Samuel Alito Was Foolish To Sell His Bud Light Stock
The conservative culture war boycott against Bud Light was actually a great time to buy stock in a successful company, even if you don't like Bud Light.

Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito reportedly sold thousands of dollars of stock in brewing giant Anheuser-Busch InBev while the company was embroiled in a culture war controversy last summer.
That was a foolish decision.
No, not because the timing of the sale suggests that Alito was participating in a politically motivated campaign against Bud Light, trying to signal his opposition to transgender rights, or any of the other artificially constructed narratives that are central to the media coverage of Alito's stock sale, which was first reported by the Substack Law Dork. And, no, not because there's any moral or ethical significance to Alito's decision (or anyone's) to buy or sell stock in a certain company. There isn't.
The only thing we can say for sure about Alito's decision to sell up to $15,000 in Anheuser-Busch InBev stock last summer is that it cost him money. That's why it was a bad decision. At the end of the day on August 14, when Alito reportedly sold the stock, BUD was trading at $56.35. Today, each share of the same stock is worth over $66.
I hope Alito got a thrill from sending that backhanded message to InBev's bosses (if that was his intent) because the opportunity cost was likely a few hundred bucks.
Voting with your wallet is a legitimate and valuable thing to do, of course. I'm a bit more skeptical about the idea of voting with your stock portfolio, however, because selling shares means giving up your rights as a shareholder and your ability to influence the company's direction. A sales boycott seems likely to be more effective than an attempt at tanking a stock price, which only creates an opportunity for others to scoop up good stocks at lower-than-usual prices. The market is a lot more robust than keyboard warriors on both right and left would like you to believe.
Case in point: When conservatives started boycotting Bud Light and Inbev's stock price fell, I bought it. I didn't do that because I care about Bud Light (it's a bad beer that I generally avoid buying and drinking) or Mulvaney or because I wanted to signal some artificial political point.
I did it because I wanted to make money. Anheuser-Busch InBev is a massive, successful company. The boycott seemed like a temporary setback that would pass as soon as the conservative culture warriors—who generally do not have an impressively long attention span—got outraged at something else. Buy the dip, as the saying goes, and I did.
Sure enough, Bud Light didn't vanish from American culture—though the fact that Mexican import Modelo has recently surpassed it as the most popular beer in the United States is an interesting cultural story. (It surely helps that Modelo has more taste.)
Neither did Bud Light's parent company, which keeps chugging along as one of the world's largest, most successful producers of alcoholic drinks. And when I owned a small share of the Anheuser-Busch InBev's stock, the company's success was also mine—even if I never bought a single case of Bud Light. Capitalism is great like that.
(Full disclosure: I sold those shares of BUD in December when the stock's price hit $65 per share, equal to where the stock had been trading in the days before the too-online conservatives got upset about the Mulvaney ad.)

Maybe Alito sold his BUD stock to register a complaint against the company's marketing strategy. Maybe the trade was executed automatically because Alito had set a "stop" order to sell the BUD stock if its price fell below a certain level. Regardless, as National Review details, there's nothing about the sale that seems to run afoul of judicial ethics rules.
Does this fact tell us anything about Alito's character or competence as a judge, as some are suggesting? Of course not. But I would advise against letting him manage your 401(k), seeing how he sold that BUD stock at just about the worst possible time—the stock has traded well above the $56 mark for most of the past decade.
That's all that matters in this case. The stock market exists so we can all benefit from the wealth generated by successful businesses. Allowing the culture war to get in the way of that goal is a shame—and potentially a costly one. Let's not do that.
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No one cares about your groomer stock tips, Eric.
White Mike did.
Also Bud Light stock does not exist.
The charge of the Bud Light brigade.
Regretfully, reluctantly.
I don't understand. Are there separate stock listings for the Light version and the non-Light version? I read the wikipedia page, and see only one listing for "AB InBev", which apparently is some Belgian conglomerate. I didn't even know that Budweiser is a Belgian beer. I've never drank beer, as I've always found it kind of smelly. I have had Belgian chocolate. Anyway I would buy the stock if I could make a lot of money on it, and I wouldn't hold it against upside-down-flag guy if he kept his Belgian beer stock.
That is the thing, are we discussing beer or are we discussing Bud Light?
And when he realized his mistake, he flew his American flag upside-down to signal for help from his stockbroker.
He'd command his wife to summon the stockbroker via the upside-down flag signal, so that he'd have plausible deniability. Or if not plausible deniability , then blame-the-wife deniability.
