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MHFTF

Why Coal Is a Short

Diary, Newsletter

What has been one of the top performing asset classes since the beginning of 2016?

Is it Apple (AAPL), Amazon (AMZN), gold (GLD), oil (USO), or collectible French postage stamps?

If you said “Coal,” you win the kewpie doll.

In fact, the 19thcentury energy source was one of the best investments you could have made over the past three years.

Indeed, the Van Eck Coal ETF (KOL) has picked up an eye-popping 210% since it printed its $5 low the first week of 2016.

Google (GOOG) eat your heart out.

You might give credit to the president for the meteoric move, thanks to policies so overwhelmingly helpful to the industry that they brought tears to the eyes of the owners of coal mining companies.

But you’d be wrong again.

Most of the move took place before the election.

As a result, I have recently been deluged from readers asking if it is time to buy this prehistoric energy source.

My answer is no, not ever, and not even with Donald Trump’s money.

However, my answer relies more on basic market dynamics rather than any environmental sympathies I might have.

You can blame China.

The Beijing government is manipulating its domestic coal industry to prevent them from defaulting on hundreds of billions of dollars with of loans to local banks.

So, it has cut back the number of days the industry can operate from 330 to 276 days a year.

What happens when you restrict supply and increase demand? Prices go through the roof as they have done smartly.

It gets better.

The Middle Kingdom was hit with rainstorms of biblical proportions, flooding many mines and forcing them to close many mines. The sushi hit the fan.

That forced major consumers, the big steel producers, and electric power plants to resort to the international spot market, or the “seaborne market” to cover shortages to avoid shutting down themselves.

Who is the world’s largest supplier to the seaborne market?

That would be BHP Billiton (BHP), the largest capitalized company in Australia, which has seen its shares appreciate by 144% since 2016 bottom.

I have been following coal for 45 years ever since I was the coal correspondent for the Australian Financial Review during the 1970’s.

I had to write a mind-numbing five pieces a week on coal (the AFR was a daily). So it’s safe to say that I know which end of a lump of coal to hold upward.

For a start, you never want to invest in an asset that is dependent on government fiat for rising prices. They can change their minds at any time. The loans in question could get paid off.

And you can count on the world market to suddenly find new supplies whenever a commodity price doubles.

Remember the Rare Earths bubble where we were active players?

After a hyperbolic bubble, prices fell by 90%. Rare earth turned out to be not so rare. Only the cheap labor to extract them free of environmental regulation was.

So you can count on the current coal bubble to deflate eventually. The perfect storm is about to run in reverse.

That leaves us with the long-term fundamentals of coal which are bleak, to say the least.

China is far and away the world’s largest coal consumer at 49%, followed by the US at 11%. This is why China is also the world’s largest producer of greenhouse gases.

China is making every effort to reduce reliance on these cheapest form of energy, thanks to the blinding, choking smog alerts besetting its largest cities.

It is only still using coal because with an economy growing at 6.6% a year plus, it has to rely on every energy form just to keep the lights only. Power brownouts can lead to political instability.

Coal consumption in the US has been in a death spiral for years falling from 50% to 33% of electric power generation over the past decade.

That led to the bankruptcy of several of its largest players such as Arch Coal (ACI) and Peabody Energy (BTU).

The collapse of natural gas prices to $2/btu made a cleaner burning alternative cost-competitive. And gas lacks the nitrous and sulfur oxides and particulate pollution prevalent in coal.

Read the prospectus of any electric power companies and you will find them besieged by lawsuits from consumers claiming that the coal they burned caused their asthma and cancers. Utility companies would love to be rid of it.

And then there’s solar energy.

California governor Jerry Brown has signed the nation’s toughest climate legislation, mandating that all power come from alternative sources by 2030.

On several days this year, alternatives already accounted for 100% of the state’s total power production.

While ambitious, the target is viewed as doable. Solar energy, which now accounts for 5% of the state’s power output, will do the heavy lifting.

Many other states are expected to follow suit. No room for coal here.

The United Kingdom has already taken this path as have many other nations.

It says a lot that a country that ran a coal-based economy for 300 years announces the closing of its last mine which it did a few years ago. It will replace the power output with alternatives.

Having lived in England during the violent miner’s strikes during the early 1980s, it was quite a revelation.

So the writing is on the wall. Another major producer, Anglo American (NGLB.BE) sold two major mines in Australia.

Coal is clearly an energy source whose time has clearly come and gone. So, will the price of coal. The next recession, which may only be a year off, could well drive the entire industry into bankruptcy.

 

 

 

Looks Like a Short To Me

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MHFTF

Is it Really Essential or Not?

Tech Letter

He is at it again.

No, not Elon Musk, but Andy Rubin – the Godfather of the Android operating system could create another ground-breaking shift in the world of technology.

Apple’s (AAPL) iOS system was the leader of the pack until Rubin’s timely intervention.

When Apple debuted the iPhone and, shortly after, the Apple app store, there was nothing remotely comparable at the time.

The roaring success of the iPhone and its app store could have been so much more to the global smartphone audience if it consumed everybody.

You could smell broad-based world domination, but it never materialized.

Android now has 85% of the global smartphone market share, and Apple has carved out the last 15% albeit in the high-income markets.

You can thank Microsoft (MSFT) for all of this – let me explain.

Android was hands down the best purchase ever made by Google for a paltry sum of just $50 million.

It was in 2005 when Android was bought by Google and Rubin’s work commenced overseeing the construction of a platform that could avoid licensing restrictions dragging down the industry.

Android was initially commissioned by Google to build a platform to stymie another potential Microsoft monopoly, but this time, in the mobile space.

Google didn’t want to be blown away by Microsoft as the pivot to mobile was picking up steam.

Google assumed that Microsoft had the best chance to execute the shift to mobile because of the universal acceptance of the Windows operating system.

And little did they know that Steve Jobs had a game changer up his sleeve when he rolled out the iPhone.

The premise was very simple for Android - offer supreme customer value, massively scale a global platform, and catalyze explosive growth.

Easier said than done.

In the end, Rubin was able to generate a blanketed adoption of the Android operating system in smartphones.

Apple has been, by and large, the victor of hardware because even though the Android system is more popular, the manufacturer of Android-based phones cuts across a broad swath of different international companies from Google itself to Samsung, LG, and the various Chinese makers.

Around half of Americans are proud to be an iPhone owner and Apple was able to ensure they were the only manufacturer of their proprietary iOS system harvesting all the profits.

Onlookers aren’t giving Android the credit it duly deserves in the global scheme of things.

Fortunately for Google and Rubin, Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer fudged his opportunity while Palm, Symbian, and BlackBerry never stuck around either for recorded posterity. It could of easily have gone the other way.

Android has become so entrenched in non-iPhone smartphones that Google was fined $5 billion for being too dominant in Europe or for what regulators tout as illegally cementing their position. The battle is still going on in court with a final verdict coming shortly.

What does Rubin have on the menu this time?

After establishing his own private company to battle the tech Goliaths, he built an initial smartphone that was an unmitigated flop.

The Essential PH-1 smartphone offered a stock Android experience meant to appeal to the medium-tiered smartphone market.

The phone had solid hardware, enough juice in it to be competitive, a poor camera, and it did little to stand out from the crowd. There are many other cheaper substitutes with better brand recognition selling similar enough devices.

In general, it is a passable smartphone, but the initial price point was a reach in this ultra-competitive climate.

Sales were an outsized bust barely able to penetrate the American smartphone market.

Sprint offered the phone for $699 and registered 5,000 sales in the first month.

To put it into perspective, Apple routinely sells 40 or 50 million smartphones per quarter.

The Essential phone was discounted down to $499 in an attempt to salvage revenue. That didn’t work either.

You can now buy the phone on Amazon.com (AMZN) for $378.

All told, the phone did about 150,000 in sales and Rubin needed to rethink his vision.

Even as recently as this spring, takeover rumors swirled because of Essential’s stable of engineering firepower.

The vultures never swooped and Essential is back with a vengeance building their second phone - Essential Phone PH-2

To stem the tide and make their mark in the smartphone industry, Rubin decided Essential needed a fresh strategy requiring immense chutzpah.

Smartphones have essentially become commoditized in the mid-tier range and consumers look for the best specs at the lowest price point. Samsung has made a living picking off this type of buyer.

Rubin decided to align his future product with the technology that will change the world – artificial intelligence.

Artificial intelligence will be incorporated into the design for the phone to work for the user without him using it.

Yes, that’s right, the user will not have to even have his paws on the phone. The artificial intelligence will mimic the user’s behavior and carry out its functions and tasks alone.

Rubin said, “You can be off enjoying your life, having that dinner without touching your phone and you can trust your phone to do things on your behalf.”

