Insights & Ideas
5 min read

Why Oracle Acquiring X (Formerly Twitter) Makes a Lot of Sense

Published on
September 15, 2024

In the tech world, mergers and acquisitions are often pivotal for growth and market positioning. Oracle, a leader in cloud computing and enterprise software, and X (formerly Twitter), a social media platform transitioning into an “everything app,” may seem like unlikely partners. However, there are significant synergies that make this potential acquisition compelling. Oracle’s expertise in data, cloud infrastructure, and AI, combined with X’s massive user base and evolving business model, could create a powerful combination.

Moreover, Elon Musk’s trust in Oracle’s founder, Larry Ellison, adds another layer of intrigue, particularly given both Musk and Ellison’s shared interest in AI development. This trust could facilitate smoother integration between the two companies, making the deal even more appealing for both sides.

In this article, we’ll explore why Oracle’s acquisition of X could be a strategic win, with a focus on data, AI, cryptocurrency, and advertising—plus the significance of Musk’s relationship with Ellison.

Elon Musk’s Trust in Oracle Founder Larry Ellison: The AI Connection

One of the most significant aspects of this potential acquisition is the personal connection between Elon Musk and Larry Ellison. Musk has publicly expressed his trust in Ellison, who also served on Tesla’s board of directors. This relationship could smooth the path for Oracle to acquire X, as Musk’s influence over X is substantial, and Ellison’s presence in the deal may foster mutual trust and cooperation.

Both Musk and Ellison are heavily invested in artificial intelligence (AI). Musk’s ventures with OpenAI and Tesla’s AI-driven autonomous vehicles show his focus on AI’s future. Ellison, on the other hand, has made Oracle’s cloud infrastructure and AI-driven applications a core part of the company’s strategy. Oracle has developed sophisticated AI tools that could enhance X’s platform, particularly in areas like natural language processing and real-time data analysis.

The combination of X’s data flow and Oracle’s AI capabilities could lead to significant innovations, especially in content moderation, trend analysis, and sentiment tracking. The trust between Musk and Ellison could also lead to deeper collaboration on AI projects, benefiting both X and Oracle’s enterprise solutions.

Crypto Integration: Unlocking New Opportunities for Oracle

X’s expected impactful move into cryptocurrency offers a perfect intersection for Oracle to expand its financial services and fintech capabilities. X is positioning itself as a payments platform with cryptocurrency features, and Oracle’s expertise in enterprise financial software could help streamline these processes.

Oracle has already made strides in integrating blockchain technology with its cloud services, allowing for secure transactions and data transparency. With X incorporating crypto payments, Oracle’s infrastructure could be invaluable in managing crypto transactions, ensuring security, and providing the scalability needed for X to operate as a global platform for digital payments.

For example, through Oracle’s cloud and AI technology, X could offer businesses crypto payment integration alongside traditional payment methods. This would give companies using Oracle’s financial solutions the flexibility to manage digital currencies without needing to build separate systems, unlocking new revenue streams for both Oracle and X.

Lending Credibility to X for Top-Tier Advertisers

One of the most valuable assets Oracle brings to the table is its credibility in the enterprise space. As X looks to rebuild and reposition itself as a business and advertising platform, Oracle’s strong reputation could lend much-needed trust to the platform, especially with top-tier advertisers. 

Advertisers are often hesitant to invest heavily in platforms with reputational risks or inconsistent content moderation, both of which have been challenges for X. However, under Oracle’s ownership—backed by Ellison’s leadership—X could provide assurances that appeal to high-end brands. Oracle’s track record in managing secure, reliable, and scalable systems would make X an attractive platform for businesses seeking premium advertising placements.

As an example, a luxury brand that has been wary of advertising on social media due to content concerns might feel more confident running high-dollar campaigns on X, knowing that Oracle’s technology and reputation ensure a safer, more controlled environment. This could lead to significantly higher advertising revenues for X as it attracts businesses willing to pay a premium for brand safety.

AI and Data Synergies

Oracle has heavily invested in artificial intelligence and data analytics, making it a leader in cloud-based AI solutions. X, as a real-time social media platform, generates enormous amounts of unstructured data that could be used to enhance Oracle’s AI models.

