Dividends and US auto sales keep motoring higher despite uncertainty

If you think about the way cities in North America have developed over the years, the constant for most is you need a vehicle to get around. It is always possible not to have a vehicle, and millions do, but it so much easier if you a vehicle. If you do not have a vehicle, transit is available but often times it is oriented to bringing people downtown and in many cities, to go across town you need to go downtown first. If you have a vehicle, everything is much easier.

In an article by Nathan Gomes and Nora Eckert of Reuters, US auto sales are expected to rise about 6% for the 3rd quarter. The number is surprising strong pace despite tariffs and other uncertainties. This is on top of healthy US sales gains for July to September period, GM and Ford were up to 8% and Toyota was up 14%.

Market research firm Cox Automotive expects US new vehicle sales to be about 4.4 million for July-September compared to 3.9 million in the same period of last year.

Duncan Aldred, President of GM North American business, said consumers seem less concerned about tariffs and potential price hikes than they were a few months ago.

I think stability, clarity and the lack of that massive price rise that people feared is total driving the market.

Demand for mid-size crossovers and pickup trucks has remained strong in September, Cox Auto said in a report. GM is expected to hold on to its top spot during the quarter, followed by Toyota and Ford.

JD Power noted the average retail price for new vehicles in September was expected to touch $45,795 up $1,310 from last year.

On a podcast, Steve Eisman talked with Lakshmi Ganapathi from Unicus Research, said 69% of consumers are paycheck to paycheck with 25% of those using the Buy Now, Pay Later to buy groceries. The problem for consumers is the companies that offer it are using AI to monitor credit habits are lowering credit limits in real time and declining credit. Ms. Ganapathi said, in when payments were received during COVID, government sent money and people’s credit increased, partly because student loans were not being paid. That has changed and student loans need to be repaid. The average car payment is $1,000 a month over an 84-month term. Banks do not want cars so only 30% of cars that could be reposed are reposed, the other 70% are extension loans. People are buying older cars for less than $10,000 but higher maintenance costs come with it. The big companies can produce cars to deliver them to dealers but who is buying?

Recently read a story, those who have over $30 million in assets, are keeping the luxury markets alive and humming.

Linking to dividend paying stocks, the automobile companies used to drive the economy, but the US economy has diversified, however vehicles remain both ingrained in the psyche of the average American and important to the economy. Increasing auto sales is good news, but one has to examine if repossessions are up, because if people fall behind on their payments, the car will be repossessed. Often times, one loves to be optimistic, but wonder why the glass would be half full?

There are more questions than answers, till the next time – to raising questions.

Dividends and Video-gamer maker Electronic Arts to be taken private in $55 billion deal

If you shop in the supermarket, at the front of the store are magazines and many of them feature Hollywood stars. Many go to the movies, watch movies and the magazines are a staple for customers. The reality is more money is spent on gaming than people going to Hollywood. Although more males game then females, anyone who does game is passionate about the game they play, the console they play with, and the list goes on. There is a reason Microsoft owns Xbox and acquired Activision Blizzard.

In an article from the Associated Press, the largest-ever buyout funded by private equity firms is with Electronic Arts from a public company to a private company for $55 billion including debt. The companies involved are Silver Lake Partners, Saudi Arabia’s sovereign wealth fund PIF and Affinity Partners. The private equity partnership is offering $210 a share.

Silver Lake Partners is co-headed by Egon Durban who has been looking at EA for years, teamed up with Jared Kushner of Affinity Partners who made the deal happen. PIF already owns 9.9% of EA. Among the many investments PIF has is a minority investor of Nintendo.

Linking to dividend paying stocks, the use of private equity is expected to increase and some of that will be take public companies private. If you own a profit-making company, then at some level private equity is interested particularly if the returns are good for dividends but not dramatic for growth that private equity wants to see. It is another good reason to own profit making companies.

There are more questions than answers, till the next time – to raising questions.

Dividends and More robots work in China than the rest of the world combined

When the industrial revolution started work was plentiful, the majority of the population lived on farms and moved to urban areas to work in factories. The industrial revolution produced jobs and most of them paid more than what the people were making on the farm. New industries developed and the industrial revolution was on going and expanding across the UK and around the world. The new revolution is going to be a little different.

