Jacob: I thought I might start, we're recording here. It's Wednesday, April 5th, so come out Friday. The big bank of the day is Western Alliance Bank Corporation. Had some results or I guess had a first quarter report that the market didn't like very much was down as much as 18%. Right now it's only down 10%.
We've been fairly sanguine about the quote unquote banking crisis here on the podcast so far, but I know that you're a little more concerned about what's going on, so I thought I might just tee up that softball and ask you to give us the counterfactual. Why are you actually more concerned about this and why have we been wrong for not taking the banking crisis more seriously?
Chase: Yeah. So for me, I don't care about the banking crisis from a banking perspective per-se, I think some of the macro downstream effects are gonna be a big deal. And already are. Monetary policy's gonna work with the lag because we're talking about credit.
I think this will tighten credit more than some people expect, even though we've already had financial or tightening credit conditions for quarters now. I think that will tighten up, more so because of deposit flight to money market funds.
That's a really big deal. I created a chart a couple weeks ago showing the rate of change of deposits, or excuse me, from, the asset base going into money market funds. And when, whenever that hit that high of a level on like a, it was like a three month or six month rate of change basis.
Like every time you have a recession, It's one of those things where if everyone's taking their money outta the bank system, throwing at money markets for any, for whatever reason that tends to tighten credit substantially, which obviously helps lead to significant slowdown of the economy because we.
Are very levered to, to affect that credit base. So that's why I think it's a big deal. Not so much, these independent banks, like I don't think the regional bank thing is as big a deal as a lot of people do, but that, that macro downstream is a little worrisome to me.
Jacob: And I think you said in your, in one of your most recent research reports that you sent over what, that you're still in the camp of a hard landing as well.
So you think that, and it's hard for me to argue with this, especially with how central banks are behaving. made this argument the other day in an appearance on Likeon spaces, which was, I don't think governments and central banks are anywhere close to on the same page. Cuz the United States government, for example, is picking a trade.
With arguably the most important industrial manufacturer, the entire world in China, at the same time that the Federal Reserve is, let's jack up the interest rates until inflation is dead and something there doesn't quite fit. So what is your kind of macro view of where we're going over the next six to 12 months?
I get a sense it's probably a little darker than most people who were used to listening to this podcast or are accustomed to
Chase: Yeah, probably a lot darker. My, my view is that we are gonna have a, not just a hard landing, probably a very hard landing. I think the economy is going to A lot of trouble, but mostly just because I think everyone has lost sight of the lagged effects of monetary policy, especially the Fed has lost sight of that.
And not only have they lost sight of that, but they've. They've gone out of their way to suggest that the lags are either non-existent or much smaller or faster than they used to be. And I think they're dead wrong on that. And I think we're gonna learn the hard way that those lag, those lags are still alive and well.
I've created this meme g the of the Lag Reaper and I think the Lag Reaper really shows up in the second half of the year. uh It. I use, a lot of times I use the analogy as it's kinda like you eat a whole pizza and your stomach doesn't hurt, so you think you're fine and you eat another whole pizza.
But I think that's what the Feds doing. I think Jay Powell's like already, halfway through his second pizza and his stomach's about to hurt really bad. It, the way I always explain it, The way monetary policy works is essentially, I think the Fed thinks everything flows through financial conditions, so like stocks and bonds and, maybe some credit conditions.
But what it really is a refinancing cycle. So as people have to refinance into these new rates, that's when the, those, the impact is really felt. And because most people took out, a really nice mortgage at 2 3 That, that kind of dolled the early impact, I think. But that still comes down the road and that's one of the reasons you see the banking crisis for every great, household balance sheet or mortgage that someone got at 2%, there's a bank holding the bag on the other end, let, and SVB you loaded up on 2%-3 mortgages and turns out that's a problem.
Whenever rates go to 5% or mortgages go to 7%. As it. So I just think as each, I just keep having these refinancings obviously the favorite whipping boy right now is commercial real estate, and I think. Specifically in the office space arena. Like it, it's, that really is scary to me.
Because all the floating rate debt that's gonna have to keep getting reset at much lower, asset prices for those assets, you're gonna have a lot of people walking away. And that's a microcosm for everything that's floating. All of us financial markets people we stare at, corporate bonds and stocks all day.
We forget how many small businesses in the country have their financing tied to SOFR And SOFR went from nothing to five, and that, that's like a substantial headwind for some small businesses and people that don't have the luxury of selling corporate bonds at, tight spreads right now.
I think a lot of those impacts, just because they haven't happened yet doesn't mean they're not coming. It's just it does not happen overnight. And one of the main reasons I think the Fed was so wrong about thinking the lags would be shorter is because of all the excess savings and all the stimulus money that was still in the system.
And a lot of people, the, one of the favorite doom charts out there is the kind of year over year money supply chart, which is scary. But if you back away and just look at the level we're still above. We're coming down fast, but we're still above trend. That which shows you not just the excess savings for households, but like all the excess money still in the system.
But as that starts to come down again, with the, with those same like refinancing lag effects I think it's really gonna, Hit the economy really hard and even this week we're seeing a lot of the macro datas are already starting to look pretty bad. The ism this week, every single component, is in contraction.
New orders being under 45. There's a, there's already bad data out there, but I think that may, June timeframe, it gets that much.
Jacob: Yeah. To your point in terms of money supply, one of the, one of my favorite charts that I put out when I'm doing like a presentation to an audience is I usually throw out a chart for wealth inequality in the United States, which is at record highs going back as far as we have data, so that includes the Great Depression.
