Aseahawkfan wrote:A Biden victory looks mostly assured barring a surprise. What does that mean for your money?
1. Taxes are going up which will have the reverse effect of the Trump tax cuts causing a tax-fueled drop in corporate earnings, which will likely lead to a sharp but temporary stock market drop due to lower earnings and PE ratios.
2. Weed will be legalized nationally and likely push other nations to legalize globally. Might be a good time to pick up some quality weed stocks or an weed ETF.
3. Medical companies will likely be a mixed bag depending on how Biden implements modifications to healthcare. There may be additional downward pressure on medical stocks as price controls and nationalization will lead to a drop in profits and limits profiteering in medicine. We will have to see the effect of the final plan.
4. Alternative energy will be big. Biden seems intent on pushing alternative energy which will make alternative energy companies like Tesla or Next Era Energy more attractive as well as push big energy companies to push harder into sustainable energy.
5. There will likely be massive stimulus. This should provide some good tailwinds for economic growth.
6. Regulations will be big on business. The overall economic effect of regulations is hard to determine and will vary by industry.
7. Possible short-term trades if the Democrats take the Senate and the Presidency while maintaining the House involve gun stocks as people will load up on ammo and guns before the Democrats implement harder gun laws.
Hope you have some cash at the ready to take advantage of the change.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Pandemic has had a strange effect on some stocks due to the changes. Work from home and crowded urban environments has pushed up homebuying in the suburbs and country. Obviously toilet paper and bleach sales have been huge. Exercise and weight equipment have been scarce and expensive.
I own Tesla. I am looking into Canopy Growth. I will probably make some weed stock purchases on Monday if nothing surprising happens over the weekend. Trump looks like a sure loss, but after the last election and the strange surge he got last election day, I would hate to suddenly hear something like, "We didn't know so many minority small business owners would vote for Trump" or something similar. Or some last minute bombshell drops on Sunday or Monday involving Biden like dropped on Hilary. Or a huge data dump by Wikileaks.
Just get here November 3rd, then I'll have more clarity on where to move money.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Looks like Biden is going to win. So pick up them MJ stocks, green energy, and electric vehicles.
Also maybe an S&P or index fund. Stimulus will boost the market until tax increases provide you some buying opportunities.
NorthHawk wrote:Biden's problem will probably be McConnell. If he holds up everything Biden wants to do for 4 years, then nothing will change and Biden won't be able to implement his agenda.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Democrats win the Senate or the Republicans retain it, should be fine either way. The Libertarian Republicans will vote for legalization of weed, so that should be good. Government needs money.
Electric vehicles are the future.
RiverDog wrote:Not sure how much effect a government legalization of weed will have on the cannabis industry. They've chosen not to enforce it in states that have legalized it. If they are to expand, they'll need to get more individual states to rescind their laws banning it.
Aseahawkfan wrote:It will have a tremendous effect. One of the big issues holding back the cannabis industry is legalization nationally in America. Without Federal legalization, it limits where they can operate, how they can operate, and the ability to build national brands and chains in the cannabis industry. Federal legalization would open up the entire U.S. market to weed, which would create the large scale weed operations much like global tobacco where the big money will be made. I picked up an ETF. It's hard to pick individual winners in such a fractured market.
RiverDog wrote:[Most states have laws against recreational marijuana use. Those laws are going to have to be repealed in order for the cannabis industry to operate within them. A federal legalization may motivate other states to follow suit, but the big issue for the industry will still be getting those state laws repealed.
Aseahawkfan wrote:And even that will far easier with Federal legalization.
RiverDog wrote:I agree with that. If the federal government gets rid of their marijuana law, it will make it a lot easier for the states to repeal their laws. I voted against the law here in WA not because I thought it was anymore dangerous of a vice than alcohol or tobacco, but because it would cause confusion as federal law would still prohibit it, that employees would get the impression that using it would not affect their work status, and I didn't want to stake a sign in the middle of the state saying "we love pot heads!"
Aseahawkfan wrote:I don't touch pot myself, but know a ton of smokers. In my experience. potheads are way better than drunks. Thus smoking weed is better than drinking. Less dangerous and less problematic.
Aseahawkfan wrote:But that crap they did in Portland scares me. Pot is very tolerable. I could even live with cocaine legalization. But heroin, opiates, and meth are different animals. People on those drugs lose themselves completely. They could kill a baby while high and not even remember doing it. My friend got addicted to heroin, it was like trainspotting. He lost himself completely in a way he never had before with pot. Almost died. He debased himself in ways he had never done before. Heroin should not be legal or methamphetamine. It shouldn't even be decriminalized unless it is forced rehabilitation and isolation from regular society. Heroin and methamphetamine are terrible drugs.
RiverDog wrote:I don't want to make heroin and meth legal, but I also don't want to be filling up our prisons with non violent drug offenders, so I am generally in favor of decriminalization.
RiverDog wrote:I pretty much have adapted a Libertarian point of view when it comes to drug use. If a mentally sound person decides to use drugs, so long as it doesn't affect me or subject someone else to harm, I don't give a rip what someone else does to their body. The problem comes to what to do with them once they've destroyed themselves to where they can no longer function and become a burden to others or to society. Should I have to pay for their rehabilitation?