In an article by Meaghan Tobin and Keith Bradsher of the New York Times News Service, China is making and installing factory robots at a far greater pace than any other country, with the US a distant third. China already dominants global manufacturing.

There were 2 million robots working in Chinese factories according to a report related by the International Federation of Robotics, a non-profit trade group for making industrial robots. Last year more than 300,000 new robots last year, the US installed 34,000.

The government has used public capital and policy directives to spur Chinese companies to spur Chinese companies to become leaders in robotics.

As technology helps factories become more efficient, some are making do with fewer workers and altering the role of others.

China’s drive for factory automation has been a key part of achieving its position as the world’s largest manufacturing powerhouse. At the start of this year, factories in China were making nearly 1/3 of all manufactured good worldwide, more than the US, Germany, Japan, South Korea and Britian combined.

Until last year, China installed more imported robots than domestically made ones. But last year, nearly 3/5’s of the robots installed in China were also made in the country.

In 2015, Beijing made it a top priority for China to become globally competitive in robotics as part of its Made in China 2025 campaign to import fewer advanced manufactured goods. To do this, industries received almost unlimited access to state-controlled banks at low interest rates as well as help in buying foreign competitors, direct infusions of government money and other assistance. In 2021, the government issued a detailed national strategy for expanded deployment of robots.

Linking to dividend paying stocks, it many companies the eco system that develops becomes the defining nature of the company. The eco system develops because the parent company has the resources to allow companies to develop for the long term with relatively low cost of funding. It takes a great deal of money and effort to dislodge the dominance, although it is possible. Those barriers are what you are investing in and expecting they will remain for the foreseeable future.

There are more questions than answers, till the next time – to raising questions.

Dividends and American Rascal, part 2

In a book called American Rascal – How Jay Gould built Wall Street’s Biggest Fortune written by Greg Steinmetz published by Simon & Schuster, NY, 2022 the author highlights how Mr. Gould was became one of the wealthiest operators on Wall Street. It is important to remember; there were very few rules or regulations because they believed regulations would stifle progress Much of what happened now would be declared illegal. However, in those times, it was expected to be done to achieve results.

If you look into recent history, there was 2 brothers who had oil wealth and decided to the silver market was undervalued. They pushed up the price, but did not sell enough when the price fell and lost $1.7 billion. In 1869, Mr. Gould decided gold was undervalued, under the idea every harvest time, the price of gold surged, if they could persuade the government to let the gold price rise in line with seasonal demand, there was money to be made.

There were risks at the time, during the Civil War, the government ran out of gold to pay soldiers and switched to paper money known as greenbacks. It promised to buy them back after the war at a price of 6 ounces of gold for 100 greenback. The price of gold fluctuated during the War, before Gettysburg the price went to 287, after the battle the price fell to 131, given the government said the price should be 100. After the War, the price went up to 150. Farmers wanted the price to be high to pay off their loans The banks wanted the price to be 100.

The Treasury Board President believed in gold not greenbacks. President Grant backed the Treasury Board President. But what if the President changed his mind or it look like he changed his mind?

Gould was attempting a mini-corner. Buy enough gold to make gold scarce to drive up the price, but not enough to allow government to intervene by releasing gold in the marketplace. Would the President commit to a new policy? did Gould have people on the inside giving incentives?

The plan worked for a while, gold went up, Mr. Gould was able to sell half his position, but he needed another day. The gold price traded on Black Friday and the government said they were going to sell $4 million of their holdings, the price went down and on that day, $500 million traded hands or all the gold in the country had turned over several times.

Mr. Gould was able to escape without too much damage, but his partner James Fisk went bankrupt. Another consequence was British investors in railway stocks, wanted change in Erie Railroad and Mr. Gould appointed a new Board and he sold his shares.

