A New Gilded Age

Rusty Guinn

May 24, 2020·22 comments·Money

Everyone knows the S&P 500 has stopped measuring actual prosperity. Every trader, every investor, every political observer admits privately that fundamentals don't matter anymore, that central banks can't sustain this forever, that our political system is broken beyond repair. Yet none of this shared knowledge produces any meaningful change. The question isn't whether the narrative is artificial. The question is why people keep accepting it.

• The disconnect between what we know and what we do has become total. Investors openly discuss how equity markets are now political utilities divorced from fundamentals. Political operatives acknowledge polarization as a tool for entrenching power. But this common knowledge doesn't alter a single investment decision or policy choice.

• Top-down narratives built on abstractions can absorb unlimited contradictory facts. When the S&P 500 becomes the symbol of prosperity rather than a measure of it, reality on different dimensions can't touch the abstraction. The lie survives not because people believe it, but because it exists in a separate plane from facts.

• History shows this before. Tuxedo Park in the late 1800s was universally acknowledged as artificial even by its residents. The Tyrolean costumes, the stocked fish, the forced formality, the arbitrary rules. Everyone saw through it. The place was ridiculous. Yet it persisted for decades.

• Individual knowledge isn't enough to break the spell. People can know something is broken and still participate in it because leaving feels like career suicide or because the incentives are aligned to keep you inside. The system survives through coercion and calculation, not belief.

• The only force that actually breaks these narratives is mass departure. When William Waldorf Astor left Tuxedo Park, when Emily Post finally left, when enough people decided the cost of staying outweighed the cost of leaving, the narrative collapsed. What breaks the system isn't argument. It's exit.

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Comments

Victor_K's avatar
Victor_Kalmost 6 years ago

I’m never going to wear a Tuxedo again, except to the Crematorium


yoloboys1123's avatar
yoloboys1123almost 6 years ago

The University degree is the symbol that perfectly represents our Gilded Age.


rguinn's avatar
rguinnalmost 6 years ago

Yes, among the most powerful, I agree.


rodedogad's avatar
rodedogadalmost 6 years ago

I recall after vacationing in Dubai for a week having this weird, confusing feeling about everything there. I compared it to Vegas. In Vegas, everything is fake, and everyone knows it’s fake and they don’t care. In Dubai, everything is fake, but everyone pretends it’s real, and there was a sadness to it. But yeah, this article could easily be written about Dubai.


DKrushing's avatar
DKrushingalmost 6 years ago

One of the most amazing things about Epsilon Theory is that Rusty is every bit the writer and thinker as Ben. Well done.


bhunt's avatar
bhuntalmost 6 years ago

I had exactly the same feeling about Dubai.


bhunt's avatar
bhuntalmost 6 years ago

Fact check: TRUE


yardsrushing's avatar
yardsrushingalmost 6 years ago

Tuxedo Park reminds me of the Goose Creek section of Baytown, Texas where I was raised. There was a very strict dress code, “No shirt, no shoes, no service”.


jeff1's avatar
jeff1almost 6 years ago

I see your point. I couldn’t stand the place. The thought that people vacation there is beyond me.


lpusateri's avatar
lpusaterialmost 6 years ago

It could easily be written about my home town of Louisville Ky. We have a handful of families that run the city behind the scenes. They have kept professional sports out of our city , they kept a bridge from being built for about 30 years because the didn’t want the “wrong type” of people from Indiana wondering too close to their neighborhood.

Anyway great tie in with current state of markets and politics I always feel that time reading espsilon theory is time well speant?

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