Waiting for the next insanely stupid and catastrophic Trump shoe to drop, Mrs. Day and I spent a few moments talking about where we are today, how, and why. The only way to describe my investment strategy is “conservative” (aka “timid” and a little shell-shocked). Back in the mid-80s, when I was in early “middle-age,” I started looking to do more with my retirement savings than CDs and US Savings Bonds. Flailing around a bit, after a decade as an electronics engineer, I realized that I was unlikely to escape my lower-middle income economic class in southern California. I dabbled with real estate, insurance and investment sales (I even had a California license for those “professions”), and quality engineering and manufacturing consulting. All while holding down a full-time engineering job and working toward a college degree. I was busy and barely afloat in the double-digit Reagan inflation and his “economic miracle” that everyone but brainwashed Republicans called “a prolonged recession.”
I started my first stock market investment account in early 1986 with Merrill Lynch (remember them?). Like me, my broker was a 30-something guy who had been, in his previous life, an Atlanta cop who moved to California to escape the Reagan economy and “only seeing the bad side of people.” I’d built up a “six month reserve” savings, that was never going to leave the safe confines of Golden State Sanwa Bank as long as I lived in California and was safely employed. For almost everyone but people in the California aerospace/military industrial economy, the Reagan/Bush years were a 12-year disaster with interest and inflation rates well into double-digits and the beginning of out out-of-control national debt. I did my best to not imitate our foolish national government.
In southern California, our neighbor, Mexico, was experiencing nearly triple-digit inflation and seeing how that made life insecure and dangerous was an up-close-and-personal life experience for me. I did not dive into investing with both feet, I put some toes in, first, and a foot up to my shin, next, but I was in far enough to get burned in late October 1987 when Reagan’s deregulation of the FTC and other irresponsible policies blew up the stock market. Over the next few months, I got a lesson in what “an economic recovery” looks like from the standpoint of a small investor. (For example, when your investments lose 50% of their value, a 50% “recovery” over the next several years means you are still short 25% of regaining what you’ve lost.)
A decade earlier, in the mid-70s, the Nixon Vietnam recession turned my first mild real estate gains into a massive loss when all of the industry in our small Nebraska town vanished. Two years earlier, I’d bought a $20,000 home with the $8,000 of sweat equity and my initial $8,000 investment from our first home in central Nebraska. I put a lot of work and money into that house, hoping to keep improving on my equity investment. It all vanished when, suddenly, more than 250 houses were for sale in a 18,000-population town. My initial $16,000 vanished, tack on the real estate fees and taxes and the under-the-table $5,000 “down payment contribution” I had to make so the buyers could afford out house, and we were flat broke. Along with 1,000 other residents, I was laid off and unemployed. So, to say the least, I was gun-shy when it came to real estate investing in southern California when a less-skeptical investor might have seen opportunity. Twice-burned from my 80’s stock market experience, I did, however, learn an important lesson from those closely linked experiences: “Republican Presidents equal economic instability.” That appears to be a history lesson at least half of Americans fail to comprehend and a mistake they will keep making, because you don’t learn history from watching television or playing with your phone.
When I left California in late-1991, most of the Republican economic vampire bats had come home to roost, including the debt-ridden Reagan economic plan left the nation with 160% more national debt than when he took office. Poor George Bush (the 1st) tried to rein in some of the grossly irresponsible military-industrial spending wasted in California. That mostly just resulted in California having to share the misery the rest of the country “enjoyed” during the Reagan years and the 90s were rough on California home owners, especially those who bought into the state in the late 80s and early 90s.
My conservative spending and savings habits had left me in pretty good shape, however. For one, the dozen years of Midwestern recession had enabled me to buy, outright, a house in northeastern Nebraska for less than $5,000 in 1988. That house was, for the next decade, my fall-back economic disaster reserve. I never lived there for more than an occasional weekend the whole time I owned it, but I had “renters” living there for more than half of the years I owned it. Mostly, they “paid their rent” with improvements on the house. When I finally sold the place I’d used it as a substantial tax deduction for a decade and sold it for $20,000 cash with no realtors’ fees involved. Not a great return, but a hell of a lot better than I’d done on the stock market up to when I bought the house. And it served as a solid safety valve for the last years I lived in California.
