Keeping up with the Joneses – that’s what Amazon is doing with its foray into generative artificial intelligence.
Its cloud division AWS is building a $100 million AI center to go toe to toe with increasing competition in cloud infrastructure services
The upcoming AWS Generative AI Innovation Center will become the heart and soul of Amazon experts in AI and machine learning.
This is a seismic strategic move for Amazon whom we have heard very little about in the generative AI sphere so far.
However, most people in the know understand that Amazon wouldn’t let this get away from them and use time wisely to concoct something worthy enough to show they have some skin in the game.
Unsurprisingly, AMZN shares were up relative to other big tech companies in a down week last week on the Nasdaq.
AMZN shares haven’t had quite the mojo that stocks like Tesla or Microsoft have had this year and this call to action is an aggressive step towards the vanguard of technological development.
I highly applaud the management at AMZN for this chess move.
In generative AI, algorithms are used to create new content, such as audio, code, images, texts, simulations, and videos.
Amazon said Highspot, Twilio, Ryanair, and Lonely Planet will be among the first users of the innovation center. With the new center, the company expects to hijack additional cloud services amidst increasing competition in the cloud infrastructure market.
Enterprise spending on cloud solutions reached $63 billion worldwide in the first quarter of 2023, up 20% from the same quarter last year.
Microsoft and Google had the strongest year-over-year growth rates, gaining 23% and 10% in worldwide market share, respectively. Amazon, the leader in cloud infrastructure, kept its 32% market share in Q1.
Amazon recently debuted Bedrock, an AI solution that allows customers to build out their own ChatGPT-like models.
The company also announced the upcoming Titan, which includes two new foundational models developed by Amazon Machine Learning.
Tech is largely downsizing staff and firing diversity officers and other woke positions, but the one area that is pushing for greater numbers is artificial intelligence data scientists and a bevy of LinkedIn posts show they are on the lookout to poach talent.
Amazon, who crushed Microsoft and Google in the business of renting out servers and data storage to companies and other organizations, enjoys a commanding lead in the cloud infrastructure market.
However, those rivals are early into generative AI, even though Amazon has drawn broadly on AI for years to show shopping recommendations and operate its Alexa voice assistant.
Amazon also failed to create the first popular large language model that can enable a chatbot or a tool for summarizing documents.
One challenge Amazon currently faces is in meeting the demand for AI chips. The company chose to start building chips to supplement graphics processing units from Nvidia (NVDA), the leader in the space. Both companies are racing to get more supply on the market.
At a technical level, Amazon shares and the rest of tech shares are quite overbought in the short term.
Last week was a modest pullback between 1-2% in the Nasdaq and I view that as highly bullish because of its orderly nature and lack of volume.
No panic selling is what we want for the markets to optimize the next bullish entry point.
After the modest price action digests fully, I do expect another dip-buying shopping spree for tech shares.
Stay patient and stay hungry.
https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png00Mad Hedge Fund Traderhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMad Hedge Fund Trader2023-06-26 14:02:032023-06-27 00:48:19Amazon Joins the Party
“I don’t want to fight old battles. I want to find new ones.” – Said Current CEO of Microsoft Satya Nadella
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/satya-m.png264208Mad Hedge Fund Traderhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMad Hedge Fund Trader2023-06-26 14:00:002023-06-26 14:36:57Quote of the Day - June 26, 2023
Buckle up, folks. We're heading into another dimension of the curious world of artificial intelligence (AI).
As we venture deeper into this high-tech jungle, things get murkier and more complex. AI's omnipresence is undeniable, its tentacles reaching deep into digital networks, handling massive scales, increasing automation, and tackling layers of complexity like a walk in the park.
But here's the kicker.
The AI we've created has grown so intricate, so sophisticated, that it's like dealing with a genius kid who won't share his homework. These smarty-pants AI systems often make decisions that are, to us mortals, unexpected and enigmatic.
Dig deep into the world of deep neural networks (DNNs), and you're dealing with the darkest of arts. We've got machines so advanced that we humans have to run calculations just to get a whiff of how these algorithms are crunching numbers.
Enter the "black box," a realm where what goes on inside is as clear as mud.
So, what happens when we can't peek inside these black boxes? Simple, it throws a spanner in AI development and adoption. Hence, the growing clamor for interpretability, transparency, understandability, and explainability of AI outputs like predictions and recommendations. After all, we need to trust these digital brains, right?
Here's where the spotlight hits the rockstar of the AI world: Explainable AI (XAI).
