No Labor Infrastructure For $2 Trillion Infrastructure Spend

Democratic congressional leaders announced Tuesday after a meeting with President Donald Trump that an agreement had been reached on the price tag for a potential infrastructure plan: $2 trillion.  — CNN

We are reposting and a piece we wrote a few years ago to reiterate our skepticism on a massive infrastructure spend, which apparently resurfaced today as Trump, Chuck, and Nancy reached some kind of agreement on a big deal.   Seriously, are you kidding me, $2 trillion?
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Yes, fix the potholes, repair the bridges, modernize JFK and La Guardia, and build out broadband.
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No Labor
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If you haven’t noticed, the U.S. has a labor shortage and no more so than in the construction industry.  Moreover, infrastructure labor, what the BLS labels “Heavy and Civil Engineering Construction“,  is extremely scarce,
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The Heavy and Civil Engineering Construction subsector comprises establishments whose primary activity is the construction of entire engineering projects (e.g., highways and dams), and specialty trade contractors, whose primary activity is the production of a specific component for such projects. Specialty trade contractors in Heavy and Civil Engineering Construction generally are performing activities that are specific to heavy and civil engineering construction projects and are not normally performed on buildings. The work performed may include new work, additions, alterations, or maintenance and repairs. – BLS
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It ain’t easy to take an unemployed coal miner, for example, move her from West Virginia to Queens for training to repair the runway at JFK or chip and paint the George Washington Bridge.
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The data in the table illustrate only 747k workers were employed in heavy and civil engineering construction in February or just 0.50 percent of total nonfarm payrolls!
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Infrastructure
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Furthermore,  job growth in the industry has been fairly robust over the past two years, almost 4x that of total nonfarm payrolls, which we suspect has reduced any slack in the sector’s labor force.
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Good For China
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Because of, in large part due to the labor shortage, we suspect many projects will have to be outsourced to, say, China once again.    Bad for the bilateral trade deficit that POTUS obsesses about.
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Read further into our old post and you will see how the modernization of the of San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge, probably one of the largest infrastructure projects in the past decade, was outsourced to China.   The alternative is to allow for more immigration, coupled with massive training programs.  Whoops!
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The modern Bay Bridge is nice but if the goal of policymakers is to create jobs and boost long-term economic growth they could do much better.   Certainly, fix the potholes and bridges but, come on, man, the main focus of policy should be on fixing the nation’s education infrastructure.
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Isn’t it time to redouble efforts to prepare the labor force for the coming automation of the economy, and not succumb to fatalism and the futilitarians who preach “universal basic income” as the only hope for a disappearing middle class?
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This takes leadership, however, which is also in scarce supply today.
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Rebuild The Educational Infrastructure
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We believe that rather than trying to turn coal miners and their children into CalTrans and bridge construction workers and engineers, policymakers should refocus their efforts on the long-term and prepare the workforce for the Fourth Industrial Revolution.
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Moreover, infrastructure, as the one now being considered, creates only a temporary economic boost, though a better infrastructure creates positive externalities and increases overall economic productivity.
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A concerted effort to begin teaching children, say, coding and the basics of the new technology beginning in primary school and following it through to the senior year of high school, including a test in order graduate would be a much more productive and efficient use of taxpayers’ (and Japanese and Chinese bondholders) scarce resources, in our opinion.
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Python, which is becoming the coding language of choice for AI and big data, is really not that hard to learn.   There are even now fun games to teach coding to third graders.
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I introduced twenty 3rd graders to programming in a special 75-minute session, using computer art and video games as motivation.

We began with physical activities. We then moved to a pen and paper exercise and then to programming in TurtleScript. Finally, we talked about some of the big ideas in computer science and saw some examples of games in codeheart.js  that my college students wrote in their first semester of programming.  – Casual Effects

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Let’s get at it!
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P.S..  With trillions of dollars being tossed around by the politicos, coupled with the rise of  Modern Monetary Theory,  the deflationistas must be, or should be, shitting razor blades.
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Misplaced Policy Thinking – $1 trillion infrastructure build

Posted on 

As the stock market celebrates and is downright giddy over the prospect of a massive fiscal expansion through a one trillion dollar infrastructure build,  we are less sanguine and propose a different and more long term policy track.
The U.S. doesn’t have the skilled labor and experience to do such a large infrastructure spend and will have to depend on Chinese and foreign firms and labor to implement the program,  just as the U.S. built out its railroads in 1830-60s with Chinese labor.

