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Morning Commentary

Technology and The Titans

By Charles Payne, CEO & Principal Analyst
10/6/2014 7:02 AM

The Revolution might not be televised after all. This week’s issue of The Economist is very telling... the headline reads:

“Technology Isn’t Working

The digital revolution has yet to fulfill its promise of higher productivity and better jobs”

We are always celebrating the rise of technology and its promise of a new world, but what if it is only giving us the old world at a faster speed? However, I am binning to wonder if it will make a serious difference for the individual’s wallet and conditions as there has been no economic revolution or even a societal revolution.

Let’s consider productivity, or lack thereof. The American output per person soared almost one hundred percent, as the industrial revolution moved full steam ahead. We were transitioning from the agricultural society to the industrial society. Although the last 13 years were the most incredible time of technology innovation. Our productivity has declined to almost half of that period when a mule and plow was considered high-tech. The first two industrial revolutions created more jobs and higher wages, but those wages and output per person are collapsing in the age of the Selfie.

American Output Per Person

1891 - 1939

1.5%

1939 - 2000

2.7%

2000 - 2013

0.9%

When I saw the wireless (radio) come about, and the TV, which played a significant role early on in America, it changed things: people were able to watch what went on in the south during the Civil Rights Movement and the Vietnam War was the first war televised. Nevertheless, I do not think the internet and technology era has lived up to the hype. Where are all the would-be people’s revolutions around the world? Technology was supposed to free the oppressed, but despite the hype of the Arab Spring, and the messages coming out of Hong Kong... I see nothing. Maybe it is still early, or maybe it is happening and I have not been paying attention.

Battle of the Ages

The Battle of the Ages…Battle of the Titans

Last week, Warren Buffett announced the purchase of the Van Tuyl Group, which will become Berkshire Hathaway Automotive. With the deal, the Oracle of Omaha will receive the following:

September Auto Sales

Chrysler

18.8%

General Motors

19.4%

Ford

-2.7%

Nissan

+18.5%

Toyota

+1.7%

Honda

+12.0%

Subaru

30.7%

Audi

14.2%

Volkswagen

-18.5%

The news comes the day after the industry posted strong sales for the month of September, however, many industry watchers think the low-hanging fruit is gone and sales could begin to fade. The 17.5 million rate dipped by an entire million last month, which has some industry-watchers concerned.

Franchise Models in Trouble

Over the long run, fluctuating sales may not be the biggest challenge for the industry. Like Uber (taxis) and Airbnb (hotels), Telsa has been upsetting the establishment apple cart, threatening to make “business as usual” obsolete. Elon Musk wants to sell cars directly to customers, bypassing the franchise model. He has gone on the attack against the industry and their pals in government. His comments sting:

“… an even bigger conflict of interest with auto dealers is that they make most of the their profits from service, but electric cars require much less service than gasoline cars… going a step further, I have made it a principle within Tesla that we should never attempts to make servicing a profit center.”

Musk, who knows how to work the system better than anyone, has been going hard at state legislators to allow the direct-to-consumer model. I am betting on Musk to win, it will be a win for consumers, too.

Inflection Point?

There are contradictions for October and mixed messages regarding the market. It has been less than a week, and October has been anything but uneventful. I have a surprising stat; out of the 13 times the first trading day in October was off by more than one percent, 12 of those times, the market finished the year higher. Another stat; if your portfolio does not seem to reflect the market being near all-time highs, there is a reason for that. Individual stocks are trading near 52-week lows, while diversified portfolios and indices are near 52-week highs.

Extreme Trends

NYSE

NASDAQ

New Highs

36

37

New Lows

80

72

 
Last week, stocks were in freefall mode, and then inexplicably, on Thursday at 11:40, the Dow hit a bottom and began to reverse. The Dow dropped 130 points before reversing and coming back and closing roughly unchanged.
 
 

 
Moreover, I think last Thursday was the inflection point, but that does not mean that volatility will fade or become less intense. Keep in mind, we begin earnings season this week, too.

