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Will AI Take Your Job? Exploring the Realities of Automation

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In the latest Week Ahead episode, three experts – Todd Gentzel, Chris Balding, and Sam Rines – discuss the impact of AI on the job market and the enterprise.

The conversation delves into the macro environment and the rise of AI, with Sam Rines framing the discussion by noting the fast adoption of AI tools like ChatGPT and Midjourney, which are taking out low and mid-level writing, creative, and analyst tasks. This is a threat at a scale not seen before as this generation of AI is targeting professional, corporate, and office jobs.

Todd Gentzel, who has consulted and led strategy for some of the world’s largest companies, discusses the current state of AI in the enterprise. He notes that many AI projects are just pet projects to tick a box and the “AI” portion of these projects is extremely limited. However, he believes that AI has the potential to change the enterprise significantly and identifies the factors holding the enterprise back from adopting useful AI.

Chris Balding, the founder of an AI-NLP firm, discusses whether AI will steal jobs. He notes that starting his firm has changed his view of the application of AI and its potential to take on whole job functions. The conversation covers the impact of AI on labor and capital, the potential for AI to be deployed to take on individual functions, and whether AI can only be used to augment job functions or take on whole job functions.

The discussion raises important questions about the impact of AI on the job market and the enterprise, and how it will change the way we work. While the experts have different perspectives on the potential of AI, they all agree that it will have a significant impact on the economy, the job market, and society as a whole.

Key themes:
1. Is the macro environment to blame for the rise of AI?
2. How will AI change the enterprise?
3. Will AI steal your job?

This is the 60th episode of The Week Ahead, where experts talk about the week that just happened and what will most likely happen in the coming week.

Follow The Week Ahead panel on Twitter
Tony: https://twitter.com/TonyNashNerd
Sam: https://twitter.com/SamuelRines
Todd: https://twitter.com/ToddGentzel
Chris: https://twitter.com/BaldingsWorld

Transcript

Tony

Hi everyone, and welcome to The Week Ahead. I’m Tony Nash. Today we’re joined by Todd Gentzel. Todd is an industry and technology strategist spanning healthcare, mining, oil and gas, transportation, and consumer goods. Todd, it’s your first time on the show. Thanks so much for joining us.

Tony

We’ve also got Chris Balding. Chris Balding you guys all know well from Twitter. He’s the founder of a stealth mode AI firm, and he’s also the founder of New Kite Data and a recovering academic.

Tony

We’ve also got Sam Rines of Corbu, who’s on here regularly. So guys, I really appreciate your joining us for the program today. This means a lot.

Tony

I’ve wanted to look at the hype around AI for quite some time. For non-experts, it’s really hard to tell what’s hype and what’s real. We see stuff about ChatGPT or whatever every day, and we can’t tell what’s real output, what’s simulated output, or whatever. So we try to assemble you guys, some experts, to tell us what’s happening. And there’s some real critical answers that we want to address. Why is AI on the rise right now? There are some reasons why AI is coming to the forefront right now. So what are those?

Tony

Will it take your job? A lot of people are, and some people are joking about that. Some people are taking it seriously, some not. But really, will it?

Tony

How will AI change corporate life? What impact will AI have on markets and regulations and so on? These are all things that we don’t know all the answers to right now, but we’re kind of figuring this out as we go along.

Tony

So, just over a year ago, I published a fairly rudimentary illustration showing the pace of impact that I thought at the time AI would take in the workplace and on jobs. So if you notice at the bottom, most of the kinds of infield jobs are retained. A lot of stuff has to physically happen. And my view, at least over the next, say, a few years, is 5% to 10% of jobs need to be automated. And I think that’ll largely grow toward the end of this decade.

Tony

So we have some key themes. First, is the macro environment to blame for the rise of AI? I think that’s a real concern, and we’ll talk about that with Sam. Second is how will AI change the enterprise. We’ll talk about that with Todd. He’s a real expert there, and I can’t wait to have that discussion. And finally, will AI steal your job? That’s kind of a silly question, but I think it’s one that everybody really wants the answer to, and we’ll talk about that with Chris.

Tony

So first, Sam, I want to frame up the discussion with a little bit of an understanding of the macro environment. We’ve had AI enthusiasm before. You have these really robust AI eras, and then you have kind of AI winters. We had a really robust era in 2018 when S&P bought a company called Kensho, which very few people talk about now.

This was just five, or six years ago. They bought Kensho for $550 million and really, nothing happened with it. They were folded into S&P. At the time I talked with people who had visibility to Kensho. They didn’t know what to do with it. It really wasn’t obvious value. But S&P kind of got the opportunity to tick the box on AI. So, in part, S&P wasn’t adopted by S&P’s customers. At least this is my running thesis. It wasn’t adopted by S&P’s customers because wages had been pretty stagnant for 30 years.

Tony

So even in 2018, you could kind of throw people at analysis problems and the type of things that Kensho was built to solve. But now we’re seeing ChatGPT, MidJourney, and those types of large language models and image models being adopted pretty quickly.

Tony

ChatGPT, as you guys know, had millions of users in the first hours, in the first couple of days. So we can say that processing power and coding and that sort of thing are responsible for advancement in AI, which is true. But adoption seems to be different than the actual capability. So when we see ChatGPT and MidJourney adopted so quickly, they’re really taking out low and mid-level writing, creative and analyst tasks. That’s what they’re taking out right now, are those tasks. These are things that earlier had 10-15 years ago, had been sent to, say, India and other offshoring places, but now it’s being experimented with doing this stuff virtually in developed countries. So I realize I’m talking a lot today. I don’t normally do this at the top of the show, but I think we need to introduce some of these ideas for people to watch.

Tony

I’m sorry I’m talking so much today, but one key point here is that AI has always been discussed more than robotics. So where it would take over the job of physical laborers, like people in warehouses, blue-collar workers, as Americans would call them. But this generation of AI is different. This generation is targeting professional jobs, corporate jobs, and office jobs, which are new. It’s kind of unprecedented, where this level of fear for white collar jobs is discussed to be replaced by technology. So, Sam, after that long intro, can you talk us through some of your thoughts on this? This is my hypothesis. Is there anything there? Can you talk us through some of the kind of capital versus labor and wage issues that we’re seeing right now? And is that having an impact on the adoption of AI?

Sam

Yeah. So don’t throw too much at me at once. Okay, so let’s take a big view of the history and kind of parse this out, because I do think it’s worth kind of going back to previous periods to look at what exactly spawns the adoption of various technologies. Because AI is a technology and it’s incredibly useful for those people that want to become, or can become much more productive over time. So I think that’s kind of the level set there. But if you look back at 70s and the level of inflation there, it spawned a significant amount of capital investment in things like computers, right. It was expensive to hire an individual, inflation was running out of control, and you wanted to maintain your margins if you were a corporation. So what did you do? You made people more productive by employing technology, specifically the computer at the time. Right. It sounds kind of ridiculous to say that the computer was a productivity enhancer because we all know that now productivity is not necessarily enhanced by a computer in front of you. But then it was incredibly enhanced for productivity. So when you have significant inflation pressures against a business, it spawns the want and the need to go ahead and invest in incremental technologies.

Sam

So kind of fast forward to COVID, and if you were a leisure and hospitality company or a company that faced individuals, you had an incredible incentive to invest in an underlying technology to allow your business to either exist in a couple of years or to survive and maybe even thrive. If you were very good at it. You had to go out and you had to make sure that your website could offer delivery or pickup options for food. You had to really invest in technologies that previously didn’t necessarily have to do. Were they emerging? Were they interesting? Yes. But all of a sudden they became existential to your business and the ability to survive going forward. So you saw an incredible amount of investment in platforms that allowed for delivery and pickup of food, et cetera. Kind of coming out of COVID. Now what you have is an incredible shortage of workers and a significant amount of wage pressures, and you have inflation pressures. So if you’re a business looking to maintain margins, grow going forward, AI is an incredibly interesting potential tool for you to be able to make some of your best workers and best thought leaders and intellectual leaders much more productive and allow you to grow going forward without having to worry about whether or not you’re going to be able to find that incremental employee.

Sam

And I think that really is an understated catalyst for why ChatGPT-4 is so incredible, right? I love it. It makes me a lot more productive at my job. I’m still playing with it and I don’t actually publish anything.

Tony

Can I just give you a tangible example of what you’re talking about? I know that you understand this Sam, but for our viewers. So my staff last week put together a persona in a large language model and called it Nash, and it looked at all of our previous shows of The Week Ahead and then it came up with a persona for Nash. So last week’s newsletter, Complete Intelligence Newsletter, and going forward, they’re largely written by this persona in Chat GPT. So we don’t have to spend the time anymore to actually write our newsletter. Of course we clean it up a little bit, but it has my voice, it has my word choice, sentence structure and so on. And so largely our newsletter is automated and of course there are little tweaks here and there, but for the most part those are the types of things where maybe I had to hire a newsletter person before, even if they were offshore. But now it’s done in three minutes.

Tony

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Sam

No, again, that’s productivity enhancing for your team, right? And it allows you to say, okay, now that we really kind of come up with a way to automate this newsletter, what else can we do? So it allows you to be not only productivity enhancing, but potentially revenue enhancing, potentially bottom line enhancing, producing new products, new services, et cetera, et cetera. So in my mind, that is the one of the tailwinds to AI adoption at this point is that you really have not only called a curiosity with it, but also a need to replace the incremental employee because you can’t find them. If the incremental employee doesn’t exist, you’re not destroying jobs, you’re creating/enhancing ones that exist. The idea I’m kind of running ahead of us. I know, sorry. But to me that’s really the catalyst behind the current adoption, right? And if you look at one of the most labor intensive businesses out there and we kind of touched on this while we were chatting before reporting if you look at agriculture, I mean, John Deere has been working on AI tools for farmers for a decade and has bought up a significant amount of IP around that to not only allow farmers to become much more productive, but potentially make it so the farmer doesn’t have to be in the tractor during planting, during when they’re spraying the plants early on and during harvesting, the farmer can go do other stuff.

