Economic Losers
The Investor's Podcast Network
The Investor’s Podcast Network is a business podcast network. Our main show “We Study Billionaires” has 180M+ downloads.
By?Matthew Gutierrez,?Shawn O'Malley, and?Weronika Pycek?· August 14, 2023
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It hasn’t been a hot coworking summer for WeWork???
Adam Neumann’s formerly $47 billion company is now worth virtually nothing. Its stock trades at just 22 cents, down over 84% this year and almost 98% all time.
The company scorched mind-boggling amounts of cash on luxuries for its coworking spaces like Kombucha on tap, meditation rooms, mini golf, and rock climbing walls.
????Even bondholders, who are supposed to get paid first in bankruptcy, expect to get almost nothing back — WeWork’s bonds trade at just 11 cents on the dollar.
—?Shawn, Matthew & Werornika
Here’s the rundown:
Today, we'll discuss the?three biggest stories in markets:
All this, and more, in just?5 minutes to read.
POP QUIZ
Despite its grand vision, WeWork has been unprofitable for years. At its peak, how much money did the company lose every hour? (Scroll to the bottom to find out!)
CHART OF THE DAY
IN THE NEWS
???Economic Losers of the New World Order (WSJ)
The rich keep getting richer.
The world’s biggest economies, the U.S. included, offer big subsidies to win in future industries, namely artificial intelligence, semiconductors, and green technology. Large subsidies are upending decades of free trade and fostering a renewed winner-take-all spirit.
In turn, smaller players are getting left behind. The U.K. and Singapore, for example, lack the scale to compete against bigger countries offering subsidies. Indonesia and other emerging markets also could lag.
Big money:?Intel was offered $11 billion in subsidies from Germany to build semiconductor plants, which exceeds the annual budget of Singapore’s Ministry of Trade and Industry.
Wait, don’t leave:?Tech companies cultivated in the U.K. often blossom, then grow elsewhere. A battery-tech startup called Nexeon, raised over?$200 million?last year but will leave the U.K. to build its first commercial factory in South Korea, followed by a plant in North America.
Europe, the U.S., and China are in a?subsidy competition,?and the losers are poorer economies with less fiscal resources.”
Why it matters:
Big economies tend to stay big, at least in the short and medium terms. The U.S. has the economic might to offer?$369 billion?in incentives and funding for clean energy as part of the?Inflation Reduction Act. That’s driven a windfall of foreign investment.
Subsidy race:?Everything has hidden costs. Globalization transformed once-poor countries such as South Korea and Taiwan into high-tech, developed countries, lifting hundreds of millions of people from poverty. In turn, western countries like the U.S. got affordable consumer goods and a higher standard of living. But the subsidy race adds to speculations about a reversal of globalization.
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领英推荐
??? ??? Will Student Loan Repayments Weigh on Stock Market & Economy??(WSJ)
With student loan payments set to resume, will amateur investors and traders get pushed out of the stock market? It’s an important question when considering whether the S&P 500 can continue its roughly?17% rally?this year.
And now, as student loan payments resume in October, many will find it more difficult to fund their stock trading habits.
Payment pause:?Millions of Americans have enjoyed a pause on student loan payments since March 2020 as part of a government attempt to provide financial relief during the pandemic — the U.S. government provides most of the loans (92%) to student borrowers. Interest rates on these loans range from 4.99% to 7.54%.
Many of these amateur traders have likely been losing money gradually to professionals since day trading became cool again during pandemic lockdowns, requiring more fresh money to keep trading.
Why it matters:
Pinching pennies:?Given that the average monthly student loan payment in the U.S. is around?$400,?according to the?Federal Reserve, payment resumption will significantly shift borrowers’ monthly budgets.
The big picture:?The U.S. is heavily consumption driven — consumer spending represents about?70%?of the economy. A hit to spending for those in their prime years of spending (those 25 and under tend to spend over 94% of their income) will ripple through the economy and, as a result, the stock market.
MORE HEADLINES
????????Israeli startups are moving jobs and money out of the country, here’s?why
????Judge sends FTX’s Sam Bankman-Fried to?jail?over witness tampering
????Mobile food ordering is finally?coming?to U.S. airports
????America’s loss of AAA badge a reminder of?'regime shift'?for government debt
?? ???Will Unlimited Vacations Gain Traction? (Bloomberg)
Vacation time:?Among perks like flexible working hours, home office, sabbatical paid leave, and a four-day work week, an increasing number of companies, such as Netflix, Microsoft, and Goldman Sachs, have embraced the concept of?unlimited paid time off?(UPTO) for their employees.
In practice:?Implementing an unlimited vacation policy in the workplace allows employees to take as many sick, personal, or vacation days as they want, provided they fulfill their work obligations.
While the concept might sound ideal, companies still track the days off to prevent any potential misuse of the policy.
Why it matters:
Unlimited vacation is still relatively rare in American companies. But, nearly?70% of employees?are?enthusiastic?about it. Many hope to be granted this perk by their current or future employers, as it offers more flexibility than more structured PTO policies.
How much time to take??Interestingly, Bloomberg found that?39%?of employees would opt for 21 to 30 days off if they had UPTO, while?20%?would try to take over 30 days off.
Yet, in reality, taking time off poses a challenge for Americans, with more than half (54%) of workers expressing guilt over taking vacations.
Moreover, data from Mercer indicates that more than two-thirds of companies that implemented the policy saw?no changes?in employees' time off behavior, underscoring that the concept of "unlimited" isn't perceived as entirely boundless by workers.
TRIVIA ANSWER
?In 2019,?Business Insider?reported that WeWork was losing an incredible?$219,000 per hour.
SEE YOU NEXT TIME!
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