The Dividend Cafe

The Bahnsen Group
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Jul 23, 2021 • 24min

Dividends, Energy, and Crypto

I do something a little different in this week’s Dividend Cafe – I cover three topics, and pretty separate ones from one another at that. In my mind they are all connected – but lots of things are connected in my mind that may not make sense to others. In this case, I see them as distinct topics yet connected in the sense that they all are part of our investment worldview at The Bahnsen Group. The challenges to dividend growth in index investing, the particulars around the Energy sector in 2021, and the inconvenient truths about bitcoin – these are three separate topics, but they are all topics we have thoroughly developed beliefs about, beliefs that are an off-shoot of our foundation. And we dive into some COVID stuff that is alone worth the price of admission – chart-filled and everything! So view it as one topic with over-arching connectivity, or a three separate topic week, but either way, this is a Dividend Cafe you will be glad you read. DividendCafe.com TheBahnsenGroup.com
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Jul 19, 2021 • 46min

Market Outlook w/ David L. Bahnsen - Conference Call Replay - July 19, 2021

Hosted by David L. Bahnsen, Founder, Managing Partner, and CIO of The Bahnsen Group and Scott Gamm of Strategy Voice Communications. DividendCafe.com TheBahnsenGroup.com
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Jul 16, 2021 • 31min

Quantifying the Quantitative, or Making Easy the Easing

Like most of you, before the financial crisis, I had never heard the term or uttered the term “quantitative easing.” This somehow becomes completely standard fare in the lexicon of finance in the last 13 years, and it is now uttered by people who I am 1,000% positive do not know what it is dozens of times per day in the media. There is nothing wrong with not understanding the obscure vocabulary of monetary economics unless of course, you are sitting around using the obscure vocabulary of monetary economics. But words have meaning, and today we’ll look at some of these words. But we will do more than define words today. After all, you deserve to get your money’s worth for what you pay for this Dividend Cafe subscription! My goal today is to walk you through the history of quantitative easing, explain what policy goal it is serving, what policy goals it is not serving, and what it means to you as an investor. By the time you are done with this read, I believe you will be a QE expert. And I assure you, as a fellow QE expert, nothing makes you more popular at parties than knowing the deep dive of quantitative easing! It’s a good thing I’m married … Okay, QE and why you should care, in this week’s Dividend Cafe! DividendCafe.com TheBahnsenGroup.com
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Jul 9, 2021 • 21min

Everything There is to Know about the Stock Market

Today I am going to do something an investment manager who writes about investing all the time ought to do more – I am going to talk about the market. Now maybe you think I do that all the time, and you’d be right. But truth be told, my investment writing is very purposely peppered with the stuff I think most matters to investors – behavioral practices, monetary policy, evergreen principles, foundational truths. The markets are to be found in and through all of it, but in Dividend Cafe, I rarely am just saying, “Hey, here’s the skinny on the stock market.” I do plenty of that day by day in the DC Today. What I want to do in the Dividend Cafe today is just look at the overall stock market – why we feel the way we do about it, why most people offering a short-term point of view are totally full of it, and how we view the present environment. I believe you will find these insights counter-cultural, and that ought to pique your interest. DividendCafe.com TheBahnsenGroup.com
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Jul 2, 2021 • 34min

The Halfway Point of 2021

I have always had a sort of unfair pet peeve with people talking about time moving either too fast or too slow. I think what I hate is the thoughtlessness of it – the sort of expected cliche when someone says, “wow, this year has flown by.” For one thing, it can’t possibly feel that way for everybody, yet it seems like everybody says it. Plus, it often times is just patently false – what people say they feel is the opposite of how I feel, and therefore I assume they must be wrong. I know, I know, but I already said it was unfair. The first half of 2021 did not “zoom by” and it also has not “dragged on” – for me. There are moments I can look back on and say “that feels like it was years ago” and there are other moments (perhaps more of these) that I do feel came and went quickly. At the end of the day, the holidays and the turn of the year were about six months ago. That much I know is true. As I do every year, I wrote a lengthy white paper between Christmas and the New Year to recap last year and to lay out our themes and perspectives for this year ahead. I prefer to wait for the next six months to do a deeper dive there, but I will check in this week on some of those perspectives. But primarily what I want to do in this week’s Dividend Cafe is give you a look at what has transpired so far this calendar year, and why. Accurately knowing what happened in financial markets is useful – and not to be taken for granted (remember, “what you know that just ain’t so” can be dangerous stuff). But I really want to explain today why things have played out how they have, and from there offer up a viewpoint on the future. Jump on into the Dividend Cafe … DividendCafe.com TheBahnsenGroup.com
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Jun 28, 2021 • 47min

