Mad Hedge Technology Letter
August 14, 2023
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(MACRO RISKS CLOUD THE PICTURE)
(AAPL), (NVDA), ($COMPQ)
Mad Hedge Technology Letter
August 14, 2023
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(MACRO RISKS CLOUD THE PICTURE)
(AAPL), (NVDA), ($COMPQ)
The momentum signals that tech shares ($COMPQ) are still working themselves out and need more time to stomach Fitch’s debt downgrade.
Unfortunately, it hasn’t been a one-day dip buying opportunity and this month has been quite abysmal for the tech sector.
Just look at Apple which lost about 10% in value. That’s almost unheard of in today’s day and age.
Many investors are still recalibrating what it means to be on the end of a stunning sudden downgrade for the biggest economy in the world.
Making matters worse, the empirical data is starting to really show that China is teetering on the edge.
Centrally planned economies can have their time in the sun, but eventually, that system blows up as inefficiencies become a doom loop with no end.
There is a good chance at this point in his leadership that Chinese Communist Party Chairman Xi cannot get the right information about what is going on in China because the ranks have been solidified by cadres that leech off the system.
China could mean another leg down to close off the year instead of the relief rally that is poised to lift us back from the short-term weakness.
The Nasdaq index has dropped 4.2% this month, with top tech companies like Nvidia on the brink of 10% decreases.
Even Microsoft, despite its advancements in AI and partnership with OpenAI, has seen a 4% drop in August. Google has also shed 2.1%.
However, one tech giant that has been able to maintain a positive trajectory is Amazon, with its stock up 4% for the month.
This may be due to the company closely monitoring the productivity of employees returning to the office, as increased productivity can lead to higher profits.
The decrease in tech stocks coincides with the 10-year Treasury yield rising from approximately 3.95% in late July to above 4.1% currently.
Some signals suggest that yields may still go up and Fed futures reflect this with around a 35% chance the Fed will hike another .25% to 5.50%.
We could find us swiveling from the soft landing is complete to a “higher (yields) for longer” pivot which is effectively negative for short-term positive price action in tech stocks.
It’s entirely plausible that yields could retest the highs from 2022, based on the chart and recent trends.
This could spell bad news for tech investors, as tech stocks typically do not perform well in an environment of elevated yields. Higher borrowing costs, more attractive returns on cash, and increased scrutiny of future growth are among the challenges that tech companies face when interest rates rise.
However, the tech story is still intact albeit it a substantial amount more fragile than in early 2023.
The pain trade will be higher, but the fragility exposes itself to quicker external risks than before that could topple the market swiftly.
The United States has nobody but themselves to blame after issuing a mountain of debt and it’s largely true that when China sneezes, the world catches a cold.
Tech shares will be confronted with these two rising risks for the foreseeable future.
Best case scenario will see tech grinding higher into year-end, and don’t expect any gaps up. The low-hanging fruit has already been plucked from the vine this year.
“What all of us have to do is to make sure we are using AI in a way that is for the benefit of humanity, not to the detriment of humanity.” – Said CEO of Apple Tim Cook
Global Market Comments
August 14, 2023
Fiat Lux
Featured Trades:
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or THE GREAT ROTATION OF 2023 IS ON)
(AAPL), (TSLA), (NVDA), (GOOGL), (OXY), (QQQ),
(TSLA), (WPM), (UNG), (BRK/B), (RIVN), (TLT)
CLICK HERE to download today's position sheet.
What a difference a vacation makes!
When I boarded the Queen Mary II in early July, big technology stocks (AAPL), (TSLA), (NVDA), (GOOGL) were on fire and knew no bounds, while bonds (TLT) were holding steady at a 3.40% yield. Energy stocks (OXY) were scraping the bottom.
One month later and big tech is in free fall while energy, commodities, and precious metals have taken over the lead. Bonds are probing for new lows at a 4.20% yield and may have another $5.00 of downside.
The Great Rotation of 2023 has begun!
The only question is how long it will last.
I happen to believe that we are into a traditional summer correction that could last until the usual September or October bottom. That is when I will be picking up long-term bull LEAPS with both hands. After that, it’s off to the races once again to new all-time highs once again.
Except that this time, everything will go up, both big tech, the domestics recovery plays, and bonds. That’s because they will be discounting the next great market mover, several successive cuts in interest rates by the Federal Reserve certain to take place in 2024.
We all know that markets discount market-moving developments six to nine months in advance. That means you should start buying about….September or October.
