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Podcast episode

How Wall Street Can Help Democracies Survive w/ Marcos Buscaglia – EP225

Show host Gene Tunny interviews Marcos Buscaglia, former head of the Latin America economics team at Bank of America Merrill Lynch, and author of the book “Beyond the ESG Portfolio, How Wall Street Can Help Democracies Survive.” Buscaglia argues that, through their investment choices, many investors have inadvertently been supporting autocratic regimes, and he calls for a change in investment practices. Tune in to this thought-provoking episode to learn more about the ultimate impacts of our investments and how Wall Street can contribute to the survival of democracies.

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What’s covered in EP225

  • Introduction to the episode. (0:03)
  • Aligning investments with values and democratic growth. (4:32)
  • Autocratic regimes, EU funding, and corruption in Hungary. (9:41)
  • Investing in emerging markets while avoiding autocratic countries. (22:31)
  • Economic sanctions, autocratic regimes, and investment strategies. (28:06)
  • Economics, democracy, and the role of finance.

Takeaways

  1. Investing in autocratic regimes can inadvertently support and strengthen those regimes.
  2. ESG (environmental, social, governance) investing should also consider whether countries are democratic.
  3. ESG metrics and indices currently do not prioritize democracy as a factor.
  4. There are limited investment options that exclude autocratic countries, but investor demand can drive change in this area.
  5. Sanctions can be an effective tool in limiting financial support to autocratic regimes.

Links relevant to the conversation

Marcos Buscaglia’s book: Beyond the ESG Portfolio: How Wall Street Can Help Democracies Survive

https://www.amazon.com/Beyond-ESG-Portfolio-Democracies-Survive/dp/1265115605

Transcript: How Wall Street Can Help Democracies Survive w/ Marcos Buscaglia – EP225

N.B. This is a lightly edited version of a transcript originally created using the AI application otter.ai. It may not be 100 percent accurate, but should be pretty close. If you’d like to quote from it, please check the quoted segment in the recording.

Marcos Buscaglia  00:03

By the time Russia invaded Ukraine ESG corrected government bond index of JP Morgan, right. Had a bigger share of Russia than then they they equal index that is not corrected by ESG. Let me open up parentheses to, to make to so everyone can understand. You know, a lot of the investments that finance autocrats end up being funnelled to them through funds that track indices.

Gene Tunny  00:40

Welcome to the economics explored podcast, a frank and fearless exploration of important economic issues. I’m your host gene Tunny. I’m a professional economist and former Australian Treasury official. The aim of this show was to help you better understand the big economic issues affecting all our lives. We do this by considering the theory evidence and by hearing a wide range of views. I’m delighted that you can join me for this episode, please check out the show notes for relevant information. Now on to the show. Hello, thanks for tuning into the show. My guest this episode is Mark Aasbo. Scalia is the former head of the Latin America economics team at Bank of America Merrill Lynch. And he’s the author of a new book Beyond the ESG portfolio, how Wall Street can help democracies survive, which we talk about in this episode. As I hope you’ll gather from my conversation with Marcos, he’s written a terrific book. It’s one that makes us think carefully about the ultimate impacts of our investments. have investors inadvertently been supporting autocratic regimes worldwide. Marcos argues that they have been and that should change. This is another thought provoking episode. So please get in touch with any comments or reactions, you can find my contact details in the show notes. And you can also find a link to Marcus’s book and other relevant information. Right, I would better get into it. I hope you enjoy my conversation with Marcos for Scalia. Marcus for Scalia, welcome to the programme.

Marcos Buscaglia  02:17

Thank you very much. Thank you for having me, Dean. Of course,

Gene Tunny  02:20

you’ve written a an excellent book, I’ve had a read of your book Beyond the ESG portfolio. How Wall Street can help democracies survive published by McGraw Hill, like us to start off with, could you tell us why did you feel the need to write this book, please? Yeah,

Marcos Buscaglia  02:40

it was it was great that a chance event, I would say, in the sense that I went to a meeting with a client in New York, about the time that Christina Kushner won the, you know, vice presidency, but But you know, she picked the president, the front runner, so she was everybody knew she was going to run the government, that this was the end of 2019. And I went to see this, this very nice client that very smart. And, you know, basically, you know, he argues that, you know, if these guys did the right thing in macro terms in economic terms, you know, they wouldn’t be ready to buy Argentina bonds. And I say, No, this is not right. This is not right, because I knew I suspected what you know, more than I knew, I suspected, you know, that. Christina Kidner will try to undermine democracy in Argentina, at least, you know, checks and balances, particularly not related to her corruption cases, you know, that were going on in courts and will try to undermine democracy in my home country. So I said, this is not right. And, you know, so you know, it was this, like, sort of, you know, small scale Rekha moments in her. And I say, Well, you know, there was something wrong with this. And I wrote a piece that, that the Financial Times blog, beyond breaks was very kind to publish at the beginning of 2020. Before the pandemic, and I got a lot of attention, you know, as so much people, you know, contacted me saying, Yeah, this is not right. For instance, some better roof journalists said, Look, you know, we’re, we’re being jailed. And at the same time, London houses, hold a lot of, you know, Belarusian bonds, but Belarus is, you know, outright autocracy for a long time. There’s no discussion, you know, about that. So, so basically, I say, you know, so So at some point, say, well, maybe I can turn this into a book, because I think this is, you know, this, this may be something important, something that can, you know, change the way we perceive things. Gotcha.

Gene Tunny  04:52

Now, what I’m wondering is, why do you think investors should care about this whether a country democratic mean, obviously, there’s the political reason or it’s the right thing to do. I mean, we want democracies, but they’re investors. So they’re trying to, you know, invest on behalf of clients and they want to get the best returns. I mean, I’d be thinking the things they’re looking at is, well, will we make money on this transaction? Or will this government actually pay its pay? Its its creditors? Will it actually pay the bondholders? So, why is it that this is something that investors should be thinking about? Well,

Marcos Buscaglia  05:37

I think it’s it’s twofold. I mean, there are two reasons. The first is is, you know, to align with your investment with your values, in the same way that you would not invest in companies that use child labour, or that basically, you know, attack one minority or that, you know, pollute, you know, outrageously pollute, you know, the environment, you know, and investors are already doing that, I mean, aligning their, their values with their investments with with the ESG framework, and that’s why we, you know, I put all this view within the ESG framework, you know, because that’s the framework in which, although, as you know, there is a lot of, you know, pushback now, but at least it’s a framework that tried to tries to align, you know, basically values with with with investment decisions, while in the same way that you will do that you will say, Well, you know, what, why would I finance, the finance the availa rules, you know, dictator, you know, or someone that is undermining democracy in his or her country. So, that’s that. So the first reason is to do good, right, to align values with with investment decisions. The second is that, I think that at the end of the day, you you end up doing better, you know, with with investing in democracies, the the empirical evidence on on this is not, there isn’t a lot of empirical evidence to be to be sure, I don’t want to, you know, be, you know, like selling something that is, that is not, you know, a lot of empirical evidence, but, but, look, if you look at what happens with with autocracies, you know, you know, the downsides that you face as an investor are downsides that you don’t face in, in democracies, in which, you know, there’s division of power, there is an independent press, there is an independent judiciary, look at what happened, for instance, we don’t know the litigation stocks in China, you know, a couple of years ago, look at what happened with you know, firms that were expropriated in Oh, no, in Egypt. You know, so there are so many examples of downside risk. And, and there is one thing that I, that there is a little more evidence, you know, that is that at the end of the day, democratic countries end up growing faster than non democratic countries. Of course, you know, there is China, you know, it’s, it’s, it’s, you know, it’s bad, when you put it all together, including China, the evidence suggests that democracy brings more growth, and then you will think, Well, you know, companies that are based in democratic countries, if the country grows faster, should should be doing better, right? It makes it it makes sense. You know, it is common sense to think that so, so again, although I cannot be selling to the people listening to this, you know, look, you’re, you’re for sure don’t going to do better investing in democracies, you know, the, it is reasonable to think that given that democracies tend to grow faster, on average, you know, compared to non democracies, that you would end up doing better. Yeah.

Gene Tunny  08:56

What I think’s interesting about your book is that you give a lot of examples, and you do identify some major financial institutions that are that you or you’re suggesting, are potentially in given the the title of your book. Well, I mean, their actions at the moment aren’t contributing aren’t helping democracies survive and could actually be undermining democracies? Could you explain how that is? I mean, by buying bonds of foreign countries or by investing in those countries, how is that actually undermining democracy in those countries or or supporting the autocracies? Could you give some examples, please?

