In this episode of Boldin Your Money, host Steve Chen and guest Mike Himmelfarb unpack the newly announced “Liberation Day” tariffs and their sweeping impact on global markets, economic strategy, and personal finance. Recorded just days after a sharp market correction, the discussion blends macroeconomic insight with practical, real-world investing perspectives. Mike shares his background in finance and tech, and how his conservative, index-focused investment approach helps him navigate market volatility. The conversation explores the rationale behind the tariffs—including revenue generation, trade imbalances, and national security—as well as the risks of stagflation, geopolitical tension with China, and broader economic uncertainty. Together, they emphasize the importance of long-term planning, emotional discipline, diversification, and critical thinking in times of change. With insights on everything from debt refinancing to the role of automation and immigration in America’s future, the episode offers a thoughtful, grounded take on a complex moment in economic history.
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[32:18] A Financial Markets and Investing Podcast
Transcription
Steve Chen (00:00):
This episode is brought to you by the Boldin Financial Planning Platform. Formerly New Retirement, create a financial plan for free Boldin.com. Welcome to Boldin Your Money. I’m your host Steve Chen, and today we’re diving into one of the most talked about developments in the market this year, the Liberation Day tariffs that just got announced last Wednesday and their effect across the globe today. I’ve got Mike Himmelfarb, he’s a friend of mine, investor and member of our community who I am thinking of as a smart, but a relatively normal human being. To give the perspective from two kind of lay people himself and myself about what’s happening and how we’re trying to make sense of the changes that are happening here and how the confluence of politics to some degree administrative strategy and the markets are coming together. We’re recording this on April 8th at 6:30 AM The market had a big correction last Thursday and Friday. It was kind of flat yesterday on Monday and then it is right now as this morning it’s up. The DOW is up 1300 points, so we’ll talk about how quickly it moves. Mike, welcome to the show.
Mike Himmelfarb (01:20):
Thanks. It’s good to see you again.
Steve Chen (01:22):
Yeah, I would love it if you can give a couple minutes on your background for our audience. They just understand where you came from and how you got to where you’re today.
Mike Himmelfarb (01:29):
Sure. As Steve mentioned, I am a uninformed investor, but I dabble in the market, but I manage our portfolio a very certain way. I started out actually in investment banking after college, so I have a finance background from way back when. Then I went and got my MBA again in finance and then moved into more corporate life and have spent the past 30 years in the technology space, mostly working for big companies. About 10 years ago though, I started my own firm, my own consulting business. I left big company life. I just got really tired of the lifestyle and the type of work and have since been consulting with small to medium size technology and data businesses, helping them with strategy marketing, product marketing, things like that. Recently I’ve been focused very much on pricing as a particular, because a lot of it because I’m really interested in the subject and as I’ve gotten older I’ve realized that I want to get a good balance between doing something I really enjoy but also can make money of course. So that’s how I got to where I am today.
Steve Chen (02:35):
Given what’s happening in the markets, how do you think about how that could affect your own personal planning and balance between working and managing your assets?
Mike Himmelfarb (02:48):
Well, first of all, I should say that we are very fortunate that we have built a nest egg over the years. We’re generally conservative investors and we can weather the storm, I guess is the best way to say it, relatively risk averse. And if I’ve been through four, this is my fourth potential recession in my career. In fact, I started my career, the first day of work was the market correction in 1987, and I remember being on Wall Street in all the senior people were staring at these little screens. They had the market just going down, down, down, and they were talking about how their bonuses were all disappearing and they were losing hundreds of thousands of dollars on that day. So that I had no money at the time, so it didn’t really matter to me, but that was my initiation into it. And then we went through the 2008, we went through the.com bubble, and so I think just having those battle scars has really stepped the way we like to invest, which is just to be able to not stress out too much during those times, know that we give a little bit up on the return on the upside, but we’re protected on the downside.
Steve Chen (03:55):
Right. So as you think about this, you would say you were anticipating or comfortable with, if the market corrected 20% or a significant amount, I mean it didn’t correct 20%, but it was down 10% on Thursday and Friday, so you’re fine with that kind of volatility.
Mike Himmelfarb (04:11):
Well, I don’t love it, but if I have to do it, so I went to business school at University of Chicago, which is very much efficient markets, you can’t time the market, you can’t beat the market. That’s sort of the bottom line, and I do ascribe to that. So most of our portfolio is in index funds, so we’ve really brought exposure and then I play around with a little bit of money with companies that I know, and I just don’t really believe that it’s possible to time the market up or down. And so we have a waiting that we’re comfortable with and I balance a portfolio every three to six months and just going to ride it out. I think I do also ascribe to the view that over the long term the market’s going to go up, so hopefully we have enough time left to recoup whatever we’ve lost here.
Steve Chen (04:59):
Yep, a hundred percent. Well, I think that given what’s happening with technology and healthcare, hopefully many of us will live longer lives or there’s a very real possibility we could have much longer lives, and we have to think that way. And I think being invested is, and taking the appropriate level of risk is definitely part of that. Yeah, I mean we did a survey of our audience on Thursday, starting on Thursday, we had a thousand people reply and 58% said they were prepared for and comfortable with the volatility, which shows you the power of planning. And another big chunk, which I think took us over 70% actually were thinking about it, Hey, this could be a buying opportunity. So it’s very different if you can step back and think about the volatility. But those folks who are kind of the exception and the media feeds into it at times like this, there is a real test for a lot of people emotionally about their investments and are they really prepared to deal with this volatility and have people started thinking about the worst case scenario.
