Month: July 2022

July 27, 2022

Why Land Is Important In This Economy

We have a really fun conversation slated for you today. It’s about something I normally don’t talk about. And that’s land flipping and land investing. You guys know that I’m a stock market guy. Things can go in and out really quickly with the stock market, real estate just seems to plod along for me. Real estate is an essential part of everybody’s portfolio and you should have some. Our guest works with land profit generator, you’re probably going to hear him mention that a couple of times, a boutique, family-oriented organization specializing in land flipping, and he also owns easy land investing, where he helps people from all walks of life begin their investment career. So, whether it’s retirement, whether it’s investing, or just recreation, he positioned himself as a mentor to help you with all those kinds of decisions which can lead to a lifetime of transformation. Tune-in to hear more!
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David’s website: www.landprofitgenerator.com
Cash Flow Machine Mentorship – http://www.cashflowmachine.io
BECOME A CLIENT -https://go.destinycreation.com/application-page

 

July 20, 2022

Real Estate for Wealth Building

Want to learn about how to build wealth using real estate?!
Listen in to learn everything you possibly can from an institutional guy about real estate. On this edition of the wealth architect podcast, we’re going to talk about real estate for wealth building with Michael Episcope.  My guest today is a former Chicago Mercantile trader. And that’s exciting for me, because I spent some time in Chicago, my origins go back to trading futures options. I was even on a show with Ira Epstein, way back when I was in college. Which goes to show, I’ve been investing for a long time. It’s really great to cross paths with a guy like Michael, who’s going to maybe tie that into what we’re talking about. He’s the co-founder of Origin Investments. It’s a $2.3 billion real estate company, or at least they’ve done that much in transactions. And the cool thing is, he can brag about the fact that he’s never lost his investors’ money. I wish I could say that…. That’s a pretty cool thing to be able to say. And when you’re in real estate, you can say that because you got a long-term perspective. Tune-in to hear more.  Click one of the links below for the complete episode.

July 20, 2022

Sri Lanka Just Crashed – Is this our future?

I just got back from a six-week long trip to Greece and Turkey and it was fantastic. If you watched my one of my podcasts that just came up recently, I think last week, actually, you saw one of the reasons I went to Turkey was to experience the hyperinflation those poor people are going through and it’s not pretty. If you watch that podcast, you know that I talked about people’s rent, doubling, tripling and the cost of things on the ground are just incredibly expensive. I just feel for the people of Turkey. But the reason I went there is because I think Turkey is just on the leading edge of what’s going on in a lot of these countries in the world. And I think it’s portending, something that’s going to happen to the United States, after all these countries ended up falling like flies. And I think the United States is not just the problem but we also have a set of our own problems that we should be aware of. That’s the only thing, I’m just bringing awareness.  

If you’ve watched any of my podcasts or consumed any of my podcasts over the last couple of years, you see that I’ve been warning about inflation. I’ve been warning about some of this green stuff that we’re putting out that we’re making economic policies around and it’s not sound.  I want to get into this by talking about Sri Lanka. Now, most of us don’t even know where Sri Lanka is. It’s this little country in the Indian Ocean. And it’s a charming little country. But the problem is now they are undergoing some major political strife, economic strife, things that I was just talking about in Turkey are happening in Sri Lanka and that’s creating a revolution, essentially. And could it be the future of things here, it’s going to be the future of other things that we’re going to see around the world. I think it could be a preview, I think it could, and we should just know about it, know how to prepare. That’s all we do here on the wealth architect podcast, we talk about the problems in the world, we also start to think about maybe some of the solutions if those problems occur.  

Let’s talk about Sri Lanka. As I said, they’re undergoing this political strife. In fact, I consider it a revolution but you’re not going to see that reported anywhere. There’s major stuff going on. So, these are some of the topics that we’re going to talk about here. We’re going to talk about their massive inflation, and now it’s causing some of the political unrest that’s leading to a revolution. The economy is failing, the country is defaulting on its debt. We’ll talk about that in a second. People are essentially hungry. There’s a poverty level rising. Fuel costs are rising, sound familiar…? Medicines are becoming scarce. This is something that we should look at. They have daily power blackouts. Citizens are storming. They’re protesting all over the place. The President has resigned, and there’s massive economic destruction. That’s really the underlying foundation of all this. So, you know, I was interested in Sri Lanka before, but then I saw the people protests. And those protests have gotten really, they’re not violent, you know, mostly peaceful protests. They’re certainly noteworthy. So, the people stormed the presidential palace where this guy “Goto” he has got a very long last name. So, they just call him “Gota”. They stormed his house, and he’s got this beautiful palace that he lives in. It’s this presidential palace. People were like swimming in his pool and going through his drawers, but they did not burn it down. They didn’t do anything like you would expect during a revolution. But they were sending a message. And then they stormed the government buildings. And just recently, in the last day or two, they stormed the central bank, which is really the cause of all these problems, is the political factions letting the central banks of Sri Lanka destroy the economy. So, it’s not just the politicians who are certainly responsible for a lot of the destruction but it’s the central banks. It’s the printing of the money, as I always warn, like you can’t get something for nothing. So inevitably, he resigned. He resigned because he’s like, “I don’t want people to come in and swim into my pool and people don’t like me anymore.” He’s done a crappy job. And he’s just made blunder after blunder after blunder. Politicians should not be in charge of economics. Very few politicians have any business experience. So why do we put them in charge of economics? And if you put them in charge of economics, that’s the number one thing in your country that’s going to create strife if you don’t get it right.  

What are some of the issues? Well, let’s talk about the policy issues, some of the debt issues and the outside country issues. So, let’s start with policy. There has been a mismanagement of the country just from almost anything you can look at.  And I’m only going to pick out a couple of things. But let’s start with US imports exceed exports. So, if you have to send money out to buy things to bring it in the country, that’s a problem. That’s why people always talk about the trade deficit. If you’re a net importer, you end up spending your money to get goods and services. Now, that’s a consumption economy, essentially. But it’s also a production economy like in Turkey’s case; they need raw materials from overseas. So, they have to pay for those raw materials in dollars. That’s the reserve currency of the world. So, when you pay for the raw materials with dollars, you get raw materials. And then essentially, they manufacture and put some value out on top of it and export them, and hopefully get those dollars back. The problem is, those dollars aren’t coming back in dollars. They’re coming back in rupees; they’re coming back in their currency. And so those are, those are devaluing, which is devaluing the country. You know, they’re trying to get dollars back in the country, but like things are starting to fail, they spend more than they make. Instead of cutting back. Fox example, if you have a high credit card bill, do you go out and spend more money than next month? Well, maybe you do. Maybe you don’t? Hopefully, you don’t. You cut back on your expenses. That’s what normal people in normal countries do. It’s like, “I guess we’re spending too much.” Now we can’t handle what we’re spending, and we’re not getting the return on what we’re spending, we better cut back. Nope, they didn’t cut back, they kept spending more, they’ve got massive trade deficits, and they’ve got massive budget deficits. So, they just keep throwing money at the problem, which long term doesn’t work.  Short term, it’s just basically kicking the can down the road. And now the road is dead ending. They’ve been running these massive trade deficits, where they’re exporting less than they’re importing, and they’re running these budget deficits, and they’re spending more than they have. They’re continuing to do it to buy votes. We’ll talk about that in a second too. And this movement to the green energy thing, it’s ridiculous, people cut off their nose to spite their face to go green. Now, green is a great thing to do. Look, I used to be in the solar business, nobody is more green than I am. But you can’t just say “Okay, tomorrow, we’re going to be green, we’re going to go all solar and wind, which also have their own non green issues attached to them, and nobody talks about those. 