Marcos Buscaglia  09:41

Yes, of course. You know, at the end of the day, particularly when they’re building their their autocratic regimes, this one of the autocrats build the reputation of being successful, you know, typically they come to power let’s say, let’s say you know the case Since that I’ve started I have not covered, you know, all the autocratic countries, of course, but take the case of, you know, Erdogan in Turkey or Chavez in Venezuela, you know, or, or the commissioners in Argentina, you know, they typically come to power or pull in, you know, in Russia, so they come to power after a period of harsh, you know, economic contraction, and, you know, IMF, typical IMF, you know, austerity programmes, and they come to power and for different reasons, you know, sometimes they’re just lucky, you know, like the cases of Chavez in and occasionally, because commodity prices went up, and they were in the right place at the right time. And, and so, you know, these countries export commodities, namely, oil in Venezuela, and, you know, the cultural goods in Argentina, so, the countries, you know, became wealthier, and they were in power. So for different reasons, but, you know, they consolidate their power, because they’re successful, because they, they come and people say, you know, these guys are successful, but, so, if you’re financing them, you’re helping them to be successful. And, and the market was very happy to finance Venezuela, for instance, when Chavez was clearly undermining, you know, all constitutional checks and balances. Actually, what I’m showing this in the book is that Chavez dismantled, you know, democracy, almost from day one, day one, he called, you know, a constitutional assembly that basically changed the way the institutions of industrial change, work and, you know, forever. And, and, and, and markets, you know, at the same time, we’re, we’re, you know, we’re very happy, you know, you know, taking the bonds that that Chavez redeem, was sent into the market and the VESA, which is the ministry lost one company, so and this has this doesn’t happen in a vacuum in the sense that is not that is people is not aware of what is going on, because you have all these democracy watchers, you know, like, Freedom House, and, and V them and, you know, there are a lot of democracy workers around the world institutions that dedicate themselves to, to, you know, follow up what is going on with democracy. And, and basically, they, they, this, you know, this is this institutions are tracking on real time, you know, what is going on with democracy, and fagging that to the world. And the media also, you know, you know, reflects that. So, it’s not that you’re buying a bond on him off Venezuela or Russia. And you’re totally unaware, you know, that these countries are, you know, sliding into autocracy.

Gene Tunny  12:52

Yeah. Yeah. Good point. Good point. Okay. Now, yeah, what I found interesting is just the the broad range of countries around the world that you that you look at what’s been happening in Hungary, and you, you make the accusation or you identify that the EU has undermined democracy in Hungary? Could you explain that, please, Marcus? Well,

Marcos Buscaglia  13:14

you know, it’s it’s that, you know, Hungary has received for a long time, very important. transfers from the, from the EU, you know, this is part of the typical accession programme, when a country, you know, that is poorer than the average, you know, of the Euro bucks exceeds the European Union, you know, it gets, it gets a lot of money from the European Union, to union to build infrastructure. You know, we have seen that in Spain, for instance, you know, many, you know, some decades ago, and so that happened with Hungary. But the funny fact about Orban is that he speech is an anti Brussels as he called me, you know, speech, you know, he has been bashing the European Union, you know, because European Union puts a lot of constraints on this, of what these countries can do. And at the same time, at the same time that he was bashing the European Union, he was receiving money. Fortunately, you know, very recently, the European Union Fest has changed some rules, and has been withdrawing money, you know, to Hungary, so has not been sending the money to Hungary. So, so, because of violation of some articles, you know, I’m not an expert. Exactly. I don’t remember, you know, I don’t have them on the top of my mind, but it has to buy been violating some articles of the European Union. So, so basically, now, but but in the meantime, you know, it has sent, you know, several percentage points per year of funding a net terms to the to Hungary, the European Union, and, and moreover, there are significant you know, there are there are many indicators, several indications that there was a lot of corruption in this in the contracts for to build infrastructure. funded by the European Union, right? So so so, you know, basically, if you want to put it well, if you want to synthesise this is, you know, there is a band of brothers, you know that, that is managing, you know, Hungary, and these, these guys get all the contracts, you know, we’re almost all the contracts.

Gene Tunny  15:22

Okay, we’ll take a short break here for a word from our sponsor.

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Gene Tunny  15:57

Now back to the show. One of the points you make in the book is that you think that ESG so environment, social governance, the this requirement or this, this commitment by companies to pursue ESG goals, you think that is not enough on its own to, to prevent or to or to just stop the investment in countries that are autocracies. So, why is ESG which does have you know, it’s got environment, social governance, why is that not enough on its own?

Marcos Buscaglia  16:36

Let me tell you a couple of things. We went into, you know, several, you know, let’s say books that analyse you know, ESG standards and, and to several metrics of companies that do that, and you don’t find the word democracy there. Sometimes you find human rights, you know, but But basically, it’s not a, it’s not a big component. So basically ESG is not built to, to reflect, you know, democratic values, as it stands now. So again, and again, we look into, you know, the metrics, that that several companies that they dedicate themselves to ESG standards look into. And let me tell you, a very, you know, telling example of why, you know, that you can see that inaction. You know, by the time Russia invaded Ukraine, that that day ESG corrected government bond index of JP Morgan, right, had a bigger share of Russia than then the the equal index that is not corrected by ESC. Let me open our indices to, to make two so everyone can understand, you know, two parenthesis certified indices, a lot of the investments that finance autocrats end up being funnelled to them through funds that track indices, right? Remember, I don’t know if you saw the news, you know, these days, but ETFs have surpassed, you know, active funds in, in, you know, in assets under management, well, ETFs track indices, you know, set let’s say in the, in the stock market, they are the most you know, popular ones on there are the Morgan Stanley MSCI indices in the in the, but there are many, of course, you know, and in the bond in the government bond indices in the market, the JP Morgan ones are the most common ones are out there, there are a lot of, you know, several indices. So, but they they, particularly for emerging markets, the JP Morgan indices are very important, right, so, so these indices, let’s say the dollar ones, the most common ones are called the NB you know, the MB them the global, the MB diversified. And then very more recently, you know, you know, JP Morgan issued, you know, the ESD corrected versions of this, right. So, so, what happens is that the, the banks or institutions that produce these indices, and then there are ETS or active funds that track these indices, what do I mean by this gene? You may know this, but Is that us imagine that you are an investor and institutional investor and you offer your services, you say, Well, look, I will track the JP Morgan in MB index, and you will see how I over outperform it, because I’m very good, you know, that’s, that’s your benchmark. Okay. So, so now, but back to track, so you have these two indices, and the the the weight of Russia in the ESG, corrected version of the JPMorgan MB was higher than the non ESD. Correct. What does what does that mean? That if Jean, if you were tracking the ESG corrected version of the index, you should have had a bigger share of Russian government bonds than in the non ESG corrected one. You know what I mean? So so you will be more apt supposed to Russia, if you were tracking and ESG index by the day Russia invaded Ukraine. Right? I don’t know if this was clear or not. Yeah.

Gene Tunny  20:08

I mean, that’s extraordinary. So if you were, if you were conscious of ESG goals, and you would have been overweight in Russian bonds, more than the market as a whole, do you have any insight into why that was? Why Russia was disproportionately? In that? That index? You

Marcos Buscaglia  20:27

know, I don’t know, because I don’t I don’t have the the exact ways I just read this in, in a report. Yeah. But my take is that, you know, given that, let’s say, you know, they take into account, for instance, whether you should green bonds, right. So, so maybe, you know, some countries didn’t issue green bonds, and also they have a lower share in that index. And that Biden, by construction, you know, mean, that meant that Russia had a bigger way. You know, that’s, that’s, you know, that’s an alternative that I can think about, I can think of, but remember, at the end of the day yesterday, as it doesn’t take into account democracy, it takes into account, you know, other the other issues that say, let me give you another example, let’s say Poland, remember that Poland, up until very recently, when when the government was ousted in the elections, it was sliding towards autocracy, you know, and Poland is the bigger, biggest sovereign issuer of green bonds. Right? All right. So, come on gene, money is fungible. Right? You know, so yes, if you finance, if you finance the Polish government to let’s say, to build wind farms, that’s very nice. We all want that. Right. But money is fungible, maybe some part of that money was diverted towards, you know, you know, the Secret Service or, you know, or to buy a media company, or, or, or even if that wasn’t the case, you know, you free up space in the budget, you know, because you’re, you’re you’re funding the the wind farms, and then you’re, you’re freeing up space in the budget to, to finance, you know, the secret police or whatever, you know, whatever an autocratic government will be doing. Yeah,

Gene Tunny  22:13

absolutely. I think there’s several good examples in the book there. So, you, you talk about adding a D to ESG? So it would be what ESD, GE or Ed SG, or however you want to want to pitch it? What are your recommendations for going about that markets? How would you actually get the D in there? What are their regulations that need to change?

Marcos Buscaglia  22:39

I think, maybe regulations, but I think at the end of the day, it seems investors asking for this to happen. I mean, you know, there are several investors, which already do that, but not in the sense that I know, you know, some friends in the, in the financial industry, that tell me Well, you know, this is this is not gonna be, you know, recorded anywhere, but, you know, many, but some big clients come to us and say, We know, we want to invest in a portfolio of emerging market bonds, but please exclude you know, this, you know, x and y and z because they’re autocratic. Right. So one way more general, so, so I think that at the end of the day, is investors, you know, requirements that will bring the change, and that’s the purpose of the book, you know, to bring awareness that this is happening, you know, so investors can demand, you know, for instance, they index providers to do something, right, are the ESG score providers to do something, you know, so, so my take is that I want to bring awareness. But but other than that, you know, given that that may may take time, I provide some solutions to that, let’s say you can do that in your portfolio, say, Well, you know, I will, I will there are some ways to invest in, in, in, in both in the in the equity world and the fixed income world in to try to exclude some autocratic countries, for instance, or diminish the importance. Yeah, your portfolio.

