[RiskHedge Report] Hereâs how the disruption of college will play out [Stephen McBride] By Stephen McBride - RiskHedge   Editorâs note: All week, weâve been sharing our best essays of the year. For todayâs special installment, we hand it off to Stephen⦠who explains why this is the end of traditional college as we know it (and why thatâs a great thing)⦠Hereâs how the disruption of college will play out Hereâs some great news... One of Americaâs most broken industries is finally being exposed as a sham. And make no mistake... the end of college as we know it is a great thing. Itâs great for families... whoâll save money and take on less debt putting kids through school. Itâs great for kids... whoâll no longer be lured into the socialist indoctrination centers that many American campuses have become. And as Iâll show you, itâs great for investors... who stand to make a killing on the companies thatâll disrupt college for good. - Stephen, how can you be against education?! I love learning, but I hate what college has become. As recently as 1980, you could get a four-year bachelorâs degree at a public school for less than $10,000. These days, itâll cost you $40,000 at a minimum⦠$140,000 for a private school... or well over $250,000 for a top school. College costs have ballooned beyond all reason. Theyâve risen even faster than healthcare costs... which is really saying something. Kids are burying themselves in debtâ$1.6 trillion at last countâin order to attend college. Longtime RiskHedge readers know that college is broken. [But the last time I wrote you about this](, I had little hope things would change anytime soon. Why? Itâs a tough sell to convince an 18-year-old kid not to attend the four-year party all his friends are going to... especially when the US government is financing it through student loans. - But this year, a lightning bolt of disruption has fried the business model of college. Mark my words⦠coronavirus will be remembered for transforming college forever. The virus has forced practically every college to move their courses online for the next semester. So instead of living on campus and walking to lectures⦠kids will be sitting in their bedrooms watching professors on Zoom calls. This is FAR more disruptive than most folks realize. College is about much more than just the learning. Thereâs the education⦠and then you have the experience. The learning part has barely changed in a century. Kids still sit in 60-year-old lecture halls listening to professors. But now, the âexperienceâ has been stripped away. Do you think teenagers will be willing to mortgage their futures in order to watch college lecture videos on the internet? - This is the end of college as we know it. Right now, millions of kids are questioning what theyâre paying tens of thousands of dollars for. NOBODY is willing to pay $30,000/year to watch lecturers on Zoom calls. In fact, tuitions are already falling. New data shows colleges that have reopened âonline onlyâ this fall have slashed costs by $9,000, on average. How many kids will jump at the chance to save themselves tens of thousands of dollars in tuition with online learning? My prediction: millions. In fact, by slashing tuitions for online courses, schools have permanently changed the perception of what college is worth. - Here's my prediction for how the disruption of college will play out. Millions of American kids will soon be able to complete degreesÂâfully onlineâfor way less than the cost of traditional college. But they wonât just be enrolling in Ohio State or University of Floridaâs âonline classes.â With learning shifting onto the internet, thereâs nothing stopping nimble disruptors from offering real college degrees at much cheaper prices. Earlier this year, [I highlighted a disruptor called 2U (TWOU)](. In short, 2U runs online classes for 73 of the worldâs best colleges including Yale⦠Cambridge⦠Georgetown... and NYU. Itâs only a matter of time before online disruptors like 2U or Coursera start offering their own degree courses. For example, they could hire world-class professors to create online courses for, say, $200,000/year. Each professor might teach 250 students per school year, which works out to roughly $800 per student. Tack on the cost of running the online course⦠plus a profit for the college⦠and you could probably charge each student $3,000/year. These courses would carry the same qualification as any regular college. Yet, tuitions could be slashed by 70â80%. Right now, every US state has a couple of big schools and dozens of little ones. And theyâre essentially all teaching the same material in a slightly different way. I expect online disruptors will put many of the 4,000 âmiddle-of-the-roadâ US colleges out of business. Top schools like Harvard⦠Yale⦠and Stanford will always attract elite kids and command huge tuitions. They are disruption proof. But the thousands of schools that sell âstandard issueâ degrees for tens of thousands of dollars are in for a rude awakening. Think of them as the new department stores. You know how unspecialized, middle of the road retailers like Macyâs and Sears are dying off? Nimble online schools will do to traditional colleges what Amazon did to department stores. This is a change every American kid should be cheering for. What do you think of how college works in America today? Let me know at Stephen@riskhedge.com. âStephen McBride
Editor â Disruption Investor New Hot Stock Research Jeff Bezos recently dumped $3 billion worth of Amazon stock. Itâs the third time this year heâs âoffloadedâ a massive chunk of his own company All in all, heâs sold $10 BILLION worth of Amazon shares over the past year. Now, Bezos didnât explain why he sold so many shares, but we donât need to speculate⦠Here at RiskHedge, [we know Bezos is in big trouble](. Read why in our [research briefing](you canât find anywhere else. Source: Common Dreams This email was sent to {EMAIL} as part of your subscription to RiskHedge Report.
To opt-out, please visit the [unsubscribe page](. [READ IMPORTANT DISCLOSURES HERE.]( YOUR USE OF THESE MATERIALS IS SUBJECT TO THE TERMS OF THESE DISCLOSURES. Copyright © 2020 RiskHedge. All Rights Reserved
RiskHedge | PO Box 1423 | Stowe, VT 05672