I’m not very good at predicting unpredictability.
Right now we’re in unpredictability land squared.
This morning ,my stock portfolio was down $x. At close this afternoon I was down about half $x, with stocks like META, MSTR, LNG, ED. COST, RDDT and PLTR actually up on the day.
My Nvidia was down big-time — because I own so many shares.
My friend Ed taught me about “selling against the box.” I sold 2,000 NVDA shares short. By the end of the day I was up $1,700 on this “trade.” That brilliant profit might evaporate in a nanosecond tomorrow morning if the market suddenly decides not to love Nvidia.
The idea of “selling against the box” (which I’d never done before) is to make a few bucks on a downturn, while still retaining your main holding for the next two years when Nvidia will be much higher. I say that with belief in the ongoing explosion of new AI applications — from robots to healthcare, from self-driving cars to digital assistants, from chatbots to education. And hence exploding demand for Nvidia chips.
Ed told me there’s a rule called The Wash Sale. If I lose money on my Nvidia short in fewer than 30 days I don’t get a short-term, ordinary income loss. But, if I make money in under 30 days, I still have to pay ordinary income.
No wonder Trump wants to do away with income tax and replace it with tariffs. That’s why he changed the name of the mountain to Mt McKinley.
When McKinley was president, there were no income taxes but there were import dues as high as 49.5%
Today Robert Reich wrote a brilliant piece:
What you need to know about Trump’s tariffs and the rest of Trump’s madness
The art of the deal, with him as dealer
Friends,
Understand this: The reason Trump has raised tariffs on Canada and Mexico is not to have more bargaining leverage to get better deals for the United States from Canada or from Mexico.
Hours before the Canadian tariffs went into effect, Trump was asked if there was anything Canada could do to stop them. “We’re not looking for a concession,” Trump said, speaking to reporters in the Oval Office on Friday afternoon. “We’ll just see what happens, we’ll see what happens.”
The real reason Trump has raised tariffs on Canada and Mexico is to show the world that he’s willing to harm (smaller) economies even at the cost of harming America’s (very large) economy.
The point is the show – so the world knows it’s dealing with someone who’s willing to mete out big punishments. Trump increases his power by demonstrating he has the power and is willing to use it.
The same with deporting, say, Colombians or Brazilians in military planes, handcuffed and shackled. If, say, Colombia or Brazil complains about their treatment, so much the better. Trump says, without any basis in fact, that they’re criminals. Then he threaten tariffs. If Colombia backs down, Trump has once again demonstrated his power.
Why did Trump stop foreign aid? Not because it’s wasteful. In fact, it helps stabilize the world and reduces the spread of communicable diseases. The real reason Trump stopped foreign aid is he wants to show he can.
Why is he disregarding (or threatening to tear up) treaties and agreements (the Paris Agreement, NATO, whatever)? Not because such treaties and agreements are bad for America. To the contrary, they’re in America’s best interest.
The real reason Trump is tearing up treaties is they tie Trump’s hands and thereby limit his discretion to mete out punishments and rewards.
Don’t think of these as individual “policies.” Think of them together as shows of Trump’s strength.
If Canada or Mexico retaliates, he’ll retaliate against them with even bigger tariffs.
If some senior Republican members of Congress object that he’s stepping on congressional prerogatives, so what? It’s an opportunity to show them who’s boss.
If a federal court temporarily stops him, so what? He’ll go right on doing it and demonstrate that the courts are powerless to stop him.
Look behind what’s happening and you’ll see that Trump is employing two techniques to gain more power than any U.S. president has ever wielded.
The first is to demonstrate that he can mete out huge punishments and rewards.
It doesn’t matter if the punishment or reward is justified. A 25 percent tariff on Canada? Hello?
It’s a show of strength.
If prices skyrocket in America for oil and lumber from Canada or for fruits and vegetables from Mexico, no problem for Trump. Most Americans don’t understand how tariffs work, anyway. Trump will blame Canada and Mexico. And then threaten them with, say, 50 percent tariffs. Kabam!
Which brings us to the second technique Trump is using to expand his power: unpredictability.
What makes an abusive parent or spouse, or an abusive dictator, or Tump, especially terrifying? They’re unpredictable. They lash out in ways that are hard to anticipate.
So, anyone potentially affected by their actions gives them extra-wide berth – vast amounts of obedience in advance.
Trump keeps everyone guessing.