It doesn't include the Civil War. I want some. PhD student out there to do a study on wealth inequality in the United States before the Civil War. So I can add that sort of feather to my data cap there. But money supply grew so much in the context of the pandemic that in the last six to 12 months, wealth inequality has actually started to reverse itself for the first time in literally decades.
I don't think it's gonna be that long lived, but I've had to rejigger all of my charts and presentations and things like that. Cause I had that lovely, beautiful, neat, inequality chart. Now I have to explain all this other stuff that's going on. To your point too, though, I and it's not just the Fed, the Bank of New Zealand today, that was one of the other big things that happened with the headlines.
Surprise rate rise, 50 basis points instead of 25 basis points. You're getting this continuing thing where every month it's always surprising inflation data, but by the second half of the year, everything's gonna be okay. I guess the question that I'm leading up to is because I have to think that these central bankers, they're smart, they like, are they smart?
Is it just as simple as that? They're not smart. What data point do you think they need to see to understand that the trajectory that they're on maybe is not the best one for the economy or do you just think it's with missionary zeal, they're gonna keep attacking inflation until they get it down one way or another, whether that's with a broken economy on their hands or so.
Chase: Yeah, , I think they tend to look at the most backward looking data there is the coincident data because it's kinda what the, their scorecard because the public and politicians, they're not gonna be looking at leading indicators. They're gonna be looking at jobs and inflation.
So it leads them to do the same thing. But that's also why they're the author of so many busts and history and booms because they're looking at coincident data and backward. Lagging data. The most lagging data you can really get is inflation and jobs. So exactly what they're staring at.
So there's looking in the rear view mirror as they floor it. And that to me is very dangerous. And I think as we've seen with some of the central banks pausing, like when Aus it's funny cuz Australia paused and then New Zealand raced 50, which is, that's very unique in history that they usually are pretty close together.
But the RBA was saying, Hey, like we need to slow down and take a hard look around because the lag effects that, that there are in our policy. That's been unique in, in the last, year globally for central banks to actually have some respect for the lag. And even like really smart macro people are saying core inflation's like really high.
Like, how in the world could they do that well? But core inflation is a very lagging indicator. It just they're trying to respect the fact that what they've already done, still hasn't hit. And you look at the Fed doing, 3 75 basis point. 25 basis points was the standard for a reason that, and it's the, it was the standard because if you do more than that you're playing with fire, so if you do 75 3 times and then, two months later you're looking out the window and no and you don't have a depression, that you think, oh, we better keep going. No. That's not how that works. It's not how the timing function, works there. So I just think they have a temporal mismatch between kind of their mandate and reality.
And the one thing I'll give 'em credit for is they stop looking at housing data, which I, they deserve a lot of credit for that because that's obviously, you look out the window and housing data's actually pretty bad. Prices are going down, rates are going down.
If you look at our actual headline inflation data, like a big chunk of that is housing. Because that thing is That's making inflation look a lot worse than it really is. But at the same time, all they're, all they really care about right now is killing inflation. I don't think they care about the collateral damage at this point.
So as long as they get that job done, I think they're gonna be fine. And they realize whatever we'll cut later to get the economy going again. So I think part of it is just they're gonna do whatever they gotta do. Like really is a missionary mandate to go kill inflation no matter what they, destroy in, in, in the process.
But at the end of the day, they're, they're looking backwards where all the leading indicators are. You get just about pick one. It's brutal. And then you but you look at the coincidence data and it's still fine. But that's how these cycles work. That's how the data works.
That's how it typically works every time. And we're getting to the point where the last two legs in the stool, they're gonna go down will be, we'll be earning. And then after that we'll be jobs. And so I think we're within, definitely within six months of jobs going like deeply negative may maybe within even three or four months.
Jacob: Is there. Is there any reprieve, is there any silver lining? Is there any plausible scenario for you that makes you think that things could be better than what you're suggesting right now?
Chase: Not really, because at the end of the day, if things are better than I think they, it's gonna keep raising rates Now unless you do get the immaculate disinflation where inflation just starts going down severely without them, doing more.
But I think even there the timing is just, it's just gonna be off for that to be enough of a possibility to happen. Now, year over year, I think you can see that just because of the comps, that inflation can go down significantly. I've been for a year now, probably have called. Under 3% by the end of 2023.
And I still think that can definitely happen. And I think they would be very happy with that. I just think it's gonna happen in part because of a recession, at some point later in the year.
Jacob: Thank you for making my job easy. Imma immaculate disinflation. Perfect title for the podcast so I don't have to rack my brain for pithy titles.
After the fact. I thought we might pivot from there because I've wanted to talk to you and catch up with you for a while. First of all want to hear your, your hot takes on the Cleveland Cav Cavaliers, but before we get there, I wanted to pick your brain about commodities because you're one of the voices out there that I respect the most when it comes to commodities and I've been wrestling with commodities quite a bit and I'm getting more and more uncomfortable with the idea of a commodity supercycle in general and how that narrative is taking off and specifically, I think you're beginning to see it a little bit with what's happened with oil in just the last week or two weeks, where you've got these perma bowls and these perma bears and everybody's out there talking their book and OPEC saying one thing one week and then another thing the next week.
There's just all this stuff and we start the week with surprise Saudi, cut along with Iraq and Algeria, all these other countries, we go up 7% and then we start to hang out in the middle here. Like I'm lost. I guess I've lost the narrative thread for that broader commodity supercycle argument and I thought oil would be an interesting way to talk about it.
