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Cathie Wood and Ark Invest. Very Disappointed.
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This video is brought to you by extra learn more at metkevin.com extra, hey everyone me kevin here in this video, i have to say i am disappointed with kathy wood and i'm going to break down the most salient arguments that kathy would made in her recent video. I'm going to break down with facts my belief as to why some of the things kathy wood is saying are just blatantly wrong and i'm very disappointed because, usually i agree with almost everything kathy has to say. I think one of the biggest differences between myself and kathy right now is that, while first, we totally agree that we're going to see the explosion of innovation between 2024 and 2030., that's the longer term right that six year end of the decade period. I completely agree genomics is in its infancy: explosion of cash flow dna, sequencing, energy storage, adaptive robotics, blockchain tech, everything, a convergence of innovation, completely agree that these things are going to lead to deflation in broader markets and prices and massive profits for innovative companies completely agree.

But it's the time between 2022 and 2024 that i'm nervous about and that i have some bones to pick with kathy wood. That 2022 and 2023 are not what kathy wood is suggesting. Let's go through item by item her argument and then my response. So, first kathy wood argues that we're already seeing a significant amount of monetary tightening and that, because we're already seeing monetary tightening, maybe markets are overdoing the sell-off that maybe we're overly negative and overly fearful.

Because we've already seen tightening and we don't need to worry about. Tightening anymore well folks, let's actually look at the facts, so kathy wood provides evidence that we are tightening money growth as her first evidence, and she suggests that hey look the amount of money growth that we've seen used to be at 27 year-over-year during the pandemic. During the early part of the pandemic, we printed so much money, that's down to 13 recently and if you zoom in even more it's down to eight percent growth in in the expansion of the money, supply or m2 money supply right. But unfortunately i worry that kathy is stuck in in here with a recency bias.

Kathy's only looking here at how we've seen this decline of essentially money supply growth from 27 down to this 13 or recently 8. But kathy isn't actually zooming out to realize that we are still expanding the money supply substantially more than the three to four percent that we usually do during normal times. This is not a sign of tightening this sign of a drop here is not tightening. This is a removal of a lot of accommodation while still providing accommodation.

We are still printing money right now, we're still printing 30 to 45 billion dollars per month. Right now, with the federal reserve, we are still stimulating the economy and we'll talk about stimulus in just a moment, because folks forget that we still have a flow of stimulus, kathy would suggest. Ah, the stimulus flow is over that the that now we're tightening, because we've seen this decline, but that's not right, just because you're, comparing to a time in 2020, when we opened the floodgates of money and yeah, we had a lot of money, printing and creation, then, And yes, today, things are relatively less than they were then doesn't mean that that money just disappears. It doesn't work that way right now.
This is where kathy would then suggest that jerome powell, because we're already tightening, might end up just telegraphing uh and end up acting with a 50 basis. Point hike uh in in in the march meeting, essentially saying. Look because we're already tightening, maybe we'll do a 50 basis, point hike, so a half percent hike on march 16th and then we'll just take a pause. We'll just stop for a moment because after all, it's an election year - and maybe we don't want to end up rocking the boat during an election year, because then powell could be accused of potentially uh.

You know having a political bias which we'll talk about the political bias aspect in just a moment, but here's here's, the problem. Okay, kathy woods, thinks that they're gon na raise rates, half a percent and then pause and not do more because we've tightened enough. But unfortunately, this is relatively the opposite of what jerome powell says now, even though jerome powell doesn't give us crystal clarity, kathy wood implies that he has given us clarity when the reality is, if anything he's giving us the opposite indications. This is where you have to make up your own mind: jerome powell says that we want to quote reduce the balance sheet in a predictable manner over time, and we want it to be orderly and predictable.

That is the opposite of implying one and done right, but that's for the balance sheet. What about rates well, kathy wood is suggesting that we're we're gon na. Have this half uh point a half, uh percentage point increase and then maybe the federal pause but wait a minute. Jerome powell was literally asked this question.