Perhaps the best question asked at my many strategy luncheons this summer came from a dear old friend in London. “Where is all the money coming from to pay for all this”? The answer is, well complicated. I’ll give you a list”
1) All of the Quantitative Easing money created since 2008, some $10 trillion worth, is still around. It is just sleeping in 90-day T-bills.
2) With inflation basically over, thanks to hyper-accelerating technology and collapsing energy prices, the case for the Fed to stop raising and start cutting interest rates is clear.
3) Falling interest rates trigger a collapse in the US dollar.
4) Earnings at big tech companies explode, which earn about half of their revenues from abroad.
5) The falling interest rate sectors are also set alike. These include energy, commodities, precious metals, and bonds.
6) A cheap greenback pours gasoline on the economy.
7) The $1 trillion in stimulus approved last year provides the match as most of it has yet to be spent.
8) China finally recovers and turbocharges all of the above trends.
9) 2024 is a presidential election year and the economy always seems to do mysteriously well going into such events.
10) All we are left to do is sit back and watch all our positions go up, figure out how we are going to spend all that money, and sing the praises of the Mad Hedge Fund Trader.
So far in August, we are down -4.70%. My 2023 year-to-date performance is still at an eye-popping +60.80%. The S&P 500 (SPY) is up +17.10% so far in 2023. My trailing one-year return reached +92.45% versus +8.45% for the S&P 500.
That brings my 15-year total return to +657.99%. My average annualized return has fallen back to +48.15%, some 2.50 times the S&P 500 over the same period.
Some 41 of my 46 trades this year have been profitable.
The Nonfarm Payroll drops to 187,000 in July, a one-year low, less than expectations. The Headline Unemployment Rate returned to 3.5%, a 50-year low. The soft-landing scenario lives! That’s supposed to be impossible in the face of 5.25% interest rates. Average hourly earnings grew at a restrained 3.6% annual rate. Half of the new jobs were in health care. At the rate we are aging, that is no surprise.
Rating Agencies Strike Again, with Moody’s threatened downgrade of a dozen regional banks. Stocks took it up on the nose giving up Monday’s 400-point gain. Higher funding costs, potential regulatory capital weaknesses, and rising risks tied to commercial real estate are among strains prompting the review, Moody’s said late Monday. The summer correction is finally here.
Berkshire Hathaway Post Record Profit, with profits up 38% and interest and other investment income growing sixfold as Warren Buffet’s trading vehicle goes from strength to strength to strength. Sky-high interest rates enabled its Geico insurance holding to really coin it this time. Buffet turns 93 this month. Keep buying (BRK/B) on dips. Our LEAPS are looking great, up 327% in 11 months.
Rivian Beats, losing only $1.08 a share versus an expected $1.41. The stock jumped 3% on the news. The gross profit per vehicle showed a dramatic improvement at $35,000. The production forecast edged up from 50,000 to 52,000 vehicles for 2023. Momentum is clearly improving making our LEAPS look better by the day. Buy (RIVN) on dips as the next (TSLA).
Deflation Hits China, as the post-Covid recovery continues to lag. Their Consumer Price Index fell 0.3% YOY. Imports and exports are falling dramatically as trade sanctions bite. Youth unemployment hit a new high as 11.6 million new college grads hit the market. Global commodities could get hit but so far the stocks aren’t seeing it. Avoid anything Chinese (FXI), even the food.
Inflation Jumps, 0.2% in July and 3.2% YOY. Rents, education, and insurance (climate change) were higher while used cars were down 1.3% and airfares plunged by 8.1%. Stocks rallied on the small increase preferring to focus on the smallest back-to-back increase in two years. Bonds (TLT) rallied big. The big question is what will the Fed do with this?
Weekly Jobless Claims came in at a strong 278,000, showing the Fed’s high-interest rate policy is having an effect on the jobs market. Stocks want to know how much longer it will last.
Natural Gas Soars to a new high and accomplished an upside breakout on all charts. European gas prices have just jumped 40%. An Australian strike shut down an LNG export facility. Energy traders are looking for higher highs. My (UNG) LEAPS, a Mad Hedge AI pick, are looking great, doubling off our cost in two months.
Biden Cracks Down on Technology Investment in China, especially on our most advanced tech which can be used in weapons development. Tech investment in the Middle Kingdom is already down 70% over the last two years. No point in selling China the rope with which to hang us.
Home Mortgage Rates Hit a 22-Year High, at 7.08%. But the existing home market is heating up and the new home market is absolutely on fire in anticipating of a coming rate fall. You can’t beat a gale-force demographic tailwind.
