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MHFTR

June 18, 2018 - Quote of the Day

Diary, Newsletter, Quote of the Day

"U.S. stock performance will be good in 2017, but is set to be outperformed by Japan, Europe, and emerging markets," said a top manager at bond giant PIMCO.

 

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MHFTR

June 15, 2018

Diary, Newsletter

Global Market Comments
June 15, 2018
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:
(ONSHORING TAKES ANOTHER GREAT LEAP FORWARD),
(TSLA), (UMX), (EWW),

(KISS THAT UNION JOB GOODBYE),
(TESTIMONIAL)

https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png 0 0 MHFTR https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png MHFTR2018-06-15 01:09:342018-06-15 01:09:34June 15, 2018
MHFTR

Kiss That Union Job Goodbye

Diary, Newsletter, Research

Those of you counting on getting your old union assembly line job back in Detroit can forget it.

The eight-year forecast published by the Bureau of Labor Statistics shows that 4.19 million jobs will be gained in the U.S. in professional and business services, followed by 4 million health care and social assistance jobs, while 1.2 million will be lost in manufacturing.

This is great news for website designers, Internet entrepreneurs, registered nurses, and masseuses in California, but grim tidings for traditional metal bashers in the rust belt manufacturing states such as Michigan, Indiana, and Ohio.

I'm so old now that I am no longer asked for a driver's license to get into a nightclub. Instead, they ask for a carbon dating.

The real challenge for we aged career advisors is that probably half of these new service jobs haven't even been invented yet, and if they can be described, it is only in a cheesy science fiction paperback with a half-dressed blond on the front cover.

After all, who heard of a webmaster, a cell phone contract sales person, or a blogger 40 years ago?

Where are all these jobs going to? You guessed it, China, which by my calculation has imported 25 million jobs from the U.S. over the past decade.

You can also blame other lower waged, upstream manufacturing countries such as Vietnam, where the Middle Kingdom is increasingly subcontracting its own offshoring.

These forecasts may be optimistic because they assume that Americans can continue to claw their way up the value chain in the global economy, and not get stuck along the way, as the Japanese did in the 90s.

The U.S. desperately needs no less than 27 million new jobs to soak up natural population and immigration growth and get us back to a traditional 5% unemployment rate.

The only way that is going to happen is for America to invent something new and big, and fast.

Personal computers achieved this during the 80s, and the Internet did the trick in the 90s. The fact that we've done squat since 2000 but create a giant paper chase of subprime loans and derivatives explains why job growth since then has been zero, real wage growth has been negative, and American standards of living are falling.

While the current crop of politicians extol the virtues of education, the reality is that we are dumbing down our public education system. How do we invent the next "new" thing, while shrinking the University of California's budget by 25% two years in a row?

If my local high school can't afford new computers, how is it going to feed Silicon Valley with a computer literate workforce? The U.S. has a "Michael Jackson" economy. It's still living like a rock star but hasn't had a hit in 20 years.

China can have all the $20 a day jobs it wants. But if it accelerates its move up the value chain, as it clearly aspires to do, then America is in for even harder times.

I'll be hoping for the best but preparing for the worst. How do you say "unemployment check" in Mandarin?

 

 

Is This Your Future?

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MHFTR

June 15, 2018

Tech Letter

Mad Hedge Technology Letter
June 15, 2018
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:
(DINNER WITH LAM RESEARCH),
(LRCX), (AMAT), (ASML), (TOELY)

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MHFTR

June 15, 2018 - Quote of the Day

Diary, Newsletter, Quote of the Day

"We can lead, but we cannot carry," said Mike Ryan, chief investment strategist at UBS, about America's role in the global economy.

 

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MHFTR

Dinner with LAM Research

Tech Letter

It was one of those normally mundane seasonal events.

But what I heard blew my mind and will substantially shape my trading and investment strategy for 2018.

By now you already know that I used some of my stock market winnings this year to buy a vintage Steinway concert grand piano (click here for "The Great Inflation Hedge You've Never Heard Of."

Well, you can't own a Steinway without a recital, and ours was held last weekend.

After listening to an assortment of children display their skills with Pachelbel, Ode to Joy, and The Entertainer, we adjourned for a celebratory buffet dinner.

Making small talk with the other parents, I asked one particularly articulate gentleman what he did for a living. He, too, had enjoyed an excellent year, and also used his profits to buy a Steinway, although his was a cheaper upright model.

It turned out that he was the chief technology officer at LAM Research (LRCX).

Had I heard of it?

Not only did I know the company intimately, I had recommended it to my clients and caught the better part of the nearly 400% move since the beginning of 2016. Furthermore, I was expecting another double in the share price in the years ahead.

Was I right to be so bullish?

The man then launched into a detailed review of the company's prospects for the next three years.

The blockbuster development that no one outside the industry sees coming is China's massive expansion of its semiconductor production.

More than a dozen gigantic fabrication plants are planned, the scale of which is unprecedented in history. Some of these fabs are 10 times larger than those built previously.

This is creating exponential growth opportunities for the tiny handful of companies that produce the highly specialized machines essential to the manufacture of cutting-edge semiconductors, including Applied Materials (AMAT), ASML (ASML), Tokyo Electron (TOELY), KLA-Tencor, and LAM Research (LRCX).

Everyone in the industry has boggled minds over the demand they are seeing for their products.

The reality is the artificial intelligence is rapidly working its way into all consumer and industrial products far faster than anyone realizes, creating astronomical demand for the chips needed to implement it.

Bitcoin mining is also creating enormous new demand for chips that no one remotely imagined possible even two years ago.

As a result, the industry has been caught flat-footed with severe capacity shortages. They are all racing to add capacity as fast as they can. Profit margins are exploding.