Today’s Session

Today will be a quiet day in terms of economic data releases. The Gallup US Consumer Spending Measure was released this morning and later today, TD Ameritrade will release its Investor Movement Index report which provides insight on Main Street’s sentiment level. Something making waves this morning is word that Hewlett-Packard (HPQ) intends to break up its company by splitting the personal-computer and printer businesses from the corporate hardware and services operations. The split will result in HPQ turning into two Fortune-50 companies, HP Inc. and HP Enterprises, which should allow the companies to continue executing HPQ’s turnaround strategy that was initiated 4 years ago. The major indices are indicated higher during the morning session, and hopefully they will continue to recover the losses suffered last week.


Comments
No, It has just made us slaves to our cell phones, email, facebook. We are like worker ants feeding the machines!

Pat on 10/6/2014 7:23:50 AM
While it has given us access to information - it was quickly utilized by all the evil types in our society, so like everything, it's a trade off.

diane on 10/6/2014 8:14:39 AM
Being that I am "over the hill" and have owned a huge number of cars in my lifetime - I think the current "model" for dealerships came from people wanting all those goodies so many dealerships include. However, only once of all my cars owned have I ever taken advantage of free oil changes offered. So I personally would love the buy direct model. Having said that, I live 60 miles from my job - so I'm pretty sure I'm never buying an electric car, at least with current technology. Maybe if they could put a big solar panel on my roof to keep me going without having to stop and plug in. Maybe.
However I am all for cutting thru red tape and regulation and doing things in a new way. You always come out of the dealership feeling like you just got hoodwinked anyway, when you buy a new car.

diane on 10/6/2014 8:31:26 AM
We are moving closer to the I-Robot movie model, Tech will kill jobs for people. I do not have hope that Tech will create jobs for masses, but just the opposite.

TJ Cook on 10/6/2014 8:40:23 AM
I believe the internet and technology has increased the convenience and access to information. Instant communication between individuals and groups has certainly developed.....The failure to equal the past industrial is due to the current administration's policies and restrictions......

Jim Braccio on 10/6/2014 9:07:16 AM
It has made life much more complicated, albeit if you let it...cherry picking is the thing to do.

Karin on 10/6/2014 10:07:05 AM
The technology is but one factor in the revolution. The driving force is a free citizenry exercising individual liberty within a free market capitalist economy.

Jim Singer on 10/6/2014 10:07:30 AM
The fact the Internet is censored or banned in some places reveals the power it has had on religion/politics.

Deb Woodruff on 10/6/2014 10:12:26 AM
Ask JP Morgan Chase, Target, Home Lumber
and those of us who are scarred to death
that we might loose our electric grid
at any moment if they would call all
this progress? I don't think so,it is
more like the OK Coral !!!!!

tom wayne on 10/6/2014 10:14:43 AM
For me technology has definitely lived up to the hype. My family has been building commercial ice cream, ices and gelato making machines here in the USA for 110 years. I used to have to do trade shows and stand in a booth for 4 days hoping somebody would walk by. Now I am know all over the internet (along with Sadie my Golden Retriever) and we sell to 172 countries. Business is up 40% or more every year for the past nine years! Moving out of the Bronx to Tampa certainly helped production too. Imagine, there still are family owned manufacturing firms in the USA!

Steve Thompson on 10/6/2014 10:22:16 AM
Allowed me to take my business and managing my stocks with me, in my pocket, anywhere I go. Nav systems keep me on-the-go and out of traffic jams. Oh my goodness,,the answer is a resounding yes.

Jerry Hermes on 10/6/2014 10:25:31 AM
Ans: yes and No. brought yes major advances in Medicine and Science but also brought us time wasting youtube videos and selfies - and people still dying in Sudan, Syria, Iraq, Liberia and fighting amongt themsleves in Lybia and Ukraine and most 'connected' Americans are ignorant of World affairs - with all that info available from the screen in their hands, sad really, in my opinion.

Joe Brown on 10/6/2014 10:30:31 AM
Not sure of whether it has revolutionized humanity, but it certainly has made things more convenient for me.

Bill Galloway on 10/6/2014 10:34:59 AM
Information must still be processed - internet hasn't created a desire among the less well informed to be better informed, nor given the well informed the mental capacity to process an infinite amount of information.

Bill D on 10/6/2014 11:11:50 AM
Yes and no. Greater info available quicker and convenience of using that data for more and better choices.
But it has left us less sociable and engaging society.Plus we replacing humans with machines, and automatans that move us further away from immediate exchange of ideas, feelings and social intercourse.

