Time to Sell the News

The stock market is under heavy distribution, and for good reason: Even if the vaccines we’ve been reading about lately are as effective as claimed, they will be too late to prevent tens of thousands of U.S. business from going under. Supposedly, vaccines from Pfizer and Moderna are nearly 100% safe and 95% effective. This is wildly speculative, since no one knows how long immunity will last; whether those who get vaccinated will still be at risk for transmitting the virus to others; and whether mRNA vaccines will cause serious autoimmune reactions. These are hardly niggling concerns, although they didn’t stop investors from bidding shares into the ozone when Pfizer announced encouraging trial results two weeks ago. Stocks were already priced for perfection, discounting not only the prospect of a Covid-free world, but the possibility of the U.S. economy returning to the 3%-plus growth it enjoyed under Trump’s stewardship.

These are just pipe dreams, and crazy ones at that. Biden is not Trump; he is a political wimp, and the Democratic Party to whom he owes his apparent victory is extremely anti-business. They have said as much, and that’s reason enough for investors to brace for a ‘Trump rally’ in reverse starting sometime before Biden takes office. The coming bear market will draw irresistible power from the vaccine’s inevitable failure to effect an instant cure, and from the economy’s inability  to return to anything even remotely resembling its ebullient old self in the foreseeable future.

Folly’s Apogee

Under the circumstances, there has probably never been a better time to ‘sell the news’, since shares have been ascending heavenward since March on hopeful ‘rumors’ of a global cure. The effect has been supercharged by unprecedented credit stimulus flooding into shares, real estate and the consumer economy.  When the downturn hits, the Guvmint will get the blame for failing to enact a second stimulus package. It is true that the Fed and Mnuchin have remained in a standoff over the size of the next stimulus. The Fed likes the Democrats’ $2.2 trillion package, which makes Treasury’s $500 billion, Republican-backed offer seem niggardly in comparison.  In truth, neither would provide more than a temporary shot in the arm for a vast swath of travel-and-entertainment businesses that are headed into certain bankruptcy this winter. And even under the best of circumstances there is zero chance that a revived economy will be strong enough to grow itself out of a debt hole that has reached economically fatal levels. The illusion that a handful of giant tech companies can sustain economic growth, and that their shares deserve earnings multiple ranging from 35 (Apple) to 91 (Amazon), will come to be seen as one of the greatest episodes of mass folly in history.  It is of a piece with the equally absurd notion that the Fed’s money-printing scam can sustain the illusion of prosperity indefinitely.

  • Rich November 23, 2020, 11:14 am

    In 1954 Richard Matheson wrote the postapocalyptic action thriller, I Am Legend.

    It was the story of a cancer cure that creates an epidemic that wiped out 90 % of humankind and turned 9 % into adrenaline charged flesh-eating zombies.

    We note 107 years of the American Cancer Society did not find a final cure. American iatrogenic costs and deaths still lead the world.

    The I Am Legend novel spawned three films, 1954 film noir, The Last Man on Earth with Vincent Price, 1971 Charlton Heston, The Omega Man and 2007 Blockbuster Will Smith Army Virologist eponymous film.

    Anything done three times seeps into archetypal collective meme unconscious, echoed by 18 October 2019 Event 201 Bloomberg Gates Schwab Johns Hopkins scenario of a contagious mild novel SARs zoonotic coronavirus transmitted from bats to pigs to people, causing 65 million deaths in 18 months.

    That iEvent 201 immediately preceded actual Corona-19 declared pandemic hastened billionaire spokespeople to cry coincidence, never mind Planned Parenthood Population Control advocates, one of whom released what he described as malaria mosquitos into a Ted Talk audience and tested millions of vaccine doses on children of Third World countries with mixed results, with another who ran for President, yet another promoting the Great Reset, deliberate recapitulation of Biblical Jubilee in Leviticus 25:8.

    Harry Dent and Peter Schiff just had another Great Deflation Inflation Debate Friday out of Australia.

    Both agree with Rick’s conclusion of falling stocks. Dent likes Treasury Bonds. Schiff likes Precious.

    Since neither has Rick’s track record, we continue to appreciate Rick.

    In the meantime, Time to Say Goodbye ?

    https://tinyurl.com/hdq8cj4