By Bill Bonner, Chairman, Bonner & Partners YOUGHAL, IRELAND – Today, we return to the scene of the crime. We’re talking about where WeWork founder Adam Neumann and Japanese conglomerate SoftBank ripped off investors for billions of dollars. And we begin by turning to Nobel Prize winner Esther Duflo. As we wrote yesterday, she urges economists to think like plumbers. So, we will have a go at it. For there were clearly some leaks in the WeWork model in need of repair… Recommended Link | TONIGHT: Get Jeff Clark’s 3 Favorite Trade Setups – Including Names and Tickers During his first-ever stock trading event tonight at 8 p.m. (ET), trading legend Jeff Clark is revealing: Why he’s actively recommending stocks for the first time in his career His system for finding the best ones (it’s already spotted gains as high as 600% in a matter of weeks) And his three favorite trade setups – including names and tickers. | | -- | Get in Line In the news this morning is word that Mr. Neumann has been let go. The poor man is on his own, after SoftBank took control of his company. He will have to get in line for unemployment compensation. The Wall Street Journal: SoftBank Group Corp. won approval from WeWork’s board to take control of the troubled co-working startup in a deal that would hand co-founder Adam Neumann nearly $1.7 billion and sever most of his ties with the company. One billion was for his shares in the business. Another half a billion was to resolve outstanding loans. Mr. Neumann had tapped into the company’s capital intake lines, borrowing money from the company to buy property that he then leased back to WeWork. And there was an additional $185 million… million!… for “consulting services.” But what kind of plumber gets a bonus for making a mess of things, connecting fresh water lines… to gas lines… to sewer lines? And what kind of a consultant gets a $185 million bonus for blowing up his own company? Pipe Dream WeWork now has over 40 properties on long-term leases. Its business model calls for paying the leases with money from month-to-month tenants. Here, too, it looks as though there was not enough thought given to how the pipes came together. The expense line is rigid, substantial, and almost permanent. But the flow of revenues comes from little, very flexible hoses that can detach at any moment. In Mr. Neumann’s fertile imagination, his properties would be filled up by thousands of “startup” entrepreneurs. The pipe dream of our age is that every mother’s son has in him an Uber or a Snapchat that will make him a billionaire before his 30th birthday… that new technology will bring us a never-ending flow of profitable new ventures… and that the feds will keep us supplied with liquidity until kingdom come. As to the first two, we have our doubts. But the third is confirmed every day. Here’s yesterday’s Wall Street Journal: The Federal Reserve Bank of New York injected $99.9 billion in temporary liquidity and $7.5 billion in permanent reserves into financial markets Tuesday. The short-term intervention came via $64.90 billion in overnight repurchase agreements with eligible banks, and with a $35 billion repo operation that will run through Nov. 5. Why the need for so much cash? WeWork, for one, was desperate for it. The company raised $17 billion from investors, but the money leaked out day after day… with nearly $2 billion in losses for 2017-2018 alone. And now there’s almost nothing left. Before Tuesday’s bailout, the company had only a few days’ worth of operating cash… and couldn’t even afford to pay the legal and separation costs of laying off employees. And WeWork is not alone. Throughout the Unicorn Zoo, there are many more freakish companies, all similarly consuming – not earning – cash. This could be regarded as a plumbing defect too; it appears that the feds – egged on by prize-winning economists – are supplying much more cheap credit than the markets can sensibly employ. Main Street… Wall Street… Washington – the big players borrow below the rate of consumer price inflation. What can they do with what they borrow? Finance foolish fighter planes and open-ended giveaways… buy back their own stocks… and fund cockamamie, capital-destroying businesses – like WeWork. But the simpleminded Nobel plumbers – such as Duflo and her husband, Abhijit Banerjee… and practically the whole gaggle of modern economists, from Paul Krugman to Larry Summers – can’t imagine that their theories, their fixes, and their wrenches could cause problems instead of solve them. And if more liquidity doesn’t bring the