Jacob Shapiro: I know you've been thinking a lot about US macro and I think US macro is driving lots of things. The big sort of top line news this week, it changes every day, but G D P was, g p growth was 1.1%.
That's a significant slowdown from previous quarter, but we're still in growth. Unemployment claims though, were still at historic lows and consumer spending was up over 3%. So everybody's looking at each other confused and saying, okay, G D P growth is slowing and consumers are spending more. And jobs are just sitting there at that historically or I should say unemployment claims are sitting there at that historically low level.
And so everybody, Bloomberg and seeing all these things, they're all just looking at each other and saying we can't explain this. So let's cut to the N F L draft or to chocolate King Charles. So Rob, let's cut to you. Can you help explain this or are you gonna tell me that there's a chocolate version of Macron that you've been eating from in Paris?
Rob Larity: King Charles sounds like an easier nut to crack than the US economy, but I'll take my best shot. So here's what we're seeing that's new and here's why it matters, right? It matters because the business cycle matters in the first place. But also because of interest rates and inflation, because the big debate going on right now in markets is when and how much is the Fed going to start cutting rates?
And that's a big deal not only because of interest rates per se but also because of currencies. The Euro had dropped all the way to below parity at the end of last year. It's now above one 10. Again, it's rallying because everyone is expecting US rates to fall and Europe is having rebound.
So there's geopolitical connotations to all of this, but just focusing on the US side specifically, here's the situation. So there's been a lot of data coming out and the GDP is such a backward looking measure that, to be honest, real investors, no one ever thinks about it or looks at it or cares about it very much.
So it's not a, something that you see analyzed too often. But it is indicative of where we have been. And I think this is really important cuz everyone is looking around and saying, when is the recession coming? The consensus, as we mentioned last week, is that we're going into a recession. And yet if you look at the numbers, For eight or nine months already, the cyclical elements of the economy have already been depressed.
So if you look at the pmi the industrial PMI manufacturing that's been in contraction territory since last summer business investment has been in a slowdown over that same time period. Inventories if I had a dollar for every time I mentioned the inventory cycle on this podcast I might have seven or $8.
But inventories have been really depressed, as we've said. So the inventory cycle is at a nadir. In the US businesses have been shedding inventories, and that's a big driver of the overall business cycle on demand. So all of those things have been falling off. And the odd man out here is that employment has not really responded.
And the reason is because the consumer has been really strong, and there is a chicken and egg thing here because the biggest driver of consumer spending is employment and earnings. And employment and earnings are standing strong, which is keeping consumer spending, which is helping to give businesses the confidence to not fire their employees.
I know that's a bit of a circular logic, but nevertheless it's it is what it is. So where do we go from here, I think is the most important question. Where are we now? All of these things, as I said, these cyclical things are depressed in the US and there was a piece that you put on the knowledge platform an hour or two ago about.
How the bulk of inflation has shifted away from goods and away from food and hard things towards services. And this is the big problem. And this is, we've said multiple times that we are much more hawkish about rates and we're much more hawkish on inflation. We think inflation is probably gonna level out at a much higher rate than people assume.
And this is a big part of the reason is services inflation has been really resilient. That's driven by labor costs, by a tight labor market, by labor shortages. That's not changed despite all of these things. And now we're seeing more and more signs that. Maybe that was the downturn that we just experienced.
So just in the last week, just to put some meat around that. Look at all of these big consumer companies that are reporting. So just in the last two weeks, you had Proctor and Gamble, Hershey Chocolate, Kimberly Clark, which makes diapers Coca-Cola, all of these big behemoths of the stuff you buy in the supermarket.
And the common denominator is they all beat earnings. They all raise their guidance for the year. All of them are posting revenue growth of the high single digits, year over year, of which all of it is price. So they've raised prices a lot, and if you listen to what they're saying, the reason why they're beating expectations and raising their guidance for the rest of 2023 is because they expected elasticity to be higher.
In other words, they expected. Consumers to buy less because of the prices were increased and they didn't, volumes were down a little bit, but the consumer was remarkably strong. And that's a really important point because it shows a, that the consumer is stronger than even, very well-informed Business management teams assume the consumer to be.
And B, it tells us something about what businesses are afraid of and what they're now less afraid of. Because that tells us what business spending is going to do. And that's the big cyclical driver of the economy. So if you're a Hershey and you're running down your inventories, you're worried people are gonna buy less chocolate cuz you just jacked up their prices 9% and then you say, Hey, it wasn't that bad.
2023 is looking pretty good. Are you gonna spend more or are you gonna spend less?
Jacob Shapiro: That particular anecdote is good for our long coco position. But let me play the role of of the simple son at the Passover Seder and as, when you say services, what exactly do we mean? Do we mean there? I think I know what you mean, but I want to give the listeners and those who don't follow this stuff super closely, who are more on the geopolitics side.
When you say services, like cost of services are increasing, what do we mean specifically?
Rob Larity: Services is restaurants, travel, hotels business services, legal advertising. Anything where you're not buying a thing.
Jacob Shapiro: And why like why would that be increasing more now? Like why is the shift from goods into services being the thing that increases?
Because goods, obviously, if we're talking about food, we can point to fertilizer or supply chain disruptions or things like that, but there's no supply chain disruption for the provision of legal services in the United States. So is that just services the people who run those businesses have been experiencing and they wanna hike their rates accordingly and people just don't have anywhere else to go?
Like, why is that the thing that is stickier and seems to be going up?