Mike Himmelfarb (05:55):
I think the other part is it’s really important for people to live within their means, and I think a lot of people get in trouble because they establish a certain lifestyle for a given earnings level, and then if that goes away or they can’t draw as much savings, then they’re kind of stuck either with a high mortgage or a car payment or something like that. And so it’s really important just to keep that part in mind too, is that your spending needs to correlate with this type of market and you might have to be comfortable that you can still maintain whatever lifestyle you have if this happens.
Steve Chen (06:24):
Yeah, a hundred percent. One thing that our audience and our community has in common, a lot of folks, they’re kind of like 401k millionaires. They’re kind of like the million next door. I mean, we didn’t set out to attract this audience, but a lot of folks that have engaged with our platform and have been meeting with some of these groups are this way. They have kind of been prudent, they’ve been pretty frugal. They’ve been saving and investing for a long period of time and seeing the positive impact of that. And it’s easier to look back when you’re decades into your life and your career and say, oh, hey, it’s working right. The challenge is when you’re younger and you’re kind of just starting out, when you start out and on Wall Street and you have no money, it kind of feels like it’s 20 years from now that feels like a long 30 years from now, that feels like a long ways away and you don’t really see the power of compounding until you get deeper into it and you have a bigger asset pool. Then you’re like, oh, wow.
Mike Himmelfarb (07:15):
No, for sure, for sure.
Steve Chen (07:16):
Alright, so we want to get into and cover a couple things. So one is what is happening and then why is it happening and try to articulate the strategy here. And I think just for full disclosure, obviously this is tied up with politics a bit, but we’re going to stay apolitical, just kind of discuss what is actually happening and then maybe get into the economics a bit of it like tariffs and do they work and things like that or what’s the point of view on tariffs? But we had this liberation day tariff thing that happened, right? And essentially the administration announced a number of tariffs across 60 countries ish and very high levels of tariffs. And the market I think saw that this one, it was unexpected the degree to how big the tariffs were, and that was a shock and a surprise, and the market started reacting during the speech announcing these things.
(08:13):
The analogy I had was to simplify this as like, hey, if you think of America as a country with a complex supply chain and supply relationships all over the world that makes stuff that we need as a, sorry, think of us as a company that we need all this stuff. If we then shredded all the agreements we had one day out of the blue, it would be very difficult to keep the company very well. And I think that’s kind of a bit how at least I see it. I don’t know, Mike, if you have a perspective on what was announced and why.
Mike Himmelfarb (08:47):
Obviously I’ve been thinking and talking a lot about this with almost every conversation I have now starts with this tariff thing. And I think there are really two parts to it. One is just the rationale behind what they’re doing. And if you look at that, a lot of it does make sense. You want tariffs to be fair, you want other markets to be open to us, you want to protect our intellectual property. And so these tariffs are a lever that can solve some of those problems. And I think we’ll talk about that a little bit more later. But the other part is how you do it. And that’s I think where people are getting really nervous because one thing about the market is it hates uncertainty, and that’s what’s happening now is that people aren’t really sure what’s going to happen with the economy. It might be going to a recession, might be stagflation. There’s all these doomsday scenarios that seem more likely and market hates that. But on top of that, just Trump’s style is just to be kind of capricious. I mean, he’s very unpredictable, and I’m not saying this as a slam on him, that’s just his style and that just adds to the uncertainty. And I think that really just magnifies all the changes that we’re seeing and what we’re seeing happening in the market.
Steve Chen (09:58):
Yeah, a hundred percent. I think some people think that that’s on purpose. I think that’s his style, but that also he’s leaning into it. And I do think you’re right, the strategy, it’s like with any company, organization, you want a strategy and then you want a plan about how you’re going to execute your strategy and then you actually do it. And I think what we’re getting here is here’s the plan, here’s what we’re doing. I have been looking around and I think that’s what this podcast is about. What is the coherent strategy that gets us from A to B? I think the B is, hey, we want to enable better growth in the United States. We want it to be more fair with our trading partners. We want less regulation, lower taxes, all these things, but can we actually navigate this? And tariffs are one lover, but we live in a world where countries can react and they are reacting. And how does that actually play out?
Mike Himmelfarb (10:54):
The best analogy that I heard that explains Trump and how he’s handling this is historically a president will play chess and they always say he’s playing chess and the other side’s playing checkers. And so if you think about the complexity here, it makes sense that you’d have all these moving parts, you have to figure out which levers to push, that sort of thing. Well, Trump doesn’t play chess. He plays poker. And if you look at it through that lens, everything makes sense. He’ll make a big bet, he’ll try to bluff the other side, he’ll wait until they fold or do something and if it doesn’t work, he’ll change his mind and go on to the next hand. So if you think about it through that lens, it actually becomes pretty clear what he’s doing in my mind. And so you can start seeing if you play it out, there’s probably a good chance that these tariffs are going to go down or away. In a lot of cases, in my opinion, countries are already calling as bluff and others are already folding. So you’re starting to see that play out on a limited scale right now.