My first economic benefit from Republican economics came when I left California and ended up in Denver, CO in early 1992. If you’re old enough and have retained any sort of memory, you might remember Billy Clinton’s campaign slogan, “It’s the economy, stupid.” In 1992, Denver was an economic train wreck with half of the commercial property and one-third of residential property under the administration of Resolution Trust Corporation. (Remember them? The Resolution Trust Corporation, “a U.S. government-owned asset management company first run by Lewis William Seidman and charged with liquidating assets, primarily real estate-related assets such as mortgage loans, that had been assets of savings and loan associations (S&Ls) declared insolvent by the Office of Thrift Supervision (OTS) as a consequence of the savings and loan crisis of the 1980s.”) Reagan trashed the savings and loan industry, handing it over to his mobster friends with little-to-no supervision resulting in the recession that led to Bush I’s defeat in 1992. Denver had an up-close-and-personal view of all that with George Bush’s 4th should-have-been-an-abortion offspring, Neil, blowing up the city’s real estate with Silverado S&L. I, on the other hand, landed in Denver with very little cash, but a good friend who put me up in his basement, a decent job, and a couple of racks of audio equipment that I repaired and sold for enough money for a decent down payment on a house. And there were still lots of foreclosed Denver houses to choose from in 1992, before Clinton’s 1992 election provided the country with a little confidence and prices started climbing.
After some tough house-buying lessons, I learned enough to trust realtors almost as much as Republican politicians and I landed a nice 1980s, 1,300 square foot, split-level, three bedroom, single-car garage house on what was the far southern edge of Denver (Parker, CO) for $71,000. The house needed a little maintenance, but I have never been afraid of that and I set to work making the place “mine.” When the house was new, it sold for $184,000 in 1984. Six years of Reaganomics and it had lost $113,000 in value. As I’ve described before, my Colorado employer didn’t last long and I ended up being a landlord after following the economy to Minnesota in 1996. At the time, I owned two houses with renters and that mostly taught me more than I wanted to know about long-distance property ownership. I’d always intended to move back to Colorado with my new employer, but that didn’t work out and I sold both of my rental properties in 1999. Not the peak time to sell, but a lot better than it was 8 years later when my Colorado house sold, again as a foreclosure, for $54,000. That house is, of course, valued at A LOT MORE today, but there were some seriously lean years where not being a landlord was a good thing. Denver, historically, experiences economic catastrophes sooner and recovers later than most of the country, so the next few years will be a test of that history.
When we moved to Minnesota, the Twin Cities were just recovering from the Reagan/Bush recession and I lucked into another about-to-be-repossessed property where we lived for 18 years. That house was more than 125 years old and the previous owners had been about as responsible as my renters. So, it needed a lot of maintenance and improvement. It would be hard to say that we “made money” selling that house in 2015, but my conservative financial tactics put us in good position to weather the Great Recession (2007-2009) and, when it was over, I’d paid off most of that home loan and that put is in the most secure economic situation we’d ever experienced. We bought another foreclosed house for cash in 2015, sold the Little Canada house for a lot more than real estate agents had said it was worth, and invested the extra cash very conservatively because the economy had recovered enough under President Obama that it would be time for foolish Americans to toss the dice and gamble on the insane promises of another Republican fool. And they did in 2016, with Trump blowing up the national debt, crashing the economy and losing more jobs than any previous president in US history, and killing off more than a million of us in an epically incompetent pandemic non-response. Four years of a competent, but boring, Democratic administration was all the ignorant goobers could tolerate and in 2024 76M nitwits re-elected a convicted felon and, in December 2024, I got the hell out of every slightly risky investment I’d made money on for the previous 4 years.
My IRAs and other investment accounts have been undamaged by Trump’s yoyo stock market games and I’m doing my best to ignore the “opportunities.” Most of Trump’s market manipulations have been transparent and if I’d been willing to spend the past 120 days glued to a computer monitor and the news I might have done pretty well. That is exactly how I created my retirement fund during the Bush II fiasco. But I was glued to a computer monitor at work between 1997 and 2001 and one result of that “activity” was a lot of misery. So, I’ll just wait out the Trump recession/depression and hope the morons don’t blow up the FDIC or put the country back into Reagan-style double-digit inflation (or worse).