Rob Larity: Yeah, it's totally because of the labor quotient. And I should have been more clear about this. So think of a business like Chipotle, right? The cost of your burrito at Chipotle, if you look at their, the costs that go into that, roughly 33% of that is the actual food.
33% is the people, which is very high. The people serving it to you, not the, all the people behind the scenes. And, 33% is everything else. So the labor, component, especially in lower level services, lower value add services like restaurants, things like that. It's gonna be driven.
The inflation's gonna be driven by wages and wage inflation. That's the big reason. Whereas a goods business is much more driven by the inputs that are going into the physical thing.
Jacob Shapiro: I first I have burritos as a service now stuck in my head that'll be the next big thing in, in corporate America.
So it sounds like you're, like nothing. There was also the other sort of big news I think from the US macro cycle here, and I'll tee this up for you cause I think I know what you're gonna say was, the return of the banking crisis and First Republic and people freaking out about that again.
You wanna just do 30 seconds on why you think that's also overwrought?
Rob Larity: First Republic is one bank, and I think last week we gave a bunch of indicators for why we're not seeing real systematic stress in the financial system. And all of that is still true. So First Republic is experiencing major problems as we speak and may not stick around.
But interest rate expectations went down a little bit and now they're going back up again. The two year treasury bond dipped earlier this week and now it's going back up again. So no big deal. Is the analysis in it nutshell.
Jacob Shapiro: What else do we need to touch on with us macro? Should we move further abroad?
Rob Larity: Why don't we move further abroad? But just to round up the US macro thing, I think it's important to emphasize like, if this plays out as we think it's playing out as far as Hey, we just had a slowdown and we might be ready to reaccelerate, then that has big implications for interest rates. It has big implications for the US a dollar.
And, for our audience who's primarily to geopolitics, that is a big deal. Especially if you look on this little dollar weakness that we've seen in the last few months, you've seen some marginal borrowers come into the market and TAF bond markets again that is gonna be challenged if the dollar strengthens and nominal rates go up and the Fed starts talking about fighting this specter of inflation.
Again, that's gonna have major a major, it's gonna create a major problem for a lot of countries.
Jacob Shapiro: Speaking of the Fed not a very good week for Jerome Powell, because apparently in January some Russian pranksters set up a phone call between. Jerome Powell, and they were claiming to be Ukraine's President Zelensky.
This happened to Macron actually in 2019. I was looking at like, when this happened previously, but it does not gimme much faith in the Federal Reserve that somehow Jerome Powell cannot screen his phone calls and maybe we should be phoning the Federal Reserve and offering geopolitical risk services to them.
Cuz it's not that hard to figure out who's on the other end. And he, by the way, he should be skewered in the media for this thing. Just think of all the the crap that Sarah Palin took with the Russia from my backyard and all these other sorts of things. Like I, I don't see him getting skewered and he should be, and it should be a really disturbing sign about levels of competency and security in the US government.
It's a funny story, but it's also not a particularly funny story. But as we move further abroad, Xi Jinping actually had a real conversation with Zelensky because apparently China's immune to the Russian pranksters. And there's not a whole lot to say out of the conversation, but this is a call that we've been waiting for literally months.
It looks china's gonna send a special envoy to Ukraine. Now that Envoy like was based in Moscow for 10 years, he's probably going to talk the sort of Russia, Chinese line. But the lines of communication are open between Ukraine and China. And I think that's really interesting because the entire narrative, this whole time has been, okay like China's supporting Russia and China's propping Russia up and they're not really intervening or saying anything against the war. And maybe it's wishful thinking on my part, but I wonder if this is, the optimist in me says, is Beijing looking at Ukraine's counter offensive? Insane? Maybe China needs to hedge its bets.
Maybe we need to think in terms of if the counter offensive is effective, we need to have some kind of relationship with Zelensky and Kyiv going forward so that we're not completely left in the dust. Maybe it also has something to do with maybe China thinks they can do what they did with.
Iran and Saudi Arabia with Russian Ukraine. I doubt it, but I think that's an interesting data point, especially as we get into all this talk about the grain deal and, there's all this Turkish elections, which is something we're gonna talk about as well here shortly. All these things come together and I thought it was worthwhile just to say that phone call happened.
Maybe we didn't learn that much out of it, but I think it's important that Ukraine and China are now talking to each other directly. This is not just Xi Jinping and Putin hanging out and talking about their no Limits friendship.
Rob Larity: And let me ask you you've spoken a lot about China's view of the world, and I always love that map that you show showing China looking out at the ocean surrounded by US allies and historical enemies.
If China is trying to diversify its supply chains, Belt and road and the old, the new Silk Road and go out the back door essentially through Central Asia. How important relative to even five or 10 years ago is Russia or Ukraine or that general region to China. Do you think it's a priority for them?
Jacob Shapiro: I think it has to be a priority for them, and it has to be a priority for them for a couple of different reasons. The sort of like nerdy, geopolitical methodological point to make here would be that China is a land-based power and it's a Eurasian power and it has basically always been a land-based power and a Eurasian power throughout its entire history.
And there's a lot of Chinese history to talk about. There are random intervals of, different chin empires or admirals building fleets and going abroad and doing some interesting things. But those are usually anomalies. Like in general. Just think about some of the when a normal western observer who doesn't know much about China, thinks about China.
I'm sure one of the first things they think about is the Great Wall of China. They built the Great Wall of China to keep out the Mongols from crossing the steps from coming down into China, because that's where the threats were coming from. So no it's very important and China's always gonna try and secure its flank from that point of view before it can go and be a maritime power.
