I'm thinking of taking a position based on expected movement from the upcoming U.S. Presidential election; specifically, a long position in the more heavily-weighted companies on the S&P (MSFT 5.1%, AAPL 4.8%, AMZN, 3.22%). [Ref 2]
I'm reading a book called "Political Control of the Economy" by Tufte, 1978. A bit of a collector's item from the Ford administration, some points therein still hold valid:
We saw this in the Clinton administration:
...and even back to the Hoover administration, who won with this slogan:
I see T spinning the Corona virus to this effect: because of this disease, limitations must be put in place with China. This is a drag on the economy. Thus, we must lower interest rates and take other actions to keep the markets hot.
If I'm right, we could see AAPL break 400 by November.
CONCERNS
A. I know... The "Economy" is not the "Market." There are plenty of threads on that; however, although most are not active traders like us, many are vested through their 401k, IRA, or even pension plans. I think that the unwashed masses' concept of "The Economy" is generally linked to performance of the DOW and S&P, and the color of these numbers as they blip across the screen on morning talk shows and sporting events.
B. The price of gold frightens me a bit. $1618 at time of writing. An increase in gold prices typically indicates some form of political unrest... war... [Ref 3] Is this price spike due to Corona again, or some semi-secret military operation that we are not privy to?
C. Most of these companies are tech... in your opinion, is a bit of diversification in order? fear that I will lose profit.
REFERENCES
1. Tufte, E.R. 1978. Political Control of the Economy.
2. S&P Weights. https://www.slickcharts.com/sp500
3. Debt, The First 5,000 Years (Graeber, D) 2011.
I'm reading a book called "Political Control of the Economy" by Tufte, 1978. A bit of a collector's item from the Ford administration, some points therein still hold valid:
Tufte said:The main propositions, in summary, of the politicians' theory of the impact of economic conditions on election outcomes emphasize short-run shifts:
1. Economic movements in the months immediately preceding an election can tip the balance and decide the outcome of the election.
2. The electorate rewards incumbents for prosperity, and punishes them for recession.
3. Short-run spurts in economic growth in the months immediately preceding an election benefits incumbents. [Ref 1]
We saw this in the Clinton administration:
President Bill Clinton said:It's the economy, stupid!
...and even back to the Hoover administration, who won with this slogan:
President Herbert Hoover said:A chicken in every pot, and two cars in every garage.
I see T spinning the Corona virus to this effect: because of this disease, limitations must be put in place with China. This is a drag on the economy. Thus, we must lower interest rates and take other actions to keep the markets hot.
If I'm right, we could see AAPL break 400 by November.
CONCERNS
A. I know... The "Economy" is not the "Market." There are plenty of threads on that; however, although most are not active traders like us, many are vested through their 401k, IRA, or even pension plans. I think that the unwashed masses' concept of "The Economy" is generally linked to performance of the DOW and S&P, and the color of these numbers as they blip across the screen on morning talk shows and sporting events.
B. The price of gold frightens me a bit. $1618 at time of writing. An increase in gold prices typically indicates some form of political unrest... war... [Ref 3] Is this price spike due to Corona again, or some semi-secret military operation that we are not privy to?
C. Most of these companies are tech... in your opinion, is a bit of diversification in order? fear that I will lose profit.
REFERENCES
1. Tufte, E.R. 1978. Political Control of the Economy.
Code:
https://www.amazon.com/Political-Control-Economy-Edward-Tufte/dp/0691021805/ref=sr_1_3?keywords=political+control+of+the+economy&qid=1582223119&sr=8-3
2. S&P Weights. https://www.slickcharts.com/sp500
3. Debt, The First 5,000 Years (Graeber, D) 2011.
Code:
https://www.amazon.com/Debt-Updated-Expanded-First-Years/dp/B015F0BBFW/ref=sr_1_3?keywords=debt&qid=1582224303&sr=8-3
Last edited:
