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MHFTR

The Path Ahead

Tech Letter

The Red Sea has parted, and the path has opened up.

Technology has been a beacon of light providing comfort to the equity market, when a trade war could have purged the living daylights out of bullish investor sentiment.

If an increasingly hostile, tit-for-tat trade skirmish threatening overseas revenue can't bring tech equities to its knees, what can?

It seems the more bellicose the administration becomes, the higher technology stocks balloon.

Does this all add up?

The Nasdaq (QQQ) continues its processional march skyward. If you were a portfolio manager at the beginning of the year without technology exposure, then polish off the resume before it picks up too much dust.

The Nasdaq has set all-time highs even after a brutal 700-point sell-off at the end of January.

Apple (AAPL), Microsoft (MSFT), Netflix (NFLX), and Amazon (AMZN) can take credit for 83% of the S&P 500's gains in 2018.

And that fearsome four does not even include Facebook (FB), which has left the shorts in the dust.

Each momentous sell-off has proved to be a golden buying opportunity, propelling tech stocks to higher highs and retracing to higher lows.

And now the path to tech profits is gaping wide, luring in the marginal investor after two highly bullish events for the tech world boding well for the rest of fiscal year 2018.

Xiaomi, one of China's precious unicorns, which sells upmarket smartphones, went public on the Hong Kong Hang Seng market last week.

The timing couldn't be poorer.

The rhetoric between the two global leaders reached fever pitch with the administration proposing $200 billion worth of tariffs levied on Chinese imports.

China reiterated its entrenched stance of not backing down, triggering a tense war of words between the two global powers.

The beginning of March saw the Shanghai stock market nosedive through any remnants of support levels.

The 50-day moving average, 100-day, and 200-day were smashed to bits and Shanghai kept trending lower.

The trade skirmish has had the reverse effect on Chinese equities compared to the Nasdaq's brilliance, and combined with the strong dollar, has seen emerging markets hammered like the Croatian soccer team in Moscow.

Xiaomi's IPO was priced in the range of HK$17 to $22, and when it opened up on the first day at HK$16.60, investors were holding their breath.

Take the recent IPO triumph of cloud company Dropbox (DBX), whose IPO was priced in the expected range of US$18 to $20. The first day of trading showed how much appetite there is for to- quality cloud companies, with Dropbox starting its trading day at US$29, 40% higher than the expected range.

Dropbox finished its first day at a lofty US$28.48, a nice 35% return in one trading day.

No doubt Xiaomi's shares were not expected to perform like Dropbox, but it held its own.

Astonishingly, this company did not even exist nine years ago and is now the fourth-largest smartphone manufacturer in the world, grossing $18 billion in revenue in 2017.

The unimaginable pace of development highlights the speed at which the Chinese economy and consumer zigs and zags.

Chinese retail sales were up a staggering 9% YOY for the month of June 2018. Its overall economy met its 6.7% target for the second quarter of 2018.

The price range settled for the IPO gave Xiaomi a valuation of $54 billion.

Instead of getting roiled, Xiaomi came through with flying colors posting a 26% gain after the first week of trading.

Poor price action could have given Beijing ammunition to cry foul, laying blame for the underperformance on the U.S. tariffs.

The healthy price action underscores there is still room for Chinese and American companies to flourish in 2018, albeit through a highly politicized environment.

Specifically, Apple comes through unscathed as a disastrous Xiaomi IPO could have resulted in negative local press stoking higher operational risks in greater China.

Apple is in the eye of the storm, but untouchable because it employs more than 4 million local Chinese employees throughout its expansive ecosystem and has been praised by Beijing as the model foreign company.

Apple earned $13 billion in revenue from China in Q2 2018, a 21% YOY increase.

Hounding Apple out of China will be the inflection point when tech investors know there is a serious problem going on and need to hit the eject button.

If this ever happens, The Mad Hedge Technology Letter will be the first to resort to risk off strategies.

BlackRock's (BLK) CEO Larry Fink let everyone know his piece saying, "the lack of breadth in the equity markets is troubling."

Investors cannot blame tech companies for executing their way to the top behind the tailwind of the biggest technological transformation in mankind.

And even in the tech industry, winners can turn into losers in a blink of an eye, such as legacy tech company IBM (IBM).

Someone better tell Fink that this is the beginning.

Amazon recorded 44% of total U.S. e-commerce sales in 2017, equaling 4% of total retail sales in the U.S.

This number is expected to breach 50% by the end of 2018.

The second piece of bullish tech news was lifting the ban on Chinese telecommunications company ZTE.

It is open for business again.

From a national security front, this is an unequivocal loss. However, it saved 75,000 Chinese jobs and gave a small victory to American regulators attempting to patrol the mischievous behemoth.

The U.S. Department of Commerce lifted the seven-year ban even after ZTE sold telecommunication products to North Korea and Iran.

ZTE was fined $1 billion, changed the senior management team, and put into place an American compliance team that will monitor its business for the next 10 years.

Diluting the penalty lowers the operational risk for American tech companies because it shows the administration is willing to reach compromises even if the compromise isn't perfect.

China is a lot less willing to ransack Micron and Intel's China revenues, if America allows China to save face and 75,000 local jobs.

This is a big deal for them and their employees.

America has a strong hand to play with against China because China still requires Uncle Sam's semiconductor components to build its future.

This hand is only effective if Chinese still thirst for American technology. As of today, America is higher on the technological food chain than China.

The move is also a model of what the U.S. Department of Commerce will do if Chinese companies run amok, which Chinese tech companies often do because of the lack of corporate governance and transparency.

These two recent China events empower the overall American tech sector, and the market will need a berserk shock to the tech ecosphere foundations to make it crumble.

As it stands, the tech sector is handling the trade war fine, and with expected blowout tech earnings right around the corner, short tech stocks at your own peril.

 

 

 

 

________________________________________________________________________________________________

Quote of the Day

"All of the biggest technological inventions created by man - the airplane, the automobile, the computer - says little about his intelligence, but speaks volumes about his laziness," - said author Mark Kennedy.

 

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Mad Hedge Fund Trader

July 16, 2018 - MDT Pro Tips A.M.

MDT Alert

While the Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader focuses on investment over a one week to six-month time frame, Mad Day Trader, provided by Bill Davis, will exploit money-making opportunities over a brief ten minute to three day window. It is ideally suited for day traders, but can also be used by long-term investors to improve market timing for entry and exit points. Read more

https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png 0 0 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2018-07-16 08:51:412018-08-20 12:43:27July 16, 2018 - MDT Pro Tips A.M.
MHFTR

July 16, 2018

Diary, Newsletter

Global Market Comments
July 16, 2018
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:
(THE BEST FINANCIAL BOOK EVER),
(A DAY WITH TOM FRIEDMAN OF THE NEW YORK TIMES),
(THOUGHTS AT SEA ABOARD THE QUEEN MARY 2, PART I)

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MHFTR

July 16, 2018

Tech Letter

Mad Hedge Technology Letter
July 16, 2018
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:
(THE REGULATION EFFECT),
(GOOGL), (AMZN), (FB), (SNAP), (TWTR), (NFLX)

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MHFTR

Thoughts at Sea Aboard the Queen Mary 2, Part I

Diary, Newsletter

Location: 48 degrees, 02.12 minutes North, 043 degrees, 42.08 minutes East, or 1,421 nautical miles ENE of New York.

The Queen Mary 2 is currently plowing its way through a massive fog bank a thousand miles thick, sounding the foghorn every two minutes. Visibility is less than 100 yards, and the waves are a rough 12 feet high.

The captain has closed the outside decks for fear of losing a passenger overboard. The weather has disrupted our satellite link, and our Internet is down. So here I write.

One hour out of New York, and a passenger suffered a heart attack. So, the captain turned the ship around and headed back to the harbor, where the New Jersey Search and Rescue sent out a launch to pick up the unfortunate man and his spouse.