Gene Tunny  24:07

Is this a way for some fund managers to differentiate themselves to attract new business? So, for those people around the world who are concerned about this, I mean, I think people should be concerned about this. I, I agree with you, do you see any companies or any hedge funds or investors, investment managers, fund managers doing this at the moment? Very

Marcos Buscaglia  24:29

few that I’m aware of, there are a couple of ETFs you know, one that is, is based on exclusion is an Emerging Markets Equity Fund is called I think life and liberty and, and it’s basically the Exclude autocratic countries. And then the the second one is an ex US equity fund, right? And instead of a It’s gruelling, it diminishes the weight compared to the benchmark, you know? Yeah. The benchmark again is is, is, you know, X US equity, you know, benchmark. And they diminish the, you know, the weight of the autocratic countries. So that’s in the ETF world. And then I have been in contact with this company, this is a rather new initiative called Tom. And Tom is, you know, French asset manager, who offers for it to situational investors in this case, not to, you know, not to individuals, and strategy, equity strategy, I think, or liberty or, you know, something like that. So, and again, I think there are a few more, but it’s not widespread, is not widespread.

Gene Tunny  25:45

Gotcha, gotcha. Few more questions. What’s the role of government here? So in your book, you mentioned something that the Trump administration did so in August 25 2017, President Trump imposed financial and economic sanctions on Venezuela, executive order 13 808, but the Venezuelan government and in its state owned companies in this joint public, private ventures from international credit markets, is this a type of thing that needs to be done? more widely? Should governments be actively promoting democracy using these economic weapons?

Marcos Buscaglia  26:28

Well, you know, there is a big discussion about this, you know, some people say that sanctions could have gone too far. And that, you know, they they undermine the standards of living of the locals. But I do think that I’m on the camp that thinks that, you know, yes, sanctions should, should be used. And this is because at the end of the day, as I said, you know, before autocrats even though they’re out to grads, they need the economy to be doing well, you know, unless, you know, it’s a very tight autocracy like North Korea, you know, probably the probably, they don’t, they don’t care what the economy’s were, but, you know, other other autocratic regimes at the end of the day, you know, the economy is not doing well, you know, they’re gonna suffer at some point. So, so my take is that you need to cut them off from from from fresh funds, you know, because in that way, you will undermine the the the autocrat, and, and basically that that would help, you know, the democracy movements inside the country. Yeah.

Gene Tunny  27:32

Do you have any thoughts on how the measures the sanctions, the freezing of bank accounts, assets in foreign countries, all the other restrictions that have been imposed on Putin’s regime? Do you have any insight into how they’ve they’ve gone? I’ve heard that. I mean, they, Russia seems to be, you know, living through it, or they sit? I mean, I’m sure it’s imposed some pain, but I don’t think they’ve been the take I’ve seen is that they haven’t those measures haven’t been as effective as US Treasury, as the US administration. Hope. Do you have any, any views on that?

Marcos Buscaglia  28:08

Well, you know, I’m not an expert again, but but my take of what I’ve been reading about sanctions is that it depends on what you want to achieve with the sanctions, you know, some sanctions are just, and, you know, are not aimed at bringing regime change. They’re just thought to be to make the life of those, the, you know, the, the autocrats and their Aiders and abettors, you know, Marmee several, you know, so, so, so, you should not, you know, measure the success or not in on whether there is regime change, because they were not aim at that, to start with, you know, so So some of the sanctions, you know, came out of the Magnitsky Act in the US, then then became the global Magnitsky Act, and several counties have, you know, copied that, and this, this arc was born out of, you know, the work of, of an American investor, Bill Browder, who, who had a fund or the Hermitage fund in, in Russia, and suddenly, you know, he got into the wrong people. And, and he got sacked, and everybody escaped Russia, except for this lawyer that was representing him. Magnitsky and he was basically illegally taken to jail and he died there. And so, will rather say, Well, you know, I, I will try to make the life of those people that that, you know, made Magnitsky life miserable, miserable myself, you know, so, so, and, and, and so, so, again, so, the sanctions that I was talking about what not that ones were related to the sales and trading of government bonds, you know, so that’s, that’s those are the sanctions that I referenced in borg in the sense that say, Well, you know, maybe, you know, the trading of bonds that are already out there, you can you can prohibit you will be hurting, you know, the, the American or the or the Western, you know, investors, but, you know, let’s, let’s stop them from from getting new bonds, you know, you can do that. And I think that that, that would be good. Although, you know, I take notice, you know, there are two sides on this debate, you know, of, you know, whether sanctions are to match, you know, my side is don’t give out to grads or out to God wannabes, you know, new money for them to look good on the population of their countries. Yeah,

Gene Tunny  30:41

yeah. And just try and around all around this often just try to summarise it all, is this a, is this essentially an enlightened self interest? So even though in the short term, you might be able to get higher yields on these, you know, that’d be paying a higher interest rate on these bonds from autocratic countries? In the long term? This is not a good thing. I mean, obviously, there’s the moral question. But if there’s this spread of these autocratic regimes, and you raised some concerns about populist regimes potentially becoming autocratic, if there’s this spread of them across the world, ultimately, that’s worse, makes us all worse off? If so, is it a matter of enlightened self interest?

Marcos Buscaglia  31:24

I think so. And again, they’re the metrics particularly, there is no very good research on the fixed income side, but there is some research on the equity side that you end up doing better, you know, in investing in democratic countries. So So So, you know, let’s let’s, you know, yesterday was seen in, in X, you know, formerly known as Twitter, the, you know, chart of, you know, the, the s&p against the, I don’t remember what, what Chinese stock market index, you know, well, you would have done so much better investing in the US or for the sake of the example, you know, against, you know, any European or, or democratic country compared to China, right? And, and we’re talking about the darling of the autocracies in economic terms, right? You know, because remember that for any, you know, China in economic terms, you have 10, you know, failed economic autocracies, you know, autocratic regimes, particularly in Africa, of course, but but you’re talking about in economic terms, the darling of the of the autocracies, and even in that case, you know, on the long run, you will not have done any money in China.

Gene Tunny  32:38

Yeah, yeah. Gotcha. Okay. Finally, before we, before we wrap up, but you’re coming to us from Argentina. Argentina, has a new president who has, you know, really made a huge impact on the world stage with his speech in Davos, what are the what are the prospects for, for him getting things under control there? In Argentina? I mean, I know that you’ve had, you know, very high inflation. There are huge issues with with the government budget, aren’t there? I mean, what are the prospects for, for him getting things under control? Do you have any insights into that? Well,

Marcos Buscaglia  33:15

you know, he doesn’t have an easy job. Because the, you know, the imbalances that he inherited are so big, let’s say, utility prices, transport prices are so out of whack compared to the costs, you know, money printing has been, you know, huge in the last four years. You know, the exchange rate was totally misaligned. I mean, you have so much misalignments on the macro side to correct, you know, for to start with, and then, you know, he’s also trying to change, you know, the economic structure of Argentina, which basically, you know, it’s, it’s an economy that closed, you know, to foreign trade, trade many, many decades ago. And then, on top of that, you know, it assembler, and all sorts of regulations and vested interests, you know, that live well, in a country that is important getting poorer than the rest of the population is getting poorer day by day. So he’s trying to disentangle those, you know, benefits, special benefits, and these special interests will fight and they’re fighting. So, so it’s not a it’s not an easy task. It starts particularly he’s, you know, President carrier Malay is in, in a minority government. So, so But basically, you know, he, I think he has, you know, still a fair chance of success because, you know, Argentina has been stagnant for the last 12 years, you know, we have 12 years of stagnation or decline in per capita terms with very high inflation with a very high poverty rate with a lot of immigration now, so So I think that The population said, you know, further up. So basically there is a there is a chance for him to succeed, you know, he’s not guaranteed because you know, the Sisa isn’t a minority government in an in a delicate macro and structural, you know, programme. Yeah,

Gene Tunny  35:19

yeah, gotcha. It’s fascinating because he’s a Libertarian candidate. Well, he was a libertarian. I mean, now he’s got to manage a government and it’s going to be, it’ll be interesting to see. I mean, I’ve seen it as some sort of experiment into how, you know how that sort of approach can go a libertarian approach to government. So we’ll have to, we’ll have to see how that all works out. Okay, Marcus Pascale, it has been terrific. Yeah, I’ll put a link in the show notes to your book and encourage you if you’re listening, I think this the books definitely worth reading. I learned a lot about the global economy and, and, you know, all sorts of interesting, interesting transactions. And so there’s reference to all of you know, major players, Goldman Sachs, for instance, gets gets called out for some of their their actions. So, yeah, it’s been terrific. Any final thoughts before we close? Marcos?

Marcos Buscaglia  36:22

No, no, I mean, again, I think that that my interest is in bringing awareness that this is happening, that sometimes he says it’s happening unwittingly, that you may be financing autocracy in your portfolio, and you don’t realise it so that it’s time to take action that there is a real struggle in the world for democracy. You know, democracy has been sliding. And and I don’t think that we want to be, you know, involuntary complicit with that, you know? Yeah,

Gene Tunny  36:49

absolutely. I mean, it’s the sort of thing I might start asking questions of myself. So the big thing at the moment here in Australia is we’re looking at how can we improve improve disclosures relating to climate change? What what’s the impact on climate change? What are companies doing in terms of mitigation adaptation? Whereas maybe what we need is to have more focus on what the least the banks and the financial businesses what they’re doing with regard to democracy, why we should have maybe we should have more insight into that, I’ll have to think about that. And he’ll probably

Marcos Buscaglia  37:26

meet let me give you a small but important example of that. A little bit over a month before the presidential election in Turkey, the Turkish government issued the first ever green bond, and the market was very happy $2.5 billion dollars. At the same time, another one was spending money like crazy to win reelection, the polls indicated that he would lose the election, but he was spending like crazy giving handouts to everyone. And he won the election. So you may say, Well, you know, maybe the market thinking that they were, you know, contributing to the environment in because it was a green bond. Maybe they contributed to consolidate autocracy in Turkey.