So I'll, do you want to pick it up from the macro supercycle question or do you wanna talk about oil first and then we can back, back into the supercycle question?
Chase: Yeah, let's start with oil. So far you're really the only person I've seen that I, that agrees with me, and that is, first of all, I've been a really hardcore oil bull since 2018, and I still am from a kind of a medium term perspective, but I think obviously my macro outlook suggests I think there's gonna be some problems in the near term, but i, all the oil bulls just cheered OPEC doing this cut. And to me like that is absolutely a sign of weakness. That's what you do if you A, see softness already and B, see, demand having problems as we move forward, which I think is absolutely right.
I think they're smart to cut because I think demand is gonna be a problem. But this getting framed as some sort of like strength I just don't understand that one of, one of the strongest kind of pillars in the entire bull thesis for oil was the fact that spare capacity was getting really.
Now all of a sudden spare capacity's starting to pile up. So I think you're losing one of the main legs of that thesis now. Maybe we have such strong demand that they have to go right back to pumping, max out next year or something. That's very possible. But at the moment I just don't see that as bullish.
Obviously the price lights it because this, there's less oil hitting the market. Like obviously that makes perfect sense. I'm not saying oil should have gone down on the news. But what I do think is in the next few months, especially if we hit a recession in the US and that really dense demand, I just struggle to see this 150, $200 nonsense that I'm always seeing, imminent from some of those oil bowls on Twitter.
But yeah I expect oil to be flat to down probably for the rest of the year.
Jacob: I was especially surprised by the Saudi move because I feel like lower prices were taking out their competitors to a certain extent. We I say this often. If you go back to the week or two before Covid, the biggest geopolitical macro market story that everybody was talking about was the Saudi Russia oil price war.
If we hadn't had the pandemic, that would've been the biggest story of 2020. And it probably, it would've been a really interesting sort of saga. But I always think of Saudi Arabia as still in that mode. Saudi Arabia can survive lower oil prices much more easily than, say, a Russia or some of these other OPEC countries can just because of how easy it is for them to get oil out of the ground.
Now, Mohammed bin Salman has all these grand plans and how he's gonna transform the country and for Messi
Chase: With $50 oil. I
Jacob: saw that. I guess you need the $80 $80 bill oil. Cuz you need Messi to come over. What is Messi thinking by the way? I need to get somebody, like why,
Chase: why does he wanna go Saudi Arabia?
Jacob: I guess so. But I mean it must be a lot of money anyway. The other the, one of the other main competitors for the Saudis was the American shale producer. And the American Shell producers were on the ropes. They were out a month ago saying, Hey, we might be at Peak Shale. Hey, we might be importing from the Saudis again in a couple years.
Things are looking really bad, and by propping up prices at this sort of $80, $90 level, isn't Saudi Arabia just helping? They're competitors. Maybe they don't care. Maybe they're just trying to make a bunch of money right now so they can pivot to, messy land and whatever else.
Chase: How do you read that? Yeah I'm split part of me definitely agrees with everything you just said, but part of me like it has become clear that they have gained confidence that they've already largely dealt with Shell and that shells. Starting a bit of a decline with or without their actions.
So I think they're confident. This doesn't mess with their market share moving forward. I'm not sure that's correct. To your point, I mean we were seeing, recounts of rolling over. We were seeing other than the Permian, like a lot of struggles in the shell space. I think you're not, definitely not wrong there.
But it is clear to me they're really confident. But they are also, spending billions of dollars on poaching a soccer players and golf golfers and building, crazy torch trap cities and so I I think MBS is having, a grand old time with his money and doesn't really want it to stop flowing, but, Yeah.
To me, like you, you could have taken out a lot your competitors in a much more significant way, especially Saudi or especially Russia to your point and the pressure that would've put on Russia geopolitically. I keep seeing so many people that, that are getting fed up with that war from like the western perspective.
And obviously the West is getting tired. But when you just look at the financial situation in Russia like. If you hold on a little bit longer, I don't know where they get the money. Like their, the, their deficit is just blowing out. They're just ripping through their rainy day money and things like that.
So unless China's willing to just fund this thing I think they were gonna be in a really bad place. Which makes this from a geopolitical standpoint really interesting. As. It's almost wait a second. Are the Saudis kind of throwing them, throwing Russia a lifeline more than anything with this cut?
And I'm not suggesting that. I don't know, but it makes it a little interesting,
Jacob: I'm glad you raised that because first of all Michael Pettis who I've been learning more and more about and reading more and more about, he had an interesting argument where he was actually talking about, previously when Saudi Arabia was trying to raise oil prices It would've gone into boondoggles like Messi and these tourist trap cities and things like that, and he said, if you give Mohammed bin Salma the benefit of the doubt, if Saudi Arabia's actually going to invest in productive industries and the tech economy and all these other productive things, then that could actually be a net positive for the global economy.
To your point, I'm not sure how, luring Messi with a 350 million whatever it is, contract to come over, is evidence that's actually what happened. It seems more like wishful thinking, but I guess there is. In the West, there's this desire to think that Mohammed bin Salman is real about all these things, but I don't think it's a lifeline for Russia at all, because I think the other thing that has gone underreported about this was that China was not happy about this. It was a week ago that we were talking about China and Aramco and all this new cooperation between China and Saudi Arabia. China had no advanced notice of this.