A windmill needs huge amounts of oil to be able to turn and then you have to replace that oil every 700 hours. So, they need oil for the windmills. You don’t think about this stuff. This movement to Green has really been expensive without the return that they thought they would get. In fact, the ESG is “A+”. So, they get an A+ rating when it comes to being a green country and doing all the right things and being green. Well, that’s certainly isn’t helping them. In fact, it’s costing them money, they put money into that green infrastructure. And we’ll talk about what they just did to the farmers. So, it’s horrible. What this green movement has done. So enough on that, you’ll start to put together your own picture, you can pick and choose what you want to believe here what you want to believe in there. That’s fine.  

What are some of the policy results? Well, there’s been a doubling down of debt, their debt to GDP ratio has now gone up over 120%. Right, the United States is right around that same price. Or that same ratio, by the way, just so you know. And they got this guy “Gota” to be elected in office in 2019, he had a tax cut agenda. Now tax cuts, I believe in tax cuts, because it’s supposed to spur velocity of money, when you get people moving money around, economies go up. That’s what happened in the Reagan tax cuts. That’s what’s happened over time. And again, when you “do” tax cuts. Now, you could do tax cuts wrong. And basically, if you do tax cuts wrong in a crappy economy where nobody believes in it, then the velocity of money doesn’t change and tax cuts really aren’t worth anything. Because what they do is they bring in less revenue to the government undermining all the problems that you had before. And so, they had a tax cut agenda to buy votes from the right factions to get elected. And he got elected with 52% of the vote, which is not a huge majority. And that’s the problem with democracy is you get the 2% run, and you know what the rest of the country doesn’t really believe it anyway, and since he never cut spending, “we’re going to tax cut taxes”, but we’re not going to cut spending. Look, if you don’t cut spending and you have less tax revenue coming in, it doesn’t take a genius to realize that you’re going to create more of a deficit and that’s what they did.  

What did they do? They had to print more money and create even more debt. Sound familiar? I keep saying that… And so now the debt was downgraded. People from the outside are like, “Well, I used to want to loan Sri Lanka money, but like they’re not cutting their debt.” They’re not doing any kind of austerity. They’re actually increasing their spending, even though they’re bringing in less money. It doesn’t take a genius to say, “I’m not going to put my money there. That’s pretty risky.” And so, they pulled their money back, they’re not giving them any more money, which downgraded their debt even further. And then what they did because of this green craziness is they said, fertilizers are bad for the environment. And so, we’re going to ban fertilizers coming from overseas, and they have to import all their fertilizers. So that was a major problem.  First of all, it started as a green thing. But at the end of the day, they didn’t want to export dollars, they wanted the dollars to stay in the country to support their currency. But you can’t buy fertilizer unless you export dollars. So, they just said, “Well, we’re going to call it a green thing and make everybody feel good about the fact that that’s a health thing”. So, they banned fertilizers. Well, what happens to you if you stop fertilizing your crops, what happens? You get less crops, so the farmers would have killed the next year, right? And what happens when you have fewer goods to market like fewer tomatoes, fewer cucumbers, less wheat that your farmers can grow while the price skyrockets; inflation. So, this is all because of this stupid green thing. They also had a dollar shortage as the farmers were now keeping the money in their bank accounts, these dollars that they were using to buy fertilizer and other stuff. So now they couldn’t buy fertilizer, so the dollar stayed there, where the central bank would go in and use the dollars as collateral to support their currency in the foreign markets. You know, they tried but it doesn’t work, just like it didn’t work in Turkey. And so, what they do, they banned luxury goods now they said, “Well, you know, it’s the Coco Chanel, and the Louis Vuitton and the Coach purses that were going to ban” and that would keep more dollars from the rich people in the banks. They moved from a really nice capitalistic society where people were really incentivized to go out and make money to a welfare driven state. They started just giving money out to people, certainly, the COVID crisis exacerbated that they gave free money out to people, well, you can’t have something for nothing. And now those consequences are taking place.  

So, they moved to this welfare state, where they were just buying votes. They were pandering on the political side to buy votes. They pander to the Sinhalese, which is a Buddhist faction, so they can get their votes.  They pander to the Green Movement. They’ve reduced police spending.  All this sound familiar guys?!  They reduce police spending. What happened when they reduce police spending? Well, they had the Easter bombings in 2021. I think now people are like, “well, I don’t want to go to Sri Lanka,” like the tourism has money dropped. They aligned with China then because China’s like, “Oh, we got a little problem over there with Sri Lanka,” just like they’ve been doing with all these other economies in the world. We’ve got a little problem over there. Why don’t we go over there, we’ll lend them the money. And we’ll use their country as collateral. So now they have strings attached to the economy. Same thing with the IMF.  The IMF, which is just a global faction, they go in there and they want to loan the money. The problem is the IMF won’t loan him money right now, because they’re in such financial problems that they don’t think they’re going to get their money back. They put that money into infrastructure to “supposedly” build the economy. They just did it the wrong way. And then they put it into military expansion. What do you need military for in Sri Lanka? So, somebody got paid off there as well? Probably, maybe not? I don’t know. But it sure seems to be “who you know.” The situations have traditionally been why do you need military in Sri Lanka. And then as a result of the Easter bombings and reduced police spending, and all that stuff, tourism plummeted. People are like, “I’m not going to go there doesn’t feel safe to go to Sri Lanka,” This little charming country used to feel really safe, but it’s plummeted. So, 13% of the economy was wiped off the face of the map, because of stupid political decisions. And then foreign currencies continue to be the problem. Here are some of the results from the politics and those policies. No money is being loaned to Sri Lanka right now.  You wouldn’t want to loan money to a country that’s failing. And that’s certainly being played out. They can’t really borrow from the IMF now they’ve tapped China out. So now they’re turning around to their neighbors at high interest rates, like Bangladesh and India and borrowing some money from them, but it’s not going to do any good. They’re just getting into more debt. Like you can’t finance your way out of the problem with the same thing that got you into the problem. It’s just stupid.  