Now, of course, China has to be a maritime power. No. So it's not just gonna be a Eurasian land power, but there's that point to make. The second point to make is, belt and Road initiative and all those other sorts of things. That's China really trying to link its economic interests with the rest of Eurasia.
It's also about trying to find other markets to export all this surplus of goods that they have, until this breakdown between US China relations, they could just sell to the West and everything would be fine. But when you look at the pace, Of deterioration in US China trade relations, it becomes all the more important that China opens up these news markets and can dump their surplus steel and iron and umbrellas and gadgets and electronics and every anything else they're doing into these other markets because every other market helps.
The last bit there is just commodities because if China is gonna have this antagonist antagonistic relationship with the West it likes having access to chief commodities that are important to it. And it also, in case of a conflict or in a sort of worst case scenario, it has to make sure that it has access to some of these commodities.
And if it can't get them through the sea and it can't get through the straight of Malaka and the Chinese navy's not up to par yet, having those overland roots is extremely important. So this is all very important for China. And, I, I like that China perspective map in part that China perspective map I should say, is also it's a little bit misleading because yes, it's Chinese geographic perspective out from the world, but a western observer is gonna see it from their own perspective too.
It's a very American thing since World War ii to think in terms of allies and defense treaty relationships and containment in things like that. China in some ways is much more like the United States was in the ear in the late 17 hundreds, early 18 hundreds when George Washington was exhorting the young republic not to have permanent relations and allies and enemies and all other things just to be pragmatic and move around everywhere.
When China looks out at that world, it actually doesn't really see allies or enemies. It just sees, if you want to be like the old China would be, oh, we see like vassal states or tributary states that would give us economic benefit. But I think they look out now and they see, oh, this is like economic opportunity and the real thing that China has to sell to parts of Southeast Asia.
And you can see this too, in the way that the United States is trying to expand those relationships and it's trying to bring people into the US orbit. China's not doing that. China just says, Hey, we're open for business. We wanna build factories and bridges, and we wanna sell things to your economies, and we wanna do all these other sorts of things.
So in some ways if you mapped China's real view of that onto that, it would be we don't care that okay, fine. Have your stupid base in South Korea we're gonna build our military and over time will be good. What we wanna do is make sure that when you tell South Korea not to sell us shit, South Korea starts twiddling their thumbs, which is what South Korea's doing right now.
So that's a long-winded way of saying Eurasia is extremely important for China. But what's really changed for China here in the last 30 years is that really for the first time in China's history, it has to be both. It has to be a Eurasian power and a maritime power in the Indo-Pacific. And there's only one country that has ever really achieved scale like that.
It's the United States. And that's, in some ways, that's the blueprint that China has to follow if it wants to become that. And it doesn't have the benefit of oceans on both sides of it to protect it from less savory things.
Rob Larity: So speaking of the Silk Road and Central Asia and trade, maybe that's a good segue into Turkey or do you wanna, anything else?
Jacob Shapiro: I'm, no, that's, no, that sounds good. I started with that joke about about stomach bugs. So what's happened this week in Turkey, never a dull moment in Turkey, is that President Erdogan was giving a TV interview and he halted the interview and there was some weird sounds on the microphone.
And he went away for a while, came back and said he was suffering from a severe stomach bug, did 10 more minutes of the interview, left and then canceled his campaign events. First it was just for Wednesday. He now has also canceled his events, even some virtual events that were scheduled for Thursday.
There has been no shortage of speculation in social media in everywhere else about what's going on. Everything from a stomach bug to, he's been hospitalized with a heart attack to, I even saw one. Ridiculous report of misinformation saying that Putin had poisoned Erdogan. That's not what happened.
I'm just trying to give you the full range of uncertainty and lack of good information that is out there. The thing to note is that we're 17 days before the Turkish election. May 14th is the first round of Turkey's elections. The polls have been relatively unreliable from my point of view, but one poll that was put up by premise and I'll monitor, which I both are sources that I respect, had Klu and Erdogan sort of neck and neck at 45% each.
And then, like a little 10% undecided pot. Erdogan is a wonderful political campaigner and an excellent politician, and this is the time when he usually makes up the ground. This is the time when those political virtues start to come out and I can't imagine that it's gonna be good for him to be seen as being weak and having health problems here just going into the stretch run of the election.
I don't wanna speculate too much about his health for all I know, it really is just a stomach bug and he'll be fine. I think it's actually it's surprising to me that foreign leaders don't more often get sick and have to go away. I literally just spent a week in bed cuz I had a bacterial infection.
Maybe they have better healthcare than I do and they don't have to wait a week to figure out what's going on. So maybe it's nothing and maybe he'll come back in line. But the spectrum of what could happen here is huge because it could affect Turkish elections and if something really is wrong with him, suddenly elections don't matter that much.
Suddenly we're dealing with a Turkey that just lost its steward of the past 20 years, which would be a big deal in and of its own.
Rob Larity: It reminds me of when Ronaldo got mysteriously sick right before the 1998 World Cup final. Exactly. I don't remember that exactly. The happened the same.
No I'm just joking. But yeah, equally big stakes. Equally bad time to get mysteriously ill.
Jacob Shapiro: Did Ronaldo play, for me, the cultural totem that there would be, Michael Jordan in the flu game, but Michael Jordan played and scored like, what, 40 points and like single-handedly defeated the Utah Jazz and that game.