I don't see that there's a good solution to the drug use problem, at least not in our lifetime. It's one of those things where we have to contain it and mitigate the damages,
The problem comes to what to do with them once they've destroyed themselves to where they can no longer function and become a burden to others or to society. Should I have to pay for their rehabilitation?
I don't see that there's a good solution to the drug use problem, at least not in our lifetime.
c_hawkbob wrote:Actually yes there is a solution but the republican (why should I have to pay for it?) in you can't see it. The solution is not even going to cost any new money over the current abomination of policies on the matter (in fact it would be a substantial net savings*). If you simply replace the moneys we spend on interdiction and incarceration with rehabilitation and education you not only wind up with fewer addicts and far fewer criminals but you essentially put the cartels out of business and take a huge burden off the law enforcement community.
* Savings would be huge reductions in court and policing costs as well as huge reductions in prison costs. Not to mention less burden on social services to junkies trying to raise families ... which in turn will have the long term cost savings of having fewer criminals in the future as these children that would have been raised by junkies with zero options in life are able to lead more productive lives themselves.
c_hawkbob wrote:I didn't say It would cure all current drug addicts, the net reduction in addicts will be down the road, but regardless of how the programs perform in that regard it is not only more humane but less expensive to treat current addicts as outpatients than as criminals. Especially when considering the burden it removes from law enforcement.
Aseahawkfan wrote:People should be able to feel safe walking in their neighborhoods and cities without fear of being robbed or harmed by some sick ass meth or heroin zombie.
c_hawkbob wrote:Well if the standard is complete eradication of addiction then you're right, there is no solution. But that's more than just a little unrealistic isn't it?
RiverDog wrote:If that threat of being robbed or harmed by some sick ass meth or heroin zombie is genuine, then yes, I agree with you. But that's not what I said. I said that so long as what a person does to their body doesn't affect me, then I don't give a rip what they do with their life. It only becomes an issue to me when it becomes a threat to my life or property.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Improper handling of heroin and opiate addiction does affect you. It costs you more in insurance, medical costs, taxes, human life, and general negative impacts of allowing a substance like heroin and opiates to wreak such damage. It's very costly.
Aseahawkfan wrote:So what? You let these people get addicted, they commit a property crime, then toss them in jail for the property crime while we decriminalize the drug crime? Then we end up with a roundabout system to jail drug users.
RiverDog wrote:You can make the same argument about obesity and over eating. Do you want to force people into weight loss clinics if they have a BMI over 30? Or what about tobacco usage? How much does that cost taxpayers or raise insurance premiums?
I don't know what the answer is. We know what it isn't: The war on drugs/interdiction/law enforcement angle doesn't work with a very high degree of success. Neither does education/rehabilitation. The best we can hope for is to rehab those that want to save themselves, give them a way out if they want it.
That's why I say that at this point, the problem is unsolvable.
RiverDog wrote:You can make the same argument about obesity and over eating. Do you want to force people into weight loss clinics if they have a BMI over 30? Or what about tobacco usage? How much does that cost taxpayers or raise insurance premiums?
Aseahawkfan wrote:Are you saying overeating and tobacco are as scientifically bad as heroin and methamphetamine?
Aseahawkfan wrote:Education and rehabilitation works better than letting them walk the street robbing people and hurting their close loved ones.
Aseahawkfan wrote:The problem is unsolvable for what percentage? It's not unsolvable for all people.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Why would you ok the distribution of a poison as dangerous as heroin? What do you plan to allow next? Bath salts? Do you not have any lines drawn on what you would allow a consumer to purchase?
Aseahawkfan wrote:That vaccine news sure helped my portfolio. Damn.
Aseahawkfan wrote:A Biden victory looks mostly assured barring a surprise. What does that mean for your money?
1. Taxes are going up which will have the reverse effect of the Trump tax cuts causing a tax-fueled drop in corporate earnings, which will likely lead to a sharp but temporary stock market drop due to lower earnings and PE ratios.
2. Weed will be legalized nationally and likely push other nations to legalize globally. Might be a good time to pick up some quality weed stocks or a weed ETF.
3. Medical companies will likely be a mixed bag depending on how Biden implements modifications to healthcare. There may be additional downward pressure on medical stocks as price controls and nationalization will lead to a drop in profits and limits profiteering in medicine. We will have to see the effect of the final plan.
4. Alternative energy will be big. Biden seems intent on pushing alternative energy which will make alternative energy companies like Tesla or Next Era Energy more attractive as well as push big energy companies to push harder into sustainable energy.
5. There will likely be massive stimulus. This should provide some good tailwinds for economic growth.
6. Regulations will be big on business. The overall economic effect of regulations is hard to determine and will vary by industry.
7. Possible short-term trades if the Democrats take the Senate and the Presidency while maintaining the House involve gun stocks as people will load up on ammo and guns before the Democrats implement harder gun laws.
Hope you have some cash at the ready to take advantage of the change.
NorthHawk wrote:The Dems have to play the R's game and can start with the Trump tax cuts.
c_hawkbob wrote:Oh I'm quite certain that Biden will address the Trump tax bill as soon as possible. It won't be via his day one exec. orders bit there's just no way he "does nothing" in regards to the Trump tax bill.
And as far as that goes, starting in 2021 and every two years the Trump tax bill has taxes being raised even $75k and below earners.
c_hawkbob wrote:And as far as that goes, starting in 2021 and every two years the Trump tax bill has taxes being raised even $75k and below earners.
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