By acquiring X, Oracle could integrate this real-time data into its AI tools, offering businesses deep insights into consumer behavior, emerging trends, and market sentiment. Oracle’s AI could improve X’s content moderation, ad targeting, and personalized user experiences, making it a more valuable platform for users and advertisers alike.

Strengthening Oracle’s Cloud Services

Oracle’s investment in cloud infrastructure has positioned it as a competitor to Amazon Web Services (AWS) and Microsoft Azure. Acquiring X would give Oracle another high-traffic platform to showcase its cloud capabilities. This would not only bolster Oracle’s cloud business but also provide X with the scalability and reliability it needs as it grows into a payments and e-commerce platform.

By integrating X’s data into Oracle’s cloud services, Oracle could offer businesses real-time insights and seamless integration with their existing enterprise systems. This would provide a competitive advantage in the cloud computing space.

Enhancing X’s Security and Infrastructure

Security has been a long-standing concern for X, especially as it transitions into a platform handling both social media content and payments, including cryptocurrency transactions. Oracle’s expertise in data security and infrastructure management would be a critical asset in addressing these challenges.

Oracle’s robust security protocols would help X manage regulatory scrutiny, protect user data, and ensure safe transactions, especially as the platform expands its cryptocurrency features. For advertisers and businesses, this added layer of security would make X a more trustworthy environment for investment.

Leveraging X’s Payment and E-Commerce Ambitions

X’s ambition to become an "everything app" with integrated payments and e-commerce aligns perfectly with Oracle’s existing enterprise offerings. By acquiring X, Oracle would be able to integrate its cloud, financial, and CRM systems with X’s platform, providing businesses with an all-in-one solution for payments, customer engagement, and data management.

As X grows its cryptocurrency capabilities, Oracle’s experience with blockchain and financial systems would provide a seamless infrastructure for handling both traditional and digital currencies.

Oracle, X, and the Future of AI, Crypto, and Advertising

Oracle’s acquisition of X would be a strategic move with far-reaching implications. Backed by Larry Ellison’s relationship with Elon Musk, the deal would likely proceed smoothly, and the trust between these two influential figures would facilitate deep collaborations in areas like AI and cloud computing.

For Oracle, acquiring X offers access to real-time social media data, cryptocurrency integration, and a platform to attract top-tier advertisers, making it a powerhouse in both enterprise and consumer-facing technology. For X, Oracle’s expertise in security, cloud infrastructure, and AI would provide the stability and scalability it needs to achieve its ambitious goals.

Together, Oracle and X could redefine how businesses use social media, data, and digital payments, creating a new frontier in enterprise technology and consumer engagement.

Perhaps This Is Simple

All of the above aside, it may be as simple as Oracle’s past, proven interest in social media; Elon’s friendship with Larry Ellison coupled with his public warnings about Google, OpenAI, and the need for ethical AI as he sees it, and Elon’s hefty purchase-price for Twitter requiring a hefty exit that a company like Oracle could afford.

It’s too early for all this. And X certainly isn’t an “everything app” yet like we see China has. But at this point it makes a lot of sense.

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Education
5 min read

Classical Economics #1: Intro & Economic Growth

Keynesian Economics and Milton Friedman help define our economic knowledge.

Note: Economics is the study of how society uses resources for the development, production, procurement, distribution, and consumption of tangible products (such as iPhones) and intangible services (such as Apple Music).

John Maynard Keynes

The most important name in today’s worldwide economic system is John Maynard Keynes. Keynes is the one who developed economics as we know it. He wrote “The General Theory of Employment Interest and Money” in 1936 in the UK. Similar to Copernicus seeking to understand the movement of the Sun, planets, and stars, Keynes wanted to understand unemployment because The Great Depression was such a problem in the 1930s, and the existing understanding of economics did not explain what was happening (or what could be done about it) very well enough for governments to partake in righting the economic ship during the storm.

Note: Come back later for more articles about other economists across the ages, such as The Austrian School of economics (also very significant).

Keynes wanted to understand

He wanted to know what existing economics at the time could not explain about The Great Depression – but he did so with an emphasis on unemployment and by taking snapshots of the economy, as if it was static. So what he developed is useful, but lacks usefulness on growth or inflation issues.

More specifically, Keynes wanted to understand how employment and prices affect each other; how government affected employment and prices; and more than anything, he wanted to know how to “control” (or at least influence economies/money), such as how to drive employment up. 

