I was in the Army from 1968-72. That’s a long enough time ago that perhaps my experience back then is no longer relevant. But I did a lot of different things, though, including winning a year-long, all-expenses-paid trip to tropical Asia, where I was a platoon leader and later on a battalion intelligence officer. In civilian life, I was an equity portfolio manager. But I also spent well over a decade managing a group of securities analysts and running a small mutual fund and pension fund complex. I mention this mostly because it strikes me as odd that I might have both more military and general management experience than the current Secretary of Defense.
From reading about the US attack on Iran, I get the impression that the administration did very little actual planning or analysis before committing troops. I don’t believe that the analysis cupboard was bare in the Defense Department, though. I presume that the White House either didn’t ask for intelligence or ignored what it didn’t like. After seeing years of conflict in the Ukraine, it can’t come as a surprise to anyone that the weaker party would use lots of low-cost drones. I am surprised a bit that we’re already running out of rockets to intercept Iranian drones, as well as that the US intercepts cost 80x what the Iranian attack drones do.
It shouldn’t be a shock, although it appears to have been one to the White House, that Iran would try to close the Straits of Hormuz. Or that the intelligence we used was so old/inaccurate that we blew up and killed a school full of children, thinking it was a military installation.
Courageous troops, but a clown car of high-up leaders.
Weirdly, Republicans are blaming Biden, who left office 14 months ago, for the US strategic oil reserve being empty today. Maybe he also left the front door of the White House unlocked back then or didn’t empty the garbage …or maybe he didn’t put the current registration sticker on a White House license plate. Yes, his fault back then, but…
The more relevant question is why the reserve has remained unfilled for the 14 months since, or why no one thought to refill it as much as possible once the White House decided to attack Iran.
From an investment standpoint, I find it hard to become interested in oil and gas stocks. There are, for me, just too many unknowns. For a long while, I’ve been thinking that US-based valu-ish consumer companies with well-established brand names would be natural takeover targets, given the weak dollar preferences of the administration that have made them much cheaper in foreign currency terms. The big issue that has arisen since, however, is that the US is not only the land of the free and the home of the brave heroes of WWII. We’re now the land of white nationalism and of ICE imprisonments, deportations and killings. no one knows whether we’re at the low point, either. So I suspect that we’re back to the winning formula from last year: tech, domestic companies with costs in $US and revenues elsewhere, and to non-US firms.