Okay, the central bank then devalued the currency, they said, “well, our currency is really sucking wind on the foreign markets, let’s just devalue the currency.” “You know, we can maybe bring in more money and, you know, start selling some of our exports.” The problem with that is that people’s purchasing power dropped, okay, which is inflation. We know that inflation is bad, it sucks to pay double at the pub, it sucks to pay twice as much for a tomato that you paid last year, or for beef or chicken or whatever it is, right? The official rate of inflation is 30.2%. But like the unofficial rate, the real rate, the People’s rate is about 96%.  Things are going up almost double because people are losing faith in in Sri Lanka, and because their currency, on purpose, is being devalued. So, the currency value itself has dropped by 32%. Just in 2022. Alone, horrible, horrible stuff. This is all leading to economic disaster. That’s why we’re here on the wealth architect podcast. If you’re still with me, I built a long case about what the heck is going on there. And it all comes down not to religious problems, not to other people invading, it comes down to economic disaster from within, from within. And these are the people that voted these people into office, right? You can’t blame the politicians when you’re the ones who voted for that.  The people are getting what they deserve. But the politicians are, you know what politicians have always done, they lie to the people, they get elected, and then they get corrupt.  

Here’s what we got. We’ve got increasing debt, soaring inflation, currency is being devalued, foreign reserves are dropping, and they’re spending money on stupid, unproductive things. Like if that isn’t a formula for economic disaster, I don’t know what is?! Wait, does that sound familiar at all? Like they’re increasing their debt? Hmm. Their inflation is soaring, hmm. Their currency is being devalued? Well, that’s not happening to the dollar. Right now, the dollar is actually the strongest game in town. But even in the land of the blind, the one-eyed man is king. And so, there’s a currency devaluation going on in that currency with respect to the dollar. But their foreign reserves are dropping. So, they’re their money is going out of the country, and they don’t have that money to be able to trade with. And they’re spending money on stupid, unproductive things like this green movement. When you put all of that stuff together, economies are measured on productivity. Their basic measure of productivity and energy, think back 150-200 years, there wasn’t really an energy business, there were some kerosene lamps hanging on your wall. So, whoever had the kerosene, but even before that, it was the candle makers, and not everybody had candles. So, you know, we certainly weren’t firing smelting plants to make bridges. And so, when you increase energy, and the use of energy, now we use it in transportation and manufacturing, and in almost everything powering our homes. We didn’t have that years ago. And as a result, we had these little tiny economies around the world that were largely agrarian, you know, people grow stuff. Now we’ve got these massive economies and skyscrapers, things that weren’t here 200 years ago, all because of energy. But you can’t sustain the costs of those things, unless you’re productive. 

So, when you give people free money, when you give people free things to buy votes, when you give defense contractors favors because you want to buy their boats, or they’re your buddy or whatever, things start to crumble. And so, if you don’t have productivity in the world, in an economy, in your home, you can’t sustain it. Like it’s, it’s so obvious to me, and I hope it is to you. So now the dire consequences are coming home to roost for the Sri Lankans.  

And I’ll wrap this up by saying there’s massive poverty and starvation, there’s massive inflation, there’s massive tax increases now coming because they think that’s going to solve the problem. It won’t. And there’s no money left, they only have about a billion dollars left in reserves. And that billion dollar is supposed to take this country, a small country, but it’s a country nonetheless, it’s supposed to offer these people security, it’s supposed to feed these people and clothe these people and house these people in this economy. It’s supposed to keep the economy going, like restaurants are going to be closing, you know, more and more stuff is going to fail. And they’re going to repay their loans so they can get more money. Well, they’ve already defaulted on their loans. They’ve got $8.6 billion due in loans this year. They’ve defaulted on that. They need nearly $30 billion just to save this economy. So, they’re only left with the amount of money that Tom Brady has as a net worth right for this entire country. Like Tom Brady could go in and stand next to them and double the amount of reserves that they have if he had it all in cash. You know, maybe it’s Tom Brady that is the Savior because he can’t do a worse job than what they’re doing now.  

What is this all leading to? Well, it’s a preview possibly of what’s going to happen. Certainly, like I’ve been telling you, other countries are going through this Turkey is going through it, I witnessed it firsthand. Sri Lanka is going through it. Argentina is going through it, Venezuela has gone through it and continuing to go through Japan as the new one. Like, look out for Japan, the number 3 economies or number 4, whatever they are in the world, I think they’re number 3. And they’re failing because they’ve been doing this printing money thing for so long. And you start to add Ecuador, and you start to add all these other countries that are failing against the dollar, because the dollar has been the reserve currency. And what happens, let me give you some results or solutions. What happens? Well, the dollar is continuing to be the world’s reserve currency. But Putin is undermining that. And Putin and China are getting together and Putin and China and Iran are getting together and they’re creating this faction that right now we don’t see it’s a threat, right? It’s all of this Putin and Ukraine thing. But now he’s got the strings, and he’s controlling the economy. And so, he’s controlling Europe’s problems. He’s controlling their energy. He’s controlling their food costs, energy has gone up 700% because Europe has made this decision to go off of nuclear, which is a very clean fuel. By the way, they deemed it dirty now they deem to clean again, because they need it. But what has happened, the pendulum swung the other way they did.  

Germany did this green stuff from 2004 on, and they became a net producer of solar energy. Yay, go Germany! We don’t want to have that nuclear. So, let’s do solar and wind. The problem is, it’s Germany, like the sun doesn’t shine that much, I mean, shines enough to make them really competitive in the solar business. But you can’t fire up a smelting plant with solar energy, you need gas, you need hydrocarbons. And so, they said, “Well, that’s okay. We’ll get it from Russia.” Well, what’s just happened in 2022, Russia has basically said, “We got shut down,” your reliant, you shut down your nuclear, you shut down all this non green stuff. So, you can go green, and now you need energy? Well, you know what our energy is going to cost you 700% More, it’s gone up seven times, natural gas. What’s that going to do to the European economies, it’s going to crush them. And that’s why the Euro is getting crushed right now. So maybe even European countries are going to be seeing the wrath of this, especially the ones that are kind of the problem children like Italy, maybe Greece and Spain, like there’s major problems going on in the world.  