Sam

So I think as we begin to really understand that there aren’t enough farm workers out there. That there aren’t enough people to hire into various businesses, I mean, just look at the participation rate. The participation rate is not exactly coming back the way anybody thought it would after COVID, and it’s unlikely that it’s going to recover anytime soon with the number of retirees. Retirees have a significant demand for services. If you’re going to provide those services, you’re going to need to not only adopt new technologies and new tools, you’re going to have to come up with new ways of doing things generally. So I think AI always was going to be something interesting, but it’s something interesting at the right time with the right catalyst moving forward. And this is not something that’s going to be… There’s a little bit of fattiness to it in different ways, but I don’t think it’s going to be one of those passing fads that everybody’s like, “remember when AI was a thing?” I think it’s much more of something that we’re going to interact with on a daily basis across a whole lot of services and a whole lot of businesses that we did not anticipate prior.

Tony

So two things there. Technology generally is deflationary, right? I mean, aside from like $1,400 iPhone or whatever, generally, technology is deflationary for kind of status quo activities. Is that fair to say?

Sam

Sure.

Tony

That’s good. And then you said something like, we’re going to X with AI. But people are already experimenting with that stuff. So we do have people who are already doing that. And it’s really a question of it going at things going broad market. Like, I don’t want to be the AI hypester here. I’m really just kind of asking these types of questions just to understand your view on this stuff.

Sam

Sure. I think it’s pretty straightforward. Right. You have to have some way of replacing a nonexistent labor market, and AI does that in a fairly efficient manner.

Tony

So it’s demographics, wages, participants, demographics, wages.

Sam

Demographics change slowly than all at once. It’s not as though you can simply incentivize the demographics to change. Right?

Tony

Exactly.

Sam

That ship sailed a long time ago. Generally, to your point, demographics are a powerful force where when you have a significant amount of people that are older and out of the labor force demanding a significant amount of services, you have to figure out a way to deliver those services into them. With fewer people in the labor force, which is a massive long term catalyst to tools like AI, like ChatGPT, that type of thing, and it’s not going to stop there.

Tony

Yes. Okay. Good points. Okay, so let’s move from the kind of context and thanks for that, Sam.

Tony

Let’s move into how will AI change the enterprise? Todd, you’ve consulted and led strategy for really some of the world’s largest companies. In enterprise circles, we hear about AI projects from big consulting firms or a firm like Palantir, which really is a consulting firm. These are largely pet projects to tick a box. But at least in my mind, the kind of AI portion of these projects is extremely limited at this point. So given the economic context that Sam discussed and the corporate dynamics that you’re aware of, is AI in the enterprise a real thing right now?

Todd

Yeah, I think that you probably have to break it into a couple of groups. I think the earlier statement about agriculture and John Deere is true in oil and gas is true in healthcare. I mean, there are lots of companies that have been at this for a while, and they’ve got relatively mature environments, and in those environments, they’re really playing a different game. It’s not a check the box. It really is kind of fundamental to business models. I think there’s sort of a sort of much larger group of organizations that are just beginning to be aware of the opportunity in the kind of intermediate and long term. I’m super positive. I think this is unquestionably, the direction this has been headed for a long time. I think in the short term, we’re going to see what we always see during these periods of technical transition. It’s going to be messy. I think it’s important to always remember that there are real power dynamics around any adoption of new technologies. And in a lot of cases, the people who are in leadership and the people who are making these decisions are the authors of the current state.

Todd

And so they struggle to sort of conceptualize what the world would look like under a completely different set of norms. And I think unlike some of the previous generations of technical advancement, I would argue we’re coming out of the age of digital enablement. We’ve talked about transformation. I think there’s been very little transformation. I think it’s mostly just enabling some core things we were already doing and gaining some minor improvements in productivity. AI is one of a dozen exponential technologies that plays a very, very different role in accelerating innovation and accelerating business model development and changing operating models. That’s where things get really dicey. And I think there are going to be winners and there’s losers. And I know, Tony, you and I have talked over the years about when you do scenario planning, you sort of right off the bat, assume that there’s really no good or bad future. It’s good for some and it’s bad for others, and I think that’s going to be true here. I think what we’re going to see is there are organizations who have spent the last decade really creating the kind of agility, the kind of resilience that’s necessary to make a transition like this and really capitalize on it.

Todd

And there’s going to be some organizations that really struggle. And that’s why I actually think that this may not be the age of the incumbents. I think that the people who are really intending to disrupt have a window of opportunity here while people are kind of working through the internal dynamics of what it means to adopt these new technologies and brand new ways of working. People who are unencumbered by those cultures and those kind of leadership norms are going to be able to move much more quickly and likely be able to sell into that world. And I think that’s going to give rise to a whole new group of consultants. I think there’s always the system integrator model and we’re going to sell the big thing and we’re going to work it out over five years and rest of that. I think that the people who will play most prominently in this next phase really are hyper specialists and they’re going to come in and they’re going to solve significant real problems.

Tony

When you say that, I think you said the current operational architecture is a reflection of the current leadership or something like that. And it sounds like they won’t change willingly. Just to be a little bit brutal here, is there going to have to be a wave of retirements or something like that for AI to really hit larger firms or what would push larger firms to attract or to adopt really interesting levels of, say, technology and productivity?

Todd

I think that we’re at a kind of a unique place where a lot of the things that made us successful in the past are the things that actually inhibit our progress. And you know, if you’ve got folks who are relatively intransigent, I mean, really the only option is to move on. We used to have a firm I worked for. This sounds really crass. We had a phrase you either change the people or you change the people. And I think we’re at that kind of a moment where if you find yourself in an environment where the leadership and the operating norms really are not particularly conducive to making these key pivots, everything Sam said is right on the money. I mean, these are economic realities. You’re going to have to make these changes to remain competitive and you’re going to have to find a way to a new way of operating that will allow you to do that again and again and again. Because this isn’t an embrace AI. It’s embrace tool after tool after tool that’s solving these problems. It’s a very different discipline, but it’s also spinning up a bunch of interesting challenges. I was just talking to somebody this week that was working on some things around material science and leveraging AI in that space.

Todd

And we are so rapidly spinning up new materials that it’s difficult to find people who are capable by way of their training, of conceptualizing the utilization of those materials. And so these opportunities in some cases take a little while not just to ingest but to train up people to leverage these to their full extent. Which is why I think the short term is going to be really a story of fits and starts. There’s going to be some big wins and there’s going to be some significant resistance. One of the places where I’m kind of most interested right now is what was mentioned earlier about sort of the top of the food chain right. You’re talking about very elite, top level professional jobs. We’re already seeing some really incredible things in the healthcare space around second reads of scans.

Tony

What does that mean, second read? Can you walk us through that process? Yeah.

Todd

So the radiologist takes a look at your X ray or MRI and says, this is what I see. And then it automatically goes out to an AI engine that goes in and makes sure that everything was caught. And what we’re finding is that we’re routinely catching things with the AI. Well, that’s beginning to tell a story, not just about supporting the work of a radiologist, but potentially, over time, the machine actually becoming a superior mechanism to leverage as a first read and a second read, and you can actually create alternate models. And these are things that are not science fiction. These things are already happening. These are institutionalized systems are doing it really to mitigate risk. I now can say I’ve looked at it multiple ways, and we feel fairly confident at what we’re seeing. That’s happening in industries right now, where we’re actually seeing real life, serious use cases that are mitigating risk, lowering costs, improving outcomes that needs to be scaled. And that’s really what I’m getting at. I think that you see these really interesting spot treatments, right, where we’re looking at something saying, I can solve that. The question is, how do enough of those actually begin to be leveraged?

Todd

It becomes a way of working rather than just a tool in the box that we go to in very specific and very narrow circumstances.

Tony

So what about those people who say, “oh, I’ll never let AI be my doctor, I’ll never have a robot for a doctor, or I’ll never let AI be my CPA” or something like that? Will they have a choice?

Todd

Yeah, I don’t know that they will. I will tell you that there’s some pretty sophisticated tools that are already on the market that are very close to being able to achieve the same level of efficacy and diagnosis as the very best physicians that we have. When you think about that as a language model, I mean, if you think about, like, a Physician Desk Reference and you’re asking questions and you’re getting the medical history and you’re making decisions and there’s things that the machine is capable of doing that’s, just far more capable in the human mind in evaluating the different levels of risk and the likelihood that this is what I’m seeing versus this other thing. Because we’ve seen such a remarkable advancement just on that front in the last four or five years, and you’ve seen its adoption. You look at the NHS or you look at Medicare and you say, there’s absolutely no way, at least at that first level of diagnosis, that we’re not moving very aggressively in that direction for a lot of reasons. Number one, it’s much cheaper, but number two, it’s super available. It’s easy access. We’re actually catching these things long before they become genuinely problematic and cost the public a whole lot more by way of health care dollars.

Todd

So I get it. I understand it. I think there’s sort of an impulse initially to say “I’m very uncomfortable with that.” But increasingly there is a whole lot of diagnostic stuff that’s happening behind the scenes that people aren’t seeing that’s already in place. That’s pretty significant part of their care.

Tony

Right. Okay, so this is where I’m going to give a little shameless plug for complete intelligence, just to give people a little tangible idea of what can be done.

Tony

So we do budget forecasting for companies, and we have one company, a client, $12 billion in revenue. They have 400 people who take three months to do their annual budget process. We did that in 48 hours, taking one of their people less than a week of their time to transfer knowledge to us. We had better results in 48 hours than what 400 people did over three months. And this is a very tangible way of identifying the opportunity that’s available with AI tools and other technology tools. It’s not just replacement. It’s not RPA, robotic process automation. It’s not that it’s better. Right? And that’s where people should be a little bit aware, where we’re talking about doctors, we’re talking about people with MBAs, we’re talking about highly educated professionals where we can have a machine do that work better and faster. And that brings us to Chris Balding to give us great news, Chris. Thanks, Todd. I really appreciate that. And you guys jump in on this anytime.

Tony

Chris, the real question here is, will AI take my job? Right? My job? I’m hoping it does. But for most people, will AI take their job? I think you’re about to launch an AI NLP, a natural language processing firm. First question, I guess, is how has starting that firm changed your mind about the application of AI today versus even just a few years ago?