So Boehm is now giving financial advise? I don't see a trail of finger wagging about the various leftist boycotts from his ass and I certainly don't see anything but partisan finger wagging here to suggest it was actually a bad decision other than hindsight. Now, where are the sales figures or the rest of the analysis to tell me that the current price is anything other than market manipulation by NYC leftists on Wall Street and they're actually worth it today despite the pressure campaign. Right, nothing.
its well documented it was manipulated to keep it afloat to fool people into thinking the boycott was useless and convince other people to buy in. it worked for people like Eric
Anyone could fool that simpleton.
LOL bud lite sales are still down and falling.
It's nice that America's vestigial bigots have something to chuckle about as better Americans continue to stomp those right-wing losers into increasing irrelevance in the modern American culture war.
We truly are laughing at you.
That is some consolation 2B shoor.
Put your hands together for the Reverend's better Americans.
Bottom row, second from the right. What is that thing?
Not sure but it might murder you for it’s precious.
Other way around you deranged sloppy bottomed gimp. Woke industries like Hollywood and tranny beer companies are hemorrhaging billions in sales now because of their virtue signaling.
You and your fellow travelers are losing. This is why you’re all so shrill and desperate. If you had the slightest bit of sense or intellect you would stop. But your kind are too dull and stupid for that. So things are going to get real fucking bad for you.
Ol' Artie must have had too many Bud Lites....which would be one.
Needs more homoerotic mouth rape and less violent rhetoric.
D-
The commentariat seems to be at lagerheads with the author.
- Narrator
It’ll cure what ale’s ya.
Only if the affected hops right to it.
Use your head.
It could be too maltuous.
That was barley funny.
Still, it was a stout observation.
No bottleneck in the delivery of responses.
These puns are getting my spirits down.
You can hear the booze from the audience.
Enough with the pour jokes.
It’s been a barrel of laughs.
https://www.marketwatch.com/investing/stock/bud
Overall their stock is down from 3 years. Static. No growth.
Do you follow market timing programs? Lol.
Aren’t you the economics writer Eric? What fucking idiocy.
On top of that it took Bill Gates with a big buy to prop the price up.
Here is the dow index in comparison.
https://www.marketwatch.com/investing/index/djia
Yeah, I don't get Boehm the Birdbrain's article. Almost as if he wants to jump on the Oust Alito Bandwagon that progressives are pushing.
Lol, how much did you make on your 10 shares stone hands?
Apparently $100 if he timed it perfectly.
Bad beer brews bad law.
$100m is chump change to Bill Gates.
The reason Alito is being criticized is that he did not hold onto the stock for the purpose of upholding the established LGBTQ+ religion. Seeing a stock that is tanking and whose management is making poor decisions is a damn good reason to sell it.
The demand from the Left for conformity to their ideology is one of the most troubling developments of current times.
Boeing needs to write "Rainbow Powered" on the sides of their jets. They will be bullet proof.
Bloeing could open the door for folks that have felt disenfranchised.
They were framed!
But they have a few bolts loose.
Unlike the whistleblowers.
Seeing a stock that is tanking and whose management is making poor decisions is a damn good reason to sell it.
Eric evidently believes crashes never happen.
I mean the left murdered 50-80 million people last century for not confirming so their demand for conformity isn’t exact a new thing.
LOL. Cope harder cuck.
Still LOLing.
Yeah, those conservatives who value women for their ability to reproduce and support them and their families over your preference to support womanface spokesman juice are the *real* short term thinkers here. You really showed them by making a few bucks over the course of 12 mos. by means that you admit has nothing to do with their political cause, or yours, or even the underlying product.
Maybe you didn't hear Boehm, InBev apologized. Disney is trying to tamp down the woke. Several big name diversity consultants in the gaming industry have gone belly up. Trans/diversity-baiting consultants are going woke. Blackrock has begun discussing giving up the woke. Apparently, you didn't get the memo that the retard hill that wasn't worth fighting on to begin with is lost Boehm. Maybe have a glance at the Cass Review or any one of a dozen other reports that show no improvements in outcome based on transitioning and several others that show actual harm being done by it.
Your sad use of economics to make your moral argument only makes you look like a sad, desperate, genderless moron.
Any actual economics used in this, or any Boehm article, is purely accidental.
InBev never apologized.
Pretty much.
https://www.thestreet.com/restaurants/bud-light-offers-unique-apology-to-beer-drinkers
Exactly. Just say we insulted our customers, we were wrong. They have not done that. If they did, even I might drink a free one if offered. Not now though.
