Global Market Comments
July 30, 2024
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(HOW TO EXECUTE A VERTICAL BULL CALL SPREAD),
(AAPL)
Global Market Comments
July 30, 2024
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(HOW TO EXECUTE A VERTICAL BULL CALL SPREAD),
(AAPL)
We have recently had a large influx of new subscribers.
I have no idea why. Maybe it’s my sterling personality and rapier-like wit.
For whatever reason, I think it's time for all to undergo a refresher course on how to most efficiently go long the market with the best possible risk/reward ratio.
I’m talking about buying vertical bull call debit spreads.
Most investors make the mistake of investing in positions with only a 50/50 chance of success, or less. They’d do better with a coin toss.
The most experienced hedge fund traders find positions that have a 99% chance of success and then leverage up on those trades. Stop out of the losers quickly and you have an approach that will make you well into double digits, year in and year out, whether markets go up, down, or sideways.
For those readers looking to improve their trading results and create the unfair advantage they deserve, I have posted a training video on How to Execute a Vertical Bull Call Spread.
This is a matched pair of positions in the options market that will be profitable when the underlying security goes up, sideways, or down small in price over a limited period of time.
It is the perfect position to have on board during markets with declining or low volatility, much like we have experienced in most of the last several years, and will almost certainly see again.
I have strapped on quite a few of these babies across many asset classes, and they are a major reason why I am up so much this year.
To understand this trade I will use the example of Apple trade, which most people own and know well.
On October 8, 2018, I sent out a Trade Alert by text messages and email that said the following:
BUY the Apple (AAPL) November 2018 $180-$190 in-the-money vertical BULL CALL debit spread at $8.80 or best.
At the time, Apple shares were trading at $216.17. To accomplish this, they had to execute the following trades:
Buy 11 November 2018 (AAPL) $180 calls at….………$38.00
Sell short 11 November 2018 (AAPL) $190 calls at….$29.20
Net Cost:…………………….……..…..………….…................$8.80
A screenshot of my own trading platform is below:
This gets traders into the position at $8.80, which costs them $9,680 ($8.80 per option X 100 shares per option X 11 contracts).
The vertical part of the description of this trade refers to the fact that both options have the same underlying security (AAPL), the same expiration date (November 16, 2018), and only different strike prices ($180 and $190, or a “spread”).
“Bull” (as opposed to “Bear”) means you receive the maximum profit in a rising market as opposed to a falling one.
“Debit” refers to the fact that you have to pay money to obtain this position rather than receive a credit
The maximum potential profit can be calculated as follows:
+$190.00 Upper strike price
-$180.00 Lower strike price
+$10.00 Maximum Potential Profit at expiration
Another way of explaining this is that the call spread you bought for $8.80 is worth $10.00 at expiration on November 16, giving you a total return of 13.63% in 27 trading days. Not bad!
The great thing about these positions is that your risk is defined. You can’t lose any more than the $9,680 you put up.
If Apple goes bankrupt, we get a flash crash, or suffer another 9/11-type event, you will never get a margin call from your broker in the middle of the night asking for more money. This is why hedge funds like vertical bull call spreads so much.
As long as Apple traded at or above $190 on the November 16 expiration date, you will make a profit on this trade.
As it turns out, my take on Apple shares proved dead on, and the shares rose to $222.22, or a healthy $32 above my upper strike.
The total profit on the trade came to:
($10.00 expiration - $8.80 cost) = $1.20
($1.20 profit X 100 shares per contract X 11 contracts) = $1,320.
To summarize all of this, you buy low and sell high. Everyone talks about it but very few actually do it.
Occasionally, Vertical Bull Call debit Spreads don’t work and the wheels fall off. As hard as it may be to believe, I am not infallible.
So if I’m wrong and I tell you to buy a vertical bull call spread, and the shares fall not a little, but a LOT, you will lose money. On those rare cases when that happens (about 20% of the time), I’ll shoot out a Trade Alert to you with STOP-LOSS instructions before the damage gets out of control.
I start looking at a stop loss when the deficit hits 20% of the size of the position or 2% of the total capital in my trading account.
To watch the video edition of How to Execute a Vertical Bull Call Spread, complete with more detailed instructions on how to execute the position with your own online platform, please click here.
Good luck and good trading.
