Global Market Comments
June 15, 2022
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(HOW THE MAD HEDGE MARKET TIMING ALGORITHM WORKS)
Global Market Comments
June 15, 2022
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(HOW THE MAD HEDGE MARKET TIMING ALGORITHM WORKS)
Mad Hedge Bitcoin Letter
June 14, 2022
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(FROM BAD TO WORSE)
(BTC), (CELSIUS)
Crypto winter is here.
My short-term forecast of one Bitcoin (BTC) priced at $20,000 is coming to fruition as BTC undergoes a nasty selloff that was triggered by panic liquidating.
The price was around $28,000 per BTC this weekend, only for the digital gold to sink to around $23,000 on Monday morning.
The dip that was around 17% won’t attract any dip buyers right now because as a whole, the entire industry is a no-fly zone.
A store of value during high inflation?
It’s playing out unfavorably for BTC as consumers and investors trade with their feet by preferring a can of tuna over an unregulated controversy.
What really heaved fuel on the fire?
Another systemic risk flaming out of control.
Celsius, said Monday it was pausing all withdrawals, causing more pain in the fragile crypto market.
This could be crypto’s “Lehman moment.”
Freezing payment flows is the antithesis of a store of value which BTC and crypto experts claimed it was.
These events will stain the infrastructure of cryptocurrencies for quite a while until they can prove they aren’t such a half-baked operation.
Celsius mainly delt in lending crypto funds and just imagine the trajectory of the stock market if all banks froze withdrawals.
The stock market would open down 25% the next day.
We are having one of those moments in the crypto industry with no sight of help to save us.
Celsius is one of the largest participants in the burgeoning crypto lending space, with more than $8 billion lent out to clients and almost $12 billion in assets under management as of May.
Celsius, which offers users higher-than-average interest rates on their deposits, is essentially the crypto equivalent of a bank — but without the strict insurance requirements faced by traditional lenders.
It was just a few weeks ago when Celsius CEO Alex Mashinsky downplayed the company was having any trouble meeting withdrawal requests.
Either he was lying or the situation went from great to abysmal quickly.
I believe it was a combination of the two.
No later after Celsius froze funds, pandemonium came to the biggest crypto exchange Binance.
Binance said Monday that it is temporarily pausing bitcoin withdrawals “due to a stuck transaction causing a backlog.”
Crypto exchanges are brokers precisely, so trades don’t get “stuck.”
At first, Binance founder and CEO Changpeng Zhao said in a tweet that the issue would be fixed within 30 minutes. But he later amended that to say, “Likely this is going to take a bit longer to fix than my initial estimate.”
Crypto is going haywire and investors are pulling funds in droves, but the inferior infrastructure is overloaded by the withdrawal transaction volume.
Investors should stay away from crypto right now unless they desire to sell a rally through a Bitcoin proxy on the public markets.
Illiquid markets mean that slippage costs are high and trades might not get filled at all.
If an investor can’t pocket the proceeds, then all bets are off.
Investors might be waiting days if not weeks to receive their order.
The market mayhem has shown crypto to be an absolute inferior asset to that of any alternative.
Investors just assume tomorrow will be worse than today.
A massive loss of confidence is the last thing investors want to see happen to an unproven industry.
Lastly, this guarantees the pulling forward of heavy regulation from the Feds that will absolutely result in higher costs for not only the trader but every part of the crypto ecosystem.
Crypto has shown it isn’t able to self-govern and with that, a third-party organization will need to come in and determine the law of the land.
The price of Bitcoin will sink through $20,000 and I believe the next stop is $10,000.
Tighten your seat belts folks.
“I think the iPhone is the best consumer product ever. That's what I feel about it. And it's become so integrated and integral to our lives, you wouldn't think about leaving home without it.” – CEO of Apple Tim Cook
Mad Hedge Biotech and Healthcare Letter
June 14, 2022
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(MULTI-PRONGED STOCKS POSITIONED FOR LONG-TERM SUCCESS)
(LLY), (NVO)
The majority of the global population lives in nations where obesity and being overweight kill more individuals than being underweight.
Over 40% of the US population is categorized as obese, with drugs barely scratching the surface, as only about 3% of the obese patients take them.
More alarmingly, 39 million children under 5 years old were obese or overweight in 2020.
