Source: Wolf Richter, Testosterone pit
Friday evening when no one was supposed to pay attention, Google announced
that Executive Chairman Eric Schmidt would sell 3.2 million of his
Google shares in 2013, 42% of the 7.6 million shares he owned at the end
of last year—after having already sold 1.8 million shares in 2012. But
why would he sell 5 million shares, about 53% of his holdings, with
Google stock trading near its all-time high?
“Part of his long-term strategy for individual asset diversification and liquidity,” Google mollified us, according to the Wall Street Journal. Soothing words. Nothing but “a routine diversification of assets.”
Routine? He didn’t sell any in 2008 as the market
was crashing. He didn’t sell at the bottom in early 2009. And he didn’t
sell during the rest of 2009 as Google shares were soaring, nor in 2010,
as they continued to soar. In 2011, he eased out
of about 300,000 shares, a mere rounding error in his holdings. But in
2012, he opened the valves, and in 2013, he’d open the floodgates. So
it’s not “routine.”
Liquidity, Google said. In 2012, he reaped about $1.2
billion from stock sales, and if he can sell this year’s portion at the
current price, he’ll reap $2.5 billion. $3.7 billion in total. What
exactly would he need that kind of liquidity for? He could buy a Boeing
787, if it ever becomes airworthy again, plus a few castles, dozens of
handmade exotic cars.... And it would barely scratch the surface.
Diversification, Google said. Sure, don’t put all your eggs
in one basket. Though he didn’t need to diversity from 2008 through
2011, he now needs to diversify urgently. The landscape has changed. And
he is reacting to it.
He could diversify into treasuries, for example, which would guarantee
him a loss after inflation, thanks to the Fed-imposed financial
repression that governs our crazy lives. Or he could buy lots of gold or
a myriad of other assets that he thinks make more sense than holding
Google stock at the current price.
So, we’re left wondering if there’s something waiting to happen at
Google that prescient execs with a phenomenal understanding of the
company and the industry can see on the horizon. Google has plowed a lot
of money into startups, green energy, and other mind-boggling projects.
He might be worried that they won’t pan out, that they’ll have to be
cleared off the balance sheet with a huge write-off. He might be worried
about a million things.
Yet the fact that he sold practically nothing during the bull market
of 2009-2011 suggests that he may see something beyond Google: the hoped
for Great Rotation, for example—from those who know to those who don’t.
From the Eric Schmidts to mom-and-pop retail investors. And once that’s
accomplished....
Small investors lost a bundle in the last crash. At the end of their
wits, they got out at the bottom, and stayed out during the subsequent
run-up. But now, they’ve been driven to desperation by the Fed’s
zero-interest-rate policy, as inflation has hammered their CDs that
yield almost nothing. In order to stop losing money slowly but surely,
they’re jumping into the stock market once again, buying the very shares
Schmidt is selling—or so the smart money hopes—only to face once again
the risk of losing a lot of money fast.
That was the Fed’s policy every time. They didn’t care in 2000 that
the market demolished a bunch of young upstarts that had gotten
unjustifiably and unnecessarily rich. Let them crash. They did it again
during the financial crisis. Let them crash. Only when it started taking
down their cronies, did they get nervous—and handed them trillions.
Mr. Schmidt isn’t alone. Corporate insiders were “aggressively selling their shares,” reported
Mark Hulbert. And they were doing so “at an alarming pace.” The buy
sell-to-buy ratio had risen to 9.2-to-1; insiders had sold over 9 times
as many shares as they’d bought. They’d been aggressive sellers for
weeks. That they dumped shares in December, when the sell-to-buy ratio
was 8.38-to-1, could have been the result of the fiscal-cliff theatrics,
but the latest sell-to-buy ratio was even worse.
Instantly, soothing voices were heard: “don’t be alarmed,”
they said. But Mr. Schmidt and his colleagues at the top of corporate
America, multi-billionaires many of them, are immensely well connected,
not only to each other but also to the Fed, whose twelve regional
Federal Reserve Banks they own and control.
For the mere public, there have been vague and mixed signals that the Fed might finally
stop its drunken printing frenzy—that the only thing it is waiting for
is the completion of the Great Rotation of equities from the smart money
to mom-and-pop money. Once that’s completed, to heck with the markets.
But for Mr. Schmidt and his buddies, the signals might not have been
vague and mixed, but clear and actionable.
At the other end of the income spectrum: with the average cost of
attending college at $120,000, a family of four should expect their
children’s college to cost more than a home. Optimism about the value of
education provided justification for students to borrow $42 billion
from the US this year. Yet many of them will end up as student-loan debt
slaves. Read.... College Graduates Are The New Debt Slaves.
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