This branch of AI focuses on spilling the beans on the inner workings of AI systems. It's the detective deciphering the cryptic clues behind an AI model’s decisions, making AI not just powerful but also trustworthy.
Without XAI, AI models risk becoming like that genius kid again, trusted by none. XAI brings much-needed clarity and openness, encouraging more trust in AI-based solutions. It's become so pivotal that it's considered a fundamental right of AI users.
And folks, XAI isn't just hot air. It's big business.
Come 2030, the global XAI market could hit a whopping USD 21.06 billion, growing at an impressive CAGR of 18.0% from 2023.
And who's riding this XAI wave?
A whole crew of startups like Alation, EXPAI, and Fiddler Labs – all digging into explainability solutions. They've got the wind in their sails thanks to venture capital firms and angel investors staking their money on them.
Also joining the party are some big dogs like.
IBM (IBM) has been all hands on deck, developing AI technologies, with XAI being one of them. Big Blue’s powerhouse solution, IBM Watson, is all about transparent AI. They're sitting pretty to cash in on the rising demand for XAI.
Tech titan Alphabet (GOOGL) is also neck-deep in AI research and development. With AI initiatives like Google AI and Google Cloud AI, they're well-placed to mix in some XAI magic.
Microsoft has been pumping money into AI as well, snapping up companies focused on XAI like Bonsai. Its industry reach gives it a front-row seat to benefit from the XAI wave.
Unsurprisingly, NVIDIA (NVDA) has been at the center of some developments. These guys have spearheaded AI hardware and software solutions with a keen interest in XAI. Given their clout in finance, they're all set to make hay as XAI takes off.
There’s also Accenture (ACN), which has its fingers in all sorts of pies, from AI to analytics services. Its focus on XAI could give them an edge in the financial consulting world.
And there you have it, folks. AI's continuing evolution is creating a landscape rich with potential, but XAI is truly lighting the way.
Whether you're a tech titan like IBM or Google or a rising startup like Alation, XAI is the key to unlocking AI's full potential.
As we navigate this high-tech labyrinth, remember - the genius kid's homework isn't as inscrutable as it seems. With XAI, we're not just cracking the code, but we're making the code trustworthy. That dear readers, could be the game changer. Buckle up.
Midjourney Prompt: “The AI black box”
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/ss-062623-mhai-c1.jpg616931Douglas Davenporthttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngDouglas Davenport2023-06-26 11:06:592023-06-26 11:07:54DECODING THE ENIGMA: UNRAVELING AI'S BLACK BOX
Come join me for lunch at the Mad Hedge Fund Trader’s Global Strategy Update which I will be conducting in Cortina, Italy on Thursday, July 27, 2023. An excellent meal will be followed by a wide-ranging discussion and an extended question-and-answer period.
I’ll be giving you my up-to-date view on stocks, bonds, currencies, commodities, precious metals, and real estate. And to keep you in suspense, I’ll be throwing a few surprises out there too. Tickets are available for $288.
I’ll be arriving on time and leaving late in case anyone wants to have a one-on-one discussion, or just sit around and chew the fat about the financial markets.
The lunch will be held at an exclusive hotel in the heart of Cortina with an expansive view of the Dolomites. I picked Cortina because this is where my great uncle died in the “White War” of WWI. Cortina has also been the location of three James Bond movies. The precise location will be emailed with your purchase confirmation.
I look forward to meeting you, and thank you for supporting my research.
To purchase tickets for the luncheons, please click the BUY NOW! button above or click here.
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/cortina.jpg352560Mad Hedge Fund Traderhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMad Hedge Fund Trader2023-06-26 09:04:282023-07-31 14:53:21SOLD OUT - Thursday, July 27, 2023 Cortina d’ Ampezzo, Italy Global Strategy Luncheon
I just received a call from the Marine Corps to go on emergency standby. This is not something the Corps does lightly.
The word is that there may be a coup d'etat underway in Russia and the entire US military has gone to a heightened alert status.
The Wagner group is Marching on Moscow with the intent of overthrowing the government, or at least the military. Putin took off in a plane which then disappeared radar, meaning he has either been shot down, or is flying low level to keep his destination secret.
This thing could go nuclear very easily, but only in Russia. It also could mean the end of the Ukraine War. There is nothing to do here as intelligence pours in over the weekend. We have ample satellites overhead and human intel on the ground.
Expect market volatility today. The markets are ripe for a black swan-inducted selloff, which a Mad Hedge Market Timing Index at 82 was screaming at us.
