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Learning to Love Heavy New Tariffs

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Tue, May 14, 2019 10:58 PM

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Today's updates from Rick's Picks. You are receiving this email because you signed up for daily upda

Today's updates from Rick's Picks. You are receiving this email because you signed up for daily updates at www.rickackerman.com Is this email not displaying correctly? [View it in your browser](. [Follow on Twitter]( [Forward to a Friend]( The Hidden Pivot Seminar "Trading success is only six hours away." Learn Rick Ackerman's risk-averse Hidden Pivot Method and never trade the old way again. -------------------------------- “...I am pinching myself to be sure I am not dreaming. I am more confident every day with the HP approach. I am making money... I am able to escape the screen if I so wish. I do not end the day stressed and hyperactive. Impressed? I am absolutely knocked out - just wish I had found the site years ago. Best wishes, long may you continue.”- David Ivory --------------------------------------------------------------- - [North Korea Is on Investors’ Radar]( - [How Long Can Mr. Market Waffle?]( - [One-Decision]( Are Too Enticing to Shun for Long]( - [Over-Under Bet for a Holiday-Shortened Week]( - [‘Seasonality’ Takes a Licking]( - [Pre-Holiday Hijinx]( - [Is ‘Matt’s Curse’ About to Doom Stocks?]( - [Nasdaq Produces a Rare Profit for Shorts]( - [AMZN Glowers at Bears]( Rick's Pick for Wednesday Learning to Love Heavy New Tariffs Published Tuesday, May 14, 6:52 p.m. ET on-again, off-again trade deal with China has put some life into the stock market, all of it vicious (click on inset). It has also invigorated an otherwise moribund discussion concerning weather tariffs are good or bad. Popular wisdom has it that the mere discussion of Smoot-Hawley tariff legislation caused the stock market to gyrate wildly in 1929 and eventually to crash. Pat Buchanan does a good job debunking this myth in a think-piece published on his web site entitled [Tariffs: The Taxes That Made America Great](. Maybe. But it’s hard to get around the logic of classical economics, which holds that it is always economically beneficial for a nation to buy from the lowest-cost producer, since the savings can be invested to produce things at which the nation excels. Rewarding a Deflator In practice, however, much of our savings gets invested in digital smoke-and-mirrors. Uber, for instance. How else could a company that in purely economic terms is a deflation catalyst command an $80 billion valuation? (That amount was precipitously reduced, incidentally, by a 10% plunge in the stock since Monday, when the ride-hailing firm went public). If we invested wisely, Adam Smith’s Law of Comparative Advantage would work beautifully, increasing productivity and thereupon wealth. We don’t invest wisely, however, simply because most of our money comes not from hard-earned savings, but from infinitely available credit created out of thin air by the banksters. So Pat Buchanan winds up being right: Tariffs can’t hurt America — not unless the Fed chooses not to make America’s farmers and others on whom the tax falls most heavily whole by monetizing their losses. China will lose a lot of sales in the U.S. as exporters in other countries ramp up to fill the void. As for the stock market, bears had better step out of the way, because they’ve been played. [Click here]( for a free two-week trial subscription that will give you access to all paid features and services of Rick’s Picks, including daily, actionable trading recommendations and a ringside seat in a 24/7 chat room that draws veteran traders from around the world. [follow on Twitter]( || [forward to a friend]( Copyright © 2019 Hidden Pivot Enterprises, All rights reserved. You're receiving this email because you requested that our Daily Commentary be emailed to you. The return email address is not monitored for reply. If you don't wish to receive further mailings, please use the unsubscribe link at the bottom of this message. Our mailing address is: Hidden Pivot Enterprises PO Box 270646Louisville, CO 80027 [Add us to your address book]( [unsubscribe from this list]( | [update subscription preferences](

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