Mr. Gould went to a new railway – Union Pacific. While it was true, Mr. Gould looted the treasury of Erie Railroad, he also made improvements to the railway and ran it by winning new business, improving service and making it better. One of the competitors of the Union Pacific was the Kansas Pacific, Mr. Gould went to the Netherlands to buy bonds from the Dutch holders of a subsidiary – Denver Pacific. He bought them for 74 cents on the dollar; this pushed up the price of Kansas Pacific shares and ending merging the Kansas Pacific with the Union Pacific.

In 1881, Gould through a variety of purchases to enable control, he was the master of 16,000 miles or one of every 6 miles, giving him 15% of the largest, most important industry in the country. The choice of buying the railways was to pressure the more dominant railway in the area into a better deal for his railway or consolidation of the industry.

One of the many methods, Mr. Gould used to consolidate was to purchase a competitor knowing every railway has a profit center where they make most of their revenues and profits. If he cut rates to decrease the competitor’s revenues and profits, the company was more willing to negotiate. If a company does it enough times, then their reputation proceeds the conversation of working together.

Linking to dividend paying stocks, often the best stocks to buy are the ones that industries have been consolidated. Many took risks, some came out ahead, some did not, but after the industry has been consolidated, profits can be made. If the industry can make profits, then it can pay dividends and as investor you can enjoy reading about how it was consolidated to learn about the new industries that will invariably go through the process.

There are more questions than answers, till the next time – to raising questions.

Dividends and American Rascal – Jay Gould

If you were an investor during the period of time known for the Robber Barrons or the turn of the century, you likely held railroad stocks or bonds. If you transport yourself to that time period, most of the people lived on east coast and had arrived by ship, transported their goods by ship and thought about the sea. After gold was discovered in California, there was a migration or a gold rush of people to go which meant they needed transportation services. The choices to go were by sea or by land, via wagon trains. A few decades later, railroads were being built all over the US to bring out the riches of the earth both in the rocks and from the continuing riches of the farmlands we know today. In every new industry there are many competitors but eventually companies need to make money or consolidation happen. In the world of logistics, if you have the right of way into the large urban centers, the railroad will make money, if not something needs to happen.

In a book called American Rascal – How Jay Gould built Wall Street’s Biggest Fortune written by Greg Steinmetz published by Simon & Schuster, NY, 2022 the author highlights how Mr. Gould was became one of the wealthiest operators on Wall Street. It is important to remember; there were very few rules or regulations because they believed regulations would stifle progress Much of what happened now would be declared illegal. However, in those times, it was expected to be done to achieve results.

Mr. Gould was born in upstate Pennsylvania and at that time – leather factories needed to soak cowhides in the tannic acid found in hemlock trees. If there was a forest of hemlock trees, it was gold to the owners. Trees are cut and sent to the tanneries. Mr. Gould partnered with a tannery owner to find a forest of hemlocks, set up a tannery and he was in his early 20’s, eventually came up with 50% of the tannery and sold it.

Railroads, similar in today’s world to operate need outside capital. They need to pay for land, rails and rolling stock. If someone had access to deep-pocketed investors at home and abroad, money was to be made. Mr. moved to Wall Street and set himself up as a stockbroker and private investor. In today’s environment, Mr. Gould was a value investor, or he dug deep to discover whatever was knowable, separating the nonsensical from the plausible. He was methodical, more voracious in search of insights and more patient with minutiae.

Mr. Gould met some wealthy investors as a stockbroker, one investor in particular he married one of his daughters, which helped his business. He was offered the ability to buy some bonds in a railway, converted the bonds to equity, became President of the railway and eventually sold it to another railway to make a profit of $100,000 or $2.5 million. Not a bad investment for 18 months.

A famous event happened on Wall Street called the Harlem Corner. Gould was not involved but watched and learned the master of Cornelius Vanderbilt work with corners and short squeezes. Mr. Gould became acquainted with Daniel Drew who was a market manipulator. He specialized in bear raids, but spreading lies and the company’s position.

Before railroads, there was the building of canals, the most famous is the Erie Canal connecting Albany to Buffalo, once completed goods moved from NY to Albany to Buffalo, connecting to the Great Lakes and Chicago. When railroad age began, the Erie Railroad connected Albany to Buffalo and time to ship goods fell from 3 weeks to 8 days. For all the wonderful location, the railroad was not the best constructed – it used a different track gage so cars could not be transferred to other lines; it did not go into New York stopping 28 miles north in New Jersey. Despite the advantages it had, the railway did not make money and went into bankruptcy.

