Daily Missive

Boomers’ Revenge, Part II

Loading ...Addison Wiggin

May 22, 20246 minute, 31 second read


Boomers’ Revenge, Part II

“The baby boomers are the most spoiled, most self-centered, most narcissistic generation the country’s ever produced.”
– Steve Bannon


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May 22, 2024 – After the market close, Nvidia will report its quarterly earnings. The market’s infatuation with NVDA as a proxy for the AI bubble on Wall Street is remarkable. And from a survey of the financial news since Friday’s record closes in the Dow and S&P 500, it’s causing even the most stalwart of bears to contemplate the dreaded “capitulation.”

First, what can we expect from today? A UBS equity strategist, Jonathan Golub,  who was talking to Bloomberg, said he expects Nvidia to continue to post earnings well ahead of “market expectations.”

Over the past year, “The company has beaten consensus forecasts by an average of 20%: by 11.8% in the fourth quarter of 2023, 19.1% in the third, 28.8% in the second, and 18.4% in the first, announced exactly a year ago.”

Now, the AI chipmaker represents 5.2% of the S&P 500’s total market cap.

And this evening, its earnings per share are expected to expand by another 411%… which would mean one company alone – one –  will make up 2.5% percentage points of the market’s 10.3% growth.

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The S&P 500 finished last week above 5,300 points for the first time, its 23rd all-time high this year. With today’s slight pullback, the index is about 40 points from its all-time closing high.

If the pattern holds, we can expect another new S&P high tomorrow. But it’s not just the broadest index.

The Dow recently closed above 40,000 points for the first time in history.

Even more remarkable, all these record highs come amid very low trader anxiety. The VIX – a measure of volatility in the markets – dropped below 12 at the same time… the lowest close since November 2019.

In the commodities markets, Gold closed above $2,400, a new record high. Silver smashed through $30 for the first time since 2013. Copper reached new all-time highs of above $5 per pound.

According to the highly recommended Global Markets Investor X Feed, World stocks also reached new records last week. European stocks hit an all-time high. Chinese stocks have outperformed the U.S. so far this year.

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Last week, 14 out of the 20 largest stock markets in the world hit or are near records.

In fact, the Russell 2000, a broad measure of small caps, is the only major index that did not make a new high.

“What could possibly go wrong?” Even the typically bearish Kitco News seemed to be searching for an explanation for global market euphoria.

Buried deep within a piece called The greatest macroeconomic story ever told? How high rates and boomer spending saved Americawe found a short bit of gratification. Or at least an analyst who seems to agree with our Boomers’ Revenge thesis from several weeks ago: Boomers made the market in their own image.

During a decade of zero-interest-rate-policy (ZIRP), they locked in low interest rates on real estate and have taken advantageous positions in stock and bonds.

Now, higher interest rates are paying them off handsomely.

CONTINUED BELOW…




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Strange crypto changes at your bank

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You’ve likely heard a million different warnings about the changes taking place in America’s financial system right now…

How the White House plans take the dollar fully digital…

Track and monitor every transaction you make… or possibly ban cash forever.

And with Bitcoin surging to new highs as institutions pour billions into the crypto market, some people are even predicting a crypto “attack on the dollar” in the near future.

The problem is… those wild predictions all miss the real story unfolding in the US financial system today. Details here…




CONTINUED…

The Real Reason for The Booming Market

Exhibit A: Kitco’s Ernest Hoffman offers a more lengthy analysis in his piece. It’s worth the read. This section in particular is helpful:

“The reason the economy is doing well is because the U.S. budget deficit was about 6.5% of GDP last year,” Marc Chandler at Bannockburn Global Forex told Kitco news earlier this week, “and it’s expected to be about 6% this year, and real wages adjusted for inflation are growing faster than inflation.”

Chandler told Kitco he thinks much of America’s purported economic strength is concentrated in one area:

“You basically have three sectors to the economy. You’ve got the government sector, in the U.S. government is a big debtor. You’ve got the household sector, and you can see from the consumer credit that many households are stretched.

“And then you’ve got corporations, and this is where the argument makes the most sense to me,” he said. “Why have corporations’ stocks, earnings, and profits done so well in a much higher interest rate environment?”

Chandler said the reason is that large S&P 500-level corporations have swung from being net borrowers to net lenders and savers:

“That’s the thing, they don’t really need to borrow. I think there’s something there with corporations, because the businesses are net savers, net capital surplus, and they’re earning interest on that.”