Chris

I think there’s this discussion about will it take people’s jobs? And if you look back on really any technological breakthrough from the cotton gin to fracking, what you really had is the per unit price would drop of a T shirt or how much it costs to get that oil and gas out of the ground. But what happened was it consumed people that had the technical training, higher levels of technical training. If you think about AI, people will say, well, hey, we don’t need as many coders. Well, you know, what’s going to happen is that opens up a whole new field of cybersecurity risks. And all those coder jobs are going to migrate into cybersecurity because all you’re doing is opening up cybersecurity risks, as a simple example. If you talk to any IT guy inside big companies or whatever, there’s typically a list of about 40 projects management wants them to work on, and there’s 20 that are constantly at the top of that field and they never get to those more advanced, maybe investment, longer term types of product. Well, if you’re able to blow through those 20 faster, as a simple example, you can move on to those more creative, risky type of projects.

Chris

So when I hear people talk about, well, it’s going to take my job, I think it’s absolutely going to change how people work. I think it’s going to change the types of jobs that we do. For instance, one type of coding might move more into cybersecurity. Is it going to eliminate these jobs so that the total level of employment disappears? Absolutely not. It’s just going to change how we work and the specific jobs we do.

Tony

So is it at least at this phase, is it more augmentation than it is automation?

Chris

So it really kind of depends on what you’re specifically saying. One of the things, and I think OpenAI has, has even said things to this effect, you know, we talked about macro and other stuff, but really, what has, what is undergirding this is that really, for the past, let’s say five to ten years, you’ve basically seen this exponential increase in AI type stuff. And that is really driven by, just to be blunt, the hardware of what you can do with GPUs. And part of the reason that we talk about this is, going forward, the amount of GPU capacity that you’re going to need is I mean, you’re going to start sucking down. I mean, the the amount of energy that they were sucking down from GPUs to do bitcoin will pale in comparison if it really takes off the way people say it will. I’ve used it for a lot of coding and similar types of things. And what you really see is, especially on more complex types of projects, you kind of use it to kind of seed what you’re doing, maybe take specific steps. It absolutely, I don’t think, is near the point where it can basically manage entire significant projects.

Chris

And so it’s absolutely a time saving tool. We talk about this with coders. It’s absolutely a time saving tool. Is it taking over their job? No, absolutely not. It’s going to help them do things faster, move on to more complex types of processes that they’re trying to automate.

Tony

Okay, but if it helps people do things faster, then that means they’re spending less time doing the job they have now. So somebody’s losing, right? Somebody’s losing a job, right?

Tony

Because if it’s helping people do stuff faster, then companies have to spend less time on headcount. Right? I’m trying to get out of the, hey, this is replacing jobs. But we kind of end up there with this type of technology.

Chris

Yeah. So think about it two ways. Let’s assume you have an IT department. All of a sudden, that IT department is doing less work, making sure that there’s not a paper jam at the printer and that the computer can talk to the printer. Okay. There’s less time spent doing that. But I guarantee you there’s hackers in Russia that are now using ChatGPT to say, “how do we break into this?” Part of the issue is that guy who started out in It is probably going to move over to cybersecurity. Okay? Or they might say, “hey, we can let go of a couple of people, but now we want these other guys to focus on these bigger investment type projects that maybe we had kept on the back burner because they just didn’t fit within our budgetary priorities.”

Tony

Okay, so those are relatively fungible skills. But if you’re like the Radiologist that Todd’s talking about, can those skills be repurposed to something else?

Todd

Well, honestly, I think it’s case by case, but I mean, Radiology is a great example and just health care generally. I think we’ve all probably heard that we have a nursing shortage and that you can’t find an endocrinologist and we’re constantly dealing with this really serious labor issue. A lot of that is because across the board in healthcare you have people really failing to operate at the top of their license because they’re spending an incredible amount of time doing the paperwork, meeting the CMS requirements. And so you have doctors who are doing 30% doctoring because the rest of their time is basically meeting all of the obligations to all the different stakeholders. Right.

Todd

I think what we’re likely to see is these people who are sitting in that sort of, again, that sort of top tier of kind of professional expertise, really spend more of their time doing value creating work. I think if you think about what’s really going on, we have effectively an opportunity cost that’s baked into everything that we’re just not doing because we’re doing all of these things that really don’t require somebody operating at that level.

Tony

Right.

Todd

What we’re trying to do. I think and I think this is really the way we should be framing the future of AI is that if you really get focused on value creation and you start talking about that opportunity cost gap, I need every one of these employees operating at the very top of their capabilities, regardless of whether they’re a physician or a coder. And I need most of their time being pushed against real value creating activities rather than all the stuff that really should be relatively easy to put off to this other way of operating. And I think you can be threatened by it or you can recognize that the greatest inhibitor to innovation over the course of the last decade has not been our ability to produce technology. It’s our ability to free up capable people to really focus on the innovative things that need to get done in order to make things go to the next level. This is that linchpin moment. And every leader ought to be asking the question like, “how do I maximize the value of every single human asset that I have and really get them operating at top their license.”

Todd

And if that’s not the focus, then this probably is going to be a challenging period and it will become about cost and it’ll become about reducing by way of eliminating positions. That’s not, I think, the way to go. I think that’s actually probably the wrong way to think about it. I don’t doubt that there will be people who will be in that trap because they just are going to have a hard time to make the move, but the smart companies are going to be able to understand that very quickly and move aggressively to make that happen.

Sam

Yeah. And I think that’s a critical point that should not be overlooked is you can be scared of it or you can embrace it and use it as a tool to enhance your one, your life, because none of us like doing the lower end of the spectrum stuff that we always have to do. If you use it to eliminate that and get to do the stuff that is much more highly value add, that is incredibly accretive not just to the business but also to your lifestyle in general. Right. I think embracing it and actually having a positive attitude about it and saying, how can I use this to make myself more productive and generally more happy? Because hopefully we’re doing things that we love to do. How do I use this to do that? I think it’s all about the mentality of approaching it rather than saying, “oh my word, is this going to take my job?” I think it’s a fundamental thing that if you think it’s going to take your job, it probably is simply because you’re not going to embrace it and learn and try to adapt to the new technology, you’re going to fear it and shut it.

Sam

And I think that’s going to be the fundamental difference between those that succeed with the new technologies that are coming and those that fail and fail in a meaningful way.

Tony

Yeah, but I think fear is a natural response to something like this. Right. I mean, we’re all kind of not all of us, but a lot of us are afraid of new stuff. We’ve had our same job for 10-20 years. We have a routine, we go in, we do our work, we leave it five and call it a day. That’s most people, the vast majority of people, and I don’t necessarily think maybe I’m a skeptic here and maybe I’m a bad person for thinking this, but as Todd you talk about people want to look at the greatest value add they can have within their job and that will help them from being kind of automated. I don’t know that most people think that way. Maybe they do. But I think most people are just kind of going in for hours to do a routine job and those are the things that are the most dangerous, I think the positions that are the most dangerous.

Tony

Before we kind of wrap this up, I don’t want people to think that I just kind of loaded this with people who I knew would have the same view as me.

Tony

So, guys, let’s take the other side of the table for a little bit. And I’m not accusing you of having the same view as me, but let’s take the other side of the table a little bit. Let’s assume that large language models and Chat GPT and all these things are overhyped right now, okay? What could stop the implementation of these technologies so that they aren’t adopted across companies and across the economy? What could stop this stuff? Chris, you’re muted.

Chris

I think one of the things is Todd has alluded to this is you’re going to need so basically the basic technology that ChatGPT used is really probably just ten years old. They just added a lot more data and a lot more GPUs. I mean, the fundamental technology is not new in the least. What you’re really going to need, what is going to stop this is now you have to get domain experts coupled with those tech geeks to say, what can we do together? So whether it’s an endocrinologist, whether it’s a financial analyst, whatever it is, and one of the things is outside of the mainstream that you’ve seen a lot, is how can you develop these language models that are providing very precise answers for very specific fields? I’m a tax accountant. I am an endocrinologist, I am whatever. So if you don’t bring those domain experts together with those tech geeks and you’re just stuck with ChatGPT, which is basically trained on the Internet, you’re going to get a lot of bad answers rather than being able to augment what those humans can do.

Todd

Well, I would go further on that and say that those domain experts are critical, especially at this moment in time, right? Like, you start thinking about healthcare, aviation, mining, oil and gas, places where there’s really some very significant risk, and you say, look, those domain experts working side by side, they see that risk coming, they bake that into the conversation. They talk about what to actually put in that learning model to actually create an environment where you accomplish those kind of incremental improvements, but without exposing the organizations to exponential risk. I would tell you right now, the issue is it’s early. And so there’s not a lot of domain expertise that’s actually fluent enough in this to have a dialogue that’s meaningful to kind of push this forward. And the risk that’s inherent to that is the sort of ugly pre adolescence, as we sort of learn our way into using the technologies appropriately, getting out over our skis and getting some things really profoundly wrong, that really creates sort of a downdraft, right? Like, oh, this failed, or this didn’t work or it opened up this massive amount of risk, that’s a human error question. That’s really just a function of moving more.

Chris

Just to kind of add to that, Todd. Give me 1 second, Sam. I’m sorry about that is one of the issues that especially in an issue like the medical field, and I’ve heard this talked about in multiple other fields, is humans are there for a reason and especially if there’s a license, if there’s legal liability, et cetera, et cetera. No human, no matter how good the technology is, even if the technology is demonstrably far superior to human, no human is going to turn that legal liability over to a computer without saying, I’m going to sign off on this, I’m going to check it. And as you said, Todd, that machine learning was basically double checking what the radiologist was doing, just verifying.

Sam

Yeah, to Todd’s point and to Chris’s point, and I think this is really important, if we don’t get the domain experts in there to actually help and make better decisions, better outcomes, better reporting by the by ChatGPT 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, we are going AI in general is going to end up being regulated in a meaningful way. It only takes a couple of really big incidences, car crashes, et cetera, before you end up with the FAA, before you end up with the Transportation agency, et cetera, et cetera, Department of Energy. However you want to look at it, the amount of regulation that will come down on top of this in a landslide like way if you don’t get it right from the beginning and have some sort of self regulating mechanism, whatever it might be, is another, I think, understated suffocating factor, right? There’s nothing that suffocates innovation like regulation. And if you don’t get it right and you don’t get it right pretty quickly the amount of regulation that’s going to come down on this, particularly when it’s consumer facing, when it’s labor facing, those are some very powerful lobbies that are going to absolutely hammer this if it’s deemed to be unsafe or dangerous. I mean, it’s that simple.

