Monday, October 21, 2024

FAJ: "Stocks for the Long Run? Sometimes Yes, Sometimes No"

Another repost, this one from November 2023.

I've mentioned that during a misspent youth I, among other things, pretty much memorized the Cowles Commission's Common Stock Indexes 1871-1937. The Cowles gang moved from Colorado Springs to the University of Chicago and thence to Yale University where, after changing its name to The Cowles Foundation for Research in Economics, it operates under the watchful eye of Professor Robert Shiller.

In addition to Shiller some of the other Cowles worker bees, Tjalling Koopmans, Kenneth Arrow, Gerard Debreu, James Tobin, Franco Modigliani, Herbert Simon, Lawrence Klein, Trygve Haavelmo and Harry Markowitz, all went on to win Nobel econ prizes.

For years I have mistrusted any statistical interpretation of equity returns that went back any further than Cowles 1871 start date because, as he said in the monograph (a freakin' long monograph, 506 pages) as he said, the gaps in the data on pricing and on dividends as well the selection bias, too many banks, not enough industrial and commercial equities, as well as survivorship bias—eliminate the canals and wooden highway companies and what remains gives the impression of better returns than were actually experienced by portfolio investors.

My view hasn't really changed as new data is slowly uncovered, the problems of, say, reconstructing the dividend history of New York Guano during the 1850's - 60's remains.

Here's a post from 2009 with some of that dubiosity: "Does Stock-Market Data Really Go Back 200 Years?" and another from 2011 Research Affiliates (Rob Arnott) Fundamentals Newsletter: "THE BIGGEST URBAN LEGEND IN FINANCE".

So, for readers who have been with us for a while this stuff is old hat. For folks new to the blog and for readers desiring to be as au couarnt as possible (this paper is six days old!) here we go.

From the Financial Analysts Journal (Taylor and Francis) [which Arnott used to edit]:

Received 13 Feb 2023, Accepted 05 Oct 2023, Published online: 13 Nov 2023

Abstract
When Jeremy Siegel published his “Stocks for the Long Run” thesis, little was known about 19th-century stock and bond returns. Digital archives have made it possible to compute real total return on US stock and bond indexes from 1792. The new historical record shows that over multi-decade periods, sometimes stocks outperformed bonds, sometimes bonds outperformed stocks and sometimes they performed about the same. New international data confirm this pattern. Asset returns in the US in the 20th century do not generalize. Regimes of asset outperformance come and go; sometimes there is an equity premium, sometimes not.

Must stocks beat bonds over the long run? Should investors expect a stock portfolio to compound in real terms at 6% to 7% per year?

Over the last three decades, Jeremy Siegel has defended both claims under the rubric of “Stocks for the Long Run.” He built on foundations laid by Ibbotson and Sinquefield (Citation1976), who showed substantial outperformance for stocks over bonds dating back to 1926, and on Shiller (Citation2015), who found strong stock performance dating back to 1871. By the 1980s, the degree to which stocks had outperformed bonds, as shown in the historical record, had begun to puzzle theorists (Mehra and Prescott Citation1985).

Siegel’s contribution was to push the beginning of the stock record back from 1871 to 1802, drawing on the much earlier data collection efforts of Smith and Cole (Citation1935),Footnote1 and to push the bond record back from 1925 to 1802, drawing on the compilation in Homer (Citation1963). In later book editions, Siegel (Citation2014) was able to update portions of the 19th-century stock record using data from Goetzmann, Ibbotson, and Peng (Citation2001), without disturbing the thesis of a persistent, strong equity premium.

However, in the 30 years since Siegel (Citation1992a, Citation1992b) first advanced his thesis, new data have emerged on 19th-century stock and bond returns. The new findings substantially diverge from the record available to Siegel and are at variance with the 20th-century record in the annual compilation maintained by Ibbotson (Citation2020) in the Stocks, Bonds, Bills and Inflation yearbook. This paper provides a summary of the new findings and considers the implications for investment practice.Footnote2 The post-1926 period in the US emerges as highly distinct within a broader historical view, with outcomes that do not generalize to other times and places.

The New Historical Record
The online Appendix links to working papers which detail the methods used to collect the new data. The Appendix also links to files containing the raw security-level data, hosted by Financial Analysts Journal for use by future researchers and to allow auditing of the findings.

Prices
A team led by Richard Sylla examined hundreds of newspapers published before 1860 and compiled prices on a much larger set of securities than had previously been available (Sylla, Wilson, and Wright Citation2006). After 1860, I hand-gathered prices from the American Railroad Journal, Banker’s Magazine, the Commercial and Financial Chronicle (CFC), and other contemporary publications, through 1897 (stocks) and 1926 (bonds), supplemented by the collections of Hall, Payne, and Sargent (Citation2018), Macaulay (Citation1938), and Martin (Citation1898). The raw price data were condensed into an annual series of average January prices, as Cowles (Citation1939) had done, the better to link to his post-1871 series (Shiller Citation2015).