I will be monitoring the situation closely.
My view that the markets were topping was vindicated last week. The “Magnificent Seven” which gained a record 25% in market capitalization in only eight weeks led the downturn, as they always do. But the AI surge that prompted the fastest equity creation in history is only just getting started.
This is against a backdrop of savage cost-cutting by Big Tech, which has had the effect of boosting earnings by an impressive 7% in only three months. My cleaning lady, gardener, dry cleaner, and shoe shine boy have started giving me stock tips yet, as they did in 2000, 2008, and 2020….but they are thinking about it.
While attention is focused elsewhere, one should not underestimate the importance of India Prime Minister Modi’s meeting with Joe Biden in Washington.
It signifies a major geopolitical shift out of the Russian orbit into the US one. Decades ago, India obtained all its weapon systems and nuclear power plants from Russia and was a major trading partner.
Now partnering up with Apple (AAPL), Google (GOOGL), Microsoft (MSFT), and General Electric (GE) is a much more attractive option. It is gaining a $2.7 billion factory from Micron Technology (MU) and presents a major market for its products. Amazon (AMZN) is investing $13 billion in cloud infrastructure there. The subcontinent graduates some 2.5 million STEM graduates a year and they need to be put to work in the global economy. It shows how limited Russia’s future really is. It’s a major win for the US.
So far in June, we are up +0.47%. My 2023 year-to-date performance is still at an eye-popping +62.52%. The S&P 500 (SPY) is up only a respectable +14.00% so far in 2023. My trailing one-year return reached +96.63% versus +21.52% for the S&P 500.
That brings my 15-year total return to +659.71%. My average annualized return has blasted up to +48.56%, another new high, some 2.59 times the S&P 500 over the same period.
Some 42 of my 46 trades this year have been profitable. Only 23 of my last 24 consecutive trade alerts have been profitable.
The Mad Hedge December 6-8 Summit Replays are Up. Listen to all 28 speakers opine on the best strategies, tactics, and instruments to use in these volatile markets. It is a true smorgasbord of investment strategies. Find the best one to suit your own goals. The product discounts offered last week are still valid. Start, stop, and pause the videos at your leisure. Best of all, access to the videos is FREE. Access them all by clicking here and then choosing the speaker of your choice. We look forward to working with you.The next summit is scheduled for September 12-14.
$2 Billion Fled Stock Market Last Week, according to a Bank of America survey, in what it calls a “Baby Bubble.” The markets are showing all the signs of an interim top, with either a 10% correction or a three-month flat line ahead of us. Time to strap on those Buy Writes for long-term shareholders.
Short Bets on US stocks Hit $1 trillion, the highest since April 2022. Shorts have so far lost $101 billion in 2023, with much of this hedged. The market is way overdue for a correction so these guys may finally be right. Even a broken clock is right twice a day.
Germany Signs Massive US Natural Gas Contract, in a major move to end reliance on Russian natural gas. Venture Global LNG will supply EnBW with 1.5 million tons a year of LNG starting in 2026. The 20-year sales and purchase agreement is Germany’s first binding deal with a US developer since the government announced ambitious plans to begin importing the super-chilled fuel. The move does a lot to eliminate the glut of gas in the US currently plaguing producers. Buy (UNG) LEAPS on dips. When China comes back on line, watch out!
Volatility Index ($VIX) Hits the $12 Handle, in a new multiyear low. At the high for the year in the S&P 500, complacency is running rampant. Time to add some downside hedges.
Copper Should be a “Critical Metal”, says billionaire Robert Friedland. A looming structural shortage is the reason, with the world going to an all-electric auto fleet and doubling of the electrical grid to accommodate it. Buy more (FCX) LEAPS on dips.
Leading Economic Indicators Down 0.7% for the 15th consecutive negative month. We are approaching the bottom of the trough in this cycle. I’ll focus on the half of the economy that is growing.
Distressed Commercial Property Debt is Exploding, up 10% to Q1 to $64 billion. Another $155 billion is waiting in the wings. This will go away when interest rates start to drop in six months.
My Ten-Year View
When we come out the other side of the recession, we will be perfectly poised to launch into my new American Golden Age, or the next Roaring Twenties. The economy decarbonizing and technology hyper-accelerating, creating enormous investment opportunities. The Dow Average will rise by 800% to 240,000 or more in the coming decade. The new America will be far more efficient and profitable than the old.
Dow 240,000 here we come!
On Monday, June 26 at 8:30 AM EST, the Dallas Fed Manufacturing Index is out.
