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Mad Hedge Fund Trader

Another View of the Antitrust Assault

Tech Letter

The big story here is that regulation is creeping closer careening towards us as if we had always expected it.

The ramifications are massive and, at a bare minimum, investors can expect the kibosh to be put on FANG stocks.

That doesn’t mean they will fall off a cliff, but the upside in the short-run is capped and appears as if this will be the base case scenario.

Investors will need to filter out the cadence to be able to hear the true chords.

There will still be many twists and turns in this on-going saga.

The Federal Trade Commission fining Facebook (FB) over privacy issues earlier this year was just the tip of the iceberg.

The government is launching a multi-pronged barrage on big tech that will include 48 state attorney generals with only California and Alabama abstaining.

Our vilified big tech companies are now confronted with two Congressional, six state and local, and eight federal investigations.

Nothing is cut and dry as judges could apply anti-trust law in different ways.

States could also go at them alone if they feel justice is not served.

The only winner here are lawyers that will earn a windfall in these proceedings.

Even if the larger society generally understands how harmful these platforms are, it does not necessarily mean the government’s case will hold up in a court of law.

It is absolutely true that social media platforms have had severe unintended consequences that have devastated the harmony of American society and culture as a whole.

But that doesn’t mean it is illegal.

Another unintended consequence is tainting the reputations of big tech and it will be meaningfully harder to hire the best of breed moving forward causing companies to relatively overpay for premium talent.

It is no surprise that millennials desire to work for companies that are a net positive social contributor and not the other way around.

It is becoming increasingly exhausting identifying new Millenial staff who immediately know their job would be to exploit consumers by culling highly targeted and personal data.

The contagion doesn’t just stop there, these big tech companies have become a nightmare to work for in their current state as the avalanche of criticism from media, society, and the state have caused management to lead in a schizophrenic and paranoid way with a siege mentality.

Would you be scared out of your mind if you knew what you were involved in could eventually be brought up in a court of law or even imprison you?

The paranoia has surfaced in the email communications with companies such as Facebook and Alphabet banning all political and societal discourse.

I will argue that Facebook has more to lose than Alphabet.

Alphabet provides real services while Facebook is built out of thin air.

I can pinpoint YouTube and Google Maps as ultimate winners if these two are spun out into their own entities.

The fact of big tech being cash cows means there is a great deal at stake in these rulings for the consumers, shareholder, employees, and the entire world.  

 

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Mad Hedge Fund Trader

September 11, 2019 - Quote of the Day

Tech Letter

“The Chinese government still would like to see U.S. Internet companies explore the Chinese market, providing they are willing to abide by Chinese law. I think companies like Facebook should think about the Chinese market.” – Said Founder and CEO of Baidu Robin Li

 

https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/robin-li.png 466 322 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2019-09-11 06:00:562019-09-11 06:46:52September 11, 2019 - Quote of the Day
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

September 11, 2019

Diary, Newsletter, Summary

Global Market Comments
September 11, 2019
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:

(HAS THE VALUE OF YOUR HOME JUST PEAKED?),
(ITB), (PHM), (KBH), (LEN), (DHI), (NVR), (TOL),
(JOIN US AT THE MAD HEDGE LAKE TAHOE, NEVADA CONFERENCE, OCTOBER 25-26, 2019)

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MHFTR

Has the Value of Your Home Just Peaked?

Diary, Newsletter, Research

Lately, my inbox has been flooded with emails from subscribers asking how to hedge the value of their homes. This can only mean one thing: the residential real estate market has peaked.

They have a lot to protect. Since prices hit rock bottom in 2011 and foreclosures crested, the national real estate market has risen by 50%.

I could almost tell you the day the market bounced. That’s when a couple of homes in my neighborhood that had been for sale for years suddenly went into escrow.

The hottest markets, like those in Seattle, San Francisco, and Reno, are up by more than 125%, and certain neighborhoods of Oakland, CA have shot up by 400%.

The concerns are confirmed by data that started to roll over in the spring and have been dismal ever since. It is not just one data series that has rolled over, they have all gone bad. One bad data point can be a blip. An onslaught is a new trend. Let me give you a dismal sampling.

*Home Affordability hit a decade low, thanks to rising prices and interest rates and trade war-induced soaring construction costs

*July Housing Starts have been in a tailspin as tariff-induced rocketing costs wipe out the profitability of new homes

*New Home Sales collapsed YOY.

*14% of all June Real Estate Listings saw price cuts, a two-year high

 *Chinese Buying of West Coast homes has vaporized over trade war fears

Fortunately, investors have a lot of options for either hedging the value of their own homes or making a bet that the market will fall.

