Boom! (Biden Goes Big)

A potential economic boom in the making:

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#GivingTuesday

The great thing about investment success is that it’s within our control. Its not dependent on a political party or a president. Build a financial plan, be disciplined about saving, stay invested for the long term, remain diversified, and occasionally rebalance. Regardless of who wins tomorrow (and we may not know for days) our economy is projected to grow above trend next year due to vaccines, more government stimulus, and a Federal Reserve who will continue to stimulate the economy to get more Americans back to work.

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It’s your Tomorrow

The great thing about investment success is that it’s within our control. Its not dependent on a political party or a president. Build a financial plan, be disciplined about saving, stay invested for the long term, remain diversified, and occasionally rebalance. Regardless of who wins tomorrow (and we may not know for days) our economy is projected to grow above trend next year due to vaccines, more government stimulus, and a Federal Reserve who will continue to stimulate the economy to get more Americans back to work.

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Scientists Will Save Us

In 1954, 40 year old virologist Dr Jonas Salk delivered to the world an effective (and free) vaccine against polio, a communicable disease that was paralyzing and killing thousands of Americans every year, mostly children. Polio was first identified in America in 1894 in Vermont with 132 cases. In 1916 it spread to New York City where it killed 6,000 (27,000 cases). By the 1950’s there were 60,000 U.S. cases annually. We feared the atomic bomb and polio. But in 1955, 2 million American kids were vaccinated. By 1979, polio had been eradicated from the United States. There are plenty of issues with our healthcare system and Big Pharma. But in the labs of these companies, there is an army of ‘Dr Salks’ determined to save the world from Covid-19. Their work looks promising based on early test results.

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#GivingTuesdayNow


On April 10th, the historic LA Forum was used as a 'mega' distribution center for the LA Food Bank. Over 7,500 families waited 2-3 hours for groceries. A bit surreal that this is Los Angeles, one of the wealthiest cities in America. And a location where I’ve experienced so much joy, The Forum! I’ve enjoyed too many live music shows there to count. Due to the pandemic, the LA Food Bank has gone from feeding 300,000 per month, to over 500,000. The demand for food assistance is skyrocketing. Food banks everywhere need our help.

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Value Over Growth

I reduced our exposure in U.S. technology stocks in the first quarter. It was an unpopular move at the time. The narrative around Big Tech continues to grow more negative, as I’ve warned:

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Don't Panic, This Is NormaL

No way to sugar coat it. It’s been a brutal October, one of the worst on record. It took the stock market 9 months to climb 11% and less than 20 trading days to give it all back. Why? To truly understand the reason you would have to get inside the head of every investor who decided that now is the time to sell. Stocks always fall faster than they rise…fear is more powerful than greed. As I mentioned a couple weeks ago (A Long Way From Neutral), I believe the combination of rising interest rates (which make things we finance more expensive), the trade tensions (including tariffs, which are essentially taxes), along with comments from the Federal Reserve Bank, are the likely reasons for this pullback. 

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A Long Way From Neutral

For the first time since 2011, the 30-year mortgage rate has topped 5%. What’s the difference between a 4% and a 5% mortgage rate?  $213,862 (on a $1M loan over 30 years, see below). That’s how much more the exact same house will cost you today due to higher interest rates. You need to come up with an additional $600 per month, or $7,128 annually. In a high tax state such as California, one must make an additional $12,000 annually (approximately) to net $7,128. So it’s a thousand bucks a month that will no longer goto travel, dining out, sporting events, concerts, Amazon, etc. 

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Big Tech, the New Big Tobacco

If you don’t believe in the addictive aspects of these platforms, ask yourself why American teenagers are spending an average of five hours a day glued to their Internet- connected screens.

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