Daniel Drew joined the Board and became treasurer. Being an insider was a dream come true for Drew. As an outsider he had to make things up, as an insider, he did not have to make anything up. He just had to buy and sell before corporate news. Erie’s price could be and was a yo-yo is his hands. These days it is illegal, back then all major investors did it.

Vanderbilt owned the New York Central, he proposed his company work with the Erie and Pennsylvania as a quasi-monopoly to ensure all 3 companies had higher profits. Drew was independent and liked manipulation, Vanderbilt did not like for his companies and thus the Erie War was on. Mr. Gould joined the Board of Erie.

There was 2 ways to run a railroad in the 1860s, run trains on time, keep rolling stock in good condition, charge a fair price, pay steady dividends to shareholders as Vanderbilt did. The other way was Drew’s way – manipulate stock prices and make profits. Mr. Gould joined Mr. Drew.

Linking to dividend paying stocks, when you buy a dividend producing stock, you are expecting the first way to run a railroad will happen because what happened in the 1800’s is illegal in our environment. While investors still short stocks, they will try to flood the news with the misinformation, there are enough sources to verify if the information is good or bad. The new actor on the scene is information bots may do the job which can do the job more effectively for a short period of time. Often it is better to buy and hold and not use margins, that way you can have patience to make a decision.

There are more questions than answers, till the next time – to raising questions.

Dividends and A media mongul like no other

Hopefully you have heard or know about Oracle, it has been a software company since the founding in 1977 and by the 1990’s. Oracle success allowed its founder Larry Ellison to have large homes, many have been featured and he owns the island of Lani in Hawaii. Mr. Ellison’s wealth has been in the top 20 richest people in the world and for a little while last month the richest person in the world as Oracle embraced AI.

In an article by David Steitfeld and Theodore Schleifer of the New York Times News Service, the 81 year old Larry Ellison is using some of his wealth to own media companies. Mr. Ellison fronted the money for his son David’s company Skydance to buy Paramount and CBS for $8 billion. Skydance is expected to buy Warner Bros Discovery and President Trump has said Mr. Ellison will be a shareholder of TikTok along with Michael Dell of Dell Computers and Lachlan Murdoch of Fox Communications. Most of us at 81 expect to clip coupons, Mr. Ellison buys companies.

Powerful families have owned influential chunks of American media in the past century, but their reach was often limited by geography or other factors. The Chandler family, owner of Los Angeles Times held sway in Southern California for decades but little power across the US. If you ever seen the movie Citizen Kane staring Orson Wells and asking the question Rosebud? that movie was about William Randolph Hearst and the Hearst chain of newspapers and magazines which is still in operations and going strong.

The difference according to Michael Socolow, a media historian at the University of Maine, in our digital age, the deals are consolidating power. The deals are across multiple platforms, and it is possible to establish an editorial line across TikTok- CBS News and CNN – that is a new world.

It is also different because until SkyDance, Mr. Ellison did not own or control any media properties.

Linking to dividend paying stocks, on one hand it is good Mr. Ellison has developed a new interest in media properties as it shows on average we all living longer and as we live longer, we can have new interests. Mr. Ellison was worth $367 billion which means the proportion of assets he is using for the media buyouts is not high, that is a good thing, and he may do a terrific job with them. It used to be at 65, we retire and clip coupons, perhaps taking new challenges will be the theme of years to come.

There are more questions than answers, till the next time – to raising questions.

Dividends and Novo Nordisk’s turmoil casts uncertainty onto Danish economy

Every country in the world has industries that are both symbols of the economy and carry more weight than other industries. If you think about the US, in the 1900’s you may think of US Steel and steel making, in the 1950’s it was GM and automobiles and present day it is Silicon Valley and AI. While the focus is on these industries all others exist, but one group of companies seemingly carry more than their share.