He demands that Denmark sell Greenland to the United States. He chews out the CEO of the Bank of America at Davos for allegedly discriminating against conservatives. He fires independent inspectors general. He purges the Department of Justice of career civil servants who prosecuted cases against him. He attacks birthright citizenship.
What’s next? Who knows? That’s the whole point.
How else to explain the bizarre deference – cowardice – we’re seeing among CEOs, the media, almost all Republican and even some Democratic lawmakers? Presumably, they’re all saying to themselves: “He could do anything, so let’s be especially careful.”
Musk, Bezos, and Zuckerberg kiss his derriere. Bill Gates is “frankly impressed” with him. Jamie Dimon, chief of JPMorganChase, decides he’s “not all wrong.”
Nearly 50 House Democrats support a bill targeting undocumented immigrants charged with nonviolent crimes for deportation. What?
In 1517, Niccolò Machiavelli argued that sometimes it is “a very wise thing to simulate madness” (Discourses on Livy, book 3, chapter 2). In his 1962 book, Thinking About the Unthinkable, futurist Herman Kahn argued that to “look a little crazy” might be an effective way to induce an adversary to stand down.
The “rule of law” is all about predictability. We need predictability to be free.
But much of what Trump is doing is either illegal,31sd yet will take months or years before the courts decide so, or is in the gray area of “probably illegal but untested by the courts.” Which suits his strategy just fine.
The media calls it “chaos,” which is how various people and institutions experience it.
The practical consequence is that an increasing number of so-called “leaders” – in the private, public, and nonprofit sectors, and around the world – are telling their boards, overseers, trustees, or legislatures: “We have to give Trump whatever he wants and even try to anticipate his wants, because who knows how he’ll react if we don’t?”
Together, these two techniques – big demonstrations of discretionary power to reward or punish, and wild uncertainty about when or how he’ll do so – expand Trump’s power beyond the point any president has ever pushed power.
Which brings us to the obvious question: Why is Trump so obsessed with enlarging his power?
Hint: It’s not about improving the well-being of average Americans and certainly not about making America great again (whatever that means).
Yes, he’s a malignant narcissist and sadist with an insatiable lust for power who gets pleasure out of making others squirm.
But there’s something else.
The bigger his demonstrable power and the more unpredictably he wields it, the greater his ability to trade some of that power with people with huge amounts of wealth, both in the United States and elsewhere.
I’m referring to America’s billionaires, such as Elon Musk and the 13 other billionaires Trump has installed in his regime, as well as the 744 other billionaires in America, and the 9,850 Americans with at least $100 million in net worth.
Together, these individuals have a huge storehouse of wealth. Many are willing to trade some of it to gain even more, and to tie down what they have more securely.
They give Trump (and his family) business deals, information, campaign money, and positive PR (propaganda). In return, he gives them tax cuts, regulatory rollbacks, and suspensions of antitrust.
I’m also referring to oligarchs in Russia, China, and Saudi Arabia. He gives them special trade deals, energy deals, intelligence deals, access to global deposits of riches; or he threatens to hold them back. In return, they give him (and his family) business deals, information, support in political campaigns, and more covert propaganda.
This is Trump’s game: Huge demonstrations of power that’s wielded unpredictably. They’re eliciting extraordinary deals for Trump and his family, domestically and worldwide.
Trump says he’s doing this for American workers. Nothing could be farther from the truth. He’s doing this for himself and for the world’s oligarchy, which, in turn, is busily siphoning off the wealth of the world.
How to stop this? The first step is to understand it.
Scams are exploding, and getting more enticing
Go to this website, Harry, and pay the $6.99 toll you owe.
Nonsense. I don’t owe the toll. And the web site is a scam.
Key: the web site looks fake.
Ditto: Email payment demands from Norton, Best Buy, PayPal, etc.
Clue: The sender’s email doesn’t come from the company or any variation of it.
Germany is crazy
They dumped their nukes. They dumped their coal. They went to expensive, unreliable wind and sun.
So, try this:
My son, the brilliant one, lives in Amsterdam and drives a fancy Tesla.
When he drives to Germany, he pays $0.64 for for a KWH.
When he fills up in the Netherlands, he pays $0.30 for a KWH.
If you were locating a business, where would you go?
Three wonderful New Yorker cartoons
Our Palantir (PLTR) is up 22.4% after hours after blow-out earnings.
That’s better than a slap in the belly with a cold fish. (Degusting Australian expression.)
See you tomorrow, or so — Harry Newton