Vertical Bull Call Spreads Are the Way to Go in a flat to Rising Market
(GOOGL), (SPOT), (UMGNF), (NVDA), (MSFT), (SSTK)
It's time to face the music. AI is composing tunes, and it's not just a passing note in the tech symphony. This could be the next big score for us investors and the entertainment industry.
Let's lay down some beats here. The global market for AI-generated music is set to hit a high note of $3 billion by 2028. That's a tenfold jump from 2023.
And it's not just a solo performance. The whole AI in music market is expected to crescendo to $1.6 billion by 2025, growing at a CAGR of 27% from 2020.
Now, who's leading this AI orchestra?
For starters, we've got Alphabet Inc. (GOOGL) and its brainy offspring, DeepMind. They're not just whistling Dixie with their WaveNet tech. With a war chest of $110.9 billion as of Q4 2023, Alphabet's got plenty of cash to keep the music flowing.
Then there's Spotify Technology S.A. (SPOT). With 489 million monthly active users tapping their feet to its tunes in Q4 2023, Spotify's not just sitting on the sidelines. They're exploring AI-generated music faster than you can say "playlist."
And they're not alone - 60% of major music streaming platforms are already using AI to personalize your listening experience.
But what about the old guard? Universal Music Group (UMGNF) isn't about to let AI steal the show. With revenues of $10.65 in 2023, they're partnering up with AI music startups faster than you can say "collab." Smart move, if you ask me.
And let's not forget the hardware guys. As expected, there’s NVIDIA Corporation (NVDA), which has been a key player in this AI music revolution.
Their chips are the backstage crew making it all happen. With data center revenue jumping 41% year over year to $15.7 billion in fiscal 2024, NVIDIA is looking at an encore performance.
The money men are taking notice, too. Between 2019 and 2023, venture capitalists pumped $1.37 billion into music-related AI startups.
OpenAI's MuseNet scored a cool billion from Microsoft (MSFT) and friends, while Aiva Technologies hit the right note with $10 million in Series A funding in 2022.
We're also seeing some interesting duets in the M&A world. For example, Shutterstock's (SSTK) buyout of Amper Music in 2020 shows they're not just about pretty pictures anymore.
So, how are these AI maestros making their dough? Well, it's a mixed playlist.
Licensing fees are the chart-topper at 40% of revenue, with subscription services humming along at 30%. Those monthly subs? They'll set you back $10 to $30.
Streaming service partnerships chip in another 20%, with deals ranging from $500,000 to $2 million a year. Not a bad gig if you can get it.
But AI isn't just composing. It's mastering tracks, running marketing campaigns, and even playing DJ with personalized playlists.
Video game soundtracks? 15% of those released in 2023 had AI fingerprints all over them. And 25% of ad agencies are now using AI to cook up jingles and background scores.
And here's the kicker - people are actually digging it. A whopping 80% of consumers are cool with listening to AI-composed tunes, and half of them can't even tell the difference from human-made music in blind tests.
Even more surprising? 65% of listeners think AI can actually boost human creativity. Talk about harmony.
But it's not all smooth sailing. Reports indicate a potential 27% drop in human music creators' revenues by 2028 if we don't figure out how to pay them for their input.
That means we need to get our act together on copyright laws and fair compensation, pronto.
Looking ahead, the AI-music mashup is just warming up. These digital Mozart's can now churn out a full symphony in under 4 hours, down from 24.
And they can mimic over 500 composers across all sorts of genres. It's like having a time machine for music.
For those of you with an ear to the ground, this AI-composed symphony could be music to their portfolios.
As this tech hits its stride and gains more fans, it's a chance to get in on the ground floor of a revolution in one of humanity's oldest art forms.
So, what's the takeaway here? Well, I say keep your eyes on the AI music scene. It's not just noise - it's the sound of opportunity knocking.
And who knows? The next chart-topping hit might just come from a silicon chip instead of a recording studio.
Now that's something to sing about.
Mad Hedge Technology Letter
July 29, 2024
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(THE EYEWEAR STRATEGY IN TECH)
(META), (ESSILORLUXOTTICA)
Meta planning on getting into the eyewear business is a little bit of a head-scratcher until pealing back the layers.
Meta in talks to buy a $5 billion minority interest in EssilorLuxottica is more about a mega tech company putting out feelers to how they can corner another premium market.
