Monday, July 31, 2023

The biggest trucking company bankruptcy in U.S. history?


It's 1:00 pm Pacific time, Monday, July 31, 2023.  Industry people and news outlets are still waiting for the official announcement, but all signs say Yellow Trucking company is going bankrupt.  In this Freight Waves video from earlier this morning, trucking industry guys talk about the fallout and effects this will have on the U.S. trucking industry.

Yellow Trucking, which has several other firms under its umbrella, ceased operations yesterday.  Macroeconomics analyst and researcher, Danielle DeMartino booth, in a recent interview, said Yellow planned to file for Chapter 7 bankruptcy, which means full liquidation.  The video above says the same.  Truckers had to turn in keys last week, the company has ceased operations yesterday (Sunday 7/30/2023), non-union employees have been laid off, and they report above that the Teamsters union have been notified of the bankruptcy filing.  The official announcement should be coming soon.  

Yellow Trucking has been around for 99 years, and appears to be the biggest trucking bankruptcy in U.S. history.  They had approximately 30,000 total employees, with 22,000 of those being Teamsters, which I presume are all or mostly drivers.  Another source reported they have approximately 11,000 trucks.  Other reports say Yellow got a $700 million loan through the CARES Act, and I think there was another bailout for them around 2010.  

Last week Federal Reserve chairman Jay Powell said The Fed no longer expects a recession in the U.S. this year, in 2023.  Yet here's one of the nation's largest trucking companies going out of business, with 30,000 workers losing their jobs.  There are a lot of conflicting signals in the financial world these days.  

Yellow was a LTL carrier, which means "less than load" shipper.  That means they handled lots of freight that wasn't in large enough quantities to fill up an entire truck.  If your business needed 1 or 2 pallets of goods shipped somewhere, you would call a company like Yellow, to get it there.  A trailer can fit around 12 to 14 standard sized pallets of goods.  

The industry guys in the video above talk about how other companies will respond to the freight that now needs a new carrier (higher prices for small shipments expected), whether most of these truckers should be able to find work at other companies. and how the actual hubs, the real estate Yellow owns, and the truck themselves and other equipment, may be bought by other trucking companies.  



I'm doing a lot of my writing on Substack these days, check it out:


Saturday, July 29, 2023

How I came to the conclusion we were due for a great depression in the 2020's...



This is a funny meme I made, from a photo I shot, of a homeless guy sleeping in an alley in an alley in 2021.  I was making fun of the crazy high rent prices these days.  #steveemigphotos

This post is the follow-up to the previous post, "The Big Transition, The Phoenix Great Depression, The Tumultuous 2020's... My Big Picture look at the 2020's"  So read that one first.

How did I come to the conclusion that we would have a major recession, or a great depression, and a lot of chaos, in the 2020's?  Here's the story...

I've been blogging about "the coming next big recession or depression" since 2018.  Here's a blog post from December 20, 2018, talking the about recession I felt was coming, where I predicted that the Dow Jones Industrial Average would drop to 18,000.  I was wrong.  But the Dow did drop to 18,591 in spring of 2020, after topping out at an all time high (then) of over 25,000.  Stocks dropping don't mean we're in a recession, but that's a main economic index millions of people look at as a sign of how "the economy" is doing.  

Either I've been crying wolf about a big recession for five years now, or there were reasons I thought an extraordinary recession, or even a depression, was headed our way.  I first hinted at this recession  on January 2, 2018, in a blog post, just a week after President Trump's much hyped corporate tax bill was signed.  The business media was telling the world that we were about to launch into a "golden age" of prosperity, or something close to one.  I disagreed.  I felt we were close to a recession that would rival the Great Recession of 2007-2009.  

Why did I think that?  The answer goes back to December of 1989.  Visiting my parents back east for Christmas, I picked up a book, knowing I was going to be pretty bored that week.  The book was The Great Depression of 1990, by economist Ravi Batra.  Nothing like a little light, uplifting reading during the holiday season.  Being a geek with a taste for economic stuff, I found the book fascinating.  

In that book, Batra described a theory that the United States had a depression, or great depression, every 30 or 60 years, going back to colonial days.  The only time that trend broke down was during the 30 years after the Civil War.  That theory was part of why Batra thought we were in for a great depression beginning in 1990.  If there was no depression 30 years after the last one, there was usually a great depression at the 60 year mark.  The Great Depression of the 1930's began in late 1929, heading into 1930.  There was no depression in 1960.  So we were due for a major economic downturn in 1990, according to that theory.  No, we didn't have a great depression then, but we had a really long "double dip" recession, and the real estate market here in California tanked for about 6 - 6 1/2 years.  From my point of view, and that of most people I knew, living in Southern California, we had a 6 1/2 year recession.

There was another concept that Batra spent a chapter explaining.  It was an obscure theory from India, called The Law of Social Cycle.  That came from a really unusual character named P.R. Sarkar.  The theory said there were four basic mentalities in any human civilization.  One of these four mentalities dominates a society for a long period of time, shaping the whole country, often for hundreds of years.  Eventually the next mentality rises up, and takes over.  Over hundreds of years, these four mentalities rise and fall in particular order.  

I won't go into the details, it's a lot to explain.  Batra's take in 1989 was the the U.S. was nearing the end of the Acquisitor Age (where the businessman's mentality had been dominating since colonial days).  That age ends in a period of high corruption and excess, where the Laborers, everyday working people, are getting taken advantage of much more than usual.  Eventually, the Laborers get tired of low pay and a declining standard of living (sound familiar?), they rise up in populist movement, and toss the corrupt business people out of power.  Here's my detailed explanation of my understanding of the Law of Social Cycle.  

In any case, the theory made sense to me.  While we didn't have the full blown great depression that Ravi Batra predicted in that book, but most of what he predicted did actually happen, just not to the extent or depth he expected.  Inspired by that book, though I was not making much money, I started checking out the financial markets, week by week, and for a while, day by day.  Working odd jobs, and focused more on working through my shyness and personal issues, I never really had money to invest.  But the dynamics of the financial markets, trying to figure out the future trends and inflection points, fascinated me.  After a while, it was more about trying to understand the dynamics of the markets, to make sense of all the variables and interwoven trends, than just to profit from them.  

I've kept an eye on the markets ever since, trying to figure out what made them go up and down, day by day, week by week, year after year.  The 30/60 year depression theory, and the Law of Social Cycle were in the back of my head as well.  As you've probably figured out by now, 2020 was the next big year  in that theory, being 30 years after 1990.  

As for the Law of Social Cycle, if that theory was right, it meant there would be a major populist uprising in the U.S, somewhere down the road.  Since the early 1990's, I kept my eye out for signs of an emerging populist uprising.  In 2011, the wildfire spread of the Occupy Wall Street protests looked like the beginning of that populist uprising.  That protest, which gave us the idea of  "the 99%" and "the 1%", spread so fast because so many people were frustrated, struggling to make a decent living, and ready for some kind of change.  A couple years later, the unexpected rise of the two populist candidates in the 2016 presidential election, Bernie Sanders on the Left, and Donald Trump on the Right, looked like another wave of populism, growing in strength, and then subsiding some.  I think the populist sentiment is still rising, wave after wave, every two or three years.  

From my perspective, by about 2016, this weird theory from India, which played out over hundreds of years, looked like it would reach a major inflection point at some time in the 2020's.  We would come to a critical mass point, where the average working people have just had enough, and they'd rise up, and run the increasingly corrupt business people, and the politicians who enable them, out of the seats of power.  We still seem to be on that track.

From a book I read at the end of 1989, 25 years later, I had two reasons to believe we would see a major recession, and possibly a great depression, and a lot of social turbulence in the 2020's.  By 2018, nearing the end of a traditional 4-7 year business cycle since the Great Recession, it looked like another recession was near.  