What can you do? Well, if the world is going this way, and I think that this will happen there, the dollar is strong right now, just because they’re relatively strong. It’s not because they’re really strong. Everybody loves the dollar. We don’t, we don’t have the cleanest house either. So eventually, people will see this farce and they’ll go, “you know, maybe we could use something different than the dollar.” So, Russia and China are creating their own basic trading currency, they’ll probably end up using the renminbi the one over in China, or they’ll create kind of a mixed rainbow currency of those things. Or what I think is happening, you’re seeing Russia start to move toward Bitcoin. I know it’s crazy. But it’s the first time in our history that we’ve created anything to compete with some of this money printing that these economies are doing for the first time. And because you know, in the past, that was always gold. We’ll just go back to gold, then we eventually go off the gold standard, we print more money, and people start to realize that that’s pretty cool for a while. And then when you can’t print any more to finance your wars, then the economy collapses, it happens. I’ve studied 700 currencies, it happened every time, we still have a couple left that are still hanging in there. But the dollar has lost 98.5% of its value or 99%, depending on when you start in the last 100 or so years. So, it’s stable, we’ve already defaulted on our debt, we’re just printing money now at a faster, faster rate. I don’t care what the Fed says. So, things are going to Bitcoin. I think because Bitcoin is digital gold, you can’t make any more Bitcoin, there’s a limit on it 21 million Bitcoin will ever be made. 

You can transport it, you can trade with it, you can do a lot of things that you could do with gold electronically now. So, it’s taken gold, which used to be the world’s reserve currency, let’s call it, and it’s replaced it with an electronic version of gold. So that’s where I think it’s going. But the bottom line is, if you continue to be irresponsible, by electing irresponsible politicians who control your economy, you’re going to end up with irresponsible results, you’re going to end up with poverty. You’re starting to see food shortages in some places here in the West. You’re going to end up with inflation, you’re going to end up with massive tax increases, let’s go after the rich, the people that actually create the jobs, you can dispute that all you want. But I’m studying history. And I see this is what happens throughout history.  

And so, at the end of the day, if you don’t prepare by putting yourself in assets that can hedge inflation, if you don’t prepare by structuring your taxes so that you’re not hit with these huge tax increases, if you don’t prepare by investing in things, maybe like Bitcoin or something else, that’s going to be a store of value, or maybe even a currency, or at least it will be part of the solution. I’m not saying bitcoin is the only solution, I think it is part of the solution, then you’re just sitting here waiting for things to happen. And then you’re going to be like these poor Sri Lankan people that didn’t prepare. And they’re like, “well, we put all these people in charge, and they didn’t take care of us.” But now it’s too late. We lost our net worth, we lost our business, we were paying these huge high prices. We send our money overseas just to make sure that it’s saved. We ended up creating the same problem, let’s not be irresponsible. Let’s start to take control of what we’re doing here. We still have a chance to take control of our economy by not electing stupid politicians, and I don’t care what level of politicians we’re talking about. Make sure they’re responsible. Make sure you know what you’re voting for. Don’t just vote for your pocket. You know, don’t just listen to the TV and decide who to vote, like really sit down and think from an economic perspective, you know, where the right place is to cast the vote, and maybe that’ll make a difference. Maybe it won’t, but at least it’s a chance. So, listen, that’s my spiel on Sri Lanka. I hope you find it valuable because I think it’s going to be happening in a lot of other countries.  

July 20, 2022

Is Tesla going to $3,500?

I want to talk about Tesla, and why I think it’s going higher and higher and higher from here. Now, it’s going to be a rocky road along the way, no stock chart is a straight line. It’s a squiggly line. But if you squint like Peter Lynch says, that line looks from lower left to upper right. And I think that’s going to be the case with Tesla. Now, this isn’t a technical analysis, discussion, this is a fundamental discussion about what’s going on with the company Tesla.  

 So, Tesla just reported its numbers, they blew away expectations pretty well, then they expressed a couple of concerns, because we have a little bit of a concern going on macro with this economy. And a couple of the concerns have to do with factory closures because of COVID in China, that shut down their factory for three weeks. And then because of supply chain issues, they had to shut down for another couple of weeks. So that affected their China sales. Nonetheless, they still beat expectations on earnings. They beat expectations on revenues. The revenues for first of all, we’re up 42% I mean, a company is growing its revenues/sales 42% is doing something right, even in the midst of what I think is a recession right now plus we have got an inflationary economy. But yet, they’re still producing cars.  They have some labor problems, but they’re not big problems. They’re figuring out ways to do things at a very efficient level. And that’s because of Elon Musk. I’ll talk about that in just a second. Second of all, earnings per share, earnings per share were up 57%. Earnings is how efficient and how much money the company is profiting right per share. They were up 57% to $227 a share. That’s pretty incredible, in this economy in this world. This company is doing a lot of things right now. There’s a big move to EVs right now. I think they have plenty of backlog, plenty of people that put down deposits for their model S’s, their model x’s and y’s and even their cybertruck. They’ve got a lot of cool stuff happening and they got a really cool car. Some of the cars have these gull-wing doors, the cars have autopilot, which I’ll talk about in a bit. They got these beautiful displays, they’re upgraded constantly with the newest software, it’s a lot better technology than your typical car, although they’re kind of catching up. In the EV market, though, Tesla has got the edge, they’ve got about a seven-year edge in manufacturing. They were manufacturing only cars when everybody else was giving a little bit of homage to cars and saying, “Well, we’ll do some hybrids.” Tesla was like “no, we’re doing electric only” To my opinion, electric only is a risk. But nonetheless, it’s paying off for Tesla right now. So, it doesn’t matter what I think, right? 

Alright, so in the midst of this report Tesla bought, about a year ago, maybe a little less, about a billion and a half dollars’ worth of bitcoin. Now Bitcoin has come down along with Tesla stock along with Netflix and Facebook and Apple and Microsoft, and all these stocks and bonds and gold and whatever in Bitcoin. One Bitcoin has gone down 70-75%. And so, they needed some cash because they had some cash crunches going into the quarter, which might be a problem in the short term. And so, they created by selling Bitcoin, about 930 million dollars’ worth of cash flow. And so that’s pretty good, right?  They sold at the bottom. Now, they didn’t preclude the fact that they would buy back in but at least they were willing to go to their treasury and say, “hey, look, let’s put some cash on the balance sheet in case we need to pay some people in case we need to buy some more supplies.” “Like we’d have to liquidate Bitcoin”. Now, I think they did at the bottom, personally, yes.  I can just tell you that, I think it’s a pretty good deal right now in the way the Fed and the central banks around the world are printing money, I think bitcoin is bottoming right now.  

Now, let’s talk about why I think Tesla is going to where I think it’s going to go. And I’ll tell you what, I think its target prices in just a second. Actually, you probably already know what it is from the title of this video, but whatever. Let’s play that you don’t. All right. So, first of all, they have incredible car production, the car capacity is increasing. It’s accelerating. They’re making more and more cars; they’re opening more and more factories. They got factories in Berlin and Shanghai and Fremont, California. And they just put one in Austin. They have got factories in Nevada, where they’re producing batteries and they’re looking to do some more things like that. So, production is amping up. You always want to be on the side of increasing production, increasing exposure to sales, and that’s what they’re doing even in a lousy economy. I think Tesla is pretty recession proof. And that’s because they have such a backlog of people wanting to buy their cars and trucks that, even if they allow, I don’t think people are going to take their deposits back as they still need to buy cars. The whole world is talking about this crazy green movement and moving to Tesla. So, car production is ramping up.  