Chinese refineries were looking for places that they could actually import oil from because they were worried they wouldn't have access to their normal supplies. Russia, supplanted Saudi Arabia as China's top import source for crude over the last couple of months. So I think in some ways Saudi Arabia was sticking it to both of them, which is interesting.
We think more about Saudi Arabia giving the middle finger to the United States. But I guess they're also saying to China, Hey if you're gonna go import from Russia we're not gonna make this easy for you. And that's a really interesting dynamic too, because I don't think, and I could be wrong about this, we've had plenty of people on the podcast who come on and tell me I'm wrong about this.
I don't think China wants to bankroll the war. I think China just likes really cheap oil. And if they can get it for $8 a barrel cheaper from Russia that can't sell anywhere else because of the politics of everything, that's what they'll do. And they're not gonna care about the rest of it. But I. I have a suspicion that's what's going on there with Saudi Arabia, and I don't know how that's gonna go.
That could blow up in your face very easily, I think.
Chase: Yeah, ab absolutely, and I think you're right. I, at the end of the day, China just wants cheap oil. Saudis just want expensive oil. Russia just wants to be able to sell their oil, hopefully any, somewhere in the same zip code as actual going prices.
It is super interesting with what and obviously some people think this is just a big MBS Joe Biden thing, and the fact that we weren't gonna resell the SPR made him mad, so they were gonna teach us a lesson. So there's definitely political possibilities in all of it, and that's fun for us to talk about.
But probably at the end of the day, they just wanted, they'd probably just have a boge at 90 bucks and it wasn't there, so they just decided to do something about it. It's probably something that simple, even. It's more fun to talk about it from the chess board standpoint.
Jacob: Let's overturn the chess board because the other part of this, because you're also one of the only I, I wish that I had as much conviction as you did about Y P F cuz I started, so Y P F is this state owned Argentine energy company, which I had been writing about and thinking about for years.
Never developed the testicular fortitude to actually say, okay we should go for this. This looks good. Cause. Honestly, because Argentina, I don't really need to say much more than that. Like it just seemed like a total dumpster fire. But you had a recent research piece that you sent to me about the possibilities in Argentine shale and Y P F and some of these other Argentine companies.
And if you look at the charts, they've done extremely well since you put out that report. So help us. Help us understand. We've got all the MBS and Biden and, pawns pushing all over the place. But another thing that I think is going under the radar here is Argentina's, this rising shale superpower.
Guiana has a fairytale discovery according to Exxon Mobil. Yeah. And is pumping, the United States is even starting, Chevron got a hundred thousand barrels out of Venezuela last. That's not a ton. It's also not, nothing is Venezuela about to wake up. There's some very interesting things happening in general in Western Hemisphere, outside of the United States.
So why don't you start with Argentina and take that wherever you want to go. Yes. I,
Chase: I find this super interesting and whenever I first started digging into it, I, it was basically from a okay, I see that Argentine oil production's moving higher. That's interesting. Let's figure it out. And I started, in the back of my mind, biased as, this is Argentina, I probably don't want anything to do with this.
They're gonna find a way to mess this up. But doing the research, I realized okay, they're serious about it. Like they're making policy changes. The government really was doing everything they could to make this work. When it comes to the actual, geology, like it has a wonderful basin that has a lot of recoverable oil.
It's just a matter of getting it. And re and more, even more. It's a matter of the takeaway capacity, of the pipelines to get it out. They're talking about, doing LNG exports of the gas. There's significant gas there. They've already built a pipeline that goes from that desert down into Bueno Aires They're making it, they're making it work. They're building pipelines. They're in very serious talks to do the LNG export terminal. Their production is just, it substantially rising. So this thing's real, like I it surprises me. And what I find most interesting is the feedback loop between the success of the country and the success of their oil there If they can get this going to where they can stop importing so much, especially natural gas you're talking, billions and billions of dollars worth of gas imports.
And if they can go from a net importer to exporter, all of a sudden their giant, dollar problems go away, their trade deficit goes from horrific to pretty decent. Things like that. It really helps their currency stabilize, especially if they stop. Printing too much of it at some point. And all that macro all of a sudden tailwinds from energy help energy because one of the reasons, that a lot of big capital providers in the energy space don't wanna deal with it is because they're afraid of the currency and the politics.
So I, it at least holds the possibility of becoming a. A self-reinforcing loop of goodness for them, for energy and just, for the country a as a whole. So very interesting. Like you say, it's already done really well. So I've been actually trimming e even this morning I was trimming some of the positions.
I think I would held six different equities in Argentina. Finally taking some off cuz it has done well and now I'm getting a little nervous on oil because I think, global growth and US growth, they're about to have some issues, but I, it's one of those where anyone that hasn't done the work on it I would definitely suggest go take a hard look at oil in Argentina and.
Production, natural gas, all of it. And then, if, especially if you think I'm right that we're about to have the Lag Reaper show up in the US economy it's gonna get cheap again and you'll be able to kind of go grab it on sale at some point. So I think it's worth the work for sure. And to your point, like Gianna, just the, what they're doing for their size of GDP, of that country, it's un it's unreal the money they're, they are making and are gonna continue to make.
It makes you want to go there and, and start some sort of business, but I'm sure everyone's thinking the same thing and the last thing they need is me there, that's for sure. But it is really interesting. And even Venezuela, like I what, from a geopolitical standpoint I can't think of a better like time and place for the US to get someone back on board or in some way if they can.
Obviously we, we tried the. The opposition and that did not work very well at all. But, and we've made at least a minimal in inroads with Madi, but I think geopolitically, it makes a lot of sense for the US in Venezuela to find a way to come to terms and do some business together.