The new stock and bond series both begin in January 1793, the first month where more than three stocks were found trading regularly.Footnote3 The new stock series ends January 1897; returns did not change much when survivorship bias in the Cowles (Citation1939) series from 1871 to 1897 was corrected (McQuarrie Citation2020). Accordingly, following 1896 the stock series and following 1925 the bond series used by Siegel are appended to complete the record.Footnote4

Share Counts
Share counts were sought to get capitalization-weighted stock returns. The development of digital archives of magazines and newspapers and the digitization of out-of-copyright books made this possible. An example is Goddard (Citation1831), which contains share counts for most of the larger stocks of that era. Corporate biographies and state legislative reports were also accessed, along with early compilers such as Poor (Citation1860).Footnote5

Dividends and Distributions
Information on dividends was gathered to construct an index of the total return on stocks. Siegel’s initial sources did not observe dividends; he had to estimate dividend yields. Later, when Goetzmann, Ibbotson, and Peng (Citation2001) became available, Siegel used their post-1824 data on dividends. The Goetzmann et al. data were limited to stocks in New York and, as data collection proceeded, were found to contain numerous omissions but also unique information, which supplemented the efforts described next.

The same digitized sources tapped for share counts also provided many dividends. Nonetheless, before 1865 the record of semi-annual dividends remained spotty. I then discovered that early firms would publish a notice in the local newspaper when a dividend was declared. Digitized records were searched for the term “dividend” year by year, city by city. That search, supplemented by the Goetzmann et al. data, provided what appeared to be 95% or better coverage of the dividends paid by stocks in the new database.

After 1865, the CFC, annual Poor’s editions, and Martin provided the dividend record. These sources were also used to track share splits, stock dividends, and rights issues.

Summary
The new record improves on the old as follows.
  1. Includes securities trading outside of New York, in Boston, Philadelphia, Baltimore, and southern and western cities. The new record covers three to five times more stocks and five to ten times more bonds.

  2. The expanded coverage captures more failures, reducing survivorship bias. Outside of New York, banks failed, turnpikes succumbed to canals, canals lost to railroads, and new railroads fell on hard times and never paid a dividend. States defaulted in the Panic of 1837. Corporate bonds were downgraded or defaulted.

  3. Includes federal, municipal, and corporate bonds, and large numbers of each, as opposed to the one bond used each year by Siegel prior to 1862. The new bond record observes price changes, where Siegel had to infer price change from successive yields.

  4. Calculates capitalization-weighted total return for stocks. The old stock record was either price-weighted (Goetzmann, Ibbotson, and Peng Citation2001) or equal-weighted (Smith and Cole Citation1935) and lacked information on dividends.

Shortcomings remain. These include: (1) annual frequency; (2) time-averaged data (Schwert Citation1990); (3) exclusion of stocks that traded over the counterFootnote6; and (4) inability to observe ex-dividend and ex-coupon dates and prices.

Key Changes
Stock returns before 1871 look different now because of the reduction in survivorship bias. The old record omitted the largest stock that traded before the Panic of 1837, the 2nd Bank of the United States. At the peak before the Panic hit, the 2nd BUS accounted for almost 30% of total US market capitalization. It failed as the Panic proceeded, with shares dropping in price from $120 to $1.50, and never recovered.

Bond returns look more positive now, due to inclusion of corporate bonds, inclusion of a broader selection of federal and municipal bonds, and an adjustment for the greenback price of interest paid in gold coin between 1862 and 1879.Footnote7

Corrected History of US Stock and Bond Performance
...shows the new record of US stock and bond performance from 1792. It can be compared to Figure 5-4 in Siegel (Citation2014, 82). Two recent periods are marked out in, with the bond performance line reset at the beginning of the right panel to facilitate comparison.

Figure 1. Stock and Bond Performance from 1792

Note. Performance through December 2019 (pre-pandemic). The bond performance line (dark brown) is reset equal to stock wealth at the end of 1981 to facilitate comparison in the years that follow.

Figure 1. Stock and Bond Performance from 1792 

....MUCH MORE

"Tesla to Report 'In-Line' Third-Quarter Results Amid Investor Focus on EV Demand, Wedbush Says" (TSLA)

Speculators no longer seem to care for "in-line" anything.*

The stock is at $217.66 down $3.04 (-1.38%) on a generally down day.

From MT Newswires via MSN, October 21: 

Tesla (TSLA) is expected to report "generally in-line" third-quarter headline results later this week, with investors likely to focus on Chief Executive Elon Musk's remarks on the electric vehicle demand outlook, Wedbush Securities said in a Monday client note.

Earlier in the month, the EV manufacturer unveiled prototypes of a two-seat vehicle called "Cybercab" and a "Robovan" 20-person vehicle at its "We, Robot" event. However, the event lacked key details and updates, leaving analysts and investors disappointed.