On Tuesday, June 27 at 6:00 PM, S&P Case-Shiller National Home Price Index is published.
On Wednesday, June 28 at 7:30 AM, the Fed Governor Jay Powell speaks.
On Thursday, June 29 at 8:30 AM, the Weekly Jobless Claims are announced. The Final Report for Q1 US GDP is printed.
On Friday, June 30 at 8:30 AM, Personal Income and Spending is announced.
As for me, when I first met Andrew Knight, the editor of The Economist magazine in London 45 years ago, he almost fell off his feet. Andrew was well known in the financial community because his father was a famous WWII Battle of Britain Spitfire pilot from New Zealand.
At 34, he had just been appointed the second youngest editor in the magazine’s 150-year history. I had been reporting from Tokyo for years, filing two stories a week about Japanese banking, finance, and politics.
The Economist shared an office in Tokyo with the Financial Times, and to pay the rent I had to file an additional two stories a week for them as well. That’s where I saw my first fax machine, which then was as large as a washing machine even though the actual electronics would fit in a notebook. It cost $5,000.
The Economist was the greatest calling card to the establishment one could ever have. Any president, prime minister, CEO, central banker, or war criminal was suddenly available for a one-hour chart about the important affairs of the world.
Some of my biggest catches? Presidents Gerald Ford, Jimmy Carter, Ronald Reagan, George Bush, and Bill Clinton, China’s Zhou Enlai and Deng Xiaoping, Japan’s Emperor Hirohito, terrorist Yasir Arafat, and Teddy Roosevelt’s oldest daughter, Alice Roosevelt Longworth, the first woman to smoke cigarettes in the White House in 1905.
Andrew thought that the quality of my posts was so good that I had to be a retired banker at least 55 years old. We didn’t meet in person until I was invited to work the summer out of the magazine’s St. James Street office tower, just down the street from the palace of then Prince Charles.
When he was introduced to a gangly 25-year-old instead, he thought it was a practical joke, which The Economist was famous for. As for me, I was impressed with Andrew’s ironed and creased blue jeans, an unheard-of concept in the Wild West where I came from.
The first unusual thing I noticed working in the office was that we were each handed a bottle of whisky, gin, and wine every Friday. That was to keep us in the office working and out of the pub next door, the former embassy of the Republic of Texas from pre-1845. There is still a big white star on the front door.
Andrew told me I had just saved the magazine.
After the first oil shock in 1973, a global recession ensued, and all magazine advertising was cancelled. But because of the shock, it was assumed that heavily oil-dependent Japan would go bankrupt. As a result, the country’s banks were forced to pay a ruinous 2% premium on all international borrowing. These were known as “Japan rates.”
To restore Japan’s reputation and credit rating, the government and the banks launched an advertising campaign unprecedented in modern times. At one point, Japan accounted for 80% of all business advertising worldwide. To attract these ads the global media was screaming for more Japanese banking stories, and I was the only person in the world writing them.
Not only did I bail out The Economist, I ended up writing for over 50 business and finance publications around the world in every English-speaking country. I was knocking out 60 stories a month, or about two a day. By 26, I became the highest paid journalist in the Foreign Correspondents’ Club of Japan and a familiar figure in every bank head office in Tokyo.
The Economist was notorious for running practical jokes as real news every April Fool’s Day. In the late 1970s, an April 1 issue once did a full-page survey on a country off the west coast of India called San Serif.
It warned that if the West coast kept eroding, and the East coast continued silting up, the country would eventually run into India, creating serious geopolitical problems.
It wasn’t until someone figured out that the country, the prime minister, and every town on the map were named after a type font that the hoax was uncovered.
This was way back, in the pre-Microsoft Word era, when no one outside the London Typesetter’s Union knew what Times Roman, Calibri, or Mangal meant.
Andrew is now 84 and I haven’t seen him in yonks. My business editor, the brilliant Peter Martin, died of cancer in 2002 at a very young 54, and the magazine still awards an annual journalism scholarship in his name.
My boss at The Economist Intelligence Unit, which was modeled on Britain’s MI5 spy service, was Marjorie Deane, who was one of the first women to work in business journalism. She passed away in 2008 at 94. Today, her foundation awards an annual internship at the magazine.
When I stopped by the London office a few years ago I asked if they still handed out the free alcohol on Fridays. A young writer ruefully told me, “No, they don’t do that anymore.”
Sometimes, change is for the worse, not the better.