Steve Chen (11:50):
Yeah, that’s true. I mean I know that some countries are coming in and saying, fine, well, I mean other countries have had tariffs on the us. I dunno if they’re that material, but they’re saying, okay, fine, let’s lower, let’s go to zero tariffs on both sides. But the thing that’s a bit confusing is I think the goal is one, use tariffs to collect money. So I think he wants to keep the tariffs in place. So we collect money in lieu of taxes. This idea is to tax everybody else, not just US citizens. And the other thing is the trade deficits. He’s like, okay, well let’s try to balance that out. Hey, we buy much more stuff from China than they buy from us. Let’s make that more fair. But it’s not one-to-one, like we buy and sell different things that have different values from each other. And so I don’t know if you’re going to necessarily solve that trade imbalance overnight or frankly at all, or frankly, if that’s even necessarily a good idea. I think one thing that a lot of people are struggling with is that generally de-industrialization of the United States or shipping manufacturing overseas has been going on for 50 years. It’s been going on for a long time
(12:53):
And it’s generally been a good thing. The US has evolved as a country. We’ve kind of moved higher up the food chain. We do more higher value things and we ask our trading partners to do other work that’s not necessarily a bad thing, and that’s helped the world economy in general. We’ve lifted other countries out of poverty because their folks can go from working in farms to working in factories, and that’s been good. Having said all that, I totally get that the US needs to make some stuff. We need to make chips, we need to make weapons, we need to be able to make cars and with the stuff to run our country, but we’re not going to go back.
Mike Himmelfarb (13:29):
I totally agree. Just look at Vietnam, do you really want to put a tariff on Vietnam so that a $2 t-shirt now costs two 50 or $3? What difference is that really going to make to us other than you don’t be negative. And then if you look at the annual wage of a worker in Vietnam, it’s like $2,400. So think about the minimum wage in the US for a factory worker, it’s at least 10 times that, right? So we’re never going to get to the point where you have an American who wants to earn $2,400 a year, it it’s just not going to happen. You’re saying those types of products, it doesn’t make any sense to manufacture them here. And so why tip the apple cart? But if you’re looking at China and they’re stealing our intellectual property and our ideas and you go onto Amazon, now you do a search for anything, the first 50 listings are all these knockoff products. So that’s a real threat to us because that really does undermine the higher value stuff, the things that we’re innovative with that we have a competitive advantage. I think the things you really need to crack down on.
Steve Chen (14:33):
Yeah, a hundred percent. I think some of the ideas behind these tariffs are rational. Like, hey, there’s a national security element of this thing. There’s a rebalancing things a bit and trying to capture more revenue. That makes sense. And for this, we was listening to the All In podcast and they interviewed the Secretary of the Treasury, Scott Besson, and he’s talking about, look, the other big driver here is the US has 36 trillion in debt, which is 124% of our $27 trillion GDP. And 9 trillion of that is coming due largely in the first half of this year and needs to get refinanced. And a driver is like, let’s get the 10 year treasury down as low as we can. It was I think four and a half percent and they’re trying to leading into this thing. It was kind of down to 4%. I don’t know, it’s probably moved a lot today, but how much do you think that is part of this?
Mike Himmelfarb (15:34):
Oh, that’s big. So I think there’s one school thought which we talked about, which is the emotional part, which it’s got to be fair. We don’t want to get ripped off. But the other part is just we have this huge overhang in this country of debt and we’re at the point now where we have to raise a ton of debt just to pay off the interest on our old debt. So it’s this really bad cycle. I also read there’s a large hedge fund manager, I can’t remember his name was pointing out that all our GDP growth over the last 20 years has actually come from increases in government spending. And I think that you could argue either way whether what it makes sense to the government to do, but the fact is we are becoming a lot more dependent on the government. And there’s a huge school of thought that says that that’s not sustainable. And I think you’re seeing that with the deck. And the other way to look at the tariffs is it’s a consumption tax or a sales tax basically on Americans, they want to replace the income tax, which they eliminated during the Trump administration. They want to continue that and this is the replacement, this is how they want to pay off the debt that essentially by taxing Americans. I think the simplistic way of looking at it,
Steve Chen (16:42):
Yeah, I mean I believe this is a huge underlying driver and it’s a test. I think the other big narrative here is China. It really feels like it’s a face off between the US and China as we look forward. Obviously technology’s a huge part of the future. I think rightly with the CHIPS act started in the last administration started moving, limiting our dependency on Taiwan, which makes 90% of the chips in the world and saying let’s some of this stuff. They’re building huge plants in Arizona, they’re bringing people over from Taiwan to work in these plants. That’s happening and that’s a good thing. But literally I think the biggest threat out there is like, hey, if China’s like, guess what? We want to control Taiwan when we’re like Taiwan has something we want, which is probably second to oil or not. I mean chips and oil are the name of the game, energy and chips, but we could get into a conflict with them, which would be really difficult. I mean, do you have a perspective on how the whole China narrative plays out?
Mike Himmelfarb (17:47):
I’m not an expert on this topic, but I can tell a couple anecdotes. So at my old job, I managed a business that was located in 27 countries and I ended up spending a lot of time in China. And this was, I don’t know, maybe seven to 10 years ago, eight to 10 years ago, most of the large internet companies are banned in China. You can’t get Google, you can’t get Facebook. I believe that there’s some auto manufacturers that have humongous tariffs, so they can’t enter the market. And then think about here you have TikTok, we do open up our market for them and they don’t for us in the same way. So it does feel unfair. I completely understand that. I think the issue with China is they’re no dummies either. They have their own astral interest, they have a lot of control over us because I think they’re the largest holder of US debt, so they could really mess with us and mess with our whole economy. They just start flooding selling our debt, stop buying. It really cause a lot of problems. So I think taking the blunt force approach might not be the, I think you’re going to have to, but you got to be smart about it is my perspective on it. And I think it remains to be seen how that’s going to all play out.