Then, in late 2018, the recession tried to get going.  We had a major market stock market correction, hitting bottom, in December of 2018.  Why?  The Fed had been slowly raising interest rates from near zero, trying to get back to close to "normal" level.  The stock market, used to getting high on The Fed's supply (of cheap money), tanked.  In December 2018, stocks dipped into bear market territory, and then mostly rebounded in a couple of months.  Then the markets largely leveled off until September of  2019.  The potential recession got put on hold, as The Fed lowered interest rates, and later began to inject liquidity into the banking system ("Not QE"), in October of 2019, following the Repo Market Crisis in September.  Then the markets started rising again, fueled by the influx of continued billions of dollars from The Fed. That continued until the pandemic amplified stock crash of February and March of 2020. 

Back to the early 1990's.  I ran into another big theory around 1993 or 1994.  I forget which one I read first, but I discovered the work of futurist Alvin Toffler, in his books Powershift and War and Anti-War, around 1994 or so.  Working with his wife Heidi, they first brainstormed the future trends building in the 1960's.  In 1970, Alvin published his breakout book, Future Shock.  A decade later he published The Third Wave.  Again, I won't go into the details, you can follow the link for more explanation.  In The Third Wave, in 1980, Alvin Toffler introduced the idea that we were leaving the Industrial Age (the Second Wave of civilization), and moving into what we now call the Information Age (The Third Wave).  

I got the basic idea of The Third Wave in those first two books, which was that we were, in 1980, and still are, leaving the Industrial Age, and moving into an information-based society.  We are in transition.  We're in a long period of transition as huge and transformative as the shift from hunter/gatherer society to the agricultural society (The First Wave of civilization), or from an agricultural society to an industrial society (The Second Wave).  

As the Tofflers saw it, this is a big transition that would change the way every single person in society lives.  It would change how we work, communicate, shop, socialize, and pretty much every other aspect of daily life.  Alvin Toffler phrased it much more eloquently, but that is the basic idea.  This is not a transition period that any person or group started, it's an organic transformation created by one social change building upon another, and one new technology building upon another, creating a long period of high innovation and change, technologically and socially.  Social changes led to new technologies, and new technologies led to other social changes.  As time went on, the pace of these changes increased, and were near the critical mass point, where the remaining parts of society make the transition.

 To be clear, not everyone in every country is moving into a Third Wave world.  In some countries (China, for instance), there are still First Wave, subsistence,  peasant farmers in some areas, Second Wave industrial cities dominating in some areas, and high tech Third Wave cultures in still other areas.  But the leading parts of the advanced economies are heading into the Third Wave, Information Age-type of society.  

Toffler's last book Revolutionary Wealth (2006), goes into some depth on this. It also goes into the wars among the different people living in the different cultures these ages create.  A lot of the turmoil in the U.S. right now is older people who want to revert back to and Industrial Age society as the Third Wave world expands.  This is "wave warfare," and is the root of much of the culture wars happening now.   

There's nothing wrong with manufacturing physical items, if it's economically viable.  But today's factories have far more robots and high tech, and far fewer humans involved in the actual manufacturing process.  The days of a steel mill employing 10,000 people and paying them really high wages, and then providing them with retirement pensions, are long gone, and they're not coming back.

In 2009 or 2010, I discovered Alvin Toffler's final book, Revolutionary Wealth, which was published in 2006.  His insights into the changes our world was undergoing were, and still are, incredible.  He was writing at an amazing depth about the single biggest change happening in society, and these ideas were not a part of the national consciousness, though many leaders knew of them.  The huge influx of changes he had been writing about for over 35 years were still growing and evolving, in 2006.  They're still playing out today, 17 years after his last book, and seven years after his death in 2016.

That elemental aspect of The Third Wave, the simple idea that we are still in the process of leaving the Industrial Age and moving into the emerging Information Age, The Big Transition, as I call it, got lost.  It got lost in the noise of 1,000 channels of cable, a billion websites on the internet, and the endless parade of cat videos.  In addition, a lot of change has taken place in the 17 years since Toffler's Revolutionary Wealth was published in 2006.  The iPhone and the Android had not come out yet.  As we all know, smartphones have become the norm since 2006.  YouTube was a year old, and not widely used, in 2006.  Now it's the #1 streaming service, and over 50% of all big screen TV watching is of YouTube content.  Social media platforms and apps were just getting going in 2006, and have exploded in popularity since, becoming a primary form of communication.  You get the idea.  In all of that, the fact that we're in The Big Transition, between the fading Industrial Age and the still emerging Information Age, got lost in a sea of other content and ideas.

The ideas of the Third Wave, and Alvin and Heidi Toffler's thinking since, really connected with me.  I read Revolutionary Wealth a second time (and recently a 3rd time), watched all of the YouTube videos featuring him, and read his short, 1983 book, Previews and Premises. Nothing I read or saw anywhere else described the increasingly chaotic level of change in society better than Toffler's Third Wave idea.  While I got a good description of the Third Wave concept from his other books, and talks and interviews online, I didn't actually read The Third Wave until last month, June 2023.  I figured the book was mostly anecdotes from the world of 1980, so I never did go back and read it.  I already had the basic idea.  When I finally did read it, last month, it blew my mind.  It has all of the foundational thinking leading up to, and supporting, The Third Wave concept, because the idea was so radical back in 1980.  Nobody expected most of the U.S. factories to go out of business at that time, let alone all the other change that has come since.  

Around 2010, I began to see the string of huge changes in society that fit The Third Wave idea.  In the 1970's, telecommunications began a massive change, from the rotary dial phones that us Gen Xers and Baby Boomers grew up with.  Touchtone phones came out, beginning the evolution towards today's smartphones.  Cable TV entered the picture, and added 15 cable channels to the three lame channels on broadcast TV in the 1970's.  Pong debuted, the really simple beginning to all that is video games now.  

Personal computers were born in the 1970's, but really hit society in the 1980's, transforming business and then personal life, most notably with the Apple Macintosh, in 1984.  Car phones made their appearance in the 1980's.  VHS videos gave us more options to watch, and the ability to record TV shows, and "timeshift" our TV watching, as it was once called.   Then video cameras for everyday people came onto the scene, they were far more consumer friendly and immediate that the old Super 8 film movie cameras.  Factories began to shut down all over the U.S., as human jobs were replaced by new technology and industrial robots, and millions more jobs were outsourced to countries with cheaper labor.  Music went from "vinyl' records and 8 track tapes to cassettes, and the Walkman came out, so we could take out music everywhere, and ignore everyone around us.  

In the 1990's the personal computers all got together for a party and formed the internet, and the world wide web, taking communications to an entirely new level.  The internet was the first huge media platform not created with advertising in mind.  Music went digital, too, from cassettes to CD's.  Video moved towards DVD's.  The DotCom craze exploded in the late 1990's.  After a long recession early in the decade, start-up businesses popped up all over as people tried to figure out what could be done with the rapidly improving computers and the internet.  Those were the days when little Amazon.com got made fun of, for trying to sell books on the internet, by the mainstream media (check the quote at 10:55 in that clip).  "People will never put their credit card numbers into a computer," critics scoffed.  Cell phones hit widespread adoption by the end of the decade.  

Then, with one click of a mouse, a geek none of us had heard of, Shawn Fanning, uploaded Napster to the web in 1999.  He killed the entire music industry with that mouse click.  He made music file sharing possible for millions of people.  MP3's and the iPod soon followed, with Apple's iTunes following soon after.  Music on phones and streaming music services came later.  The entire music industry changed in the 2000's.  