Good Luck and Good Trading
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/john-thomas-economist-e1664802946349.png285500Mad Hedge Fund Traderhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMad Hedge Fund Trader2023-06-26 09:02:572023-06-26 12:08:01The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or Is there a Coup Underway in Russia?
Come join me for lunch at the Mad Hedge Fund Trader’s Global Strategy luncheon, which I will be conducting in Florence Italy on Tuesday, August 1, 2023. An excellent meal will be followed by a wide-ranging discussion and an extended question-and-answer period.
I’ll be giving you my up-to-date view on stocks, bonds, currencies, commodities, precious metals, and real estate. And to keep you in suspense, I’ll be throwing a few surprises out there too. Tickets are available for $287.
I’ll be arriving on time and leaving late in case anyone wants to have a one-on-one discussion, or just sit around and chew the fat about the financial markets.
The lunch will be held at an exclusive hotel in the heart of Old Florence near the Medici Palace and the Uffizi Gallery. The precise location will be emailed with your purchase confirmation.
I look forward to meeting you and thank you for supporting my research.
To purchase tickets for the luncheons, please click the BUY NOW! button above or click here.
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/florence.jpg775974Mad Hedge Fund Traderhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMad Hedge Fund Trader2023-06-24 09:04:332023-07-31 14:53:08SOLD OUT - Tuesday, August 1, 2023 Florence, Italy Global Strategy Luncheon
(GETTING WEALTHY IS ONE THING; STAYING WEALTHY IS ANOTHER)
Friday, June 23, 2023
Hello everyone,
I thought I would dive into some psychology around money today. In my personal opinion, I don’t think enough emphasis is placed on this area. Most people just focus on their spreadsheet and the numbers – and looking at whether they are in profit or loss. But there is so much more to making and keeping money than just counting the numbers. It really involves your behaviour around money.
Getting wealthy and staying wealthy involve different skills.
Getting wealthy involves taking risks, being optimistic, and putting yourself out there. For instance, you all took a risk subscribing to my product, and some of you are also subscribers to John’s product. But, if you don’t take some risks, you will stay in the same place.
Staying wealthy requires a certain amount of frugality and an element of paranoia. In other words, you need to be wise to the possibility that what you have made in the past ten years or past two years can be taken away from you just as quickly. Furthermore, it also requires acceptance that at least some of what you have made is attributed to luck. In other words, you placed that trade that John or I sent out at just the right time and got a great price and then you closed it at maximum profit. You were in the right place at the right time. What I am trying to highlight here is that you can’t be complacent. It becomes more about survival through all the financial storms that have happened in the past and are arguably ahead of us.
It must be the cornerstone of your strategy. A survival mentality is key with money.
We all must learn to survive the ups and downs we will inevitably experience over time.
So, how do we do this?
Who can we look to and learn from?
Let’s look at Warren Buffett for a moment. There are numerous books written about this man and his strategy on how to invest and become wealthy. But let’s investigate the things that he didn’t do.
He didn’t get carried away with debt.
He didn’t panic during the 14 recessions he lived though.
He didn’t attach himself to just one strategy.
He didn’t limit himself to one worldview.
He didn’t sully his business reputation on one passing trend.
His survival gave him longevity – he didn’t burn himself out and quit and retire.
Warren Buffett and Charlie Munger had another partner when they started Berkshire Hathaway.
His name was Rick Guerin. Unlike Buffett and Munger, Guerin was in a hurry to make money. During the 1973-1974 downturn, Rick was positioned with margin loans, so when the stock market went down almost 70% in two years, he got margin calls. Ultimately, Rick ended up selling his Berkshire stock to Warren at under $40 a piece. He was forced to sell – a position you never want to be in.
Most people would wonder, how could this have happened to him; a person that was so smart with money and was surrounded by great mentors.
It is important to remember that having an edge and surviving are two different things.
The first requires the second.
You must become unbreakable.
Compounding doesn’t rely on earning big returns, merely good returns, sustained, uninterrupted for the longest period of time, especially in times of chaos and havoc. This is the strategy that will always win.
Planning is important – but the most important plan is to plan on the plan, not going according to plan.
Sounds weird, right, but doing this gives you some breathing space.
Financial and investment planning are critical because they let you know whether your current actions are within the realm of reasonable.
But remember, few plans of any kind survive their first encounter with the real world. We’ve all been there, right?
If you are projecting your return, your income over the next 25 years, think about all the big stuff that has happened over the last 25 years, that no one could have foreseen. I’m talking about those “black swans.”
September 11.