This audacious strategy is a risky bet that consumers will be comfortable enough with artificial intelligence to allow them to venture out alone into this complicated world with no checks and balances from the user themselves.

Imagine some catastrophic scenario if the artificial intelligence taps into a user’s bank account and begins deploying hard-earned capital to exotic locations all over the world.

Smartphone competition has effectively made smartphones widely available for most of the world, but cultivating a smartphone company from scratch requires a dose of creative intuition.

Betting on the development of artificial intelligence is one of the few weapons in Rubin’s toolkit.

This could be Rubin’s last attempt at a smartphone and moving further out onto the risk curve means this could be a whale of a failure or a spectacular success. I can’t imagine his investors allowing him to produce another failed smartphone.

My bet is that consumers aren’t ready to absorb the type of levels of artificial intelligence that Rubin hopes to infuse into his new phone.

Even if he lays an egg, he will be back on another project in no time. That is the sort of slack you get by being the godfather of the Android operating system. Funding is as lush as a tropical forest.

Secretly, I want him to succeed because the world needs positive disruption to the Silicon Valley cohort of megacompanies from independent sources.

My bet is that a smartphone will not be the revolutionary new product the world is clamoring for. It’ll be something we have never seen before.

Please click here to visit Essential’s website.

A GOOD PHONE BUT TOO SIMILAR TO THE REST

 

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MHFTF

Testimonial

Diary, Newsletter, Testimonials

Dear John,

I would like to express my appreciation for all that you put into your daily letter.

My background is in the medical field so when it comes to investing and finances, I need all the help I can get. It's totally amazing that you are a one-stop shopping experience.  

You the incorporate past, present, and future in where to invest. With your service, I have learned the who, what, when, where, and how of successful trading and have done rather well with your input and the text alerts.  

Often times though I have gone off on my own in trades and have given much of my profits back.

You warn your subscribers of the pitfalls and the need of strict discipline in knowing when to exit and limit your loses.  I am surely learning this the hard way.  

You are definitely the voice of experience in all matters of trading and I hold you in high regard as my mentor.

Sincerely,

Christine P

Morristown, NJ

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MHFTF

October 16, 2018 - Quote of the Day

Diary, Newsletter, Quote of the Day

“In the future, driving cars will be outlawed. It’s too dangerous to drive around a two-ton death machine,” said Tesla founder Elon Musk.

 

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MHFTF

October 16, 2018 - Quote of the Day

Tech Letter

“The common question that gets asked in business is, ‘why?’ That’s a good question, but an equally valid question is, ‘why not?’” – Said Founder and CEO of Amazon Jeff Bezos

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MHFTF

October 15, 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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MHFTF

October 15, 2018

Diary, Newsletter, Summary

Global Market Comments
October 15, 2018
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:

(THE MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or OUR HARD LANDING BACK ON EARTH),
(SPY), (QQQ), (TLT), (VIX), (VXX), (MSFT), (JPM), (AAPL),
(DECODING THE GREENBACK),
(DUMPING THE OLD ASSET ALLOCATION RULES)

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MHFTF

The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or Our Hard Landing Back on Earth

Diary, Newsletter

Truth be told, it’s the really boring, sedentary, go-nowhere markets that drive me nuts, cause me to tear my hair out, and urge me on to an early retirement.

The week started with such promise.

Sunday night I witnessed the first Space X landing of a rocket in California which I could clearly see from the top of Berkeley’s Grizzly Peak some 250 miles away. It was fascinating to see four separate jets steer the spacecraft earthward.

Financial markets had a different landing in mind, the hard kind, if not a crash.

I absolutely love the market we had last week which saw the third biggest down day in history, volatility explode, and $2.6 trillion in stock market capitalization vaporize.

I had to blink when I saw NASDAQ (QQQ) down an incredible 350 points in one day. My Mad Hedge Market Timing Index hit an all-time low at 4.

No wonder insider selling hit $10.3 billion in August, another record. Maybe they know something we don’t.

Chinese Gamer Tencent Postponed their US IPO. It seems they noticed that market conditions had become unfavorable. I know investment bankers hate passing on an opportunity to ring the cash register. I used to be one.

There is no better feeling than being 100% cash going into one of these crashes and then having panicked investors puke their best quality positions to me at a market bottom.

On Thursday, I backed up the truck and issued four perfectly timed Trade Alerts, picking up Microsoft (MSFT), Apple (AAPL), and the S&P 500 (SPY), and covering my short position in the bond market (TLT).