More or less, Keynes used existing approaches that microeconomists used when evaluating businesses, plus some new approaches to expand economic knowledge into something bigger: macroeconomics

Simply put, Keynes took what was small or local and made it big – big enough for governments to use. Naturally, macroeconomics includes microeconomics since the economy of each piece would be part of the economy of the whole.

Milton Friedman came later

He pointed out that Keynesian Economics could not explain the relationship between price levels and economic output. He called this “the missing equation.” Friedman melded classical economics understandings of Adam Smith (and others) with Keynesian Economics. Friedman concluded that the classic theories worked in the long-run, but Keynesian Economics works in short intervals.

Local isn’t universal

“What goes up must come down” is right locally (in your backyard), but on a bigger scale it is wrong . The meteorites from space that have landed on Earth did not come back down to their origin when they “went up.” They never came back down.

Building on Friedman’s work

An economist from New Zealand began working with 100 years of UK data on the relationship between unemployment and inflation. The economist’s name was AW Phillips, and his work became known as The Phillips Curve. This curve was adopted by economists worldwide and is now a major contributor to economics. It shows that as unemployment rises, wages increase, and when unemployment falls, wages decrease.

Friedman and fellow economist Edmund Phelps felt that manipulating monetary policy (such as managing inflation) was not the right way to manage unemployment and that unemployment should be left “natural” and unaltered by central banks, the banks of governments.

Then in the 1970s and 1980s the US experienced both high unemployment and high inflation. Phelps and Friedman then clarified the understanding to show that The Phillips Curve was true if inflation was unanticipated. If it was anticipated, then the conditions were different. This ushered in a whole new element to economics: Expectations are part of the equation in a significant way.

Nowadays, we see expectations set by world governments very deliberately so they can use it as another way to manage economic systems. Something like “a period of somewhat-higher inflation can be expected in the next two quarters,” is common to hear from a Fed Chairman (Federal Reserve Chairman) since this economic understanding came to be.

Of note, since the late 80s/early 90s, economic growth theory is what has dominated economist efforts (since inflation, employment, and prices were already being managed with Keynesian and Friedman understanding), and GDP expansion continued as a top priority.

Back to The Great Depression

Let’s not forget how the interest and need for macroeconomics got started: The Great Depression. The Great Depression was not just in the US. It was global. It started in the US in 1929 though, and by 1930 it had reached the UK. Half of Britain’s trade (sales around the world) disappeared, and in some areas unemployment reached 70%! No wonder efforts were made to understand economics better.

The US had an awful time through The Great Depression too of course, as did countless other countries. For the US, The Great Depression did not end until we entered WWII in 1941. The statistics and the stories are really sad, and to this day people and governments study, fear, and work to avoid the conditions that led to The Great Depression.

Note: The Industrial Revolution followed by The Great Depression followed by WWII followed by The Cold War firmly cemented Keynesian Economics into world governments for a variety of reasons.

Boom and bust

Economic booms (a hot economy) and busts (a cold economy) are now known as business cycles. You may think that you always want your economy hot, but that is actually not true. Booms can lead to bubbles and bubbles pop and you get busts. Understanding business cycles is just one piece of the economy. Another piece of the economy is understanding growth.

Note: As investors, if we understand where things have been we can better understand where things are going — and that’s a major strategic advantage.

Let’s talk about GDP

When you add up all of the goods (such as iPhones) and services (such as Apple Music) you get GDP (Gross Domestic Product). GDP is measured as Total County Production measured in dollars (if you’re the US). GDP has been growing for 200 years for capitalist countries.

Note: there is no purely capitalist country, but each country has rules and people that are more capitalistic than others.

GDP across decades has a very obvious upward trend

But GDP throughout the weeks, months, quarters, and a year can (and do) have significant ups and downs. It is within these ups and downs that successful investors thrive and profit.

Let’s talk about inflation too

The last concept to introduce in this article is inflation. For most people the word has nothing but negative connotations. But in the world of Keynesian economics inflation is a given, and it's managed with government actions. 

Simply put: inflation is a rise in prices

Often people think inflation is simply a devaluing of currency by printing too much currency, but consider this: if currency was devalued then prices would go up, no? They would. So devaluing currency is a type/cause of inflation, but there are other types/causes too.