But now I want to talk about some other esoteric things that are going to drive Tesla. Now, in order to do that, I’m going to talk about Musk in a second. But I want to lay out that Musk is a visionary. Now, he came up with this autopilot thing, the car drives itself, before anybody else thought of it, everybody thought he was crazy. Now, he might be crazy on his timetable. But I think within a couple of years, we’re going to have a lot of cars driving themselves around, they’ve got a proven track record, they’re having like 1.2 million miles driven for every accident, which is incredible, because I don’t know about you, but I get in an accident probably every 300,000 miles or something like that. And a lot of people are worse than that as they drive a lot. And they get in more accidents, especially around the cities. So, Tesla, and that’s an important thing, is they have a technology that uses this thing called LIDAR, which is kind of a radar. But it also uses artificial intelligence, AI, and that AI takes in thousands and thousands of images and data, and it says, that’s a bicycle, that’s a motorcycle, that’s a pedestrian, that’s another car, that’s a red light. And it puts us in this database so that it recognizes all of these things when it sees it. That’s an incredible piece of technology. And the cool thing is they can go down and they can upgrade all the cars in just a second. They can push a button and upgrade all the cars with that data. What does that do? That makes driving even safer. The more data they get, the more cars and Tesla’s are on the road, the better their cars start to operate and start to perform, the safer they are. So, they’ve got autopilot. But the cool thing about autopilot, and if you have a Tesla, you know what I’m talking about, you can tell your car to come out of the parking lot and come pick you up basically. It’ll come around and open the door and pick you up and close the door. It’s kind of getting pretty smart, little scary, but pretty smart. And so, you in the future, they’re going to be integrated this autopilot with ride hailing. Now, I want you to imagine this, right? Imagine you go to your phone, you pull up your app, your Tesla app, you go bring my car out of here, you don’t need valet parking, by the way, you just say bring my car to the front door of this restaurant, pick me up, you go out the car door opens, you sit in the car, and then you go off. And you said “go home Tesla” and it drives you home. Now take it one step further. You get on your app, you don’t have a Tesla, and you say I want to go to my house, a Tesla that’s not being used that’s close by, just like Uber, will come and pick you up and using the autopilot will take you home. Now I know that sounds crazy, but the technology is right there. So, they’re going to displace Uber potentially, and Lyft because they’re not going to need to pay the amount of labor that it costs to drive you in in an Uber. They’re going to be able to eliminate that. And on top of that, they’re going to have autopilot, right? It’s going to be feeding more and more data back into the system. This is a like a snowballing effect. Now, I don’t know if you see how important that is. But now think about their safety record. Think about autopilot and think about ride hailing and put that in the context of now they can become their own insurance. Now they have the safety data. They know those habits of a person that’s driving the car. They know how good autopilot is, they know how many accidents they’re going to have every million miles driven, right? And so, they can do an underwriting an actuarial calculation, that’s probably going to undercut by 20 or 30 or 40%, their nearest competitor. Now imagine a GEICO or Progressive or a Liberty Mutual underwriting a Tesla with their own data, right? That’s a game changer. People don’t realize this yet. It’s coming. That’s its own business insurance. It’s its own business. And we both know, it’s a lucrative business because Warren Buffett has built his whole career on buying insurance companies. He owns Geico, right? Berkshire Hathaway is an insurance company; it was a furniture company and became an insurance company.  

Now you put together the autopilot, the ride hailing and the insurance, by the way, you probably haven’t heard of this stuff, have you? Right, this is what’s going on behind the scenes. And then you say, “well, you know, he created through his cousin or his brother-in-law or something like that. A battery, a solar company, right to go to the solar business.” Well think about how brilliant this is. He gets into the solar business, you buy solar, you put it in your house, and then he makes this thing called a power wall. It’s a big battery that stores some of that solar. But the Tesla is also a battery, it stores the solar when you plug it in. So now this is all working together. When you lose power in your house from the power company, it kicks in. You’ve got plenty of power from your Tesla and plenty of power from your power wall. And now, as they grow battery technology, as they get better at it, it gets more efficient. So, they get economies of scale. It’s actually brilliant when you think about how all these things come together without us realizing they’re come together. But that’s the brilliance of Elon Musk.  

Now, there’s a reason this freaking guy is the richest guy in the world, right? Let me tell you why. He started a computer company with a partner and sold it to Compact, I think it was for 302 million or something like that, 300 million, this first company. His second company, he co-founded PayPal, you’ve heard of PayPal, he sold it for like a billion dollars. 1.2 billion maybe. He’s gone from 300 million to 1.2billion to Tesla just a few months ago, and it’s getting back to close to that spot was worth a trillion. So, it’s over 300 million to a billion to a trillion. Now the guy is the richest guy in the world, right? He knows how to run companies. Now you may look at his tweets, and think he’s a whack job, and he smokes pot on people’s shows. But at the end of the day, he knows how to run a company. And he understands it has a vision for technology. And he’s got a rare trait, he can execute on the vision. He can execute on the vision huge because a lot of people have vision, but they don’t have the execution or vice versa.  

So now you know about Elon Musk, what else is he doing? Well, he’s got this little company called SpaceX, which is putting thousands of satellites all around the world, to be able to bounce off each other and bounce back down to the world and low orbit internet signals. So, he’s going to cover the earth, you heard that lately, he went to Ukraine, and enabled all of the Ukrainian people to have Starlink to be able to communicate on the ground when Russia cut them off. And when they didn’t have access to the internet. He allowed that. But it was like pretty cool technology that you could do that. And then he’s also launching into space. And he I don’t know if you’ve seen it, but he launches a rocket and stage one comes back down, and it lands on itself, it lands on a pad in the middle of the ocean. And then he can reuse it up to 10 times. Think about how much money that saves. Remember all the things that were sent into the ocean when the space shuttle launched. And they you know, half of it broken, some of them were retrieved but you could only use them once or twice. This guy can reuse his camp, his capsules, and his fuselage over and over and over again, huge economies of scale. And now NASA is paying him to set things up in space because they are sending food to the space station, sending supplies and adding on to that space station. That’s what Elon Musk is doing with SpaceX, and he has this vision that he wants to go to Mars now. I’m not sure about that one. But you know what, every time I doubt Elon Musk, he proves me wrong. So maybe he’s right on this one, probably in 20-30 years, we’re going to have people going and living on Mars, I don’t know. But I’m not betting against this guy anymore.  