On October 17, (LRCX) announced Q3 revenues of $2.48 billion, a staggering increase of 51.84% over the previous year, and a gross margin of 46.4%. The operating margin was 28%, generating net income of $591 million.

That gives the shares a very reasonable price earnings multiple of 16.95X, a 10% discount to the 18X multiple for the S&P 500. That is an incredible deal for one of the fastest growing companies in America.

Samsung of South Korea was far and away its largest customer, accounting for 38% of total sales.

On November 14, the company announced an eye-popping $2 billion share repurchase program that is certain to drive the price higher.

If there is one dark cloud on the horizon, it is the loss of the research and development tax credit embedded deep in the proposed Republican tax bill.

This will have a noticeable and negative impact on (LRCX)'s bottom line. Still, my friend thought that the company could offset this loss with faster sales growth and margin expansion.

However, many other technology companies in Silicon Valley won't be able to bridge that gap. It is a hugely anti-technology move for the government to take.

My fellow Steinway owner thought that LAM Research could easily see sales double in three years as long as there is no recession, which I believe is at least two years off. As for the share price, he couldn't comment, but remained hopeful, as he was a large owner himself.

Of course, the trick is how to buy a stock that has just risen by 400% in two years. So, you could start scaling in here, and build a larger position over time.

You only get opportunities like this a couple of times a decade, and it's better to be too aggressive than too cautious.

To learn more about LAM Research, please click here to visit the company website.

 

 

A Steinway Model D

_________________________________________________________________________________________________

Quote of the Day

"The market always gets it right," said Jim O'Neill, the chairman of Goldman Sachs International, who coined the term "BRIC."

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MHFTR

June 14, 2018

Diary, Newsletter

Global Market Comments
June 14, 2018
Fiat Lux

SPECIAL GOLD ISSUE

Featured Trade:
(GUESS WHO'S BEEN BUYING GOLD?),
(GLD), (GDX), (SLV), ($SSEC),
(WILL GOLD COINS SUFFER THE FATE OF THE $10,000 BILL?),
(GLD), (GDX),
(TESTIMONIAL)

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MHFTR

Guess Who's Been Buying Gold?

Diary, Newsletter, Research

Gold bugs, conspiracy theorists, and permabears had some unfamiliar company last year.

While traders, individuals, and ETFs have been unloading gold for the past five years, central banks have been steady buyers.

Who had the biggest appetite for the barbarous relic?

Russia, which has been accumulating the yellow metal to avoid economic sanctions imposed by the United States in the wake of its invasion of the Ukraine.

Hot on its heels was China, which has flipped to a large net importer of gold to meet insatiable demand from domestic investors. China appears to be buying about 20 metric tonnes a month of the barbarous relic.

It seems the Chinese stocks markets ($SSEC) were not the great trading opportunity that they were hyped to be, which plunged 30% during the first two months of 2016, and is now 60% off its all-time high.

That's a big deal in a country that has no social safety net.

Many Chinese now prefer to buy gold instead of stocks, which are now considered too risky for a personal nest egg.

They are facilitated by the ubiquitous precious metal coin stores, which have recently sprung up like mushrooms in every city.

Only a few years ago, private ownership of gold resulted in China having your organs harvested by the government.

Central bank sellers have been few and far between. Venezuela has dumped about half its reserve to head off a recurring liquidity crisis.

Middle Eastern sovereign wealth funds cashed in some chips to deal with the oil price crash.

Canada has also been selling for reasons unknown to us south of the border.

All of this poses a really interesting question. Gold fell for the four consecutive years that central banks were buying, and the rest of the world was selling.

What happens when the rest of the world flips to the buy side?

My guess is that it goes up, which is why I have issued long side Trade Alerts on gold this year.

 

 

 

 

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MHFTR

Will Gold Coins Suffer the Fate of the $10,000 Bill?

Diary, Newsletter, Research

The conspiracy theorists will love this one.

Buried deep in the bowels of the 2,000-page health care bill was a new requirement for gold dealers to file Form 1099s for all retail sales by individuals over $600.

Specifically, the measure can be found in section 9006 of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of 2010.

For foreign readers unencumbered by such concerns, Internal Revenue Service Form 1099s are required to report miscellaneous income associated with services rendered by independent contractors and self-employed individuals.

The IRS has long despised the barbaric relic (GLD) as an ideal medium to make invisible large transactions. Don't you ever wonder what happened to $500, $1,000, $5,000, $10,000, and $100,000 bills of your youth?

The $100,000 bill was only used for reserve transfers among banks and was never seen by the public. The other high denomination bills were last printed in 1945 and withdrawn from circulation in 1969.

Although the Federal Reserve claims on its website that they were withdrawn because of lack of use, the word at the time was that they disappeared to clamp down on money laundering operations by the mafia.

IN FACT, THE GOAL WAS TO FLUSH OUT MONEY FROM THE REST OF US.

Dan Lungren, a republican from California's third congressional district, a rural gerrymander east of Sacramento that includes the gold bearing Sierras, has introduced legislation to repeal the requirement, claiming that it places an unaffordable burden on small business.

Even the IRS is doubtful that it can initially deal with the tidal wave of paper that the measure would create.

Currency trivia question of the day: Whose picture is engraved on the $10,000 bill? You guessed it, Salmon P. Chase, Abraham Lincoln's Secretary of the Treasury.

 

 

Ever Wonder Where The $10,000 Bill Went?

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MHFTR

June 14, 2018

Tech Letter

Mad Hedge Technology Letter
June 14, 2018
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:
(THREE RULES FOR JACK DORSEY),
(TWTR), (SQ), (MSFT), (FB)

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