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COVID, Bezos, Serfs and Other Risks to America’s Economic Health

real financial advice

Below we look at  the currents impacting America’s economic health. The symptoms (and culprits) might surprise you.

Biases

It’s no secret what I think of Facebook—I find it sort of appalling at so many levels, from the cultural to the financial, but that’s a bias not a fact, and this is not another report on Facebook, just a confession of a bias.

Yet mixed within one’s biases, including my own, there often lie certain facts worth sharing, as we do below when measuring the objective threats to America’s economy in general and its capitalism in particular, as both are at historical levels of risk.

Buckle up…

Stepping Back

Every now and then it’s worth stepping back from the markets and their signals and doing a general pulse-check on the systems and people living in the real economy, as I have done on occasion here, here and here, for example.

Toward that end, I’ve given blunt opinions on what I consider to be empirically clear signs that capitalism has died in the U.S. at the hands of a subtle but shameless form of Wall Street socialism.

The updated observations below track America’s slow decoupling from sound economic policy and an open yet ignored decoupling from the core majesty of capitalism itself.

The New Feudalism

American exceptionalism, as current COVID and capitalism disasters confirm, has morphed into a distortion that resembles more of a comorbidity than a guiding light, and a system more akin to feudalism than capitalism.

Despite a prior reputation for leading the world in innovation, problem solving and health care, for example, the U.S. is witnessing record hospitalizations in a nation comprising 5% of the global population yet 25% of its COVID infections.

Regardless of one’s politics, the COVID crisis is now an open symptom of failure, not exceptionalism.

The same is true of the current crisis facing American capitalism.

In its purest form, capitalism IS an exceptional system, yet sadly one that is morphing into something that is anything but exceptional.

A Critical Turning Point

Regardless of legitimately debatable views on how individuals and policy makers (from central bankers to health organizations) have handled the pandemic, we can all agree that COVID represents a turning point.

The question now is whether it will be a turning point for the worse or the better.

One way to forecast this direction is by tracking the current health of U.S. capitalism.

Capitalism Re-Assessed

Today, with central banks engaged in open Wall Street socialism wherein artificially repressed rates and unlimited QE have directly benefited the two largest asset classes in America, namely real estate and stocks, we can’t deny the cause-and-effect powers (as well as beneficiaries) of such “accommodation.”

It’s an objective fact that 80 % of those assets are owned by the top 10%.

Does that feel like capitalism working at a national level, or something far more targeted and far less “free-market” driven?

The very concept of central-bank supported (and Congress-lobbied) capitalism is itself a contradiction in terms, and requires on honest re-assessment (and some hard questions) regarding the true meaning of capitalism.

Can any system, market or sector, for example, that is directly and exclusively supported by trillions in fiat money creation and decades of artificially repressed (and unnaturally low) interest rates by definition be labeled “free market,” “natural” or even “capitalistic”?

Be honest.

And has the $6+ trillion in Fed money creation since 2008 truly “trickled down” to the real economy or has it primarily benefited risk asset markets like stocks on the S&P 500…

Bezos

…or real estate owners and their ambitious, commission-based brokers:

Bezos

Again: Be honest.

Whether you be in the top 10% or the bottom 10%, the answer to such questions is empirically obvious.

Such asset price inflation (i.e. bubbles) in everything from tech stocks to beach front real estate is not symbolic of the lauded and natural “Darwinism” of competitive, free-market capitalism.

Instead, such targeted bubbles for the top 10% (and the consequent wealth disparity that followed for the rest of the country) are dangerous indicators of a kind of post-modern feudalism.

That is, we are seeing a questionable cabal of policy makers subsidizing (aka “accommodating”) a distinct minority of beneficiaries and then calling the result “economic stimulus” as the rest of the country gets poorer by the day.

Bezos

But again, is that capitalism?

Capitalism, whether defined by Adam Smith or abused by Gordon Gecko, is a dynamic, full-body contact sport of almost blood-thirsty competition played on a level playing field of new ideas, equal capital costs and individual effort.

In addition, true capitalism, the kind our fathers knew, was equally designed to create a broad rather than narrow class of winners and prosperity over time.