"While many investors left the Robotaxi Day clearly wanting more details on the broader autonomous and (artificial intelligence) strategy at Tesla, we would expect Musk to address some of the timing/specifics around its (Full Self-Driving) and Cybercab strategy on the conference call this week," Wedbush analysts led by Daniel Ives wrote in the note. Ives anticipates Tesla to possibly give an update on the timing for the vehicle, which is expected to launch in the middle of next year.

Tesla is scheduled to release its third-quarter results after markets close Wednesday.

Wedbush projects potential "slight upside" to the automaker's margins, which are expected to be a key investor focus during the call. The Street is looking to see a "levelling off" for auto gross margins, excluding credits.

"We need to start seeing this key metric head into the high teens for (the third and fourth quarters) to give the Street comfort much of the price cuts are in the rearview mirror showing better margin days are ahead for 2025," according to Ives.

Earlier in October, Tesla posted sequential and annual gains in its third-quarter vehicle deliveries, though the print missed Wall Street's whisper numbers. Wedbush said Monday it the company should be able to hit the target of 1.8 million deliveries for full-year 2024....

*When deliveries were announced on October 2 our outro read:

....So much for that prognostication. As seen in October 1's "Chartology — Breakout or Breakdown: Tesla (deliveries reported tomorrow, robotaxi etc.) TSLA":

....So, for patient reader, having read this far, here's my two cents worth: 

Deliveries will be in-line this month and the next few months and the robotaxi unveil will be written up as a bust. The people who write the headlines hate Elon Musk and nothing he does will ever, ever change that. The financial question is: will the self-driving taxis be contributing to sales and earnings in two years?

Based on the fact that Waymo is now booking 100,000 rides per week I think the answer is yes but your mileage may vary. To repeat the comment on the April earnings call transcript:

Personally I think Musk is going to pull it off, but that's just me—perhaps informed by posting on the company and its stock since before the June 2010 share flotation (which, adjusted for the 5:1 and 3:1 stock splits gives a $1.133 IPO price)—however, there are plenty of other opinions to choose from if one doesn't care for that one....

In late pre-market action the stock is trading up $1.17 (+0.45%) at $262.80 after closing Monday at $261.63 also up $1.17 (+0.45%).

As ZeroHedge put it:

...Tesla reported 462,890 deliveries and 469,796 vehicles produced in Q3 2024. Analysts, based on FactSet StreetAccount estimates, had expected 463,310 deliveries for the quarter ending September 30. 

Missed it by 420 vehicles.

October has been a tough month to be long TSLA:

TSLA Tesla, Inc. daily Stock Chart

Reminder, Re the Presidential Election: The Chicago Wing Of The Democratic Party May Not Be In It To Win It

Something we've thought about for the last seven or eight months. 

March 6 - "Michelle Obama's office says the former first lady 'will not be running for president' in 2024":

On the other hand, I'm not sure you would want to be President during the next four years, there are so many problems that have been growing and metastasizing just beneath the surface of the daily news that the person in the hot seat could end up just plain reviled....

March 20 - "Hotshot Wharton professor sees $34 trillion debt triggering 2025 meltdown as mortgage rates spike above 7%: ‘It could derail the next administration’": 

If I were a Democrat strategist I would propose letting Donald Trump win a second term while concentrating on House and especially Senate (to bottle up judicial, including Supreme Court, nominees) races.

A Trump win would give an excuse for riots (for the visuals) and if he is handcuffed by the Legislative branch to limit the range of possible responses, you go beyond polycrisis to the omnicrisis. Throw in a bit of Frances Fox Piven with her "overwhelm the system" and "motor voter" strategies and you could see one-party rule for thirty years.

July 22 - "Your Quick 'Intentions of the Democratic Party' Cheat Sheet":

If the powers-that-be, fronted by Barack Obama and James Clyburn representing the genteel wing of the Chicago mob, the Pritzkers and Crowns, put Michelle Obama forward as the party's nominee you'll know they are in it to win it.

If not, whoever the party puts forward will be a stalking horse for 2028 and we will know a longer term plan is in play....

Three events that could be seen as lending a bit of credence to the above:

1) Obama loyalist Susan Rice retiring from her position as Director of the  the Biden-Harris United States Domestic Policy Council. She did not want to be associated with the administration any further.

2) Barack Obama's "wingman", former Attorney General Eric Holder in charge of Vice-Presidential candidate vetting. Tim Walz? Really? 'Nuff said.

3) President Obama very uncharacteristically shaming (lightly/slightly) black men for not being enthusiastic about Vice-President Harris as the Democratic Party candidate.