In fact, I believe I had my best week of the year even though I only added modestly to my annual return. Look at the charts below and you’ll see that I suffered a 9% drawdown during the February meltdown. Maybe I’m getting wiser as I get older? One can only hope.

This time, I managed to limit my loss to a modest 2.5% and am nearly unchanged on the month despite the Dow Average at one point nearly giving up all its gains for 2018. This is also against a horrific backdrop of hedge fund performance that is now showing losses for 2018.

The Volatility Index (VIX) made a move for the ages, at one point kissing the $29 handle, up from $11 two weeks ago. During the 600-point swoosh down on Thursday, I couldn’t get any of my staff on the phone. The entire company was logged into their personal trading accounts, buying puts on the iPath S&P 500 VIX Short-Term Futures ETN (VXX) as fast as they could.

Which leads me to believe that the bottom is near. Earnings and valuation support start kicking in big time at these levels, and the blackout period for company share buybacks started ending with the bank earnings last Friday.

When you take a $1 trillion buyer out of the market, it has a huge effect no matter how strong the fundamentals are. Start buying those dips. Their return is similarly eventful. I’ve already started to invest my 95% cash position.

Further eroding confidence was the president’s statement that the Federal Reserve is crazy. So, now we know the president appoints crazy people to the most important financial positions in the country. White House control of interest rates ahead of elections. Why didn’t I think of that?

Sparking the Friday melt-up was a statement by JP Morgan (JPM) CEO Jamie Diamond saying that a 40-basis point rise in rates is no big deal. The bull market is on. His earnings beat all expectations.

My 2018 year-to-date performance has bounced back to 27.56%, and my trailing one-year return stands at 35.87%. October is almost flat at -0.84%. Most people will take that in these horrific conditions.

My nine-year return appreciated to 304.03%. The average annualized return stands at 34.41%.

This coming week will be pretty sedentary on the data front.

Monday, October 15 at 8:30 AM brings us September Retail Sales.

On Tuesday, October 16 at 9:15 AM, September Industrial Production is announced.

On Wednesday, October 17 at 8:30 AM, September Housing Starts are published.

Thursday, October 18 at 8:30, we get Weekly Jobless Claims. At 10:00 we learne the September Index of Leading Economic Indicators.

On Friday, October 19, at 10:00 AM, the September Housing Starts are out. The Baker-Hughes Rig Count follows at 1:00 PM.

As for me, I will spend this week on my Southeastern US roadshow, giving strategy luncheons in Savannah, GA, Atlanta, GA, Miami, FL, and Houston, TX. I love meeting my readers mano a mano who are often a source of my best trading ideas. It looks like I’ll miss Hurricane Michael by three days.

Good luck and good trading.

John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Off to Lunch

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MHFTF

October 15, 2018

Tech Letter

Mad Hedge Technology Letter
October 15, 2018
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:

(FIVE STOCKS TO BUY AT THE BOTTOM),
(AAPL), (AMZN), (SQ), (ROKU), (MSFT)

 

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MHFTF

Five Stocks to Buy at the Bottom

Tech Letter

You don’t want to catch a falling knife, but at the same time, diligently prepare yourself to buy the best discounts of the year.

Interest rates triggered a tsunami wave of selling tearing apart the tech sector with a vicious profit-taking few trading days.

No doubt that asset managers are frantically locking in profits for the rest of the year and protecting ebullient performance from a year to remember.

This week shouldn’t deter investors from picking up bargains that were non-existent for most of the year because the bulk of the highest quality tech names churned higher with lurching momentum.

Here are the names of five of the best stocks to slip into your portfolio in no particular order once the madness subsides.

Apple

Steve Job’s creation is weathering the gale-fore storm quite well. Apple has been on a tear reconfirming its smooth pivot to a software-tilted tech company. The timing is perfect as China has enhanced their smartphone technology by leaps and bounds.

Even though China cannot produce the top-notch quality phones that Apple can, they have caught up to the point local Chinese are reasonably content with its functionality. That hasn’t stopped Apple from vigorously growing revenue in greater China 20% YOY during a feverishly testy political climate that has their supply chain in Beijing’s crosshairs.

The pivot is picking up steam and Apple’s revenue will morph into a software company with software and services eventually contributing 25% to total revenue.

They aren’t just an iPhone company anymore. Apple has led the charge with stock buybacks and will gobble up a total of $100 billion in shares by the end of the year. Get into this stock while you can as entry points are few and far between.