Do the above charts suggest a broad class of winners?

Capitalism, of course, should reward executives. But by how much?

Since 1978, CEO compensation has grown by 940%, whereas worker compensation for the same period has grown by 12%. In 1965, the average ratio of CEO to median employee salaries was 21:1, today it’s over 320:1.

For Jeff Bezos at Amazon, the ratio is 1.2 million to 1.

Is such data a sign of an evolving capitalism or an indicator of something far more disturbing?

In Native American culture, I’ve read that it was customary to do an intervention if any one member of a tribe had accumulated too many objects or things, as if the greed, hoarding and tee-pee filled with too much “stuff” suggested a kind of sickness.

If that’s the case, then it would appear that Mr. Bezos would need a full Division of shamans to cure what appears to be an almost irrational psychopathy, regardless of one’s view on executive pay.

Wealth accumulated at that level is not a reward of capitalism, but a signal to something harking back to the aristocratic excess of the Bourbons and Romanovs, and we all know how that ended for them…

Fair Competition vs. A Rigged Game

Unfortunately, there are other and increasingly clear signs of rigged policies (from the Fed, Congress, SEC or White House) which have less to do with fair competition and compensation—the keystones of healthy capitalism—and far more do with an extended yet media-ignored paradigm of favoritism—i.e. cheating.

Today, a kind of pseudo capitalism has emerged which is neither empathetic toward (or beneficial to) its host nation.

Instead, we have a distorted model of capitalism whose benefits and empathies are uniquely targeted to a singular (parasitic?) group of companies, individuals and markets.

For every member of Congress, for example, there are at least four financial lobbyists (from banks and big-tech) scurrying to influence (i.e. purchase) favorable policy decisions.

This suggests healthy capitalism is under the influence of bribery not policy, and backroom deals rather than fair competition.

Of course, any system that is inherently rigged, like the 1919 World Series, is inherently flawed.

Capitalism, when rigged, is no less disgraceful. I worry that abuses of capitalism will lead to systems far, far worse, including the slow creep of socialism emerging from the understandably angry yet history-ignorant populism that is rising by the day.

We see this rigged game playing out in real time as the weak majority get weaker and the strong minority get stronger in a backdrop that is not a capitalistic “survival of the fittest,” but rather a feudalistic survival of the best-connected.

Record breaking wealth disparity as well as the open and shameful disconnect between a tanking economy and a rising (Fed-supported) securities market is not an homage to capitalism, but rather open proof of its failure.

Tesla, Apple and Amazon—The New Capitalism?

Take Tesla. It’s a visionary company, but its stock has been skyrocketing on growth projections and historically low borrowing costs, easily managed by exaggerated share price inflation.

In March, it was the 4th most valuable auto company in the world, today it is now the most valuable, worth more than Daimler, Toyota and Volkswagen combined.

Or Apple. It took 12 years to get a $1 trillion market cap, but only 5 months to recently reach $2 trillion.

Are such growth stories a consequence of fair, legitimate and natural free-market capitalism, or have they enjoyed an unfair advantage from the policy jocks?

Consider Amazon.

With online sales skyrocketing as citizens are locked at home, Amazon has hired hundreds of thousands of minimum-wage warehouse workers to keep boxes coming to your doorsteps.

We can applaud Amazon for its job creation and raising of the minimum wage.

But let us not forget the larger picture in which AMAZON has gamified municipalities through its absurd HQ2 plan which transfers wealth from city police, fire and school districts to its shareholders.

Nor should we forget that despite years of a profitless balance sheet and legal tax avoidance, Amazon’s share price bubble has allowed it to literally kill, gut and bury small businesses across the nation.

At the same time, by owning the rails and engaging in anti-competitive behavior while dumping products and prices due to their access to cheap capital (against which no other companies can compete), Amazon has slaughtered rather than leveled the fair “playing field” upon which true capitalism was designed to be played.

Instead, names like Amazon, Tesla and Apple have prompted openly pro-capitalist thought leaders like Scott Galloway to question whether the pandemic was created, or at least co-opted, for taking the top 10% into the top 1% while sending the remaining 90% downward.