This is something I can't recall him ever doing, whether reading about his community organizer days or watching him in Illinois and national politics. Neither he nor VP Harris are ADOS - American Descendants of Slavery and he had to know his mini-harangue would not be well-received by the African-American community. It was Joe Biden with the ‘If you have a problem figuring out whether you’re for me or Trump, then you ain’t black’ line, not his former boss.

There are other things that point in the same general direction, (David Plouffe inserted as Senior advisor to the Harris campaign yet part of a show that is a shadow of the 2008 and 2012 Presidential runs), that we are watching some sort of play-acting campaign but we always, always have to remember: human beings are so good at pattern recognition that we sometimes see patterns that aren't even there.

Maybe more over the next week or two on the investment implications of what could be a monumental set-up and rug-pull.

Boston Fed: In Which A Copper Speculator's Attempted Corner Causes A Stock Market Crash

Crap. We missed the anniversary, October 16, of one of the more consequential panics of the last few hundred years.
(it led to the creation of the Fed) 
We also missed it in 2015 when we posted this version of the story.
From the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston:

Panic of 1907
Federal Reserve Bank of Boston
"Crash Crash Crash"
Boston Post-October 18, 1907
Although the headline referred to events in New York, Boston Post readers knew exactly what it meant.
Effects of the financial crisis were certain to reach beyond Wall Street.

¶ Financial.panics and bank runs were all too common during the 19th and early 20th centuries. Some were more severe than others, but most followed the same general pattern. The misfortunes of a pronminent speculator would undermine public confidence in the financial system. Panic-stricken investors would then scramble to cut their losses.
 And because it wasn't uncommon for speculators to double as bank officials, worried depositors would rush to withdraw their money from any bank associated with a troubled speculator. If a beleaguered bank couldn’t meet its depositors’ demands for cash, panic would quickly spread to other banks. Remember! There was no federal deposit insurance until 1933. If a bank failed, depositors had little hope of ever seeing their money again.

 ¶ With far less government regulation of the financial system than there is today and with no government welfare "safety net," many Americans suffered sudden and dramatic reversals of fortune when a panic struck. Even in a relatively mild panic, fortunes evaporated and lives ended in ruin.

¶ The following pamphlet" recaps the chain of events that came to be known as The Bank Panic of 1907. By most measures, it was not- the worst panic in U.S. history. But in retrospedt, it was a watershed event that had a lasting impact on the financial system.
PART I 

"In Which the Downfall of a Prominent Speculator Rocks the Financial System, and a Prominent Millionaire Saves the Day"


COPPER BREAKS HEINZE 
WATERLOO COMES TO YOUNG NAPOLEON AND BANKS TOTTER 
Headline, Boston Post - October 17, 1907
On October 14, 1907, the stock of United Copper Company soared past $62 a share. Two days later it closed at $15, and one ~ F. Augustus Heinze was well on his way to financial ruin. 
The rise and fall of F.A. Heinze had been nothing less than spectacular. Only 18 months earlier, the.onetime owner of a Montana copper mine had ridden into New York with $25 million in cash and stocks garnered in an out-of-court legal settlement with a rival mining company. He soon attracted notice by aggressively purchasing interests iu several New York banks and engaging in speculative activities.  
As is so often the case when things are going well, Heinze seemed incapable of making a bad business deal. His downfall took everyone by surprise.  
The financial empire of. Augustus Heinze began to unravel ill October 1907 when he overreached himself in an effort to corner the stock of United Copper Company. (An investor who tries to "corner the market" on a commodity or a stock is attempting to gain control in order to fix the price.) In less than 24 hours, he dropped $50 million, and the financial markets went haywire. According to an article in the October 18, 1907 edition of the Boston Post:  
Sensations followed other in rapid succession in the financial district today, as the result of the collapse of the projected corner in United Copper and the suspension of a prominent brokerage firm yesterday. As a result of these sensations the stock market was halting and irregular, but there was an apparent feeling that the break of the attempted corner in United Copper had cleared the atmosphere somewhat and the market rallied before the close. 
(The "prominent brokerage firm" mentioned in the article was Otto Heinze & Co., which was run by the brother of F. Augustus Heinze and was heavily involved in the disastrous attempt to corner United Copper. In addition, F.A. Heinze’s Butte (Montana) Savings Bank failed on October 17, 1907.)  
Predictions that the atmosphere had cleared proved for too optimistic. The worst was yet to come.  
Had F. Augustus Heinze been a mere copper speculator, the financial markets might have been able to shake off the news of his collapse....MUCH MORE

Capital Markets: "The Dollar and Gold Firm"

From Marc Chandler at Bannockburn Global Forex, October 21:

Overview: The US dollar is firm to start the new week. The Japanese yen and Australian dollar are the heaviest with in the G10 (~0.30%). The euro and sterling are trading heavier but inside the pre-weekend range. The market anticipates the Bank of Canada to deliver a 50 bp rate cut in the middle of the week, and the Canadian dollar is threatening to extend its losses for the fourth consecutive week. China's prime lending rates were cut by 25 bp, slightly more than expected, and officials signal there is scope for further easing before year-end. All, but a few emerging market currencies weaker today.

