November 21, 2019 The Intellectual Dark Web Things used to be so simple. You buy a stock, the government cuts taxes, the stock goes up. Actually, things still are that simple. And yet vastly more complex. We cut taxes in 2017, but future tax increases—large ones—are likely. The Federal Reserve is lowering interest rates because it is told to by the president. There are tariffs, things we haven’t seen in a while. Deficits are rising with zero collective will to contain them. And we’ve seen a sharp rise in authoritarian behavior from elected leaders of all stripes, globally, which is a source of consternation. There have been many articles written about how you should not mix your politics with your investing. Many. Except… occasionally, you should. From 2009 to 2011, it paid to be a far-right gold bug. The liberals were left in the dust. Since 2011, it has paid to be a liberal growth stock indexer. Maybe going forward, it will pay to be an MMT-er. Who knows. My point here is that the stock market goes through political regimes, much like it goes through volatility regimes. It took me years to understand this. My early investing years were spent thinking that center-right policies were good for the stock market. In general, that is true. And it is always and everywhere true that cutting taxes, especially corporate taxes and investment taxes, results in higher stock prices. Aside from that, things get a little hazy. Tariffs are supposed to be bad for stocks, but on a long-term basis, they haven’t been. As for deficits, the record is a bit mixed. Stocks have gone up when debt is both rising and falling. Now that the debt issue is becoming a bit hard to handle, you might think that stocks would begin to care. Clearly, they don’t. Crazy Town You can’t say anything for certain anymore. There are some folks out there—like Leon Cooperman—who say the stock market might not even open if Elizabeth Warren is elected president. I tend to agree. But maybe not! Maybe Elizabeth Warren gets elected—and stocks go up! Sometimes stock markets go up when bad things are happening. This was true in Weimar Germany, Zimbabwe, and Venezuela. There isn’t a person alive who can say with 100% certainty what stocks are going to do. After all, the conventional wisdom was wrong about Trump. The only thing you can say with 100% certainty is that it is going to be a surprise. I try not to make normative statements about the stock market anymore. I try not to say what the stock market should do. I try to predict what the stock market will do. One of the things I have been writing about in The Daily Dirtnap (and talking about on the radio) is that supply and demand ultimately drives stock prices, and right now stock supply is down because of all the buybacks. I’m not saying the market can’t go down, I’m saying it’s hard for it to go down. Basically, nothing would surprise me about 2020. Nothing at all. And that’s why… You Should Join A Call With Me on November 26 I’m hosting a call on November 26, where I’m going to talk about all this stuff: political risk, political regimes in the stock market—and what investors need to consider in order to take advantage of all of it, while not blowing themselves up. I’ll have a special guest with me: Ben Phillips of EventShares. ETF 20/20 subscribers may know him from the policy play in our portfolio. He also spoke at The Daily Dirtnap Conference (Dirtcon 2.0) in Myrtle Beach earlier this year, and was a hit. You don’t need to register for this call. I just wanted to let you know it’s coming. I’ll send you an email when it airs (and you’ll be able to listen back if you can’t listen live). End of Intermission, Back to Political Investing The poor gold bugs. For years they have been talking about the collapse of the dollar, the government going bankrupt, and stock market crashes. Their investing is clearly influenced by their political beliefs. News flash: everyone’s is. One of the hardest things about investing is to be intellectually malleable. To think one thing one day, and then think another thing the next. Even harder is to be politically malleable. To have one political belief one day, and the opposite belief the next. Impossible. I do not know one person who got it right from 2009 to 2011 and also got it right from 2011 to today. People take sides, they put on a jersey, and they play for that team. Which means you get to be right every so often, but not all the time. I can sort of switch sides, but not really. If it isn’t obvious by now, I am a libertarian-slash-classical liberal. Which means I have missed out on the stock market rally from about 2015 onwards. I have run into a few people in my career who have actually told me that they would rather lose money than buy a stock like Alphabet. Or whatever. That gets into a central thesis of mine—the vast majority of people would rather be right than make money. Ideally, you get to do both. But that is pretty rare. I remember buying fluffy tech stocks in 2013. It felt terrible, but I did it because it was the right trade. The trade worked. I was never comfortable with it. It was an unnatural act. If you want to be right, put it on your tombstone. In this life, we make money. I Had a Party I DJed at a party last week, and here is the music. I had a great time. Jared Dillian ETF 20/20: Your solution for intelligent ETF investing. Jared’s introductory service, helps investors use ETFs to make more money in the markets with less volatility. ETF 20/20 is a newsletter for every investor—order your subscription now | Other publications by Jared Dillian: Street Freak: Jared’s monthly newsletter for self-directed stock pickers. Learn how to pick and trade trends, and master your inner instincts here. The Daily Dirtnap: Want to read Jared every day of the week? 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