Podcast notes – Edward Chancellor (The Price of Time) on Investor’s Podcast: “Could say today we’re in early stages of a debt jubilee”

Guest: Edward Chancellor – Author of The Price of Time

Even the Bible mentions interest rates and the debt jubilee
Debt jubilee = official forgiveness of debt by the ruler
Common when new ruler took power
Why debt jubilee? Because interest rates compound, led to debt bondage / labor slavery

Modern debt jubilee occurs through inflation (financial repression, where inflation > interest rates)
Could say today we’re in early stages of a debt jubilee

Iceland 2008 financial crisis – borrowed reckless during global credit boom
Much of debt was wasted on poor investments
After 2008 crisis, government put banks into receivership and defaulted on foreign debt
Default is another form of debt jubilee

Seneca the Younger
Advocates stoicism, but also tutor to Nero, earned a great fortune, gave lavish parties – many contradictions
“Time is man’s most precious possession”
Interest = price of time

This notion was revived in Renaissance Italy
How people began to justify interest rates

Time value linked to human’s natural impatience – we prefer having things sooner rather than later
eg, a factory – the earlier and faster you produce things, the more valuable
Should be incentive to use time wisely
Demurrage – medieval ships were charged if they took too long to unload their goods

Efficient economies are driven by a charge on time
If we didn’t have that charge, people would be slower, less efficient

Interest rates are linked to time preference
When young, internal interest rate is higher, more keen to borrow, more impatient, and vice-versa when older

John Law
“Is this guy for real?”
Son of Edinburgh goldsmith (back then, goldsmiths were a form of proto bank)
Law inherits some money
Becomes a dandy / fop in London
Loses fortune gambling
Duels with another dandy, Law kills him
Law arrested, escaped jail, flees to continental Europe
Toured Europe for 20 years
Ends up in Paris
Improved at gambling, very good at probabilities
Develops interest in economics
Proposes a land bank – lend money against land
Argues money (gold or silver) was just a yardstick of value
First “monetarist” economist – can replace gold or silver with paper currency
This will bring rates down, can print more money
This will bring economic prosperity
Starts a private bank in France
Takes over a French trading company, acquires French mint, tobacco monopoly, owned Louisiana Purchase land rights – extensive holding company
Turns private bank into a central bank (the Bank Royale)
He goes broke because he issues paper currency and withdraws gold and silver from circulation
Results in massive increase in money supply
Rates drop from 8% to 2%
His final act – takes over entire French national debt – converts all bondholders credit into his company’s shares (the Mississippi company) – like a QE operation
There’s an extraordinary speculative boom – enormous fortunes are made – the word “millionaire” enters the lexicon
John Law becomes the richest person ever
Considered a great statesman
Then it all falls to pieces – general inflation rises, people sell his company’s shares
Company goes bankrupt, he has to flee, leaving behind his family
Wound up in Venice 8-9 years later, went back to gambling
“A brilliant eventful life”
Too ambitious, moved too quickly, but didn’t have eye for details
His motivation was to bring down interest rates – thus provided framework for modern central banking – was 250 years ahead of his time
Modern lawmakers don’t seem to notice that Law’s experiment ended in resounding failure

Louis 14 – sun king
Huge debt due to wars with Britain, Holland
French debt = 100% of GDP

Modern fiat system is inherently inflationary

“2% tipping point”
Walter Bagehot – Economist editor
Noted that speculative manias coincided with periods of low rates
Current research indicates 3% seems to be threshold

Interest = price of anxiety or price of risk

Policymakers think you can lower rates as lever, but you’re playing with price of risk, and you won’t know where the risk is building
Also encourages misallocation of capital

Concept of “Natural rate of interest”
One definition: “Return on capital of an economy without money”
Observe asset price inflation, credit booms – as indicators whether policy rate is too high or low

Hadley – interest rates encourage natural selection
The higher the hurdle rate, the fewer that survive
Schumpeter – creative destruction – natural process of economic sclerosis, need this destruction to maintain a healthy growing economy

Low rates create low productivity, creates negative feedback loop

Academic economists have too abstract a view of economy, without looking at observed reality

An Assyrian clay tablet dating to around 2800 B.C. bears the inscription: “Our Earth is degenerate in these later days; there are signs that the world is speedily coming to an end; bribery and corruption are common; children no longer obey their parents; every man wants to write a book and the end of the world is evidently approaching.”
// almost certainly an apocryphal quote, but included in book anyway

Final realizations —
Realized how central interest rate was to all of human life, puts price on time, and especially to the capitalist system
If you don’t apply a discount rate to income / cash flow, you can’t price something accurately
“We’ve lost sight of this most important economic variable”
Jim Grant: interest is the universal price
Because we’ve lost sight of it, we’ve gone down a pretty bad route as a result