This is why it is no surprise that more and more companies in the biotechnology and healthcare sector are working on obesity treatments. After all, obesity is the starting point of a lot of serious diseases.
Obesity is a primary risk issue for diabetes, heart disease, stroke, some types of cancer, and several severe conditions—most of which are among the leading reasons behind premature deaths.
However, a key factor to consider here is that obesity is preventable. Hence, dealing with this condition could help patients manage better potential severe conditions.
Needless to say, the market for this condition can also be lucrative. In the US alone, the annual expense for obesity medication reached approximately $173 billion in 2019.
This is because the medical bills of an adult with obesity are at least $1,861 higher than someone with a healthy weight.
So far, two names have emerged as major players in the obesity market: Eli Lilly (LLY) and Novo Nordisk (NVO).
Noticeable weight loss was observed in clinical trials of treatments that Novo Nordisk and Eli Lilly initially developed for diabetes.
Consequently, these announcements pushed the stocks higher despite the backdrop of a relatively flat Nasdaq Composite recently.
For Eli Lilly, the company disclosed that results of its Phase 3 trials for its diabetes drug Tirazeptide showed that the highest dose would lead to a 21% to 25% weight loss or an average of 52 pounds within 18 months.
The possibility that Tirzepatide, which is already sold under Mounjaro as a Type 2 diabetes treatment, can also be marketed as a weight-loss drug has been prodding Eli Lilly stock.
At the moment, Eli Lilly was only able to test Tirzepatide against Novo Nordisk's Wegovi. The former notably outperformed the Danish candidate on most factors.
If Tirzepatide gains FDA approval as an obesity drug, then Eli Lilly can launch it commercially by mid-2023.
Given the size of the market and the drug’s promising results, Tirzepatide is estimated to reach over $10 billion in obesity sales alone, in addition to the more than $12 billion projected in diabetes sales.
Aside from obesity, Eli Lilly is also looking into testing Tirzepatide for other linked conditions like heart failure, stroke, and other cardiovascular diseases.
If these work out, then the additional markets would contribute over $14 billion in sales by 2030.
Meanwhile, Novo Nordisk also released promising results for its investigational treatment named Kagrisema.
While Eli Lilly is considered a dominant force in the diabetes market, Novo Nordisk is a strong challenger. Some would say that this Danish company is the global leader in the segment.
That could very well be the case because a company can be considered a global controller if it holds around 30% of the market.
While the diabetes sector tends to be complex since it’s segmented, Novo Nordisk indisputably holds 30% of the primary market. Moreover, it holds 40% to 50% of a diabetes sub-market focused on insulin products.
With that said, it was hardly unexpected that Novo Nordisk was the first to market an FDA-approved drug for obesity: Wegovi.
Wegovi, the same drug tested by Eli Lilly against Tirzepatide, was launched in June 2021. This treatment enabled obese patients to lose roughly 15% of their body weight.
Since Eli Lilly has been working on a more effective drug, Wegovi sales are expected to reach approximately $5.5 billion by 2025 and eventually lose stake to competitors and Novo Nordisk’s own next-generation treatment Kagrisema.
The diabetes and obesity markets present substantial growth opportunities in the years to come.
It is projected that roughly 415 million people are suffering from diabetes globally, and the number is anticipated to increase to 642 million by 2040, representing a 3% annual rise.
In the US alone, it is expected that the prevalence of diabetes will rise by 54% to over 54.9 million people between 2015 and 2030.
This means the anti-obesity treatments market is estimated to expand more aggressively at a CAGR of roughly 15% in the next 5 years.
Both Eli Lilly and Novo Nordisk are well-established biopharma businesses that offer high-quality products across various areas.
They are both leaders in diabetes and obesity markets with impeccable growth opportunities. Their pipelines are well diversified, and neither relies solely on one product, making their businesses attractive and less risky.
I suggest that those looking for long-term investments put these stocks under their radar and start building up positions on pullbacks, as these are excellent companies to own in a well-balanced portfolio.
Global Market Comments
June 14, 2022
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(THE MAD HEDGE TRADERS & INVESTORS SUMMIT IS ON FOR JUNE 14-16)
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD,
or WHAT HAPPENS WHEN YOUR BEST FRIEND BECOMES YOUR WORST ENEMY?)
