Swift Thinking

Music star Taylor Swift has taken the country by storm this year, selling out large football stadiums in every city lucky enough to have her perform. Generally, she puts on two or three shows in each city, in some cases more, such as the six shows in Los Angeles. You would think that with all this supply the tickets would be affordable, but a recent check on some seats on the secondary market showed a price of $2,000 for one ticket – and those were for the poor seats. But her devoted fans – known as “Swifties” – have been willing to pay up and, in many cases, make the long drive to see and sing along with the icon.

We don’t know where she invests her money (we’d be happy to meet with her), but Swift has proven to possess some financial savvy. When crypto exchange FTX recruited her as an endorser, she asked some critical questions that led her to decline the deal. Other celebrities that signed on with FTX have since been embroiled in legal problems in the wake of the collapse of the exchange.

The market’s mega-cap “love story” continued in the second quarter, with a handful of stocks carrying the major indices higher while the average stock was relatively flat. This time the catalyst was the excitement over generative AI, or artificial intelligence. AI is an advancement in technology that allows a machine to learn and produce new content based on inputs. The most well-known play on AI is semiconductor company Nvidia, whose chips are the brains of many AI systems. Management’s recent extremely bullish forecast sent the stock dramatically higher, and it became one of the few US companies to break the $1 trillion market value barrier.

AI, which has applications across various industries, appears to be a real trend with plenty of growth potential. That said, as with other burgeoning technologies in recent memory (e.g., Internet, cloud computing, electric vehicles) the market may be getting carried away with the valuations of the companies associated with the theme and overestimating the number of long-term winners. Nvidia, which we do not own, seems like the most obvious winner, but it’s also trading at more than 40 times sales – an astronomical multiple that requires the company to grow profits at an exceedingly high rate for many years to come.