Gene Tunny  38:06

Yeah, yeah. Very possible. Very possible. Yes. Lots to lots to keep an eye on, Marcos, for sure. Look, this has been fascinating. I really enjoyed your insights. totally recommend your book. So well done. And yeah, I look forward to the to seeing your work in the future and hopefully catching up sometime in the future. Thanks so much for your time.

Marcos Buscaglia  38:32

Thank you, Jean. But it was very nice talking to you.

Gene Tunny  38:35

rato thanks for listening to this episode of economics explored. If you have any questions, comments or suggestions, please get in touch. I’d love to hear from you. You can send me an email via contact at economics explore.com Or a voicemail via SpeakPipe. You can find the link in the show notes. If you’ve enjoyed the show, I’d be grateful if you could tell anyone you think would be interested about it. Word of mouth is one of the main ways that people learn about the show. Finally, if your podcasting app lets you then please write a review and leave a rating. Thanks for listening. I hope you can join me again next week.

39:22

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Credits

Thanks to Obsidian Productions for mixing the episode and to the show’s sponsor, Gene’s consultancy business www.adepteconomics.com.au. Full transcripts are available a few days after the episode is first published at www.economicsexplored.com. Economics Explored is available via Apple PodcastsGoogle Podcast, and other podcasting platforms.

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Podcast episode

Investing for success w/ Paul Mladjenovic, author of Stock Investing for Dummies

Paul Mladjenovic, CFP is the author or co-author of several dummies guides on investing, including Stock Investing for Dummies and Investing in Gold and Silver for Dummies. Paul shares his views on what makes for successful investing with show host Gene Tunny in episode 133 of Economics Explored. They discuss what types of companies to look for, an often unappreciated benefit of investing in gold and silver, and what Paul thinks about real estate and crypto assets.

You can listen to the conversation using the embedded player below or via Google PodcastsApple PodcastsSpotify, and Stitcher, among other podcast apps.

This episode contains general information only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Please consult a financial planning professional for advice specific to your circumstances.

About this episode’s guest – Paul Mladjenovic

Paul Mladjenovic, CFP, is a certified financial planner practitioner, writer, and speaker. He has helped people with their financial and business concerns since 1981. You can learn more about him at ravingcapitalist.com. He has authored or co-authored several popular Dummies guides on investing and affiliate marketing. You can learn more about Paul and his online courses at https://www.ravingcapitalist.com/

Links relevant to the conversation

Some of Paul’s books mentioned this episode:

Stock Investing For Dummies

Investing in Gold & Silver For Dummies

Transcript of EP133 – Investing for success w/ Paul Mladjenovic

N.B. This is a lightly edited version of a transcript originally created using the AI application otter.ai. It may not be 100 percent accurate, but should be pretty close. If you’d like to quote from it, please check the quoted segment in the recording.

Gene Tunny  00:01

Coming up on Economics Explored.

Paul Mladjenovic  00:04

The bottom line is, Gene, is that healthy quality companies will keep zigzagging upward no matter what you throw at them.

Gene Tunny  00:13

Welcome to the Economics Explored podcast, a frank and fearless exploration of important economic issues. I’m your host, Gene Tunny. I’m a professional economist based in Brisbane, Australia, and I’m a former Australian Treasury official. This is Episode 133, on investing for success. My guest this episode is the author of several of those yellow dummies guide that you may have seen in bookstores, Paul Mladjenovic. He’s written Stock Investing for Dummies, High Level Investing for Dummies, and Investing in Gold and Silver for Dummies, among other books. Paul Mladjenovic, CFP is a certified financial planner, practitioner, writer and speaker. He has helped people with their financial and business concerns since 1981. You can learn more about him at ravingcapitalist.com.

The usual disclaimer applies to this episode. This is for general information only, and nothing in this episode should be interpreted as financial or investment advice. Please consult a financial planner for advice specific to your circumstances.

Please check out the show notes for links to materials mentioned in this episode and for any clarifications. Also, check out our website, economicsexplored.com. If you sign up as an email subscriber, you can download my e-book, Top 10 Insights from Economics. So please consider getting on the mailing list. If you have any thoughts on what Paul or what I have to say about investing in this episode, then please let me know. You can either record a voice message via SpeakPipe – see the link in the show notes – or you can email me via contact@economicsexplored.com. I’d love to hear from you. Righto, now for my conversation with Paul Mladjenovic on investing for success. Thanks to my audio engineer, Josh Crotts, for his assistance in producing this episode. I hope you enjoy it. Paul Mladjenovic, welcome to the programme.

Paul Mladjenovic  02:20

Thank you kindly. What a pleasure to be on.

Gene Tunny  02:22

Yes. Thanks, Paul. Yes, it’s good to be chatting with you today about investing. You’ve written several books on investing. One of your books I’ve been reading is Stock Investing for Dummies. I’ve been getting a lot out of that. I think it’s a really great book and has a lot of sensible things to say that are consistent with economics. Really, really positive about that book. I’d like to ask, just to start off with, what is your general approach to investing? Does that vary over the lifecycle? Would you be able to take us through that place?

Paul Mladjenovic  03:04

Oh, absolutely. First of all, as you know, probably one of the most important foundations of investing is good economics. You’re on the right topic in many respects. If people make good choices, and with some economic reasoning, they could prosper, among the many choices you can make out there. And it also depends on many other things, such as politics and that kind of economic environment, etc. For me, I prefer looking through things through the prism of value and fundamental analysis.

Like many folks, when the people who make sense about this, whether it’s economics from that gentleman who’s behind you there, Mr. Friedman, or in my case, somebody more in the narrow vertical of stock investing, someone like Benjamin Graham, who was like the father of value investing. And I think it’s an important concept, because many things have to make sense. In economics, once you understand the basics of your own chequebook and household budget, it’s not that far-fetched to understand choosing good companies to invest in, etc.

I’ve been teaching about investing since the 1980s. I find that if you have common sense and have some basic of economics and grasping long-term success in stock investing and other assets as well, it’s not that difficult. You are much more proficient. It’s when you understand that. Common sense and value, it goes a long way in the world of investing.

Gene Tunny  04:34

Okay, so you’re looking for companies that are reliable over the long term. Am I reading that right?

Paul Mladjenovic  04:46

Absolutely. Actually, I’ll give you a few points from my investing class that I love. You’re a very astute man, and the people in many of my classes, many of them are beginners or beginning intermediates, and the first thing I tell them is, select… I say, remember two words, when you’re choosing your investments, whether it’s directly in stocks, or indirectly through ETFs and mutual funds, two words, human need. Think about all the products and services people will keep on buying, no matter how good or bad the economy is. And I think that especially for beginners who are looking for long-term success, human need will really, I think, crystallise it very much for folks moving forward.

For example, some of the greatest companies in the last 20 years that have been chugging along, no matter what, with the crises and market crashes and booms and busts and all the rest, companies that are profitable, involved in things such as food, water, beverage, utilities, etc. This is where you start. You start with human need before you start going into other pursuits, such as growth investing, or speculating, or everything else for that matter. The first thing is get to the right category.

The second thing is, I look for companies that are profitable and have low debt. Those may sound common sense to maybe folks like you and I, but when I’ve seen the kind of selections people have made for their portfolios over the last, I don’t know, ever since I’ve started teaching, my eyes bug out. People go for the flashy stocks, big names, glamour headlines, and that kind of thing. Those stocks may go up or down in a short term. But if they don’t have star power, in terms of their fundamentals, good profitability that they’ve done year in and year out profitable… Very important.

To me, profit isn’t just a cornerstone of a good stock. I can make the argument that it’s the cornerstone of a successful economy. I was born in a communist country. They obliterated the concept of profit, which means you obliterate the incentive to produce. That’s why you invest in companies because these produce goods and services. That’s the hallmark of a successful company, so profitability.

Again, anybody in our audience, you look at your own budget, what do you look at? If your income is greater than your expenses, you’re doing fine, especially whether you’re a billion-dollar company, or you’re a household budget. That’s one aspect of it. The second one is I like companies that have good balance sheet. And again, assets exceeding liabilities, it doesn’t have to be complicated. Many people think when you’re looking at stock investing, you have to have a degree from the Wall Street school of analysis, but no. A lot of them have gone wrong, because they went beyond the scope of good economics and good common sense.

Those are the things I look for, human need, profitability, do they have good balance sheets, in other words, making sure they’re not overloaded with debt, etc. Of course, they have to be in a free market economy, because obviously, the free market is a very important and very powerful part of any successful economy out there. Beyond that, I look at other things as well, does it pay dividends and so forth.