 He also has this thing called The Boring Company. Now he goes under the earth. He’s figured out this cool technology, because he’s kind of an engineering geek. Even though he’s not an engineer. He’s a self-taught engineer. He’s figured out this way to drill these huge tunnels under the earth. And he’s done them in L.A. and he’s done them in Las Vegas. He’s connecting the underground of Las Vegas using Tesla’s with this Boring Company, these tunnels, which are revolutionizing some things under the ground and transportation in these different cities, he’s going to create this thing called the Hyperloop, which is going to use the Boring Company, see how everything does fits together? It’s really, really amazing. I’ve never seen a company like this except maybe apple that has all of these different fingers that feed into each other. He has this.  

And then he’s looking at Twitter. Now, you might think he’s a quack and a little bit of a nut. And he wants free speech and all that stuff. And he’s creating all this ruckus with Twitter. But I think he has a big plan. I don’t know what that big plan is. And I’m not going to speculate. But I do think that he’s going to go through with the Twitter acquisition. And if he doesn’t, he’s going to figure out a way to make a ton of money out of it, in any case, or at least he exposed Twitter for what they are. That’s if they’re lying to him about the number of bots that are part of this is part of their platform. But I don’t want to get into the politics of that. I just want to tell you; I wouldn’t doubt him.  

 So where do I think all this is going? Where do I think the car production and autopilot and a ride hailing and the insurance, and the solar and the batteries and the and the SpaceX and the Mars thing, right, and all of this Starlink and the boring company and Twitter, what do I think this is all going? I think this is going to be a massive enterprise, an enterprise like you and I have never seen. A massive enterprise that’s going to take all of these revenue fingers, as my friend likes to call them, revenue fingers, and plug them into this massive thing that everything works together, the solar and the batteries and the cars and the tunnels, and the insurance and everything. And it’s going to be a massive company like you’ve never seen in this world before. And I think that’s why I think the target price in three to four years, by 2025 will be about $3,500 per share for Tesla. Now a lot of that’s going to depend on the market. It’s going to depend on the Fed. And it’s going to depend on our policies, and all of these things. But this guy knows how to run companies. And I wouldn’t bet against him now. And I wouldn’t bet against him in the future. I think Tesla is going to $3,500 a share. I’m not saying that you need to jump on board. In fact, go talk to your broker and go talk to whoever you want. I’m a big investor in Tesla. That doesn’t mean you should be, it doesn’t mean it’s right for you. Here’s my disclaimer, go find your own financial advice, but I’m giving you a case for my opinion about why I think Tesla’s going to $3,500 a share. Hope you like it. Take care. 

July 5, 2022

Hyperinflation in Turkey

What the heck is going on Turkey? In this podcast, I’m going to talk about the inflationary problem. They’re having turkey and my recent visit there. Stay tuned. 

Welcome back to this edition of the wealth architect podcast from Greece. I’m still in Greece right now, I just got back from a week in Turkey. And I was there with my buddy Nick Spohn. And Nick has got a master’s degree in economics. We banter around economics all the time and we said, a few months ago, why don’t we just go to Turkey and check out what’s going on there with hyperinflation, what I learned in Turkey was eye opening. And the reason its eye opening is because I think it’s the same thing that’s going to be happening in the United States. So, if you’ve been watching my channel, my videos, my YouTube, my podcast, you know, that I’ve been telling you that inflation is coming. And now we know that that is here. And it’s here bigger than we thought it was ever going to be. And, and bigger than they told us.  

 The same thing is going on in Turkey. So, let’s talk about the dire situation in Turkey, I feel really sorry for the people in Turkey. You know, we met three tour guides along the way, and each of them had their own spin on what was going on in Turkey. But in general, the theme was, we can’t afford it. And we don’t know why it’s going up, that’s in general, the thing like they don’t understand the concept of scarcity of money, or the lack thereof. And that’s the reason why it’s going up. So, as we would talk to them, for example, our first tour guide, her name was Nisha, she was paying about let’s call it 6000 lira a month in rent. And she didn’t have a lot of disposable income, well, halfway into her lease, the landlord comes and says, “We got to raise your rent to 15,000 lire month from 6000.” So that’s a pretty big jump, and the landlord knows they can come and do that, because where else are they going to go? And so, this is the problem with Hyperinflation as it affects the poor. The rich people have their assets, they know they can go out and sell the asset, or they can find another tenant who’s going to pay that 15,000. But the poor people, they’re stuck, they have to figure out a way to pay it. And they’re going to have to give something else up. This is not discretionary money. So, I kept hearing that theme over and over again. And the dollar is actually remarkably strong right now. It’s not going to last forever, but it’s remarkably strong.  

When you go to Turkey, you can use dollars and you get a lot more bang for your buck, it goes a lot farther. I was amazed at a phenomenal dinner would be $5 or $6. It was amazing what you can buy with the dollar for hyperinflation, I think that will translate into asset prices. So, asset prices will probably rise in the short term, but only to the extent that people can use other currencies to buy those assets, the euros or the dollar, specifically right now.  

Now, let’s go back and figure out what’s going on in Turkey. And why there is hyperinflation. Well, first of all, they have a president, his name is Erdoğan . And he’s basically a dictator in Turkey. Now your people, they’re not allowed to say that because they can get thrown in jail, but I can say it. He’s basically a dictator. And he basically says, we’re going to keep printing money and keeping the people happy. So that’s what’s going on. And it’s always happened in the 700 economies that I’ve studied, and all of which have failed. When it comes to fiat currency, like the United States dollar, like the yen, all of these currencies are failing or in the process of failing right now. 

But it’s because they placate the masses by throwing money at them. So, in the short term, people are like, “Oh, I’m getting more money, I get a raise, the government’s giving me a stipend, we’re getting universal basic income. My minimum wage is going up”.  All these basic things andt people are like, “Oh, the government is on my side.” They’re buying your vote everybody, by the way. And then what happens over time. People are like, “wait a minute, I got an 8% raise, but my costs are up 20%, like, look at what the rent was up to, 150%.” People are not stupid and after a while, they’ll figure it out. So, they’ll keep voting for this guy. Or maybe they’re at the end of voting for this guy. But inflation is 73%. That’s the official rate. But I just told you what the unofficial rate is. And that’s what’s happening to people’s rent, what’s happening to the price of people’s food. It is a real shame what’s going on.  

But let’s talk about WHY it’s happening in Turkey. The economy is an importation economy. They export, but only to the extent that they can import. So, what they do is import raw materials, they fix them up, manufacture and turn those around and export it. Well, they can only buy raw materials with a global currency such as the dollar, which is still “the supposedly” reserve currency of the world, but that status is changing. But right now, everybody accepts dollars, and so they could transact in dollars. But the problem is the lira is becoming worth so much less that it’s costing more and more and more lira to buy dollars that is number one. Number two, the government has basically said, if you’re a bank, or you’re a company that has a lot of dollars, we want 75%, you can keep 25%. But we need to go out to the market and prop up the dollar on the international markets on the exchanges. And so, they go out in the US dollars to prop up the lira, it’s not going to work, they just keep printing more lira. And when you print something, the more you have of something, the less it’s worth, right? Think about air, you don’t pay much for air because it’s free, right? Because there’s an abundance of air, water is pretty much the same thing. You don’t have to pay much for water, if you don’t want to, the more something is available, the less it’s worth. And the same thing is happening with currencies. The same thing specifically is happening with the Turkish Lira.  