During the last federal reserve, uh fomc press conference jerome powell was literally asked what about just front loading interest rate increases and then pausing, and that is literally what kathy wood is suggesting, is going to happen a front loading of interest rate increases and then a pause And jerome powell was literally asked this question, and this was jerome powell's response and i'm going to leave the conclusion up to you: does jerome powell's response agree with kathy wood or suggest something entirely different? This is for you to analyze. Okay. What about front loading? Drone powell drone powell responds with the following: this is a very different expansion with higher inflation and higher growth in a much stronger economy. These differences are likely to be reflected in our policy.

We haven't determined any ceiling on rate increases. We want to move steadily away from accommodative economic effects, we'll be guided by the data and we'll try to communicate that as clearly as possible, but we know the economy is in a different place. Today. It is a much stronger economy that we have today with major differences from the past.
We have much more inflation than we've seen in prior tightening cycles. So does jerome powell's response here, align more with kathy that we're gon na do a one and done in march and then go away, or does it align more with a steady eddy rate hike we got ta keep pushing and we got ta walk the walk at The fed to finally raise rates consistently steadily and be very clear with our intentions and actually follow through with them. I'm going to leave the conclusion to that up to you, i think it's pretty obvious which side my opinion lies on this one. In case it's not.

I think kathy's wrong on this one anyway, then kathy suggests this argument, and this is a very, very commonly held belief, uh that uh, that might not be founded, in fact - and there are a couple things that we really have to break apart here, because i'm a Little bit disappointed in kathy and this, but first i just have to mention to you our sponsor today: extra quick message from them and then we'll get back, go to medkevin.com extra to learn more folks. Getting into real estate, in my opinion, is one of the best long-term ways to build your wealth, but to get started in real estate. You got ta, have a credit score and you got ta stay out of consumer debt and for those of you who are younger or maybe you ran into some trouble in the past, there are very few ways to raise your credit score other than getting a credit Card, and if you don't use a credit card properly, you could actually ruin your credit score more and prevent yourself from building wealth. However, the extra debit card now allows you to have the best of both.

You can build your credit score without incurring debt see the best part about the extra debit card is, first of all, it's super easy to use because it connects to the existing bank account you already have, then, once you connect extra to your existing bank, account you Make purchases on the extra debit card, just like you would with any other card extra, then spots, you for the money pays themselves back the next day from your bank account so you're spending money that you have, but because of that process they can report to the Credit bureaus that you paid a credit line off timely, and now you could build your credit score with a debit card. It's super easy to use, so go to metkevin.com extra to learn more well thanks extra for that. Okay, so kathy first suggests that hey - maybe maybe this is a very commonly held belief. Maybe jerome powell won't want to raise rates aggressively in 2022 because we have a midterm election year.

Well, look, i don't know if this is just a correlation without causation aspect or whatever, but let's just look at some other election related time frames and compare them to non-election related time frames. Take a look at this in 2016, which was a presidential election year. We had an interest rate liftoff if kathy wood is right. We wouldn't do that during a presidential election year, because that could be a sign of political bias.
In 2018, we overly hiked rates during the midterm elections in 2000, leading into the dot-com crash. We hiked rates. Numerous times, four to five times leading rates to go from 5.25 to 6.5 percent in less than a year in 1992, which was also a presidential election, your interest rates were actually suddenly cut. One percent and frankly, the most stable times at the federal reserve, seemed to be non-election years or periods of massive political issues.

So we seem to have a more calm fed during politically calm periods and a more active fed during politically active periods, which is kind of opposite. I mean consider this: between 2010 and 2016, the fed was pretty quiet until donald trump happened on the scene in 2016.. In 2021, the fed was mostly quiet talking about how inflation's transitory and we've had, but you know essentially no elections right. There haven't been elections other than the california recall in 2021.

in night, well and of course, some other elections, but but minor ones, no, nothing nationally. Uh between 1995 and 1998, no no massive elections here the federal reserve changed virtually nothing. So i think the the suggestion that politics affects the fed comes from the cynicism that the fed really cares more about politics than the actual economy and preserving the dollar as much as they can. And while i agree that the fed can be influenced by politics.