A lot of these things, obviously, I detail that in my book, Stock Investing for Dummies. I try to also crystallise that in my courses online, etc, whenever I’m doing live programmes or recorded, because I think people, I don’t know, to me, the more they understand about good investing and their own situation, the better choices they make, not only for their portfolios, but also when they walk into the voting booth, believe it or not. I feel that’s part of it. People forget that during the Great Depression of the 1930s, people forget that many people unwittingly voted for the Great Depression, because they voted for policies,  because they didn’t understand economics, and those in turn, created just wretched conditions in many respects. But anyway, on to your other points, my friend.

Gene Tunny  09:09

I’m interested in this concept you mentioned, value investing. That’s contrasted with what’s called growth investing, if I remember correctly. This is one of the things you write about in the book. Would you be able to explain what those differences are, please, Paul?

Paul Mladjenovic  09:28

Well, value investing means that you’re not going to be putting your money into a company that’s overvalued right now. And how do we mean about valuation? You see, when people are buying a stock, they’re buying the company, and if they’re buying a stock that’s very overvalued, then you have less chance for it to grow or do well over the long term. You’ve seen that happen very frequently. I look for something like is it a fair valuation, because I can look at a company and see things like its book value, the price-to-earnings ratio. Again, I’m happy to explain all of these to folks that need it. But there are some very key ratios that tell you if you’re paying too much.

How often have people saw a company that was say losing money, but it had a very hot sexy technology, people kept on bidding up the stock, bidding up the stock, and all of a sudden, you’re paying a fortune for a company that’s not making a profit, which means that the moment the economy starts to get a little bit worrisome, unstable, recessionary, these are among the first that that see that stocks fall. If people are paying a fair amount for the company itself…

Here in 2022, it isn’t like the way it was when I first started investing. You had to go to the library and dig through 27-pound books just to find some of the right numbers. But now you’re online and on your smartphone, and you can find out the key numbers and the key metrics very quickly. And so it should be easier than ever before. But I think people get waylaid because they see all the financial commentators and everybody is… There’s that sales pitch from Wall Street, etc. But my thing is, you always go back, the way you look at the ingredients of a good recipe, you look at the ingredients of a good company, and then say to yourself… One of the things I mentioned was the price-earnings ratio. I like to find a price-earnings ratio of under 25, because that’s a fair valuation. But people buy these stocks where… Would you like me to briefly just explain the P/E ratio for the audience?

Gene Tunny  11:36

Yes, please. Yes, I think that would be great, please, Paul. And yeah, what it roughly means.

Paul Mladjenovic  11:44

The price-earnings ratio tries to make a relationship between the stock, what you’re buying, and the essence of the company. The essence of the company is its profit, of course. And what we do is take a look at the price per share and the earnings per share.

Let’s say for example, you have a company that makes a million dollars net profits, and they have a million shares outstanding. Well, that’s a $1-per-share profit. The earnings per share is $1. Okay, so we can understand it. A million shares, a million dollars. It’s $1 earnings per share. Great. But now, let’s say that company’s stock is $10. Alrighty, so basically, you’re paying $10 for the stock, and you’re paying for $1 of earnings. So that’s a 10-to-one ratio. But that’s a P/E ratio of 10. Very fair valuation. Of course, if the stock is $15 or $20, you’re still in the ballpark. I think that’s a good price that you’re paying for it. In that case, if it’s 15, you’re paying $15 per stock, and you’re getting $1 of earnings.

What happens is this. If everyone’s excited about the stock, and they bid that stock all the way up, but the earnings are still down here, then you start getting into dangerous territory where you’re over, that there is an overvaluation, the price is much higher than what the company has in basic intrinsic worth. Back when the Internet stocks crashed, many of those P/E ratios were not 15 or 20 or whatever. They were north of 100. Some of them were over 1000, which means you’re paying an awful lot of money for the company. When it’s a nosebleed territory, then it’s in greater danger of a pullback.

The reason why they bid up the stock is that they’re assuming, oh, that’s a great company, the earnings are going to come in. They’re assuming that they’re buying up the stock, that the earnings are going to eventually rise, but you don’t know that. You’re basically speculating. You’re buying stocks today, hoping that tomorrow or next year, they can have a sensational profit, but that doesn’t always materialise. So at that case, you’re speculating. You’re not investing. Investing means you look at the reality of the moment, what you’re paying for, and the actual key components that a company are in a good price range, a good valuation, and the price is closer to it. Then it’s less risky.

I prefer people starting off with value investing, because it brings out much of the risk to begin with, because if you’re paying a lot of money for a stock, then the risk is, what happens if the earnings don’t materialise? What if they start to have losses? What if the economy slows down, and 100 other variables. Then that stock gets up here. It could easily be in bubble territory, pop and come back down and you’re sitting on a loser. That’s the issue with this. You want to go for valuation early on.

It’s like if you buy a dozen eggs, if they’re on sale for $1.99 for a dozen eggs, it’s a lot cheaper than if you were going to pay 10 or 20 bucks for the same dozen eggs. The eggs don’t change, but the price in the relationship does matter. This is among the things I emphasise, hopefully, throughout the book, and to casual readers everywhere. Hopefully that are not that casual with their money.

Gene Tunny  15:03

Yes, yes. I was just checking the P/E ratio for Tesla at the moment. I’m just looking at this one site. It says it’s 193.24, March 22, 2022. That’s a P/E ratio well in excess of–

Paul Mladjenovic  15:24

Exactly. Now, I have no problem with people investing in that type of stock. But they need to tell themselves that they’re not investing. They’re speculating. Could Tesla stock keep going up? Sure. Could it crash? Yes. And if there’s a slowdown out there, and less people are buying automobiles, and that puts a drag on the entire automotive industry, that’s going to put a drag on Tesla as well. Plus, it doesn’t pay a dividend. It’s not that you’re getting paid to hold the stock. For me, that’s a speculative choice. Nothing wrong with that. There’s nothing wrong with people speculating. But they need to know that there’s a very material difference between an investment and a speculation. And they need to know that.

Gene Tunny  16:06

If my portfolio was heavy with stocks like Tesla, I would be a growth investor, rather than a value investor. Is that how I should be–

Paul Mladjenovic  16:21

If they all have that kind of valuation, you’re hoping for growth. But the thing is, in reality, you’re speculating, because you’re expecting a stock with a 200 P/E ratio, that you’re hoping that it goes to 250 or higher, translation meaning that their income is coming in and the stock price is going up. They’re bidding it up, and that way you’re holding it, and your stock went up. But you don’t know that. To me, there’s a greater risk in those kinds of stocks. But the thing is this. Fortunately, it’s not all or nothing. There’s nothing wrong with having a few aggressive speculations in your portfolio, but they better not make the majority of the foundation of your portfolio, otherwise you’ll be at risk, especially since when you juxtapose it today’s macro economic environment, it is riskier out there.

I don’t see anything here that’s going to say that a particular automotive company are going to double the number of their cars they’re going to sell next year, when there’s a lot of debt out there. Interest rates are rising. A lot of people buying automobiles. Some of them, fine, you could buy it all cash, well, good for you, I cheer you on. But the majority of the market out there would tend to be borrowing money. And if interest rates go up, then they may not choose that Tesla. They might choose a competing model for now. I think there’s a lot of fragility in today’s economy, if a lot of these things continue the way they’ve been going. I was expecting inflation and everything else over a year ago, and it’s materialising now. Gene, from what I know about you, you’re a smart guy. You were probably there even before me, and hopefully people have benefited from some of your insights months ago.

Gene Tunny  18:10

Our mutual friend Darren Brady Nelson and I were chatting about this, definitely last year, the potential inflation, just because of, as you would have seen, all of the money growth that we’ve been experiencing associated with quantitative easing, and the housing credit boom that we’ve had in here in Australia, and then in other countries. So yeah, certainly something we’ve been expecting. I’d like to ask all about the P/E ratio again. Clearly, it’s relevant to particular stocks. Are you also looking at it from the whole market point of view? There’s a measure of the P/E ratio for the whole market is in there. Is it the cyclically adjusted P/E ratio?

Paul Mladjenovic  18:58

Exactly. Whenever I see that, what is the cumulative P/E ratio for the S&P 500, for example, which is considered obviously a major yardstick and a major barometer of the general health of the stock market. I haven’t looked at it lately, but I do know that it is elevated. It is higher than it should be the last time I looked. That is also a cautionary tale.

For me, because I like to invest in human needs stocks, they tend to have a lower P/E ratio. And so that’s a measure of safety for me. Not the only one, but certainly one of the primary ones. The other side I like to look at, again, especially when I’m dealing with beginners or beginning intermediates, one of my criteria is also they should be investing in stocks that are paying dividends. We call them stock dividends, but they’re really company dividends, because a dividend that’s being paid out by a company. Obviously, if it’s a successful company, the dividend tends to rise, over an extended period of time, like years and decades. And it’s a sign of health. It’s a clear, tangible measurement of the company’s financial success. If they’re having a dividend that’s rising every year, that’s a good sign. So I like that.

And the other point of it is too is that whenever there’s a market crash or a major market event and stocks go down, you’ll find out that dividend stocks tend to be among those that tend to recover a little bit sooner. For me, if my stock goes up or down 10 or 20%, but my dividends are coming in, quarter in, quarter out, I’m not that worried about it. For many reasons, including in family accounts, we talk about having the cash flow coming in. I have clients and students that I remember from decades ago, that today, they’re getting annual dividend payouts greater than their initial stock investment from decades ago. It’s gotta make you feel good.