It’s right to monitor and take appropriate action against inflation

When prices go up enormous amounts this is called hyperinflation. For instance, between WWI and WWII Germany had inflation of 230% per month at times! That means every day prices went up 4% on average. So if milk cost $1 on Monday, it cost $1.04 on Tuesday, $1.08 on Wednesday, $1.12 on Thursday, and $1.17 on Friday. By the end of the month milk would cost $2.30. By the end of the year milk would cost $8.20. And a $25,000 car would cost $180,020.60 if those hyperinflation rates happened to us today. No wonder it scares people.

Historically, the US has managed inflation well

In the last 100 years, our worst experience had been in the 1970s when inflation reached 7% from 1973-1975. However, in 2022 inflation met or exceeded 7.5%. 

The US government used many tools and decision-makers to keep it down and return to the 3-4% average we have had since 1946 (on the heels of WWII). Before WWII, the US averaged about 1.7% inflation.

Around the world though, countries have been far more adversely affected by inflation. As mentioned, Germany experienced 230% inflation per year. Israel saw 400% inflation in 1985; Argentina has seen 700% inflation; Bolivia saw 12,500% in 1984. There are many more examples, but Keynesian economics does indeed have the understanding, tools, and systems that manage inflation well.

Inflation is like cancer to economies — and it must be detected early and expertly managed. When inflation is detected, it gets everyone’s attention!

So that’s the introduction to economics. There is a lot more to follow, but we hope you liked what you read, and we hope you have learned something too. Is this enough understanding for you to go start investing in stocks with great success? No. But we can build to that.

The key concepts in this article to remember are:

  • John Maynard Keynes “invented” macroeconomics for governments
  • Government using macroeconomics to influence and manage a country’s economy
  • Milton Friedman identified the relationship between prices and economic output
  • AW Phillips identified the relationship between Unemployment and inflation, known as The Phillips Curve
  • Phelps-Friedman established expectations as a key component of an economy
  • Business cycles, GDP, and inflation as the major factors government considers
  • Since the late 80s/90s, economic growth has become the priority for economists

Built for The One in the Arena

Arena Investor is on a mission not only to help with financial planning, and investment management, but also with education. Keep reading, watching, following, and sharing great Arena Investor content. And as always if you want professional advice, we are glad to be your teammate – along a financial journey you can actually enjoy.

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Insights & Ideas
5 min read

A Brief Description of The Investor Mindset

Build upon a foundation of learning, independent thinking, emotional poise, seeing trends, and being financially ready.

We can use different mindsets for different conditions

There are a number of personality types. One type is the transactional individual. A highly transactional person seeks mostly transactional relationships and interactions. And they seek out “the process” because they like to understand a system or a network and leverage it. Like many things, this is a spectrum. Some people are somewhat transactional and some are purely transactional. A transactional personality leads to a transactional mindset. Typically, a transactional mindset means you are looking for something in return. This for that. 

There are pros and cons to transactional mentalities and relationships. Perhaps you are not very transactional, but you have a transactional relationship with someone. For instance, “When Mike and I get together, we drink a coffee and talk about sports.” It’s a true friendship, but it’s transactional. So just because an individual’s personality, or a particular relationship, is a this-for-that one doesn’t make it good or bad. It is what it is. 

But if you were in a sales position, you would be wise to add transactional skills.

Beware though: If you are not a transactional person naturally, then there is a certain amount of friction that occurs when you act transactionally. Decide if that’s okay for you. 

You’re almost certainly adding skills and participating in the workplace in ways that create some friction for you already. When there’s too much friction though, you want to quit your job or change your field. But having a transactional skill set can be valuable when under the right conditions. Most times people think of personalities as set, and that may be correct. But you can certainly add skills that transactional people naturally have.

So what’s “The Investor Mindset” then?

The Investor Mindset, briefly, is what investor-types use. You may already know the people in your life that think and act like investors naturally. Some of their characteristics are: analytical, delayed gratification and thinking long, re-investing, builders or curators, value-measurers, value-adders

These are pretty positive characteristics. Again, like many things, it is a spectrum. If you are so analytical that you cannot make a decision, that is bad. You don’t want “paralysis by analysis,” as they say. 

Another thing to watch out for is delaying gratification too much. Someone who overdoes this may become unhappy. Perhaps it is useful when managing money, but it isn’t great if you overuse it in your life. What if you never eat a cookie? It sounds funny when talking about cookies, but be careful about persistently delaying gratification. Discipline is great, but find appropriate treats for yourself too along your journey

So whether the previously described investor characteristics come naturally to you or not, you want to treat it like a skill, and use it when appropriate.