The publishing industry, from newspapers to magazines to books, got hammered, too.  The internet and digital technology changed the game.  Publishing went through a transformation, and many newspapers and magazines died off.  Ebooks, like Kindle and other formats, took a small share of the print book market.  Also in the 2000's, we saw the rise of social media, where gossip met the digital age.  That's a match made in heaven if there ever was one.  Or is it hell?  It depends who you ask, these days.  The world of video, TV, movies, and DVD's, got hit by new tech as well, and the industry moved towards streaming, wrecking everything, and leading to the world of binge watching and "Netflix and chill," Somehow, a lot more really good TV series came out of the whole chaotic transition.

I rediscovered the work of Alvin Toffler around 2010, and started thinking a lot more about his Third Wave concept in the years since.  Around 2015-2016, the department store and discount store giants, Sears, J.C. Penny, and Kmart, were on the ropes, getting pummeled by the increasing rise in online sales, and slowing foot traffic in malls.  Huge chain stores began to disappear.  Radio Shack was gone, Toys-R-Us died, as did dozens of other once iconic brands.  

It was around that time, late 2016, that I first heard the term, "Retail Apocalypse" to describe the closing of thousands of retail stores.  I realized the the Retail Apocalypse was the Industrial Age, bricks and mortar goods distribution system, dying off.  The Information Age retail business model was replacing it to a great extent.  Not all stores were dying, but thousands of them were.  It wasn't just Amazon killing them, now a huge mega corporation.  It was Craigslist, eBay, Etsy, and thousands of small business websites, and Shopify-type online stores.  Walmart and Target figured out the "shop online and pick-up up at a nearby store" model, just in time to keep them viable, as millions of shoppers made the transition into the Information Age world.  

With that insight about the Retail Apocalypse, tied to Toffler's Third Wave idea, I looked back in time.  At that point, around late 2016, and early 2017, we had seen a string of industries go through phoenix-like, death and rebirth scenarios.  Telecommunication, typing (typewriters to word processing PC's), drafting and graphic design, marketing and advertising, music, publishing, movies, TV and video.  They had all largely made the transition from the old, Industrial Age business model, to a new, Information Age business model.  There would be more change to come, but those industries had moved, by and large, to Information Age models.

That's when I asked myself, "Is there ANY business or institution that will not have to make the transition from the Industrial Age to the Information Age?  I spent months trying to find one.  I couldn't.  I thought about a basic item, something we all use, that was unlikely to change much in design, like a toilet.  I know, it seems like an odd item to focus on.  But in all likelihood, it will pretty much stay the same for many years to come.  But the whole business around it will change.  The design, materials sourcing, manufacturing location, marketing, sales, and distribution will all be transformed by new technology.  A toilet we use today has not changed that much in 80 or 100 years.  It probably won't change much in another 30 to 50 years.  But the whole business of making them and selling them will change.  Even industries like that have to make the transition to an Information Age model.  Later on, I came up with other examples.  A trumpet or guitar today is about the same as one made 50 years ago. They will be pretty much the same 50 years from now.  But the whole business of making and selling them will change to an information age model. 

I finally came to the conclusion that EVERY business, industry, and institution will have to make the transition from an Industrial Age model to an Information Age model, to survive.  The Big Transition is a period of time when this huge process of change will take place.  It will happen in every business,  industry, and institution; like colleges, churches, non-profit organizations, political and organizations.  

A lot of industries and organizations have already made the transition, though there will still be some level of change.  But many parts of our society have not made the full transition yet.  As I write this, the whole banking system is in question.  That's because, while banks use a lot of high technology, the basic, underlying system dates back to the Medici's, around 600 years ago.  The banking system will change, and I don't mean into the globalists/New World Order wet dream of CBDC's and total control.  That will fail, people are already figuring out workarounds to that crazy nonsense. But the banking system will morph into something that actually functions in the Information Age world.  

The college and K-12 education system will morph into something that works in the Information Age world.  Law, voting, government, democracy, money, investing, child care, healthcare, housing, local small businesses, transportation, airlines, labor unions, bars and restaurants, and everything else, they will all make the transition.  These industries and institutions will all go through The Big Transition into a new model.  All of these things, and many more, will see the old versions die off, and new versions, 21st century, functional Information Age versions, emerge.  Or civilization as we know it will collapse.  And we really don't want that.  OK, a few people want that, but not really that many.  

To be completely clear, I'm all for manufacturing anything in America that can, viably, be manufactured here.  I know several people personally who do manufacture products in the U.S..  But the types of factories us older people knew in the 1970's, and before, are not coming back.  They are not viable in today's world.  Look up today's factories online, there are far fewer people in the factories than there were 50 years ago.  We need to find new, good paying, meaningful work for millions of people currently out of work in the U.S., and the millions more who recently have, and soon will, lose their jobs.  But it's not going to happen by trying to go backwards to the Industrial Age of 50 or 80 years ago.  A huge part of The Big Transition is finding the ways for large numbers of people to earn a living, and have have affordable, good housing, that works now, in the century we're actually living in.  

We have small towns, and small and mid sized cities, dying on the vine across the U.S..  Those cities are dying because of who is running them.  It's not that these are bad or corrupt civic leaders (most of the time), it's that they're stuck in a mindset, a business or social model, from the old paradigm, the Industrial Age.  Alvin Toffler referred to this as "obsoledge," obsolete knowledge, something we all have in these rapidly changing times.  The mindset of the leaders is what's holding back many cities across the U.S..  I'm speaking from experience, I got stuck in a few of those towns and cities on the eastern seaboard from 2008 to 2019.  A lot of my thinking that you're reading now comes from not being able to get my own business up and running, while in those towns and cities, because so many people are still mentally anchored to the world they grew up in.  But that world is fading away, and we're trying to build a new one that works for everyone in today's world. 

This is why I was really sure that we were headed for a huge economic downturn about 5 years ago.  So much change HAS to happen, that there's no way a typical 12-18 month recession would be enough to shake out all the unneeded parts of our world, and help new ones rise up.  Things are going to be really crazy for quite a while.  We need lots of new ideas in virtually every part of society.  And then we need to bring the best ideas into action to build actual businesses, organizations, and institutions.  Like it or not, The Tumultuous 2020's is the decade where we get to re-invent most of the world.  That's a lot of work.  

But we have models.  We've seen phones, music, computers, publishing, video and TV, and the retail world, go through this transition.  We can learn from what did and didn't work in those transitions.  Hopefully, we can all dig in to some little piece of our world, and morph it into a version that actually works, for the future.  That's the Big Picture that I see looking forward.  Welcome to the Tumultuous 2020.

I know this all sounds pretty depressing.  Most people today have a really hard time with the idea of tough times ahead.  But that's just where we are.  These tough times, this period of incredible change, is also when the most innovation happens.  This is one of the best times to get new ideas, and new businesses, off the ground.  

Recessions and depressions are when the whole world goes on sale, and almost no one wants to buy

This crazy decade is unnerving to look at, but there will be more opportunities in the 2020's, than in any other time in most of our lives.  That's the upside.  Change creates opportunity.  What needs to happen in your world?  What needs to happen in your town, city, or region?  Get on it.  Get busy.  Make it happen!


I'm doing a lot of my writing on Substack these days, check it out:

Steve Emig The White Bear's Substack



Thursday, July 27, 2023

The Big Transition, The Phoenix Great Depression, and The Tumultuous 2020's... MY Big Picture look at the 2020's

"The worst is yet to come."  My photo of a ripped up Shephard Fairey/Obey street art poster, San Fernando Valley, CA, 2020.

The Big Transition 
The Big Transition is my name for the transition phase out of the fading Industrial Age, and into the emerging Information Age.  This is based on the concept of The Third Wave,* by the late futurist Alvin Toffler, in his 1980 book by that name.  He put the beginning of the transition period in 1956.  That was the first year that "white collar' office workers outnumbered "blue collar" factory workers in the United States.  I believe we are still in this transition phase, between these two ages.  We are no longer in the Industrial Age here in the U.S., but we're also not in the true Information Age yet.  