In an article by Eshe Nelson of the New York Times News Service, for the past few years in the country of Denmark, the pharmaceutical industry in particular Novo Nordisk has been the symbol for the country. Novo Nordisk was founded in 1923 and has many years of success, but in the last 5 years its blockbuster diabetes and weight-loss drug – Ozempic changed everything.

Novo Nordisk accounted for 11% of the Denmark’s growth, according to nation’s statistic office. ?Hiring by Novo represented 1/5 of employment in 2023, while it was the largest single contributor to corporate tax revenue.

This year, Novo Nordisk warned that its sales growth would slow, this has resulted in Danish Economy Ministry slashed the country’s growth rate by half to 1.4%.

Novo had doubled its workforce by 34,000 and is reducing its workplace by 5,000. In addition, last year the stock market capitalization put Novo as the biggest company in Europe, its shares have fallen.

Linking to dividend paying stocks, all stocks go up and down or fluctuate, in your portfolio if you are fortunate to own shares which rise, remember at some point it is important to take profits, either the money you put in and a little bit, then as the price goes up and down it matters less. With the profits you can diversify into other companies or use for lifestyle. In that fashion, you worry less about the price because you have made profits and have the ability to have patience and can do your homework in a more leisurely manner.

There are more questions than answers, till the next time – to raising questions.

Dividends and Hyundai says it will spend $2.7 billion to expand part of Georgia complex raided by ICE

Every company makes investments that it expects to generate returns in the future and sometimes politics sometimes gets involved. In the steps to the decision to making decision – there is numerous departments from the local level to the state level to the federal level involved in helping to influence the decision. Often the departments float tax cuts, incentives for training, infrastructure improvements and list can go on. The company then makes a decision and hopefully the location is in business for years to come and makes positive contributions to the community.

In an article by Jeff Amy of the Associated Press, Hyundai Motor Group of South Korea made a decision to invest $5 billion in an auto plant in Savannah, Georgia to produce up to 500,000 vehicles a year. The models will be a combination of electric and hybrid gas electric. Hyundais said it plans to make more than 80% of the vehicles it sells in the US domestically by 2030. The increase is a 20% for 60% to 80%.

Then politics came into the play, the Trump administration has increased the number of raids it makes on companies looking for people who do not have the proper documents. Acting on a tip, ICE arrested 300 South Koreans who were working in the plant and sent them back to Korea.

Would the raid stop the investment made into the US by Hyundai? the governments of South Korea and the US had serious talks. Time continues and state and local governments have promise up to $2.1 billion in tax breaks and other incentives. Georgia Governor Brian Kemp had conversations with the White House about the visa issue. Do not expect more raids.

Linking to dividend paying stocks, often times these companies have enormous reach for both the local and national communities. Within the reach is access to highest levels of government to ensure the process works for the benefit of the company and its shareholders.

There are more questions than answers, till the next time – to raising questions.

Dividends and US, China reach framework for TikTok sale, Bessent says

One of the social-media platforms that has been very successful is TikTok – it shares videos, people can make money from their viewership and because it is successful it draws a large number of advertising dollars. TikTok was invented in China and is owned by a company called ByteDance and the issue of what happens to its data has always been a concern. US authorities have claimed ByteDance is very close to the ruling Communist party and thus the government makes the app and its information collection a national security threat.

In an article by Alan Rappeport and Jose Bautista of the New York Times News Service TikTok has emerged as one of the biggest points of contention between the world’s largest economies. For the US, Treasury Secretary Scott Besssent and Jamieson Greer, the US trade representative have been the point people on the negotiations, the Chinese delegation is led by He Lifeng, Vice Premier for economic policy.

The solution that has evolved is for TikTok US and its servers continue to operate but owned by a US company. A number of firms have been rumored to be interested.

Linking to dividend paying stocks, TikTok is popular among young people and the issue will be its staying power for the next generation. If you are older, it is important to stay in contact with younger people to see what they use. Many times they will use something you do not simply because the older people do not use it. That suggests every generation will have their platform and it continually moves around the internet. If you invest in a company that becomes less popular with a generation it is still possible to make profits, but you can treat it as a utility not a growth company.

There are more questions than answers, till the next time – to raising questions.