Again, I don't know if it'll happen, but it definitely makes sense.
Yeah.
Jacob: Maybe we need to send Stevens to gall back down there to open up negotiations. Clearly the. But help me square that with, cuz you said medium term, you're of more bullish, the price of oil. And I see that argument in the sense that we've had under investment for a period of years and that's gonna lead to a lack of supply in the market, but that's now been the narrative.
For what about 12, 18 months? Like I think there has been some more investment now in the space and I'm sure higher prices. We had those really high prices we had last year and all this news this year. I feel like we're starting to get more investment, more interest in oil, but when you actually look at what's out there, there's a lot of supply.
If you just decide to go take it, there's a reason that like, The oil market has cartels like opec because if everybody just produced as much as they possibly could, oil would be very cheap. There's actually probably too much of it in terms of demand if you didn't actually control production in some way.
So why is it as simple as that? Underinvestment is still the case and ESG has really taken the wings out of oil. So when we get back, at a three, five year time horizon, there are gonna be these gaps with India and China and Indonesia and all these other countries rising, or is there something else going.
Chase: Yeah, I mean he basically just made a whole argument for me. So yeah, I think it is as simple as the investments into your point, like the investment has risen some, but if you if you just looked at it like on a long term kind of chart for CapEx it still is nowhere near where it needs to be for us to keep growing production the way we need to.
I think people. Don't realize how much of a treadmill oil is, and if you just stopped investing in it, you're talking, you'd lose like 7% of production a year. It would just, it just falls off a cliff if you're not willing to put a bunch of money in the ground. And one of my, one of the big parts of my thesis though, was, what was that?
Like ESG, the fact that you can't get capital they've made their own capital in the last couple years because oil's done so well and they've, they haven't invested. So now they're all sitting on money. Granted, they're giving a lot of it back to shareholders, but I think they at least have enough, money that they can fund for themselves to invest.
So you should see an in an investment cycle that picks up. One of the reasons it's hard for me to get really bearish on oil though. They still haven't really invested that much and it's really hard to kill an oil cycle without, cuz typically what you have is way too much investment.
You just have everyone go nuts to try and capture that 150 bucks or whatever it is. And until we get that, it, I don't think you can have a proper bear market in oil other than just macro induced from the demand side. And also to your point, you look at India, India's gonna be India, Indonesia, like a lot of Southeast Asia. It's gonna be the driver moving. So unless they all go significant ev penetration in, into those emerging markets especially I think it just, you're gonna have demand keep going higher and it's just not easy to meet that. And you were talking about oh, you just turning on, but OPEC at one point was all out, like they were doing everything they could and it was, and it, we reached a point where they were doing everything they could and you're looking around going like where's the incremental barrel gonna come?
And then you had China completely shut down and that, that was the relief valve that obviously that relief valve is closed now. So between that OPEC cutting, without a recession and in global slowdown, I think you would see a significant price spike right now.
But because. Because you're gonna slow demand down with slow growth, you probably won't. But let's say a year from now, we've dealt with a recession in most of the world and everyone's stimulating again, instead of raising, then I think you're right on the cusp of having triple digit oil and a in a struggle to keep up with demand.
Like all over. Unless again, like things like EVs just start. Taking over enough market share to at least flatline demand, which is not impossible.
Jacob: I don't know where the commodities come from that. I I think biofuels is the more interesting one. If you look at places like, Indonesia's saying, okay, more palm oil in our fuel, in Europe, different places, it's ethanol, it's renewable diesel.
I think the bio, the biofuels thing is very operative there, but, Starts to pressure on food prices, which if you look at the inflation data everywhere else, like the stickiest, the highest right now, like energy is relatively down year on year, to your point, housing data mix. It's those food prices that are really stubborn and that are really stuck in place in some ways.
Chase: I think we all have a crazy aunt on Facebook, really mad about egg prices.
Jacob: I don't have a crazy aunt on Facebook about, about egg prices, but yeah, egg I think egg prices could get a lot worse too. But that I think allows us to back out and zoom into this commodity supercycle narrative.
Because it, you raised it, it goes to the EV question if we're gonna scale up, for example, EV production, then we need a lot of cobalt and a lot of lithium and a lot of nickel and a lot of all these other things that we don't have enough of. And I guess that's the argument for the commodity supercycle, but I'm.
I'm just struggling to see it because if China is having all this, all these problems, like they've got their real estate crisis, they're in a trade war, that's gonna depress their growth. In some ways, the Chinese consumer is still not consuming despite everything that Xi Jinping has done to try and encourage spending, go out there, do stuff, Chinese citizens, they're still, I think what the, I forget what if it was the P B O C or somebody came out and said no, they're still sitting on their hands.
So if you're not gonna. China returning to help support global growth? Are you really gonna see commodities in general just boom, because everybody's building EVs it, I don't know, something doesn't ring true there for me. Do you have a sort of broader view on where commodities are going in the next couple of years?
I can make very. I can make reasoned arguments for some of them, like copper makes some sense to me. But when you start to get into the lithium land and all these other things I start to glaze over and I start to get a little more skeptical.
Chase: To me, at the end of the day, what you need for a commodity, supercycle is a really weak dollar I think we could talk about supply demand for all of them, and obviously that matters. But I think the thing, if you're really gonna have a proper recycle, the dollar would have to be in a secular. Again, to me, not impossible, but I'm kinda like you though. I prefer to look at them all on, on their own merits instead of Just putting 'em all together.