The mega infrastructure build this decade in the SF bay area was the rebuild of the SF Bay Bridge, done by a Chinese firm, by the way.

Bridge Comes to San Francisco With a Made-in-China Label – NY Times

SHANGHAI — Talk about outsourcing.

At a sprawling manufacturing complex here, hundreds of Chinese laborers are now completing work on the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge.

Next month, the last four of more than two dozen giant steel modules — each with a roadbed segment about half the size of a football field — will be loaded onto a huge ship and transported 6,500 miles to Oakland. There, they will be assembled to fit into the eastern span of the new Bay Bridge.

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/06/26/business/global/26bridge.html

Furthermore,  the U.S. is at full employment and only 936K  (as of Ocotober 2016, including supervisors)  of the labor force is employed in heavy construction and civil engineering.  You can’t take an unemployed banker and have him/her build a bridge or hospital.  This is not like the WPA and CCC during the great depression where the unemployed built campgrounds, for example.

If implemented, expect big inflation in a few years.  The markets are already beginning to price it in with the collapse of the global bond markets and a huge rally in the dollar.

The U.S. will thus have to rely heavily on immigrant labor and foreign firms for its $1 trillion infrastructure build out.  Exactly the opposite of what Trump has campaigned on. Ironic, no?

Finally,  many construction jobs will be automated in 10 years anyway and most, if not all new,  jobs will be in software and coding.  We have been writing, no, warning about this for years.

The idea of paying families that lose their jobs to automation and robots, say, $50k per annum, is already being discussed in the private sector and policy circles, commonly known as the “universal basic income“.

The brave new world of robots and lost jobs

A look at the numbers suggests that the country is having the wrong economic debate this year. Employment security won’t come from renegotiating trade deals, as Donald Trump said in a speech Monday in Detroit, or rebuilding infrastructure, as Hillary Clinton argued in Warren, Mich., on Thursday. These are palliatives.

The deeper problem facing the United States is how to provide meaningful work and good wages for the tens of millions of truck drivers, accountants, factory workers and office clerks whose jobs will disappear in coming years because of robots, driverless vehicles and “machine learning” systems. – David Ignatius, Wash Post, Aug 11, 2016

Instead of a one-off massive infrastructure program, the U.S. should massively revamp its education system,  teaching coding to second graders and continue through graduation.  And ramp its vocational training for those not inclined to take a software job.   But this faces violent opposition from the special interests – not excluding the public sector and teachers unions — and will take political vision, will and courage.  We need a new Sputnik moment and we better get on with it.  Quickly.

The Japanese spent the U.S. equivalent of almost $20 trillion of infrastructure build from 1991 to 2009,  building bridges to nowhere and got them nothing — well maybe staved off a greater depression —  but a debt of over 200 percent of GDP and are now on the verge of blowing up.

Japan’s Big-Works Stimulus Is Lesson

Moreover, it matters what gets built: Japan spent too much on increasingly wasteful roads and bridges, and not enough in areas like education and social services, which studies show deliver more bang for the buck than infrastructure spending.

“It is not enough just to hire workers to dig holes and then fill them in again,” said Toshihiro Ihori, an economics professor at the University of Tokyo. “One lesson from Japan is that public works get the best results when they create something useful for the future.”

In total, Japan spent $6.3 trillion on construction-related public investment between 1991 and September of last year, according to the Cabinet Office. The spending peaked in 1995 and remained high until the early 2000s, when it was cut amid growing concerns about ballooning budget deficits. More recently, the governing Liberal Democratic Party has increased spending again to revive the economy and the party’s own flagging popularity.

NY Times, Feb 5, 2009

Enough of this same old archaic, not thought out policy-making,
Yes, it would be nice to have a first class and brand new “trophy” infrastructure to, say,  one up the Chinese,  but not at the expense of the future of our children. We prefer trophy children over trophy airports. Yes, fix and modernize LaGuardia and JFK; and in no way are we saying we don’t need to improve our infrastructure and restructure the way we pay for it.