A housing boom and bust that caused 10 million Americans to lose their homes.
A financial crisis that caused almost 9 million Americans to lose their jobs.
A record-breaking stock market rally that ensued.
And a Corona Virus that shook the world.
A plan is only useful if it can survive reality.
A future filled with unknowns is everyone’s reality.
So, there should be room for error in everyone’s plan.
And please, turn off the noise of the talking heads on TV. It will manipulate your thinking and psychology about when to invest. The best investment strategy is to buy small parcels often regardless of whether we are heading into recession, are in a recession or there has been some major crisis. The most successful strategy can seem quite boring.
In an annual general Berkshire Hathaway stockholder meeting in 2013, Warren Buffett said that he has owned abut 400-500 stocks over his lifetime but has made most of his money with only about 10 of those stocks which outperformed. Charlie Munger admits that if you removed just a few of Berkshire’s top investments, its long-term track record is pretty average. When we pay attention to role models’ successes, we can overlook that their gains came from a small percentage of their actions. In other words, maybe they are right just as often as you or me.
It's not whether you are right or wrong that’s important, but how much you make when you’re right and how much you lose when you’re wrong. (George Soros)
So, you can be wrong half the time and still make a fortune.
We underestimate how normal it is for a lot of things to fail which causes us to overreact when they do.
I’ll be writing more pieces about the psychology around money because I think it is important to gently nudge you into thinking about your behaviour in relation to investment/trade decisions.
A little bit of housekeeping now:
For those of you who have not filled out this survey about peer tutoring, could you please do so by clicking on the link below? Once I know who would like to participate, I can go ahead and begin grouping people together.
Here is the link to the Survey Page https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/trader-survey/
Wishing you all a magical weekend.
Cheers,
Jacquie
https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png00Mad Hedge Fund Traderhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMad Hedge Fund Trader2023-06-23 19:00:482023-06-23 19:19:23June 23, 2023
Europe is reeling and now it is becoming Silicon Valley’s playground.
The evidence is all over Europe and quite clear-cut at this point.
The royal 7 from the likes of Tesla (TSLA) and Apple (APPL), who have been responsible for most of the stock market gains this year, are leading the charge to cherry-pick the best tech companies in Europe.
The Ukraine military conflict was a godsend for American big tech, as many European companies are now waving the red flag amid commercial electricity costs spiking 100% in many Western European countries.
The unrelenting electricity increase has caused a mad rush to relocate the best European talent to the United States.
Or, if they don’t relocate out of their own will, many are buy-out targets just like yesterday’s news of British online grocer Ocado.
They are on the verge of tasting the sweet hand of acquisitive cash from Amazon (AMZN).
Poached or not poached – Silicon Valley is dominating.
Ocado Group shares jumped as much as 47% - the most in more than five years.
Even with today’s gains, shares in Ocado have still lost about two-thirds of their value since the end of 2021 amid a selloff in growth stocks.
The stock soared in 2018 on a landmark deal to build warehouses and license software to US supermarket chain Kroger Co., boosting the grocer’s credentials as a technology company. Ocado has partnerships with several grocers, but investor focus has shifted to profitability as demand for automated warehouses slows.
I’m not surprised to hear about Amazon’s interest in Ocado.
Ocado has developed, leading automated warehouse technology that could be of great use to Amazon if it tried to take over the supermarket industry in Europe, which it might.
Many American tourists might experience how outdated and obsolete many European supermarkets are these days.
On the corporate side, when I talk to many European workers on the ground in Milan and Brussels, the consensus is that finding a job at an American big tech firm is considered the proverbial golden paycheck.
European counterparts are mired in inefficiency, unproductivity, and the politicians who exist as 27 European Joe Bidens are ruthlessly driving the industry into the ground by taxing and regulating the hell out of them.
European workers also take 2 months of vacation every year along with 15 to 20 federal holidays per year.
When I read the tea leaves, the next expansion of Silicon Valley is to gobble up anything of perceived value in Europe and anything in any European Union country is fair game.
This buying spree could trigger another leg up to big tech and expand margins.
American tech possesses the powerful balance sheets to wield around the world and dominating the European supermarket industry would add to the top line.
Amazon has already forayed into the food industry with Whole Foods in America so this should be viewed as something similar to that.
Look for big tech to enter strategic European industries and eventually buy something like Manchester United or any other high-quality asset.
https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png00Mad Hedge Fund Traderhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMad Hedge Fund Trader2023-06-23 15:02:212023-06-26 15:52:27Poaching Foreign Tech
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