Tony

Interesting. So basically what I get from you guys is we’re likely to have at least a few years where it’s more augmentation, where those experts are feeding back into the models to help them understand what they do before these things can really go off on their own. Is that fair to say? So we can’t just open the box today, replace a bunch of jobs and everyone’s on government payments or whatever for the rest of their lives. It’s going to take a few years for this stuff to really get some practical momentum in the workplace.

Todd

I think that’s right. But I think to that previous comment, the industry has to be very careful to sort of self moderate here. I mean, there are going to be folks who really very diligently go about the process of ensuring that we do it right. And then there will be people who inevitably will play it fast and loose. It’s the folks on that side of the fence that actually create the downward pressure from the legislative and regulatory environment. And so it’s just kind of an interesting moment in time because it’s sort of the learning period that really puts it on a solid footing. But it’s also a period where there’s a great deal of volatility and potential for there to be some kind of significant things that happen that actually harm the long term ability to get it implemented in a way that makes sense for the public.

Tony

Very interesting. Yeah, I think that regulation point is so super important. Okay, guys, anything else to add before we wrap this up? This has been hugely informative for me. Anything else that’s on your mind about this?

Sam

I’ll just say don’t fear it. Use it. If you’re not using it, if you’re not trying to learn about it, then make it make you better or get out of the way.

Tony

Exactly. Watch a few videos, learn how to do some mundane tasks. Use it to your advantage and do things like we do with our newsletter. Just get some really routine tasks automated and then just start learning from there. So guys, thanks so much. This has been really, really valuable. Thank you very much. Have a great weekend.

Todd

Thanks, Tony.

Sam

Thank you, Tony.

Categories
Week Ahead

Inflation in Asia and the US: The Week Ahead – 3 Oct 2022

Learn more about CI Futures here: http://completeintel.com/futures

In this episode, we talked about what’s happening with inflation in markets, and where it’s hitting, particularly in the US in different sectors. Mike walked us through the Asian contagion for inflation. Also, given where USDCNY has been over the past week or so, how vulnerable is China? Are they more concerned about inflation or export competitiveness?

Sam put out a couple of wonderful newsletters about central bank responses to inflation last week. The Fed seems – and is – unrelenting in their response, regardless of what happens with UK gilts. One area Sam raised last week is the car market versus mid-market dining: Cars vs Cracker Barrel. He walked us through the price and volume considerations with these two.

And then we looked at Meta’s move to freeze hiring and their warning about layoffs. Is that a broader signal for tech?

Key themes:
1. Inflation: Asian Contagion
2. US Inflation: Cars vs Cracker Barrel
3. Meta’s move: More to come?
4. The Week Ahead

This is the 36th episode of The Week Ahead, where experts talk about the week that just happened and what will most likely happen in the coming week.

Follow The Week Ahead panel on Twitter:
Tony: https://twitter.com/TonyNashNerd
Mike: https://twitter.com/UrbanKaoboy
Sam: https://twitter.com/SamuelRines

Time Stamp
0:00 Start
0:49 Themes for this Week Ahead
2:47 How vulnerable is China? Are they more concerned about inflation/export?
10:23 China will not be the exporter of deflation anymore
13:28 Will China give in to devaluing CNY?
16:15 Cars VS mid-market dining
22:00 Price increases will continue?
24:26 Is this the beginning of the end of tech wage spike?
29:11 How does this current ad slowdown compare to the past?
30:20 What’s for the week ahead?


Listen to the podcast version on Spotify here:

https://open.spotify.com/episode/5HrIhlEwZMwIBDdFwBo5Ib

#inflation #asiainflation #usinflation #stockmarket #stockmarketnews #economy #economics #inflationrate #costofliving #effectsofinflation #comparingpricesinflation #metalayoffs #meta #layoffs2022 #investing #inflationinasiaandtheus

Transcript

Tony Nash: Hi, everybody. This is Tony Nash and welcome to The Week Ahead. Today we have a couple of very special guests. We’ve got Michael Kao. You would know him from Twitter as UrbanKaoboy. And we’ve got Sam Rines. And obviously you know Sam from previous shows. This week we’re going to talk about a lot about what’s happening with inflation in markets. We’re going to talk a lot about where inflation is hitting, particularly in the US in different sectors. And then we’re going to cover a little bit of tech.

So our key themes this week first is the Asian and contagion for inflation. And Mike’s going to jump into that in quite a bit of detail. We’re then going to look at US inflation. Sam put out a really interesting note covering kind of cars versus Cracker Barrel, although that’s not really the comparison, but it’s something in that range. And then we’re going to look at Meta’s move to freeze hiring and their warning about layoffs. Is that a broader signal for tech? And finally we’ll move into the week ahead.

So before we jump into this, please be aware that we have our product called CI Futures, where we forecast hundreds of commodities, currencies and equity indices as well as economic indicators. I was just going over our error for GDP USD for the month of September, and our area was about 2.23%, I think, for the month. So it’s a very relevant product even in these times. You can find out more on the link below. 

It’s $99 a month and you can see everything in the subscription there. We publish our error rates. We publish our forecast. You can download the data, you can download the charts and do comparisons. So please check that out. 

Michael, thanks for joining us. I really appreciate your time. I’ve heard you on a number of other podcasts and it’s just so great to have you here. I really appreciate it.

Michael Kao: Yeah, thank you. Great to meet both of you. Yeah, I appreciate you having me.

TN: Fantastic. Hey, there’s a tweet that you put out a couple of weeks or about a month ago actually looking at the Asian contagion and pretty much it was reflecting a tweet that you had put out in January, talking about your expectations for the year ahead and the set up for the year ahead.

So given where, say, CNY has been over the past week or so and the set up that you put out earlier in the week, how vulnerable is China? Are they more concerned right now about inflation? Are they more concerned about export competitiveness? What does that look like? And as you start talking, we’ll put up a chart of USDCNY as well.

MK: Sure. Before I answer that question, I just want to take a quick step and just outline for you, like where I kind of arrived at this Asian contagion thesis. Right? So about a year and a half ago, I’ve been invested in the oil patch for quite a while. And I’ve expressed my bet through a long term private equity plate because it’s my belief that years and years of underspend and then exacerbated by this worldwide ESG push right, and diversion of capital away from the sector and then of course, further exacerbated by all of this massive monetary and fiscal stimulus first created oil inflation way back. Right.

So I started noticing this basically around the beginning of ’21 and I wrote a bunch of threads about it. And then during the year I started thinking what are the ramifications of this? Well, the ramifications are that it’s going to make our Fed more hawkish than the rest of the world earlier than the rest of the world. And so what are the ramifications of that? Well, given that currencies are mainly driven by interest rate differentials that would in turn create this what I labeled a USD wrecking ball effect.

And so as that thesis started kind of coming true and gathering steam throughout the year, the tweet that you referenced that I wrote at the beginning of this year was that I said, look, the setup is a scary one for this year because we have the makings of a stagflationary energy crisis not seen since the 70s. It’s going to create tightening ahead of the world, creating this USD wrecking ball. And then we have this everything bubble to boot on top of that. 

And this wrecking ball really reminded me of my sort of baptism by fire into the hedge fund business. In 1997, I joined a hedge fund here in LA called Canyon and we were value credit based investors and a lot of our idiosyncratic bets essentially got swamped by the macro, right? So what started as seemingly innocuous devaluations by a couple of EM countries in Southeast Asia metastasized over the course of a year and a half until full blown credit contagion. Except this time, what I wrote about in this thread is that what’s scary is that number one, the level of inflation that’s driving this US dollar racking ball is much higher than before.

And from my oil centric point of view, I think a lot of it is structural. And then the second thing is that the vulnerability point… I mean the EM countries are also vulnerable. But what’s scary this time around are the developed nation currencies like the Euro, the Japanese yen.

And now I come back to your question, the Chinese Yuan. Your question is a really interesting one that I actually tweeted about this week is China. China is in a box. Just like the Bank of Japan, just like the ECB. They’re all in a box because their respective economies are much weaker than ours.

I think the big question, and I don’t know when the US dollar wrecking ball is going to peak, maybe it already has. But I suspect though, my hunch is that maybe it’s still got some legs to go because until you reach a point where the macro fundamentals of those respective economic zones are strong enough to allow their central banks to essentially outhawk our central bank. Any interventions are going to basically be just a wasted burn of their reserves.

And so you saw that with the BOJ, right? They spent something like 20 billion of reserves defending their currency and that lasted two days. And we’re back to all time lows in the Yen.

So China is really interesting because China is such an export-driven economy. One would think that with their economy on the back foot from the property crisis, from zero COVID policy, one would think that as their neighbors are devaluing and becoming more competitive versus them, that they would be more worried about their current account getting hit, right, their current account surplus getting hit. And so you would think that they would want to let their Renminbi devalue.

What we saw instead, I think, was that yesterday that the PBOC had a pretty strong intervention in CNY. That tells me, I actually put a tweet out to exactly the effect that’s a big tell to me that they’re more concerned about inflation. And China, just like Japan, is uniquely vulnerable in that they are also net importers of something like 80% of their energy. They’re in a tough bind.

And the million dollar question is no one knows when… That day, when the BoE intervened and all risk assets rallied hard. I think that was the market kind of conflating that all these interventions are going to be exactly. It’s going to lead to the Fed also going to QE. And I put out another thought on Twitter saying that, you know what, I don’t know that you can conflate that because the Fed was happy to be the world’s plunge protection team in a world of where there was no structural inflation.

When you’ve got a world of structural inflation, it becomes kind of an every man from self dynamic where I don’t know that how much we can go help stymie the yen or stymie the Renminbi or stymie the Euros collapse by queuing here. Because that’ll just completely inflame inflation. And the big tell on that was on that risk on day. You know, what was really roofing also was oil. And so it comes back down to oil.

If the Fed actually blinks and goes back and pivots, the thing that’s going to moon and lead us right back to square one is oil, which is what started this whole cycle in the first place.

TN: So let me take a step back from what you said, because you just unloaded a lot, which is great, and I think Sam will violently agree with you on a lot of stuff. But what’s really interesting to me. If China is worried about inflation. Although this is somewhat like 2011. When they had the, or 2007 or whatever. When they had the pig flu and all this other stuff.