But. economics is all about making choices.  Staying at the Best Western instead of the Trump Casino Hotel while in Vegas is fine with us if it provides a better future for our children.  $1 trillion dollars?   Come on, folks, get real.

It’s about time we start to think outside the box, don’t you think?

Posted in Economics, Fiscal Policy, Uncategorized | Tagged , , | 2 Comments

Q1 2019 GDP = “Stranger Things”

It is always prudent to look under the hood after a big unexpected beat or miss on a major headline economic number.

Never so relevant than Friday’s GDP report, which blew out expectations, and appears right out of Stranger Things.   The 3.2 print was light years away from the beginning of the year panic when many thought the economy was falling off the cliff.   Declining markets almost always cause traders and investors to “retrofit their perception of the  fundamentals” to the price action – e.g.,  “the market’s going down and we are heading into recession…the yield curve is pancaking and signaling recession….the Fed needs to implement an emergency 50 bps rate cut…”   Yada, yada, yada.

Long live the Flat Yield Curve Society!

Do they not yet understand market prices are so distorted by the market socialism of government and central bank intervention, what many now call “socialism for the rich,” that there are few if any economic signals that can be derived from market prices?   We were having nothing to do with the economic panic, by the way,

We will watch and wait and don’t believe the U.S. is heading into a recession in 2019   – GMM, January 1st

Is The Coast Now Clear?  Bull Markets Forever? 

The coast is clear with the 3.2 percent GDP on Friday, right?  Bull markets forever?

Not so fast.

The number was much weaker than it appeared.

Private domestic demand (also known as real final sales to private domestic purchasers) – personal consumption + nonresidential and residential fixed investment – which is the traditional driver of robust and sustained economic growth contributed less than 35 percent to Friday’s headline growth number.   This was the lowest proportional level since Q4 2009.

The bulk of GDP growth came from the combination of a big inventory build, net exports, and government spending (see table below).   Yuckety, yuck, yuck…

In fact, some see conspiracies,

This stockpiling of goods boosted first-quarter GDP growth by about 70 basis points and helped propel growth to a 3.2% annual rate, well above forecasts.

The problem is that it is not at all obvious where these inventories came from. Goods have to come from somewhere, either produced by domestic firms or imported from abroad.

The mystery is that both production and imports fell in the first three months of the year, according to government data.

“You can’t stockpile what you do not import or do not produce,” said Robert Brusca, chief economist at FAO Economics.

The Fed reported last week that industrial output slipped at a 0.3% annual rate in the first quarter. – Zero Hedge

There have been only five quarters in the past thirty years where private domestic demand contributed so little to GDP growth.

Furthermore, over the past 72 years,  there have been only 15 quarters where personal consumption, business fixed investment and residential had such a small contribution to a 3 percent plus economic growth rate.

Now What?

Hard to say, but we ran the numbers and found that 5 of the 15 quarters after such similar aberrational 3 percent plus growth as was the case in Q1 2019, where private domestic demand’s contribution was so small, experienced negative growth.   Only 3 of the 15 quarters did economic growth accelerate.

The average growth deceleration of this sample was 435 bps quarter on quarter.

Empirical probabilities suggest that Q2 economic growth will be significantly lower than Q1 with the high likelihood of the final reading of growth in the quarter will be lower than the initial print.

Stay tuned.

 

GDP

 

GDP_1

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White House Correspondents Dinner

This is good!  Historian Ron Chernow delivers keynote at tonight’s annual White House Correspondents Dinner, which was boycotted by the Trump Administration.

 

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More Brexit Polling

More than half the public – 55% – now think it would have been better never to have held the EU referendum given the difficulties of reaching an agreement on Brexit, according to the latest Opinium/Observer poll.

…If a second referendum were held between the options of leaving the EU on the prime minister’s deal or remaining in the EU, 46% say they would vote to remain (unchanged on a fortnight ago) while 34% would vote to leave (down 4%).  – Guardian, April 27th

Confusion reigns as Farage and the Brexiteers will claim victory in the EU Parliamentary elections, which will begin on May 23rd.

EU_Poll

 

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World’s Fastest Growing Economies

We have updated the GDP growth rates for the 2019 and the 2020 forecasts and ranked the world’s fastest growing economies in the ginormous table below.  The data are from the April 2019 IMF’s World Economic Outlook.