The funny story is this, this guy has hired like five or six central bankers. And the central bankers all tell them, “Look, you have to raise rates, you have to make money more scarce, if you want to prop up the lira.” And he’s like, no, no, no, I still need to buy votes, I want to print money, I want to give it to the manufacturers. The problem is now manufacturers need raw materials. They also need fuel. Where are they getting their fuel from, Russia. So, they need oil and gas from Russia, where Russia doesn’t accept the lira. They’re only accepting the Ruble or the dollar if they can right now. And so, it’s really hard for them to even manufacture. So, everyone is just printing money. The central bankers, are saying “you’ve got to raise rates, if you don’t raise rates, we’re going to have hyperinflation.” And every time they say that, he fires them and brings in somebody else that is a yes man, and basically tells him what he wants to hear. It’s not working. And so, he just keeps burning money, the economy is failing. All that to say, he’s going to become a desperate dictator. And desperate dictators either get through overthrown, if there are legitimate elections in Turkey, and I don’t think there are, so then they get taken out with an election, or they start to do something stupid, like Putin is doing right, they’re going to start a war, distract everybody, and get nationalistic and print more money. And, you know, buy jets and stave off the inevitable for a few more years. 

I wanted to give you an idea of what’s probably coming in the United States. And we’ve printed more money in the last two years than we’ve printed in the entire history of the United States. And so that comes at a cost. And the cost is usually to the poor people who can’t afford the assets, the stocks and the bonds and the bitcoins and the real estate. And so those are the people that bear the brunt of it. If inflation is 8.6%, which it’s not, that’s the official rate, it’s way higher. But if you believe that, that’s a month’s salary. If you were told a year ago that you’d have to work an extra month to pay taxes, you wouldn’t have liked it very much. But if you look at it that way, 8.6% is about an extra month that you have to work to pay that increased cost for the goods and services that you buy. So, think about that, as you pull the trigger on your next politician, or you start to make your next decisions, because inflation is decimating everything right now. Bitcoin is getting hurt, real estate is starting to get hurt, the only things that are not getting hurt are the stock market in the oil sectors and the transportation sectors, and things like that. But the Fed keeps talking about raising rates, which is probably the right thing to do. It is just too late to do it. And if they’re really serious about raising rates, they’ll raise rates say one percent. You’ve got an idea of what’s going on in Turkey, that I believe is the shape of things to come in all economies that are Fiat economies. So, count all of the major economies, from the EU, the in Europe, to the Japanese yen to the China, to the dollar to the Turkish Lira, it’s happening in South America and Venezuela. It’s happening in Argentina; it’s happening all over the world. And you know, eventually it levels itself out. But there’s going to be some economies that fail in the next few years. And you’re going to see them because of this irresponsible movement to printing. 

It’s an also an irresponsible movement to this green thing that everybody’s like, “Oh, we got to go green.” Well, going green is great. And you know, there’s a transition period that can happen if you go green, it can’t be cold turkey. You can’t take a solar panel and make the kind of power out of a solar panel that you can make out of a combustible engine, you just can’t. It takes a lot of solar panels. How do you think those get made, they get made with heat, heat gets made with gas, oil, and coal. And there’s not something for nothing. These economies like Germany, for example, and I’m going to pick on Germany because they made some really stupid decisions. They said, “You know, we need to move our whole economy away from that dirty nuclear power,” (which is not dirty.) It’s one of the cleanest powers there is, but there’s a stigma around it. So, they got rid of most of their nuclear power capacity. And they replaced it with solar and wind and then the wind didn’t blow and the sun doesn’t shine much in Germany, and they don’t have enough power where they’re getting it. They got to go to Russia to get it. And they were like, “well, we’ll just keep buying the gas from Russia. “Well, now that there’s a war, the ruble is strengthening, and Putin is going “Hey, great, we’ll sell you all kinds of oil and all kinds of gas at really inflated prices.” And so, Russia is getting stronger from the stupid green decisions that everybody’s made. And now that people are suffering, I’m over here and it’s $10 a gallon for fuel for gas, right? $10 a gallon! That affects everything. It’s not just the big cars, they have little cars over here. They have little motorcycles that use very little, but it’s still expensive. That trickles into all the trucking, the trucking with all the goods and services and things that go to the stores that causes inflation.  

You know, I have got lots of posts about inflation, it’s a passionate subject. For me, it’s an inevitable subject for me, what can you do about it? Time will tell what you can do about it, but right now, you should be in some good performing assets, but you shouldn’t be in cash. And you should try to keep your powder dry a little bit by being in cash. Unfortunately, that’s the opposite of what I just said. So that you can buy some assets when they’re cheap, there’s going to be a bottoming process going on here. And when that happens, you’re going to find some opportunities to buy some really great bargains but it was really fascinating to see inflation in Turkey as the shape of things to come in some of the other Western countries.  

July 1, 2022

CDBCs are Bad (Central Bank Digital Currencies)

CBDCs what are they? It’s a good question. It’s a central bank digital currency. But is it good? Or is it bad? CBDCs, which are central bank digital currencies. Now, that sounds innocuous enough, right? I mean, we were pretty much already digital, right? We go to the store, we use our credit cards, we use our debit cards, rarely do we take out cash, and I have cash in my wallet, it kind of gets moldy, I use cash so little. And even when I go overseas now, you do need cash. But most of the time every place takes credit cards. So, things are already very electronic and very digital. The governments around the world are going to seize on that opportunity and they’re going to say, “hey, everybody’s already used to paying things with digital money; so, why don’t we just transition everything over to digital money?” 

Now, during the pandemic, I don’t know if you guys noticed this, but there was a lot of lack of change. Like if you wanted to go someplace, they were rounding things up, because they didn’t have the change to be able to give you. So, I don’t know what happened to the coins all of a sudden, but they were disappearing. And people are using cash less and less and less. And so that is how the CDC is going to be put into society. It’s already happened at China. So, we have a blueprint. But there are some risks to it. And it’s going to sound like it’s a really innocuous, gentle thing, we’re just going to move our money to a central bank, digital currency, which is put out by the government. But essentially what it does is it takes out the middleman takes out their banks, right? The banks or their lending institution. So now the lending will go directly to the consumer and take out the middleman sounds pretty good, right? Well, it’s not always good to take out the middleman. In this case, the government is the middleman, right. And so, if you take out the middleman, now you just have a single source to provide capital. Let’s talk about some of the risks.  

