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Guideposts: At the Fed, the Deep State Hides in Plain Sight

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You are receiving this email because you signed up to receive our free e-letter Gilder's Guideposts, or you purchased a product or service from its publisher, Eagle Financial Publications. [Gilder Guideposts] [Technology Report]( [Tech Report PRO]( [Moonshots]( [Private Reserve]( Guideposts: At the Fed, the Deep State Hides in Plain Sight by George Gilder and Richard Vigilante 05/03/2023 SPONSORED CONTENT [Hottest Stocks This Week]( Here are 3 Stocks that are potential sky-high performers you should be watching heading into Monday. Get the names and tickers of the hottest three stocks this week... [Plus free access to our weekly stock watchlist by clicking here.]( We’ve never quite liked the “Deep State” as a descriptor, as it tends to suggest dark and, well, deep, hidden machinations by unknown actors. That’s not quite right. The Deep State consists of a long list of very public institutions, staffed by people listed in some publicly available directory, acting in broad daylight but subverting democracy nonetheless. In theory, anyone sufficiently interested can keep informed about what these institutions are doing. In practice their actions are almost impossible to track, appeal, or bring under democratic authority. Essentially, every federal agency, whether “independent” or theoretically subordinate to the Executive Branch, carries three antibodies immunizing it from democracy. - Invisible: Each makes so many rules, handles so many resulting cases and has such discretion in enforcement, that it would take an extraordinary effort for any citizen--or legislator--to track a small portion of what any one of them is doing. - Implacable: Practically speaking if a citizen attracts the unwanted attention of a federal agency, there is nothing to do but give in and cut a bad deal. It is far easier for a bureaucrat to punish a law-abiding citizen than for a prosecutor to nail a violent criminal. The criminal gets the protection of a real court, you don’t. - Irresponsible: Though the political branches--Congress and the President--yield an enormous amount of their power to this not-very-deep state, they like it that way. It gets them off the hook. The Federal Reserve exemplifies all three. The meaningless melodrama of the federal funds rate is all too visible, but did the public have any hint of the bureaucratic failures that led to two massive bank failures in a month? Did Congress know--much less approve--how those disasters would be settled, with possibly viable banks wiped out, sweetheart sales orchestrated, and credit markets undermined as senior bondholders were punished while shareholders of the acquiring banks were rewarded? As for implacable, has anyone asked you whether you prefer the risk of a recession to the risk of inflation? Has anyone asked whether you believe the Fed can even do what it claims, or whether recession or inflation are the only choices? Not for 40 years, since Ronald Reagan blew the Phillips Curve to bits, has inflation been a consequence of growth. Not even when Donald Trump’s 2017 tax cuts led to the lowest unemployment rate in 77 years did inflation appear. Yet now, without consulting any democratically elected body, the Fed declares it must save us from the horror of too many people working and, horror of horrors, getting raises. Even if the Fed had the power it claims, which we doubt, have the U.S. central bank leaders asked you or your catatonic Congressperson which you prefer: losing your job or paying a few more pennies per dollar for groceries. This a very real question for several million American households that will be impoverished if the Fed realizes its fondest hopes. Shouldn’t they be asked? Shouldn’t their neighbors? Worst of all, the very existence of the Fed excuses Congress, and only to a slightly lesser extent the President, from responsibility for the soundness of the current health of the economy. Biden may pay some political price for rising prices but far less than he or Congress deserve. The myth of the Fed’s power shields them all. [The 6 Stages You Need to Know in Order to Invest in Technology Companies]( Investing in technology companies can be somewhat difficult. It always seems like you learn about these companies after they take off. But what if you knew about the 6 stages that every technology company goes through so that you, too, can invest in them before the stock price soars. Our Gilder’s Moonshots publication might be the perfect fit for you. We take a deep dive into all of these companies and use our methods to know when to invest in them. We recommend not only small and micro-cap stocks, but also Reg-A (Pre-IPO) opportunities. [Click here to learn more now.Â]( The prevailing narrative is that inflation kicked in because the Fed: A. Kept interest rates too low for too long, and/or B. Let the money supply get out of hand. “A” asks us to believe that 156 months (roughly since 2008) of a near zero Fed funds rate is no problem, but cross that red line at 168 months and all Hell breaks loose. “B” asks us to forget that Aggregate Demand is not determined by M (money supply) alone, but by M x V (velocity). During the run-up in the money supply, velocity collapsed, as it often does when the government tries to give people money for which they can find no productive use. We all know what really happened. The government, for more than three years, under both Trump and Biden, paid people not to produce; then let Europe slide into war; then proceeded to cripple our domestic energy supply, all causing massive supply shortages. Miracles would have been required to keep prices stable. Happily, if the government had ignored the rise in prices altogether and just stopped doing any of those bad things, a miracle was readily available in the form of an economy liberated 40 years ago to create decades of inflation-free growth. The myth of the Fed provided an excuse for the government to do nothing. And yet doing nothing was the right solution all along. Too bad the government couldn’t accept the gift. [Defy Volatility Using Artificial Intelligence]( Have you ever heard if you are having issues in your trading, it could be that it's not you - it really is the market? Well, you’re in control.  