G20 Growth

 

World Growth

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Trump Losing Fox News – Summer of Discontent Cometh

Caveat emptor.  The complacency in markets is absolutely stunning as the U.S. slowly drifts into, what could be, the biggest Constitutional Crisis in the nation’s history.

Trump lost the top legal analyst at Fox News today.  This is a major development.

Judge Napolitano told friends in 2017 that President Donald Trump had told him he was considering him for a United States Supreme Court appointment should there be a second vacancy.

Fox News legal analyst Judge Andrew Napolitano is not going easy on President Trump.

In a scathing op-ed and accompanying video published Thursday, Napolitano said that special counsel Robert Mueller’s report on Russian attempts to influence the 2016 presidential election and Trump’s efforts to cover it up showed a clear pattern of criminal behavior.  – Yahoo News

 

Fox News

Click here for the full interview.

Our Maundy Thursday Post

We concluded within 15 minutes after the release of the Mueller Report last Thursday, after reading the first 20 pages, the House Democrats would have no choice but to move on impeachment.  See our Maundy Thursday post here.   We received major pushback.

The markets are totally clueless to the potential of a huge spike in major political risk in the U.S. during the coming summer.

Clinton and Nixon Impeachment

Clinton’s impeachment coincided with the second biggest bull market in the 20th century and a super hot economy.   Nixon’s impeachment was battered by the headwinds of spiking oil prices due to OPEC I, which was in retaliation by Arab nations for the U.S. rearming Israel during the Yom Kippur War.

Many suspect the Arab nations sensed Nixon was too politically weak to help Israel, which was a major miscalculation, and almost led to a dangerous confrontation between the U.S. and the Soviet Union.

We just found this tidbit of history from Politico of how during the Watergate scandal the Nixon administration was melting down and the President retreated to self-medication,

The Nixon administration began disintegrating—the president unable to play his role as the leader of the nation and the free world—at 7:55 p.m. on October 11, 1973.

The newly appointed secretary of state, Henry Kissinger, picked up his telephone. His trusted aide at the National Security Council, Brent Scowcroft, was on the line from the White House. The Arab-Israeli war of 1973 was in its fifth day, escalating toward a global crisis and a potential nuclear conflict.

SCOWCROFT: The switchboard just got a call from 10 Downing Street to inquire whether the president would be available for a call within 30 minutes from the prime minister. The subject would be the Middle East.

KISSINGER: Can we tell them no? When I talked to the president he was loaded.

President Richard Nixon—ravaged by more than four years of war in Vietnam, 15 months of Watergate investigations and countless nights of intense insomnia—was incapacitated.  – Politico

Wow!  POTUS was hammered as the world spiraled toward nuclear conflict and incapable of taking “the call.”

This further confirms our suspicions that domestic political scandals, such as Watergate, distorts and weakens the global perception — and maybe not just perception — of U.S. leadership in the world.   And contributed, at least, partially,  to the 1973 Yom Kippur War and subsequent economic crisis caused by the related OPEC embargo.  – GMM,  May 2017

Crude oil is up 43 percent year-to-date, the stock market is hovering around new highs but topping in our opinion, and the economy is slowing but who knows what will happen.  Let’s hope we don’t have a repeat of the above as China and Russia sense weakness and chaos in the U.S. but we don’t see how they cannot.

Thus the probability of a major geopolitical event or crisis is increasing as the White House will be obsessed with their coming battle with Congress over the next several months.  Taiwan, Iran, Venezuela, North Korea, Ukraine, or other? Take your pick.

Hollywood Can’t Make This Stuff Up

The activity of President Trump & Co. as reported by the Mueller Report is in a different zip code in terms of seriousness compared to both Clinton – lying about a blow job — and Nixon — obstructing the investigation of a break-in into the Democratic National HQ at the Watergate hotel.

The Mueller Report documents the Trump Campaign soliciting, meeting, accepting and benefiting from help from the Russian government, who hacked the 2016 presidential election.  Then trying to obstruct the investigation of those events.

Check out how dark (in a spiritual sense) this campaign poster is, which the Russian IRA put together for a campaign rally which they sponsored during 2016 in Pennsylvania.  The poster is directly out of the Mueller Report.

IRA Poster

Don’t know about you but it really gives us the heebie-jeebies.