At Arena Investor we use “The Investor Mindset” to help us perform our jobs well serving financial planning and investment management clients, as well as providing financial education.

Simply put, The Investor Mindset treats almost everything like a portfolio and only things that make that portfolio better should go in it. At Arena Investor this can mean: stocks, crypto, ETFs, mutual funds, bonds, real estate and so on.

But The Investor Mindset can be used at large too – well beyond finances. For instance, it can also apply to nutrition, fitness, friendship, your subscription TV “watch later” list, and on and on. Investor-types don’t naturally take-on things that don’t make their portfolio better. At a minimum, they try to decide if it is on-par with what they already like, or better. If it is sub-par then good luck talking them into doing it.

A Lot of People Can Relate to This Already

Believe it or not, a lot of people can relate to this as sports fans. Good luck convincing a Cleveland Browns fan that the Arizona Cardinals vs the Seattle Seahawks fits their “entertainment portfolio.” They may watch because they like football at large, but they aren’t truly invested in that game. It isn’t as good or better than their AFC North matchups against the Pittsburgh Steelers, Cincinnati Bengals, or Baltimore Ravens. They believe those matchups do make their entertainment portfolio better though.

The suggestion is this:Add “The Investor Mindset” to your life. You don’t have to re-create yourself and try to be someone you’re not though. Simply start to see the world with Investor-tinted glass a bit more each day. 

It can help you get started as an investor too

Perhaps you’ve wanted to invest for a long time now. But you are afraid to get started. With The Investor Mindset realize that an empty portfolio would be made better with one quality company in it.

Now you’ve started. 

And you’ve used The Investor Mindset – you upgraded your portfolio!

Do that a second time, and continue until you are diversified.

Remember: You only want to put stocks into your portfolio that make it better. So say you want to build a portfolio of 10 stocks. Well at the beginning you are really just laying a foundation. Don’t lay a crappy foundation

If you wouldn’t leave the portfolio alone for 5 years and be happy with your picks with minimal intervention (say, less than once per quarter), then do not add that stock. 

But remember, while we say stock we really mean company. You should be happy with the company you pick for 5+ years. You should believe in it, the work it does, the role it plays, and be able to sleep at night. That way, you will get through the ups and downs that The Business Cycle (here) intrinsically experiences. 

Be sure to think long when you build the foundation. You wouldn’t swap out parts of your foundation every day, week, or month would you? Perhaps over time you make an upgrade though because it makes sense.

“The Investor Mindset” is large and encompassing. So is a transactional mindset. But you can use the skills that naturally come with those mindsets to your advantage. And you don’t have to become a different person to do it. Pick something in your life to try out The Investor Mindset on. At the start of the new year health and wealth are at the top of many people’s minds already. Maybe choose one of those. Nutrition is a great way to add it to your life: Does this thing I’m about to eat or drink make my body-portfolio better or worse? 

Note: There’s a key difference with nutrition though in that a splurge for an hour on a Friday night isn’t as long-lasting as a financial splurge or investing splurge – that money is spent indefinitely.

Built for The One in the Arena

Arena Investor is on a mission not only to help with financial planning, and investment management, but also with education. Keep reading, watching, following, and sharing great Arena Investor content. And as always if you want professional advice, we are glad to be your teammate – along a financial journey you can actually enjoy.

You’re the Hero.
    We’re the Guide.

Education
5 min read

Classical Economics #3: The Business Cycle

Great investors stay the course and think long because they understand the Business Cycle.

What is a business cycle?
It’s the ups and downs of the entire economy's Real GDP as it follows its overall trend.

The overall trend is upwards

Note: Oddly enough the term business cycle does not apply to a business. Rather, it refers to the entire economy (keeping us all on our toes I guess). 

As the US economy works its way upward it has its ups and down. The ups exceed the downs, and over time the economy (and the stock market) climb upwards. 

This occurrence is typical of a good, and normal, economy. It represents that the US economy is healthy overall, so it grows and performs well (upward trend).

But the US economy also encounters challenges along the way (the downs markets and slowing or shrinking GDP periods).

Importantly, individuals, companies, organizations, and government responds to the declines in order to “fix” the economy by solving a present challenge.

