TREECE BLOG

Treece: Drilling in dry wells

Written by Dock David Treece | | letters@toledofreepress.com

Readers who frequent this column will recall my long-held dictum that everything cycles. Be the subject investments, economics, politics or otherwise, everything in this world has a tide that ebbs and flows, albeit on different schedules.

Nevertheless, it remains of utmost importance that in any of these areas, when the flow of tides change directions, we must adjust in turn. Doing so is far more profitable – and eventually far easier – than attempting to swim upstream.

Today there exist surprising crowds of people who have made names for themselves acting solely as antagonists, people who have little or nothing to say if they aren’t provided someone or something to rally against. Of these, Glenn Beck stands out as among the most vocal and probably the most recognizable.

And just what has made Glenn Beck famous? Rallying against unsound monetary policy, speaking out against progressive welfare programs, lambasting unaccountable government czars and, most noticeably, revealing in minute detail the background of a president unqualified for election and – in all likelihood – presently serving his last weeks with any real authority.

Do any of these arguments add value in any way? Do they put forth any reasonable alternative or call for real change? More importantly, do any of them matter if Obama loses re-election and the U.S. federal government tightens its fiscal purse strings?

A recent quote said of this election that “if Barack Obama were running unopposed, he’d have nothing to run on.” In other words, with a president devoid of any meaningful progress or accomplishment after three years in office, any re-election campaign waged by Obama is built solely on bashing Republican candidate Mitt Romney.

Quite often we see the same thing in business. Instances abound where businessmen, spokesmen or pundits survive only because they have someone to struggle against. Theirs is not a constructive struggle; they are simply saying what people want to hear, following the path of least resistance.

A quick story: Around the time George W. Bush was coming into the White House, a caller into Rush Limbaugh’s radio show asked the conservative host what he was going to do now that he wouldn’t have Bill Clinton to speak out against. Rush responded that there would always be issues and events to discuss, and as time went on his subjects changed from those he had discussed during the Clinton years.

The point here is that the United States is presently undergoing a major shift, just as it was around the new millennium. In fact, this instance is likely much larger and further-reaching than was seen a decade ago. The U.S. is now in the midst of major shifts in the sphere of politics, finance, manufacturing and production, employment, military, entitlement spending and the list goes on.

The question now is which of those pundits who have spent the past several years building names for themselves can make the necessary shift from being critical to constructive in their commentary.

Far harder is it to avoid the flavor of the week, but instead to change with the times as required – regardless of popularity – when time calls for such a shift. After all, the one-trick pony can be amusing for a time, but when it ceases to serve a purpose it’s the first one sent to the glue factory.

Dock David Treece is a partner with Treece Investment Advisory Corp (www.TreeceInvestments.com) and is licensed with FINRA through Treece Financial Services Corp. He provides expert content to numerous media outlets. The above information is the express opinion of Dock David Treece and should not be construed as investment advice or used without outside verification.

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One Response to “Treece: Drilling in dry wells”

  1. Bob Klahn

    “Do any of these arguments add value in any way? Do they put forth any reasonable alternative or call for real change? More importantly, do any of them matter if Obama loses re-election and the U.S. federal government tightens its fiscal purse strings?”

    No, they don’t. Romney will either reverse himself on pretty much every economic policy he promised, or sink this country back into recession, maybe all the way into a depression before his first term ends.

    “A recent quote said of this election that “if Barack Obama were running unopposed, he’d have nothing to run on.” ”

    Nothing but getting a Health Care Program the republicans proposed 15 years ago enacted. Nothing but stopping the fall of the economy into what could well have become another Great Depression. Nothing but starting the reduction in private sector unemployment that turned around the Bush debacle.

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