cover of episode The Most Expensive Election Trade Ever Made (A Cautionary Tale)

The Most Expensive Election Trade Ever Made (A Cautionary Tale)

2024/11/1
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Polar Pant: 本期节目讨论了美国最新的经济数据,包括令人意外的就业报告、飙升的黄金价格、I债券收益率下降以及股市表现。分析师对十月就业报告仅新增12000个就业岗位感到震惊,远低于预期的100000个。飓风和罢工是造成这一结果的主要因素。美联储可能在下周降息,市场已预期到这一点。黄金价格飙升至45年高点,这与股市强劲上涨形成对比,主要原因是全球央行,特别是中国和印度的央行,正在大量购买实物黄金,以应对地缘政治风险。I债券的收益率已从9.6%大幅下降至3.1%,其吸引力已不如高收益储蓄账户。股市方面,标普500指数的涨幅主要来自七家科技巨头(苹果、微软、Alphabet、亚马逊、英伟达、Meta和特斯拉),但其他公司也表现良好。美国经济在疫情后增长强劲,但面临通货膨胀和财政赤字的风险。两位总统候选人的经济计划都将导致财政赤字增加,关税可能加剧通货膨胀并引发全球贸易战。最后,节目以Sam Bankman-Fried在2016年大选期间的交易为例,告诫投资者不要根据大选结果进行交易,而应进行长期投资。

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The US jobs market added only 12,000 jobs in October, significantly below the anticipated 100,000. Hurricanes in the Southeast and strikes, especially at Boeing, contributed to this slowdown. Despite this, the Federal Reserve is expected to cut interest rates, while the unemployment rate remains low at 4.1%.
  • October 2024 saw only 12,000 new jobs added to the US market, compared to 223,000 in September.
  • Hurricanes and labor strikes were major contributing factors to the job slowdown.
  • The Federal Reserve is expected to cut interest rates by 0.25 percent.
  • Unemployment rate remains low at 4.1%.

Shownotes Transcript

#554: The U.S. jobs market hit a surprising speed bump in October, adding just 12,000 new jobs — way below the expected 100,000. 

A mix of natural disasters and labor unrest explains the slump. Recent hurricanes in the Southeast wiped out somewhere between 40,000 to 70,000 jobs, while strikes at Boeing and other companies added to the slowdown. Against this backdrop, the Federal Reserve looks ready to cut interest rates next week by 0.25 percent.

Meanwhile, gold is having its biggest moment since 1979, but not for reasons you might expect. Central banks, especially in China and India, are loading up on physical gold like never before. Poland's central bank has grabbed 167 tons of gold and wants to keep 20 percent of its reserves in gold — a move that hints at banks preparing for possible global shake-ups.

Remember when I-Bonds were the hot ticket in 2022, paying out 9.6 percent? Those glory days are gone. The new rate has dropped to 3.1 percent, making your standard high-yield savings account look pretty good in comparison.

In the stock market, it's all about the "Magnificent Seven" — Apple, Microsoft, Alphabet, Amazon, Nvidia, Meta, and Tesla. These tech giants account for 62 percent of all S&P 500 gains over the past year. The other 493 companies aren't doing too shabby either, with profits expected to grow 13 percent next year.

As for the upcoming election, both presidential candidates' economic plans would push the federal deficit higher. The Wharton School of Business says Trump's proposals would add $5.8 trillion to the deficit over 10 years, while Harris's would add $1.2 trillion. There's also talk about tariffs that could spark inflation and maybe even kick off a global trade war.

Here's the kicker: during the 2016 election, a 24-year-old Sam Bankman-Fried correctly predicted the outcome before anyone else and made $300 million in a single night trading on that information. But by morning, the markets had swung so wildly that he'd lost $600 million. 

The lesson? Even if you guess the election right, predicting how markets will react is a whole different ball game — one that you should avoid. Think long-term, buy-and-hold. 

Timestamps:

Note: Timestamps will vary on individual listening devices based on dynamic advertising run times. The provided timestamps are approximate and may be several minutes off due to changing ad lengths.

3:15 October jobs report falls short: only 12,000 new jobs added

7:45 Gold prices surge to 45-year high

11:30 Central banks lead global gold buying spree

16:20 The end of the gold standard

20:45 I-Bond rates plummet from 9.6 to 3.1 percent

24:03 The Magnificent 7 create most S&P 500 gains

28:58 US deficit hits 6 percent, tops G7 countries

33:31 Inflation risks and tariff concerns ahead of election

40:10 Why you shouldn't trade the upcoming election

Resources Mentioned

Wharton’s Trump Campaign Economic Analysis:

https://budgetmodel.wharton.upenn.edu/issues/2024/8/26/trump-campaign-policy-proposals-2024)

Wharton’s Harris Campaign Economic Analysis:

https://budgetmodel.wharton.upenn.edu/issues/2024/8/26/harris-campaign-policy-proposals-2024)

The Economist, Editorial Board Endorsement:

https://www.economist.com/in-brief/2024/10/31/why-the-economist-endorses-kamala-harris)

Bloomberg Endorsement:

https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2024-10-31/michael-bloomberg-why-i-m-voting-for-kamala-harris)

The Financial Times endorsement, which is unfortunately behind a paywall:

https://www.ft.com/content/3db1db35-f536-4efc-b463-a1fc98a785b0

For more information, visit the show notes at https://affordanything.com/episode554)

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