And there was inflation pressures but China has been the source of deflation for the last 25 or 30 years right and so if China is no longer the global exporter of deflation then it is a dramatic change in the structure of the global economy. Dramatic and I think so many people use this that this is not something that we’re not going back to 2019 prices ever. Right? But I don’t really hear people talking about China not being able to be the exporter of deflation anymore and that’s just one that’s come and gone that’s already gone right. 

MK: And it’s not just China. It’s Eastern Europe, too, right, because I wrote a thread that basically borrowed some of the thoughts from Professor Goodheart’s paper about how this was kind of a once in a lifetime demographic dividend that allowed the world and the Fed to basically pay for over every financial crisis of the last four decades with aggressive monetary policy because there were never any inflationary repercussions. But as you so validly pointed out, that was due to like a once in a lifetime sort of demographic dividend that is now in secular reversal.

Sam Rines: To this point… I want to jump in and just reinforce this point here because I think it’s a really good one that China was a massive source of goods deflation globally along with East Germany, Poland. Etc. as they joined in following fall of the Berlin Wall. 

But I think  there’s something really intriguing here is that it doesn’t even matter if they still continue to export some goods deflation over time. Their commodity inflation tailwind is going to be problematic. The only thing that has really saved them with a Renminbi north of seven is that they haven’t had to import anywhere near the amount of commodities that they would typically have to. If you’re locked down, they have the longest commute times on average in the world in China. That is a tremendous tailwind to gasoline. Food. Et cetera. When you begin to reopen and have China’s economy going full bore, that is a tremendous issue for the commodity complex in general in an environment where it’s already broken. It’s going to be a tremendous amount of pressure on that system and I don’t think people are prepared for that either. That China is now the exporter of an incredible amount of commodity inflation over the next half decade or so.

MK: It’s actually really insightful because commodities which they have to import. They’re super afraid of that and that oil is basically the primary factor of production for everything under under the sun. Yes, everything.

TN: Back to CNY do you think they’ll kind of give in to devaluing or do you think they will continue to fight this, which is a battle that everyone loses eventually?

MK: That’s such a hard question to answer because if anybody can fight it, it would be China right?Because they have a non convertible currency, right. So I think, for instance, Japan is much more vulnerable because I don’t see Japan imposing capital controls and I don’t see Japan relaxing on their yield curve control. So the only exit valve there is the Yen devaluation. Right.

But in China’s case, they have capital controls. I spoke on an interview earlier this week with Mike Nicoletos, and we were discussing about whether or not there’s a porosity through the Hong Kong dollar. Right. I think they have to clamp back down, too, right? Because. If they really want to manage the pegs, they need to really like stymie capital controls. Otherwise, I think capital just going to flow out.

TN: So will we see a divergence between CNY and CNH? 

MK: What is the divergence? I mean, it’s tiny. Two or something. 

TN: Okay, great. I’m just wondering if CNH is trading offshore and that’s allowed to freely trade or relatively freely trade? Maybe. Sam, you have a better idea? I’m not entirely clear on what the restrictions are on CNH trading because I don’t think it’s completely for all. Otherwise that divergence would be much bigger, I think.

TN: Well, it’s a spread, right? It’s a proxy of a spread. And so you can see pressure on that, and you can see that pressure pushing the expectation of seeing why potentially devaluing if they don’t handle it. Like PBOC, they’ve got a lot of smart people, but policy wise, they make a lot of mistakes. Don’t think they’ll elegantly.

MK: I was just going to say that I actually think that if they let CNY or CNH freely float, it would have a nine handle on it. At least, I think that’s where it goes.

TN: Yeah, at least. Okay, very good. Thanks for that, Mike. I really appreciate that. Let’s move on to Sam. You put a note out earlier this week talking about inflation and central bank responses to inflation. And the Fed obviously seems unrelenting in their responses. Mike mentioned, as you mentioned in your newsletter and here several times, but one area you raised in your newsletter this week is kind of cars versus mid market dining.

So you talk about cars, Carvana versus Cracker Barrel. Can you kind of walk us through that? And I’ve got a couple of shots from your newsletter. One is on the Carvana release, and the other one is on Cracker Barrel. Actually, we only have the one on Cracker Barrel to show the group. But do you mind walking us through that?

SR: Sure. So the impetus behind the note was really to kind of make the point that Mike made earlier, that the Federal Reserve does not care about what’s going on in the Gills market. It is not going to come save the Bank of England and Downing Street from what they’ve done. That’s not their problem. That’s a domestic issue. And when you decide to have a massive fiscal tailwind and a monetary policy that was being highly restrictive and going to sell bonds, your currency is going to fall. And that’s your own problem. That’s the way that the Fed viewed it. And then a bunch of Fed speakers came out and said basically exactly that, but in a little kinder tone.

But the idea there kind of pulling that together is that the US domestic economy is still doing well. So the CarMax report was really interesting because CarMax has used autos, right? That’s what they sell. And all the headlines about inflation and used autos, their volumes got absolutely trashed in the past quarter. And that makes sense, right? People?

There’s a drawback from interest rates moving higher. It’s one of the most direct things that is affected housing and car financing. But the interesting part about it was while the volumes were down, they still had revenues up on their retail segment because prices were higher 25% year over year, their average selling price. So they did a really good job of kind of managing their revenues.

But that speaks to the inflation problem, right? The Fed doesn’t care about volumes going down. If the prices are still higher. Then you kind of go to Cracker Barrel, right? Middle America in my mind is you can encapsulate middle America in a Cracker Barrel I mean, it’s kind of perfect. And when you look at their release, it’s pretty clear that they called out 65 and over dining down. Guess what? That’s highly sensitive to inflation. They cited lower income individuals dining out less. Again, highly sensitive to inflation. And they still had their comp store sales up 6%, which is pretty good. And then you read a little further in the same sentence and they’re like, and we had pricing higher by 7%, so traffic was down. So they had negative traffic at higher prices. So that is again, they’re giving up volumes to be able to push the price and grow reps.

I think this is kind of a microcosm of the US economy, right? It is a strong economy. If you can continue to push price like that on the consumers. If you can grow revenues while pushing price at those levels, that’s pretty incredible. And then it’s pretty interesting to me because there’s this whole idea that corporate America is going to slow down their price increases. Cracker Barrel basically shot that idea right in the foot by saying, hey, listen, we think wages are going to inflate 5% over the next year. That’s september to September. And then if we’re going to have comparable store sales up, right?

So guess what? They’re going to continue to push price. And that’s where I think we kind of need to take a step back and realize these inflation pressures are broadening out and they are beginning to become embedded. Their food costs, when they forecast that, I believe that number was 8%. These are significant figures, right? These are not things that we would have thought were possible five or six years ago. They’re becoming embedded. I mean, that’s 2023 that these guys are thinking that.

And just one more point going back to the CarMax report, their SG and A, their cost of doing business, we’re up 16% year over year because they hired more people and they paid them more. So you think about you grow revenues at 3%, but your costs are up 16%. I mean, that’s a pretty big problem. Again, it goes back to the two things that the Fed really wants to get under control, including inflation is two things, right? They talk about the vacancies to unemployment ratio. They need less hiring to happen and they need wages to begin wage growth, to begin to subside a little bit because that’s a tailwind consumption.

So I think you’re having a number of pieces working against the Fed that might not be showing up in the data, mostly because I think the data is kind of crap. But the best part is if you’re kind of willing to go to that microlevel  to get the macro and pull the macro out of it, these trends are not going anywhere anytime soon.

TN: So what I get out of that is I hope Cracker Barrel has digital menus. If not, I want to be their menu printer because every time I go into a restaurant, I wonder how often they change their prices, right? And basically, from what you’re saying, it sounds like they’re going to continue to push up, I don’t know, quarterly, semi annually, but they’re going to continue to push these prices up based on what’s happening in the market, and I suspect they’re not going to come back down. Oh, no.

SR: There are other ways to do it, right. You can push price by pushing less food on a plate, too. Right. So you can do some creative things on multiple fronts. Shrinkflation. The shrinkflation. But I do think that you’re not going back to anything like 2019. Right?

MK: I just want to riff off that for just a second because I participated in a real estate panel a couple of weeks ago and listening to these asset managers from around the world present. One big asset manager was basically saying that they’re still seeing essentially. Even though the rent growth is slowing down. It’s still growing for Q3 of this year where you would think that the hiking has already kind of worked its way into the system. That rent growth is still annualizing at a 10% click. So you talk about sticky.

I’ve had this thesis that it started with commodity inflation. Commodities have abated somewhat and certainly will abate more if there is an Asian contagion. Right. But the core stuff, which is what Sam is talking about, and also rents, that’s really sticky. But here’s the problem. When that stuff starts curling over, I really agree with you that if China reopens, you’re going to see a resurgence in commodity stuff again. So I call this sort of like the core energy tag team. And I think we’re going to see this tag team effect possibly for years.

SR: Oh, yeah. To rip off that I called it the COVID earthquake is going to have more aftershocks than anybody really wants to admit. 

TN: Yes, there was so much intervention. You can’t just earn it out in six months, right. Or a year. It takes so long to work that out. So that makes a lot of sense. Guys, staying on this inflation theme and Sam, you mention SG and A and wages. Meta announced yesterday that they are imposing a hiring freeze and they’re warning their employees about restructuring. 

So obviously now that as of yesterday, they’re the second most valuable company in the world with Exxon taking over. But if Meta is instituting a hiring freeze and Sam, you talked about Carvana hiring a bunch of people last quarter and their costs going up, what does that signal for tech?

I think, Sam, you showed me the site layoffs.fyi or something like that to look at layoffs in tech, there are a couple of issues which we covered with Mike Green before and you’ve talked about up befor Sam, where ad space is becoming almost infinite and these guys who are ad based have a lot of headwinds and Meta is no different. And so that’s obviously one of their headwinds.

But the SG&A cost is huge. Right. What do we need to be looking for with Meta and companies like Meta? And is this the beginning of the end of the tech wage spike?

SR: I’ll take part of that. Okay, good. Is it the end of the tech wage hike? I don’t know that is going to be the case simply because we don’t have enough people with those skills, even if we do have a pullback in the number of hires. Right? On the marketing side, yes. But on the tech hiring front of people with programming skills, et cetera, I don’t think that’s going to slow down or those are going to slow down anytime soon, at least until we have enough of them.