Like biden potentially threatening jerome powell's job, which i believe happened, i do not see election years as actually providing causation to action or not at the federal reserve. I personally think this is a little bit of a weak argument, uh and - and i can't say that it's definitely a definite aspect - that there is political influence or that there is not i'm sure there is some level of political influence, but i i don't think we Can we can make bets with our money that the fed's not going to do something just because of politics? History doesn't say we can make that bet uh at least you know other than being a yolo and a totally shot in the dark, a total shot in the dark now uh, then kathy would suggest that our economy is is actually quite weak, and this i have A little bit of a problem with because you know i don't know about your economy kathy, but gdp came in at 5.7 in january, with an annualized rate of growth of over uh six percent for q4. This is the largest gain that we've had since 1984. and i'm not sure if you've been paying attention to some of the earnings calls here, but microsoft, amazon, apple, starbucks, gm4, tesla, ralph, lauren, ups, caterpillar or kimberly clark, just to name a few of the earnings reports That i've read have literally all literally all of them, said that they have had the highest levels of demand that they have ever seen and the highest pricing power that they have ever seen in recent decades.
Now the only complaint that they have is they're being held back by dynamics dynamics like supply chains and labor costs now kathy, then so so i disagree that this is a slow economy. The fact that cathy wood is suggesting that our economy's slowing - i i i don't see that i think our economy is actually very, very, very strong right now, which i know some people argue then they're like well kevin if the economy's so strong. How could we go into recession? Well, recession is only two negative gdp prints in a row right and we, if we have that, then all of a sudden you might see consumers turn inward and stop spending. That's when you could potentially see the deflation from excessive inventories and people stop spending, but right now we're not there right and we're talking quarter to quarter bases here now.

Kathy then points to fiscal outlays peaking in 2022 and suggests that this is because she thinks that the child tax credit ended in december. She said thanks we're going to clarify this uh and that there really haven't been any other forms of stimulus checks and, and the government isn't spending as much money on people as they did previously. You know no, while this is broadly true, kathy missed again some facts here, and this is where i'm thinking myself kathy come on. Y'All got hundreds of millions of dollars to hire researchers.

You should know the answer to this. You should know this. I'm one dude, i'm sitting in this room here doing 99 of my own research uh. No, anyway, look! Okay! Let's clarify this! About the child tax credit, the child tax credit came in two batches batch number one did end in december.

This is correct. Kathy batch number one ended in december. Batch number one was a monthly payment of 250 to 300 per child depending on the age of the child for six months ending in december. The second batch will come as a refundable tax credit on individuals, tax returns, guess what not in december in february march or april.

This means that millions of households will actually be getting a very large stimulus check. The largest stimulus check that we've ever had remember. We had 1400, 1200 and 600. This means we're gon na have the largest stimulus check ever actually coming in march february or april, via a refundable tax credit on people's tax returns of 1500 to 1800 per child, so the largest stimulus check ever is actually still on its way.

That's massive. This is likely to lead to another temporary surge of demand and reiterate companies, pricing power, but kathy made no mention of this. The fact that companies are suggesting they have so much pricing power and the fact that all of this, this extra, these extra little surges of of spending that people have from having higher bank balance sheets or household balance sheets higher bank higher net worths. Whatever the fact that kathy is ignoring this confuses me a little bit, i'm not sure why this would not be talked about.
Of course, fiscal policy will calm down. I agree with this and i believe we're actually going to set up for a really weird and rude awakening, potentially in q3 and q4, when at the same time as finally stimulus ends and the fed stimulus ends because remember the fed's still printing money today, we're still Getting a massive stimulus check ahead of us still got growing inflation ahead of us right, so we're going to go through more pain first, while consumers are still going to feel strong and then the concern is if inflation doesn't go down, then all of a sudden. Finally, we see less consumer purchasing power, less consumer spending at the same potential time as we have less support and accommodative policies. Maybe the fed has tightened too much and then this is where potentially we push into a recessionary period.