Rob Larity: I forget if Ronaldo played or he, if he played terribly. I should know this, but hopefully that's not a foreshadowing of editor one depending on your sympathies. But let's talk about structurally what this means and how we're thinking about the election. Cuz this is something that we discussed at our research meeting yesterday.
And in full disclosure, we don't have any positions on for any of our clients in Turkish stocks or the currency right now. Even though we've been very bullish on Turkey long term and we've had. Significant positions for clients in the last few years, which we've talked about. So we're heading into this, trying to figure out what to do.
Maybe, why don't you set the table for how others might be thinking about this and we can talk through the different issues of what happens in the different scenarios.
Jacob Shapiro: Yeah, this is such a rich topic, and we could do hours just on this, but I think the key thing to keep in mind is that when Erdogan first came to power at the end of the late nineties, in the early two thousands, Turkey was in the midst of an economic crisis.
It had a banking crisis and high inflation, and Erdogan came in. And really, he fixed, he led the fix of the economy and he did that by embracing orthodox monetary policy and doing exactly what the I MF said and really turning Turkey into a modern industrial powerhouse. Really the only one in the Middle East, north Africa.
If you go back and look at GDP or the makeup of the major economies of the Middle East, so think Turkey, Saudi Arabia, Iran, you go back to the nineties, they're all starting from roughly the sort of same starting point and you. Fast forward about 20, 30 years. Turkey has far surpassed them. Saudi Arabia has done okay because of oil, they're only just now getting into, oh, we need to diversify, we need to manufacture products, things like that.
Turkey's stealing market share today from the European Union and from China for things like cars and other manufactured products. Erdogan oversaw that and he also oversaw really the stitching together of cosmopolitan secular Istanbul and that part of Turkey and the more conservative hinterlands of Turkey really fused those things together because he was also more conservative and he used Islam to try and tie Turkey together into his own version of a modern Turkish republic that was able to link those two things together.
Now, somewhere along the line Erdogan jettison those policies as things were doing well to increase his political power, and it was less about. Maintaining growth and more about rewarding cronies or rewarding those interests that had supported him over time and who were supporting his attempt to centralize and increase the power of the presidency over time.
And that's where you get the last couple of years, whereas 10, 15 years ago the narrative on Erdogan was. Hey, this is good guy. You could trust him. Turkish economy looks great. This is, he's restored stability like we love this. Foreign investors want to be there. Now, Erdogan is seen as this crazy guy who has stomach bugs in the middle of interviews and gets his monetary policy from the Koran, not from the Turkish Central Bank and all these other things.
I say that just to say like the shift on Erdogan in that 20 years shows you the ebb and flow of geopolitics and ideology and the way people think about things. Erdogan's also overseen the rise of Turkey really as a more independent, pragmatic power from the point of view of foreign policy.
Turkey's most people experienced Turkey since the Cold War is this staunch us ally against the Soviet Union and later against Russia. Turkey's much more pragmatic now and much more about expanding its influence. I give you all of that wind up because what's at stake here in this Turkish election?
Is really the future of Turkish democracy and what Turkey is going to look like. I don't think it's the future of whether Turkey's gonna have success. I think Turkey will have success either way. It's just what flavor is that success gonna have? What is the tone and the disposition and yeah.
The alliances that Turkey's gonna have, I think, is gonna be based on this. Because if Erdogan wins here, if he gets more than 50%, he can really complete the centralization of power. And that executive presidency, which he pushed through and which he had installed, will probably become the sort of future of Turkish politics over time.
And it could have, we're not here to say whether it's a good thing or a bad thing, but centralization of power, strong executive president, whether it's Erdogan or someone else, solidification of the a K P's power all these sorts of things. If Erdogan is not gonna be there though, if he's gonna experience what the leaders that he usurped did, which is, Hey, you like mismanaged the economy and all these entrenched interests are not so good, we want to go to the opposition, which is promising, Hey, we want.
Normal monetary policy. We wanna get back to having foreign investment. We wanna stabilize the economic situation. We want our relations with the West to be good. Stop messing around with blocking Sweden from NATO and all these other things. Stop flirting with Putin. Yes, we can be pragmatic, but we don't have to look like a Russian lap dog.
That's the other thing. And the other thing the opposition has promising is they're gonna reverse this executive presidency. They want to go back to a more empowered Turkish parliament. They want to go back to the way the system was before Erdogan came in and made all these changes in the 2010s to solidify his power base.
So that's really what's at stake. I think the non ideological thing that we keep saying in which I think is the differentiator for us, is it doesn't really matter. Who wins in terms of Turkey's economic performance over a five, 10 year time horizon, or in terms of assessing Turkish power over that five, 10 year time horizon?
Turkey's a rising power. It's gonna be, it's gonna have economic outperformance, it's going to assert its own foreign policy interests more pragmatically and more independently over the next five to 10 years. What's at stake is really the character of the Turkish nation state and its politics and all those other things, which is one of the reasons I think it all gets it, it all gets jumbled up.
So hopefully that wasn't too long and rambly, but that's the chess board. That's what's at stake here and why this particular election is so important.
Rob Larity: Just to put some meat around something that you said it's one thing to say, oh, Turkey's gonna do no matter what. But that's something that always struck me about Turkey relative to other countries.
So look at Brazil for example. Brazil, much like Turkey has seasaw in extreme directions of policy and. Industrial policy versus laissez fair and all sorts of experiments throughout the years, and they've experienced these huge booms. And then they'll have 15, 20 years of just depression.