Amazon

This is the best company in America hands down and commands 5% of total American retail sales or 49% of American e-commerce sales.

It became the second company to eclipse a market capitalization of over $1 trillion. Its Amazon Web Services (AWS) cloud business pioneered the cloud industry and had an almost 10-year head start to craft it into its cash cow. Amazon has branched off into many other businesses since then oozing innovation and is a one-stop wrecking ball.

The newest direction is the smart home where they seek to place every single smart product around the Amazon Echo, the smart speaker sitting nicely inside your house. A smart doorbell was the first step along with recently investing in a pre-fab house start-up aimed at building smart homes.

Microsoft

The optics in 2018 look utterly different from when Bill Gates was roaming around the corridors in the Redmond, Washington headquarter and that is a good thing in 2018.

Current CEO Satya Nadella has turned this former legacy company into the 2nd largest cloud competitor to Amazon and then some.

Microsoft Azure is rapidly catching up to Amazon in the cloud space because of the Amazon-effect working in reverse. Companies don’t want to store proprietary data to Amazon’s server farm when they could possibly destroy them down the road. Microsoft is mainly a software company and gained the trust of many big companies especially retailers.

Microsoft is also on the vanguard of the gaming industry taking advantage of the young generation’s fear of outside activity. Xbox related revenue is up 36% YOY, and its gaming division is a $10.3 billion per year business.

Microsoft Azure grew 87% YOY last quarter. The previous quarter saw Azure rocket by 98%. Shares are cheaper than Amazon and almost as potent.

Square

CEO Jack Dorsey is doing everything right at this fin-tech company blazing a trail right to the doorsteps of the traditional banks.

The various businesses they have on offer makes me think of Amazon’s portfolio because of the supreme diversity. The Cash App is a peer-to-peer money transfer program that cohabits with a bitcoin investing function on the same smartphone app.

Square has targeted the smaller businesses first and is a godsend for these entrepreneurs who lack the immense capital to create a financial and payment infrastructure. Not only do they provide the physical payment systems for restaurant chains, they also offer payroll services and other small loans.

The pipeline of innovation is strong with upper management mentioning they are considering stock trading products and other bank-like products. Wall Street bigwigs must be shaking in their boots.

The recently departed CFO Sarah Friar triggered a 10% collapse in share price on top of the market meltdown. The weakness will certainly be temporary, especially if they keep doubling their revenue every two years like they have been doing.

Roku

Benefitting from the broad-based migration from cable tv to online streaming and cord-cutting, Roku is perfectly placed to delectably harvest the spoils.

This uber-growth company offers an over-the-top (OTT) streaming platform along with the necessary hardware and picks up revenue by selling digital ads.

Founder and CEO Anthony Woods owns 21 million shares of his brainchild and insistently notes that he has no interest in selling his company to a Netflix or Apple.

Roku’s active accounts mushroomed 46% to 22 million in the second quarter. Viewers are reaffirming the obsession with on-demand online streaming content with hours streamed on the platform increasing 58% to 5.5 billion.

The Roku platform can be bought for just $30 and is easy to set-up. Roku enjoys the lead in the over-the-top (OTT) streaming device industry controlling 37% of the market share leading Amazon’s Fire Stick at 28%.

The runway is long as (OTT) boxes nestle cozily in only 40% of American homes with broadband, up from a paltry 6% in 2010.

They are consistently absent from the backbiting and jawboning the FANGs consistently find themselves in partly because they do not create original content and they are not an off-shoot from a larger parent tech firm.

This growth stock experiences the same type of volatility as Square. Be patient and wait for 5-7% drops to pick up some shares.

 

 

 

 

 

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There is a very high degree of risk involved in trading. Past results are not indicative of future returns. MadHedgeFundTrader.com and all individuals affiliated with this site assume no responsibilities for your trading and investment results. The indicators, strategies, columns, articles and all other features are for educational purposes only and should not be construed as investment advice. Information for futures trading observations are obtained from sources believed to be reliable, but we do not warrant its completeness or accuracy, or warrant any results from the use of the information. Your use of the trading observations is entirely at your own risk and it is your sole responsibility to evaluate the accuracy, completeness and usefulness of the information. You must assess the risk of any trade with your broker and make your own independent decisions regarding any securities mentioned herein. Affiliates of MadHedgeFundTrader.com may have a position or effect transactions in the securities described herein (or options thereon) and/or otherwise employ trading strategies that may be consistent or inconsistent with the provided strategies.

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