There is a whole lot in Alvin Toffler's book, The Third Wave, it's about 560 pages of incredibly well researched thinking.  The key point I think people today need to understand is that we are in this really long transition phase in between the Industrial Age, and the Information Age.  We haven't completely left the Industrial Age, despite the fact hundreds of factories closed down over the last 40 years.  Many of our political and business leaders still work from an Industrial Age mentality, and so to many businesses and organizations, large and small.  

In the same way, we are not fully in the Information Age.  Sure, we have the phones, which are actually tiny supercomputers and broadcasting studios, that fit in a pocket.  We have a lot of the technology of the emerging Information Age, But we still have a long way to go in creating a world that functions around that technology.  Our society hasn't even come close to fully assimilating the technology we have already, let alone all the technology still to come.  We haven't shifted our world to fit the kinds of lifestyles that all our technology makes possible.  Instead we have a bunch of authoritarian douchebags trying to get Orwellian and use all this tech against us, the 99.9% of the world who just wants to live our lives, make a decent living, and have a little fun along the way.  The people bent on taking over the world do not understand that we are in The Big Transition.  

When I really started thinking about this idea, which I dubbed The Big Transition in my personal writing, it was probably about 2015-2016.  I asked myself if there was any part of the business or cultural world that would not have to make the transition from an Industrial Age business model to an Information Age business model.  I could not come up with any business, industry, or institution that would NOT have to change.  Heck, even Ohio's Amish Country has a website now (and they get more annual visitors than Cedar Point amusement park, believe it or not).  The Amish people are a very creative, hard working, First Wave, agricultural society.  But their tourist board has a website.  That's our world today.  Farmers and craftspeople, who drive horse and buggies in Ohio, have millions of visitors to their region, while Elon Musk is trying to figure out how to colonize Mars.  We live in "interesting times," no doubt about it.

There is a lot in Toffler's book, The Third Wave, but I believe the basic idea that we are in this Big Transition period between the two ages is the key point to know now, to help people understand the world of the 2020's.  

We are now 67 years into the transition into the Information Age.  I think this transition phase will go on until at least 2035 or 2040, until we're in a fairly functional Information Age.  That's an educated guess, judging by the increasing pace of change.  I believe the 2020's will be the "critical mass" phase of this transition, where the greatest amount of change happens.  It appeared the forces were also setting up for a major recession or depression in the 2020's, as well, which I'll explain below.  So, even several years ago, it appeared to me that a financial downturn would come along, and increase the pressure on businesses and other institutions to evolve to meet the world of the 21st century, or go out of business.  I believe this is why our world seems so chaotic right now, because our whole society is in this massive period of transition, and almost no one thinks of it that way.  Just the simple reframing to, "Oh we're in the big, long, chaotic transition period, the world is supposed to seem crazy," can help make sense of it all.  Having a context where the world makes sense, relieves some stress, at least for me.

Why have I been writing about this recession and this period of change for over five years now?  Because The Big Transition, and this series of recessions, will be life changing for every American, and it will be world changing.  When 2030 dawns, it will be on a world much different than what we know right now. 

My Pinterest board, see the long term transition of advertising, phones, video cameras, personal computers, music devices, malls, and factories, from Industrial Age to Information Age, all in photos.  Go to the very bottom of the Pinterest page and then slowly scroll up.

The Phoenix Great Depression
The Phoenix Great Depression is my name for the long period of economic turbulence that I saw coming in the 2020's.  I first used the term "The Phoenix Recession" in October, 2019, in this blog post.  I had already written about the major recession I saw coming, in August 2019, in this blog post, "The Beginner's Guide to the Next Great Recession," as well as other posts.  I knew no one was ready to hear the word "depression" yet.  At that time, the business media was saying that there might be a minor recession in 2020.  For the reasons I'll explain in the next post, by about 2017 or or 2018, I believed we would head into a very long period of economic turmoil in the 2020's.  It appeared to me that this era of economic turmoil would at least feel like a great depression to most people.  It may or may not actually be termed a great depression years from now, when history of this era is actually written.  It will be quite a while before anyone can make that call.  

I believe The Phoenix Great Depression began with the Repo Market Crisis in September of 2019, and we have had, and will continue to have, a turbulent economic climate, that will last until at least 2027 or 2028.  There will be ups and downs during those years, but it will be continually turbulent and hard to figure out the whole way through.  With all of the change coming, because of  The Big Transition, I think it will be at least that long before we get some kind of economic normalcy again.  

I'm writing this in late July 2023, and I believe the much hyped and anticipated 2023 recession is really the "second recessionary wave" of this depression.  The first wave of the depression was in the spring of 2020.  That recession (technically a depression, with a greater than 10% GDP drop, -32%) was amplified by the Covid-19 pandemic, but it would have happened anyhow.  Because of the $5 to $6 trillion of new money created to bail everyone out of that mess, the depths of the recession, the weeding out of outdated businesses, and bad investments, never fully played out.  

Business, various levels of government, and us individuals, have all been buoyed up by all that new money since, and it has completely warped the financial world.  Now, in 2023, we're paying the price for all that money printing, first with rising asset prices, then all around high inflation, and now with high interest rates to fight the inflation, leading us into a major recession that has probably already begun (as I write this in late July, 2023). 

Chairman Jay Powell at The Fed  said yesterday (7/26/2023) that there won't even be a recession.  That's the latest Fed talking assumption, and now business media P.R. and spin doctoring.  For me, that makes a major recession a sure bet now.  This is the same guy who said inflation was "transitory" for a year.  

I think this "recession," this second recessionary wave of The Phoenix Great Depression, will be the deepest one in the 2020's.   It will make the Great Recession of 2007-2009 look tiny by comparison.  There's much more debt at every level of the system, and the numbers are much bigger in pretty much every category you look at.  In addition, much of the world is in, or heading towards, a recession, even China.  

This is a worldwide economic downturn.  This second recession has been completely hyped up, for about a year now, partly because there are so many voices now talking about business, investing, and the economy.  We didn't have YouTube, Twitter, and other social media, at any significant level, in 2008.  Now everyone can give their opinion.  A huge lesson of this decade will be for individuals to figure out who to trust, and who not to, with so much information, misinformation, and disinformation enveloping us.  Trusting the wrong people will cost millions of people their cars and trucks, their retirement savings, possibly their homes, and much more, in the years ahead.  

I also believe we will see another, smaller recession, around 2027-2028.  The Great Depression of the 1930's was actually three recessions, back to back to back, if you look at the stock index or the GDP charts.  I think the 2020's will play out in a similar way economically, except with far more technology and social chaos involved this time around.  When I first wrote these ideas down, mostly in 2019-2020, this great depression idea seemed ridiculous.  It seems a lot less ridiculous now, but there's still a lot to play out.

The "phoenix" part of the The Phoenix Great Depression refers to the mythical creature, not the city in Arizona.  It appears to me that this major economic chaos will force dozens of whole industries and institutions to switch to new business or organizational models, or die off. And this is in spite of huge bailouts that have been propping up many zombie corporations for 14 years now.  

All of the businesses and institutions, like our political parties and system (in crisis now), our banking system (in crisis now), our college and K-12 education system (crisis just beginning), and plenty of other industries, will have to make the transition to a 21st century, Information Age model.  This decade will be a "death and rebirth" period for huge parts of our society.  That is a very messy, chaotic, and often painful process.  So The Phoenix Great Depression is an extended period of economic turbulence that will force death and rebirth levels of change on many parts of society that haven't made the transition from the old, Industrial Age models, into new Information Age models of operation.  