(SPY), (TLT), (TSLA), (CCJ), (TGT), NVDA), (JPM), (BAC), (C)
The Mad Hedge Traders & Investors Summit is on for June 14-16. A collection of the 27 best traders and managers in the world, or eight a day, each giving an educational webinar. Back-to-back one-hour presentations are followed by an interactive Q&A. It’s a smorgasbord of trading strategies, so pick the one that is right for you. Covering all stocks, bonds, commodities, foreign exchange, precious metals, energy, bitcoin, and real estate. It’s the best look at the rest of 2022’s money-making opportunities you will get anywhere. Oh, and you will have a chance to win $100,000 in prizes. To view the schedule and speakers and to register NOW, click here.
Of course, I am talking about the Federal Reserve.
The Fed was the best friend of share owners, pressing interest rates lower from March 2009. That remained the case for 12 years until November 2021 when its notorious pivot took place, flipping overnight from an easing to a tightening posture.
It's actually worst than that. In fact, our nation’s central bank morphed overnight from the easiest monetary policy in history to the most aggressive tightening.
Stock markets have noticed, the Dow average giving up 20% in six months, and the final lows are probably not in yet.
I would bet money that you are expecting the worst-case scenario to happen. After all, the last serious selloff in 2008-2009 took the index down a heart-palpitating 52%.
What’s more, every oil shock of the last 50 years was followed by a recession, and we are clearly in one now. So, you are right to fear for your net worth and retirement security.
However, my work suggests that the best-case scenario will happen. Who is right, you or me?
You already know the answer.
Let me tell you what is already priced in the stock market: a Russian invasion of Ukraine, inflation at a 40-year high and climbing, a doubling of mortgage interest rates in a half year, peaking of the housing bubble, popping of technology and Bitcoin bubbles, and 200 basis points of Fed interest rate hikes.
With all this negativity already in the market, I would say that it is impossible for stocks NOT to go up. All that is left is to suck in one last round of non-believers on the short side before the indexes start a move to new all-time highs. That could take months at the most.
The only question now is whether a further 5% decline to an S&P 500 of 3,600, or a final puke out low of 3,500, down 7.5%. That means you should start scaling into your favorite longs now, the Cadillacs at Volkswagen prices.
So, let’s do some thinking outside the box here.
Tech stocks are cheaper now than after the low point of the Great 2000 Dotcom Bust. But they are still expensive compared to the main market. The S&P without technology stocks is now valued at earnings multiple of 13X versus 17x main market.
That is well into decade-low territory. That’s why I have included financials like (JPM), (BAC), and (C) in my list of “must own sectors'.
It's clear that inflation will bedevil the market for months to come given the dramatic acceleration we saw in May, from 0.3% to 1%. Let me tell you that there are only two ways to end inflation, and they could be done overnight.
*End all US support for Ukraine and throw in with Vladimir Putin. That would shave $50 off the price of oil immediately and get gas prices below $3.00 a gallon. You might have a hard time selling this to the thousands of Americans going over to Ukraine to volunteer.
*Cause a sharp recession immediately. The Fed is already well on their way to doing this with three guaranteed 50 basis point rate hikes by September. The first thing to collapse in a recession is oil demand. In the last recession, it went to negative $37 in the futures market (I got stopped out at -$5). This is why the oil industry isn’t interested in investing a dime at these oil prices. They are responsible to their shareholders, not Biden’s reelection prospects.
If there is a recession, it’s an invisible one. It’s a recession where you can’t hire anyone, can’t buy anything, subcontractors give you a six-month timeline with a straight face, and it takes a year to get delivery of a damn sofa. This recession miserably fails my “look out the window test.”
But at my advanced age, I don’t get surprised anymore.
Boba tea anyone? Who knew?
Consumer Price Index slaughters stocks, taking the Dow Average down 1,600 points, or 5% in two days, the worst move in two years. It’s typical bear market action. May inflation hit 8.6%, a new 40-year high. But you have to more than double to hit the old 1980s peak. New stock lows are in easy reach.
Lumber crashes, down 50% from the highs in months, with the near-complete cessation of new orders from builders. They see a recession just around the corner with higher interest rates and no new home buyers. It’s proof that the current inflation is spiking and setting up for a big fall.
Luxury Home Sales are plunging in New York, in numbers, but not in prices. Anyone who needed debt to trade up is out of the picture.