Market Outlook w/ David L. Bahnsen - Conference Call Replay - June 28, 2021

David and Scott discuss the market matters of the day Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com TheBahnsenGroup.com
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Jun 25, 2021 • 25min

A Golden Opportunity to Go Against the Grain

The weird week in the markets doesn't change what I want to be doing with each Dividend Cafe.  As of press time, the market is up ~1,000 points on the week, with pre-market futures on this Friday pointing to a +100 point open.  The day-to-day and week-by-week movements in the market are not the subject of the Dividend Cafe, but they are what we do each Monday through Thursday at The DC Today. This week it is tempting to dive more into the cluster of these infrastructure talks. On Thursday, there was a White House briefing that it was a done deal; on Friday, it appears to be falling apart; I can write about all this now, but I think by the time it hits your inbox, the deal may be back on, and by the time you are done reading it back off. Yet, in these "current events," there is, indeed, a "timeless principle" that warrants immediate application.  A week ago, markets were experiencing nearly irrelevant levels of volatility - and the media declared it the new apocalypse as they went about drooling on themselves in a sea of inaccuracies about what the Fed did, said, and meant.  A week later, markets have been rallying, and the new question is what to do about "investing at the top" (it is "new" in that the last time I heard this concern, was almost three weeks ago). So I want to dive this week into some fun history, some actionable application out of that history, and leave you with some crucial reminders about markets.  These things will be useful whether the market is down a thousand or up a thousand next week. Come on into the Dividend Cafe ... DividendCafe.com TheBahnsenGroup.com
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Jun 18, 2021 • 28min

Debt and Everything Else

We had an interesting week in financial markets … The Fed did exactly what they were expected to by any reasonable person – nothing more, nothing less. They acknowledged the economy is improving, they said they were “talking about talking about” slowing down their quantitative easing. And they indicated two years from now as a time where the fed funds rate may be 50 basis points higher than it is now (may it be so). And that was it. No actions, policies, or steps. No commitments, promises, or assurances. Just loose language around some policy measures that are (a) Brutally obvious, (b) Not remotely hawkish, and (c) Not nearly enough if the conditions people are saying they are worried about are actually present. So how did people respond? After three months of people saying “inflation is here” and the “Fed must act” – what happened? Commodities got hammered, and the yield curve flattened more than it has in ages. You can’t make this stuff up. But rather than re-hash what I think the Fed will do, or what they should do, or what is going on in the inflation ad nauseum discussions, I think this week’s Dividend Cafe needs to better unpack what the real, actual, accurate under-current is to all of this. More or less, every single topic being discussed right now has as its true foundation the reality of debt. The accumulation of debt. Concerns about debt. Plans for more debt. Questions about servicing of debt. The promise of debt. The fear of debt. The cost of debt. For a four-letter word where 25% of its letters are actually silent, this is a pretty potent word in 2021 economics. And it is the subject of this week’s Dividend Cafe. Let’s dive in. DividendCafe.com TheBahnsenGroup.com
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Jun 14, 2021 • 45min

Market Outlook w/ David L. Bahnsen - Conference Call Replay - June 14, 2021

With the key market insights of the season, David L. Bahnsen takes questions from the public. Hosted by Scott Gamm of Strategy Associates. Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com TheBahnsenGroup.com
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Jun 11, 2021 • 16min

The Business Model Matters in Economics

We had a reasonably boring week in the markets (as of press time, which is after the market open on Friday, the Dow is modestly down on the week but no up or down day this week was particularly significant), but it was somewhat less boring in economic news. What I want to do today is look at the variety of economic news circulating and apply a market perspective to it.  My view is very simple as to the dangers around most conventional methods of receiving that news and most conventional methods of applying that news to investment practices: The news itself is prone to sensationalism, and the application of the news is prone to over-reactionism. Put differently, the incentive structure behind how most people receive their news is flawed (and in this case, I am talking about economic news, but my statements here are true in all forms of news).  And the incentive structure in how investment applications are delivered is substantially flawed, not to mention divorced from personal financial reality. I unpack all of that this week, and do a look at the current news, and provide wise investment applications for you - within our framework - where the incentives are right, the temperature is moderate, the perspective is sober, and the culture is fiduciary. Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com TheBahnsenGroup.com

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