So like copper I've definitely done a deep dive of copper flying demand and to me it seems fine for the next year or two, but then it probably is gonna be a significant problem. So that's one that you don't have to love now, but do you want to be in it over the next decade? Absolutely. And I think it's gonna be the same for a lot of the battery minerals and everything.
But on those, I will say, y you could go back five years and run all of the if we're gonna have X EVs, we're gonna need y cobalt. And there's, we just can't get it. And then here we are, like five years later and the adoption curve of EVs is still really strong. And, we didn't break the world with running outta cobalt or lithium or any of it.
So I. It's such an easy thing to, to look at those and do the extrapolations and just we can't, we don't have that much of, minimal why, but we all said the same thing on oil, hundred years ago, 50 years ago, 20 years ago. Now people are saying it about oil and turns out we're like really good at going and getting stuff that fetches a lot of money.
So I think we'll probably figure it out on all that stuff. Even though when you just do the analysis, it is hard to figure out where it comes from. One, one of the things I'm about to, I'm about to do with deep dive on is EVs, because it's actually surprised me with how strong the penetration has remained and the adoption curve has remained.
I thought it would start flatlining a little bit more than it has, so I'm taking it more serious all of a sudden as a threat to. Two fossil fuels. Something I've definitely made fun of, three or four years ago is that's not gonna be a thing. And maybe it still won't be because when people go to trade it in or go buy a new battery, they realize it's not as fun as they thought it would be.
But, it, so I'm not sure on the, I don't really trade. Cobalt or lithium or anything like that. Obviously I do copper, but
Jacob: You, you can't really trade cobalt or lithium unless you're willing to go uh, risk your life in the Democratic Republic of Congo and make some deals with some dudes down there.
Chase: Like technically you can trade lithium, but it not with any liquidity. So if you have size, you're not gonna wanna trade lithium, but, It actually trades. And I'm, and I think that is something that, 10 years from now, there will probably a liquid features contract for, but probably not cobalt.
But at the same time when it comes to those metals, battery chemistry is always changing and what, what they use for Anodes and different parts of it. It's always changing. So may maybe we're all looking at the wrong things to begin with and solid state batteries will take over or something completely different.
10 years from now. But but for now, if you go look at the charts of all the things, most of 'em are getting beat up, which most people did not predict. Everyone just thought, oh it's going parabolic and it's gonna keep doing that cuz we don't have enough. But no, it didn't work that way.
Never does.
Jacob: Yeah, you're right about ev adoption though. I I'm here in Louisiana and at the Superdome where the Saints play, and Louisiana a fairly, oil rich, natural gas, rich hydrocarbons, fossil fuels are a big part of the local economy here. But, you can park close to the Superdome cuz they're putting in the charging stations there.
You can, get. Get a, if you're at the airport, like they reserve the first floor all for EVs and they're all plugged in and it's all Teslas and everything else. And it's funny, I, I consider myself fairly green when it comes to policies. I think we should save the planet. It would be nice if my children and their children could, enjoy things like fresh air and clean water and things like that.
Like I'm on board, but I'm skeptical of EVs. I don't know if this is just because I've gotten so cynical. Being in geopolitics in markets now for as long as I have been. But it doesn't make sense to me, and I don't even really trust it. Like I'm still I don't think that, the guy driving his car with his fossil fuels is the problem, but I'm, apparently, I'm off there because I, I think you're right.
Like we are getting this mass adoption, whether it makes sense or not,
Chase: yeah I've definitely been in the skeptic category and even the making fun of category and in general, I just don't really, I don't really understand renewable. A almost at all. Other than I think on a very small scale, wind in solar can make sense, but I, and obviously I think nuclear is great.
I think hydro makes sense as long as you're not, doing too much ecological damage. But but wind in solar on large scale, that kind of stuff never made sense to me. EVs never really made much sense to me. I think hybrids made sense. We, but we decided that was good enough for whatever reason.
But here, yeah, it's like in the last six months I've been reading a little bit and been surprised. It just really continues to grow. It's your point. Like I, I spent a decade in California and they're everywhere. If you're the Bay Area, It feels like half of every half of the people there have an ev.
But then you get out in the heartland and it's oh, they're all gone. But now we just drove all the way across America making our move and they're cropping up in more and more places. Obviously DC is a little bit, Kind of this may as well be the West coast or you know it plenty of coastal elites there.
But when I worked there, the parking garage we had you got primo parking if you had one. And it, it was a significant amount of EVs parked there. Yeah,
Jacob: This is also just in the realm of anecdotes, so take it for what it's worth. Sure. When I. When I go rent cars, if I fly to someplace and I have to drive somewhere else and I'm renting a car, like it's now actually cheaper to rent the Tesla or to rent the new ev, like the Hertz and the enterprises, they've slashed the prices on renting those.
You can get a super nice brand new Tesla or you can get, a shitty 2017 Nissan Altima. I guess that's one way that they're trying to get people to upkeep there. But again, that, that feels like something's wrong to me. Or how are these. Rental car companies that, Herz what went bankrupt, didn't it?
And suddenly they have Teslas on the front line that when I'm getting there, they're trying to get me to take the keys to the Tesla. Something does not quite line up for me with what's going on there.
Chase: Yeah. That's weird and interesting. I didn't nail that. I've never even seen the option when I was running a car.
That's interesting. I'm about to try it. One of these.
