Tom welcomes private trader and newsletter publisher Kevin Muir of "The Macro Tourist" back to the show.
0:00 - Intro0:53 - Dot.Com Bubble2:56 - Rolling Bubbles7:35 - Bitcoin & Tesla9:14 - Why Commodities?14:25 - Stimulus & Inflation25:50 - Trump & MMT Theory30:50 - A Biden Presidency33:22 - EV's & Copper Demand38:23 - Stimulus & Crypto
Kevin discusses the numerous bubbles and why they seem to inflate very quickly. This appears to be due to the entire world speeding up communication as these bubbles seem to form almost overnight. If you want to trade these, you need to do so quickly, and he outlines what is behind these market forces.
Kevin discusses how governments are moving towards direct fiscal stimulus and why this is likely to create growth. This growth will fuel the commodity sector, and eventually, inflation will occur as governments become direct competitors to the private sector.
He agrees that it will be challenging for the government to withdraw direct stimulus once they start. It will work well, but inflation will start quicker than most expect. This is why you need to own real assets as we are likely to enter a prolonged inflationary period.
MMT is a framework for understanding how the economic system works, and the world seems to have dropped the Keynesian school of economic thought in favor of this theory. Fiscal stimulus, lower rates, and tax cuts are what MMT recommends until inflation commences. Covid has marked a structural change in how the government and the public see monetary theory.
His new phrase is "don't fight the fiscal" instead "of don't fight the Fed." Kevin is less concerned about the economy under a Biden administration since all governments and central banks seem to be operating under this new paradigm.
He believes that the EV market will be difficult to chase, and instead, investors should look at buying underlying commodities that remain cheap. We will need a surprisingly large amount of copper and other metals to hit government targets for electric vehicles.
He says, "You have to think about not what should be done but what will be done." There is very little chance that the Fed will cut their stimulus. Instead, they are more likely to overshoot on stimulus intentionally. We are going to continue to have a series of full-on bubbles.