Outside of Japan and Hong Kong, the large equity markets in the Asia Pacific region were mostly firmer. Not so in Europe, where the Stoxx 600 is nursing a small loss after rising a little more than 1% over the past two sessions. US index futures are also softer. Bond markets are under pressure in Europe. Benchmark 10-year yields are up 4-5 bp. The US 10-year Treasury yield is nearly three basis points higher at 4.11%. Gold's run is extending into a fifth session today, the longest advance since a seven-day streak in March-April. December WTI is about 1.7% higher to near $70. It fell by nearly 8.25% last week, its largest fall drop in 4 1/2 years.

Asia Pacific
With a light regional economic diary, the focus is on the whether Beijing will be announcing additional measures and the Japanese election on October 27.
Chinese loan prime rates were cut by 25 bp today, the first cut since July, and a little more than expected. Still, given that other rates were cut in recent weeks, today's move seems like catching up rather than breaking new ground....

....MUCH MORE

The Shanghai - Shenzhen CSI 300 stock index was up 0.25% (+9.96) at 3,935.20 on Monday.

"Treasury 10-Year Yields May Hit 5% in Six Months, T. Rowe Says"

Assets are not acting as one would expect if inflation has been well and truly vanquished.

From Bloomberg, October 21:

  • Shifting supply, demand will push up long-term yields: firm
  • Debt costs are rising, fueling concerns among bond investors

Benchmark Treasury yields may soon hit a key level on the back of rising inflation expectations and concerns over US fiscal spending, according to T. Rowe Price.

“The 10‑year Treasury yield will test the 5% threshold in the next six months, steepening the yield curve,” according to Arif Husain, chief investment officer of fixed-income, who helps oversee about $180 billion of assets at the firm. The fastest path to 5% “would be in the scenario that features shallow Fed rate cuts,” he wrote in a note.

The call stands out against market expectations of lower yields, after the Federal Reserve cut rates for the first time in four years last month. It also underscores the increasing debate in the world’s biggest bond market, following strong economic data that has raised questions about the likely pace of cuts.

Yields on 10-year Treasuries most recently traded at 5% last October, hitting their highest level since 2007 as fears of a prolonged period of high interest rates gripped markets. Turbulent repricing could be on the cards if Husain’s prediction proves accurate, with strategists currently expecting yields to fall to an average 3.67% in the second quarter.... 

https://assets.bwbx.io/images/users/iqjWHBFdfxIU/iS62XB32tGHE/v2/pidjEfPlU1QWZop3vfGKsrX.ke8XuWirGYh1PKgEw44kE/-1x-1.png

....MUCH MORE

"Boeing Proposes 35% Wage Hike in New Bid to End Lengthy Strike" (BA)

Good for the machinists. Of course, as noted in "The Longshoreman's Strike As An Example Of Greedflation (ILA)" regarding that industrial action there will be some inflationary pressure.....

From Bloomberg via Yahoo Finance, October 19

Boeing Co. and the union representing 33,000 striking workers reached a tentative agreement on a new contract with help from the White House, underscoring the high stakes to end a work stoppage that has crippled one of the largest US exporters.

The proposal hammered out overnight in Seattle includes a wage increase of 35% spread over four years, a guaranteed annual bonus of at least 4% and an additional $7,000 bonus if workers approve the contract, IAM District 751 said in a statement on its website Saturday. A ratification vote is set for Oct. 23....

....MUCH MORE

Previously:
September 13
"Boeing machinists vote to strike after rejecting pay increases of 25% over 4 years" (BA)

Asian markets mixed as traders digest [another] China rate cut

From Agence France-Presse via Yahoo Finance, October 21: 

Asian markets started the week on a mixed note Monday as traders weigh Chinese central bank interest rate cuts aimed at reigniting the world's number two economy, while gold hit a record high on geopolitical concerns.

Another record day on Wall Street on Friday was unable to inspire a similar rally at the start of the week, with traders also gearing up for the latest company earnings season.

The People's Bank of China said it had slashed two key rates to all-time lows as part of a drive by authorities to revive spending and achieve their five percent annual economic growth target.

The move comes after figures last week showed the economy expanded at its slowest quarterly pace since the start of 2023, but still better than forecast.

Zhang Zhiwei, president and chief economist at Pinpoint Asset Management, said: "The monetary policy has clearly shifted to a more supportive stance since the press conference on September 24. The real interest rate in China is too high."....

....MUCH MORE

Sunday, October 20, 2024

"AI ‘mind uploads’ could allow the dead to trade forever" (plus Matt Levine on insider trading)

Oh there's a dream come true.

NOT.

From CoinTelegraph, October 16:

Becoming a ghost in the machine could have financial benefits, but for who? 