Hopefully it is short and shallow uh, but but that seems to be the trajectory we're heading on right now, so uh fed's, still, printing money congress is still sending checks to people uh and really little evidence here of a weak economy. Now kathy does suggest that we've seen a decline of the annual work week of 0.6 or an annualized rate of about 6, but makes no mention of the fact that this was a measure from january, where it would make sense that we saw a little bit of A decline in people's work week because of omicron kathy only makes the mention of omicron when making essentially an excuse for why wages were going up potentially because of omicron. So that was weird. Why mention omicron as a reason why wages went up, but not mention omicron? As a potential reason why the work week was lower in the last jobs report, i'm i'm not jiving with this.

Usually i love kathy wood, videos and i'll tell you. I don't want to come across as harsh here, but i think when we just look at the facts and and we compare reality then then we have. We have some cause for concern here. I want to be the perma bowl.

I want to be the bull going. Let's go we're going to the moon on these innovation plays i'm a little concerned anyway. Uh then kathy talks about how purchasing power is declining. Now this, i agree, is a good argument.

You know we've had real wage growth negative over the last year. That means inflation's at seven percent and wage growth has been five percent year over year. Uh, that's a negative right. People are losing purchasing power.

The problem, unfortunately, is that kathy is suggesting see people are losing purchasing power. This means our economy is weak right now, wrong. All you have to do is actually look at the bank, earnings that are suggesting people have way more money in their uh checking accounts than ever before. Yeah the saving rates have declined, but they still have bigger balance sheets now, which means they could potentially still be.
Spending very strongly for the next two to three quarters entirely possible right. All you have to do is look at visa or mastercard to see people are spending money like crazy, especially in retail stores and so kathy's, suggesting that we're already seeing a slowdown when the reality is we're, seeing only the potential of a slowdown get baked in and This is a problem because, if kathy thinks we're slowing down now, but really what we're setting up for is a slowdown at the end of the year. I think kathy's going to have a disappointing year. I hope not, but i think this is there's the lag time here is misaligned.

You can't look at the jobs data and say: oh see, people's purchasing power is declining without realizing that people have more money and feel richer than ever. Before. Again, look at bank earnings, jp morgan, wells, fargo city. They all tell you the same thing and not realize that wait, a minute.

Okay. This means this decline of purchasing power, isn't going to hit us for for two to three quarters potentially, and we should really consider that, when we're investors rather than considering oh no, things are slowing down now when they're, not because that would imply that, if things are Slowing down now that, then maybe the fed doesn't have to hike as much, but that's not what we're actually seeing. That's not what the numbers are actually saying now, kathy wood does suggest that consumer sentiment has started declining and then cites specifically how people are a little bit less inclined to purchase cars right now. But this is no surprise.

You go to a dealership right now. They will price a prius that usually sells for 35 000, which is already crazy. You may as well buy a tesla uh, well price, a prius at 35, 000 and they'll, literally, throw on their dealer mark up ten thousand dollars just because they can, of course, the sentiment for buying durables has been declining. This is the same thing that the new york fed survey found that people have to spend more money right now on essentials, uh than than on non-essentials and the biggest sector getting hit is durables well yeah, because pricing for durables has shot up and we are going To see a longer term shift where people finally start saying: okay, that's it! These prices are too high.

We can't pay these prices anymore and when we see that shift, that's maybe when the prices start coming down, but it's too early to actually see that shift, especially since we're still seeing prices go up for durables. Okay, we're still seeing that inflation for pretty much everything. Then kathy talks about how sales at amazon are only up nine percent and how this is a very, very low comp and she says even coming out of the recession uh when, when amazon had really really strong comps, they did better than nine percent growth. But i think kathy missed the point here that amazon's comps were so so strong and we only had nine percent growth because we didn't come out of just a recession.
We came out of a stay-at-home pandemic where of course, spending on amazon surged and, of course, the year-over-year comps are going to be very, very difficult. So this argument that sales at amazon only went up nine percent is is kind of laughable because again it discards. The fact that we just came out of a pandemic style recession, not an 08 financial crisis - very very uh misaligned here on this one, in my opinion, kathy and then on top of that she says that this one really peeved me. Okay, this one really really peeved me.