The Tumultuous 2020's 
The Tumultuous 2020's is the name I gave to this whole decade, when I was writing my 20 chapter "book/blog thing" Welcome to Dystopia: The Future is Now.  That online project began when I woke up about 4 am one morning, in a parking lot in Studio City, California, where I slept as a homeless man.  At the time, I had a whole bunch of disjointed ideas in my head about the future, and where society was headed, particularly in the decade of the 2020's.  

"Dystopia" was my way of writing those ideas out, and trying to organize and make sense of them.  I woke that morning with the initial idea to watch the trailers from the best dystopian future movies of the 1960's, 1970's, and 1980's.  I wanted to see the different visions of the future those writers and directors had, and compare those predicted futures with the real world of 2019.  What did they get right?  What did they get wrong?  I would begin there, see what that taught me, and then start writing out my thoughts of where we were actually heading in the 2020's. 

It turned out that the 1962-63 TV cartoon, The Jetsons, predicted more actual real world technology today (personal computers, Facetime telescreen communication, smart watches which were much like cell phones, dog treadmills, filters on social media, personal "drone" vehicles, etc.) than any of the TV shows or movies of the mid 20th century.  I also found out that the classic 1982 movie Blade Runner was actually set in Los Angeles in November of 2019, exactly where and when I was starting this project. That was a weird coincidence, or bit of synchronicity, depending on at how you look at it. 

I began writing the rough ideas of "Dystopia" in late October of 2019.  I built the blog on December 21, 2019, and filled in the chapters, one by one, between then and early June, 2020.  So I began the project before Covid-19 was even on the radar, and wrote into the early stages of the pandemic lockdowns.  The 2020's, from my perspective then, looked like they would be a really crazy decade , with a major recession or great depression, the continuing massive change of The Big Transition, and with a level of change beyond any decade in memory.  I dubbed them The Tumultuous 2020's in the subtitle to the "Dystopia" book/blog.  When the pandemic hit U.S. shores in 2020, things quickly got a lot crazier than even I was expecting, and it's been a wild ride since, as we all know.  Unfortunately, I see a lot more change to come.  If nothing else, I got the "tumultuous" part right.  We'll see about the rest.  

The Big Transition, The Phoenix Great Depression, and The Tumultuous 2020's are my names for different aspects of what I see happening in this decade.  It will include multiple recessions or a great depression, in the economic world.  We will see many businesses, industries, and institutions going through a death and rebirth phase, some coming out in a functional, Information Age model, and others dying off entirely.  

All of this will cause much more chaos than we've seen already.  I don't see full on doom and gloom, or an apocalyptic future, like some of the far out religious people do.  I see a really chaotic period, as we figure out how to build a society that fits the technology and social norms that are now part of our world.  Then things will calm down, eventually.  I also see this chaotic period as a time of great opportunities to make new ideas happen, whether creative, businesses, or socially.  

So that's my take on the next several years.  A little depressing at first, but also an era of incredible opportunities to get new ideas off the ground.  Let's make some cool stuff happen!

How did I come to the very unusual conclusions above?  Find out in this blog post below:

*not a paid link.

I'm doing a lot of my writing on Substack these days, check it out:

 

Real Estate: Nick Gerli- the best voice I've heard on real estate


In this video, Adam Taggart of the Wealthion YouTube channel interviews Nick Gerli of Reventure Consulting.  The Wealthion YouTube channel puts out interviews every day, with a wide variety of people on business, money, economics, and investing.  Nick Gerli has his own YouTube channel, Reventure Consulting, where he puts out longer videos up once or twice a week, and YouTube shorts several times a week.  He has also developed the Reventure App real estate app/website where you can look up stats and trends about residential real estate for every part of the U.S.  The Reventure App is still free to use, as I write this. 

I first found Nick Gerli's YouTube channel in the summer of 2022, when I went looking for good info about real estate, as interest rates were starting to rise.  While I was expecting an eventual crash in real estate, Nick was making some claims that seemed pretty far out, even to me.  But as time went on, and I watched more of his content, I realized the Nick really knows his shit.  He's looking at the data, the actual data of what is happening in real estate nationwide.  

He also amazes me for his historic knowledge or real estate.  I'm an old Gen X guy, now 57 years old, I remember the 6-7 year real estate recession here in Southern California in the 1990's, that followed the 80's boom.  Nick's a young guy, but he's done an amazing amount of research at some point, and really looks at today's crazy market from a solid, historical perspective.  

In addition, this past winter, Nick stopped putting out content for a few months.  He did that partly because he was building his app.  But he also traveled much of the U.S. to get a solid, "boots on the ground" look at what is happening in regional and local areas, firsthand.  Nick is on top of the national real estate picture like no one else these days.  

On the other side of this interview, Adam Taggart talks daily to some of the best minds in business, investing, and economics, and has a great knowledge of the crazy dynamics of  the financial world in 2023.  Because of this body of knowledge, Adam does great interviews with these people, in this case, with Nick.  

This interview took place in mid-July 2023.  If you're trying to get a grasp on where the U.S. real estate market is in the summer of 2023, this interview is the best place to start.  


I'm doing a lot of my writing on Substack these days, check it out:

Inflation: Lyn Alden- the best voice on inflation today


In the crazy world of 2023 financial markets, this Blockworks Macro's "On the Margin" show interview with Lyn Alden is the best look at inflation I've heard.  Blockworks Macro has a YouTube channel where three guys interview all kinds of people on economics, investing, and crypto.  Lyn Alden is a researcher of economic and investment data, and you can find her work, and read some free articles, at lynalden.com .

This interview starts with Lyn explaining that the inflation problem now, in the 2020's, is more comparable to the inflation of the 1940's, rather than the 1970's.  The interview moves on from there.  If you want to understand the whole concept of inflation better, this is a great video/podcast to watch or listen to. 


I'm doing a lot of my writing on Substack these days, check it out:

Tuesday, July 25, 2023

Another one bites the dust... Pac West bank to merge with Banc of California

The 4th U.S. bank collapse of 2023 is happening, and is getting almost no press in the business media.  Hmmmmmmmm... 

This Yahoo Finance article today (7/25/2023) reports that the struggling Orange County (CA) bank, PacWest is close to completing a merger deal with L.A. based Banc of California.  This is the first U.S. bank to go out of business since the banking crisis in March, 2023.  

Here's a New York Times article on the collapse of PacWest and merger to Banc of California.


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Steve Emig The White Bear's Substack

What is a "spatial fix?" And why is it important today?


Here's a Bloomberg news segment from about a month ago (June 2023) talking about the crisis in commercial real estate happening now in the U.S.. 

Here's the basics of the commercial real estate crisis.  Interest rates have risen dramatically over the last year and a half, as The Fed hiked their base rate higher to combat inflation.  A lot of large commercial buildings, from smaller complexes to office skyscrapers, have loans that need to be rolled over (refianced) every few years.  Some of those loans have variable interest rates.  For those loans, when interest rates go up, and the loan gets refinanced, the landlord's payments go up, like an ARM loan for a home.  

According to this clip above, about $1.4 trillion worth of commercial real estate loans in the U.S. need to be refinanced in the next couple of years.  But the higher interest rates mean the payments on those loans will double or triple when they refinance.  When you're talking buildings worth tens of millions, or hundreds of millions of dollars, that a HUGE rise in costs for the landlords.  

This is coming at a time when a lot less people are working in many of those offices, due in large part to the work-at-home trend.  So those same landlords are taking in much less rent than they were pre-pandemic.  Several major commercial landlords, like Blackstone and Brookfield, are literally letting some of these buildings go into default.  They're walking away and tossing the keys to the banks who hold the loans, much like homeowners with upside down mortgages did back in 2008-2009.  Most of those huge buildings have non-recourse loans, so the landlords can walk away, and the banks can't go after the company's other assets to get their money back.  