Jacob: Yeah I have not had the bravery cuz usually I'm, when I'm flying, I'm usually like driving someplace in, in rural America afterwards. If I have to rent a car and I'm not gonna get a Tesla and then, drive three hours into the middle of North Dakota.
That seems like a recipe for disaster. What should we close out on here, chase, before we get to some basketball talk? I know that you you were also looking at Coco. I don't know if that's still interesting to you. Is there anything else you want to talk riff about geopolitical wise or market wise before we delve into some casual basketball chatter?
Chase: We didn't talk about gas much and I think it's interesting be because we talked about it the last two times I was on with you the first time I was counting the table in Bullish. The second time I was saying, you know what, now I'm selling. I think it's gotten a little crazy and. When it reached $10, it's okay, that's actually probably a fair price.
But now, and what's interesting is all the energy, zealots, we are, we're, we've been referring to a lot of them love oil and hate Nat Gas now. The time to hate it, it's not at $2. Like I, I think summer is the new winter when it comes to gas especially in the US where so much gas demand is for power burn and not just for heating.
Obviously we continue to warm and we're seeing really ugly temperatures crop up in places like India, China, south America. So I think we're, I think we're in store for another hot summer and I think that will drive a lot of power demand. And that goes to the summers, the new winter for gas.
And I think you sit it out in the. When, especially if you think they're gonna be mild, which honestly was the funny thing about oil gas collapsing this winter is it was a consensus take that, hey, it's gonna probably be really mild. I pay two different weather firms to stay up with weather.
And they were both like, yeah, we think it's gonna be mild. So I was like, okay, it's enough for me. I'm gonna get outta the way of this thing. But then you go from $10 back to two. A lot of people weren't ready for that, obviously. But at $2 you're gonna start seeing production fall off. And then as soon as you get now, l and g exports are all the way back up to a new all-time highs after falling 20% thanks to Freeport.
So I'm constructive on gas again. I. I think you can be right back up over 5, 6, 7, even maybe all the way back to 10 by the end of the summer. I don't think that's impossible. By the end of the summer.
Jacob: Yeah. I don't know if you saw the White House in the EU put out a joint statement about how, the US is committing to another, I forget what the exact number was, but some astronomical level of l g exports to Europe as the war keeps going.
And I'm glad you brought up gas. Cause last time you were. I was al in September of last year. I was saying, I don't believe this natural gas price spike thing. I don't think it's gonna happen. And I've gotten my fair share of things wrong, but that one I at least I got right. And, but I'm in a similar position to you right now.
I wouldn't even go summer as the new winter. Winter is still a problem, even if we have, generally warmer winters, you could still have super cold winters. Most listeners if you're not I know that my listeners in Minnesota and North Dakota and some places, north in the Great Plains right now, they.
An epic blizzard this week. Absolutely freezing temperatures. Farmers in the United States haven't been able to get out to start planting, some of their crops for the next season going forward. Yes, there might be these unprecedentedly warm winters happening in Europe and things like that.
But we've also had a triple dip, LA Nina, and. That is also finally going away. So we're gonna go back into El Nino land and things are gonna be a little bit different. So I think last year, markets and media and everybody and their mother was talking way too much about the natural gas crisis in Europe, and I feel like this year the conversation is, it's gotten way too blase.
And maybe you're right about the. Summer. But the thing I'm really worried about is winter. What if you actually get a cold winter? Just because on average we're warming and we're getting warmer winters doesn't mean that you can't have a really cold one in there. And if you look at all the data, neither you or I are weatherman.
You would think that we're probably due for a colder winter. Especially with the luck that we had this year and what the Rush Ukraine War is still going on and everything that we've just talked about, us, ex US is gonna continue to export. I'm with you, natural gas.
When it's this low and everybody. Is talking down to, it's probably the right time to look at it as an opportunity.
Chase: Yeah, absolutely. And there I'm talking more like US base and Henry hub, but I think yeah same thing for Europe and to your point, like with or without global warming, you can have a winner where the polar vortex just keeps, getting penetrated and pushing down to lower latitudes and that's all it takes.
Just one active polar vortex year. Is enough to just absolutely demolish, storage. And with in Europe with the flow of Russian gas being what it is, that, that can still be a problem. They got incredibly fortunate this year. It's actually really scary to think about what inflation would be in Europe right now if gas had stayed, even reasonably.
Obviously it wasn't gonna stay where it sped to, cause that was just com completely unsustainable, but it's pretty wild to think what they would be dealing with right now. They're very fortunate.
Jacob: Yeah, but it's not over. The war like Macron is in China trying to convince Xi to do something.
You're right that Russia's economy looks terrible, but Russia. Economies look terrible forever. I don't see that either Ukraine or Russia are willing to give it up here and until they're willing to give it up, like all of these macro dynamics that you're talking about, like the L n G supply is just not coming online.
So maybe the Europeans will out pay everyone for these L NNG exports that are out there, but that's gonna mean higher prices for the US consumer. It's gonna mean countries like Pakistan are gonna say. We built all these l nng facilities, but we can't actually afford the L nng, so we're just gonna go burn coal.
And that's literally what the Pakistani government's saying right now, the problem with that
Chase: is they end up with your own problems with coal. Cause going back to, lack of investment that has been significant in coal E even that may not be a safe haven for folks that like, like Pakistan that don't wanna pay for it for l and g.
Although now with l and g where it is to me it should be just like price dependent. Like sure don't buy it when it gets expensive. But some countries are now starting to talk about strategic LNG reserves and things like, maybe that makes sense even though, it doesn't store as well as oil obviously.