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, August 14 at 8:00 AM EST, the US Consumer Inflation Expectations are out,
On Tuesday, August 15 at 8:30 AM, US Retail Sales are released.
On Wednesday, August 16 at 2:30 PM, the US Building Permits are published.
On Thursday, August 17 at 8:30 AM, the Weekly Jobless Claims are announced.
On Friday, August 18 at 2:00 PM, the Baker Hughes Rig Count is printed.
As for me, occasionally, I tell close friends that I hitchhiked across the Sahara Desert alone when I was 16 and I am met with looks that are amazed, befuddled, and disbelieving, but I actually did it in the summer of 1968.
I had spent two months hitchhiking from a hospital in Sweden all the way to my ancestral roots in Monreale, Sicily, the home of my Italian grandfather. My next goal was to visit my Uncle Charles who was stationed at the Torreon Air Force base outside of Madrid, Spain.
I looked at my Michelin map of the Mediterranean and quickly realized that it would be much quicker to cut across North Africa than hitching all the way back up the length of Italy, cutting across the Cote d’Azur, where no one ever picked up hitchhikers, then all the way down to Madrid, where the people were too poor to own cars.
So one fine morning found me taking deck passage on a ferry from Palermo to Tunis. From here on, my memory is hazy and I remember only a few flashbacks.
Ever the historian, even at age 16, I made straight for the Carthaginian ruins where the Romans allegedly salted the earth to prevent any recovery of a country they had just wasted. Some 2,000 years later it, worked as there was nothing left but an endless sea of scattered rocks.
At night, I laid out my sleeping bag to catch some shut-eye. But at 2:00 AM, someone tried to bash my head in with a rock. I scared them off but haven’t had a decent night of sleep since.
The next day, I made for the spectacular Roman ruins at Leptus Magna on the Libyan coast. But Muamar Khadafi pulled off a coup d’état earlier and closed the border to all Americans. My visa obtained in Rome from King Idris was useless.
I used to opportunity to hitchhike over Kasserine Pass into Algeria, where my uncle served under General Patton in WWII. US forces suffered an ignominious defeat until General Patton took over the army 1n 1943. Some 25 years later, the scenery was still littered with blown-up tanks, destroyed trucks, and crashed Messerschmitts.
Approaching the coastal road, I started jumping trains headed west. While officially the Algerian Civil War ended in 1962, in fact, it was still going on in 1968. We passed derailed trains and smashed bridges. The cattle were starving. There was no food anywhere.
At night, Arab families invited me to stay over in their mud brick homes as I always traveled with a big American Flag on my pack. Their hospitality was endless, and they shared what little food they had.
As a train pulled into Algiers, a conductor caught me without a ticket. So, the railway police arrested me and on arrival took me to the central Algiers prison, not a very nice place. After the police left, the head of the prison took me to a back door, opened it, smiled, and said “si vou plais”. That was all the French I ever needed to know. I quickly disappeared into the Algiers souk.
As we approached the Moroccan border, I saw trains of camels 1,000 animals long, rhythmically swaying back and forth with their cargoes of spices from central Africa. These don’t exist anymore, replaced by modern trucks.
Out in the middle of nowhere, bullets started flying through the passenger cars splintering wood. I poked my Kodak Instamatic out the window in between volleys of shots and snapped a few pictures.
The train juddered to a halt and robbers boarded. They shook down the passengers, seizing whatever silver jewelry and bolts of cloth they could find.
When they came to me, they just laughed and moved on. As a ragged backpacker, I had nothing of interest for them.
The train ended up in Marrakesh on the edge of the Sahara and the final destination of the camel trains. It was like visiting the Arabian Nights. The main Jemaa el-Fna square was amazing, with masses of crafts for sale, magicians, snake charmers, and men breathing fire.
Next stop was Tangiers, site of the oldest foreign American embassy, which is now open to tourists. For 50 cents a night, you could sleep on a rooftop under the stars and pass the pipe with fellow travelers which contained something called hashish.
One more ferry ride and I was at the British naval base at the Rock of Gibraltar and then on a train for Madrid. I made it to the Torreon base main gate where a very surprised master sergeant picked up a half-starved, rail-thin, filthy nephew and took me home. Later, Uncle Charles said I slept for three days straight. Since I had lice, Charles shaved my head when I was asleep. I fit right in with the other airmen.