In 2006, the Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME) started trading futures contracts for the Corelogic  S&P/Case-Schiller Home Price Index, which covered both U.S. residential and commercial properties.

The Case-Shiller index, originated in the 1980s by Karl Case and Robert Shiller, is widely considered to be the most reliable gauge to measure housing price movements. The data comes out monthly with a three-month lag.

This index is a widely-used and respected barometer of the U.S. housing market and the broader economy and is regularly covered in the Mad Hedge Fund Trader biweekly global strategy webinars.

The composite weight of the CSI index is as follows:

  • Boston 7.4%
  • Chicago 8.9%
  • Denver 3.6%
  • Las Vegas 1.5%
  • Los Angeles 21.2%
  • Miami 5%
  • New York 27.2%
  • San Diego 5.5%
  • San Francisco 11.8%
  • Washington DC 7.9%

However, these contracts suffer from the limitations suffered by all futures contracts. They can be illiquid, expensive to deal in, and you probably couldn’t get permission from your brokers to trade them anyway.

If you want to be more conservative, you could take out bearish positions on the iShares US Home Construction Index (ITB), a basket of the largest homebuilders (click here for their prospectus). Baskets usually present half the volatility and therefore half the risk of any individual stock.

If real estate is headed for the ashcan of history, there are far bigger problems for your investment portfolio than the value of your home. Real estate represents a major part of the US economy and if it is going into the toilet, you could too.

It is joined by the sickly auto industry. Thanks to the trade wars, farm incomes are now at a decade low. As we lose each major segment of the economy, the risk is looming that the whole thing could go kaput. That, ladies and gentlemen, is called a recession and a bear market.

On the other hand, you could take no action at all in protecting the value of your home.

Those who bought homes a decade ago, took a ten-year cruise and looked at the value of their residence today will wonder what all the fuss is about. By the way, I met just such a person on the Queen Mary 2 last summer. Yes, ten years at sea!

And the next recession is likely to be nowhere near as bad as the last one, which was a twice-a-century event. So it’s probably not worth selling your home and buying it back later, as I did during the Great Recession.

See you onboard!

 

 

In Your Future?

 

https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/home-sales-signboard.png 345 612 MHFTR https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png MHFTR2019-09-11 01:04:282019-10-14 09:48:32Has the Value of Your Home Just Peaked?
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

September 10, 2019 - MDT Alert (MA)

MDT Alert

While the Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader focuses on investment over a one week to the 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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Mad Hedge Fund Trader

Trade Alert - (TWLO) September 10, 2019 - SELL-TAKE PROFITS

Tech Alert

When John identifies a strategic exit point, he will send you an alert with specific trade information as to what security to sell, when to sell it, and at what price. Most often, it will be to TAKE PROFITS, but, on rare occasions, it will be to exercise a STOP LOSS at a predetermined price to adhere to strict risk management discipline. Read more

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Mad Hedge Fund Trader

September 10, 2019 - MDT Pro Tips A.M.

MDT Alert

While the Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader focuses on investment over a one week to a 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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Mad Hedge Fund Trader

September 10, 2019

Diary, Newsletter, Summary

Global Market Comments
September 10, 2019
Fiat Lux

SPECIAL ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE ISSUE

Featured Trade:
(NEW PLAYS IN ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE),
(NVDA), (AMD), (ADI), (AMAT), (AVGO), (CRUS),
 (CY), (INTC), (LRCX), (MU), (TSM)

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MHFTR

New Plays in Artificial Intelligence

Diary, Newsletter

It’s been three years since I published my first Special Report on artificial intelligence and urged readers to buy the processor maker NVIDIA (NVDA) at $68.80.

The stock quadrupled, readers are understandably asking me for my next act in the sector.

The good news is that I have one.

For a start, you could go out and buy NVIDIA again.

With an explosive 50% annual earnings growth, a near-monopoly in super fast processors, and a huge lead over the competition, I think there is another double in the shares that could take the price up to a stratospheric $300. Its newest super-fast graphics card, the Turing, promises to be a real barn burner and dominate the industry yet again.

But I can do better than that.

The good news if you are new to this sector is that the entire AI space has started to broaden out to offer a host of investment opportunities beyond the tiny handful I first mentioned in 2016.

These include legacy chipmakers, survivors of the great Dotcom bust, whose shares have barely moved in years.

Yes, there is such a thing as a cheap AI stock. To find out who they are, read on.

