Three Laws That Will Define A New Investing Age
Let me show you the culmination of many technological breakthroughs that uplift each other concurrently - The Fourth Industrial Revolution has begun
There’s a lot of interesting technology coming onto the scene.
In particular, I’m most excited about the potential of EVs.
Four years ago, the Energy Industry Administration (EIA) and other forecasting agencies estimated that EV sales would total a few hundred thousand units in the early 2020s. After EV sales hit 1.45 million units in 2018 and an estimated 2 million in 2019, the same agencies now forecast roughly 6.5 million in 2024.
However, because I’m a fan of abstraction, especially when it concerns the fundamentals of technology, I think this forecast is disingenuous to the real trends at work. Let’s digress a bit.
I’ve previously put forth the thesis that the emergence of the New Digital Economy (highly relevant in 2020) is predominantly the culmination of three guiding principles, or “laws”.
You might know them:
Moore’s Law — more computing power = more value
Metcalfe’s Law — more network connections / users = more value
Gilder’s Law — more network bandwidth / storage = more value
Of course, “more value” is an oversimplification, as is the general description of each Law, but we’re just concerned about the net effect of these Laws and their relationship to each other.
You might have heard discussions that relate the “value” of the Bitcoin network as being a function of Moore’s & Metcalfe’s Law, in particular.
Bitcoin’s network security increases as computing power increases, and a more secure network helps attract more users & activity, which drives value through economic activity in the form of transactions or deflationary growth as BTC is removed from the circulating supply with price growth incentives.
Long story made short: technology growth influences value growth under the guiding principles and interactions of the Three ‘Laws’.
Now, returning to our discussion on Electric Vehicles, we can look at an alternative of Moore’s Law to better speculate the growth of the EV market.
Where Moore’s Law focuses on cost as a function of time (i.e., the number of transistors on a chip would double every two years), its counterpart, Wright’s Law, forecasts cost as a function of production. Based on Wright’s Law, we can reasonably forecast EV sales will be 37 million units, six-times higher than the forecasting agencies’ consensus estimate for 2024.
Ok, great, but why bring all of this up?!
I’m glad you asked.
A critical addendum to my thesis on the New Digital Economy growth, which focused on its growth is a function of the Three ‘Laws’, which is that we need to look beyond the scope of single emerging technology verticals and their respective markets.
Here’s what I mean: Many seem to miss that the Fourth Industrial Revolution — the emerging technological renaissance driven by rapid advancements in new technologies such as AI, IoT, Blockchain, Automation, Battery Storage, Robotics, and many more — has immense value due to the combined sum of those emerging technologies.
I want to really emphasize that point.
Where the first three Industrial Revolutions were characterized by a central technological breakthrough — steam power for the First, electricity for the Second, Computers for the Third — which enabled massive advancements in production and reshaped society as a result, the Fourth is the culmination of many technological breakthroughs that uplift each other concurrently!
Once more drawing from our EV Market example, and the explosive growth we forecast using Wright’s Law, we can now better understand why that market share growth is inexorably linked to the Fourth Industrial Revolution: The continued decline in battery prices has opened up new segments of the auto market to utilize increasingly efficient lithium-ion batteries which, in turn, is pushing them toward an even larger market, utility-scale energy storage.
According to Wright’s Law, for every cumulative doubling of units produced, battery cell costs will fall by 18%. These cost declines are critical to reaching price parity with gas-powered vehicles, as the largest cost component of an EV is its battery. By 2023, it’s likely we’ll see EV range parity to ICE (Internal Combustion Engine) cars, and arguably we’re nearly at the point of EV / ICE price party. Soon, EV cars will be cheaper to buy and maintain, go further for cheaper than using gasoline, and introduce new technologies than drastically improve safety & facilitate automated personal transportation.
Do you see this beautiful cascading chain-of-events and advancements that is taking place?
Battery costs decline, allowing for EV market and large-scale energy storage market growth, which in turn help to push down prices of not just batteries, but other technologies that support this growth.
A myriad of emerging technologies, which benefit from reduced cost due to Wright’s law as production increases, are evident just from this one example of the EV market: AI models for self-driving vehicles, AR for spatially mapping the physical world and connecting it to a digital interface, hyper-charging capabilities and vastly superior energy density with industrial-scale Graphene production methods, robust AIoT networks of sensor devices and smart city infrastructure that communicates enormous quantities of data near instantaneously using a new generation of phased array beam communications, and so many more.
So, to recap, we are at the precipice of a massive technological shift that will change many facets of our society. Importantly, this shift is the culmination of many emerging technologies that are advancing each other concurrently with their advancements and subsequent reductions to production costs.
In particular, the EV market is serving as a weathervane for this zeitgeist.
As we covered, this is translating to an explosion of market opportunities that are generally in the form of SPACs.
If you’d like to learn more about SPACs, killer trading strategies, and building a system for consistent profit, check out our site to get free access to some of our best courses, such as the ‘Trading The Next Big Thing: Secrets To SPAC Gains’ course and ‘The Wheel: Passive Income Through Trading’ course.
See you there!
Cheers,