If a stock falls, then what happens is that… For example, again, using a simple example, if I have a $20 stock, and it’s paying a $1 dividend, that’s the equivalent yield of 5%. 5% of 20 is $1. All right. So let’s say that today, the market is crashing big time, and my $20 stock went to $10 a share. All right. Obviously, I’m not happy. But the thing is, now that $10 stock, if it’s still paying a $1 dividend – again, I’m looking at the health of the company, it’s making a profit or whatever – if it’s still paying $1 dividend and the stock is $10 now, that tells me that the dividend yield at this moment would be 10%. That is a very attractive yield. So what happens is other investors will go in and bid it back up again. And so it has an easier time recovering.

The bottom line is, Gene, is that healthy, quality companies will keep zigzagging upward, no matter what you throw at them, whereas companies that are not financially stable, don’t have all the numbers, are losing money, they’re going to be zigzagging downward. So, which zigzag you want to be part of? You look at these things, because they’re not mysteries. This is public data.

Gene Tunny  22:18

Yeah, I think it’s great advice. And it’s consistent with what David Bahnsen recently told me when I chatted with him, and he was talking about his views on dividends. He’s very pro dividends. I think it’s also consistent with Warren Buffett, isn’t it? I mean, Warren Buffett looks for those companies that deliver reliable earnings over the long term. And in his day, I’m not sure if it’s still the case now, it was Geico, the Government Employees Insurance Company, and also Coca-Cola, I think. So those are the sort of dependable companies that… Not that I’m making any particular recommendations, but it’s those sort of companies, I’m guessing.

Paul Mladjenovic  23:06

And by the way, the human needed investing, as much as I love it for beginners, etc, in the generic sense, also it tends to be a great approach and strategy during inflationary times. The last year and a half, especially with my end with the Federal Reserve, printing up trillions, look, people forget that inflation is not the price of goods and services going up, it’s the value of money going down. When you over-produce something, and you have more units of it out there, chasing the same basket of goods and services, then don’t be surprised that the prices go up.

Plus, in addition, during the pandemic, and people were worried about their economic situations, etc. , when people are worried, and there’s anxiety, and there’s a declining or low consumer confidence, then people will not invest in their wants. They won’t spend on their wants. They’ll spend on their needs. They may want fancy whatever, trips and vacations and snazzy restaurants and so much more. But if the economy is contracting, and there’s more worry on the radar screen, and people are worried about their companies, their jobs, etc, then they’re going to shrink what they’re spending on that that is want-driven. And they will keep on buying things that are need-driven, so that they’re trying to adjust accordingly to the economic environment.

So all of a sudden, you start to think that those things that we do need, all of a sudden in an inflationary environment, it’s almost like they’ve switched hats to be more growth-oriented. You have found that in the last 3, 6, 9, 12 months, the things we’ve invested in that we needed, all of a sudden, they become spectacularly solid  things to put your money in. Grains, for example. I spoke to some of my students last year. I said, “If you’re investing in money, where it’s tied to things that are rising in price such as human need, and you’re talking about energy, gasoline, you’re talking about groceries, which means food and commodities, those things have performed very well.” So, in many cases, I tell people out there and yeah, yeah, good, you can keep complaining about inflation, but part of your action plan is to be invested in those things that benefit from inflation versus being hammered by inflation.

Gene Tunny  25:34

Okay, we’ll take a short break here for a word from our sponsor.

Female speaker  25:39

If you need to crunch the numbers, then get in touch with Adept Economics. We offer you frank and fearless economic analysis and advice, we can help you with funding submissions, cost-benefit analysis studies, and economic modelling of all sorts. Our head office is in Brisbane, Australia, but we work all over the world. You can get in touch via our website, http://www.adepteconomics.com.au. We’d love to hear from you.

Gene Tunny  26:08

Now back to the show. Now with an action plan, Paul, I’d like to explore that, what that means for an individual or for a household, because we need to think about how diversified should your portfolio be, and then also how actively or passively you should manage it. Do you have views on those that you could take us through, please?

Paul Mladjenovic  26:35

Yeah. There’s the simple 80/20 rule, if you want. All things being equal, I’d love to see people put 80% of their foundational investment money into human need things, food, water, beverage, utilities. Again, it’s a very simple question. Ask yourself, what will people keep on buying, no matter how good or bad the economy is. If people are unemployed, they’re still going to eat, they’re still going to turn on their lights. And that’s where you should have your money, especially if you’re a beginner, and especially if these are worrisome times.

And I like the dividend portion, because then I know that, in many cases, especially many brokerage accounts, they give you the ability to reinvest the dividends. So even if you don’t need the money, if the stocks are down and contracting, the dividends will buy more of it. Then on the other side of it down the road, when you’re ready to have the money being sent home to you, it’d be good to know that over a period of years, and you started with 50 shares, now you have 75, 100, 150, and now their dividends are higher, plus there’s more shares, which means you’re going to have more money coming in to make yourself more financially secure in your later years.

A lot of stock investing, it doesn’t have to be mysterious or crazy. A lot of people think that to make the real big bucks got to be extra risky and extra speculative and extra growth-oriented. Well, that might be true with a portion of your money, but it shouldn’t be the bulk of your money. Absolutely. So 80% value to human need. And I’m saying this real time too, March 2022. And I think a lot of people’s experience with human need is bearing these points out. There, at least 80%. How’s that?

Gene Tunny  28:24

So yeah, 80% on investments–

Paul Mladjenovic  28:27

Of your investable money should be in human need things.It doesn’t have to be just stocks. There are ETFs. There’s actually excellent dividend ETFs, where they’re tied to human need and pay dividends. Again, I can’t get specific with this audience because I don’t know who I’m talking to. But everybody knows they can go on a search engine and find dividend ETFs. They can find ETFs.

For example, when the economy is doing very well, and everybody is flush with cash and they’re positive, then they might go for, I said wants, and that basically is a reference to consumer discretionary. When you have extra cash, what do you do? Fancier restaurants, vacation, take the missus out for the weekend somewhere, all good stuff. When you’re talking about a contracting or problematic economy and commensurate issues in the stock market, then you think consumer staples, that’s where a lot of those human needs are going to be.

There are ETFs that invest just in consumer staples or utilities. You don’t have to worry about trying to choose one winning stock. Why not a winning ETF or winning mutual funds? There’s a lot of sector mutual funds out there. There are food and beverage mutual funds. There are food and beverage ETFs. And these would make a lot of sense in today’s environment, for 2022 and probably for the remainder of this year, because I don’t see any spectacular rebound coming in the economy. And if they’re going to raise interest rates, because they’re fighting inflation, somebody’s going to win, somebody’s going to lose.

Right now, there’s people out there who have a lot of fixed bond. That bonds market is huge. You can have a spectacular problem with the bond market, because if there’s a lot of fixed debt, and interest rates are rising, what will people do? You want to get rid of your, whatever, 2.5% bond and buy a 5% bond? That’s fine, but then that means a lot of selling. And so in this environment, I tell people, if you are going to be in bonds, make sure they’re high-quality AAA, and that they’re adjustable rates. And that could be another component of your portfolio, if you want something diversified away from the stock market. Those are the kind of choices, AAA, high quality, and adjustable rates involved so that you’re not stuck. You don’t want to be stuck with a fixed interest rate, like say, 30-year bonds, and rates are going to be driven upward. That’s going to be like a hammer to the value of the bonds you’re currently holding. Okay, so adjustable rate, quality, AAA, if you can have that, that’s the kind you should have.

Gene Tunny  31:03

That’s 80%. There’s another 20%, is there?

Paul Mladjenovic  31:09

Yeah, exactly. If you’re ultra worried, and you don’t want growth, then maybe 20% should be an adjustable rate, high-quality bonds.

Gene Tunny  31:16

Oh, gotcha. Right. So that’s a really safe part of it.

Paul Mladjenovic  31:20

That’s a possibility, exactly. If you’re more growth-oriented, then put 20% into growth-oriented stocks or ETFs, again, depending on… See, the interesting thing is that investing and speculating can be something in a generic, but in many cases, it depends on the person involved. If I’m talking to somebody who’s a year or two from retirement, then you’d bet they’d have to be much more so into very secure things, human need, high-quality, adjustable rate bonds, money in the bank, low debt, and a few other features. That would be important. But if you’re talking to a 25-year-old, I’d still say, keep the bulk in your human need, but now you could put your money into growth-oriented things that are out there, some types of commodities, because inflation is pushing some of these things up. If people have seen the price of gasoline and wheat in recent months, then they get a good idea about the kind of things that grow in an inflation-driven environment, as we’re in right now.

Gene Tunny  32:18

Yeah. What are your thoughts on real estate, so both your own home and also investment properties? Do you have any thoughts on that? One of the challenges we’ve got in many advanced economies is just the very high cost of housing at the moment. And I’ve seen some commentators questioning whether buying your own home actually does make sense for a lot of young people. So yeah, I’m interested in your thoughts on that.

Paul Mladjenovic  32:48

First of all, obviously, owning your own home I think is fine. I see no problem with it. Obviously, I don’t argue with real estate folks. I know some people who will rent a cheap apartment, then they have their money and invested it and buy rental real estate. That’s fine. Some of this is a personal proclivity. Me, for example, I love real estate, but I don’t buy fixer uppers or other type of thing. My favourite type of real estate investing is true real estate investment trusts that I can buy with a few mouse clicks through my brokerage account. Those people who want to be beginners in the world of real estate, and you’re nodding your head so I think you generally agree, that I think real estate investment trusts is a great place for the beginners to be.