I woke up with a fever, so Charles took me the base clinic. They never figured out what I had. Maybe it was exhaustion, maybe it was prolonged starvation. Perhaps it was something African. Possibly, it was all one long dream.
Afterwards, my uncle took for to the base commissary where I enjoyed my first cheeseburger, French fries, and chocolate shake in many months. It was the best meal of my life and the only cure I really needed.
I have pictures of all this which are sitting in a box somewhere in my basement. The Michelin map sits in a giant case of old, used maps that I have been collecting for 60 years.
Mediterranean in 1968
Stay healthy,
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
(GOOGL), (UNVGY)
If the winds of technological advancement keep blowing as they are, 2023 could well be hailed as the year when AI didn't just softly announce its presence but resoundingly proclaimed its dominance. And one of the names at the forefront? Google, charging full-steam ahead after the whirlwind debut of ChatGPT last year.
Generative AI is turning heads not just by digesting data, but by producing intelligent content with seasoned flair. Picture a system drafting emails with unmatched precision, fixing computer glitches at lightning speed, and answering your complex queries in a heartbeat.
But this isn’t just a narrative of tech prowess. We're at the precipice of a monumental economic surge, with estimates ranging from $6 trillion to an ambitious $7 trillion, all by 2030.
Clearly, an AI-orchestrated future is not just a prospect, it's an imminent reality.
So, where does Alphabet (GOOGL), Google's parent company, stand amid all this?
First of all, erase any misconceptions about them missing the AI train. While they might have appeared a tad offbeat at ChatGPT's inception by OpenAI, Google has been meticulously crafting AI innovations for years.
Evidence? One could simply chat with Google's chatbot Bard, or marvel at how they've seamlessly infused machine learning into tools we use daily, like Search, Google Lens, and Google Translate. It's as if our everyday gadgets have been elevated to prodigious heights.
Then there's the impressive Google Cloud.
Far from just a floating concept in the virtual ether, it's an effulgent hub of innovation, becoming the go-to for businesses eager to harness the power of AI. Its recent 28% revenue growth in Q2 isn’t merely impressive; it’s a testament to the ongoing AI revolution.
Indeed, with Google Cloud's revenue overtaking YouTube ads, it's clear they're on an upward trajectory, powered by AI.
Digging deeper into Google's success, their search engine isn’t just leading—it’s reigning supreme with a formidable 93% market share. The reason? Their cutting-edge AI algorithms.
It's no exaggeration to say their system often knows what we seek even before we're sure of it. And it's this AI sophistication that's also revolutionizing digital advertising. By capturing nearly 30% of the global internet ad market, they're not just participating—they're setting the pace.
As we marvel at these advancements, Google has yet another ace up its sleeve: Project IDX.
This is not just another platform—it's a cutting-edge AI-backed browser workshop for creating state-of-the-art apps. What’s particularly savvy is how they've repurposed the tried-and-true Visual Studio Code, integrating it with their PaLM 2–based programming assistant, Codey. This combination transforms IDX into an intuitive coding companion, replete with smart code completion and AI-driven insights.
Shifting our lens to a slightly different pitch, there's another burgeoning field where Google is making waves—the music industry. They’re currently in advanced discussions with Universal Music Group (UNVGY) to license artist voices and melodies for AI-crafted music.
This venture aims to let users compose with the voices of stalwarts like Drake or Ariana Grande, blending the boundaries between fan and artist. With the right agreements in place, artists would get their due, and the world of music as we know it might be on the brink of a profound transformation.
As we stand at the cusp of an AI-driven era, Google is not just participating in the race—they're shaping the course. With their diverse AI applications, from search to cloud to music, it's evident that they're positioned not only to ride the AI wave but potentially to lead it.
For investors eyeing the AI realm, Google offers a promising, multifaceted avenue, showing once again that they're adept not just at predicting the future, but at creating it.
Mad Hedge Technology Letter
August 11, 2023
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(SHORT-TERM STUMBLES)
(AAPL), (NVDA)
When Apple and Nvidia go, so does the Nasdaq.
That’s why tech shares have been relatively impotent the past few weeks as Apple, again, revealed they don’t have much more than the iPhone.
This has spooked tech shares.
Combine the lack of innovation from Apple with the scares of Nvidia not being able to sell their chips in China as Washington clamps down on China’s ability to procure semiconductor products, and there you have it.
Growth fears from the biggest and best tech companies mean that as a sector, the Nasdaq shares pull back and investors are feeling the pain.
Apple is experiencing a slowdown in the smartphone market, but will the presumed iPhone 15 release in September change that for Apple?
