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
Global Market Comments
July 6, 2022
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(MEET THE GREEKS)
Mad Hedge Biotech and Healthcare Letter
July 5, 2022
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(AN AAA-RATED STOCK POISED TO DELIVER MARKET-BEATING RETURNS)
(JNJ), (AAPL), (GOOGL), (AMZN), (MSFT), (TSLA), (META), (BRK.A)
More than six months after what appeared to be a never-ending assault on the biotechnology and healthcare industries, the sector seems to be slowly reviving.
While it is still too early to declare the pullback over, there are a few companies that provide a ray of hope for investors.
In the US, only four stocks have recorded a market capitalization of $1 trillion or higher: Apple (APPL), Alphabet (GOOGL), Amazon (AMZN), and Microsoft (MSFT). This year's market crash saw Tesla (TSLA) and Meta Platforms (META) departure from this elite group.
The market-wide selloff also made it more difficult for stocks to reach the $1 trillion mark. However, this does not necessarily preclude them from achieving this goal in the future.
Companies are rapidly expanding and equipped with the right tools and strategies to capitalize on growth opportunities, making them prime candidates to make the $1 trillion cut in a couple of years.
One of them is Johnson & Johnson (JNJ).
Almost everyone is familiar with JNJ's century-old brands, such as Band-Aids and Listerine. What many people probably do not realize is that the company's med-tech and pharmaceutical segments account for the vast majority of its total revenue.
In 2021, its pharmaceuticals segment alone comprised 55% of JNJ sales, while its medical devices unit contributed 29% to the company’s top line.
So far, the most promising drug in JNJ’s pharmaceutical segment is Tremfya. First-quarter sales for this psoriasis treatment jumped to a whopping 41% year over year to record an annualized $2.4 billion.
Meanwhile, JNJ's med-tech segment is poised for massive growth as a result of the strong demand for its electrophysiology products. These devices, used to keep hearts beating normally, have been identified as lucrative revenue streams and growth drivers in the long run.
The company has been working on spinning off its consumer segment into a separate publicly traded entity in the following months. This means that investors with JNJ stock will eventually end up owning shares of two different companies by 2023.
The decision to spin off its consumer health segment is part of the company's effort to shed a cyclical segment and become a health pure play focused on pharmaceuticals and medical devices.
Hence, now is an excellent time to buy JNJ shares.
While JNJ isn’t known as a high-growth stock, the company’s strategies have the potential to spur exponential growth and send shares soaring.
The next decade will be crucial for the company's success as it transforms. If the company executes its plans successfully, its current market capitalization of $467 billion could slowly but steadily increase to approximately $1 trillion.
J&J will be able to invest and concentrate its resources on segments with high sales and margins, which should increase the company's income and cash flows at a faster rate than at present.
Furthermore, JNJ's plan is expected to increase shareholder returns through higher dividends and share repurchases because of its growing cash flow. With these factors combined, JNJ's stock price will undoubtedly rise, as will its market cap.
On top of these, JNJ offers a 2.6% dividend yield. Admittedly, this isn’t remarkably high. However, investors can rely on its steady rise. Moreover, JNJ is a Dividend King. In fact, it recently raised its payout for the 60th year in a row.
If these aren’t enough to cement the company’s reputation as a solid investment, consider the fact that JNJ is one of the largest holdings in Warren Buffett’s (BRK.A) portfolio.
It’s also one of the only two publicly traded companies with the coveted AAA credit rating from S&P. For context, the US government only has an AA rating. Needless to say, this makes JNJ one of the safest—if not the safest—income stock to date.
Overall, JNJ has been diligent in getting all of its ducks in a row and is poised to provide market-beating returns to patient investors.
Mad Hedge Bitcoin Letter
July 5, 2022
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(CRYPTO INFRASTRUCTURE HANGING BY A THREAD)
(COIN), (VAULD), (BTC)
Get your digital coins off Coinbase (COIN) asap. That’s the big takeaway of another crypto platform freezing.
I told you this could happen again, and it did.
This is yet more unwanted optics for the digital gold and its pitiful infrastructure whose bellwether coin crashing down to $19,500 has kicked up an avalanche of system risk.
This asset class simply will not have a future if crypto exchanges, lenders, middlemen, stablecoins, and the broad network just freezes after customers want their money back.
We need to put this under the category of not good enough.
Delivering back funds upon a requested withdrawal is the cornerstone of trust for any industry.
Crypto is failing miserably at basic safeguarding of funds and they have nobody to blame but themselves as crypto lender Vauld on Monday paused all withdrawals, trading, and deposits on its platform and is exploring potential restructuring options.
The shake-out is clearly not over and it’s really who’s guess to which crypto company is next.