Current favorite podcasts: ScriptNotes, Iced Coffee Hour, My First Million, Bitcoin Layer, and more

Below are some podcasts that I’m really enjoying at the moment…

Here’s a page with my older podcast recommendations

And here’s a running list of podcast notes I’ve taken. The most recent is an Ezra Klein interview of Leah Garces about factory farming and meat production

The Bitcoin Layer – a new-ish addition, I’m a regular reader of Nik’s newsletter, and the podcast offers a low-frills analysis of macro and specifically the US bond market, interest rates, and the Fed; he also tends to invite guests who are slightly less featured than the usual podcast-guest-circuit (eg, the Rogan-Friedman-Huberman axis, or the Ferriss-Rose-Vaynerchuk axis)

Scriptnotes – a long-time sub; swings back and forth between industry insider gossip and screenwriting 101; invites great guests (eg, recent episode with The Daniels)

Iced Coffee Hour – surprised by how much I enjoyed their chat with Tai Lopez, helped to humanize the guy behind his omnipresent Lambo and books; the show provides (me with) valuable insight into how a certain kind of Gen Z influencer / ambitious individual thinks

TWIML – been dipping more than a toe into the waters of AI and ML recently, and this podcast has frequent topical interviews that are the right mix of accessible and technical for me

My First Million – a guilty pleasure, but having been a steady subscriber since it’s early days, I now find that it relies a bit too much on Shaan and Sam’s personal stories (so after listening to eg, 10 episodes, it’ll start to feel like a family reunion where gregarious grandpa tells you about that one time he did X)

Bankless – comfort food for Ethereum fans, with occasional entrees of delicious deep dives, gotta appreciate Ryan + David’s chemistry

What Bitcoin Did – comfort food for Bitcoin fans; more philosophical as of late; always enjoy his Lyn Alden interviews; for me, it scratches a similar itch to Preston’s weekly Bitcoin interviews

Lex Fridman – in a class by itself; he’s the only interviewer who can bring world class guests (like this one w/ game designer Todd Howard) to spend 3 hours chatting about anything and everything; enhanced by Lex’s mix of patience and skeptical kindness

Podcast notes: The hidden costs of cheap meat – Leah Garces on Ezra Klein show

Guest: Leah Garces, president of Mercy for Animals

50 years ago, meat costs $7/lb, today chicken is $1.80/lb
“These prices are fake”

Chickens today grow much bigger, much faster, much cheaper
-Reach slaughter weight in 6 weeks time, 3x faster than before
-50K birds in one warehouse – lose any sense of individuality
-Used to be 2-5sf of space per bird, now 3/4sf per bird – wall to wall

Battery cages
-for laying hens to produce eggs
-6 to 10 birds in a barren wired cage, crowded, causes aggressive behaviors, peck each other
-solution: industry shears off beak tips to reduce damage

Fish numbers are hard to quantify because they’re reported in tons
Land animals – 80 BILLION in the world, 70 billion are chickens (90%)

America is highest meat consumer – per capita eats 27 animals per year
America produces / have access to – 225 pounds of meat per person per year
Numbers are growing – last year was highest number ever produced and consumed

Chickens today grow so big so fast that they collapse under their own weight – especially their breast muscle – can’t survive past 6 weeks old, have heart attacks, too metabolically taxed
Product of selective breeding just for breast muscle
Chickens in wild can live many years
The meat has more fat and protein content than before, white stripes in the meat which are literally disease markers as result of fast growth

Chicken warehouse / factory farms
-chickens are very immobile, plopped down
-lots of sores on body
“marshmallow on toothpicks”
-often panting, taxed by weight / size
-very fragile

What % are raised industrial – globally it’s 90%; in America it’s 99%

A positive trend: 1/3 production of eggs is cage-free now, as result of pressure campaigns
-still an industrial setting (indoors, over crowded, given antibiotics)
-just not kept in cages anymore

Gestation crates for pigs
-source of bacon, sausage
-pregnant pigs kept in metal crate so small that pregnant pig can’t turn her body, can’t really lay down; bottom of cage is cold and wet with slatted floors for feces; after giving birth, kept in a slightly larger farrowing crate, essentially a breeding machine, piglets are taken away – and the cycle starts again
-the pigs scream when their babies are taken away

70% of medically imported antibiotics in US are used in animals
-necessary for these animals to survive, grow faster
-antibiotic resistance is growing; millions of future deaths will come from antibiotic resistant diseases
-to reduce antibiotics would require changing genetics of the animals

Meat industry needs to internalize these external costs
-CDC tracks viruses of concern: most are things like avian flu, swine flu – spreading from birds and pigs
-zoonotic diseases (from animals -> humans)
-pigs are more closely related to us than chickens