I like the idea that with a few mouse clicks I can get in, and a few mouse clicks, I can get out. The same rules of real estate apply when you’re talking about real estate investment trusts, REITs. You look at the type of real estate, and you look at the location, very important. For me, I like that there are a couple of hundred different REITs out there, certainly in the American market. I’m sure there’s more. I’m sure there’s some in your neck of the woods, etc. But REITs are a way that I can buy a few shares, whether it’s 5 shares, 50 shares, 100 shares, or more, I can participate in a real estate property, get my dividends, CD appreciation, but somebody else is… You have an executive team that’s managing all the properties and that’s their specialty. I prefer that.

Keep in mind, real estate investing, think about the types of real estate. Right now, in the last couple of years, I’ve told my students that I would avoid things like office building real estate investment trusts, because I think if the economy’s going to shrink, and you got pandemic residual issues, why do you want to be there?  I would be invested in REITs that are in the residential complex. For example, the last few years I’ve avoided like the plague shopping centre REITs, and instead I’ve been looking into REITs that specialise in data storage. They still pay dividends. And you see more movement there. There are REITs that are cell tower REITs. In other words, their property is cell towers. They pay good dividends. And cell towers won’t go out of style anytime soon. And if you have teenagers, you know what I mean.

Gene Tunny  35:23

That’s interesting. I’ll have to have a look at some of those. I wasn’t aware of those. That’s fascinating. Paul, can I ask you about gold and silver? You’ve written on gold and silver in the past.

Paul Mladjenovic  35:36

I’ve written two books on precious metals. And I’ve been very bullish on gold and silver and other metals over the last few years. And I feel that when everything finally shakes out, I see no reason why gold and silver couldn’t be at new market highs in the coming months. I have associates of mine who feel that these things will go to new multiples of where they’re at now. That remains to be seen. But the bottom line is, I do think that gold and silver will be appreciating for a variety of reasons. And I think they’re part of a portfolio that’s really…

Let me tell you, I can give one important reason why everybody in your audience should own at least a little bit of gold and silver. Are you ready? I’m going to give you a reason that you won’t hear very often. And by the way, if your financial advisor talks you out of them, tell them to call me. And this is what I meant. Okay, so anybody within the sound of my voice, remember the following phrase, counterparty risk. Counterparty risk. That’s the number one reason why you should have some. I’m not asking you to head for the hills and live in a cave and have a tonne of either one. No, not really. You should be diversified away from the risks of paper assets.

Me, I love gold. I love stock investing. I love the paper assets, definitely. But I favour gold and silver, the physical, because gold and silver are two assets that  are among the few assets on the landscape of choices, of investment choices that do not have a counterparty risk. You talk to your financial advisors about this, see if they know this point. It’s very important. Years ago, I remember I used to even teach financial advisors, and I think this is an important factor.

What is counterparty risk? See, here’s the thing. If you invest in any type of paper assets, you’re undergoing counterparty risk. For example, if I buy stock, the counterparty risk is the performance of the company. In other words, counterparty risk means that if you invest in an asset, the value of this asset is directly dependent upon the promise or performance of the counterparty. If I buy stock, and that company is doing great, my stock will be fine, I’m sure. At the moment that counterparty fails, falters, goes into debt, goes bankrupt, what’s going to happen to the value of my stock at that point? You follow? There is counterparty risk with stocks.

Bonds, perfect example of counterparty risk. If I invest in a bond, the first risk I think of is that, will the payer of this bond pay back the principal and the interest as stipulated in bond agreements, to me as the bond holder. There’s counterparty risk there. What if that entity defaults? Many times in history, especially during bad economic times, people have defaulted on bonds. And so you have to understand that, but also to currencies.

Right now, inflation means that that money is losing value. And that’s a counterparty risk, because a currency is only as good as the counterparty being the central bank of that country, managing, hopefully, properly, that money supply. And we’re seeing that there’s inflation everywhere, the ruble falling apart in Russia, because of the conflict, runaway inflation in Venezuela, etc. In many cases, the currency of a country is similar to the dynamic of the stock with the company. When the company is doing well, the stock does well. If the country is strong and doing very well, and they’re managing their currency, then that currency will be strong. But once you mismanage that, and the currency goes into hyperinflation…

By the way, you’re talking to a guy who has experiences personally with my family. In 1963, as a four-year-old with my family, we escaped communist Yugoslavia. And by the way, communism is a horrible thing, but that’s a different conversation. But they, in 1993, 1994, tried to help out their own economy with inflating the currency, the dinar, and you had one of history’s greatest hyperinflationary catastrophic incidents occur in Yugoslavia, and it collapsed into nothing basically. No more Yugoslavia as of 1994 . I got married in 1993. So my wife and I were thinking about going to Yugoslavia for our honeymoon, but as the civil war it was going through and collapse, these things ruin a good honeymoon. So we opted for the Caribbean instead. And in retrospect, am I glad I did.

Gene Tunny 40:18

Absolutely.

Paul Mladjenovic 40:19

Currencies have counterparty risk. Virtually every paper asset you can think of has a counterparty risk. Its value is directly tied to the promise or the performance of a counterparty. Gold and silver have their own intrinsic value. Gold and silver have never gone to zero. They had value thousands of years ago, they have value now, and likely, gold and silver will continue to have value far into the future. So precious metals, and I mean, the physical, look into bullion coins and the like. Do your shopping. As you know, I did the book Investing in Gold and Silver for Dummies. It’s a whole book on how to choose and shop for it, etc. But gold and silver, again, are a diversification away from currency mismanagement, away from the risk of paper assets, away from geopolitical and other risks. And I think that that is an important fact. And let’s face it, you hear about the rich over the aeons, the centuries, they always had gold and silver. The people are in the know. They know something, I think that’s something for you, that should be a clue to you to start figuring it out and seeing if a small portion does make sense in your overall picture. And I think given today’s economic realities, a portion of it doesn’t make sense.

Gene Tunny  41:38

What about NFTs and crypto that everyone’s talking about? Have you had any exposure to that or do you have any thoughts on that? There’s a lot of excitement about it.

Paul Mladjenovic  41:52

Let me tell you, a few years ago, I was asked about writing a book on cryptocurrency. And the point is, I think I’m good at what I know, but I know the limits of what I know. And I got them a great author on that book. So my publisher does have one called Cryptocurrency Investing for Dummies, and she does a great job with it.

Again, I feel the same way, having a small portion of it is not a bad idea. But there’s been just a lot of, I don’t know, overwrought speculation about it in recent years. And the thing is this. Part of the success of cryptocurrency, again, was the idea that it’s limited in scope. And, and so obviously, if you don’t over-produce it, and more people are buying it, then of course, you’ve seen how well it’s performed. I mean, it’s been amazingly volatile, crashing here and there. And I think investing small amounts here and there, again, as a small diversification away from everything else, is not a bad idea, but a lot of these people who are going whole hog into it, etc, we have to be careful. You have to remember that the governments of the world look at cryptocurrencies as a competitor, and nothing stops them from waking up one morning, passing a few laws and regulations, and all of a sudden, your cryptocurrency becomes problematic versus being an asset. So again, tread lightly here. Obviously, you may get a cryptocurrency expert on who will have a totally different opinion. And I’m not here to argue with those folks.

Again, I think having some cryptocurrencies is fine. And for me, some of my clients, I say to them, why not get some of the blockchain technology companies, because that way, you’re indirectly working with it. And that worked out to be a pretty good speculation. But again, same feelings as with gold and silver, have some of it, not an overwhelming amount, because you never know, because cryptocurrency… Everything we’re talking about has some kind of risk. With cryptocurrencies, what happens? I mean, it’s extremely dependent on electricity. What happens when there’s a power outage? Can you trade with it then? I doubt it.

The whole point about guys like me, in my industry… I was a certified financial planner for 36 years. I retired it a year ago, but I’m still active with education and teaching about this and I love my topic. I doubt I’ll retire anytime soon. I love what I do too much. However, the world of CFPs and financial advisors, they live and breathe the word diversification. Every asset has some type of risk attached to it, if you have money in the bank, fine, you’re away from financial risk, but now how about inflation risk, purchasing power risk, and a few other ones out there? What if the bank closes its doors because there’s a national crisis with the central bank, etc?

This is why you have a little bit across the board. That diversification just makes you stronger and not dependent on the goodness or wellness or the speculative success of an individual entity or asset class. Again, have some cryptocurrencies, fine. Have a couple of different ones, fine. But don’t have your life savings in it. Don’t put too huge of a percentage of your investable assets in it. Same thing as I would say with many other things that are out there. And of course, everything mitigates things. If you are a real estate expert, then having more of a portion of your assets in real estate is not that big of a deal, because your personal expertise is mitigating the extra exposure, but that’s fine. Knowledge is always the thing you should be accumulating the most, after accumulating your wealth, because the both of those things are tied together.