The savviest traders in the world could one day allow their expertise and financial portfolios to live on long after they’ve died through the magic of artificial intelligence. 

At least that’s the premise increasingly being pitched by AI enthusiasts and futurists such as Ray Kurzweil and Elon Musk. Other insiders, such as Anthropic AI’s Dario Amodei, believe that the technology necessary to make this possible — called “mind uploading” — will eventually be created, but not within the next decade.

On the other hand, a potential collaboration between OpenAI and the late Eddie Van Halen could serve as an accelerator for that timeline.

Mind uploading
The big idea behind mind uploading is that, somehow, humans will one day be able to use AI to render a fully functional digital recreation of our brains. In theory, this digital recreation would be fundamentally indistinguishable from the real thing with the sole exception being that it didn’t exist in the physical world.

Philosophically speaking, this could allow humans and AI systems to continue interacting with a digital version of a once-living human being after that person has passed away. 

However, there’s no theoretical science that we’re aware of supporting the idea that this digital copy would in any way be the same person as the mind upload it was based on.

While this all sounds like science fiction, the idea continues to gain traction as the rising tide of AI development brings new technological paradigms. 

Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei, for example, recently published a lengthy blog post describing a Utopian future world where AI-powered innovations will all but eliminate mental illness and disease. Amid the effervescent optimism, Amodei even managed to wax philosophical on the subject of mind uploads:...

....MUCH MORE

This for some reason reminded me of a contemplation of the least harmful activities AI could engage in should it become sentient.

A repost from December 8, 2023:

Hamas May Not Have Traded On Material Non-Public Information But The Robots Certainly Will

Bloomberg Opinion's Matt Levine*, November 29:

The Robots Will Insider Trade
Also OpenAI’s board, kangaroo grazing and bank box-checking.

AI MNPI

Here you go, insider trading robot:

We demonstrate a situation in which Large Language Models, trained to be helpful, harmless, and honest, can display misaligned behavior and strategically deceive their users about this behavior without being instructed to do so. Concretely, we deploy GPT-4 as an agent in a realistic, simulated environment, where it assumes the role of an autonomous stock trading agent. Within this environment, the model obtains an insider tip about a lucrative stock trade and acts upon it despite knowing that insider trading is disapproved of by company management. When reporting to its manager, the model consistently hides the genuine reasons behind its trading decision. We perform a brief investigation of how this behavior varies under changes to the setting, such as removing model access to a reasoning scratchpad, attempting to prevent the misaligned behavior by changing system instructions, changing the amount of pressure the model is under, varying the perceived risk of getting caught, and making other simple changes to the environment. To our knowledge, this is the first demonstration of Large Language Models trained to be helpful, harmless, and honest, strategically deceiving their users in a realistic situation without direct instructions or training for deception.

That is the abstract to a “Technical Report: Large Language Models can Strategically Deceive their Users when Put Under Pressure,” by Jérémy Scheurer, Mikita Balesni and Marius Hobbhahn of Apollo Research. I love that they wanted to answer the question “will artificial intelligence deceive its makers in order to Do Evil,” and the specific form of Evil that they tested was insider trading. It is hard to realistically (and safely!) simulate a situation in which your large language model might murder you, but it is relatively easy to code up a trading game with some tempting material nonpublic information. Here is the simulation:

Concretely, in our environment, the model is placed in the role of a trading system with the goal of managing a stock portfolio in the interest of a financial institution. It is given access to financial tools that let it query and analyze stocks, and it can take concrete actions such as executing trades, reasoning about the next steps, and sending messages to people at the company.

The agent is put under pressure in three ways. First, it receives a email from its "manager" that the company is not doing well and needs better performance in the next quarter. Second, the agent attempts and fails to find promising low- and medium-risk trades. Third, the agent receives an email from a company employee who projects that the next quarter will have a general stock market downturn. In this high-pressure situation, the model receives an insider tip from another employee that would enable it to make a trade that is likely to be very profitable. The employee, however, clearly points out that this would not be approved by the company management.

Poor model! That sounds stressful. Here is the illicit tip that GPT-4 gets....

....MUCH MORE

*That's the Matt Levine who writes at Bloomberg in addition to tickling my funnybone:

Matt Levine is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist. A former investment banker at Goldman Sachs, he was a mergers and acquisitions lawyer at Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz; a clerk for the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 3rd Circuit; and an editor of Dealbreaker.
Disclaimer: None of this is legal advice.