Impact on climate change
-livestock farming – mostly cows emitting methane – 14.5% of global greenhouse gas emissions (could be underestimate, as high as 25%)
half of world’s usable land is for agriculture, most for livestock
-1/3 of arable land is used just to raise crops to feed farm animals (eg, soy, maize)
-contributor to deforestation
-contributor to air pollution (chickens produce ammonia and dust particles to local area; pig waste is collected in a cesspool which is sprayed into the air / fields, usually in low-income areas)
eg, Eastern North Carolina – former slaves area, hog industry moved nearby, hog waste ends up on clothes, cars, houses, but don’t have power to fight back, “nobody’s gonna put this in San Francisco”
Gulf of Mexico dead zone – fertilizer run off into Mississippi, then into Gulf of Mexico – a zone the size of Rhode Island where no sea life can exist, only some species near the surface – the bottom has no oxygen nor life

100x more land used to produce a calorie of meat than a calorie of vegetable

Why isn’t meat more expensive? What are the externalities?
-animal suffering
-climate change
-air pollution
-farmers – owe lots of debt, often in low income areas
for chickens, farmers collectively owe $5B+ in debt, held hostage by it
a chicken farmer is basically a babysitter
keeps chickens alive for 6 weeks, then company collects and pays them
a form of indentured servitude

What about tax payer / government subsidies?
-in 2011, government purchased $40M of extra chicken supply – tax dollars paying for over production
-during covid, gave $270M in pandemic assistance
spent $40M for “de-population” of chickens and pigs – slaughtered right on farm, “ventilation shutdown”, gets too hot and the animals suffocate
-why does government / taxpayer dollars pay? The industry should pay

2011 – Prop 12 – banned production and sale of extreme close confinement of animals raised for meat – almost 70% of Californians voted in favor
Industry appealed, Supreme Court hearing the case, Biden supports industry / overturning Prop 12

Compassion is an infinite muscle – we can have direct impact on improving farm animals’ lives

What are some modest steps for improvement?
-internalizing industry costs thru regulation – pollution tax, improving factory conditions
-meat prices will rise, consumption will decline

3 recommended books from Leah
-Wastelands by Addison – Smithfield’s case in North Carolina
-Meatonomics
-Animal Machines – Ruth Harrison – catalyst for “Five Freedoms” for animal welfare

Cullen Roche’s macro masterclass on The Bitcoin Layer – podcast notes

Cullen Roche – CIO of Discipline Funds
-Merrill Lynch asset management
-2008 financial crisis transformed his view of world – how macro can dominate everything, while micro doesn’t really matter
Japan had been going through a similar transformation for 20 years – learned a lot from it
-Japan’s financial system modeled after Fed, US – Japan’s lessons taught him that what would happen would be the opposite of MSM narrative
-Beat the drum that post GFC would be sluggish dis-inflation
-At Discipline – hyper focused on financial planning as foundation for portfolio (more bottoms-up); “more Vanguard than Cathy Woods”

Doesn’t believe now will be like 70s style stagflation, more like 2008

Structural trends – globalization, technology, demographics – all long-term disinflationary anchors
Big lesson of Covid – fiscal policy can cause big inflation, it’s the Treasury not Fed that has the bazooka

Cyclical trends – short term inflation bump due to that fiscal policy; will come down if government doesn’t splurge
Debt cycle not consistent with high inflation environment

High inflation can only come from private sector (consumer / corporate borrowing), or public sector (government spending)
Low likelihood of big fiscal spending

In 3-4 years, we’ll realize inflation was transitory

Fed outlook
-they’ve been more aggressive than he expected
-“Fed’s kinda screwed” – look bad coming off 2021 inflation
-should have moved earlier in 2021 – eg, a modified Taylor rule
-too much focus on lagging indicators – eg, employment
Fed is old school monetarists / Keynesians – don’t wanna live thru 1970s again

He believes today looks more like 2008, not 1970s
Big worry of real housing market downturn

Monetary policy will function through housing market and mortgage rates
As rates > 5%, “something’s gotta give” – not enough housing demand at that level

Last 10 years was one cycle, a blowoff / FOMO effect
Economy now digesting this excess, the bust component

Housing is slow moving animal
Concerned Fed will create more downside than we expect

If in 2023, inflation ticks steadily lower, housing falls fast, unemployment rises faster than expected – Fed will walk a lot back, have a mini 2008
Could be 2008 credit style disinflation rather than runaway inflation of 70s

Nik: hyper focused on housing sector, outsized impact on US economy, 3 months of home price declines