results they want, they will simply open up the valves further. Bad Plumbing A few months ago, investors thought they saw in WeWork another Amazon or Google. What the former had done to brick-and-mortar retailing and the latter had done to the Yellow Pages, WeWork would do for office space. Rather than bother with leases and maintenance, forward-looking entrepreneurs would have a single solution to their business lodging needs – WeWork. Thus it was that the company was groomed for an IPO at $47 billion (as much as $60 billion had been discussed). But then, in a moment of uncharacteristic caution, the chumps took a look at the plumbing. WeWork had the same hard costs of buying/leasing/outfitting/maintaining commercial real estate as every other property company. But it lacked the one thing that made those companies profitable – reliable long-term leases with healthy tenants. It was losing money – by the billions. And try as much as investors could to unclog the drains and open up the fresh water lines… they just couldn’t make the flows even up. However they added them up, there was always more going out than coming in. Investors wondered if WeWork was really such a revolutionary new concept after all. They balked at $47 billion… and at $37 billion… and then, finally, its patron, SoftBank, took over at a value of $8 billion. And now, the plumbing inspectors are beginning to look more carefully at SoftBank itself. “What is the value of the fund that nurtures these losers?” they ask. “We see the billions of ‘liquidity’ going down the drain. But where are the revenues?” In short, how long before SoftBank blows up too? Regards, Bill FEATURED READS China Ramps Up Infrastructure Project Approvals Bill has warned us about the worldwide bamboozle that encompasses the U.S.-China trade war. Now, China is accelerating infrastructure spending to prevent economic slowdown in the wake of the trade war… And see also: This Company’s Stock Is Tanking Due to the Trade War The trade war is affecting American businesses, too – particularly this one. This company’s stock sank 15% after the brand revealed that the trade war has been hindering its supply chain… The Pin That May Burst the “Everything Bubble” Bill believes we are living in a “Fin de Bubble” period. Now, Dan Denning, his coauthor on The Bonner-Denning Letter, shows how the flood of money into passive funds is helping pump the “everything bubble”… and why that bubble is about to pop. MAILBAG On Friday, reader William M. called Bill a “commonsense guy in a world that is upside down.” Today, more Dear Readers echo this praise… Bill, thanks very much for your daily Diary. It is indeed one of the very, very few voices of reason and sanity in this increasingly unreasonable and insane world. I hasten to point out that, of course, reason and sanity are only two of your Diary’s many fine qualities. I eschew the various shamefully hypocritical media outlets and formats, as they all have their dull little axes to grind, in preference to your straightforward honesty and truth. (The reason they’re constantly grinding their axes is just to keep their tiny little heads nice and pointy.) Thanks, Bill. You’re one in 7 billion and change. – David S. Bill is most definitely a rational, clear thinker in this crazy, “me first,” upside-down world. I look forward every day to Bill’s words. Such clear opinions and selfless wit shed light on the reams of data he’s spent his life analyzing. One thing I have found to be true in my little world (I’m a psychologist) is that those with a balanced view and no axe to grind make fun of themselves and their profession just as often as making fun of others. Thanks for your comments! – Bill B. Are you a faithful Diary reader? What keeps you coming back for more? And does SoftBank stand a chance, or is it just a matter of time before it blows up like WeWork? Write us at feedback@bonnerandpartners.com. IN CASE YOU MISSED IT… Free Stock Trading Event With Legendary Trader Tonight, at 8 p.m. ET, trading legend Jeff Clark is putting on his first-ever stock trading event to reveal… The S-Force Method: How to Make More Money Than You Can With Options – Trading Nothing But Tiny Stocks… And if you’d like to find out how to trade tiny, $1 stocks and potentially walk away with as much as $4,550… $15,900… and even $30,050 per trade – without using options – you’ll want to register immediately. Register for FREE here. Like what you’re reading? Send your thoughts to feedback@bonnerandpartners.com. |
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