First of all, there’s some financial risks. You have exchange rate risk all of a sudden, it’s just government to government negotiation. And by the way, we’ll give you some extra bombs that you could drop, if you keep your rate fixed to your currency exchange rate. So that’s a risk out there. Not a big one. But it is a risk. And it just takes away a free market element, we don’t want to take away many free market elements, if we can help it, we certainly want to put it in the hands of one or two powerful people that can control the money of the world.  

Number two, because it’s taking away the potential for competition through the banks to lend money, it’s also going to potentially lead to increased lending costs. Not good, right? We don’t want to increase lending costs; we want competition to decrease lending costs.  

And third, it could decrease access to capital. So instead of going to your bank and making an application, now, banking used to be different. Banking used to be a small bank and the community and they have a reputation for making good loans, if they don’t, they go out of business. You would go as a small business person or a homeowner and say, “Listen, I want to borrow from the bank.” The bank would assess whether that was a good risk.  Today, they kind of sell all the loans to the government. So that is a risk. There’s decreased access to capital, that’s a potential of a CBDC. So, you got to watch out for that.  

But here’s where it really comes to fruition and we’ve seen this in China, it’s a human rights cost to have a CBDC, and here’s what I mean. Let’s unpack what a CBDC is; It’s a central bank, digital currency. Well, that sounds like the dollar, right? Just print whatever you want. There’s no scarcity. You just print as much as you want, and then the government controls your money. The problem is, if you just do that, then you have an unlimited amount of money, is it an infinity sign is the denominator. And that’s why we get rapid inflation. Well, now it’s going to be even easier for the government to do that. But on top of it, it’s going to be wrapped in a crypto technology. And that sounds okay. Well, I’ve heard Bitcoin and I’ve heard of a theory, and I’ve heard of all the other coins out there. But there’s a cost to that. And number one, the main one is surveillance. So, they’re going to be able to surveil you and watch what you’re doing, watch how you spend money, maybe even put capital controls.  I was in Greece in 2013, 2014, 2015 and 2016. And they had capital controls in the country. So, if you were wanting to go out and get a certain amount of money, you could only pull out 400 euros a month or a week, but it doesn’t really matter. It’s a limit.  So, you could have had a million euros in the bank, but you could only pull up 400 if you didn’t have multiple accounts. 

 You were kind of screwed, if you had to live on 400 bucks a week or a month, so it’s 400 bucks, I’m pretty sure that’s what everybody was living on. And that’s what everybody was struggling with and the economy was just bogged down even more than it was prior to the capital controls. The government will have even more tentacles into how you’re spending. And that could be tied to what’s called a social credit score, which they’re using in China. Basically, if you say anything against the powers that be, now your social credit score goes down, and they can limit your spending, that’s a real risk to freedom. We don’t want anybody limiting our ability to have freedom of speech or our ability to defend. And they might say, “Hey, listen, you know, we don’t like you, because you’re a Trump supporter, or we don’t like you because you’re a Biden supporter, or we don’t like you because you’d like guns, or you’re a pro-abortion or anti-abortion, we don’t think you should be able to get a mortgage on your house. So, we’re limiting it to the people that see things our way, that’s a major risk. That’s government control, that’s regulation. Anytime you hear the word regulation, that means somebody else is in charge of your freedom, you got to watch out for that. It’s a, it’s a power grab, the government is going to sneak it in, it’s going to be the camel’s nose under the tent. But pretty soon the whole camel is going to be in the tent. So, you got to watch out because the government wants control of how you spend your money. 

And by the way, you’re going to hear a lot of F.U.D; fear, uncertainty and doubt around cryptocurrencies. And you know, what? Some of it is justified, some cryptocurrencies, and, in fact, there’s like 20,000 different projects, tokens, they’re called, and most of them are crap, right? And I call them “shit-coins”. A lot of people call them shit-coins. There’s Bitcoin and other shit-coins. Bitcoin is the only real one that first of all has a network effect. And second of all, it is not tied to some centralized person. It’s a decentralized thing controlled by the people, it’s controlled by the 15,000 or so nodes that verify that the transactions are accurate. There’s no human being involved in that. And it takes a majority of those nodes to be able to overturn anything, it’s impossible now. It’s so entrenched, and that ledger, which we can go into in another video, that ledger is immutable, you can’t change the transactions that have already happened. So, you’re going to hear this fear, uncertainty, doubt. And the big one is: cryptocurrency going to be used for money laundering? Well, for sure. Like, let’s give them that one. But cash is used for money laundering, wiring money is used for money laundering. In fact, cryptocurrency and Bitcoin is like the worst way to money launder because there’s a public ledger that shows every single transaction. So, how could you possibly believe that there’s money laundering going on with these idiots that say that there is money laundering on the blockchain, for everybody to see, in fact, there was a big hacking of one of the exchanges about six or seven months ago. And these idiots, you know, put it out on social media anyway, they were caught in like six hours because it was public transaction. So, like, that’s a stupid objection to having a central bank, digital currency or any kind of cryptocurrency, the final risk is the risk of hacking. Now imagine that the government controls all the money and they have one computer, right, which is essentially what they’re going to talk about doing. It’s all going to be on one big giant computer. And they’re going to push a button and say, “you know what, let’s send Ukraine another 40 billion, let’s, let’s get some more money from John Q Public. And we’re going to we’re going to tax over here or we’re going to increase by a couple of 100 trillion dollars just because we want the green New Deal.” Like anything’s possible, they just need to add zeros. And there’s even less accountability from the Fed. And from the government. At that point, they are just going to print money into oblivion until our currency explodes. But a lot of people were saying, what happens if it gets hacked? Well, think about that. If there’s one place, there’s the money is controlled. What if a hacker gets in there? Right. And that’s the big knock-on cryptocurrencies, but bitcoins have never been hacked. A lot of them have but mostly on the exchanges.  

But imagine the government, because the government so good, they couldn’t even put out an Obamacare website. Remember that? It costs like $1.6 billion dollars to put a website together, and they still never got it out on time. That was our government work. Then they turned it over to private individuals, and it was up and running in like a week, right for a fraction of the cost. So, if we put the government in charge of anything, we run the risk of cronyism.  All right, that can tell you in effect, the people that are closest to the money are the ones that make the money. You see that with the wealth gap right now. But secondly, you put them in charge of something, they’re probably not going to watch out for the backdoor. And the things that are opening up with their developers, right? There’s always an Edward Snowden that’s going to leak some stuff out because of the interest of the public, he thinks he’s doing the right thing, or he’s putting a backdoor. He doesn’t believe in government pressure. Why would you want to put all your control in one entity, you want competition, that’s what brings prices down. That’s what creates efficiency.  

 All right, bottom line. Don’t let them scam you into Central Bank digital currencies. Just because it’s easy to spend money on your credit card and Apple Pay and Google Wallet and MasterCard and PayPal doesn’t mean that’s what a central bank digital currency is. There’s a lot of big risks involved with that. 

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