Like terrible g d P declines, just disaster. And that's what they experienced really. Host 15. It wasn't a depression like the 1980s were, but it was a really significant down period. Turkey is very similar, right? As you point out, like they've oscillated over time between sort of Western approved Orthodox policy versus.
More inward looking, import substitution that sort of thing. And talking about how the US can influence them is, something I'd like to do in a sec, but the thing that strikes me getting to my point is Turkey's growth never changes that much. Like it accelerates a little bit and it decelerates a little bit, but Turkey is so steady as she goes.
If you look over a long period, like GDP growth just averages like three and a half percent. And sometimes it's a little more than that. When things are really good and when things are really bad, it's 2%, but you don't experience these just terrible, decade long shit storms in Turkey for whatever reason, even though the policy would seem to be completely wild and crazy and the currencies going all over the place.
It's a bit of a mystery, but there's something inherently stable. About Turkey is my point.
Jacob Shapiro: I think what's inherently stable about Turkey is the geography. The shit storm that you're talking about was World War I. So the Ottoman Empire had a really powerful position, so powerful that it rested on its laurels and that eventually came apart when it was part of the wrong alliance in World War I and the Turkey that we're seeing today.
It's really only just now getting back to the position where it was before World War I in terms of power and economic influence and all these other things. But the thing is, whether it was. Byzantium or the Ottomans or anybody else, if you control the Boas, if you're on Stanbul, you're at the center of one of the most important trade routes in the entire world.
One of the reasons we're talking, the Black Sea Grain Initiative, most people are talking about Russia and Ukraine. In the context of the Black Sea Grain initiatives. The Turks are the gateway to the Black Sea. None of this stuff that we're talking about in the Black Sea means anything. If the Bos barista is not open you can, it was bad for the Ottoman Empire and for Turkey in the long run when you could figure out how to get around the Mediterranean.
There are ways around the Mediterranean in terms of trade flows and when technology. Meant that you didn't have to go through the Mediterranean to have trade. That posed a major challenge to Turkey, but that's still the most efficient way to actually trade things. And this is one of the ironic things about Turkey.
They they don't necessarily need globalization, but we were talking about China and Eurasia, that's stitching together of Eurasia, that trade between Europe and China and North Africa and China and the Middle East and all the caucuses and Central Asia, all these places that we really haven't talked about for decades.
When it comes to geopolitics, turkey's the center of all those things. Turkey is the land bridge between all these things. It's the strategic point between all of them. It's why the Romans picked Destan bowl for the new Rome when it was on its last legs. It's why the Turks event, the Turks are descendant from their own hoards that came down.
They settled in part where they did because this is really advantageous geography. So I think that's what's not changing here and it allows whatever power is gonna be there to have a certain level. Of wealth. The interesting thing here is that, and this goes back to the multipolar thesis, if we're right about our multipolar thesis, and if this is a really great tangible example, then a country like Turkey that is on this strategic geography and has these geopolitical strengths is going to do incredibly well.
And if you're thinking in terms of bipolar world or unipolar world and you miss. Oh, there are these geographies that are gonna be very important. Like you're gonna miss massive opportunities because Emory was on this podcast a couple weeks ago. We're gonna have him back to talk about election reaction.
And he talked about Turkey being, one of the, I forget the exact phrase he used, but it was something like, one of the greatest booms that you could probably ever get if you got some kind of election result here. I think our key point is like, yes, you could get a pop based on the elections and we're throwing around ways to try and capture the pop, but it's a boom no matter what happens.
Like turkey's a market you wanna be in over the next five to 10 years because they're going through the bad part of the cycle. The next part of the cycle should be good. Let's say AKP wins more than 50% of Parliament and Erdowan remains president, I bet you they're gonna go back to orthodox monetary policy at that point, even if it's Erdowan, like all the stuff that we've seen over the past four to five years.
Once he solidifies what he needs and he now needs to think about growing the economy, I'm sure he'll go back to trying to solicit foreign investment in general. And maybe he'll solicit more you won than he will dollars, but. It'll still be net positive for Turkey.
Rob Larity: I guess that's what I find so striking, and I think Turkey in some ways is the greatest proofs that geopolitical analysis really matters for investing and then doing longer term forecasting like we do is just like you point out, like Turkey's geopolitical fundamentals are like this load star.
And if you look relative to the United States, Turkey bottomed in 1950 or so after the first World War, like you mentioned, where the whole, like it was, they lost 25% of the population. It was obviously a huge disaster. But since that bottoming, it's just been ticking up up.
And they've been closing the gap, closing the app, closing the gap in periods, no matter what the policy is. And even, like you mentioned now is the bad part of the cycle. Like turkey's still growing. Like people are looking at the inflation numbers and they're looking at, oh, Dewar, he's this crazy guy and he's put the economy off the rails, like this is the bad part of the cycle. There's still positive growth. They're one of two countries in the world that grew in 2020 during Covid, which is just really interesting. But so strategically maybe it doesn't matter what we think is going to happen, may probably not. I think these geopolitical fundamentals are more important than anything political on any meaningful time horizon.
But then on the tactical, I guess that's the real question because how do you. How do you approach the election itself? And I think this is a lot trickier than most people assume, just, buy Turkish stocks if the opposition wins, cuz I, I mean we can talk through this, but I worry that it could have the opposite effect because if you look at the Turkish stock market, the Istanbul Index is up like five times in the last few years.
And the reason is because of inflation. So all of the local investors are using equities as a way to protect their wealth against against the inflation that they've seen. The foreign investor quotient is very low right now. They're not really driving those markets. It's a domestic driven market.