NVDA shares surged by over 200% year-to-date in 2023 and replicating that for the back half of the year is almost impossible.
A continued drop in Apple’s overall revenue suggests that investors demand Apple to pull another cat out of the hat and at some point find something new.
A bout of inertia from management could force investors to look elsewhere with their capital allocation strategy.
Services did have a good quarter, but moving forward, what is their grand plan?
What does that mean then for this quarter as well as the next quarter, when we get the presumed iPhone 15?
It's something that Apple is going to have to answer once those phones are revealed in September.
They're going to have to have stellar features and not just the same groundhog day with a different color lock screen.
New cameras, new processor, basically looks the same. So can Apple really push the envelope enough to get people back into stores, back online, and picking up their products?
Take what I just said about the iPhone and apply it to the iPad and the Mac businesses too.
It is an industry-wide trend where people bought their PCs or laptops during the government-mandated lockdowns.
Now they just don't need another new one. And so we're seeing that from manufacturers to chip makers as well.
Beyond Apple, what about Nvidia?
There was a massive run-up on NVDA shares throughout the year. And now the question is, can they keep it rolling?
NVIDIA is a unique company when it comes to the AI space. They produce chips that nobody else can. They've perfected this over decades. They made the bet several years ago, and now it's really paying off for them.
Also, what happens when companies, this kind of hyperscaler companies, go out and begin putting their own chips into their own servers?
We know that Microsoft is working on it, Google is working on it, Amazon's working on it; Tesla has their own supercomputer that they're building with their own chips.
They already use NVIDIA as well and Elon Musk had said, look, we'll order as many as we can.
I don’t believe that will bite Nvidia in the short term, but it’s definitely a long-term risk.
As long as Nvidia produces the quality required to stay ahead of the competition, the stock market will pick back up after it has time to digest the rally in the first half of the year.
Ultimately, these are great companies, but faster than we know it, solutions are demanded for structural problems.
“When something is important enough, you do it even if the odds aren't in your favor.” – Said Tesla CEO Elon Musk
(WHAT’S HAPPENING AT ROBLOX AND PAYPAL?)
August 11, 2023
Hello everyone,
Roblox gets punished after the earnings report.
Roblox stock took the lift down yesterday after its latest earnings report, giving up almost all the gains it had made so far this year. The videogame-platform company’s issues with managing costs, and uncertainty over its timeline to increasing profitability are posing problems for the market.
Roblox stock (RBLX) dropped 22% after it reported a bigger quarterly earnings loss than expected. The shares were staging only a small recovery on Thursday, up 2% in premarket trading.
That leaves Roblox stock only marginally up in 2023 so far, and down 26% over the last three months. There is growing apprehension over its ability to cut costs and increase its earnings margin.
Roblox executives are pinning their hopes on the launch of its new advertising platform which they hope will help grow its income ahead of expenses in coming quarters.
Roblox is one of my son’s favourite places to hang out with his friends. He designs environments here and plays competitive games as well. The creative digital worlds are designed with all age groups in mind. No one is ever too old to play here.
PayPal launches U.S.$ stable coin (PYUSD).
PayPal USD is designed to contribute to the opportunity stable coins offer for payments and is 100% backed by U.S. dollar deposits, short-term U.S. Treasuries, and similar cash equivalents. PayPal USD is redeemable 1:1 for U.S. dollars and is issued by Paxos Trust Company.
From early August onwards, eligible U.S. PayPal customers who purchase PayPal USD will be able to:
Transfer PayPal USD between PayPal and compatible external wallets
Send person-to-person payments using PYUSD.
Fund purchases with PayPal USD by selecting it at checkout.
Convert any of PayPal’s supported cryptocurrencies to and from PayPal USD.
Dan Schulman, president, and CEO of PayPal states that the “shift toward digital currencies requires a stable instrument that is both digitally native and easily connected to fiat currency like the U.S.$.” Furthermore, Schulman argues that “our commitment to responsible innovation and compliance, and our track record delivering new experiences to our customers, provides the foundation necessary to contribute to the growth of digital payments through PayPal USD.”
Brief market update:
Nasdaq could reach 4400 or even 4200 before it rallies again into the end of the year. A buyer’s market at the aforementioned levels.
Euro, Pound Sterling, Aussie dollar, and Kiwi dollar may face significant downside in the weeks ahead.
Gold could get down to 1880 before rallying to new highs.
Wishing you all a great weekend.
Cheers,
Jacquie
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