You can anticipate massive trend reversals with A.I. You’ve got to see it live to understand it. [Save a Seat for this Free Live Training >Â]( *  *  * Since what we do for a living is write about technology investing, and you wouldn’t always know that from the subjects we cover in this column, we’ve decided to add a new feature. Every week we are going to offer you some stuff we’ve been reading with insights for tech investors: SoftBank's Arm registers for blockbuster U.S. IPO [( This is a huge event. Arm is easily one of the 10 most important firms in the global semiconductor eco-system and the only one that is still private, depending on where you rank Huawei. Does this mean that the IPO pathway to capital raising is back after some 20 years of Sarbanes-Oxley-imposed underperformance? Probably not. The real driver here is the Federal Trade Commission’s fanatic hostility to tech M&A, acquisitions long having been the main alternative to repressed IPOs. Last year, the FTC halted Nvidia’s acquisition of Arm, prompting Softbank, Arm’s principal owner, to default to an IPO even in today’s weak market. ASML: Whistling past the graveyard or just high on life? [( ASML holds the strongest monopoly in the semiconductor arena. It is the only company that can make the advanced photolithography machines required to produce the last three generations of state-of-the-art microchips. Many, including us, have worried that the Biden administration’s self-imposed embargo on tech exports to China would cost ASML dearly, but the company, which announced consensus-beating revenue forecasts last week, does not seem to be worried, or isn’t admitting it. Surprise, surprise, Japan already seeking workarounds to U.S. export ban [( Information theory teaches us that only surprise counts as information, which is why we have no comment. China responds to U.S. export ban by... banning U.S. imports [( Possibly even less surprising. All hat and no cattle: Corning on networks’ promised fiber buildouts [ Corning, the world’s leading supplier of optical fiber, is calling baloney on big fiber buildout plans that aren’t equating to earth moved. Our take: fiber buildouts are politically popular and heavily subsidized. But some of the biggest buyers, especially the legacy telcos, have a long record of over-promising and under-delivering. That’s why we still like cable as the winner of the broadband war. Canadian cable leader Rogers delivering 8 gigs per second in live tests [( And here is a great example of why we think cable wins: Coax cable can’t beat fiber’s theoretic top speeds, but it can deliver more bandwidth than you’ll ever realize you have. House Introduces Bipartisan Legislation to Restore Immediate Deductibility of R&D Investments [( And not a minute too soon. A huge portion of semiconductor R&D is directed at production 12-24 months out in an industry in which innovation is so relentlessly necessary that R&D must be treated as an operating expense. IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT: We are having our Eagle Virtual Trading Event on Tuesday, May 16. If you haven’t signed up for this yet, there’s still time. Just [click here now to sign up for free](. You won’t want to miss this online event — as we bring together all of Eagle’s investment experts at the same time to reveal the Second Half Outlook: 7 Ways to Beat the Market. Reserve your seat now [by clicking here](. P.S. Come join George Gilder and other Eagle colleagues on an incredible cruise! We set sail on Dec. 4 for 16 days, embarking on a memorable journey that combines fascinating history, vibrant culture and picturesque scenery. Enjoy seminars on the days we are cruising from one destination to another, as well as dinners with members of the Eagle team. Just some of the places we’ll visit are Mexico, Belize, Panama, Ecuador and more! [Click here]( now for all the details. Sincerely, [The Editors] George Gilder, Richard Vigilante, Steve Waite, and John Schroeter Editors, Gilder's Guideposts, Technology Report, Technology Report Pro, Moonshots, and Private Reserve About George Gilder: [George Gilder]George Gilder is the most knowledgeable man in America when it comes to the future of technology and its impact on our lives. He’s an established investor, bestselling author, and economist with an uncanny ability to foresee how new breakthroughs will play out, years in advance. George and his team are the editors of Gilder Technology Report, Gilder Technology Report Pro, Moonshots and Private Reserve. To ensure future delivery of Eagle Financial Publications emails please add financial@info2.eaglefinancialpublications.com to your address book or contact list. View this email in your [web browser](. This email was sent to {EMAIL} because you are subscribed to George Gilder's Guideposts. To unsubscribe please click [here](. If you have questions, please send them to [Customer Service](mailto:customerservice@eaglefinancialpublications.com). Legal Disclaimer: Any and all communications from Eagle Products, LLC. employees should not be considered advice on finances. Although our employees may answer your general customer service questions, they are not licensed under securities laws to address your particular investment situation. No communication by our employees to you should be deemed as personalized advice on finances. Eagle Financial Publications - Eagle Products, LLC. - a Salem Communications Holding Company 122 C Street NW, Suite 515 | Washington, D.C. 20001 [Link](

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