Vauld CEO Darshan Bathija said on Independence Day that the company is facing “financial challenges” due to “volatile market conditions, the financial difficulties of our key business partners inevitably affecting us, and the current market climate” which has led to customers withdrawing more than $197.7 million from the platform since June 12.
Many future investors won’t invest in any crypto risk assets if the CEO says one day everything is perfect and a few days later the platform is down.
It’s flat out misleading.
This is certainly a black eye for the “decentralized” thesis that has morphed into a money confiscation operation which will damage long-term trust and accountability of the asset class.
In the next bull market, if there is another one, many investors will remember when multiple lenders and exchanges froze funds when Bitcoin went down in price.
So apparently these platforms only work for the customer if crypto is going up.
The ridiculousness then leads to investors to question at what percentage sell-off is their crypto broker going to pull the rug and screw them over.
This is why many conservative investors gravitate towards regulated market with cash flow which crypto certainly is not.
Also, insurance is another massive failure precisely because it’s unregulated.
This will ostensibly turn into a big negative feedback loop with systemic risk attracting government regulators causing Bitcoin to drop further and then inviting another wave of regulators on top of the first round of regulators.
Who wants to be a part of that circus?
Pushing the false narrative that regulation is akin to communism and that centralized money is the worst thing out there has really come back to bite the crypto community.
The industry was clearly overhyped when it didn’t need to be.
Crypto clearly needs a reset after many of the companies that surround the ecosystem are in panic mode because of insolvency issues.
It’s almost as if the only thing working is Bitcoin itself and nothing else.
Just like the health and military crises which really exposed the thoughts and values of individual people, the rise in interest rates has exposed crypto as not as good as first advertised.
“The best way to predict the future is to create it.” – Said Austrian Management Consultant Peter Drucker
Global Market Comments
July 5, 2022
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(LEARNING THE ART OF RISK CONTROL)
Now that you know how to make money in the options market, I’m going to teach you how to hang on to it. There is no point in booking winning trades only to lose the money by making careless mistakes. So today, I am going to talk about risk control.
The first goal of risk control is to conserve whatever capital you have. I tell people that I am too old to start over again as a junior trader if I lose all my money. So, I’m pretty careful when it comes to risk control.
The art of risk control is to make sure your portfolio is profitable, no matter what happens to the market. You want to be a winner, whether the market goes up, down, or sideways.
Remember, we are not trying to beat an index here. Our goal is the make actual dollars at all times, and to keep the P&L chart always moving from the lower left to the upper right. You can’t eat relative performance, nor can you use it to pay your bills.
The second goal of a portfolio manager is to make your portfolio bombproof. You never know when a flock of black swans is about to alight on the market, or a geopolitical shock comes out of the blue causing markets to crash.
The biggest mistake I see beginning traders make is that they are in too much of a hurry to get rich. As a result, they lose too much money too soon. I can’t tell you how many times I have heard of first-time traders losing all their money on their first trade, well before they got a handle on the basics.
I’m usually right 80% to 90% of the time. That means I’m wrong 10% to 20% of the time. If you bet the ranch on one of my losing trades, you’ll get taken to the cleaners. Never bet the ranch.
If you do, you are turning calculated risk into random risk. It is akin to buying a lottery ticket. I often tell clients they have gambling addictions. Make sure you’re not one of them. You can’ trade yourself back from zero with no money.
If you can master the skills which I am teaching you, you can make a living at this FOREVER! So, what’s the hurry? As my old trading mentor used to tell me, the Late Barton Biggs of Morgan Stanley, “invest in haste, repent in leisure,” a time-tested nostrum in this business.
I recommend that you use NO real money on your first few trades. Start with paper trading only. All of the online trading platforms offer wonderful tools that allow you to practice trading before you try the real thing. If you lose your “pretend money”, no harm, no foul. They don’t want you to go broke either. Broke customers don’t pay commissions.
The more time you spend learning trading, the more money you will get out of it. Remember, work in, money out. Spend at least an hour or two getting to know your own trading platform well.
Once you start trading with real money, it will become a totally different experience. Your heart rate steps up. Your hands get sweaty. You start checking your watch. It’s a lot like going into combat. In fact, combat veterans make great traders, which is why the military recruits so actively from the military. I think all these instincts trace back to our Neanderthal days when our main concern was being chased by a saber-tooth tiger.
The time to learn a trading discipline is NOW. All of a sudden, your opinions, your ego, and your savings are on the line. It’s crucial for you to always start small when using real money.
That way, making a beginner’s mistake, like confusing “BUY” and “SELL” (I see it every day) will only cost you a cup of coffee at Starbucks, and bet your kids' college education, your house, or your retirement. It won’t take long for you to grow from one contract to thousands, as I have done myself for many years.
It’s all about finding your comfort level and risk tolerance. You never want to have a position that is so large that you can’t sleep at night, or worse, call me in the middle of the night. My answer is always the same. Cut your position in half. If you still can’t sleep, cut it in half again.