And I just wonder if the opposition wins, do you get a sort of paradoxical outcome where, The equity market declines 25% because people are saying, oh great, things are going back to normal. I don't have to have all my money in stocks anymore. I can go put them in, my business or do the things that I would normally do cuz my inflation expectations are turning around.
Jacob Shapiro: I mean we're still thinking out loud through this, but I would say that there are a lot of different scenarios on the table. And another thing here is, there's the presidential election and then there's the parliamentary election. So there's totally a universe in which. The opposition figure KH wins the presidency, but a k p remains in control of parliament, which would be like Brazil right now with, you've got Lula on the top, you've got, congress saying, eh, we're gonna oppose you tooth and nail and probably not a lot's gonna happen and what is gonna happen is gonna be a result of compromise.
That's actually probably in some ways the best case scenario because you won't get lurch too far in either direction. But I think that the scenario, I think that might cause a pop, and I think it would cause a pop because I think it would wet the whistle of foreign investors would be what if, in, in 17 days or whatever, or 16 days, by the time listeners are hearing this, what if K wins in the first round gets more than 50% of the vote in the first round and it doesn't have to go to a second round?
I think most foreign investors and markets are thinking this is gonna go to a second round in June, and then we'll figure out what's gonna happen. But if you had that sort of. Emphatic statement from the Turkish people saying, no, we want to go back to orthodox monetary policy. We are tired of the instability of the past couple of years.
If you saw that kind of sentiment from Turks at the ballot box themselves, I think you might see foreign investors come back in and try to come back in quick and maybe you would see that pop in general. But I take your point. There are so many different scenarios here and a scenario we weren't even considering until this week was what if, I hope this doesn't happen.
I hope he's fine. I'm not saying this, I have no special information about Erdogan's Health, but what if he drops dead tomorrow? I don't even know what Turkish law looks like. Could he still be on the ballot? Could he still be elected president and be dead? And then a k p gets to, it opens up this whole Pandora's box of things.
So it's it's not for the faint of heart, but I think there, there's opportunity in here somewhere for a country that is this important and as this many prospects going for it, and it is at is, and that is at this sort of critical juncture. That's the way to think about it. But you're absolutely right.
Like we could, the tactical part I don't wanna say it's fun that cheapens it a little bit, but the tactical part is interesting. You can try and go one way or another. The important thing is the compass. And so the real thing we're talking about here, and this is why we've had you, you mentioned it, we've had big positions on for clients on Turkey before, have done very well with those positions, have taken them off when risks were elevated and we didn't like the smell of things long-term, we're gonna be in Turkey and maybe there'll be periods where we don't own anything because we wanna, protect clients from risks and things like that.
But the long-term picture here is very good, and it's just about when you want to engage and how you want to engage.
Rob Larity: Just to clarify that is primarily what we're focused on is the long term, the short term mix for fun chit chat.
Jacob Shapiro: But there's, the short term mix makes the short term mix for podcasts and the long-term mix for wealth creation.
So we're talking here because if you, if we sit here and talk about issues that are 10 years in the future, Maybe some people will use, you could use this as a sleep a sleep aid if we focused only on those things. But these are the things that are important, so we need to cover them a bit.
Rob Larity: And the short term makes for trading entries. I think that's the real issue because when you have a long term view and then something short term derives prices in the opposite direction, that's your opportunity. So we'll be waiting to see how the election goes.
Jacob Shapiro: Speaking of, and we can close out on this because I still need to do a lot more work on this, but we promised at the beginning of the year to focus more on Latin America and more on Africa.
We talked about Sudan last week. Sudan's still a huge deal, by the way, and Turkey's, Turkey is one of those foreign powers that is involved in the Sudan conflict there as well. But I have no new insights to offer about Sudan. It still looks like a civil war to me. There have been no moves from outside powers that really scare me yet.
But this is a war that you should be tracking very closely, not least because of the migrant situation that's gonna create the displacement of refugees. Food prices in an area. The Horn of Africa was already stressed and facing famine. I don't wanna leave Sudan and say everything's fine.
This is still in some ways the most important thing happening in the world that nobody's talking about. But I did wanna also talk about, A little bit of South America this week because over in Columbia, president Petro I hate making apples to apples comparisons between Latin American countries, but it's hard for me not to because he's he's showing me Pedro Castillo Peru type vibes.
So he dismissed his cabinet and he's appointing loyalists into it and says he wants to move forward with some of his more radical policies. Which doesn't make a whole lot of sense because he already didn't really have much support in Columbia's Congress and he just lost a couple coalition parties with what he did.
Now, it doesn't seem to me like he's actually gonna be able to get anything done. And the Peru comparison I make, because that was what happened in Peru. Castillo won but he didn't have Congress behind him and he kept on budding heads with Congress and he eventually got so tired of it that he was like, all right, I'm just gonna seize control.
And then the Peruvian military escorted him to a prison. I feel like you're about to get that sort of gridlock in Columbia here, because when Petro first came to power, he was saying all the right things. He was saying, I'm gonna be pragmatic. I'm gonna make coalitions, I'm gonna make alliances. Yes, I have this past and I'm personally leftist, but Columbia has to move forward with progress that's all out the door here, at least the way that he's behaving for the past couple of weeks.
I think we could juxtapose this also with what's going on in Chile, another country that we've had a long term sort of positive view on, which is getting a little bit challenged here because the Gabriel Borge government came out and said they basically want to nationalize. Chile's lithium industry now.