I'm not going to quibble that they didn't literally say "I'm sorry." I'm not going to suggest that anyone go back to drinking Bud Light (My advice was never to start in the first place). I understand that this is "fairly recent" in the whole issue but, to me, this is the President saying "Mistakes were made. Lessons were learned.":
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/business/2024/05/06/bud-light-stay-in-lane-trans-backlash/
In case your subscription to The Telegraph isn't paid up:
https://www.lbc.co.uk/news/bud-light-stay-lane-backlash-trans-stunt-dylan-mulvaney/
I'm a bit more skeptical about the idea of voting with your stock portfolio, however, because selling shares means giving up your rights as a shareholder and your ability to influence the company's direction.
Or, your stock shares aren't significant enough to actually make a significant difference in how the company is operating, so you vote with your wallet by dumping the shares before the stock tanks. That also communicates with the company that they're pissing off their shareholders when shareholders are dumping stock.
The more I think on it, the more this statement reads like a condemnation of people who move out of California. "But you're giving up your right to vote and try to fix California!"
known sitewide for his squirrel-like lack of focus ...
Ban all state licensed corporations and end all investor liability protections in corporations. All transactions in corporate stock should be at the risk of the investor. Stock holders and corporate officers should have no less - and no more - liability for damages caused by the corporation than the individuals who caused the damages.
Yes, let’s all descend into madness!
Again?
"Alito was participating in a politically motivated campaign against Bud Light, trying to signal his opposition to transgender rights"
Is there a "right to appear on a beer can" that I am missing here?
Good idea! Put Palito's pug on a beer can and watch the market react to THAT.
Is there a “right to appear on a beer can” that I am missing here?
Yeah, it's in the penumbras and emanations. Boehm knows where they are. Alito is just some hack writer on the internet who wouldn't know anything about investing, let alone tell the Constitution from the back of his hand.
It depends on when he bought it. If he had bought it in October of '22 and paid ~$45/share he may have just been trying to lock in profits. On the other hand if he picked it up in June of '16 and paid the then price of $125/share then, yeah, he should have cut his losses well before it hit the mid $50s.
But hey, maybe he sold BUD and bought SWBI at $12.66/share which is now up to $16.04 for almost a 27% profit instead of a mere 17-18%.
this
Similarly ignorant political appointees ruled that God's Own Volstead Act was certainly constitooshunall and didn't infringe contracts or anything. It then rooled that skulking wiretaps are good, honest, ethical and no bother to 4A because War on Beer. They then rooled that the income tax law demanded you confess illegal income, Fifth Amendment be damned. So booze and pharma miscreants worldwide took investments out of the looters-by-law US and the resulting Crash wrecked the market value of ALL robed fanatics' stock shares. Welcome to Hooverville!
What the fuck are you babbling about today, Hank.
No one will ever know. Including Hank. Who is clearly due for more electroshock treatments.
Hageiographic port with a side of futon.
the stock has traded well above the $56 mark for most of the past decade.
Past performance does not indicate future performance.
The dimensions to which this article is laughable really are funny.
Outside an actual financial collapse, I can’t think of a more successful, impactful *and less otherwise disruptive* boycott (remember the Occupy movement?).
It’s undeniable that the boycott set InBev and others back dramatically and Boehm’s trying to pretend it’s a W because “Conservatives” didn’t leave every last brewery and distribution center as a smoldering crater. Especially considering that InBev is hardly the only stock or company that the whole woke/”trans rights” movement has nosedived.
It’s just hilariously, moronically oblivious. Like next we’re going to get a story about the sociopolitical significance of his winning on a scratch-off ticket.
That's a Mickey Mouse argument.
Reason writers post brags about stock trades now?
Stupid bragging too.
If Boehm's numbers are correct then Alito supposedly gave up a 17% gain, but if Alito put the money into a SP 500 index fund, which is the standard benchmark, then Alito would have gotten a 20.6% gain.
Boehm is bragging about how smart he was, but a brainless index fund beats Boehm's stroke of genius to buy low on BUD.
Just think Eric, if you'd spent a little money on the East India Company when those uppity, short-sighted colonialists boycotted in 1773, you'd almost certainly have made up your money and then some by the time of the Opium Wars if not by the time they got out of the slavery game!
Of course, now the East India Company is a lone tea shop in London owned by a man of Indian ethnicity.
What about the increasing (and generally "progressive") conscious decision to do business with companies whose values align with your values?
Conservatives aren't supposed to do that? Oops, sorry.
No, only Progressives are allowed to BDS.
Conservatives are expected to keep eating the dicks they're fed. They're on the wrong side of history, after all.
Except, if Alito had reinvested the proceeds in the S&P 500, his investment would be worth $66.79, rather than the $66.24 for BUD. Because, I'm pretty sure Justice Alito wouldn't be a moron and just put the money on his bed and roll around in it.