That meant we could pass under the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge three times, on each occasion deftly clearing the span by a mere 10 feet. Talk about inauspicious beginnings.

The ship is truly gigantic. You must allow 20 minutes to get anywhere, 5 minutes to walk there and 15 minutes to get lost. When launched in 2003, it was the largest cruise ship ever built at 148,900 tons, nearly double the size of the now decommissioned Queen Elizabeth II.

It whisks up to 3,000 passengers and 1,325 crew across the seas in the utmost luxury at a steady 21.5 knots. You could water ski behind this leviathan of a vessel, if only the crew permitted it.

As a 40-year guest of Cunard and the highest paying customer on the ship, I managed to bag the Sandringham Suite, possibly the most luxurious publicly available oceangoing accommodation ever created.

The 2,200-square-foot, two-floor, two-bedroom, three-bathroom, Q1 class apartment on decks nine and 10 includes a formal dining room, kitchen, his-and-her closets, a small gym, and 1,000 square feet of rear-facing teak deck.

All of this was a bargain for $56,000, or about the same as renting the presidential suite at the San Francisco Ritz for a week at $10,000 a night, except at the end you wake up in England five pounds heavier.

Not that I noticed, though. By the afternoon, the two complimentary bottles of Dom Perignon Champagne were already headed for the recycling bin.

The suite came staffed with two full-time butlers, Peter and Henry, who were an endless font of fascinating information about the ship. During one unfortunate cruise, eight senior citizens passed away.

The morgue held only six, so the extra two were stashed in the meat locker for the duration of the voyage. No comments were every made about the seasoning of the steaks that week.

I asked if Cunard ever performed burials at sea in these circumstances. They said they used to. But a few years back an elderly billionaire "Mr. Smith" checked into a deluxe Q1 cabin with a hot young "Mrs. Smith," and then promptly expired. The grieving widow requested he be buried mid-Atlantic with the traditional yard of sail and a cannonball.

When the ship docked at Southampton, a much older, actual "Mrs. Smith" appeared to claim the body and sued the company when informed of his current disposition.

So, no more burials at sea.

Yes, the ship did hit a whale once, which struck the bulbous bow. It next landed in Lisbon, Portugal, with the whale still attached. Cunard was fined for commercial fishing without a license. The unlucky cetacean's skeleton is now in a Lisbon maritime museum. Apparently, this company gets sued a lot because of its deep pockets.

Of course, the memory of the sinking of the Titanic is ever present. There is a history display down on deck 2, and you can even have your photo taken in front of a backdrop of the grand staircase of the ill-fated ship.

When we passed 10,000 feet over the wreck at 48 degrees, 38.50 minutes North, 50 degrees, 00.11 minutes West one day out of New York, the Queen Mary 2 let out three long blasts of its horn in memory of the lost. Cunard took over the Titanic's White Star Line during the Great Depression and is therefore the inheritor of this legacy.

Peter is now at the door with my dinner, so I will continue on another post.

John on Yacht

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MHFTR

The Regulation Effect

Tech Letter

Locking horns with large cap technology companies in court is inconceivable for regulators in Washington.

Yes, it is their job to put out fires left, right, and center, but when the scorching inferno reaches full intensity, regulators hit the pass button.

Taking on an industry that employs an army of lawyers and data analysts up the wazoo is frightful.

Tech wants to make the skirmish into a resource fight and no cohort has more ammunition than these four companies.

They are already on the way to create more unregulated industries simply because they do not exist yet.

This is why regulators cannot keep up with the nimbleness on display by the tech industry.

They are always one, maybe two steps ahead.

Investors have been able to digest consequences of the data fiasco fueling an even more bullish narrative for the likes of Facebook (FB) and Alphabet (GOOGL).

Facebook and Alphabet are the two laggards in the vaunted FANG group, only because they are up against Netflix (NFLX) and Amazon (AMZN), two of the most transformational companies of the gig economy generation.