The reason for the expansion of the AI sector is that practically overnight these ultra-sophisticated algorithms have become essential to any company that wants to survive in online commerce or stay in business….period.

Those of us who have been in this business for more than 15 minutes have seen this pattern before, and the resulting impact on share prices: the Boeing 707, the personal computer, Windows, the Internet, and the smart cell phone.

AI is everywhere.

In the old days, visiting a website and window-shopping their products was easy. You just clicked around a few times and then moved on to the next site.

Now if you click on a product once, that site will follow you around relentlessly for months, appearing in the margins of your emails, offering you endless discounts and special deals.

I bought a Dell computer six months ago, and it is still pounding away at me with better offers. I feel like such a dummy buying a machine at the first price asked.

That is all AI.

The auto industry is now a major growth industry for AI. Even a simple garden-variety vehicle needs 100 chips just to operate.

The gull-wing doors on my new Tesla Model X each has its own learning program. They never open the same way twice.

In fact, when I first picked up the car last year, the salesman warned by saying it would be “stupid” for the first 3,000 miles.

It had to “learn” how to drive before I let it attempt any sophisticated self-driving maneuvers, like backing into a parking space on a crowded street.

I let it park itself in my garage now. I have only had a heart attack once.

With US annual auto production at 16.7 million units annualized, and global car and commercial vehicle production at a record 94.64 million, that is a lot of processors.

I have been covering Silicon Valley since it was a verdant, sun-kissed peach orchard in Northern California.

I have to say that in the half-century that I have followed the technology industry, I have never seen the principals, gurus, and visionaries so excited about a major new trend like AI.

Asking if AI is relevant now is like pondering the future of Thomas Edison’s new electricity invention in 1890.

If you think that AI still belongs in the realm of science fiction, you obviously didn’t get the memo. It is all around us all the time, 24/7. You just don’t know it yet.

And here’s the rub.

It is impossible to invest purely in AI.

All-new AI startups comprise small teams of experts from private labs and universities financed by big venture capital firms like Sequoia Capital, Kleiner Perkins, and Andreeson Horowitz.

After developing software for a year or two, they are sold on to major technology firms at huge premiums. They never see the light of day in the form of a public listing.

Alphabet (GOOGL) acquired Britain-based Deep Mind in 2014. Later that year, Google’s AlphaGo program defeated the world’s top-ranked Go player.

In 2016, Microsoft (MSFT) purchased Equivio, a small firm that applies AI to advanced document searches on the Internet.

Amazon (AMZN) recently bought out Orbeus, a startup known for machine learning tools for image recognition.

Amazon’s Jeff Bezos now says that his Amazon Fresh home food delivery service is using AI to grade strawberries.

Really!

We’re not talking small potatoes here.

The global artificial intelligence market is expected to grow at an annual rate of 44.3% a year to $23.5 billion by 2025.

Nearly half of all applications now use some form of AI that by 2020 will earn businesses an extra $60 billion a year in profits.

And from what I have learned from speaking to the major players over the last few weeks, I am convinced that these are low numbers by an order of magnitude.

I have been following developments in artificial intelligence since the 1960s.

There were those feeble computer dating attempts in the early seventies where we all had to prepare IBM punch cards.

I was matched with an annoyingly aggressive bleach blonde real estate agent. (Really?). Her only real qualification was that she was female.

It took decades and tens of thousands of programming man-hours before IBM’s Deep Blue could become a chess grandmaster in 1996, defeating Gary Kasparov.

Big Blue’s latest effort came to us with Watson in 2007, an 85,000-watt behemoth with 90 servers and 15 terabytes of data, or three quarters of the content of the entire Library of Congress.

The machine can read a staggering 1 million books a second. IBM has so far poured $15 billion into the project.

In 2011, Watson defeated the top-rated Jeopardy game show contestant by answering the question “What city’s national museum lost the “Lion of Nimrod.” The answer was “What is Baghdad” (I knew that!).

Today, Watson is on loan to the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill where it has been deployed to cure cancer.

It took scientists a week to teach Watson how to read medical literature. In the second week, it read every paper published on cancer, some 25 million.

By the third week, it was proposing customized cures for advanced cancer patients, which achieved a 33% success rate.

After all, it can read all of the 8,000 cancer papers that are published every day from around the world IN SECONDS!

Scientists say that Watson has so far reached only 1% of its true potential.

It gets better than that.

A clinic can now biopsy your tumor, sequence its DNA, design a custom protein that will target and destroy your personal tumor, mass-produce it, inject it in your tumor, and cure you of cancer in a month.