Steve Chen (18:59):
Yeah, it’s interesting seeing the market. I think a lot of people were wondering, is Monday going to be black Monday? And it was pretty stable and then today it’s jumping back up in a pretty huge way, but I think a lot of people, the market discounted that these tariffs were going to stick at the level they were going to stick at because a lot of folks have said that, Hey, if we were really intent on keeping these tariffs at these super high levels for a long period of time and trying to industrialize a lot, one that would take a long time. And two, the market would be not down like 10% but be down like 30 to 50 plus percent. So it was already discounting it. Now you’re seeing the market come back. So I think a lot of people see this, but I think one of the scenarios that’s less good here is that ultimately in some ways countries come down to their leaders. If you get in a yelling match with somebody, that’s one thing. But if someone pushes somebody else, then suddenly you’re actually a physical fight. And I just worry that in some ways does this go from like, Hey, I’m playing poker and I’m bluffing when China’s said, okay, we’re not going to take this lying down, we’re going to crank up our stuff, and maybe they start pulling other levers that does it turn into something worse?
Mike Himmelfarb (20:13):
Well, I think the other thing is, yeah, you look at the personalities right now and prime Minister China and Trump, neither of ’em want to back down. They’re not going to back down. And so if we get to a point where it’s just unbelievably painful, they’re going to need some sort of off ramp that makes it look like each of ’em got to win. And I don’t know if either side really understands or knows what that is, and Trump’s kind of fishing around for that. He said, I think it was yesterday, if China agrees to sell TikTok, then he’ll lower the tariffs. So he’s trying to find some sort of win that he can then talk about. And it may be bigger, maybe small, but I think part of the issue with what you’re saying is that it becomes this financial arms race and who’s going to blink first,
Steve Chen (20:58):
Even if there’s this off-ramp. I guess the question is do we still have these underlying problems? Because if we’re like, okay, guess what? Just kidding, we’re going to lower these things. Okay, the stock market ramps back up, but if interest rates also ramp back up, then we still have this refinance problem.
Mike Himmelfarb (21:15):
The other interesting thing I saw, and this is really important to keep in mind now, is that in the last whatever, four or five bear markets, there’s always a bounce. So this happened in 87 when I mentioned the drop. Then a couple days or a week before the market had dropped, let’s just say 2%, I don’t remember the numbers, I wish I did. And then it climbed back up for a couple of days and then it tanked. And the issue is that everyone should keep in mind as they’re trying to, I am timing the market and see if you can get 3% in a minute, is that this isn’t going to erase the long-term issues that we have. And so if we’re heading to a recession, removing the tariffs isn’t going to necessarily remove the threat of recession. And so I would expect that we might get a little balanced, it’s going to be extremely volatile and for some reasons I can explain, but over the next six to 18 months, you should probably expect it to be lower than it is now.
Steve Chen (22:11):
Interesting. Yeah, there’s definitely an emotional part of the market, right? It’s not. I think one thing that people have been around for a while now is that markets are not only rational, they’re also emotional. You don’t really find the market bottom until there’s something called capitulation, which is like everyone around you feels like it’s freaking over. And yeah, you’re right. 87, I was graduating high school, so I saw the headlines, but it wasn’t there. but.com crash, there was capitulation. People were like, it’s over. We totally overdid this stuff. 2008, great financial crisis, that was a capitulation Bernanke at the time was like toing his wife sell it all. The whole system could come grinding. Literally people thought it could be freaking over. They called all the banks together. We got to backstop everything otherwise we could have a total meltdown. And then in 2020, and I think people were like, Hey, I could be dead. So at times those you see one significant corrections, like 20% whatever down plus down, and then people thinking it’s all over. And that’s when actually the buying new opportunity is because if you zoom out for a hundred years, the stock market is just up into the right, but the volatility is part of it. It’s a feature, not a above.
Mike Himmelfarb (23:32):
So two comments on that. The first one is if you remember back to 2008, what happened was Beer Stearns went out of business, they went bankrupt, and so the market sank and then the government think they sold them. So they rescued Bear Stearns market went back up, then Lehman Brothers failed and then everything went to a hand basket down. So this might be the first shock among many. But the other thing I’ve been thinking a lot about is if you do want to invest in the market, it’s probably better to do dollar cost averaging. Just say for the next 12 months, I’m going to put X in the market and you will catch some of the upside, but you won’t be risking that you’re mistiming it.
Steve Chen (24:15):
Oh, for sure. Yeah. You want to be gradually and gradually out and kind of ride this thing. It’s time in the market versus timing the market. I think in general, the more concentrated your bet either by time or by specific equity or specific position, the more risky your stuff is. And that’s where investing over long periods of time and then also owning broad indexes and being broadly diversified is it’s just way safer for people.
Mike Himmelfarb (24:43):
There’s actually one other thing to think about. This is the first possible recession, let’s say market correction since the advent of programmatic trading. So during the last one you still a lot of individual investors making manual trades. So there was a lot of emotion, but it was a lot more diversified than it’s now. And so what friends of mine who are on Wall Street say is that this programmatic trading just causes massively more volatility. The swings are just going to be way bigger than they would’ve in the past. So in some ways it’s a little bit of an unknown how the market’s going to react, but overall I think we should expect that it’s going to be pretty volatile and these 200 point swings are two 3% in a day that might be commonplace versus before it might be a bit more spread out.