It’s almost a given that Meta would start to branch out into other venues once their core businesses start to stagnate.
The digital ad game and social media platforms only go so far in terms of growth these days and that doesn’t hack it. Shareholders aren’t excited about what prospects Facebook and Instagram have to offer moving forward.
EssilorLuxottica is the largest maker of eyewear in the world and the owner of many eyewear brands and retailers including Ray-Ban, LensCrafters, and Pearle Vision in the U.S. If the deal happens, Meta would own about 5% of EssilorLuxottica.
EssilorLuxottica also announced its acquisition of Heidelberg Engineering, a maker of imaging and healthcare machinery and technology, largely for the ophthalmic and eyecare markets worldwide.
Prescription glasses are not cheap ranging into the thousands of dollars for designer frames and lenses.
If Meta can figure out how to do this all online without going to the optician, imagine the juicy margins they could extract from this sort of venture.
Meta and EssilorLuxottica have a relationship for the production of the Ray-Ban smart glasses. The glasses’ latest version gives consumers video, camera, and Bluetooth headset capability in a stylish eyewear frame with a cool brand on it.
Heidelberg Engineering makes complex, sophisticated, expensive equipment that you may be exposed to if you’re examined in an ophthalmologist’s office. Buying Heidelberg makes EssilorLuxottica more entrenched in the industry where it is the established leader.
The tie-up with EssilorLuxottica is the perfect onboarding situation to understand how to perfect the optimal glasses and lenses and then transfer it into an online experience.
Remember, even if this investment is for VR purposes, the application revolves around virtual eyewear as well.
Meta now understands they need to secure a monopoly on eyewear and it is a conscious decision to make that a launching point for more of their products.
In the future, Meta wants consumers to access Instagram, Whatsapp, and Facebook through EssilorLuxottica eyewear products.
Meta also hopes to secure the first mover advantage while other big tech firms lack the deep knowledge of eyewear. There have already been numerous failed attempts at smart glasses and so Meta founder Mark Zuckerberg is doubling down with a relationship with Europe’s most deeply entrenched premium eyewear firm.
Although the boost to the bottom and top line won’t happen quickly with a possible relationship with EssilorLuxottica, this could anoint Meta as the gatekeeper to the new virtual world through this new eyewear tech.
It’s becoming clear that Meta is running up to certain upper limits in regards to the growth of their 3 platforms and they are looking for another super booster to prop up profits.
I don’t believe that Meta will be allowed to acquire this eyewear company because of anti-competitive laws, but adopting its best products and hiring their best talent seems a lot more on brand from Meta.
Meta has never been shy at poaching outside talent and rewarding them handsomely.
On the flip side, EssilorLuxottica would be smart to adopt some tech now by hiring the right people and trying to digitize the experience further otherwise Meta will get what they are coming for.
Meta pushing the envelope is one of the big reasons why they have stayed ahead of other big tech companies and why the stock has done so well the past few years.
Buy Meta stock once the tech market consolidates.
(INVESTORS WILL BE WATCHING CLOSELY AS THE MARKET NAVIGATES AN EVENTFUL WEEK)
July 29, 2024
Hello everyone,
Week ahead calendar
Monday, July 29, 2024
10:30 a.m. Dallas Fed Index (July)
7:30 p.m. Japan Unemployment Rate
Previous: 2.6%
Forecast: 2.6%
Earnings: On Semiconductor, McDonalds
Tuesday, July 30, 2024
9:00 a.m. FHFA Home Price Index (May)
9:00 a.m. S&P/Case Shiller Home Price Indices (May)
10:00 a.m. Consumer Confidence (July)
10 a.m. JOLTS Job Openings (June)
9:30 p.m. Australia Inflation Rate
Previous: 3.6%
Forecast: 3.8%
Earnings: Advanced Micro Devices, Live Nation Entertainment, Public Storage, Electronic Arts, Starbucks, Match Group, Microsoft, First Solar, Extra Space Storage, Caesars Entertainment, Corning, Howmet Aerospace, Procter & Gamble, Pfizer, Merck & Co, Stanley Black & Decker, PayPal.