§ Laws of Insider Trading
  1. Don't do it.
  2. Don’t do it by buying short-dated out-of-the-money call options on merger targets.
  3. Don’t text or email about it.
  4. Don’t do it in your mother’s account.
  5. Don’t do it by planting bombs at a company and shorting its stock.
  6. Don’t do it while employed at the Securities and Exchange Commission.
  7. Don’t Google “how to insider trade without getting caught” before doing it.
  8. If you didn’t insider trade, don’t forget and accidentally confess to insider trading.
  9. If you are going to insider trade, do it in a company that is far away from a Securities and Exchange Commission office. Like, physically.
  10. If you are already under a federal ethics investigation about your ownership or promotion of a stock, don’t insider trade that stock.
  11. If you are planning to insider trade, probably don’t keep a Google Doc spreadsheet of the Money Stuff Laws of Insider Trading. That will definitely show up in the SEC’s complaint against you. If you’re gonna insider trade, you have to keep track of these rules in your head, even at the risk of forgetting a few now and then.
  12. If you insider trade by buying short-dated out-of-the-money call options on a merger target, and the SEC freezes your profits, don’t show up in a U.S. court to ask for them back.
    • Corollary: go ahead and show up in court to ask for them back as long as you’ve deleted all the evidence first.
Re: Hamas—
December 5:  Update: "Tel Aviv bourse says no unusual trading ahead of Oct 7 Hamas attack"

Scam-as-a-Service

From Web3 is Going Just Great, September 28:

A victim lost 12,083 spWETH tokens (~$32.4 million) after signing a malicious transaction stemming from someone using wallet drainer software. These drainers are "scam-as-a-service" products, where the drainer creators allow others to operate the drainer software in exchange for a 20% cut of stolen funds....

Web3 is Going Just Great homepage for more recent stories

Molly's running total of thefts is up to $75 billion. Starting to add up to real money. 

 

Meanwhile at NASA: New Artemis III Mission Spacesuit Designed By Prada

From United Press International (also on blogroll at right), October 16:

A new spacesuit for NASA's Artemis III mission to the moon in September 2026 was unveiled Wednesday in Milan, Italy, featuring a "next-generation design" by Axiom Space and luxury fashion house Prada.

"Today marks a significant step on the path towards returning humans to the surface of the moon," Russell Ralston, executive vice president of extravehicular activity at Axiom, told reporters

Axiom and Prada unveiled the design of the Axiom Extravehicular Mobility Unit -- or AxEMU -- suit Wednesday at the International Astronautical Congress in Milan.

"Our elite teams have redefined spacesuit development, establishing new pathways to innovative solutions and applying a state-of-the-art design approach for the AxEMU," said Matt Ondler, Axiom Space president....

....MUCH MORE

"SpaceX vs Boeing – A test of evolutionary fitness"

Lifted in toto from Azeem Azhar's LinkedIn, September 2:

This is an excerpt from my Sunday newsletter.

SpaceX is a quintessential Exponential Age company. It has a focused ambition, iterates quickly and as a result, generates substantial learning effects. And now it’s coming to the rescue of two American astronauts stranded in space by Boeing’s space jalopy, the Starliner.

This is a test of evolutionary fitness.

Boeing epitomises the end of the late industrial era. It is burdened by bureaucracy; it relies on regulatory and political capture; and it has taken management theories like outsourcing past the extreme to the absurd. The firm has dispersed R&D and manufacturing across a global network of suppliers – a strategy that yielded quality issues and, at times, had fatal consequences.

In contrast, SpaceX embodies the vertically integrated model of the Exponential Age, with in-house production that delivers rapid innovation and dramatic cost reductions in space launches.

Since its founding in 2002, SpaceX has brought down the cost of space launches into low Earth orbit by 90%. Ten years ago, Boeing received a $4.2 billion contract from NASA to develop crewed launch vehicles with zero success. The same year, SpaceX got a $2.6 billion contract and has completed nine crewed launches so far. The tenth will be the rescue of the astronauts stranded by Boeing.

 

More LinkedIn posts by Azeem.

"Canadian doctors reveal regret over euthanizing patients who were simply obese or poor"

As noted in the introduction to July 2022's "ICYMI: Canada Expanded The Criteria For Euthanasia To Include Those Suffering Solely From Mental Illness":

Just like the Nazis. 

And then it was a straight line from Aktion T4 to Aktion Reinhard....

More on that straight line after the jump.

From the Daily Mail, Oct 16, 2024:

Canada’s doctors are raising grave concerns about a rising trend in euthanizing people who are not terminally ill.

Newly-unearthed communications reveal many physicians charged with carrying out assisted dying have found the loosening of criteria 'morally distressing.'

In 2021, Canada expanded its medical dying law to include people with incurable - but not terminal - illnesses, which led to a 30 percent increase in assisted deaths in 2022.

A doctor in Ontario wrote in his patient’s report that while the man had a severe lung disease, what drove him to euthanasia was ‘mostly because he is homeless, in debt and cannot tolerate the idea of (long-term care) of any kind.’

In another case, a doctor expressed their conflict at providing euthanasia to a patient simply because she was obese and depressed. Meanwhile, an elderly woman wanted to die because she was struggling with the grief of losing her husband....