Steve Chen (25:29):
Yeah, it’s true. I was talking with another founder and he was just noting that he is like the constant volatility, these 800 point swings and the Dow is just like, it’s hard. He’s in financial services too, but it’s just hard for him emotionally to watch this. And I don’t know, I’ve gotten to the point where I generally ignore it. I believe in my plan and have a long-term perspective that it’s going to work out and the market itself corrects and I’m broadly diversified, but it’s tough. And I think another thing that people, I don’t know if there to some degree we are in terms of downsides here, we could be kind of talking ourselves, creating our own recession because there’s so much uncertainty. I mean he was seeing it. We see it a little bit in our business. It’s like when people are so distracted and uncertain about what’s going to happen here, they pull back, he runs a business in the lending side of the world for larger considered projects, things like home improvements, cars and stuff like that. If people aren’t sure then they delay decisions. It is just like, I don’t want to spend money, I don’t want to think about it. And as that happens broadly, that slows the economy down and that causes recession.
Mike Himmelfarb (26:48):
No, absolutely. So I deal with a lot of technology companies. Most of ’em are a little bit smaller, they’re lower to middle market and yeah, they’re terrified because a lot of times they’re kind of considered to be a discretionary spend by their customer. And so they see real downside risk. And I think it’s important to at this point kind of step back and take a moment just to take the emotion out of it. And here’s what’s happening right now and think a little bit longer term for these companies because, and I’ll bring it back to individuals. For these companies, the budgets are tightening, but if the end goal is to actually get more onshoring, it’s not going to be human factories, it’s going to be all automated, then companies here are also going to be looking for other ways to create more efficiency. So there’s long term, there’s going to be probably more demand for technology to solve some of these issues.
(27:42):
And I think the smart companies are the ones that are both managing the short term and also taking the long view on how they can adjust their business, their go-to-market and their product. And so I think individual, it’s important for individuals due to the same is that you can feel the emotion and the terror or being scared about what’s happening now, but it’s a good time to think about what is my risk tolerance? What do I really need to weather the storm? How do I want to basically come out of this and be in a decent position? So it’s really important to take the motion out and take a step back and take a rational look at it as well.
Steve Chen (28:17):
Yeah, there’s definitely a long-term strategy for the country that we want to get into. But just to recap, this is what’s happening. So listen to the all in pod, which is helpful. And basically the plan is this. So the goal is how do we get the country to grow faster and be more efficient as an engine? That’s a good goal. And then the plan is let’s raise revenue outside of taxation because taxing US people, so that’s tariffs. And also they hope that tariffs, one raise revenue and two lead to more onshoring of manufacturing. That makes some sense. They want to increase efficiency so that lower regulation and they also want to lower taxes. That’s part of this. And then they’re also trying to decrease spending in the federal government. So like Doge is in there, there’s 3 million people that work for the US government, 600,000, the postal service, 2.4 million doing everything else.
(29:10):
Their goal is to get 10% of everybody else, so 250,000 jobs or something. And I think they’re getting there. And then I think they also are trying to convince the Fed, which is independent to lower rates. And one way to do that is to cause a recession. And so some people think, Hey, we’re actually fine if they’re, I mean Besson actually said this. He’s like, Hey, we’re going to do these things and there’s going to be market volatility and there might be a recession, whatever. That’s the cost of doing business. I think what the challenge is is that the Fed also’s job is to fight inflation and tariffs can cause inflation because it makes the cost of goods higher. So that makes things more expensive and that could lead to lower growth and inflation stagflation, which would be bad, but that’s kind of what they said they’re doing and what is happening. I dunno if you have any more color you want to add to that.
Mike Himmelfarb (30:06):
Yeah, there’s a lot of stuff I could say to that Stagflation is for anyone who’s lived through the seventies and early eighties, it’s tough. It puts the Fed in a real bind because like you said, normally in a recession you lower rates, so you incur spending, but if there’s inflation, then you would raise rates to lower the inflations. They’re kind stuck. They don’t really have anything to really do in that situation. And what ended up happening in the early eighties is those during Reagan, they ended up raising the rates, interest rates were like 18%. They’re huge. And so you can think about what that would do to the economy, it just slows it down tremendously. So I think that is a real risk that they need to be careful of. I think the other thing that’s interesting that’s going on is a lot of this is happening because the Republican party in general, in Congress especially, have been deferring to Trump and they’ve been letting him go.
(31:00):
And I think you’re starting to see a number of politicians, whether it’s Ted Cruz or the Heritage Foundation, some of these really conservative organizations are starting to get nervous because they think that there could be a real political cost to going into a recession. So it might be good medicine, but it could really cost ’em for a long time. And the midterms aren’t that far away. It’s only a little over a year. And so that I think is the other thing that could happen is that they get so nervous that they basically reign Trump in. They try to reassert control over the tariffs. And so I think that’s the one thing that we will see how it plays out, whether they can actually pull it off or if that’ll happen or not.
Steve Chen (31:40):
Yeah, so it’s interesting. So we’re going to find out, I mean any points of view on the worst case, mid case and best case here.
Mike Himmelfarb (31:49):
Well, I think certainly the worst case we just talked about, which is stagflation, that could be very painful to go through because it’s very hard to control the levers. And if you look at Japan, they were basically in a stagflation environment with zero growth for it was like 20 years for a really long period of time and they just are coming out of it. And that type of malaise is really painful to go through. So that I think would be the worst case. Is that how you see it or?