But maybe on the marketing side, et cetera, I would say that the Meta announcement is far more indicative of a slowdown generally in Silicon Valley startup ad spending on the marketing. That’s a problem for Meta on the margin. A significant amount of their ad revenue comes from startups.

It’s a much larger problem for a company like Snapchat. Right. There is a hierarchy of where you go to advertise and when you’re going for eyeballs. So if it’s a problem for Meta, it’s probably a much larger problem for a Snap in some of those smaller, less ubiquitous platforms. 

But yeah, it’s always going to be a question of where is Meta putting its incremental dollars, because it is making a pretty big push into the Metaverse. It’s unlikely that people are getting slashed, jobs are getting slashed there. It’s more likely that what you’re going to see is a reduction in places. They’re simply not seeing the returns that they want to see and they’re going to continue to grow the hiring base on something that’s important to them, like building out the Metaverse side of the business.

TN: Sure. Yeah. Mike, what are you seeing with tech?

MK: I don’t follow Idiosyncratic tech as much, so yes and no. I’m actually, ironically, one of my Idiosyncratic positions is actually a dyspacked ad tech company that’s in the ad arbitrage business. That’s a different type of a different type of play, but I haven’t been as focused. So I’m very interested to hear your sort of microcosmic views. Really interesting.

TN: Yeah, I think everything Sam says is spot on. I do think that in terms of the core coding skills, there’s a lot of slack there. So for example, as we talk around, because we hire developers. Some of the developers who work for some of the very large tech companies who make mid six figures, something like that, their daily code commit is something like eight lines of code. That’s it. 

Okay, so these guys are not sweatboxing code. It’s a very minimal amount of code they have to put in every day. So I think there are major productivity gains to be made on the developer side within these large tech companies. So maybe it’s not hitting yet, but I think it will hit soon as it always starts with marketing, right? It always starts with traveling expenses and then it goes further. And so I think give it a few months and we can see it go further into development.

MK: I’m curious, Sam, if what you’re seeing in the sort of tech ad slow down, how does this compare to past downturns, past cycles?

SR: It’s hard to say because we haven’t seen many significant down cycles. Because COVID wasn’t a down cycle for ad spending. It was kind of strange. Right. Social media did very well during that time frame, and social media was so young in ’08, ’09 that it’s hard to really get a read there, except you can kind of extrapolate Google. Google did pretty well in ’08 ’09. They took a lot of market share from traditional media, but that was a different age. So I would say it’s pretty hard to look back and say it’s going to be similar this way or not similar.

MK: But wouldn’t you say, though, that the ad slowdown is just across the board? It’s not as if traditional ad spending is going to start eating their lunch across the board.

TN: Real quick before we wrap up, if you can, in ten to 15 seconds, what are you looking for for the week ahead? Mike, what are you looking for next week to watch?

MK: Well, this has been a very confusing week in that I think there have been a lot of quarter inch shenanigans and window dressing. I’m still macro pretty bearish. Okay. I’m concerned that I think after the window dressing is done, I think some of the supports from the market may actually not be there. I watch bonds and commodities a lot.

TN: That makes sense. Yes, Sam?

SR: I’m just watching the Euro and what happens with TTF next week. I think that’s really important after we get through the quarter close.

TN: Absolutely. Guys, thank you so much. I know this is quick. I wish we could talk for two more hours.

I guess we got cut off at the very end there, so I really apologize for that. I just wanted to thank Mike Kao and Sam Rines for coming on The Week Ahead. Thanks, guys, so much for all that you contributed this week. And thanks to everyone for watching. Have a great weekend.

Categories
Week Ahead

The Week Ahead – 23 May 2022

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The SPX was down 4%, WTI was up 2.8%, and the 10-year yield was down 2.9%. Intraday vol has been an issue all week. What’s going thru an institutional trader’s mind in this market? Sam Rines explains.

On the commodities market, wheat was down 6% this week. Corn ended this week down about 1%. We’ll help you understand ag and fertilizer markets with Tracy Shuchart.

The dollar (DXY) is down a bit this week, about half a percent. Are global central bankers worried about a rising dollar and is there anything they can do about it? Albert Marko gives his insights on this.

Key themes:

1. How are institutions trading the intraday vol?

2. Ags and fertilizer: Demand Destruction vs Supply Shortages

3. $USD 💪 – 🙂 or ☹️

———————————————————————

This is the 19th episode of The Week Ahead, where experts talk about the week that just happened and what will most likely happen in the coming week.

Follow The Week Ahead experts on Twitter:

Tony: https://twitter.com/TonyNashNerd

Sam: https://twitter.com/SamuelRines

Albert: https://twitter.com/amlivemon

Tracy: https://twitter.com/chigrl

Listen on Spotify:

Transcript

TN: Hi everyone, and welcome to The Week Ahead. I’m Tony Nash, joined as always by Sam Rines,

Albert Marko, and Tracy Shuchart. Before we get into it, please, please like and subscribe. Please like and subscribe.

Also, we just started our new CI Futures promo. You get your first three months free. Get global markets, currencies commodities economics with CI Futures. Check it out at completeintel.com/2022Promo 

So guys, this week S&P was down 4%. So I think some people are relieved it wasn’t down more. WTI was up almost 3% and the 10-year yield was down 2.9%. So I think it was a little more tame, at least by the end of the week than some people thought it might be, which probably not helpful to everybody, but I think it helped people a little bit, just kind of get a grip on things.

So our key themes this week, first, how are institutions trading this market and more specifically kind of Intraday Vol?

For AGS and Fertilizer. Is it demand destruction or supply shortages or both? How are those playing out?

And for the US dollar strength? Are global central banks happy about it or sad about it?

So today for our first segment, Sam, if you can help us understand this. Intraday vol has been an issue all week and for the past couple of weeks. What’s going through an institutional traders mind in this market We’ve got a tweet and there was a great thread from Kris Sidial. I definitely recommend reading it. So can you walk us through that a little bit, Sam, what they’re thinking about and what institutional traders are doing?

SR: Sure. I would say what they’re thinking about is not losing money, particularly after you had the target earnings, Walmart earnings. There were some landmines out there in individual retail land. That brought up some call it concerns about the consumer. It brought volatility into places you hadn’t really seen volatility recently. So staples began to really get a little more volatile. In particular, they were more volatile than the S&P500 for the back half of the week. So you began to see call it the volatility spread on underlying issuer basis, but not necessarily really spiking at the headline index level.

TN: So traders are trying to keep it flat, right?

SR: They’re keeping their risk very tight. There’s quite a bit of blood in the streets, so to speak, particularly those trading rates and individual equity names. So yeah, I would say it didn’t look like it was that volatile, but the intraday vol was incredible and it took a lot of the risk out of the system. It’s worth noting that a lot of the risk managers out there aren’t looking at day to day vol. They’re looking at Intraday Vols, PNLs. So you’re likely to get a shoulder tap Intraday if you’re playing these markets with too much leverage.

TN: You tap out at like 2:00 PM or something because of your positions? Is that what happens?

SR: Or you just have to unwind one that you like. Right. If you put on a S&P future trade early in the morning and you get 100 point move Intraday in the S&P, you’re going to get blown out of that position pretty quickly. Right. You have to have really tight stop loss limits. That’s it.

TN: Albert, what are you seeing?

AM: Well, the Fed has done a marvelous job of erasing excess wealth out there, excess money. Not just from retail. Retail is dead in the water right now. But even institutional wise, a lot of funds just been obliterated for the past month and a half now? The problem becomes liquidity. And where is it? I’m looking at the order book on the e-minis, and it’s just there’s nothing there. There’s nothing on the buy side,

nothing on the… Nothing. So these massive 100 point moves, I mean, of course, we’ve never seen anything like this, but if you look at the problem with liquidity there, it makes perfect sense.

TN: So, Albert, from a hedge fund world perspective, do you think we’re going to see some hedge funds cleaned out? Obviously, Melvin, we know that story. But are we going to see some issues there with some funds?

AM: Without question, you’ll see a lot of them unwinding by the end of the year. I know a few personally that have closed up shop or in the process of closing up shop. And I can’t imagine there’s at least 25% more that’s out there that are in some serious trouble. I mean, redemptions will start taking off clients that were sold, big tech names in a zero rate economy, they’re gonna be calling every single day what’s

going on for returns, and there’s none to be found right now.

TN: Yeah.It’s tough to get things out right now. Okay, good. Thanks for that. Let’s move on to our second topic.

Tracy, wheat was down 6% this week. Corn ended down about 1%. We got an interesting viewer question from Thomas Sieckmann, who’s a regular viewer. Can you help us understand AG and fertilizer markets. Thomas is saying, “love to hearyour thoughts on AG commodities. Demand destruction versus supply shortages, fertilizer prices and shortages, drought, lots of cross currents.” Can you help us understand kind of those markets a bit better?

TS: Sure. Well, first, I don’t think you’re going to see demand destruction even at higher prices,

because people need to eat. Right.

TN: Eating is good. Yeah, right. We can agree on that.

TS: The thing is what I think we’re going to see a structural shift in the market, whereas you’re going to see different crops being produced over other crops. In other words, if we look at, say, wheat, for example, what’s happening right now is that wheat crops are being produced more because it’s easier to do, less energy intensive, and that’s going to make a problem on the corn market. Not necessarily in the United States. I would single out the United States as it is kind of a different market altogether?

But if we look at the global markets, where I think this is headed. We’re going to see shortages in areas where you didn’t think so. Right.

We’re all scared about wheat because of obviously Ukraine and Russia and then being major producers, et cetera. But that is going to, in turn, affect the corn market, global production and what those crops are, what crops are being produced globally, if that makes sense. I think that’s what we need to be on a lookout for.

And things like rough rice. Rice. Rice is going to, because nobody wants to put wheat and corn into, say, animal food anymore. Right. Rice is much cheaper. So I would look for rice to go much higher because

they’re going to use that to replace something like animal feed.

TN: Interesting. Okay.

So we’ve seen political instability in Sri Lanka, especially over the past couple of weeks, and part of that is just terrible government. Part of that is weak currency and food affordability. How far do you think this goes? Does it get extended to a lot of other countries, or is there a few other countries that this gets exposed to? Both you and maybe Albert, if you guys can both jump in on this.