Now many of these huge properties are worth 30% to 80% less than they were a few years ago, because of the lower occupancy rates, and the much higher loan payments.  This is a huge problem for the small and mid sized regional banks, because they hold most of these loans.  In addition, city governments get a huge amount of their income from taxes on these large buildings.  Another big issue is that the people who used to work in these buildings used to support many smaller businesses around those buildings.  This means that there are several different major problems happening at once, that are all tied to these offices, and other commercial real estate buildings.  

This brings us to the concept of a "spatial fix."  A spatial fix is when there a change in business in a region, or a whole country, and one business, or one type of real estate, or one whole region, is no longer useful or viable.  I first heard this term in a talk by economic development expert Richard Florida, in his book The Great Reset.  I believe the general idea goes back to Joseph Schumpeter and his ideas about "Creative Destruction" in capitalism.

In any case, here's a very simple example.  Shopping malls.  I was born outside Akron, Ohio in 1966.  In 1975, within a few miles of where I was born, a shopping mall was built.  It was called Rolling Acres Mall.  Although we moved away from the area when I was about three, my grandparents lived in the area, and as a kid we visited all the malls around there at one time or another.  When I was a kid, in the 1970's malls were thriving, families bought clothes, appliances, tools, lawnmowers, shoes, and even furniture, in the major department stores in the malls of the area.  Rolling Acres Mall was one of the malls my family visited, at least a few times, when I was a kid.  

In the late 1970's, factories began to shut down, industrial jobs were outsourced or taken over by industrial robots, and well paid workers got laid off.  As time went on, thousands of people moved away from industrial cities, like Akron, Ohio.  Akron had over 290.000 people living there in 1960, a few years before I was born.  In 2021, Akron had a population of just over 189,000 people.  The big city closest to where I was born has lost 100,000 people in 61 years.  This is a photo taken inside Rolling Acres Mall about 2014.  
Rolling Acres Mall, abandoned, around 2014.  


This photo, and a few others like it, made Rolling Acres Mall, the poster child mall for the Retail Apocalypse.  We all know of malls that are struggling, and most of you reading this have probably heard about dead malls.  There's even a dead mall website.  

Back to where we started, a spatial fix is the geographical change that happens when major trends make some kind of building or infrastructure no longer viable.  People move from where the jobs used to be, to where the jobs are.  Then those new places need new houses, new types of infrastructure.  Those changes across geography are the spatial fix caused by major changes in society.  

Shopping malls made a lot of sense in  thriving, post World War II, Industrial Age America.  Malls thrived in a mass market, mass media world with lots of well paid, middle class factory workers.  Rolling Acres Mall made sense when the big tire companies, Goodyear, Goodrich, Firestone, and other major manufacturing businesses, employed tens of thousands of people in Akron.  Other malls across the U.S., particularly in mid-sized cities, had the same problems as factories moved overseas, and our Industrial Age society began to morph into an Information Age society.  As the factories closed down, malls, and many other businesses in those towns, also began to die off.  

Where did the people go?  Did they move to smaller towns?  No.  Over half of all U.S. counties lost population between 2010 and 2020.   Those people who moved out of the old, Industrial Age cities moved to bigger cities, by and large.  Some of our biggest cities are now turning into Mega Regions.  
  
I believe this is because of our shift from the old, Industrial Age business models, to the emerging Information Age business models.  I think we're in a long transition period between these two types of society, a concept first explained in the 1980 book The Third Wave, by the late futurist Alvin Toffler.  Whatever the reason, we now have thousands of empty factories, empty storefronts, vacant or much less busy shopping malls and shopping centers, and now we are beginning to see a huge decline in older office buildings, and even many huge skyscrapers in big cities.  There are thousands of struggling or already abandoned buildings across this country.

The business and social changes that have happened over the last several decades have led to several types of business real estate, and also thousands of houses and apartments, in formerly booming cities (Detroit & Flint, Michigan, and Gary, Indiana, for example), that are no longer useful for their original purposes.  We are in the middle of a HUGE, and decades long, spatial fix, away from the types of properties, and locations, that no longer make sense in today's world.  We need, as a country and a society, to build the types of homes, apartments, business buildings, and infrastructure that make sense for the world we are moving into.  In my understanding, the "spatial fix" is this transition from the types of buildings, and locations, that used to make sense, into the ones that make sense going forward.  

This is also a part of the huge rise in homelessness, people living in vans and RV's, thousands living as wandering nomads, working odd jobs like for Amazon's Camperforce.  This is why hundreds of small towns are dying on the vine and turning into ghost towns.  There's an increased concentration of people in about a dozen huge metros, mostly tech hub regions, where the new technology work and businesses are clustered.  

This short blog post is a very small look into a huge issue in today's world, but a very important subject that almost no one is talking about.  As we mover deeper into the hyper-connected, digitally driven, Information Age world, we need to figure out how and where to build affordable housing, upscale housing, and what types of business, education, and public facilities and infrastructure we really need, and where those need to be.  

So this was my quick look into the spatial fix idea, and why I believe it is critically important in the U.S., and other countries, going forward.


I'm doing a lot of my writing on Substack these days, check it out:





Sunday, July 23, 2023

McDonald's Grimace Birthday/purple shake promotion... the "stupid" marketing idea that turned out to be brilliant... thanks to Gen Z


Here's a compilation of several of the TikTok videos made by influencers about the purple Grimace milkshake, part of the "Happy Birthday Grimace" meal promotion.  

I'm a currently homeless, middle-aged, Generation X blogger and artist.  I spend waaaaay too much time at McDonald's. Why?  Cheap (though 60% more than a year ago) iced tea, and wifi.  There are several McDonald's in my general area, and I often do some of my blogging or drawing in them.  They are a good place to chill and work.  I'm not really a Starbucks kind of guy, I'd rather be able to get refills and do my work at McDonald's.  Also, I don't drink coffee, so I rarely go to Starbucks.  

In the beginning of June, I saw these new promotion posters go up at Mickey D's, with picture of a meal, and Happy Birthday Grimace! in big letters.  Since I was a 1970's kid, I remember Grimace as the least creepy of the weird, guy-in-a-suit characters, in McDonald's commercials from my childhood.  Like this one.  Over the years, McDonald's moved on, and other than Ronald McDonald himself, the weird 1970's characters, thankfully, disappeared from the commercials.  

So with my cynical Gen X point of view, I saw the Happy Birthday Grimace promotion poster, which didn't even have a picture of Grimace, and thought, "That's the fucking stupidest marketing campaign ever."  I did think about trying the purple shake out of curiosity, but never did.  

As the month went on, I was sitting in a McDonald's working one night, and a high school girl walked by me, right to the Grimace poster.  She shot a photo of it on her phone, and proceeded to share it on social media.  I couldn't help myself,  "You don't even know who Grimace is," I said, "He's from back when I was a kid, and I'm old."  She said, "Sure I do," he's the big purple guy."  She walked back to her friends.  I was confused.  I later heard moms telling small kids, "Grimace is kind of like Barney."  One dad told his kid that if you drank the Grimace shake by itself, it tasted like vanilla, bug if you ate French fries first, then it tasted more fruity.  

A couple days later, 4 or 5 teenage boys came into McDonald's, and again I was working, on a blog post, I think.  They all got Grimace meals, and started talking about how they should make a video trying the Grimace milkshake.  Again, I was confused.  They looked like upscale, pretty intelligent young guys.  And they sat there for ten minutes or so, eating the Grimace birthday meal, and talking about making a video about the Grimace shake.  What the fuck is going on? I asked myself.  

So I finally looked up "Grimace milkshake" on YouTube (I don't use TikTok).  All these crazy videos, including a couple of the ones above, popped up.  And several of them had millions, even tens of millions, of views. 