Gene Tunny  45:40

Yeah. Very good observation there, Paul. A couple more questions on how actively should a person be managing their portfolio. Typically I’ve just sort of said, maybe I made some decisions, like a couple of years ago, I’ll invest in this ETF or I’ll have these investments. And I’ll just commit to putting a certain amount in every month or whatever. And you get that, they call it that dollar cost averaging technique. You’re not worried about what the prices are at any particular time. And then over time, you do better out of that. How do you think about how actively investors should be managing their portfolios? How frequently should they be reviewing their selections? Any thoughts on that?

Paul Mladjenovic  46:36

Again, everyone’s a little bit differently, but if you’re not reviewing monthly or quarterly statements, if you’re not speaking to whoever you trust at least once a year or once every half year, then there’ll be issues, obviously. The more you’re aware about what you have, the better. I mean, I look at decisions every day, for my family. And the interesting thing is, if there’s one thing that people need to understand also, it is that to be successfully monitoring your situation, keep in mind that successful investing isn’t just what you invest in, but how do you go about doing it. If your positions are residing in a brokerage account, then nothing stops you. I highly encourage everybody within the sound of my voice to speak to your customers, to your brokerage firm’s customer service department, ask about things, about tutorials and things like stoploss orders, trailing stops. Sometimes you could do some, again, to a small extent, things such as covered call writing, which gives you income. It’s a hedge on a position as well, in some cases.

For example, trailing stops, I’m a big one on this, if, if you’re nervous about what you’re holding, alrighty, then again, it’s not just what you invest in, it’s how you go about doing it. Then you should consider trailing stops to minimise the downside. Now, what does that mean? Well, well, first of all, the generic about a stoploss order. If I bought a stock at 20, and I’m nervous about it, then I should put a stoploss order in at 18, 10% below, just as a generic point. 10% lower, you give it room to fluctuate. My stock at 20, if I bought it, obviously, there’s no upside limitation. But at 18, I now have downside limitation. In other words you’re adding discipline to your situation. You’re not just blindly watching this stuff. You could put that stoploss order in for the day or make it good until cancelled. It could sit there for three months.

If you’re worried about the coming weeks and months, go through your portfolio. If you need to go with your financial advisor, by all means, and say, I’m nervous about position x over here, what should I do? Well, they should be telling you. First of all, if it’s quality, that should remove some of the anxiety. But if you’re still worried, then either, A, sell it if you need the money, or if you don’t need the money, then put in a stoploss order in it. And then what happens? Let’s say your $20 stock zigzags up to 30. Okay, well, now what? That $18 stoploss, cancel it, like it says, good until cancelled, and replace it with one at 27, as an example. Now, what happens? The stock is at 30, you put a stoploss in at 27. Well, now what? Now if there’s a market crash, stock will go down, will trigger a sell order at 27, and you’re out. And you kept 100% of your original $20 plus a $7 per share profit. You added diligence and safety and discipline to your situation, not because you were expecting it, but because you started worrying etc. Then put those on. What’s the worst that happens? You’re selling and protect your money and keep a portion of your profits. Well then, that’s the very essence of prudent investing. You follow?

So in other words, everybody within the sound on my voice, if you have a brokerage account, go to their site. They’ve got to tutorials and other things. Call them up. Ask them, hey, what can I do if I’m worried about my stock dropping? What can I do? Have that conversation. But I find that a lot of people don’t have those conversation, and then what? Then when there is a market crash, and your positions plummet all the way down to the bottom or whatever, or lose 50%, then you do could’ve, would’ve, should’ve, you have anxiety, and so much more.

Right now, as I’m talking to you, the markets are generally in good shape today. But that could change next week. You could have a 1,000-point drop on a Monday morning, because you have trillions flowing in and out. You’ve got sanctions and unintended consequences. You don’t know when the next crisis is going to blow up, which in turn will blow up point A, point B, point C, and all of a sudden, you wake up one morning and your position or your broker has been hammered to pieces. Again, diversification. Remember that you have many tools and tactics in your pocket with these brokerage firms that you should be fully aware of. When you’re fully aware of these and you start applying some of these things in a very modest way, your confidence grow, your knowledge grows, which means more importantly, your financial security does better.

Gene Tunny  51:18

Yeah. Okay. I might ask one more question before we wrap up, Paul. There was an interesting passage in your book on Stock Investing for Dummies, where you’re asking what school of economic thought does the analyst adhere to? So this is things you should ask about analysts when you’re assessing the value of their contributions, what they’re saying, what their advice is. You make a point that if there was one that adhered to the Keynesian school of economic thought, that’s analyst A, and analyst B adhered to the Austrian School. Guess what? I’d choose analyst B, because those who embrace the Austrian School have a much better grasp of real world economics, which means better stock investment choices. Could you explain what you mean, there, please?

Paul Mladjenovic  52:05

Well, it’s funny, you brought up an interesting point. I mean, I love the Austrian School. And as you know, Darren is a devotee of that. It doesn’t necessarily mean the Austrian School… There’s a couple of other schools that are pretty good. There’s the Chicago school, Milt Friedman, I admire his work. It’s just that there are many financial advisors out there who… Obviously, Maynard Keynes, I don’t think highly of him. I mean, if I had a financial advisor who loved Karl Marx, I would be terrified, because that tells me they know nothing about economics. I’m serious about this. Yeah, I’m very serious about it.

By the way, to me, it’s not that I look for a financial advisor who’s into these particular schools. Question number 17, that helps me hone my selections. I want to make sure that they’ve been around for a few decades, they’ve seen bear markets and bull markets. That’s a much more important criteria for me that they understand these things. But if it ever comes down to the school, I’m going to make sure they understand, because remember, it was the free market schools out there were warning about the Great Depression, they were warning about stock market bubbles, and they were warning about these things. I found out that these disciplines helped me be a better tactician and strategist with the money.

I mean, I remember when I read an article about the stock market bubble in 1999, and that was from the point of view of the economics. That just cemented some of my concerns about the stock market. What did it mean? For those students and clients who were your conservative, retirement-oriented, made sure they were in safer waters. But those people out there who were speculators, like me, for example, I made sure that I was not invested in the internet stocks of 2000, because the first wave, you don’t know which ones are going to survive or not. They were all losing money. So in terms of investment, I stay away from them. However, my speculative side, I was buying long-term put options on these. So when these things collapsed, my speculative put options garnered some very nice gains. And that was my speculating.

Understanding basic economics and following some of these schools of thought would just enhance  your ability,  because obviously, understanding the macro picture makes you a better choice of which micro choices, which stocks and ETFs are going to either survive or thrive in that kind of economic environment, and it actually gives you another leg up. When you understand the big picture, it just makes it better choices in your own portfolio, so you could sleep better at night and serve the family that you love.

Gene Tunny  54:48

Okay, that’s a great point, Paul. I was just thinking about Keynes. Keynes himself was a rather good investor and made a lot of money for King’s College in Cambridge. However, I think there’s some speculation that he may have benefited to an extent from insider knowledge he gained while working for the Treasury.

Paul Mladjenovic  55:13

That’s very possible. And actually, when you think about it in the 1920s, look him up, there was an economist called Irving Fisher. When the stock market was in bubble territory, he was notorious for making the call that he feels that they’ve reached a permanent plateau. And this was whatever, like six or nine months before the crash of 1929, and he had been filing for bankruptcy. So no one should have listened to Irving Fisher, including Irving Fisher.

Gene Tunny  55:42

Exactly. Okay. Paul, any final points before we wrap up? I think this has been great. You’ve given me a lot to think about. And I mean, I think we could chat for hours on this stuff. But I think I’ll have to wrap up now. And yeah, I’d be keen to chat with you again.

Paul Mladjenovic  55:57

I really appreciate it. I mean, obviously, you mentioned Stock Investing for Dummies, I’ve done a lot of books out there. So I certainly invite people to see if those things help them with theirs. And if people want to find me, I’m at ravingcapitalist.com. But the point is this. Knowledge is really so important with all of this, and the idea that you’re a better consumer or a better investor, it also makes you a better voter, too, , and it also makes you much more aware of what policies out there will do harm and which ones will do right, and which investments will go up or down accordingly. It’s all about the knowledge. Ignorance is going to be extremely problematic in the coming months. So I invite them to get as much knowledge as possible, apply it, talk to everybody, you’ll be much better off. If they keep on listening to gentlemen such as Gene Tunny, then I think they’ll be served well, and thank you again and again. God bless your audience, and I wish them all prosperity.

Gene Tunny  56:54

Thank you. Paul, it’s been a pleasure. Really appreciate your time. And yeah, I hope to chat with you again soon. Thanks so much.

Paul Mladjenovic  57:02

Continued success to all of you. Take care, Gene.

Gene Tunny  57:04 Thank you. Okay, that’s the end of this episode of Economics Explored. I hope you enjoyed it. If so, please tell your family and friends and leave a comment or give us a rating on your podcast app. If you have any comments, questions, suggestions, you can feel free to send them to contact@economicsexplored.com And we’ll aim to address them in a future episode. Thanks for listening. Until next week, goodbye.

Credits

Big thanks to EP133 guest Paul Mladjenovic and to the show’s audio engineer Josh Crotts for his assistance in producing the episode. 

Please get in touch with any questions, comments and suggestions by emailing us at contact@economicsexplored.com or sending a voice message via https://www.speakpipe.com/economicsexplored. Economics Explored is available via Apple PodcastsGoogle Podcast, and other podcasting platforms.