Facebook and Alphabet give traders entry points; Amazon and Netflix hardly ever.

Investors are hard pressed to find days when Amazon and Netflix drop more than 1%, and a brief respite is met with a torrent of new buying.

Even more of a head-scratcher is the American law etched into the books, calculating harm by connecting it with price increases, underscoring the FANG's dominant position.

It is almost impossible to prove caused "harm" because Alphabet and Facebook services are free. However, the free service is a misnomer, because of the extreme manipulation of data allowing tech titans to profit from data opportunities instead of charging customers a service fee.

The Mad Hedge Technology Letter has been rolling out a steady dose of Facebook recommendations since its inception to scintillating effect.

The Cambridge Analytica scandal stoked mayhem on the global news waves ravaging Facebook shares from $192 down to $153.

Investors were panicking and rightly so. A precipitous drop is nothing investors with skin in the game like to see.

The Mad Hedge Technology Letter saw it as a gift from the celestial stars and ushered subscribers into this suave stock at $168, to reread this memorable story please click here.

Facebook has gone from strength to strength blowing past expectations celebrating all-time highs of a recent intraday price of $207 earlier this week.

I am still highly bullish on Facebook, even more so after the first fines were doled out for the recent scandals.

Under the old data laws in Britain, Facebook was fined a grand total of $660,000 along with a detailed report from the Information Commissioner's Office castigating Facebook's business practices.

This amount is peanuts for Facebook, practically equaling the cost of providing a16-person security detail for CEO Mark Zuckerberg around his Palo Alto, California, estate for maybe two weeks.

If Facebook can hold down these fines to inconsequential amounts, regulation will be a decisive tailwind going forward.

How does a headwind turn into a tailwind in the blink of an eye?

General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) rolled out in Europe lately has helped Alphabet and Facebook solidify their digital ad business.

Alphabet has adopted a stringent version of the rules to its new model because the behemoth does not need to take on the added risk of noncompliance.

Marginal companies do.

The possibility of exorbitant fines clearly grabbed the attention of Silicon Valley CEOs, and they have put the ball in motion to insulate themselves from such downside risk.

Unsurprisingly, Alphabet has a higher opt-in consent rate than its smaller tech brethren.

Users are more comfortably entrusting data to an Alphabet instead of a smaller unknown that could potentially be 10 times worse than Alphabet.

Uncertainty breeds risk aversion.

Recent data shows other companies have a galling time keeping up with the same percentage of consent as Alphabet.

You cannot expect a college basketball player to perform miracles like Steph Curry.

This puts Alphabet in a healthier strategic position as the users who consent are five times more valuable to digital ad exchanges and easier to monetize.

Other ad exchanges face an uphill battle against Alphabet if they cannot increase the rate of consent.

The extra premium is derived from the ability to personalize the advertisements boosting the conversion rate for sellers.

Alphabet has in effect increased its quality of data just by being Alphabet.

It is certainly not fair, but life is not fair.

And then there is the conundrum of where do you go if you do not want to sell on Alphabet or Facebook?

Well, Twitter (TWTR), Snapchat (SNAP), and Instagram (owned by Facebook) are the other alternatives fighting for the scraps.

The battle to get users to consent is really the be-all and end-all for many of these ad sellers.

Facebook and Alphabet have seen the best results and will likely extend their hegemony.

Recently, Alphabet has been offering 15% less ads on its exchange. But, it all involves consented users demonstrating the unenviable position for other exchanges to match Alphabet's quality.

The EU antirust watchdog is expected to levy a multi-billion dollar fine for abusing its dominant position of its Android operating system.

This comes on the heals of fining Alphabet $2.82 billion last year for abusing the dominance of a search again.

The stock barely budged on this news.

Alphabet's punishment for being too dominant in Europe is laughable.

When a company is punished for being too good then you sit back and admire from afar.

There is no other company that can undermine its position and even hit with billions in fines - its leadership status is unquestioned.