The man whose father [died of black lung disease in 1987] was featured in a pro-Trump Russian “Miners for Trump” propaganda ad speaks to CNN’s Anderson Cooper after it appeared in special counsel Robert Mueller’s report.  — See video of interview here

Less Than 30 Percent Of Voters Have Read Mueller Report

The latest Morning Consult/Politico poll states that only 28 percent of voters have actually read the Muller Report.  Anyone who just skims it is in for the shock of their lives.  It reads like a Tom Clancy spy thriller but, unfortunately, it is scary true.   Hollywood can’t make this stuff up

Moning Consult Poll_Read Mueller

Once the report disseminates through the electorate, we suspect the dam could break.  It is now the number one best seller on Amazon.

White House Keeps Digging Deeper 

Moreover, Trump is providing the House with more ammunition for impeachment by ignoring Congressional subpoenas, which was the basis for one of Nixon’s articles of impeachment.  Back then, the House Judiciary Committee passed three of the five proposed articles of impeachment.

Article III alleged in part that Nixon:

failed without lawful cause or excuse to produce papers and things as directed by duly authorized subpoenas issued by the Committee on the Judiciary of the House of Representatives on April 11, 1974, May 15, 1974, May 30, 1974, and June 24, 1974, and willfully disobeyed such subpoenas. — Wikipedia

Coming Summer of Discontent

We are expecting a Summer of Discontent. That is increased political instability, which will eventually weigh on the markets.  We are the only out there with this call and it is not even close to the market’s radar.

Stay tuned.

Posted in Politics, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , | 11 Comments

Non-alcoholic Beers Ready To Roll?

Gotta find a good company or some crafties to bet on.  A good draft frosty without the batteries will satisfy a yuuge overlooked market.

The FT’s Leila Abboud and Al Gilmour put alcohol-free and low-alcohol beers to the test, tasting them against full-strength brews from some of the biggest producers in the industry.

Read more at https://on.ft.com/2VdsyLi

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One Of Our Best Trades Ever – Mike Trout

Trout_picture.png

The first time we ever saw Mike Trout play baseball it was like watching the real-life version of The Natural,  and thought someday people will say,

There goes [Mike Trout] the best there ever was in this game – Roy Hobbes, The Natural

Moreover, the dude is such a nice and decent guy.

What’s nice about it is Mike is such a good person,” Jim Quinn, the former mayor of Millville [Trout’s hometown], told NBC Sports. “You get some of these superstar athletes that have attitudes and aren’t really genuine, but Mike is a genuinely nice guy.” – GOODSPORTS

We began to hoard all things, Mike Trout.

We’re buyers of Mike Trout’s rookie card. – GMM,  September 1, 2012

 

Trout.png

 

QE?

We also knew QE was at our back and thought someday the Fed may begin to add baseball cards to its SOMA portfolio, especially if the POTUS collected them and would lean on the FOMC to ease monetary policy in order to inflate their prices  (note, FDR was an avid stamp collector).

 

 

We are pretty sure President Trump is not a big baseball fan as he has yet to throw out a ceremonial first pitch on opening day,

Every president since William Howard Taft, the commander in chief famously known for his particularly rotund figure, has thrown a first pitch at an MLB game…Donald Trump, for whatever reason, has yet to engage in the ceremonial practice of throwing the first pitch on Opening Day.   – Complex.com

Fundamentals

Given, no Fed buying and QE backstop we will have to depend on fundamentals — Trout’s productivity — to add value to our trade.   And the fundies are still sizzling,

Baseball has been around for about 150 years and Trout — only 27 years old — is already in discussion for one of the best to ever play the game…Since his first full year in 2012, Trout has averaged 34 homers, 26 steals and 98 walks and has hit .310/.420/.579. No player in the game’s history has racked up more WAR through their age-26 season. Basically, any metric you want to use puts Trout at the top of the game – MLB.com

I played against some of the all-time greats. Mike Trout is better than all of them. – Dale Murphy

Trout_stats

 

What We Are Buying

Mike Trout Farm Hats.  See here.

Trout_hat

We have no doubt the appreciation of the Trout Farm hat, as a collectible, will beat inflation over the years and estimate our great grandchildren will cashing these for thousands of dollars.

Looking for a big price jump when Trout is elected to the Hall of Fame circa 2037!

