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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A better headline for this piece might have been “Ten stocks to Buy at the Bottom”.
At long last, we have a once-a-decade entry point for the ten best stock in America at bargain basement prices.
Coming in here and betting the ranch is now a no-lose trade. If I’m right, the pandemic ends in three months, stocks will soar. If I’m wrong and the global epidemic explodes from here, you’ll be dead anyway and won’t care that the stock market crashed further.
Needless to say, I have a heavy tech orientation with this list, far and away the source of the bulk of earnings growth for the US economy for the foreseeable future. If anything, the coronavirus will accelerate the move away from shopping malls and towards online commerce as consumers seek to avoid direct contact with the virus.
What would I be avoiding here? Directly corona-related stocks like those in airlines, hotels, casinos, and cruise lines. Avoid human contact at all cost!
Microsoft (MSFT) – still has a near-monopoly on operating systems for personal computers and a huge cash balance. Their inroads with the Azure cloud services have been impressive. (MSFT) just reported an impressive $8.9 billion in Q4 earnings. It’s now yielding a respectable 1.26%.
Apple (AAPL) – Even with the Coronavirus, Apple still has a cash balance of $225 billion. Its 5G iPhone launches in the fall, unleashing enormous pent-up demand. Apple’s rapid move away from a dependence on hardware to services continues. It’s now yielding a respectable 1.13%.
Alphabet (GOOGL) – Has a massive 92% market share in search and remains the dominant advertising company on the planet. (GOOGL) just announced an incredible $8.9 billion in Q4 earnings.
QUALCOMM (QCOM) – Has a near-monopoly in chips needed for 5G phones. It also recently won a lawsuit against Apple over proprietary chip design.
Amazon (AMZN) – The world’s preeminent retailer is growing by leaps and bounds. Dragged down by its association with the world’s worst industry, (AMZN) is a bargain relative to other FANGs.
Visa (V) – The world’s largest credit company is a free call on the growth of the internet. We still need credit cards to buy things. And guess what? Coronavirus will accelerate the move of commerce out of malls, where you can get sick, to online.
American Express (AXP) – Ditto above, except it charges high fees, its stock has lagged Visa and Master Card in recent years and pays a 1.58% dividend.
NVIDIA (NVDA) – The leading graphics card maker that is essential for artificial intelligence, gaming, and bitcoin mining.
Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) – Stands to benefit enormously from the coming chip shortage created by the coming 5G.
Target (TGT) – The one retailer that has figured it out, both in their stores and online. It can’t be ALL tech.
Good Luck and Good Trading
John Thomas
Looks Like a “BUY” signal to Me
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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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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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Mass layoffs are on the horizon, thanks to the tech market slowdown sapping vitality for risk in the IPO market, and the widening contagion stemming from the coronavirus.
At a moment in Silicon Valley’s history where the market is rethinking its appetite for risk, it is customary for the loftiest and hottest growth names to drop the most in times like this.
For instance, Tesla (TSLA) was rocked by 32% and ride-hailing app Uber (UBER) gave up 25% in an epic downturn.
In general, tech that isn’t integral to the intricate global supply chain will also be penalized because of cratering overall business demand.
The vacuum of demand isn’t applied to only digital products but most others, as the world literally becomes a walled garden of self-quarantine areas.
The odds are still high that this global phenomenon squeaks by, but the far reach of the virus worries even experts and making crucial decisions on how to cut losses is becoming a pressing and imminent issue.
Airlines have been first to announce a potential readjustment to staff numbers such as Finland’s flagship airline Finn Air, but mass layoffs will start to trickle in from Silicon Valley.
Front-running the layoff parade was online travel tech company Expedia (EXPE) who expects to say adiós to 3,000 employees and network infrastructure company Cisco (CSCO) who announced restructuring plans because they expect revenue to fall between 1.5%-3.5% in Fiscal 2020.
I have been unwavering in my core thesis that tech procuring revenue from Mainland China is nothing more than a short-term Faustian bargain, and now the downsides of that bargain are finally appearing and frankly uncontainable.
The viral coronavirus is escalating on the heels of a new round of layoffs from Silicon Valley’s startups who just don’t know how to make money such as robot pizza startup Zume and car-sharing company Getaround who slashed more than 500 jobs.
Online DNA testing company 23andMe, logistics startup Flexport, Firefox internet browser Mozilla and social platform Quora restructured staff as well.
The “disruptors” are finally getting disrupted out of existence because of a sudden referendum on the health of balance sheets.
The situation turned ugly just before the coronavirus and this health crisis just adds fuel on the fire.
In total, more than 30 startups have cut over 8,000 jobs over the past four months with aggressive venture capital investments pulling back significantly.
The latest to flop at the starting line was Casper Sleep (CSPR) who marketed themselves as the “Nike of sleep” only because they sell online mattresses.
Mr. Market is purging these marginal businesses that over-promise, over-hype, and under-deliver.
The IPO pricing was underwhelming with Casper taking down the price range to the point where it went public at over $13.
The stock is now at $8.
No doubt that some of this negative sentiment was stoked by office-sharing company WeWork, who had an epic fall from grace and cut its valuation by 80% late last year while permanently shelving an IPO.
Now the coronavirus is on the verge of scoring the empty net goal as companies go into full-blown crisis mode.
SoftBank bet two ranches on Uber and WeWork, then poured money into Colombian delivery startup Rappi and Indian hotel startup Oyo.
All have sputtered with mass firings recently.
Poor investment decisions led SoftBank to report a $2 billion operating loss in the last quarter of 2019 from their venture capitalist arm named the Vision Fund.
After Nasdaq flourished in a memorable 10-year run post the financial crisis, flip the parabola upside down and markets are tanking with many experts already contrasting the coronavirus sell-off to the dot-com bust of 2001.
Irrational optimism is part of the DNA of San Francisco.
Entrepreneurs are quietly preparing to change the world, but the climate has soured so quickly that many investors believe many of these current entrepreneurs are unlucky.
The rules of the game deem unprofitable models temporarily obsolete in the current market environment.
In the land where spending money in uneconomic ways is a time-honored tradition, turning to more “responsible” models is gut-check time.
Talent is forgoing chances to enter the start-up world too, instead opting for big box corporates who provide a lower ceiling but higher salary and benefits.
Café X, which operated robot coffee shops and raised $14.5 million in venture funding, fired its own robots and closed three stores in San Francisco recently.
The brightest stars of the IPO pipelines might be able to go public this year, but at a cut-rate price which is a tough pill to swallow for Airbnb and online delivery platform DoorDash.
With no new blood going live on the public tech markets, we focus on the ones already there and recent news is alarming.
Apple whose 42 stores in China have been closed since January and Foxconn, which produces Apple products, are running at around 30%-40% capacity, then it’s ring-the-alarm time.
The most likely scenario is that big tech will need to write off this quarter until the public health crisis improves setting up a bullish second half of 2020.
Even that could get stopped in its tracks.
The only silver lining is that the run-up in shares in January means that the best of tech has only returned one month of share appreciation, but for the weaker companies, they aren’t afforded those types of luxuries in malicious trading conditions and have returned 4-6 months of share appreciation already.
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“Your margin is my opportunity.” – Said Founder and CEO of Amazon Jeff Bezos
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