We are marching head long into Brave New World without the safeguards of family, friends and God and replacing them with all powerful and knowing Government who is more than willing to be all things to all the people it has uplifted their roots.

All this to make us more equal and all on the same level playing fields except for the ones on the top pulling the strings. We are rushing head long into an world oligarchy who want to eliminate human element that uses the resources and pollutes the environment that they want for themselves.

Like money, trade, etc., they are a wonderful tool but a terrible task master. The informational systems could be great tool but in the wrong hands could prove to greatest of all taskmasters , making us slaves to very thing we hoped would us free from the menial things we wanted to escape.

Jim Cuff on 10/6/2014 11:51:30 AM
We have more/quick access to info. Has hampered communication as many spend more time messing around with 6-8 communication devices/venues, leaving no time to actually respond. What a poor substitute for socialization.

Kathryn Napier on 10/6/2014 12:17:33 PM
communications between people of different countries might lessen the wars from the past

Ronald Lammers on 10/6/2014 12:44:12 PM
Regarding access to information, often times it is hard to find the truth in issues of controversy. The internet also opens up many more doors to fraud. It is a market place that is truly buyer beware.

On the plus side I live 15,000 miles away from my business and am able to manage it remotely. I connect with people in several countries, in the Americas, Europe and Asia and facilitate business rather rapidly. I love the internet, it allows me to live on a remote small tropical island where not much is available except for high prices, a large outdoor sauna and lovely lagoons and lush jungles.

It is like anything else, it can be good or bad, it is what one makes of it.

David Huber on 10/6/2014 1:24:07 PM
The revolution will be seen in coming years as young people around the world use the new instant acces to information and ideas in ways not yet realized. Current world leaders (both political and economic) will be supplanted by people with different points of view about what is important in society. The transition may not be pretty.

Mike Leavitt on 10/6/2014 2:15:05 PM
This is not a yes or no question. Of course it has provided an unlimited amount of convenient learning and information. It is better than the card catalogue in the public library! I probably look up info 20 times a day. But it can also be abused and substituted for personal effort and strength of purpose. The Internet is a tool but it must be used wisely.

Rose Marie DeStefano on 10/6/2014 2:48:16 PM
It's amazing how quickly we can find information today through the internet and technology, but putting this information together into coherent and useful configurations still requires intelligent human reasoning.

Patricia Flynn on 10/6/2014 2:57:18 PM
Increased productivity in all things means less work for all, and more leisure time for all. But sharing available work leads to lower productivity, especially in work categories that require a high level of concentration and creativity.
IMHO there is only two possible non-exclusive conclusions: 1) The human population is two large and uneducated; and 2) An economy based on consumption is unsustainable.
I'm going to concentrate in search of a solution. No guarantees.
Later, Larry

Lawrence Foltzer on 10/6/2014 4:07:18 PM
After vacationing this last week and using Uber and AirBnB, yes, without question.

Scott Heck on 10/6/2014 4:10:32 PM
The question is restated a little different after one has voted than it was when asked. Yes there has been a revolution in communication and access to information just as there was with the printing press and then the telephone. But revolutionized humanity? I think not. "Humanity" has not changed for thousands of years... only human's "stuff" has changed.

Mel Shapiro on 10/6/2014 6:38:58 PM
Charles

Technology has offered convenience and information; however, it has a long list of negative effects on society; such as: 1) moderate percentage of job loss, 2) it has also brought us to the point of threatening our national security, 3) I believe there will be a "hack" [of some sort] resulting in a paralysis of our country, and will cause great harm to the entire country, 4) it has had a major affect on the moral and value degradation of our country...these are a few negative elements of technology.

It has occurred to me I should end here - there are never ending negative examples of technology. Technology does have positive attributes; however the speed of the growth and expansion without proper security is frightening.

P.S. I enjoy your new show. It is actually about finance and investing, with only a small emphasis on politics. The FOX Business channel could learn a lot from the modeling of your show. Great job!!

F. Michael Toye on 10/7/2014 7:37:51 PM
I believe it has exceeded anything that I believed it would have been back in the early 90's. Business has been the primary beneficiary by use of intranets. As much as I might complain about how cumbersome using a "one size fits all" program for project management, having up to the date data on all projects and programs available with a few commands is "night and day" compared with yesteryear.

Jonathan on 10/9/2014 10:28:47 AM
 

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