Steve Chen (32:18):
Yeah, I think I see the same thing. I think we get into a real trade war and everything gets more expensive, which drives inflation and slows us down. And so yeah, it’s stagflation and we haven’t seen that. It’s very tough to adapt to. So I think that’s definitely the downside in the mid case is this goes on longer than we think. I think the best case is like, Hey, this is a big negotiation scenario and it gets resolved pretty quickly. I think the mid case is actually, it drags on that uncertainty drags on and that just, we basically score an own goal by causing our own recession when we don’t necessarily need to have one, then it just slows things down. Peter Luke at Creative Planning did a good interview with John Clements where they were talking about these scenarios, and I think a lot of folks feel like, okay, one, this is not like 2008 and 2020, it’s not these external driving things that are potentially so terrible. It’s a little bit like we’re doing this to ourselves. Hopefully it’s not going to end up being that kind of scenario. And a lot of this is trying to, you’re saying your poker analogy like it’s negotiation, making bets and trying to get information, but then also the administration can get away from some of these bats and basically say, okay, actually we’re not going to keep these tariffs in place and we can kind of go back a little. We can backtrack a bit.
Mike Himmelfarb (33:45):
The other thing that I think a lot about is how all the other policies fit into this plan. They’re two big ones that I think are worth remembering. So usually a country needs to grow, they need to expand and grow to be healthy. And a lot of that growth for us has come through immigration and we’ve basically decided to cut that off as well, justifiably. So you could argue the pros and cons, but it could potentially magnify the impact of a low growth scenario, right? Because then you don’t have new people coming in. And then if you’re trying to onshore a lot of production, a lot of that’s taken by people who come here and they’re making a lot more money than they were in there where they used to be, right? A lot of times they’re doing jobs that most Americans don’t want to do.
(34:29):
So I’m not sure if those policies are in sync. And then the third part is higher education. We’ve spent a lot of time, as you mentioned earlier, sort of upskilling ourselves, moving ourselves up the ladder to doing more high value activities. And that’s all been fueled by the university system in the US and it really is a crown jewel. You have a lot of people around the world who want to come here because they think it’s the gold standard and for other reasons, the administration is kind of getting that to contract too. They’re doing things against that may undermine that asset that we have. And so if you look at those three together, you just wonder if it’s a coherent policy or how they’re all going to interact and what the effect of them will be.
Steve Chen (35:15):
Yeah, totally agree with that. I mean, I think we have to be thoughtful about the kind of super long-term strategy here. And what has I think made America great over time has been, well, one, let’s not forget, we’re all immigrants. Everybody in this country except for the Native Americans, our ancestors came here at some point and many of them started at the bottom of the ladder and had crappy jobs in the first generation, worked hard, educated their kids. That was the American dream is like, come here, get a better job than you had in your previous country, and this is all kinds of nationalities. Educate your kids and hopefully they do better than you did largely through education. And also be a beacon where people, the smartest people in the world want to come here and work hard. I see this in Silicon Valley to try and take a shot at it and it happens. Look at the stats on the unicorns founded by basically immigrants. It’s super high. I mean, people come here and they’re like, Hey, great, I can work my ass off and do Well, if you make it less welcoming and people don’t want to come here, you lose that innovation. And if that starts happening in other countries, that’s a net loss. I think we need to be thoughtful about that and support that.
Mike Himmelfarb (36:40):
I think that’s what makes it really tough is that, I mean, I fully believe in all the things you’re saying in the value of education. On the flip side, you look at the K through 12 education in this country, it’s kind of field this, right? You can make a very good case that department of Education has failed for the past 20 years. Scores have gone down. There’s a lot of issues. So on one hand I can see the rational for saying, let’s just get rid of it and start over and figure out a better system. But at the same time, to your point, you don’t want to crash the whole system. You want to do it in a thoughtful way. And so I don’t know what the right balance is or how you protect that asset we have and make sure you change it. I mean, there’s so many reasons why it’s not changing and it’s very complicated, but something needs to be done for sure.
Steve Chen (37:25):
I think there’s some good things about what’s happening. So reducing waste in government, lower regulation or some lower regulation can be good. Lower taxes can be good. I think the private sector is better at allocating capital than the public sector. More visibility. There’s some of that, right? There’s also some crazy stuff. So there’s some good stuff, but there’s also some worrying things. I just in general feel like this country is also founded on the rule of law versus the rule of men. And that’s a very different thing. We had the American Revolution because we didn’t want to be governed by a king. We wanted basically have rule of law and the constitution was set up that way with separation of powers and checks and balances. I mean, these are core things. It is super important, but it worked. I mean, America has totally worked. If you AB test America versus everyone else, we freaking win and we want to keep winning.
(38:22):
And part of winning is having a common set of rules for the game. And so I think that’s core and also just trust with our, we’re not in this alone. We need to cooperate with our allies and other countries and be good trading partners, be a good business partner. Hey, I want to do business with you, Mike. Well, I got to hold up contracts. I got to hold up mine at the bargain and you got to hold up yours and then we do better together. So that kind of stuff, we got to keep our eye on that as well.
Mike Himmelfarb (38:49):
Oh, for sure. I mean, if you run a company, you look at sovereign risk, right? You’re not going to go necessarily build a new plant in Somalia. There might be a lot of corruption. It might be unstable. You need stability. You need to know what the government’s going to be there for you. And if you start doing things that are unpredictable, it just lowers the appeal of doing that. And so if we’re counting on investment in the country, which this really banks on, you have to have an environment that really makes it welcoming to get political for a second. I have a lot of friends on both sides of the aisle, and it’s very easy when you see something on the news that Trump does to either just immediate love it him or hate it him. And I think you’re bringing up a really good point, which is it’s very helpful, especially in times like this, to take that step back and put the emotion aside and spend the time to really understand the issues and make your own rational evaluation of what’s going on rather than let your emotions dictate what you do.