Two Americas, Zero Capitalism

A recent study by the Robin Hood Foundation, for example, revealed that 32% of the people in New York, the homefield of Wall Street, have been forced to go to a food bank since the onset of the pandemic.

That’s more people in the Empire State seeking free food than those who possess a college degree.

Meanwhile, 1/3 of greater America is worried about paying their rent.

By pure math, we now live in a Dickinsonian backdrop by which it is the “best of times” for a tiny minority (from Face-shot real estate brokers to Facebook tech investors) and the “worst of times” for the broader population.

Is it truly fair to castigate the real America as “losers” in a so-called Capitalistic competition whose rigged rules and policies ensured who the winners would be before the game could even start?

The rigged game playing right under our noses in the U.S. is not free market capitalism, just as an S&P sitting atop a big, fat, $7+ trillion Fed air-bag, sure as hell aint a free market.

Natural price discovery, as all honest Wall Street veterans know, died years ago. Nod to Greenspan, Bernanke, Yellen and Powell.

As a member of the Wall Street elite who benefited from such anti-capitalistic capitalism, I can’t ignore facts merely to alleviate a fake conscience.

The simple truth is that current U.S. markets, competition and politics have nothing to do with fair competition and hence nothing to do with capitalism.

The New Feudalism

As Galloway recently observed, “we are barreling toward a nation wherein 3 million lords are being served by 350 million serfs,” simply because US policy decided to favor corporations over populations as capitalism “collapses upon itself.”

Nor can this modern version of so-called capitalism rely on the “better angel” generosities of billionaires like Bezos or Musk to save the system.

The moral character of overpaid CEO’s will not bring the dying middle class back to its glory days.

Frankly, it’s up to the citizens themselves to get informed rather than angry.

Knowledge begets better results than pitch forks.

Yet pitchforks require less thinking, and the risk of increased social unrest in the U.S. goes up each day as living conditions go down each day for a large swath of the U.S. population.

America is falling not just because capitalism lost its way or policy-supported CEO’s lack the character and accountabilities of the past.

It’s because citizens and their lobbied (bribed) leaders—red, blue and purple–have lost their sanity and are screaming at each other rather than opening a single economics, math, ethics, history or anti-trust book.

Today, the crowd gets its education from tweets and twits, not informed thoughts, sound leadership and patient knowledge or actual book reading.

Bread & Circus, Fear & Division

This, of course, makes the mal-informed majority (i.e. the bottom 90%) easier to trick and manipulate.

Decision-makers on top, from ancient Rome to Herr Goebbels, have always understood, and hence exploited, such wide-spread ignorance.

In short, policy anti-heroes serve a mal-informed population a mixed cocktail of either: 1) bread & circus (from Netflix to celebrity virtue-signaling) or 2) fear (from “social-distancing” to COVID death rates) to keep the crowd ignorant, divided and afraid.

Today, most U.S. citizens are blind to the rudimentary basics of Fed policy, currency debasement, lobbying tricks, anti-trust principles, or even viral facts.

Thus, as the middle-class flounders and a new financial feudalism replaces genuine capitalism, the mad crowd has no idea where to place its anger other than at each other in an historically divisive era of identity politics replacing anything resembling informed and unifying politics.

Meanwhile, Amazon’s stock climbs as true capitalism crawls.

Despite such heavy observations, I do wish you a light and enjoyable weekend.

Sincerely,

Matt & Tom

 

2 thoughts on “COVID, Bezos, Serfs and Other Risks to America’s Economic Health”

  1. Really good macro overview – in fact I’d say one of your best reports yet.

    I think you have connected all the dots very well on where we are today. Most people don’t seem to have a clue.

    You are probably aware of the book published in 2019 called “Political Capitalism” aka Crony Capitalism by Randal Holcombe. If not, it goes into more detail on this Crony Capitalism System we have today. I was fortunate enough to have had Dr. Holcombe as one of my Econ Profs back in the day. He taught (and still does) great Classic Free Market Economics at Florida State.

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