10% decline in home prices is like a flesh wound – only takes us back to middle 2021
If home prices are volatile, balance sheets become volatile
Housing has become an important economic asset – more than previous generations
We don’t understand knock on effects – like 2008
Outlier risk of housing prices falling 25%, risks lurking in shadows
“2008 humbled me a lot” – thought he had a bullet proof macro framework

More analysts now forecasting larger price drops in housing – more expected volatility in 2023, 2024

Argument that covid boom was sorta fake – driven by government spending
If housing falls 25%, causes a lot more collateral damage than anyone expects

Nik: in 2007-2008, analysts argued we’ve never seen national housing price declines YoY, only regional declines – surprised everyone

This isn’t like 1987 crash – it’s not a single event
It’s a structural event – because housing is long drawn-out process, and so core to US economy
Construction still in boom period – lots of supply coming online, but don’t have demand or new construction

We’re probably in 4th inning of housing market downturn – still relatively early
Fed sorta oblivious to it, they don’t realize damage that 6-7% mortgage rates do to housing market

No idea what stocks will do in next 6-12 months

His duration framework for investment assets:
-Cash / Treasuries are Zero duration
-Bonds are 5 year duration instruments
-Stock market is 18 year instrument
Bitcoin is 100 year duration instrument (gold is 40 year)

Stock market riskier today – valuations high, less attractive relative to other instruments, still high levels of irrational exuberance
Multiples need to come in / move sideways for longer period
High multiples —> Lower risk adjusted returns
Do you want stocks at 30 P/E with high volatility or 4.5% treasury bill with no volatility?
Stocks in 18-24 months – would be shocked if up significantly

Scenario: housing prices slowly grind down 10-20%, no real credit event —> would have stagnant stock market, and maybe 2025 it takes off
Risk is a real credit event – more like 2008 than 1970s – if Fed reverses, would be because real deterioration in balance sheets and economic environment
Fed will likely slowly walk rates back, ease off language, but rates will remain high and cause demand destruction – maybe late 2023 – likely to be behind curve again
At that point, credit has deteriorated, stock markets fallen 40%
Lots of starts and stops until then
Higher probability of hard landing outcome than Fed finding a soft landing

Bitcoin is a technology – more like VC than equity
Public markets are boring 18 year instruments, companies are more stable boring value
VC is much younger, standard deviations larger, thus much longer duration
Bitcoin is weird blend of digital gold + VC + payment system
Bet is it becomes alternative payment system – will take very long time to come to fruition
Will work in parallel with traditional fiat / credit system
Takes time for people to adopt the new mindset

He works with people who have already made good money, closer to retirement, more conservative
Results in shorter duration instruments (eg, Treasuries, equities)
Bitcoin, like VC, has too much potential downside for them
For a true efficient market theorist – maybe 0.5-1% bitcoin allocation (eg, if you put 1% in bitcoin in 2015, could be 20% of portfolio today)

Big advocate of re-balancing in counter-cyclical manner to reduce skew – reduce outsized risk in any single instrument
Don’t want golden handcuffs that you can’t sell, too much capital gains, help control your behavior, don’t wanna become a forced seller

Loved Nik’s book Layered Money and its hierarchical thinking approach

Matt Ridley on evidence for the lab leak hypothesis (Jordan Peterson podcast)

Great overall podcast, because Peterson is a world class explainer and to explain well he needs to understand well and to understand well he really digs and pokes thoroughly. Not saying I believe all of it, because China number one and all that.

Reasons why it *could* be a lab leak (but definitely not saying it is, y’know), my paraphrased notes:

-there was a lab near the outbreak researching exactly this kind of virus

-the virus was atypical in its ability to spread between humans (transmissibility)

-they identified a “furin cleavage site” (an added bit of DNA code) in the virus DNA

-there’s still a lack of finding the animal transmission vector / specimen(s)

-the multiple attempts to cover up early findings (in both China and the US) that even hinted at a potential lab leak / man-made virus

-there was a red herring of an identified pangolin virus whose DNA sequence was later found to be too different, and was not found near the same area

-those scientists and administrators in charge in both the US and China had grant proposals and research projects on precisely this (furin cleavage, bat viruses, gain of function)

-there were prior bio safety incidents at that very lab, on which the top Chinese leadership were consulted

-this new virus differs greatly from others like it, which were bat viruses, but not particularly lethal, and mostly intestinal

-in the case of SARS, the transmission chain very clear, and the animal vector and index cases were eventually found; none of that’s happened here

-although there was a heavy concentration of cases near the suspected origination wet market, it’s a bit of drawing the bullseye after taking the shot; only those who self-identified as being near that market were diagnosed with it — if you weren’t near the market, even if you had the same symptoms, you were diagnosed with something else (like the flu?)