I think it's been overstated, like what Chile can actually do and what's actually gonna happen. I think it's opening up negotiations really between SQM and Almar and the Chilean government and what this means. And the current leases go, I think it's till 2030 and 2035 or something like that. So we're talking about stuff that's very long in the future.
The Borge government is also doing terrible in the polls. You could have a new government come in and reverse some of these things. They don't. Actually have a constitution yet either. So what gets happened, what happens in the Constitution could completely change mineral rights as well. But you can already hear how much bo how much more boring the conversation about Chile is cuz I'm talking here about constitutions and laws and partnerships between governments and things like that, which is not what you're having in a country like Columbia, where it's like dude just fired his whole cabinet and he wants to push through radical leftist agenda that he's not gonna be able to push through and what kind of goes there.
So I'm still bullish in the net on Chile and we can talk a little bit about lithium two, but those are two hotspots in South America that I think are worth thinking about as we close the podcast.
Rob Larity: Yeah, and I think it's worth pointing out that, so for every country in the world we have a system where we're, our clients are in it big, they're in it small or they're not in it at all.
And for a long time you've been writing about Columbia and the fundamental problems that you saw there and saying we really, this is not a place where you want to be. And just to clarify, the Columbia ETF is now making a new all time low relative to US stocks and relative to to international stocks even.
So that's been a place that you've wanted to avoid and I think, the analysis that you've done couldn't predict this specifically, but this as a symptom of of what you analyze. It's it's certainly playing out. On Sheila, I spoke with a contact of ours this week, an executive and Sheila and it's funny, he was saying the mood since the September plebiscite that they held has been absolutely buoyant.
His like, and this is the same guy who a year ago was saying, oh, things are terrible. Everyone is depressed. It's. The country's going to hell. And so I think boring is good. People are very happy about boring in Chile. And you can, that's a big factor in terms of confidence, willingness to invest all the things that, that make the economy tick.
Jacob Shapiro: No, Chi Chile has mature and fairly resilient political institutions. We can go back to Pinoche, but since the end of Pinoche, there are not many Latin American countries that can sport the same types of institutional resilience and strength. That the Chilean.
Political system has and in some ways, I would be more worried about, attempts to nationalize the copper industry and, the Borge government has talked a big game about copper, but they haven't really touched that. The lithium thing, I don't know. I have trouble getting too excited about lithium in part because there was so much excitement about lithium that now they're, lithium prices are in the dumps because there's now too much lithium out there, and it's also.
We've seen this movie before. Like I, I wrote a piece, God, that, that was 2021 now probably summer 2021 talking about the lithium triangle, which is Argentina, Chile and Bolivia have some red, I forget the exact N number, but some ridiculous percentage of lithium reserves are in a triangle between those three countries.
And there was talk about trying to create some kind of OPEC like cartel around lithium in general. It makes sense. Oil was what's powering cars. If you're going to electric vehicles and u them using lithium batteries, you would expect these countries to rerate the value of this commodity and how they want to use it and how they want to figure out how the government and the people can get the most benefit out of it.
So the flip side though is I'm just less convinced that electric vehicles is where is at, in part because you need all sorts of commodities like lithium that you're gonna it's not just lithium. You're gonna have to go get a bunch of other different mineral commodities around the world and deal with a lot of other governments who are gonna wanna nationalize and cartel eyes and all these other sorts of things.
So I think it's much more, it would've been much more concerning if Chile was actually able to make some progress going after copper, because copper is much more clear. We already use copper for a lot of different things and we're gonna need a lot more copper going forward. Whereas lithium like, yeah, I can like trace the bowl case for lithium.
But it's not as completely clear as the bull case for copper. So in that sense I almost view it more as a speculative bet by the Borge government in a way to, to talk about the Chilean government's relationship with mineral commodities. In a more, I don't know, in a deeper, more substantive way, again, juxtapose that with Columbia, where Petro, even though oil was one of Columbia's biggest exports, he basically came in and said, no more hydrocarbons, no more oil, no more co, no more no, no more coal, no more investment.
We're gonna stop all this. We're gonna embrace like renewables and green energy and things like that. Like maybe someone in the Sierra Club cheered. But if you're, like, if you're exposed at all to the Columbian economy, the Columbian president just came in and said, I'm, I just gave a middle finger to like the main portion of the Columbian economy.
Yeah the point being, I. The situation in Columbia looks really bad, and it's also, I think it's a differentiator for some of the things that we do. If you are, if you're an investor, or even if you have a, an IRA or something like that, you might be in like an international mutual fund or an international ETF or something like that.
But when you actually pull the hood back and look at what companies or what countries you're exposed to, you'd probably be like, you're not actually diversified by country at all. So the strategy that you talked about that we're creating is really about trying to create a true international strategy.
That. And like you said, you can have these big relative gains like Columbia is making new lows against the United States. That's a place where you can really push advantage if you're thinking about it that deeply. I don't think most people are thinking about it that, that differently.
Most people, oh, there's this off the shelf. International et tf. Okay, great. I'm gonna put it there and I'm gonna go play nine holes of golf. Like one of our, I think one of our big differentiators is no geopolitics is gonna invest in, is going to affect investing and this is how you do it. Go overweight countries that are good go underweight countries that are bad, change that based on sort of things that are happening geopolitically when you have good entry points or when you need to exit because something goes against you.
In that particular way. I don't think there are a lot of companies or advisors out there that are doing this sort of thing.
