more now playing video games
than he did doing a job he hated. "Work will set you free?" Yeah, well,
that's what the Nazis said at Auschwitz.
Mr. Sanders, the populist-turned-pop psychologist, has since changed
his mind--for now, anyway. Turns out, people might not want to work the
graveyard shift as a cashier, particularly if it means putting
themselves in grave danger.
Do painters still want to paint? Sure. Do actors still want to act?
Probably. Do tech entrepreneurs want to keep... entrepreneuring? Most
likely. Do Freudian psychoanalysts want to keep projecting their own
sexual pathologies onto others? Most certainly.
But most people hate their jobs, unsold on the idea that collecting
money and putting it into a machine is anything other than Sisyphean,
let alone spiritually satisfying. You don't have to be a populist or a
pop psychologist to figure that out. (Being a cashier is the second most
common job in the United States after "Retail Salesperson" more
generally.)
This brings me to the forthcoming stimulus and the idiotic underlying
belief to which the Democrats at least pretend to adhere--that
unemployed people would work if they could even if they made the same or
more money not working.
The 68-Percenters
According to researchers at the University of Chicago's Becker
Friedman Institute, 68% of persons who are eligible for Unemployment
Insurance will make more money not working than they did working. And
about 20% will make--wait for it--twice as much as they did while
working.
Are we really to believe that these people would rather work than
stay safely at home playing video games and escaping from the horror of
their "professional" lives both before and during this scourge?
Of course not.
It is true that we need to do everything can right now to stave off
disaster. The number of Americans filing new claims for state
unemployment benefits totaled 1.43 million last week, the Labor
Department reported Thursday; the drop in GDP in the second quarter was
the second-worst in history, falling 9.3%.
Not only are stimulus checks and additional unemployment benefits critical today, but they are critical in perpetuity.
Conservatism is dead. Trump killed it long ago, and now Republicans
find themselves even advocating for UBI, however temporary. There is no
going back--and that is a good thing.
But $600? How can anyone insist it is sound policy to give someone unemployed more than they make when they were employed?
Republicans instead are calling for chintzy $200 per week in
additional federal assistance for the unemployed as a temporary measure
until the whole unemployment system is revamped, eventually providing
the unemployed with 70% of their former earnings through a combination
of state and federal help. From $600 to $200 is a massive drop,
especially considering the circumstances. It is also political suicide.
But what is the right figure? $400? $350? It is hard to say, but it
cannot stay at the $600-plus-state-benefits for everyone out of work.
People cannot make more not working than working and be motivated to
work.
That isn't Monetarism or Keynesianism or Communism or Capitalism: It is Idiotism.
There is a real chance now that, through the fog of this pandemic,
even Republican voters will see the world through Yang's eyes. Let us
not blow it by giving UBI (or added unemployment benefits) a bad name by
divorcing these proposals from all common sense. This current
half-hearted and overly generous iteration of UBI is not what Yang
called for. For UBI to do the job it is meant to do (i.e. grow the
economy from the bottom up) it must be permanent and supplemental, not
interim and primary.
Yes, relief must be given right now. But if we do not do this smartly
(or at least honestly) we run the risk of degrading the concept and the
potentially permanent implementation of UBI. We need a long-term plan
for UBI after the pandemic for nearly everyone, not just temporary
disincentives for the unemployed supported by a privilege-based
platitudinal romanticization of the American work ethic.
Ever wash dishes at a diner? I did, in high school. The first night I
threw up in the sink after smelling the food I dug out of the drain. I
was seen and fired on spot.
A Tale of Two Economies
As earnings this week showed us, we have two economies in this
country which the virus has exposed and temporarily exacerbated.
Facebook, Amazon, Apple--all these stocks went up and took the Nasdaq
along with it, while just about everything that wasn't tech or gold
fell. Mid-term, these are the stocks to buy. Long-term, value is in big
undervalued companies in sectors hard hit like aerospace and industrial
and some now archaic-sounding tech names like Intel and IBM. But even
longer term, it is back to these tech stocks once again.