American readers sometimes forget the popularity of the Android ecosystem outside of America because of the ubiquitous nature of iPhones stateside. The network effect has made it impossible to do business in Europe without collaborating with the Android platform.

Facebook took more than eight years to reach a billion users but only half that time to reach the next billion.

The stock has held up relatively well. The 73% market share of digital ad dollars Facebook and Alphabet extracted in 2017 is up from 63% in 2015.

This two-headed monster shows no sign of abating, demonstrated by taking in 83% of all digital ad growth, leaving the crumbs for the rest.

They are specialists at exploiting their business environments, much like mining companies exploit the earth.

Their platforms are so influential, they turn elections on its head.

Governments are scared of taking them down, empowering these companies to new heights creating a massive halo effect worldwide.

The Chinese communist government has even used Chinese social media platforms to establish an Orwellian surveillance system monitoring its people at all times. Such is the power of technology these days.

Users are forced to accept any conditional terms they offer, because many jobs are reliant on these platforms such as the millions of app developers hustling to create the new hot app.

They all have families to feed.

On an individual level, people would not sacrifice a cushy income because they do not wish to consent to tracking services.

The next step is for the Amazons and Alphabets to ramp up their private label businesses using their high-quality treasure trove of data.

Amazon has been the leader in selling its own products from tech behemoths, and that percentage in terms of overall sales will increase over time.

It does not need others to sell products they can make themselves for cheaper, better quality retaining every cent.

Amazon's private label is geared toward decent quality and low prices capturing the volume of transactions desired.

Bundling services, exploiting the data, and applying discriminatory pricing will become the new normal for these powerful platforms and nobody does that better than Amazon.

It has no incentive to allow eyeballs, data and dollars to escape these proprietary walled gardens hence the term walled gardens.

Even more genius, Facebook and Alphabet can track users outside their walled gardens if they are signed into their Facebook or Google accounts.

Granted, Facebook has had better price action of late as traders understand there has been no lasting effect from the misuse of leaked data.

However, Alphabet has the crown jewel of the next leg up in A.I. (Artificial Intelligence) - Waymo. Waymo is a company I have chronicled in the past leading the race in autonomous driving inching closer to full-scale deployment sometime in the next year.

If you think Alphabet and Facebook shares are lofty now and "overbought," then I cannot imagine what you'll think when these companies dominate further because the runway is as far as the eye can see.

 

 

 

 

________________________________________________________________________________________________

Quote of the Day

"One machine can do the work of 50 ordinary men. No machine can do the work of one extraordinary man," - said American author Elbert Hubbard.

 

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Mad Hedge Fund Trader

July 13, 2018 - MDT Pro Tips A.M.

MDT Alert

While the Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader focuses on investment over a one week to six-month time frame, Mad Day Trader, provided by Bill Davis, will exploit money-making opportunities over a brief ten minute to three day window. It is ideally suited for day traders, but can also be used by long-term investors to improve market timing for entry and exit points. Read more

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MHFTR

July 13, 2018

Diary, Newsletter

Global Market Comments
July 13, 2018
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:
(FRIDAY, AUGUST 3, 2018, AMSTERDAM, THE NETHERLANDS GLOBAL STRATEGY DINNER),
(NOTICE TO MILITARY SUBSCRIBERS),
(CHINA'S COMING DEMOGRAPHIC NIGHTMARE)

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MHFTR

July 13, 2018

Tech Letter

Mad Hedge Technology Letter
July 13, 2018
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:
(THE FANGS' PATH TO ONLINE BANKING),
(SQ), (V), (MA), (AXP), (JPM)

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MHFTR

July 13, 2018 - Quote of the Day

Diary, Newsletter, Quote of the Day

"I'd much rather have the Wicked Witch of the East go away. We'd be way better off if we ended quantitative easing real fast so this scapegoat can get behind us," said Ken Fisher of Fisher Investments.

Wicked Witch

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Page 7 of 13«‹56789›»

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