Rob Larity: All I have to do is go to the cognitive investments website and look at the white paper we wrote on geopolitics and investing, cuz we put together the data on the dispersion between the different countries and the dispersion is extraordinarily wide.
And it's getting wider. The difference between picking the best country and the worst country is 60 percentage points in, in a particularly volatile year. That's, being up 20 versus down 40, that's a pretty big dispersion. So it matters to be in Chile and out of Columbia or, whatever the, that the winners and losers may be in any given region.
Just a few things on Chile and lithium because I don't really have much to say about the nationalization and it's a little bit unusual cuz I, I agree. Lithium is a still a nascent industry and you don't usually see nationalization talk until an industry gets more mature.
Jacob Shapiro: Yeah. It's a cash cow.
Rob Larity: Yeah. Look at look at oil in the 1960s and seventies, like they didn't start seizing. Oil fields for national oil companies until they were gushing money. So that's a little bit weird and it's not clear that it's gonna go anywhere. But a few things on lithium. So yes, the price of lithium is down about, 50 to 80% depending on where you look and what benchmark and what time period.
So it's really collapsed after running up in a major way. But the thing to keep in mind is that lithium is a extremely deeply cyclical market. And this is usually what with one of these nascent commodities is you see huge oscillations. So we made a bunch of lithium investments in 2020, and at that point, it's hard to remember now.
That was in the last trough of the cycle when everyone hated lithium and the price was collapsing and it was, oh, there's. Way too much lithium being produced and the cars that are gonna use it aren't gonna show up for years and we're all screwed. That is the sort of wild west kind of oscillations that you get in this kind of commodity market.
And one of the ways to really think about it from a long-term investment standpoint is identifying long-term sources of demand that are driven by innovation. Cuz this is going to be a major market. And then waiting for those periods, maybe like today where you're in the trough of despair and selling when everyone says, oh, the prices are gonna, they've already doubled and quadrupled and they're gonna go up another 10 times.
Cuz that's how lithium, that's how crazy lithium is. Chile is particularly well positioned because what's happened in Lithium in the last two years is The lithium price exploded and a lot of supply came online in response, but it was not the kind of supply that Chile produces. So there's two different ways to get lithium.
You can use the pools, which are the, everyone I'm sure has seen these pictures. It's like the beautiful aqua marine tiles that you see from way up in the air. That is a long process that takes five to seven years to set up one of those and get lithium out of it. And there's a big upfront cost, but the cost of getting the lithium once you build the pool is very low.
So high upfront cost, very low marginal cost. By comparison, all of the new lithium that's been coming online and driving the market into a collapse in the recent period is mind lithium from Australia and China. And that has a very different economic profile. It's much less attractive. Because you have to spend a lot of money to mine every bit of lithium you get out of the earth.
It's not like the pools where you spend the money up front and then it's basically costs you almost nothing to harvest the next batch of lithium. So in many ways, Chile is the low cost producer Chile's like the Saudi Arabia of Lithium, cuz Saudi has these fields already. It's super cheap to get the oil out of the ground.
Chile's in kind of the same position when it comes to lithium. One other geopolitical point on lithium, which is related to this. So one of the things that people are freaking out about with lithium in the last few weeks is the potential that, oh my God, maybe cars aren't gonna use lithium ion batteries, or maybe they won't be the dominant technology because cattle, the Chinese battery maker made an announcement that they have developed a sodium ion battery.
Which is small enough and energy efficient enough that they're going to use it in a vehicle, in a joint venture with b y D. And this is a big deal and worth watching for those of our listeners who care about new energy and transport and stuff like that. Because previously sodium ion batteries were never viewed as energy efficient enough to be used in vehicles.
They're very cheap, but they're not very dense as far as their energy capabilities go. So this is an interesting milestone. But one thing that's interesting about it as well, we'll see if you know where the technology goes and whether this is just like a pilot or it actually turns into something that's applicable.
I don't think anyone really knows yet. And the people we've talked to in the battery industry have said we have to wait and see cuz there's some skepticism, but we don't know exactly what they're doing. But one thing that is interesting is Tomas on our innovation advisory board who does a lot of work with us on minerals, materials, supply chains, and we're gonna be talking a lot more about that in the near future.
He has pointed out something really interesting, which is that the world's largest supply of sodium carbonate is found in the US. Over 90% of the world's reserves of sodium carbonate is in Wyoming. And sodium carbonate is what you need to make these sodium on batteries. China makes their own Soviet carbonate from coal ash which is about as clean as it sounds.
Yeah, that sounds clean. But that's very problematic. And they have pollution and regulatory issues that they're really struggling with. It's funny to think that China developed this battery and it may end up being that they're somewhat dependent on the US as a source of the input for this battery.
How the tables are turned.
Jacob Shapiro: Yeah. Although that would be a net positive because that would be technological and scientific progress from China. And if that's true, it would eliminate the United States as a competitor. So then China can just be the top consumer for Chilean and everybody else's lithium, while the US has fun with whatever it's gonna do in Wyoming.
Which is really, the Chinese sort of story in general is they want to be the center of economic gravity. They want to be the one that consumes and they want you to be dependent on them because they are the one that is consuming, they are the center of the economy. So it would re down to them eventually, even though I appreciate the irony of what you're talking about.
I think that's a good place to, to stop it unless you have anything else you wanna say, Rob? Nope, I think I'm good. Okay. Listeners I wish you a week of no stomach bugs, of no Turkish stomach bugs, and if somebody calls you and claims to be President Zelensky and he wants to speak to you may maybe hang up the phone.
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