But. Go buy it when it is cheap, like right now. Seems like a good time to go. Buy some LNG and put it. In a sphere for a little while, but but then, yeah, don't buy it when it gets expensive. I think the, needs people like Japan to go, make this nuclear, know, renaissance as fast as possible because they're such a enormous L n G importer.
And China's Im imports of L Nng are gonna be really fun to watch as. Their economy comes back because they took the year off, which really helped gas prices as well. So if they don't take the next year off for, from LNG imports what is that gonna do to, to LNG prices as well?
Jacob: Yeah, the more and more I think about energy, the more and more nuclear seems like the answer. Now, it's probably been the answer for decades. So just because it is the answer doesn't mean that it's actually gonna get adoption. There's no company like Tesla out there that's making nuclear sexy.
I think most people have. Deep reservations about nuclear because of Three Mile or because they saw Cher Noble on HBO or whatever else. But if you're just looking at cost and benefit and what's good for the environment and nuclear does seem to be the clear answer, but politics gets in the way there.
I will
Chase: say, I think some of the small modular reactor type companies and the ones making some unique fuels, they make it sexy. People just don't know about them.
Jacob: Now you do. If you're listening to this podcast chase cheer me up about basketball. I went to the Pelicans game last night and watched the Pelicans get their asses kicked by the Kings.
Shout out to Kings fans out there. Wow. Seonis is so much fun in person, and I'm so glad you guys have a they beat us and it w they weren't even working hard. It was embarrassing,
Chase: but no, I spit. Basically, I don't know. Seven years in sa. So we used to go to King's Games back in the old terrible sleep train arena.
And then they moved downtown and they're still bad, but it, I'm excited to see them good again for the first time since, oh man. I don't even wanna talk about how old I was last time. They were good. But it's fun to watch that if people remember back, their fans were incredible back when they were good.
20 years ago, whenever it was. So I think them being back on the stage is gonna be a lot of fun.
Jacob: And they're a really fun team. And the same were that they were fun, 20 years ago with Weber and Soko and d it was beautiful basketball. It was all passing and it was all movement and it was a joy to watch like last night watching them, it was a joy to watch.
Saboni, not only is he a great passer and he was like running the break and he also, he was working hard on. Like I, I go to a fair number of Pelicans games. It's very rare to see somebody who's actually trying on defense. Every play. Sab Bonis was out there, Val Junis, who was the Pelican Center.
He's got at least a couple inches and quite a couple pounds on Saboni. And Sab. Bonis was like every single play he was. Like in his jersey, it was really impressive. But tell the listeners why. Are you optimistic about the Cavaliers? I You've got some things setting up nicely for you, but I guess you also have, some buzz saws like Giannis and Tatum waiting for you in the Eastern conference.
So wh where are you with the Cavaliers right now? I like that team. But you've definitely got some challenges coming. Yes,
Chase: so I'm, I mean, obviously I'm really excited to make the playoffs without LeBron for the first time since I was also very young, even younger than when the Kings are good. But that actually, Philly is who worries me.
I just think we, we don't match up great against them. We kind of struggle with them. I actually think we could beat the Bucks. Probably not Boston. That would, I think that would be a great series actually. But the reason I'm most excited, o obviously everyone knows how great Donovan is and all the points he's been scoring, but Evan Mobley is just really coming into his own offensively lately.
He's already a great defender as a young guy, but he's just gotten a lot more aggressive and assertive on offense. And they, so they look to get him the ball, which creates a lot of space for our, all of our other scores. I'm excited about 'em. I think they have a really good team. I think they're, I think they're built and constructed well.
Like we have a couple guys that don't care that they'll score, they'll go play defense and rebound and they're fine to do that. And then we have Jonathan Mitchell who goes for 40 almost every night. So I think it's kinda a unique mix. And they play defense, which again, like you were talking about, of rear in the nba, That's a big part of their identity is to play defense and rebound and, win 50 50 ball, things like that, which I think can play off time.
All those little extra possessions all of a sudden get magnified. They matter a lot so their defensive efficiency could make them go on a longer run than people expect. But I don't expect to go all the way to the finals this year. I think the east is a little too tough and Philly is the one that worries me the most.
Jacob: Any finals predictions You want a hazard? Don't worry, we won't hold you. Oh man.
Chase: You know what? Just for fun. We'll keep the theme going and I'll pick the kings to just blow everyone's mind and go from being total nobody to, to the finals and a go Philly. I don't know what it is about Philly.
I just think they're a little tougher than people think. Although speaking of defense, it's hard to pick a James Harden team to go to the finals. Because he plays none, but
Jacob: I, I assume that he will show his real colors. So we're talking Kings, Sixers, and you think it's Kings, take it. Or Sixers take it.
Let's go
Chase: Sixers. And six. Why not
Jacob: Sixers and six? You heard it here first. Sacramento Kings not by the way, folks. Hey, my prediction was Pelican's bucks, so we'll see where I'm at right now. So Chase, we'll have you back on soon. Thanks so much for making the time, man. All right. Appreciate it. Thank you so much for listening to the Cognitive Dissidents Podcast, brought to you by Cognitive Investments.
If you are interested in learning more about cognitive investments, you can check us out online at cognitive. Investments, that's cognitive investments. You can also write to me directly if you want, at Jacob Cognitive Investments. Cheers, and we'll see you out there. The views expressed in this commentary are subject to change based on market and other conditions.
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