Then I began wondering who the genius was who paid Gen Z influencers to make TikTok videos about drinking the Grimace shake and dying, turning into a zombie, or exploding. McDonald's marketers pulled a weird old character out of the dust bin of Mickey D's history, and I thought they apparently paid a handful of well known influencers on TikTok and elsewhere, to make crazy videos about drinking the Grimace purple shake, which spawned lots of wannabe influencers, and just random Gen Z people, to make their own videos.  This goofy appearing marketing campaign knocked it out of the park with Gen Z people.  And they bought the meal and the purple milkshake.  I wondered if Gary Vanerchuk's VaynerMedia team was behind the campaign.  But they weren't.  

According to this article from Restaurant Business, McDonald's DID NOT plan the massive social media campaign, which ultimate clocked tens of millions, maybe hundreds of millions, of impressions and mentions, across social media platforms, largely on TikTok.  TikTokkers just made their own funny, usually horror-esque videos, and the thing went viral.  So there was no marketing genius behind this campaign that pulled in a lot of sales for McDonald's.  It apparently, was a truly organic thing, funny videos going viral on their own.  

So now we can probably expect a whole bunch of companies to try and replicate this crazy campaign, and probably fail, for the most part.  As a Gen X guy, now I'm wondering what will happen when Gen Z TikTok influencers find this old commercial from about 1976.  The damn Nippersinkers song is still in my head from about 47 years ago.  It actually pops in my head on rainy days. I even start singing it sometimes, I'm not kidding.  We had a lot of Nippersinker days last winter, here in Southern California.   


July 27, 2023- The Grimace HBD meal hype created by Gen Z's TikTok fun with the Grimace purple milkshakes actually did boost McDonald's sales for the quarter.  CNBC article, 7/27/203-


How McDonald's makes its money... a different model than most fast food joints.


I'm doing a lot of my writing on Substack these days, check it out:

Saturday, July 22, 2023

Is there a bubble in luxury goods? Are high end flippers in trouble?


This video is way outside my sphere of knowledge, and I've never heard of Patrick Boyle before.  This video popped up on my YouTube feed, and I watched it, since economic bubbles, in any area, are something I am interested in.  If you have any business interest in high end anything, check this video out. 


"Americans with a household income of less than $50,000 make up about 27% of regular luxury goods consumers, according to global data."- Patrick Boyle, 5:57 in the clip above

That line blew my mind.  This takes the Hood Rich and Instagram Flex ideas to a whole different level.  My research has me believing we're on the verge of a major economic downturn, and hearing that Millennials and Gen Z kids are actively "investing" in Louis Vuitton bags, Rolex watches, and many other luxury brand goods, gives me the impression there's a lot of potential downside in these areas, as the economy continues to slow down. Watch the video for a lot more solid info and insight into today's luxury goods markets.  


I'm doing  a lot of my writing on Substack these days, check it out:

Tuesday, July 18, 2023

Make money as a E-scooter wrangler


Here's the guy from Financial Wolf channel looking into, and trying, the side hustle/business of being a scooter wrangler.  With some tips from the pros, him and  a friend actually made money one night, even though they rented a U-Haul to pick up and distribute the scooters.  This was about a year ago, the job has changed somewhat since then.  

Since coming up to L.A. in 2019, I've seen the urban e-scooters all over the place.  There was Lime, Bird, Uber, and I think a couple of other scooters, for a while.  You needed a different app for each one.  Now it's down to Lime and Bird scooters in my area.  Some places, like Hollywood and downtown L.A., there are lots of them, and in some places there are only a few scooters visible, and they're more spread out.  As a guy on the streets, literally, I started seeing weird trucks coming around and picking up the scooters.  I've never talked to these guys, but I figured out they're the guys who take the scooters to be charged, and then put them back out somewhere else.  I saw one of these guys dropping off scooters in my area of the San Fernando Valley, just last night, which reminded me to look this up as a side hustle/gig job for this new blog.  

These days the scooters have replaceable batteries.  I also just learned these guys are called "juicers," who charge scooters.  So the jobs now for the juicers are to either pick up scooters and move them to different locations, and to pick up batteries at a warehouse, take them out to scooters with low batteries, and to switch out the batteries.  There are also scooters that need repairs, at times.  As the guys in the video above found out, this is physical work, scooters are heavy, and you need to pick them up, put them in a truck, and unload them later.  You also need a truck.  I've seen guys doing this job with old school Toyota and Nissan mini trucks (small pick-ups), I've seen one guy in a former tourist van with cut-out sides, and also larger pick-ups.  Juicers get paid per task they complete, somewhere around $3-$7, according to these videos.  

For those of you in smaller towns, are not familiar with these, here's the deal.  A few companies came up with battery powered, electric scooters, for people to use to get around urban areas.  To ride a scooter, people have to sign up for the phone app for that company, and put some money in their account.  Uber account holders can pay for a Lime scooter with Uber or Lime.  People scan on the handle bars of the scooter itself, to turn it on.  Then they can ride around, wherever they need to go, and leave the scooter when they're done.  There was a lot of uproar from cities about these scooters at first, but I see all kinds of people riding them now.  They have become really popular to get around urban areas these days.

Who needs this service?  Lime and Bird are the main companies at this point, at least here in L.A..  There may be other companies in other regions.  The videos I see on this gig range from about 4 years ago to about a year ago.  

Here's one more video below, the newest video I've seen.  This guy became a "logistics partner" for Lime, which included getting a business license, insurance, and all needed requirements.  This video below is a much more in in depth, a more long term look at this gig.  He's working out of Columbus, Ohio:  


So... these E-scooter companies need juicers, who pick-up, charge or swap batteries, distribute, and sometimes repair scooters, on a day by day basis.  They need people to do tasks every day, seven days a week.  So there's the basics.  

If this appeals to you, watch these videos, talk to local juicers in your area, if you can, and see what the business is like in your city.  Do the research, and see if this makes sense in your area.


Monday, July 17, 2023

What sets this coming recession apart from other recessions

OK, anything to share the "stealing the shipment" scene from Tank Girl (featuring "Disconnected" by Face to Face, the best song of the 90's).  Basically, there's a cliff at the end of the road, and we don't know if she can stop the truck in time.  That's where this clip ties into our current economy.  Did The Fed wait too long to "hit the brakes" and slow down inflation?  Will things slow down but not crash?  Will we go off the cliff?  "Yes" and "no" and "not sure" are my thoughts to those questions, but we don't know for sure... yet.  Anyhow, here are several things that set this coming recession apart from previous ones.

Disclaimer

Economic recessions happen.  Period.  On average, over the life of the United States of America, we've had a recession or depression every 4 to 7 years.  I was born in 1966, making me an older member of Generation X.  Since Gen Xer's like me were born, we have had recessions that started in 1969, 1973, 1980, 1981, 1990, 2001, 2007, and 2020.  That's just fact.  At any given time, it is certain that there will be a "next recession," it's just a question of when, and how gnarly it will be.   

There's a ton of TALK about a recession coming in the second half of 2023.  This talk has been going on for over a year now.  Many people are sick of hearing about it.  Personally, I think we're heading into a major recession, one that will be more intense that the Great Recession of 2007-2009.  That's my opinion.  But there are people now saying there will be no recession, that we'll have a "soft landing," and there are people saying we are heading into a worldwide depression.  And everything in between.  This has often been called "the most anticipated recession in history."  And whether we have a recession is still up for argument.  

Going on my assumption that there is an economic recession coming, here are several of the things that set this coming 2023 or 2024 recession apart from previous ones.  

(One) There is more debt, at every level, than at any time in human history.  When the economy slows down, people, businesses, and governments have more trouble paying their bills.  When a person or institution can't pay their bills, then whomever they pay that money to, also has trouble paying their bills, and the problem spreads.  Here's the U.S. Debt Clock, to get an idea of debt levels in different areas.  