Steve Chen (39:48):
Right? A hundred percent. Well, I think the core thing for everybody is critical thinking, right? They teach at school, but you got to develop it and maintain it. You can’t believe everything you see on the internet or in the news. There’s bias in everything. And I think both sides of the aisle see both of that. A lot of people are like, oh, CNN is just only liberals, and our Fox news is only conservative, but people have to have their own perspective and make their own rational judgements about what’s happening and try to understand. That’s what we’re trying to do here is just understand it. I think we see what’s happening. It’s really the why and what is the end game here? How does that play out? That is still not obvious. What are the real drivers? Now, the debt thing is real, the national security thing is real, but how does it play out? Because in China, they have developed the muscles of building things. They can build factories fast and they can build the supply chains around those factories fast. And that’s highly automated. And that skillset exists there. And you watch videos of China making bridges and you’re like, oh, hey, they’re going to lay down a bridge in a week. It’s like, okay,
Mike Himmelfarb (41:01):
Put over apartment building in 24 hours. It’s crazy.
Steve Chen (41:05):
Yeah. The amazing stuff that I see over here is then you see SpaceX launching huge rockets and landing them on the freaking pad again mean, so there’s things that we’re also great at too, and we’re cranking out AI in amazing ways. And so I don’t know, you have to be respectful of the skills that have been developed in these different countries and recognize that it’s,
Mike Himmelfarb (41:24):
Well, I can give you another example. We were in Mexico over winter break, and there’s this electric car manufacturer in China called BYD, and they out how to make these cars that are, they’re electric cars, they’re like $24,000. They’re super cheap, they’re really nice. If they were available here, I would buy one in a second. They’re just really great cars, but because of tariffs, they’re not sold here. It wouldn’t be competitive. So I think the question we have to ask ourselves is we are giving up some lifestyle things by having these types of tariffs and some opportunities. And so that’s just another consideration.
Steve Chen (42:01):
But on that front, I mean, we want to protect the industries. We do want to maintain the ability to build stuff here for sure. And we have to decide how much of our economy is going to be devoted to that. And I think that’s, to me, I guess the ultimate question we have to be able to defend ourselves. I do believe in you can’t be rich, but not strong. So that makes sense. And I think what China has done is they were investing a ton in real estate infrastructure, and then they basically pivoted and they said, we’re going to invest a ton in industrializing or being able to build factories and they’ve built over capacity and therefore they can ship solar panels and they can ship cars super cheaply. But they’ve also gotten good at it. Now the question is, is that a good use of resources or they themselves are an 88% debt to income ratio in terms of their GDP. Their GDP is like 18 trillion versus ours is 27 trillion and their debt is 16 trillion. So they’re, but they’re running up the corporate credit card too to build stuff out, which creates some pressure on them too.
Mike Himmelfarb (43:07):
Well, I think the other thing of, I understand the military security purposes of having heavy manufacturing here. The other way of looking at it though is that’s how World War II has fought. But if you look at the current conflicts, whether it’s the Mideast or Ukraine, it’s turning into mostly a drone based war. So if you think ahead 20 years, does it make sense to be able to build these huge fighter jets or do you just build these cheap drones and it could just really change how you look at what we need to have to protect ourselves. I think
Steve Chen (43:39):
That’s true. I
Mike Himmelfarb (43:39):
Don’t know the answer, but I think that’s the thing you got to think about.
Steve Chen (43:42):
Yeah, no, fair point. I mean, you read these science fictions, I mean, it’s like, Hey, we’re going to have these insect size drones with AI in them and facial recognition, and they’re going to zoom around, see who’s bad and bad, and it feels like this stuff could be real very soon or, yeah,
Mike Himmelfarb (43:59):
Well, as another anecdote, so we’re thinking a lot about long-term care and health insurance and a couple years before retirement, but we’re getting to that point. We do have long-term care insurance. We’ve talked to a friend of ours about it who’s in a similar situation, and they said, I’m not worrying about it because by the time I need it, it’s just going to be robots. I’m just going to hire a robot and it’s going to take care of me. It’s going to be cheap. Hey, just never know
Steve Chen (44:21):
Could happen. I mean, that’s what Japan’s doing right now. They’re building some robot stuff for caregiving and also for companionships, it’s kind of sad, but people, they have dementia or they get intellectually diminished and then they give ’em a robot bunny rabbit, and they’re like, oh, great.
Mike Himmelfarb (44:37):
Yeah, actually, do you see, so that’s another point around security. I dunno if you saw this yesterday, but there was a story about there’s this robot dog that’s developed in China that’s used all over the place, including by large institutions. And what they found is that there basically is a security flaw. It’s built into the system, is a way for China to basically pipe back all the information that this dog is learning.
Steve Chen (45:01):
Yeah, it’s everywhere. We’re surrounded by, all of us carry smartphones on our ourselves that can literally, we can talk to and could also record everything that we’re doing. I don’t know. I mean, a lot of people hear a lot of these stories. It’s like, oh yeah, I was talking to my wife about going to Mexico or something, and then suddenly I’m seeing ads in beta for trips to Mexico, and I’m like, I didn’t type that into anything. I
Mike Himmelfarb (45:23):
Know I hear that all the time. I don’t care if people know I watch a certain TV show or whatever, or I’m about to buy a new mixer. But if you have a factory and you have these trade secrets and somehow the foreign government can steal all the secrets, I think there’s just different levels of risk, in my opinion.
Steve Chen (45:41):
All right. Well, let’s talk about one more thing and then we’ve got to wrap it up here. But in terms of what people can do, what are you doing in your own situation to adapt to this volatility?