Upshot

Relax.  Tune out the ugly politics.  Enjoy the new stock market highs.  Watch some baseball.  Watch the Warriors win their third straight NBA championship.

Then continue to sell this strength while there’s a bid.  We think the S&P makes a nominal new high at 3025-ish before the Big Dipper sell-off or bear market.

Posted in Sports, Uncategorized | Tagged , , | 2 Comments

The Most Successful “Garage Band” Companies

That we are aware of…

Apple
Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak had withdrawn from Reed College and UC Berkeley respectively by 1975. Wozniak designed a video terminal that he could use to log on to the minicomputers at Call Computer. Alex Kamradt commissioned the design and sold a small number of them through his firm. Aside from their interest in up-to-date technology, the impetus for Jobs and Wozniak, also referred to collectively as “the two Steves”, seems to have had another source. In his essay From Satori to Silicon Valley (published 1986), cultural historian Theodore Roszak made the point that the Apple Computer emerged from within the West Coast counterculture and the need to produce print-outs, letter labels, and databases. Roszak offers a bit of background on the development of the two Steves’ prototype models.  – Wikipedia

Google
The Google first company was officially launched in 1998 by Larry Page and Sergey Brin to market Google Search, which has become the most used web-based search engine. Page and Brin, students at Stanford University in California, developed a search algorithm at first known as “BackRub” in 1996. The search engine soon proved successful and the expanding company moved several times, finally settling at Mountain View in 2003. This marked a phase of rapid growth, with the company making its initial public offering in 2004 and quickly becoming one of the world’s largest media companies. The company launched Google News in 2002, Gmail in 2004, Google Maps in 2005, Google Chrome in 2008, and the social network known as Google+ in 2011, in addition to many other products. In 2015, Google became the main subsidiary of the holding company Alphabet Inc. – Wikipedia

Amazon
In 1994, Jeff Bezos incorporated Amazon. In May 1997, the organization went public. The company began selling music and videos in 1998, at which time it began operations internationally by acquiring online sellers of books in United Kingdom and Germany. The following year, the organization also sold video games, consumer electronics, home-improvement items, software, games, and toys in addition to other items.  – Wikipedia

 

Garages

         Hat Tip:  @tooskinnymariah

 

Harley-Davidson
Harley-Davidson is the iconic American motorcycle manufacturer. Founded out of a small shed in 1903 by William S. Harley and brothers Arthur and Walter Davidson in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. The Motor Company produces traditional cruiser motorcycles utilizing air-cooled V-Twin engines. – MotoUSA

Disney
Disney was originally founded on October 16, 1923 by brothers Walt and Roy O. Disney as the Disney Brothers Cartoon Studio; it also operated under the names The Walt Disney Studio and Walt Disney Productions before officially changing its name to The Walt Disney Company in 1986. The company established itself as a leader in the American animation industry before diversifying into live-action film production, television, and theme parks.  – Wikipedia

Mattel
Harold “Matt” Matson and Elliot Handler founded Mattel in 1945. The company sold picture frames, and later dollhouse furniture. Matson sold his share to Handler due to poor health, and Handler’s wife Ruth took Matson’s role. In 1947, the company had its first hit toy, a ukulele called “Uke-A-Doodle”.

The company incorporated the next year in California. Mattel became the first year-round sponsor of the Mickey Mouse Club TV series in 1955. The Barbie doll debuted in 1959, becoming the company’s best-selling toy in history. In 1960, Mattel introduced Chatty Cathy, a talking doll revolutionizing the toy industry, which led to pull-string talking dolls and toys flooding the market throughout the 1960s and 1970s.  – Wikipedia

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Mueller Report: Hollywood Can’t Make This Stuff Up

Wow!   We are still digesting the full redacted version of the Mueller Report.

We only had to get through the first few pages within an hour of its release on Thursday for us to conclude the House Democrats will have no choice but to move on Impeachment.   See our post, Impeachment Market – The Only Market That Matters Now here.

If we could make any investment right now, it would be the media that takes the report and runs with it.  Books, movies, conspiracy theories, and others will use the Mueller Report as the original source for the next 50 years, and beyond.   The Mueller Report reads like a Tom Clancy novel and makes the Bridge of Spies look like a Flintstones cartoon.