(Two) We are at the end of a really extended business cycle.  Instead of 4 to 7 years since the last TRUE recession, it's been 14 years since the official end to the Great Recession in 2007-2009.  Yes, we had a recession due to the Covid-19 pandemic in 2020 (technically a depression), but so much new money was created and added to the economy, that the 2020 recession was stopped in its tracks, and we all became "Stimulus Ballers"* for a while, spending stimulus, PUA, and PPP checks like on lots of stupid stuff.  So that recession didn't play out like a normal recession would have, and in my opinion, the business cycle kept on going.

(Three) The Fed (the Federal Reserve) has been raising interest rates going into this recession, and usually they lower interest rates when the economy begins to slow down.  In their attempt to fight inflation (that they largely caused by creating too much money in 2020-2021) The Fed has raised the "overnight" interest rate it charges banks faster than at any time in modern history.  They raised the interest rate 10 times since April of 2022, and a total of 5% points.  This interest rate for banks causes them, and other non-bank businesses (mortgage loan, car loan, credit card companies, etc) to raise their interest rates as well.  This makes it much hard for everyone, average people, banks, businesses, and local, state, and federal governments, to pay their loan payments.  Everything on credit costs more, and that just blows, as you all know.

(Four) We have a split, or bifurcated economy, two largely separate economies.  There is the everyday "Main Street" or "real world" economy, where businesses create products and services, pay their employees, and people get paychecks or income from a small business, and we all buy things as consumers.  But there is also a HUGE financial economy, where money shifts back and forth between huge investment banks, private equity firms, major corporations, and super wealthy individuals that invest, and move money into and out of all of their investments.  This economy may be as much as 6 or 7 times the size of the real world economy.  So everyday people could be (and in many cases already are) struggling, and yet the stock market could be (and currently is) going up, and Lamborghini, for example, has a two year waiting list for $200,000 to $500,000 cars.  This trend has been going on for decades, but the two economies really split after the Great Recession. 

(Five) This is a worldwide economic downturn, much of Europe is already in recession, and many other places, even China, are slowing as well.  In previous eras, when one country or region went into recession, there were other places doing well.  This is a global slowdown.  Even the super rich people don't know where to put their money these days.

(Six) Here in the U.S. we have a widely polarized, "us versus them" political climate, as we all know.  This means that if a major congressional action is needed to help the economic situation, the two parties will fight, and not agree on anything, for the most part.  This is why I don't think we will see stimulus money going to individual people again, like in 2020.  The banks and major corporations will get bailed out (and already are in some cases), but not us average humans.  There's also a huge populist sentiment in the U.S., both on the Left and the Right, many people that are sick of mainstream politicians altogether.  That could come into play at some point in this recession.  

(Seven) We have a serious and ongoing banking crisis.  Not only did three banks fail earlier this year, but The Fed's own report says 722 other banks are technically insolvent, and could potentially go bankrupt.  That's not good.  So the banking crisis will rise up again, and it's almost certain that more banks will fail if things get much worse.  On the bright side, there are over 4,000 banks in the U.S, so less than a 1/4 of them are in really bad shape.  

(Eight) There is more student loan debt than ever ($1.81 trillion, or $1,810,000,000,000) and those payments are set to start getting paid again in September.  I think it's safe to say that MOST of the 45 million people with student loans can't really. comfortably, afford to start making those extra payments.  And that's now, before the likely recession.  Just for the record, back in 2019, a year before the pandemic, about 37%-38% of student loans were not being paid on time.  The Nerd Wallet page with that info has been updated to current info, but I read that page myself three years ago.  

(Nine) We are in what I believe is the critical mass stage of  The Big Transition.  This is my name for the multi-decade long transition phase between the fading Industrial Age society, and the emerging Information Age society.  This is based on The Third Wave concept, first described by the late futurist Alvin Toffler in his 1980 book by that name.  So, for example, the "Retail Apocalypse" is the transition from the Industrial Age goods distribution system, to the growing Information Age goods distribution system, which is made up of Amazon, eBay, thousands of other online stores of all sizes, and lots of shipping to our homes.  This also explains the many half full office buildings and the commercial real estate collapse, as we transition to a model with many more work-at-home workers.  Basically, every business and institution (including the faltering banking system), need to move from and Industrial Age model to a functional Information Age model.  I've written a LOT on this idea, and I think this is the underlying trend that explains much of the craziness in our current world.  There's a lot more change that needs to happen, and recessions accelerate the death of the old, and the rise of the new.  

(Ten) The commercial real estate crash in malls, many office buildings, retail storefronts, and other areas I mentioned above, will be a huge factor in this recession, much more than in previous recessions.  Billions of dollars in commercial real estate loans are coming due in the next couple of years, and those now marginal loans are held mostly by smaller, regional banks, which are already having a tough time.  

(Eleven) The residential real estate collapse has many new factors.  There are/were many large, corporate residential homeowners, like Blackstone and the high tech iBuyers, who have been selling houses at a loss for months now.   There are millions of Airbnb and Verbo rental houses sitting empty right now, rentals have dropped big time, so many of those may be up for sale in coming months or years.  The residential real estate crash is much more region focused, with the West coast tech hub cities (San Francisco Bay Area, L.A.,  Seattle, and Austin), pandemic boom cities (Boise, Nashville, Denver, Salt Lake City, etc.), and the wildly swinging markets of Phoenix and and Las Vegas heading down first.  Florida, other Texas cities, and hot southern regions like Atlanta, Charlotte, and Raleigh/Durham/Cary will follow in time.  Much of New England and the Midwest didn't go up in price much in the last decade, and will probably not see big declines.  Check this video for much more up-to-date info (as of July 2023)

(Twelve) Businesses and major brands have TONS of extra inventory that they can't sell, going into this recession.  As most of us know, this is due to the crazy pandemic era.  Manufacturers/brands couldn't get enough inventory, do to supply chain issues, after people started buying a lot, fueled by stimmy checks.  Then many businesses over-ordered when they finally could get products, and by then, people were running out of money.  So a lot of businesses are sitting on tons of extra inventory they can't sell right now.  Big discounts coming soon!

(Thirteen) This is the first major recession with widespread internet, YouTube, and social media usage.  So EVERYONE can talk about the recession (or lack of one).  There's a lot more voices on the current state of the economy, and much more conflicting info than in any recession ever before.  There's tons of good information, and tons of misinformation and disinformation, and even the savviest investors are having trouble figuring out who to listen to.  I geek out on this kind of stuff, and that's  why I'm adding my thoughts to the mix, since I've been blogging about this recession for over 4 years now, believing it will be a time of major change in our lives, and in the world, because of The Big Transition idea I listed above.  

These are most, but not all, of the things that will set the suspected 2023 recession apart from other recessions in the past.  


* I stole the term "Stimulus Ballers" from Lucky Lopez, check out his car/truck industry YouTube channel.  

Saturday, July 15, 2023

Make money hunting for and selling crystals


What do you think about crystals?  For thousands of years, there have been people who have ascribed all kinds of powers to crystals.  While the healing, calming, or spiritual effects of crystals can be argued forever, they are really cool looking and interesting rocks, either way.  Lots of people like them, some people swear by them, and there's a market for them, which means there are people who make money for finding crystals of all sizes and kinds.  

I live in the San Fernando Valley these days, just north of Los Angeles.  I know of three New Age stores that sell crystals, lots of crystals, within a couple miles of where I'm sitting right now.  If crystals are of interest to you, this is another world where there are several ways to make money.  You can go out, stake a claim, and dig up and collect the crystals, or you could buy them wholesale and sell them to retail crystal buyers online, or in a brick and mortar store. If this idea appeals you, check out these videos as a starter, and do the research to find a niche in the market that works for you.  



Check out my writing on Substack...

Here's a clip of Joe Rogan interviewing Chris Best, one of the two founders of Substack .  Substack is a platform for writers to write t...