TS: Yes, I think it extends. We’re already seeing that name around. Right. We’re already seeing protests in Iran, and I think that this is going to continue, especially in emerging markets. Right. So I think this is nothing new. I think we should expect more of this and be reminded of when we saw the Arab Spring. It all started because of food. Right. So that’s something that we need to pay attention to, in my opinion.

AM: Yeah, I agree with Tracy. Some of the emerging markets are going to be the most hardest hit. It’s funny, because four or five months ago when my client and I were sitting there discussing what countries to look at to invest in, and one of the key components is which ones are stable in their food supply.

I mean, the United States. But France is actually quite stable. I think that they can actually make quite a play for the European Union’s leadership over Germany going forward, specifically because they’ve got enough food to sustain themselves.

As for the other countries…

TN: That’s a good point, Albert. I hadn’t thought about that. But that’s a really good point about France.

AM: Yeah. Well, I mean, they got their own food. They have a big agricultural industry, they’re

top in the world, and they’re self sufficient. And they have water from the Alps, too. So they have everything they need for themselves. So they’re pretty isolated from this.

But you look at Spain, they’re in trouble. North Africa, they’re in significant trouble. Sri Lanka won’t be the first looking for at least a dozen more instances of that happening around the world.

TN: So we have a summer of new government.

TS: I’m looking towards Brazil and Argentina, even though everybody kind of hates those markets right now, is if we look at their agriculture? Their agriculture is robust. And so I think that in the end, that will serve them from an investment standpoint if you’re looking to invest in.

AM: But the only problem with Argentina is so I mean, their government is just absolutely atrocious. And then the Brazilian. High risk. And Brazilians have a big election coming up, and that’s going to be extremely contentious. So I would stay away from those two until after those elections happen and whatnot. 

But yeah, I mean, Brazil, they have fertilizer, they have fruits, they have sugar cane, a lot

of chicken, a lot of soybeans, a lot of meat.

TN: Okay, perfect. Let’s move on to the next topic. Albert, we got a question from Gary

Haubold, who’s a regular viewer. He’s talking about the dollar and how central banks. There’s gossip that central banks are getting nervous about a strong dollar. So dollars up or down, sorry, a little bit this week, but how worried are global central banks about the dollar?

Of course, you have, say, the North African or Brazilian or other kind of fairly shaky monetary markets. But if you look to, say, European or developed Asia or some of those other markets, how worried are those central bankers about a strong dollar?

AM: Well, I just want to isolate this between just the United States and Europe right now, because that’s only really what matters to the market back in the United States. A strong dollar for the Europeans is not good. It’s just absolutely not good. It would be good if the Euro was falling. They had exports to send to China, but they don’t have that anymore. So now they have dollar liabilities that are getting out of control. And I think that the Europeans, I’ve heard whispers inside the Fed and treasury that they’re worried about a European financial crisis. And it makes perfect sense. If they want to get the markets down, blow up Europe, that’s the best way to do it.

TN: But I thought we’ve had a financial crisis in Europe since about 2012.

AM: Yes, but we have it every five or ten years because Europe is a welfare state. It’s a welfare state that lives on Fed swaps. Right. That’s all it is. And I don’t want to insult the Europeans on here, but let’s just get real here. Without Chinese exports, they’ve got nothing.

TN: Sam, what do you think about that?

SR: Yeah. If China doesn’t open up soon, it is going to be extremely problematic for Europe. That would be the saving grace in a lot of ways to Europe for a strong dollar. Other than that, there’s going to have to be some sort of interesting talk down to the dollar, either from treasury or some hawkish comments coming out of the ECB. And you’d begun to hear the ECB be a little bit more hawkish recently. If they really want the dollar to abate, they’re going to have to get more hawkish.

TN: Yes, for sure. And on your China point, I saw a story this week that the Shanghai Port was at about a 90% capacity at some point this week. Whether that’s true or not, I don’t know. But I saw it in a legitimate newspaper so let’s see how long that lasts.

TS: I was going to ask you, Tony. From a China perspective, how do you look at this opening? Do you think Shanghai is really opening like they say it is or is this hearsay or, can you give us a little bit of insight on kind of the China situation right now because that makes a huge difference in demand for energy and materials?

TN: Sure. Absolutely. So I sure want it to open because I want both China and the rest of the world to thrive but because of a lot of domestic considerations, COVID or monkey pox or whatever it is. I don’t know. They’re just lifting it slowly. 

But we talked about this in detail on last week’s show but I really don’t think they’re going to open to any interesting degree until mid summer. Maybe later. I wish they would open tomorrow but they won’t. I think for a lot of reasons they’re kind of getting in their own way and I’ve said this many times China needs to be saved from China. It’s just such terrible management of the country and has been for 50 or more years

and they’re potentially going back into the great famine type of environment which I worry about a lot and that would be detrimental to everybody around the world.

TS: That makes sense.

TN: So on that happy note, thanks so much for taking time for the show, guys. Really appreciate that. Have a great week ahead. Thank you very much.

Categories
QuickHit

Inflation: Buckle up, it may get worse (Part 1)

Nick Glinsman and Sam Rines are back in this QuickHit episode special Cage Match edition about inflation. Where are we in the inflation and what is the horizon? Both guests have different views and they explain exactly why they have such views. And what about China’s manipulation of CNY through hoarding metals and commodities? Is that a valid way of looking at inflation?

 

Part 2 of this discussion can be found here: https://www.completeintel.com/2021/05/06/quickhit-inflation-part-2/

 

Want the audio version? Play this on Spotify or find us in other podcast players. You can also find us in other podcast audio streaming services. Just search “QuickHit”.

 

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This QuickHit episode was recorded on April 28, 2021.

The views and opinions expressed in this nflation: Buckle up, it may get worse QuickHit episode are those of the guests and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of Complete Intelligence. Any content provided by our guests are of their opinion and are not intended to malign any political party, religion, ethnic group, club, organization, company, individual or anyone or anything.

 

Show Notes

 

TN: Today we’re talking about inflation. It’s been on everyone’s mind for the last couple months and we’ve got two macro geniuses to talk to us about it today. We’ve got Nick Glinsman from EVO Capital and we’ve got Sam Rines from Avalon.

 

We look at copper. We look at a lot of these indicators of inflation and it’s been on everyone’s mind over the last few months. A year ago, people were worried about deflation. Now the worry is inflation. Obviously we’ve seen a lot of monetary and fiscal policy in the interim.

 

So, Nick, can you give us your view on where we are with inflation and what that looks like over what horizon? Is it months? Is it five years? Is it, you know, how does this play out?

 

NG: The horizon is a little bit tougher. But my my thesis is based on looking back at historical precedence and I focused on the LBJ Vietnam War spending, combined with his great society fiscal spend, which ultimately led in the early 70s Paul Volcker’s fame containing huge inflation there was at that period.

 

And I’m sitting here having spent the last year but actually building this thesis up for a couple of years thinking that the equivalent of the Vietnam expenditure is Covid and the relief spending that’s been has combined Trump and now Biden, and then the great society equivalent would be Biden’s green infrastructure spending which, I slightly tongue-in-cheek called the green ghost plan, which is enormous. Amazing.

 

When I find myself agreeing with Larry Summers on inflation. I think his odds of a third in terms of this creating inflation, I would suggest a higher. In terms of timeline, it took five to seven years for the inflation to really kick in during the 60’s leading to Volcker. I think this time around, it will be much quicker due to the differences, a lot of globalization and supply chain management.

 

TN: Sam, can you kind of give us your view of where we are in inflation and what’s the duration that you kind of expect this to play out?

 

SR: I have a very different view. If you look at the lumber market, copper, et cetera, these are things that tend to sort themselves out rather rapidly. Being in Houston, the best cure for high prices and energy is high prices. We will pump more if oil ever goes to 80. It’s very similar with lumber and copper. Most of the mills are becoming much more efficient in lumber, for instance.

 

So we will see that begin to roll over and that will roll over in a very meaningful way as we begin to work through these supply chain issues that we know are coming in the summer and we know are probably going to persist in the fall. But as we get into the fall and we get into early 2022, even if we have a couple trillion dollars infrastructure, it’s going to be spread over the better part of 10 years infrastructure.

 

It’s not a fast spend and it will not save us from the fiscal cliff. It will not save us from the lower employment numbers that we’ve been seeing on an overall basis. Yes, unemployment is moving lower, but employment is not keeping up with the employment figures.

 

Once the economy begins to have to stand on its own two legs, even if it has a touch of a tailwind from the government, it’s still going to be very difficult to continue to see consumption going through the roof, continue to see the types of disruptions that we’ll see for the next six to nine months in terms of supply chain that will have one-off price implications.

 

But that to me says we’re probably getting towards the peak of the sugar high as we get into the summer and the other side of the sugar high is going to be very painful in terms of going back to a one and a half to two and a half percent growth rate in the US inflation that will be very difficult to get higher simply because it’s difficult to have sustained disruptions in supply and demographics that aren’t changing anytime soon. So we will continue to have a number of those headwinds. And I think that’s what the US 10-years is telling you, US tenure at 1.5 is telling you that the market’s looking through this summer and saying the next decade doesn’t look as good as the last decade in a lot of ways.

 

It’s something to at least keep in the back of our minds that the Fed doesn’t have great control over the 10-year. The fed has great control over zero to two-year timeframe. But nothing beyond that.

 

TN: Okay, so let’s look at common areas. It seems to me that both of you see inflation continuing to rise maybe not in terms of the rate of rise but certainly continue to rise until, let’s say say Q3 Q4? Do we at least have comic around there?

 

SR: Yeah.

 

NG: Yes, absolutely.

 

TN: When we look at some of the the pressures in inflation, part of my assertion has been, and I’m sure you’re both going to tell me I’m wrong, but as we’ve seen the CNY strengthen, my hypothesis has been with a strong CNY, Chinese manufacturers are stocking up on industrial metals, food, other things because it’s in dollar terms. They can get it pretty cheaply and they’re waiting for CNY to devalue again when their buying power will decline.

 

What I’m hearing is that a lot of these things are really going to China to be hoarded and as a play on a potentially devaluing CNY. What do you think of that hypothesis aligned with a lot of the central bank easing? Is that a valid way of looking at inflation? Meaning this is stockpiling more than it is demand pull?