We find it interesting that most cannot abstract themselves from the heat of the political moment to recognize the historical importance and consequences of this document.  It is the classic case of the boiling frog fable.

We have pulled just a few money quotes from the first few pages, which we believe will resonate throughout history.   Don’t use it as an excuse not to read the entire report.

Keep an open mind and stay flexible.   Read the full report for yourself and do not depend on the spin from either side. 

Hollywood can’t make this stuff up.    

 

See the full redacted version of the Mueller Report here.

 

The Russian government interfered in the 2016 presidential election in sweeping and systematic fashion. Evidence of Russian government operations began to surface in mid-2016.  – Mueller Report, P. 1

IRA Poster

 

  • RUSSIAN SOCIAL MEDIA CAMPAIGN
    The Internet Research Agency (IRA) carried out the earliest Russian interference operations identified by the investigation – a social media campaign designed to provoke and amplify political and social discord in the United States. The IRA was based in St. Petersburg, Russia, and received funding from Russian oligarch Yevgeniy Prigozhin and companies he controlled. Priozhin is widely reported to have ties to Russian President Vladimir Putin………[redactions]
  • …The IRA later used social media accounts and interest groups to sow discord in the U.S.political system through what it termed “information warfare.”  The campaign evolved from a generalized program designed in 2014 and 2015 to undermine the U.S. electoral system, to a targeted operation that by early 2016 favored candidate Trump and disparaged candidate Clinton.   The IRA’ s operation also included the purchase of political advertisements on social media in the names of U.S. persons and entities, as well as the staging of political rallies inside the United States. To organize those rallies, IRA employees posed as U.S. grassroots entities and persons and made contact with Trump supporters and Trump Campaign officials in the United States. The investigation did not identify evidence that any U.S. persons conspired or coordinated with the IRA. Section II of this report details the Office’s investigation of the Russian social media campaign. – Mueller Report, P. 4
  • The social media campaign and the GRU hacking operations coincided with a series of contacts between Trump Campaign officials and individuals with ties to the Russian government. The Office investigated whether those contacts reflected or resulted in the Campaign conspiring or coordinating with Russia in its election-interference activities. Although the investigation established that the Russian government perceived it would benefit from a Trump presidency and worked to secure that outcome, and that the Campaign expected it would benefit electorally from information stolen and released through Russian efforts, the investigation did not establish that members of the Trump Campaign conspired or coordinated with the Russian government in its election interference activities.  – Mueller Report, P.5
  • IRA employees posted derogatory information about a number of candidates in the 2016 U.S. presidential election. By early to mid-2016, IRA operations included supporting the Trump Campaign and disparaging candidate Hillary Clinton. The IRA made various expenditures to carry out those activities, including buying political advertisements on social media in the names of U.S. persons and entities. Some IRA employees, posing as U.S. persons and without revealing their Russian association, communicated electronically with individuals associated with the Trump Campaign and with other political activists to seek to coordinate political activities, including the staging of political rallies. 5 The investigation did not identify evidence that any U.S. persons knowingly or intentionally coordinated with the IRA’s interference operation.  – Mueller Report – P.14
  • Collectively , the IRA’s social media accounts reached tens of millions of U.S. persons. Individual IRA social media accounts attracted hundreds of thousands of followers.  – Mueller, P. 26
  • From June 2016 until the end of the presidential campaign, almost all of the U.S. rallies organized by the IRA focused on the U.S. election, often promoting the Trump Campaign and opposing the Clinton Campaign. Pro-Trump rallies included three in New York; a series of pro-Trump rallies in Florida in August 2016; and a series of pro-Trump rallies in October 2016 in Pennsylvania. The Florida rallies drew the attention of the Trump Campaign, which posted about the Miami rally on candidate Trump’s Facebook account (as discussed below). /86  – Mueller Report, P. 31

 

Trump Tweets

  • IRA employees monitored the reaction of the Trump Campaign and, later, Trump Administration officials to their tweets. For example, on August 23, 2016, the IRA controlled persona “Matt Skiber” Facebook account sent a message to a U.S. Tea Party activist, writing that “Mr. Trump posted about our event in Miami! This is great!” /105  The IRA employee included a screenshot of candidate Trump ‘s Facebook account, which included a post about the August 20, 2016 political rallies organized by the IRA. – Mueller Report, P. 34
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