The US has been very good at fixing its economy as it meets challenges, plus we have a huge collection of smart and hardworking businesses full of good people and resources to fix their business (their slice of the economic pie).

Economists measure business cycles

These macroeconomists measure many variables to paint a picture and understand the past, present, and future economy. An example of a variable that is measured is Unemployment. Another example of a variable that is measured is Real GDP. There are tons of variables measured. But these variables are measured at regular intervals (perhaps once per week, once per month, once per quarter, once per year, etc.) When you measure a variable at consistent intervals it’s called a time series.

When you look at the time series (collection of data for one variable taken at regular intervals), you can see trends. Real GDP, Prices, and Unemployment are three massively important trends for economists. When the Real GDP trend shows increases for two or more quarters (a quarter is a 3-month interval, or a quarter of a year) then the economy is in expansion. If that expansion lasts for a long, long time (years) it is considered a boom

But when the Real GDP trend shows decreases for two (or more) quarters then the economy is in contraction. Historically, if the Real GDP is contracting then it was called a recession, but nowadays many economists look at more than just Real GDP before labeling the economy as being in a recession. 

(They will look at income, unemployment/employment, etc for an overall feel before using the word recession.) 

So expansion and contraction are not debatable: either your Real GDP continues to grow every quarter and you’re expanding (your economy), or your Real GDP continues to shrink every quarter and you’re contracting (your economy). Obviously, government is interested in having tools to end contraction, avoid recession, and restore expansion/growth — more on that later. 

The NBER (National Bureau of Economic Research) can officially declare a recession, but as an improving investor gathering your data do you want to just move with the herd and wait for the NBER to declare a recession or end of a recession? Or do you want to be one step in front of it? And even if you do wait, just understanding that an expansion or a contraction is coming can keep you emotionally calm and rational (buying low and selling high takes emotional control and sound reasoning). 

I saw that coming from a mile away” is a powerful feeling as an investor. It takes time to develop that — and you will still get surprised from time to time too. But since you’re winning more than you’re losing as you improve, you deal with it better.

Note: The NBER is typically full of Nobel Laureates and past members of the President’s Council of Economic Advisors. But, you know, good investors still ensure what they are reading and hearing makes sense to them.

Many economic factors correlate

For instance, Real GDP and Unemployment rates historically correlate (move together) very, very well. In other words, when Real GDP is going up then Unemployment is going down. When things move together but go in opposite directions that is called “an inverse relationship” or a “negative correlation.” They go in opposite directions, but at the same time; this can also be called countercyclical. And a direct relationship is when two things move in the same direction at the same time; this can also be called positive correlation, procyclical, or just cyclical

An investor could look at it the opposite way too: when Unemployment is going down then Real GDP is going up.

The NBER looks at this closely when deciding if we are in a recession. If Real GDP is declining, but Unemployment is not changing then they may not call it a recession. 

There are indeed times when things that are highly correlated (like Real GDP and Unemployment) do not move “correctly.” This is always odd for economists and investors, and you need to pursue the reason (or at least a theory) why. 

Remember, the economy is very dynamic and complex, so there are many things that are usually true but not always true. Economists are just gathering information and painting pictures in order to understand the economy. Not every painting from economists is photo-realistic. 

There are in-between periods too, such as 2024, when the painting looks more like a Monet. You can tell what it is, but there are not a lot of clean edges. What you don’t want is a Jackson Pollock painting (economically speaking), such as the lead-up to GFC (Great Financial Crisis of 2007-2008) that wasn’t understood and turned into a crash. 

As an investor, you want procyclical investments when the economy is good (restaurants, airlines, auto-makers) and countercyclical investments (discount retail and alcohol) when the economy is bad.

So before the NBER declares a recession they look for: a decline in total GDP, a decline in income, a decline in employment, and a decline in trade. So they want to see that the economy is bad, or down in many regards — and we would tend to agree with this. The term recession should be reserved for when many bad things are happening within the economy. Otherwise, people might think every bit of bad news is a recession, which reduces their participation in the economy (less iPhones, restaurants, and Disney+) which then would lead to more problems — because they got spooked.

Note: What works really well is to have a teammate that can understand, stay the course, and make some basic pivots along the way. If you can’t do it yourself, we recommend Arena Investor investment management services.