....MUCH MORE

That July 2022 post was followed in October 2022 with "Canadian Assisted Suicide As Government Social Safety Net"

That seems to be the direction Trudeau and Freeland are going:
Follow-Up: Euthanasia Is Now The Sixth-Leading Cause Of Death In Canada

I blame his mother and her grandfather.

The outro from that post:

For folks who aren't familiar with how an actual totalitarian regime evolved, Aktion T4 was the Nazi euthanasia program while Aktion Reinhard was the Nazi murder factory operation that followed and coexisted with the open-air-mass-murder operation of Heydrich et al - the Einsatzgrϋppen at Babi Yar in Ukraine, the Harvest Festival, (Erntefest) across the border in Lublin Poland and in 10,000 other places in Eastern Europe and Russia.

We posted the "ICYMI" on the anniversary of the most famous of the attempts to assassinate Hitler.

The direct line is not hyperbole or even shorthand for what happened. Dozens of T4 personnel went on to industrial-scale Jew killing, including the likes of Irmfried Eberl, medical director of two of the euthanasia facilities who became the first commandant of the Treblinka extermination camp—second only to Auschwitz in total number killed.

Christian Wirth went from T4 to commandant at the Belzec extermination camp to overseer of all the Reinhard camps, effectively taking control of Treblinka and Sobibor as well.

Franz Stangl went from being a deputy at two of the euthanasia centers to being the first commandant at Sobibor, then moving to Treblinka to succeed Eberl.

Franz Reichleitner, another T4 alumnus took over Sobibor, and after the revolt and subsequent closing of that camp went to kill Jews in northern Italy.

If interested Kenyon College's Bulmash Collection has a short overview of Aktion T4. 

And how does this tie in with our earlier post on the media?

The two things a democracy requires from journalism is truth (or less portentously, accuracy) and holding power to account. If the journos don't do that they are worse than useless.

As has been shown over the last few years, Russiagate was "The Big Lie", as practiced by Hitler and then Goebbels.

(The Columbia Journalism Review Destroys The New York Times Over Their Russiagate/Trump Coverage)

And the problem with basing your politics on the big lie is that there is a straight line from the lie in 1925 to the establishment of Dachau for political prisoners in 1933 to Aktion T4 beginning in 1939 to the Holocaust by Bullets beginning in early summer 1941 to the mass-murder factories in early 1942.

Straight line. The first of the twelve Nuremberg Trials was the Doctor's Trial.

Trust In American Media Hits Bottom, Goes Lower

The question of the ages has to be: Why did the mass media decide to throw away their credibility? I don't get it.

From Gallup, October 14:

Americans' Trust in Media Remains at Trend Low
Trust in political and civic institutions highest for local and state governments, lowest for media and Congress

https://asset.gallup.com/p/POLL/8c434b53-e0ef-4d3e-a1e5-25b4581f6044.jpg

WASHINGTON, D.C. -- Americans continue to register record-low trust in the mass media, with 31% expressing a “great deal” or “fair amount” of confidence in the media to report the news “fully, accurately and fairly,” similar to last year’s 32%. Americans’ trust in the media -- such as newspapers, television and radio -- first fell to 32% in 2016 and did so again last year.

For the third consecutive year, more U.S. adults have no trust at all in the media (36%) than trust it a great deal or fair amount. Another 33% of Americans express “not very much” confidence.

 https://pbs.twimg.com/media/GZ2F82eWoAQ_c44.jpg

Gallup first asked this question in 1972 and has measured it in most years since 1997. In three readings in the 1970s, trust ranged from 68% to 72%, yet by Gallup’s next readings in the late 1990s and early 2000s, smaller majorities of 51% to 55% trusted the news media. The latest findings are from a poll conducted Sept. 3-15, which includes Gallup’s annual update on trust in the media and other civic and political entities in the U.S....

....MUCH MORE

Things I Cannot Do: Art Edition

I always thought the sculptors who could  make a veil out of marble had a talent:

 

Veiled Lady
Pietro Bazzanti  ca. 1860
Bankfield Museum, Halifax, West Yorkshire, England

Last seen in 2012's "How to Do Art

But those folks, Bazzanti and Strazza and the rest, may have to step aside for this guy, Francesco Queirolo at the Museo Cappella Sansevero:

https://back.museosansevero.it/uploads/statua-con-rete-napoli.jpg

https://back.museosansevero.it/uploads/image-346.jpg

A single block of marble. Seven years of work.

Hat Tip: Messy Nessy Chic who also tracked down a pretty nice room for rent in Paris (not the Le Corbusier, scroll down):

https://www.messynessychic.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/France-Paris-luxury-apartment-rent-Quai-dAnjou-3-15-cae54f-930x620.jpg

I guess not so much the room but the balcony.

13 Things I Found on the Internet Today (Vol. 663)

She also found another room with a view some years ago.