Appeasing Donald Trump Supporters

The week before the US elections, I remember being overcome by a surreal feeling. I was worried because I feared Donald Trump would win. I was always concerned about this, so many months ago I purchased over $20,000 worth of GDX (a gold mining ETF) and about three weeks before the election I bet $50 on Trump to win at $5.00 odds. I had a feeling the events of Brexit would play out again. Just by browsing various Internet forums, I could feel the distrust in the American people. I could feel the pain and anger they were feeling. I knew that the markets were wrong. Those who feel they have been disrespected by the elite live in a completely different world to the investors making the bets.

It turned out I was right. Donald Trump won. It all started to go wrong a little before lunch. I was watching both the betting odds as well as the ASX200, the main Australia stock market index. The ASX200 surged initially but at lunch it completely turned around and started to crash. The betting odds also turned around. I went for a walk in the gardens during lunch. When I left the office the probability of a Trump win was about 20% but when I came back it was around 60% and was climbing fast.

Everyone around me was shocked. I am pretty sure everyone expected and wanted Hillary to win. One of my coworkers I think is a closet Trump supporter but by far most people didn’t want Trump to win.

My concern is that this victory empowers the crazies. The racists and sexists who believe it’s okay to bully women and non-whites will have the power of the government behind them. It is illegal in workplaces to sexually harass women, but when the harassment is done by those more powerful than you, you have no choice but to submit. There’s no telling whether Trump’s racism and sexism will result in policies that will disadvantage women or non-whites. Some people say he will moderate his position. Just because someone boasts about grabbing women “by the pussy” it doesn’t mean he will necessarily overturn legislation that criminalizes such behavior.

Among those who are disgusted by Donald Trump’s behavior, there is a lot of wishful thinking. The reason why the markets were wrong about a Trump victory was because no one wanted to believe that it was possible, so the suggestion that it could happen was easily dismissed. There was a lot of wishful thinking, and I think yet again people are engaging in wishful thinking by entertaining the idea that Trump will moderate his views or that he was only acting crazy during the campaign.

Supposedly Trump was elected mainly by working class people in swing states who were fed up with wealth inequality and the dominance of Wall Street. I don’t see how Donald Trump will fix any of that. His idea of applying a tariff on Chinese goods will only lead to a protectionist trade war. China will simply retaliate by not buying American exports such as Boeings, and this will only lead to more job losses. Meanwhile, the American working class is fixated by feminism, multiculturalism, Muslims, and homosexuals as if they are the reasons why they’re poor. It is as if rich people eat cake and everyone else fights over the crumbs. Instead of focusing on why the rich are eating all the cake, the white working class is fixated by the crumbs eaten by a Mexican person.

Now more than ever, the idea of a universal basic income is starting to sound good. Basically you tax the rich and give, say, $10,000 per year to everyone. This ensures that everyone has enough money to live. Technological advances through automation and robots as well as artificial intelligence as well as free flow of labor and capital will all create immense chaos. It is all part of the creative destruction of capitalism, and even if, as a whole, we benefit, there will be losers, and there needs to be a way of appeasing these losers. The easiest way to do it is to simply transfer money to them or, to make it fairer, to transfer money to everyone so that no one needs to work.

All in all, I’m trying not to think too much about politics. We don’t have much control over what happens in the world, so we should try to think about what we can control.

How to Invest Post-Brexit

The ASX200 went down about 5% after Brexit. A few days earlier, I purchased about $19k worth of gold mining ETFs (ASX: GDX). GDX went up 10% on Friday, so much that it made up for the losses from my other investments in my margin loan account. However, if you add up money in other areas, such as my super fund, my Vanguard funds, and so forth, I’m sure I made a net loss immediately after Brexit. I believe that there is a huge bubble right now in the economy caused by money printing. The economy is fragile because this bubble could pop any moment now, but it’s difficult to know when the bubble will pop. It may take decades before the bubble pops, so you need to have a strategy that allows you to profit when the bubble continues to inflate while also protecting you if the bubble pops.

What I am doing is focusing on dividend income but hedging this portfolio by buying gold mining stocks, gold ETFs, and maybe some government bond ETFs. I am less bullish on bonds because I think that they are artificially being pumped up with printed money. Gold is better as a safe haven asset compared to bonds as bonds are being artificially inflated by central bankers.

In my opinion, we are entering a period of stagnation similar to what we see in Japan where the stock market goes sideways and there is no more growth. We have reached the limits of growth, in fact. Investing in dividends allows you to capture income as the market goes sideways, and if the bubble bursts, gold will protect you. You are covered either way.

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What will burst the bubble?