I make a bold prediction here. The more experience you gain, the faster your risk tolerance goes up.
I’ll give you one more piece of advice. Take your broker's technical support phone number and paste it to the top of your computer monitor. You don’t want to go looking for it when you can’t figure out how to get out of a position, or your platform breaks. These are machines. It happens. As they teach in flight school, it’s not a matter of if, but when, a machine breaks.
There’s one more thing. When you’re ready to commit real money, don’t forget to take your account off of paper trading. The profits you make can’t be spent.
Risk management is an important part of the position sheet I will be sending you every day.
Take a look below at a position sheet I sent out during sharply rising markets, which I update every day.
The important thing to look at here is my long/short balance. On the left is the position name and on the right is the position weighting. I usually run 10% positions so I don’t have all my eggs in one basket. Maybe twice a year, I’ll run a 20% position in a single stock, and once a year I’ll have a 30% weighting. Above that, I start to lose sleep.
I have further subdivided the portfolio into “RISK ON” and “RISK OFF.” “RISK ON” means the world is getting better, while “RISK OFF” means the world is getting worse. The long positions have positive numbers, while the short positions have negative ones.
I like to balance “RISK ON” and “RISK OFF” to remove overall market risk from the portfolio. When markets are rising, I tilt positive. When markets are falling, I tilt negative. At the bottom, I have my total net exposure. On this particular day, I was running 60% in longs and 20% in shorts, for a total net position of 40% long. This is an aggressively bullish portfolio.
When I’m bullish, the net position is positive. When I’m bearish the net position is negative. When I have no strong views, the net position is zero. That way, if nothing happens you still get to rake the money in.
I have no positions at all only a few days a year. I only play when the risk/reward is overwhelmingly in my favor, and sometimes that is just not possible.
One more warning to the wise. There are literally hundreds of gurus out there, marketing services promising 100% a year, if not a 100% a month, or even 100% a day. They are all fake, created by 20-year-old marketing types who have never worked in the stock market, or even traded. Unfortunately, I work in an industry where almost everyone else is a crook.
I have worked in the markets for more than 50 years and have seen everything. Ray Dalio is the top-performing hedge fund manager in history and he only averages 35% a year. The number of real traders who are right more than 80% of the time you can almost count on one hand. If returns sound too good to be true, they never are.
I want to offer special caution about naked put-shorting strategies which are promoted by 90% of these letters. This is where a trader sells short a put position without any accompanying hedge, hence the word “naked.” This is an unlimited risk position.
You might take in a $1 of premium with this approach, but if the market turns against you, and implied volatilities go through the roof, your losses could balloon exponentially to $100 or more, wiping you out. The newsletters recommending these have absolutely no idea when or if this is going to happen.
I call this the “picking up the pennies in front of the steamroller strategy.” No professional trader worth his salt will put money into it. It is banned by most investing institutions. And only a few brokers will still let you do this, and then only with 100% margin requirements because when losses exceed 100% of capital, they’re left carrying the bag.
Many of those strategies you see being hawked online look great on paper but can’t actually be executed. In other words, you just paid thousands of dollars for a service that is utterly useless. Sounds like a “No Go” to me.
Stop losses are an important part of any trading strategy. No one is right 100% of the time. If they claim so, they are lying. The best way to avoid a big loss is to take a small one.
There are many possible places to use stop losses. I use 2% of my total capital. If I start to lose more than that, I am out of there. It’s easy for me to do this because 90% of the time, the next trade will be a winner and I’ll make back all the money I just lost.
Others use a 10% decline in the underlying stock as a good arbitrary point to limit losses. Others rely on Fibonacci levels (I’ll get to him later). Many traders rely on key moving averages, like the 50-Day or the 200-day.
The problem with this is that high-frequency traders have access to the same charting data as you do. They’ll program their algorithms to quickly take a stock through your stop loss level, buy your stock for cheap, and then take it right back up again to book a quick profit. You are left with a “SELL” confirmation in your inbox and no position in a rising market. No wonder people think Wall Street is rigged.
Another concept is the “trailing stop”. That’s when after an initial rise, you place a stop-loss order at your cost. That way you CAN’T lose money. This is known as “playing with the house's money.” This approach has one shortfall. You can’t place stop losses in the options market that are executed automatically. The same is true for options spreads.
In this case, you use what is known as a “pocket stop-loss” where you set your own mental level on when to get out. Also, these are not automatic, they do establish a trading discipline. Caution: You can’t execute a pocket stop loss when you’re playing golf or on a one-week cruise in the Caribbean.
So, there you have it. By managing your risk prudently, you can tip the risk/reward balance in your favor.
I hope this helps.
Mad Hedge Technology Letter
July 1, 2022
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(WHO’S BEING HONEST?)
(META), ($COMPQ)
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