Mike Himmelfarb (45:54):
Well, I am not doing much now to adapt. I feel like I’ve adapted a while back and I have a much more of a set it and forget it type mindset that I’ve developed over time. I personally just, I don’t like the risk. I’d rather miss out on a little bit of upside and not get the downside as much. So we have a balanced portfolio. We’re almost all in ETFs. I rebalance quarterly or every six months, and I know that there’s going to be volatility, and I try not to worry about it. I don’t want the stress. And I just feel like when we set this, our allocation or how we wanted to do this five years ago, I’m comfortable with it and we stay within that range. And yeah, it’d be great to time the market and I wish I invested yesterday at 3 45, but I didn’t. And that’s how it goes. So I think it’s just set a plan, the long-term goals, get everything in place, and then of course, keep an eye on it, but try not to panic or make any adjustments right now when you’re really emotional about it.
Steve Chen (46:53):
Do you use a bucket strategy at all? Do you have a cash allocation for some period of time?
Mike Himmelfarb (46:58):
Not really. It is mostly the more traditional 60, 30 10 or whatever it is, allocation.
Steve Chen (47:05):
I think a lot of what you’re saying resonates. I mean, for sure, being educated, having a plan, having scenarios, and thinking through it in advance. I mean, I think that our poll reflects that a lot. The reason vast majority of people are in our community are not freaking out is that they had thought about that. They anticipated this could happen, thought about it, and were comfortable with how they’d behave when this happened. And that’s really good for them long-term because traditionally retail investors get crushed because they buy high when there’s euphoria. Hey, Nvidia is happening, let’s buy Nvidia when it’s peaking. And then, oh, things reverse and things are bad and they sell low, and they do the opposite of what they should do. Versus if you can stay invested and just ride it out, generally you do better. But on the bucket strategy side, some of our users to do this, they basically set aside 1, 2, 3 years of cash and they’re like, whatever, I’m going to live on that. And they just continually replenish that. But if something like this happens, they just start using the cash up if you live on, or maybe they reallocate into the market, but then they’re timing the market to some degree, which is taking some risk. So they use that cash as a stock absorber and I think be diversified, just generally be diversified across your investments, across equities, bonds, real estate, cash, domestic, international. As part of this,
Mike Himmelfarb (48:23):
You and I, and probably most of your audience are extremely fortunate that we have a cushion to be able to do. Most people don’t have assets where they could have three years worth of cash on hand.
Steve Chen (48:33):
Totally.
Mike Himmelfarb (48:34):
And so I remind myself that every day, yeah, we’re losing money, but man, we’re lucky that we can weather the storm. And I think it’s helpful to have that kind of perspective as well, that yeah, it might be annoying and painful, but we’re just in a very fortunate condition. But it takes, you got to plan ahead to do that, to get there. And so that gets to your point about doing the 401k when you’re young is this might be bad, it might go away, but at some point there’s going to be another recession, there’s going to be something that happens, and if you plan ahead, then you can be a much better spot where you’re going to be able to weather it.
Steve Chen (49:06):
Yeah, for sure. Well, I think that’s the part about Bolden, we kind of talk about being your financial confidence platform, making these good decisions, being educated, being thoughtful, doing it over a long period of time lets you build that knowledge base, but also hopefully the asset base to have some resilience. And that lets you be more emotionally stable and take a longer per perspective. But yeah, unfortunately, it’s the exception versus the rule. I mean, I think our vision is how do we help the long-term stuff of this country? It’s like, how do we help a lot of people get financially literate when they’re young, make sure families or help families support each other and pass that knowledge across generations and build that wealth over generations and so they can make good decisions to stay disciplined with it. It does require discipline, and there’s no easy path here and there’s real risk anyway.
Mike Himmelfarb (49:56):
Yeah, no, I agree. So I’m a user, obviously and a big fan, and I think I have this thing against paying somebody one and a half percent to manage all my money. I’m just like, I don’t need that. Especially if I believe in just buying ETFs. What do I need to spend that money? Look, I don’t spend all my day thinking about the market normally, but with the platform, at least I get enough. I could check in on myself and I sort of have this automated system that can keep an eye on things and alert me if things need to be rebalanced, but it’s not overbearing in any way. But I could always use it more or I could use it in conjunction with the financial advisor or whatever. But I think I really like the flexibility of it, but also it does give you comfort that you’re doing the right thing.
Steve Chen (50:43):
Yeah, I think a lot of our users, they do. It does remind them. Yeah, one, we’re fortunate and two keeps things in perspective. If you take a long-term view, you’re like, okay. I mean, if you look at Thursday and Friday, you’re like, ah, it’s super scary. But if you look at two years of data, you’re like, okay, or five years or 10 years of data, you’re like, yeah, it’s a blip. Probably things are going to be fine.
Mike Himmelfarb (51:04):
I think you guys should inflate the grades of readiness though. Just give everyone a 99. They’ll make everyone feel comfortable.
Steve Chen (51:09):
Inflate the, yeah, well, we use Monte car, we use math to help people. There’s more coming. We’re always trying to make it give people a better understanding of their own situation and help people see things more clearly is what we’re trying to do and take long-term perspective. Alright, well look, Mike, thanks for jumping on and helping us break this down and hopefully for folks listening, it was helpful. Again, we are not economists, but we’re two people that do care and that we’re living it and stepping back. I mean this will be a moment in history for sure because of what’s happened. And I guess we will find out over the rest of this year and maybe into next year how this plays out. But hopefully it’s for the good. Thanks for listening. All comments and feedback are welcome. And Mike, thanks for joining us.
Mike Himmelfarb (51:53):
Thanks for having me.