In 10 or 20 years, all those cashiers and waiters and retail
salespeople won't be out of work due to a virus, they will be out of
work due to a robot. This pandemic has pulled back the curtains to
reveal the haunting future that Yang has long warned awaits.
So, if you are making more now unemployed than you did working, take
that money and buy ROBO or BOTZ, two ETFs focused on artificial
intelligence and automation, both of which are smart buys as they vie
for robot ETF market dominance.
Just about everyone is now, reluctant or not, a Yang Ganger. We must
make the right moves to ensure that membership will last not just
through 2020, but through 2030 and beyond.
Okay, now back to work putting in this chart below and updating stock
prices. Maybe if I painted the chart in oils instead it would be more
fulfilling? Next time, perhaps.
(Oh, BTW, my Robinhood.com foray into options has been fun. I made $600 this week. Not great, but sure beats working.)
Bergman Buy Index:
Performance since Feb. 28. All stocks now sold and profit put into cash.
Bergman Buy Index 1: Started Feb. 28 with $100k hypothetical capital
Ending Capital: $173,546.
$100k back in New Index; $73,546k held in Cash. (Sorry, I do not trust myself or the market to let all profits ride.)
This index to be unchanged for the next three months additions, but
no subtractions. Obviously, some companies are both good shorter and
long term bets--like AMD.
(For more information on buy and sell signals in options and momentum
plays on small-cap equities (like buying the dips in Zoom and
Shopify--which you should do) email me at
Gregory.bergman@capitalwatch.com.)
Bergman Buy Index
Company Name Ticker Exchange 7.31 Open Price
Long-term Movers,
Undervalued (12-24 months)
Intel INTC Nasdaq 48.13
IBM IBM NYSE 122.71
Boeing BA NYSE 161.55
Raytheon RTN NYSE 57.36
General Dynamics GD NYSE 148.23
Mid-Term Movers (6-12 months)
Big Lots, Inc. BIG NYSE 39.68
Apple Inc. AAPL Nasdaq 411.54
General Electric Company GE NYSE 6.25
NVIDIA Corporation NVDA Nasdaq 422.53
Sony Corporation SNE NYSE 76.98
Netflix, Inc. NFLX Nasdaq 488.29
Tesla, Inc. TSLA Nasdaq 1,515.00
Amazon.com, Inc. AMZN Nasdaq 3,244.00
Canopy Growth Corporation CGC NYSE 18.52
Best Buy Co., Inc. BBY NYSE 100.25
Dollar General Corporation DG NYSE 191.38
Activision Blizzard, Inc. ATVI Nasdaq 81.16
Fortinet, Inc. FTNT Nasdaq 138.4
Aphria Inc. APHA Nasdaq 4.91
Uber Technologies, Inc. UBER NYSE 30.4
Bank of America Corporation BAC NYSE 24.93
Regeneron Pharmaceuticals, Inc. REGN Nasdaq 634.68
Walmart Inc. WMT NYSE 129.65
Target Corporation TGT NYSE 124.28
Pfizer Inc. PFE NYSE 38.67
Johnson & Johnson JNJ NYSE 146.66
Canon Inc. CAJ NYSE 16.35
Kirkland Lake Gold Ltd KL NYSE 52.02
Shorter-Term
(3-6 months)
Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. AMD Nasdaq 78.67
Zoom Video Communications, Inc. (ZM) ZM Nasdaq 268.58
Square, Inc. SQ NYSE 131.34
PayPal Holdings, Inc. PYPL Nasdaq 193.05
Moderna, Inc. MRNANasdaq 78.2
United Parcel Service, Inc. UPS NYSE 141.82
FedEx Corporation FDX NYSE 172
HUYA Inc. HUYA NYSE 23.71
Baozun Inc. BZUN Nasdaq 41.24
Alibaba Group Holding Limited BABA NYSE 254.2
JD.com, Inc. JD Nasdaq 62.95
Tencent Holdings Limited TCEHY OTCBB 69.12
Gregory Bergman
Editor-in-chief, CapitalWatch
(The opinions expressed in this article do not reflect the position
of CapitalWatch or its journalists. The analyst has no business
relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.
Information provided is for educational purposes only and does not
constitute financial, legal, or investment advice)