This is being done with human volunteers in clinical trials NOW.

Expect this procedure to go retail and be made available to you in about five years. And by that, I mean cheap, locally available, and covered by your health insurance policy.

I believe that Watson and its future offspring will cure the major human maladies within a decade. My generation will probably be the last to suffer serious disease.

It isn’t just Watson that will take us the great leap forward in computing. By 2020, you will be able to buy a low-end laptop for $500 that can hold ALL KNOWLEDGE ACCUMULATED IN HUMAN HISTORY!

They better hurry. That body of knowledge is doubling every 18 months!

It is a key part of my argument that the US will enjoy a Golden Age and see a return of the “Roaring Twenties” during the 2020s.

If you have in any way been involved in the stock market for the past five years, AI has invaded your life.

High frequency trading and hedge funds now account for 70% of the daily trading volume on the major stock exchanges, and almost all of this is AI-driven.

Having spent my entire life trading stocks, I can confirm that in recent years the market’s character has dramatically changed, and not for the better. Call it trading untouched by human hands.

Algorithms are trading against algorithms, and whoever wins the nuclear arms race brings home the big bucks.

You used to need degrees in Finance and Economics, or perhaps an MBA, to become a professional fund manager. Now it’s a Ph.D. in Computer Science.

Remember the May 2010 flash crash when the Dow Average plunged 1,100 points in minutes wiping out $4.1 billion in equity value? AI’s fingerprints were all over that.

In 2016, the British pound lost 6% of its value in a mere two minutes, a move unprecedented in the history of foreign exchange markets. The culprit was AI.

Don’t expect the path forward to AI to be an easy one.

Indeed, the machines already have the power of life and death over all of us.

No less figures than Nobel Prize winner Dr. Stephen Hawking and Tesla’s Elon Musk have warned that computers and the Internet may have the power to pose a threat to human existence within a decade.

They are especially concerned about the militarization of powerful robots, something I know the US Defense Department is hell-bent on developing.

As I write this, the only thing preventing a drone attacking a village in Afghanistan is an Army corporal hitting a red button on a console in Nevada.

In the future, antivirus software won’t be needed to protect your computer. It will be essential to protect you FROM your computer.

You know that massive denial of service attack that hit the United States on October 21, 2016?

I asked one of my friends at security giant Palo Alto Networks (PANW) if it was the Russians again. He replied, “You better hope it’s the Russians.”

The implication is that the Internet may have launched the attack itself.

Now, about that stock recommendation.

Since we aren’t venture capitalists, we can’t buy into pure AI firms in their early stages. And I’m too old to get a Ph.D. in computer science.

We, therefore, have to be sneaky and get in through the back door via an indirect play which still has plenty of upside leverage.

My current favorite among the AI alternative stocks is Advanced Micro Devices (AMD).

If Intel only piques your appetite for AI stocks and you feel you need another serving, I have listed below ten names that will benefit mightily from this once-a-century opportunity.

AI Stock to BUY

Advanced Micro Devices (AMD)
Analogue Devices Communication (ADI)
Applied Materials (AMAT)
Broadcom (AVGO)
Cirrus Logic (CRUS)
Cypress Semiconductor (CY)
Intel (INTC)
Lam Research (LRCX)
Micron Technology (MU)
Taiwan Semiconductor (TSM)

If you’re really lazy, you can just buy a basket of semiconductor stocks through an industry-specific ETF.

The largest is the VanEck Vectors Semiconductor ETF (SMH), with $1.3 billion in assets under management. For a prospectus on the fund, please click here.

Or you could just stick with NVIDIA.

No matter how you want to slice and dice it, AI should be a dominant factor in your IRA, 401k, or benefit plan.

And you are a trader by nature, this will be a great sector to trade around.

As for your computer, you better start leaving it unplugged at night.

You never know.

 

 

 

 

 

 

She’s Smarter Than You Think

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Mad Hedge Fund Trader

Trade Alert - (TWLO) September 9, 2019 - BUY

Tech Alert

When John identifies a strategic exit point, he will send you an alert with specific trade information as to what security to sell, when to sell it, and at what price. Most often, it will be to TAKE PROFITS, but, on rare occasions, it will be to exercise a STOP LOSS at a predetermined price to adhere to strict risk management discipline. Read more

https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/Alert-e1457452190575.jpg 135 150 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2019-09-09 10:48:012019-09-09 10:48:01Trade Alert - (TWLO) September 9, 2019 - BUY
Page 9 of 13«‹7891011›»

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