 

NG: My view on China is that, if you look at food firstly, there is a food shortage crisis. And we all know what the CCP are most scared of, which is society unrest. And we can take the examples of the Arab Spring, food is the key. But I also wonder whether the Chinese are stockpiling in anticipation of decoupling? I think of rare earths, of which they have a large control of the refining thereof being problematic. Semiconductors, there is an issue there.

 

So if I extrapolate further, my view is I think the supply chain issues are much longer standing now because of various geopolitical forces creating a decoupling with China for sure. And we have this Anglosphere grouping that’s clearly beginning to take shape, which now looks like that will include India because of the health crisis there.

 

If we look at that, then the question is what happens with Europe? Again, I think that’s part of the supply chain problem whilst they decide which site they go to. Is it china-centric or is it anglers-centric?

 

So I think the supply chain issue is much longer standing, hence I suspect that we’ve got China positioning, because nothing goes on which in China without the government knowing about it, quite frankly. In terms of anticipating a supply chain issue, because all the commodities they’re importing they’re short off.

 

TN: Okay, Sam, first of all, what do you think about my hypothesis and then Nick’s qualification around the supply chain issues being much longer term on the back of decoupling?

 

SR: I would take the argument that decoupling isn’t an action. It’s a process, and the process takes a very, very long time. And that creates in my mind a much longer time frame for the United States to build out its portion of the supply chain, for instance semiconductors, et cetera. So I would say I don’t disagree that there is a decoupling underway. In my opinion or my argument would be that it will take much longer than a few years to really get that process to move and it’ll be particularly under this administration a much more diplomatic and less blunt force tools than we’ve seen in the past being used. So I don’t disagree with the supply chain eventually being at least somewhat disentangled from China. I would just argue that it will take quite a while to really begin to become an issue unto itself.

 

On your point that China stockpiling, that does appear to be happening. It does appear to be a hedge against a weaker CNY to come including with lumber. One of the reasons that lumber prices are spiking is because China’s buying a lot of lumber in the US. That is a significant problem. And I would point to, when they stop stockpiling, that tends to have a significant effect on the price of commodities in the opposite direction. We’ve seen that with copper a couple of times during their infrastructure builds.

 

The interesting thing right now is you’ve actually seen a pullback from infrastructure spending. From the peak in China, they’ve begun to do their form of policy tightening on that front already. Suspected will continue at least on the margin and that will be a significant headwind for those commodities that have been stockpiled when less of them are being used on the margin as well. So that that does play into a 2022 disinflationary type environment versus 2021.

 

TN: Given that we have all these different pressures, whether it’s supply chains, whether it’s stockpiling, whatever it is, what the people in the middle, so that the manufacturers, what capacity do they have to absorb these price rises? What are you guys seeing when you talk to people, when you read? Are you seeing that manufacturers can absorb the lumber prices, the copper prices and other things? Or are they passing that directly along?

Categories
QuickHit Visual (Videos)

QuickHit: “LUV in the Time of COVID”

Avalon Advisor’s chief economist and author of “After Normal: Making Sense of the Global Economy”, Sam Rines joins Tony Nash for the 14th episode of QuickHit, where we discussed the L, U, and V recoveries in different states and industries. He also shares some interesting data on traffic congestion, CPIs, car sales, and food prices — and what these data mean for investors, businesses, and people. And what trend is he seeing to pop back up in travel and leisure?

 

Don’t miss out some of our relevant QuickHit episodes:

Proactive companies use data to COVID-proof their supply chains

Manufacturers are bouncing back, but…

We’re not going to normalize

How do we use up all the corn now?

 

The views and opinions expressed in this QuickHit episode are those of the guests and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of Complete Intelligence. Any content provided by our guests are of their opinion and are not intended to malign any political party, religion, ethnic group, club, organization, company, individual or anyone or anything.

 

Show Notes

TN: I’m trying to figure out when and how do we come out of this? We have our models, we have our views on things. But I read your stuff every day and what are you thinking? Where are we right now? Are we early, mid, late? Where are we now and where do you think will go in the next few weeks or months?

 

SR: So I think the answer is all three. We call it LUV in the Time of COVID. There will be an L-shaped recovery, a U-shaped recovery, and a V-shaped recovery depending on whether you look at Texas or Florida or Kentucky. Whether its manufacturing or services. Everything has its own shape. So we’re early on some, middle on some, and late on others.

 

On the overall employment side, we’re probably past peak pain. At this point, you’re mostly having unemployment benefits a hindrance to bringing people back to work, not help people keep afloat. That’s not true everywhere. Certainly, there are places that are still shut down and those people still need those unemployment benefits. But places like Texas that are reopening to a certain degree like Florida and Georgia. It’s difficult to bring people back to jobs that pay less than the enhanced unemployment benefits.

 

One interesting piece of the puzzle though is the continuing unemployment claims and you’ve begun to see the states that open actually begin to roll those down. So people are coming off those unemployment slowly. It’s not happening quickly. Florida is one of the exceptions that Florida came off extremely fast. I think that’s going to be one of the stories that’ll pick up pace over the next three to four weeks. There’s a decent chance that if we’ll continue to have these types of numbers for continuing claims. There’s a decent chance that the May unemployment number will be the worst number we see this year. You begin to improve pretty quickly. The June number, we don’t take that survey for another few weeks. That’s more than likely going to be better than May in terms of unemployment beginning to come down. So we think it’s a mixed bag. But employments probably going to improve from here.

TN: That’s good news, I hope. There are a lot of service jobs and blue-collar jobs that were laid off in the first waves. Is that right?

SR: Yeah most of them. The interesting thing is it’s fairly easy to social distance within most manufacturing facilities. So manufacturing, theoretically, can snap back a little bit faster than the services side of the economy. The services industry is going to be the laggard here. But the service industry is also the majority employer, far more important on the employment side of manufacturing.

TN: You keep an eye on things like traffic patterns and restaurant usage. What are you seeing as the rate at coming back and then what does that say about things like food prices or gasoline consumption?

 

SR: It’s snapping back very quickly on the driving side of things. That’s snapping back much faster than public transit, airlines, etc. You have the U for airlines and mass transit. But you have what appears to be a pretty sharp V in driving. Congestion is almost back to normal levels in places like Houston during rush hour. Texas generally is back towards its baseline according to most of the metrics.

 

The RV sales are through the roof. People still want to go on vacation. And if you can’t and don’t want to get on a plane and go to Cabo, you get in an RV and go to the Grand Canyon. It’s just another way to get out of the house. I got to a little bit of trouble for saying it. But I’ll say it again, if you keep boomers off of cruise ships, they’ll find a way to still go places and still have fun in retirement. They’re not just gonna stay up. They’re not just going to stay cooped up in their house. And the interesting thing about that is an RV is not a small investment for most people. So I think that travel might have more legs than people are really giving credit for. Camping might actually make a come back here versus your more crowded areas, particularly within that boomer crowd.

 

TN: Back to the 70s for camping. We hear about food shortages with meat and we also hear about storage for crude oil. With more activity, are you seeing faster drawdown with crude oil? Are you seeing anything happening there in terms of food?

 

SR: So with crude, we’re beginning to see drawdowns and I’m not sure that it’s faster than we anticipated. But gasoline particularly has picked up much faster than people anticipated. That drawdown will be much faster, much stronger and have longer legs than was anticipated. On the overall demand side for oil, it’s a harder picture to paint. Aviation fuel is a significant driver on the margin of usage within the US. A lack of that is offsetting any bullishness on the gasoline side. Those will probably balance each other out for the most part as we move forward and you have a drawdown that’s relatively in line with what we were anticipating a few months ago.

 

On the food side, you’ve seen a snapback in restaurants for Texas in particular. We are back to, give or take 55 percent usage for restaurants. We have 50% occupancy allowed in Texas. That appears to be pretty close to maxed out. At least restaurants, we get reservations. We’ve seen some interesting things on the eat-at-home food side. We dug through the CPI, the inflation data pretty carefully and found that the food at home was getting increasingly expensive in a way that we hadn’t seen in a long time. Eggs were getting expensive. Meat was getting expensive. Fresh fruits and vegetables are getting expensive and they were accelerating at a pretty rapid pace.

 

It does look like we’re going to have some pretty good crops. It doesn’t look like we’re going to have trouble on that front. So we shouldn’t have the pricing pressure emanating from that side, which is good.

 

The critical aspect is going to be how do we get the beef demand back up to the point where you actually have cattle ranchers wanting to not cull their herds and therefore drive state prices higher. I think that’s going to take more states opening restaurants like New York, California, and other big steak consuming areas of the country reopening and really beginning to drive that incremental demand.

 

Another fun note is I grew up in New Hampshire. Lobster is an important part of eating there. And lobster prices plummeted to the point where lobstermen decided they probably shouldn’t even go out and they were selling for two to four dollars a pound on the side of the road.

 

TN: Let’s just take a minute and we’re sitting in October 1st. We’ve gone through Q2. It was carnage. We’ve gone through Q3 and we’re looking back on Q3 versus Q2. What are you thinking at that point, October 1st of this year? Help me understand a little bit of that based on your perspective today.

 

SR: Based on my perspective today, I’ll probably be sitting in Boston, hopefully having a client meeting at a lobster that’s more expensive than three bucks, looking back and wondering how we missed the pickup that was happening in June and July and how the pockets of things that were doing much better than anticipated.

 

It’s worth noting according to one of the data sources I used, auto sales are actually picking back up rapidly from down, north of 60% for new cars and used cars. New autos only down, I’d call it the high 20% range from a year ago. Used cars down single digits from a year ago, on a volume basis. That kind of snapback in different pockets of the economy is going to be what I’m looking back and wondering how I missed whatever it might be whether it was people wanting to get back on cruises. I don’t think they’re going to want to give back on cruises. I don’t think people are gonna jump back on planes very quickly.

 

I think we have a 911 type of recovery. Three years, give or take there. I think that’s the mindset to use. But there will be something that just completely catches me off guard in terms of the speed and rapidity that it comes back, or with the L-shaped, it’s just never coming back. One thing I think we’ll catch a lot of people off-guard is the pivot on the margin from hotels to homes. Renting at home instead of renting a hotel. Being spaced away from people, having the pool to yourself. I think there will be trends like that that have become pretty clear whether or not they have legs by October and I think that’s probably one of them.