In the past, this would boost their capital investment more than it would the average American’s income, but that’s not the case today. Chandler continues:

“Even though businesses have this windfall by being net savers in a higher interest rate environment, they do not seem to be stepping up their business investment. Instead, I suspect that they’re doing two other things: boosting dividends and share buybacks. Rather than investing in new plant and equipment, they’re giving it back to shareholders.”

“This aligns with what we’ve seen throughout this surprising bull market,” Hoffman comments, “companies have indeed been paying out larger dividends and buying back their own stock, and the companies that have done so have been rewarded by investors.

“But which investors, precisely? Just as the Fed goes on about the need to drill down past the headline numbers to figure out where exactly the inflation is occurring — is it transitory or permanent? Goods or services? Essentials or luxuries? — it may also be necessary to understand who stands to gain from high interest rates, because it won’t be everyone.”

For now, we recommend enjoying the global mania for securities. But also do not forget the old Wall Street adage: “Nobody rings a bell at the top of the market.”

So it goes,

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Addison Wiggin,
The Wiggin Sessions

P.S.: As far as government spending propping up the economy and by extension the global stock market, we paraphrase (Niall) Ferguson’s Law – any great power that spends more on interest payments than on defense is not going to be great for very long.

As we noted yesterday, the Chinese — among other BRICS nations — have just sold off the most U.S. government debt since they began gobbling it up upon opening their market to Western nations in 1991.

(How did we get here? An alternative view of the financial, economic, and political history of the United States from Demise of the Dollar through Financial Reckoning Day and on toEmpire of Debt— all three books are available in their third post-pandemic editions.)

(Or… simply pre-order Empire of Debt: We Came, We Saw, We Borrowed, now available at AmazonandBarnes & Noble or if you prefer one of these sites:Bookshop.orgBooks-A-Million; or Target.)

Please send your comments, reactions, opprobrium, vitriol and praise to: addison@greyswanfraternity.com


DASH and LOW Stock Have One Key Thing In Common

September 18, 2025Adam O'Dell

Sometimes, a compelling market trend flashes like a neon sign on the Vegas strip.

We’ve seen that a lot with mega trends like artificial intelligence (AI) over the last few years. Just last week, Oracle was rewarded with a 40% post-earnings pop in its stock price after a strong earnings outlook for its AI cloud business.

Other times, you’ve got to do a little work to find out what’s driving a stock’s price higher. And my “New Bulls” list each week is a great place to start.

DASH and LOW Stock Have One Key Thing In Common
The Carrot and The Stick

September 18, 2025Addison Wiggin

Incentives grow markets. Regulation stunts their fragile bones.

The Fed’s rate cuts are carrots. Markets are feasting on them. Over in the Grey Swan Trading Fraternity, Portfolio Director Andrew Packer added a long trade in the commodity market – in a small-cap player, producing a commodity domestically.

As a cherry on top, it might be the next MP Materials or Intel and get explicit government backing, which could really cause shares to take off.

Trump’s threats to the Fed, or the FCC’s jawboning of broadcasters, are sticks. Investors must decide which matters more.

As one market veteran told The Wall Street Journal: “Cheaper money is a carrot. But the bigger question is whether trust in our institutions can hold. Without that, the carrots won’t matter.”

The Carrot and The Stick
Nasdaq Enters Nosebleed Heights

September 18, 2025Addison Wiggin

If you follow technical indicators, the Nasdaq — a broad measure of tech stocks — is now “extremely overbought”… a level only seen in 0.4% of its history.

That’s less than half a percent, and it is likely the precursor to a correction when traders decide to take profits.

Our advice, “panic now, avoid the rush” and rotate your tech into hard assets such as gold , bitcoin, and commodities in general.

Nasdaq Enters Nosebleed Heights
Stefan Bartl: From Draining the Swamp to Owning Intel: Is the Right Becoming What It Feared?

September 17, 2025Addison Wiggin

As time unfolds, the US federal government’s tentacles burrow ever-deeper into the economy. In the 2008 crisis, banks deemed “too big to fail” received a government bailout. The following year, automobile firms GM and Chrysler were saved from bankruptcy. When the Treasury exited GM in 2013, taxpayers were left with a loss of more than $10 billion. Ten years later, the federal government forbade Nippon Steel to acquire US Steel, in a merger they both desired. Instead, the government settled for Nippon Steel to invest in US Steel alongside its own direct ownership of the firm via a “golden share.” Just this past week, the US federal government announced its 10 percent stake in Intel, the struggling US semiconductor giant. On top of the $7 billion Intel had already received from the 2024 CHIPS Act, Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo called Intel “America’s champion semiconductor company.”

Stefan Bartl: From Draining the Swamp to Owning Intel: Is the Right Becoming What It Feared?