US drop Covid Testing Requirement for international travelers. Too many Americans trying to get home were getting stranded overseas for weeks because they failed a Covid test. Wheww!! That was a close call!
Americans will spend an extra $730 Billion on energy this year. That’s a heck of a lot to take out of consumer spending. So far, there has been no decline in demand. Much of this money ended up in Russian coffers.
Amazon (AMZN) splits 20:1, triggering an avalanche of new retail buyers. The company is also at the low end of its valuation range anger a gut-punching 41% decline in the share price this year. It may be early, but (AMZN) is definitely a BUY.
Target (TGT) warns of more margin squeeze, with too much inventory and flagging demand. (TGT) has become a bellwether for all of retail, which points to inflation, labor, and supply chain problems.
Uranium Stocks soar on Biden’s plan to buy $4.3 billion worth of enriched uranium, or yellow cake. The move is aimed to replace Russian imports where Russia is one of the world’s largest suppliers. It is the most unexploited form of non-carbon energy out there. Mad Hedge recommended Cameco (CCJ), the world’s second-largest supplier, a month ago. It was up 15% yesterday at the high.
New Home Mortgages hit a 22-year low. With 30-year fixed-rate loans soaring from 2.8% to 5.58% in six months, how can they not? Refis have crashed 75% YOY. Now that the Fed has quit buying, investors won’t touch mortgage-backed securities with a ten-foot pole.
Weekly Jobless Claims pop 29,000 to a five-month high in another hint toward a recession. Continuing Claims are at 1.306 million. The preemptive layoffs by ultra-cautious companies have begun, especially in technology.
Tesla (TSLA) gets an upgrade by UBS, which sees 51% of upside from here to $1,200. Total sales should top 1.4 million vehicles in 2022, up 40% YOY, and that includes lost production of 60,000 in Shanghai. A new Gigafactory in Indonesia is planned with a locked-up supply of Nickel, where the world’s largest supply of the metal resides. Cheap labor helps a lot where 5,000 need to be hired. The company will need six gigafactories to reach 20 million annual production.
My Ten-Year View
When we come out the other side of pandemic, we will be perfectly poised to launch into my new American Golden Age, or the next Roaring Twenties. With interest rates still historically cheap, oil peaking out soon, and technology hyper-accelerating, there will be no reason not to. The Dow Average will rise by 800% to 240,000 or more in the coming decade. The America coming out the other side of the pandemic will be far more efficient and profitable than the old. Dow 240,000 here we come!
With some of the greatest market volatility seen since 1987, my June month-to-date performance recovered to +2.57%.
My 2022 year-to-date performance ratcheted up to 44.44%, a new all-time high. The Dow Average is down -13.52% so far in 2022. It is the greatest outperformance on an index since Mad Hedge Fund Trader started 14 years ago. My trailing one-year return maintains a sky-high 66.63%.
That brings my 14-year total return to 557%, some 2.56 times the S&P 500 (SPX) over the same period and a new all-time high. My average annualized return has ratcheted up to 44.56%, easily the highest in the industry.
We need to keep an eye on the number of US Coronavirus cases at 85.6 million, up 200,000 in a week, and deaths topping 1,011,200 and have only increased by 2,000 in the past week. You can find the data here.
On Monday, June 13 at 8:00 AM EDT, US Consumer Inflation Expectations are out.
On Tuesday, June 14 at 8:30 AM, the Producer Price Index for May is published.
On Wednesday, June 15 at 10:30 AM, Retails Sales for May are announced. The Fed interest rates decision is out at 11:00 AM. The press conference follows at 11:30.
On Thursday, June 16 at 8:30 AM, Weekly Jobless Claims are out. We also get Housing Starts and Building Permits for May.
On Friday, June 10 at 8:15 AM, Industrial Production for May is published. At 2:00, the Baker Hughes Oil Rig Count is out.
As for me, I have benefited from many mentors and role models over the years, but Al Pinder, last of the New York-based Shipping and Trade News, is one of my favorites. Short with blown hair, glasses, and an always impish smile, he was a regular at lunch where we always played an old dice game called “ballout.”
I sat next to Al for ten years at the Foreign Correspondents Club of Japan high up in Tokyo’s Yukakucho Denki Building, we were pounding away on our antiquated Royal typewriters. At the end of the day, our necks would be stiff as boards. Al’s idea of work was to type for five minutes, then tell me stories for ten.