She suggests that facebook saw weakness in the consumer sector and that's why facebook is having problems. No kathy facebook did not say they're seeing weakness in the consumer sector i'll tell you exactly what they said by showing you literally what they said. They said we're hearing from advertisers that macroeconomic challenges like inflation and supply chain disruptions, are impacting advertiser budgets. That does not say the consumer is spending less money, it literally says supply chains and inflation is hurting advertisers.

That's this is this is bad kathy. I'm disappointed these. It should not be that easy for one person to discredit some of these things again. I do not want to make this uh, it's not like.

I have a fund and i'm like oh, buy my fund instead of kathy's fun. No, like there's nothing, nothing like that. The only sponsor for this video is extra, and i love extra and i'm sure kathy loves extra too go to matt kevin.com, but it's not good when one dude in a youtube studio can start picking apart these pieces when this is supposed to be your summary of Macro and and whatever research for the week come on, not not cool. Okay, then kathy wood is suggesting that our latest gdp print shows that inventories are up, and this is sort of her way of suggesting that c inventories are up.

Deflation's coming okay, but if you actually read the earnings calls of companies like ford, gm and ralph lauren, guess what they tell us. The reasons inventories are appearing to be up is because more inventories are in transit. It's taking 150 days for stuff to get from warehouse to store uh than when it used to take 50 days. So you have higher inventories but they're, not on shelves they're on ships.

That's a problem! In fact, ford and gm are talking about tight inventories, not loose inventories. This is this is not right. Uh, and this is really this really flies into the face of this. The suggestion that we're seeing real demand being quite sluggish, which was her quote, flies in the face of companies like starbucks, who are like we're raising prices in january.
That's going to hit us on the cpi print, which is expected to be 7.3 coming up. Uh then, we've got panda express, which is not even a public company, so you have to talk to the employees to actually get this kind of information, which is the kind of stuff that i do uh, but anyway, even panda express just raised prices in january. So it's like, ah great, that's also going to hit us on the cpi print and it's because demand is crazy. Now, look long run.

Yes, i agree. Innovative companies will increase productivity, but then then now kathy now i don't know if this was the result of your soul, searching which you were talking about, but kathy. What the heck kathy is saying that private market market valuations, so private equity valuations have gone up over the last year and that we've seen public values drop 50 percent and the private market double so she's, like okay prices were together, public markets have dropped 50 percent And private markets have doubled, and so now kathy is suggesting, i think the private market, the more expensive one. Has it right, so we're going to open a private market equity fund where we do like venture capital fund to invest in private equity.

What what come on kathy, you're, literally saying in your video, we think private valuations have doubled and public valuations have halved, and so now we're going to double down and go, invest more in private markets, because obviously they have it right. This is the opposite of what warren buffett tells you. You don't use pricing as your indicator to tell you what's right or wrong now, you're chasing the top, rather than buying the dip board like you've, been selling more tesla than anything else. Now i know recently you did buy a little bit of tesla.

I got ta put my hands down because this this does not make any freaking sense at all. Okay, look then she talks about how benchmarks are doing a disservice. How great crypto's gon na be in the future, which i agree with? Okay, look i'm sorry i have. I don't think i've ever been this rough uh to kathy and i love her.

I agree with her long term, but this is short-term blindness. This is just like buying zoom as we're coming out of the stay-at-home cycle, even though zoom might be a great and innovative company come on man. You know traders are in that thing up the wazoo and the reason it's fallen. So much is because they're training out of it, that's all - i got to say, go check out mechkevin.com thanks.

So much for watching we'll see you next one goodbye.