The point here is that BUD's equity performance isn't necessarily a market endorsement of Anheuser Busch Inbev's woke marketing so much as a broad market phenomenon reflecting hopes of falling rates.
No, this is a common fallacy. “It’s a good time to buy this stock because of [some reason].”
If the fact that the stock is “temporarily” depressed is obvious to you, it’s also obvious to everybody else — including a lot of sharpies who are sitting around all day looking for a reason to buy or sell a particular stock. Asset prices reflect all readily available information.
Not always - but close enough to reality on a large-cap like BUD. Even in equities, there do appear to be inefficient markets. It's just it's not for companies like Anheuser Busch Inbev.
"Eric Boehm is a reporter at Reason who covers economic policy, trade policy, and elections."
Now I understand the concept of "pointless".
Side note; it seems his personal best is a red ribbon from years ago, unrelated to his area of expertise. This explains so much.
"His 2018 piece about a curling controversy at the Winter Olympics ("Curling Is the Closest the Olympics Ever Get to Anarchy") won 2nd place in the Los Angeles Press Club's annual journalism award in the Sports Commentary category"
Just throwing this out there: Alito could have been doing tax-loss harvesting. Which might get (say) Elizabeth Warren mad at him, but for the rest of us, it's totally ethical, blessed by one of his predecessors, Learned Hand (https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=8086805)
Talk to the hand.
The hand is quicker than the eye.
Hand job.
Hand Jive
Give these guys a hand!
Aloha.
That was a foolish decision.
Unless he got an inground pool with the dough. Or a bunch of coke and hookers. Or paid for his daughters wedding. Or reinvested in something with an even greater return. Or...well you get the picture; if he derived more pleasure by selling BUD without being financially ruinous on his family's finances well that's what working hard and delaying gratification is for.
Samuel Alito Was Foolish To Sell His Bud Light Stock
Even if stock in Anheuser-Busch InBev turns out to be an excellent investment in purely financial terms, that statement is WILLFUL IGNORANCE.
So . . .you're saying the antisemite *shouldn't* BDS? Because they have more control over the evil juice of they continue to do business with them?
The market is a lot more robust than keyboard warriors on both right and left would like you to believe.
So the question becomes, why did Bud Light's stock go up? I don't actually know. However, given how the stock market tends to work, and how ESG tends to figure into things like credit-rating, huge investor inputs of cash, despite sales or profitability etc., I'm not sure this is the 'haha' moment you think it is, Broheim.
For instance, I work for an old, big, established manufacturing firm. I won't name the company, but our stock suddenly dropped 60% over the last few months without any major earnings issues. It just *poof* lost 60% of its value. The value of our stock has dropped so much, the C-suite is shitting its pants because our multi-billion dollar company now has a market cap of less than $400 million, and we're apparently a takeover target. Gordon Gecko could by our company for $400 million and sell it for parts at a major profit. The stock market is funny like that.
Interesting bit of explanation with data behind it.
One thought about the unusual longevity of the “boycott” might be that it isn’t just a boycott. Meaning, it’s abstaining, but not to coerce Bud into changing. It’s just abstaining.
Because Bud Light is about as fungible an asset as you can get. It’s piss-water beer that’s meant to be as cheap as possible, and there are an awful lot of beers in the category of light, cheap, American lager that can replace it in your fridge. If a brand very obviously offends its customer base, they might come back if there aren’t alternatives. But if there are alternatives, why would they?
Seriously, I’m well past tired of giving money to people who view me with contempt. I don’t need a private company for that, that’s what the government is for. So if I stop buying a product from someone that obviously despises me, it’s not a boycott. I’m not trying to get them to change or teach them a lesson. It isn’t a culture war. It’s just… not giving money to people who hate me.
The question is: How long before a guy can bring a case of bud lite to deer camp without jokes being made about it?
27.2 years.
Light beer is a commodity like paper clips, so easy enough to just choose another...which is what happened.
Hmm...
I have no fucks to give.
Boehm the Birdbrain...look into something called tax loss harvesting.
Nitwit.
A mistake in hindsight is not the same as foolish. He or his financial advisor could have made a bad prediction of the behavior of irrational people. The rational capitalist is the one who sells you the rope to hang him with. The irrational capitalist invests on principle, whether it be ESG or divesting from companies with immoral marketing departments.
What a mind-numbingly stupid and useless story all around.
Do we know when Alito bought this stock and what he paid for it? Does Alito personally sit at a laptop and trade stocks or does he have brokers that manage his portfolio? Honestly I don't see the point here. I have no idea what his net worth is but the disclosure states the sale was worth between 1k and 15k. I'm guessing that's a pretty inconsequential number to him and he could easily have done better than a 10.00/share gain by investing in something else.