Saying that Al lived a colorful life would be the understatement of the century.
Al covered the Japanese invasion of China during the 1930s, interviewing several key generals like Hideki Tojo and Masaharu Homma, later executed for war crimes. He told me of child laborers in Shanghai silk processors who picked cocoons out of boiling water with their bare hands.
Al could see war with Japan on the horizon, so he took an extended tour of every west-facing beach in Japan during the summer of 1941, taking thousands of black and white pictures. The trick was how to get them out of the country without being arrested as a spy.
So he bought an immense steamer trunk and visited a sex shop in Tokyo’s red-light district where he bought a life-sized, blow-up doll of a Japanese female. His immensely valuable photos were hidden below a false bottom in the trunk and the blow-up doll placed on top.
When he passed through Japanese customs on the ship home from Yokohama, the inspectors opened the trunk, had a good laugh, and then closed it. These photos later became the basis of Operation Coronet, the American invasion of Japan in 1945.
Al was working for the Honolulu Star Bulletin when the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941. Many antiaircraft shells fired at the attacking zeros landed in Honolulu causing dozens of casualties. Al told me every woman on the island wanted to get laid that night because they feared getting raped by the Japanese Army the next day.
Since Al knew China well, he was parachuted into western Yunan province to act as a liaison with Mao Zedong, then fighting a guerrilla war against the Japanese with his Eighth Route Army. Capture by the Japanese then meant certain torture and certain death.
In 1944, Al received a coded message in Morse code to pick up an urgent communication from Washington. So, he hiked a day to the drop zone and when the Army Air Corps DC-3 approached, he lit three signal fires.
A package parachuted to the ground, which he grabbed and then he fled for the mountains. Dodging enemy patrols all the way, he returned to his hideout in a mountain cave and opened the package. It was a letter from the Internal Revenue Service asking why he had not filed a tax return in three years.
When the second atomic bomb fell on Nagasaki, the war ended on August 15. Since Al was the closest man on the spot, he flew to Korea where he accepted the Japanese surrender there.
Al was one of the first to move into the Press Club, which housed war correspondents in one of the only buildings still standing in a city that had been bombed flat.
Al never left Japan because, as with many other war correspondents who arrived with the US military, it was the best thing that ever happened to him. After some initial hesitation, they were treated like conquering heroes, it was incredibly cheap at 800 yen to the dollar, and the women were beautiful.
During the Japanese occupation when the people were starving, Al bought an acre of land in Tokyo’s burned-out prime Akasaka district for a ten-pound can of ham. He spent the rest of his life living off this investment, selling one piece at a time, until it eventually became worth $10 million.
Al went to work for the Shipping and Trade News, an obscure industry trade publication which no one had ever heard of. I sat next to him when he artfully lifted every story out of an ancient book, Ships of the World. But Al always had plenty of money to spend.
When Al passed away in the early 2000s, an official from the American embassy in Tokyo showed up at the Press Club asking if anyone knew all Pinder. We eventually traced a bank branch which held a safe deposit box in his name. In it was proof that the CIA had been bribing every Japanese prime minister of the 1950s. He kept the evidence as an insurance policy against the day when his lucrative deal with the Shipping and Trade News was ever put at risk.
I flew in for Al’s wake and his Japanese wife was there along with most of the foreign press. Everyone was crying until I told the IRS story, then they had a good laugh.
A few years ago, I was invited to give the graduation speech at Defense Language Institute in Monterey, California. The latest bunch of graduates, including my nephew, were freshly versed in Arabic and headed for the Middle East.
The school was founded in 1941 to train Americans in Japanese to gain an intelligence advantage in the Pacific war.
General 'Vinegar Joe' Stillwell said their contribution shortened the war by two years. General Douglas MacArthur believed that an army had never before gone to war with so much advance knowledge about its enemy.
To this day, the school's motto is 'Yankee Samurai'. There on the wall with the school’s first graduates was a very young Al Pinder, still with that impish grin.
Al lived a full life and I still miss him to this day. I hope I can do as well.
Stay Healthy,
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
Al Pinder
Press Club 1976
“I have not failed, I have just found 10,000 ways that do not work,” said the inventor, Thomas Edison.
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