By Stock Chat

where the coffee is hot and so is the chat

24 thoughts on “Wtf cathie wood i’m extremely disappointed in this.”
  1. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Monroe says:

    M2 was $4.6 trillion in January 2000 to $18.45 trillion in August 2020, to 22 trillion today and is only going up from here.

  2. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars dhruv sarang says:

    Lack of Cathy's enthusiasm in the latest video made me concerned. I don't think she's right about the current situation. Your take is more accurate with interest rate hikes, strong demand, and inflation.

  3. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Lliane Hunter says:

    We actually got wayyyy less on our taxes I believe because it was split up into the child tax credits given last year. So stimulus to families has been drastically reduced. Not complaining, just pointing out.

  4. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Joey G says:

    Anybody considering the Extra Debit Card better read the fine print: fees charged, reporting to credit bureaus, etc.

  5. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Kramer 90 says:

    Kevin doesn't hold a candle to Kathie. She is a proven investor, Kevin is a paper hand bitch.

  6. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Masson H says:

    KEVIN should explain equities in SILVER or GOLD explode during these market circumstances.

  7. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Strade says:

    how credible is paper handing flip flop youtuber again? yeah, right, get lost.

  8. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Saucy Fredo says:

    Bro you about to take more shit smh . Donโ€™t bet against winner . Elon trump or beauty kathy man jesus

  9. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Audrey Hamel says:

    Here comes the FUD again, I mean the market has been essentially flat since Kevin sold out. And now listening to him you would think the market tanked since he sold out.

  10. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Star says:

    Cathie is twice your age and she has a hell aโ€™lot more experience in the market.. For you to say that she is having recency bias is laughable

  11. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Masson H says:

    KEVIN has made the right decision.

    The Titanic is sinking. โ€˜โ€™Heroโ€™sโ€™โ€™ will go down with the ship.

  12. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars lol says:

    Has she started selling real estate courses because she's disappointed?

  13. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars E L says:

    Im disappointed that i only saved 15 percent or more by switching to Geico

  14. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Jetta Bhadram says:

    IMO, she has better knowledge on macros as she had gone through may recessions

  15. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Invader14 says:

    ez to say long term innovation will happen as history has proven, biggest difference between you and her is ur a bear right now and she is not. period!

  16. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Andrew Tetterton says:

    I would think someone like Cathy managing billions of dollars has a little more inside info of how things will go down. Lol its just how money worksโ€ฆ.all smoke and mirrors

  17. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Paul Begley says:

    Next big crypto. NANCY COIN. It will make someone rich. Just not us and it's endorsed by Newsom and company. Buy it for the children.

  18. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars atgul says:

    Is the inflation numbers really as bad as reported? 30% of the inflation number is auto shortage related which we see the data that auto supply is increasing.

  19. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars IncomeByte - Make Money Online says:

    โ€œIf you believe itโ€™ll work out, youโ€™ll see opportunities. If you donโ€™t believe itโ€™ll work out, youโ€™ll see obstacles.โ€ โ€“ Wayne Dyer

  20. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars abdeo777 says:

    Kevin and Kathy wood are made out of the same mold, both are sales people only good for booming (read bubble) economy without fundamentals

  21. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Sun S says:

    I love how this guy just got into this stock market two years ago and thinks he's a stock market guru. And then he scammed his audience and flip-flopped his positions. Then he made a crying video and everybody forgot about it?
    Why does anybody like this arrogant narcissist?
    Just unbelievable amount of stupidity.

  22. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Relative Vie says:

    Never trust a hedge a fund / investment โ€œfinancial advisorโ€. Their primary goal has always been to sell you a product

  23. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Hard Drive says:

    WTF Cathie Wood | I'm Extremely Disappointed that she's not turning bearish.

  24. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Iโ€™m a boss can u be one ๐Ÿ”ช๐Ÿ•โ€๐Ÿฆบ says:

    Kevin is a chicken and cry baby and he was gonna go for governor for California cry baby you donโ€™t know anything

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