You can be in a growth recession too

What does that mean? It means you were growing at 3% but are now growing at 2.5%. See how you are growing slower now? The growth (growth rate) contracted. But you are still growing. It is like the kid in middle school who hits a growth spurt and grows 12″ in a year versus the kid who grows 6″ in a year. Don’t worry, they are both healthy. 

Look at the data for yourself, hear what is actually happening, and don’t just listen to panicky news. Growth rate contractions happen. Should we look at why? Yes. Should you panic? No. In fact, you should never panic. 

The moral of the story

Continue to learn so you can decide for yourself what is good and bad. (Hint: there are opportunities in every market.)

What is an economic depression?

So we know what contraction is, and we know a recession is more than a Real GDP contraction, but what is a depression? Simply put, an economic depression is when you are in a recession for a long time (years and years). 

Since The Great Depression economists have been steadfastly dedicated to preventing another depression! Heck, we already covered Keynes and his effort to develop macroeconomics because the world was suffering through The Great Depression. (There are other great contributions from others too in economics.)

Economies have momentum and inertia

The momentum is how much change is happening (a lot of upward or downward change in the Real GDP for instance) and inertia is the economy’s resistance to change. This does not mean that when government takes action it is useless; instead, it means that a train slows down slowly. You won’t get a barge to turn on a dime. You can put rudder inputs in, and a turn will start, but it might not respond like a fifth generation military fighter jet.

You may think you want quick changes, but you don’t. What you want is small inputs that are on-time from the government so you don’t get a runaway train in the first place — so you don’t need to do a 180 degree turn with an aircraft carrier — but instead a little left or a little right to stay on target.

As instructor pilots say, “small corrections sooner.” The US government has been pretty good at this compared to the rest of the world, especially when you consider how big, complex, and dynamic our economy is. But let’s stay vigilant.

Note: Economic inertia that is quite resistant to change is called persistence.

Built for The One in the Arena

Arena Investor is on a mission not only to help with financial planning, and investment management, but also with education. Keep reading, watching, following, and sharing great Arena Investor content. And as always if you want professional advice, we are glad to be your teammate – along a financial journey you can actually enjoy.

You’re the Hero.
    We’re the Guide.

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Monthly Topics include

Understanding: Insurance Rate, Debt Rate, Savings Rate, Burn Rate, Qualified Term, Tax Rate, Liquid Term, Real Estate Term, Equity Rate, Total Term

Plus
• DRIP and Grow Rich!
• What Is Investment Management?
• What Is Your Financial SWOT?
and more!  

Subscribe to The Investor Mindset newsletter (above)

2

Plan

One-on-One Financial Planning

Enjoy an Initial Meeting to get to know each other, set your goals, and evaluate your debt and credit

Enjoy a Second Meeting to refine the gameplan, review insurance, and review your investing

Get easy-to-understand Monthly Reports specific to you and the Financial Plan we built recorded and delivered to your inbox for your convenience

Schedule live or recorded Quarterly Meetings to stay on track, review your Financial Health, Financial Plan, and make adjustments as needed

Enjoy Income Research Assistance -- Let us confirm you're being properly compensated

Enjoy Philanthropy Assistance -- our curated list of organizations you can donate to if desired

Financial Health Monitoring & Alerts
in the Elements app


Get professional monitoring of your Financial Health

Receive alerts when certain thresholds are met

Understand your Financial Health and actually enjoy the journey!

3

Invest

Investment Management
for Individual and SMBs

Fee-Only, never any commissions or conflicts

At just 0.75% AUM, Arena Investor offers great value!

No hidden [fill-in-the-blank] fees -- we absorb them all!

Enjoyable user experiences with elegant industry-leading apps

A modern Advisory designed to serve today's professionals

Professionally managed portfolios
Stocks, ETFs, Mutual Funds, Bonds,
Crypto, High Yield Cash Accounts

Also included
Financial Health Monitoring & Alerts in the Elements app

Portfolio Checkups for DIY Investors


For All 401ks

For Personal Brokerage Accounts

Have your Investor Profile analyzed (your goals, time horizon, risk tolerance, et al)

Have your actual portfolio analyzed and compared to your Investor Profile to ensure alignment

Get specific stock, ETF, mutual fund, crypto, etc recommendations to realign your portfolio

Invest with the peace of mind that you have a Registered Investment Advisor as a teammate when desired