Wednesday, July 31, 2024
8:15 a.m. ADP Employment Survey (July)
8:30 a.m. Employment Cost Index (ECI) Civilian Workers (Q2)
9:45 a.m. Chicago PMI (July)
10:00 a.m. Pending Home Sales Index (June)
2:00 p.m. FOMC Meeting
Previous: 5.50%
Forecast: 5.50%
2:00 p.m. Fed Funds Target Upper Bound
Earnings: MGM Resorts International Allstate, Albemarle, Lam Research, eBay, Qualcomm, Western Digital, Meta Platforms, Etsy, Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings, Hess, Boeing, T-Mobile, Marriott International, GE Healthcare Technologies, Generac Holdings, Kraft Heinz, Mastercard, Ingersoll Rand.
Thursday, Aug 1, 2024
8:30 a.m. Continuing Jobless Claims (07/20)
8:30 a.m. Initial Claims (07/27)
8:30 a.m. Unit Labor Costs preliminary (Q2)
8:30 a.m. Productivity SAAR preliminary (Q2)
9:45 a.m. Markit PMI Manufacturing (July)
10 a.m. Construction Spending (June)
10 a.m. ISM Manufacturing (July)
7:00 a.m. UK Rate Decision
Previous: 5.25%
Forecast: 5.00%
Earnings: Apple, Clorox, Intel, Amazon.com, Booking Holdings, Motorola Solutions, Microchip Technology, Kellanova, Hershey, Moderna, Air Products and Chemicals.
Friday, Aug 2, 2024
8:30 a.m. Jobs Report (July)
Previous: 206k
Forecast 185k
10:00 a.m. Durable Orders (June)
10:00 a.m. Factory Orders (June)
Earnings: Exxon Mobil, Chevron
This week the global interest rate landscape could shift significantly as the Bank of Japan, FOMC, and Bank of England convene to determine their respective rates. The BoE is anticipated to reduce rates by 25 basis points, marking its first rate cut since 2020. Conversely, the Bank of Japan might increase rates from 0% in an effort to bolster the yen, following suspected currency intervention last week which resulted in USD/JPY dropping 2.3% - its largest weekly decline since April.
After the market volatility last week, earnings results may well sway an already sensitive market into a chop and churn behavior pattern, especially with the backdrop of the Fed interest rate decision on Wednesday, and the Jobs Report on Friday. For the week ahead, 171 S&P500 companies, along with 10 Dow members, report results.
The market is expecting no change in rates on Wednesday from the FOMC, but it may clarify whether rate cuts are slated for September, aligning with trader expectations. The Jobs Report may show unemployment figures ticking up.
Amazon.com Inc. will be one to watch. It can show investors both sides of the coin, so to speak. Amazon’s e-commerce network can offer details on the state of online spending for both consumers and businesses. And its other segments provide a look into AI and cloud competition and entertainment.
Also on my radar is Starbucks. Earnings results will show the spending habits of consumers and any shifts in behavior toward discretionary expenses.
=====================================================================
The Paris Olympics has begun. Spectators and television audiences saw a rain-soaked opening ceremony. (Many spectators at the opening ceremony complained they couldn’t see anything, and so chose to go home). Australia has been successful in many events, most notably swimming and most recently in the kayak singles final where Jess Fox won gold.
MARKET UPDATE
S&P 500
Since recording a Bearish outside reversal week in mid-July, the S&P 500 has been undergoing a significant corrective decline. From an Elliott Wave perspective, the market is interpreted to have completed its extended Wave 3/ advance to signal the start of a broad Wave 4/ correction. Support should be found between 5, 265 and 4,954. Only a sustained break below key 4,954 support (the prior 4th wave low) would instead signal that the market is correcting its entire uptrend from 3,492 – 5,670, to then risk a deeper sell-off back toward the late 4,500’s.
GOLD
Gold is still completing an irregular corrective wave structure. Resistance = around $2400/$2440. There is a risk of a deeper correction below $2365/$2350 support toward the $2290/$2275 support area and even $2225/$2200, before exhaustion. If that move eventuates scale into GLD to build your holdings here. It may be a similar story with silver. If silver follows a similar pattern, scale into SLV to build your position here as well.
BITCOIN
Strong resistance in the low $70k’s is likely to contain strength in the short term, which may prompt a correction back to the low $60s/high $50s in the near term. If this eventuates, scale into Bitcoin on this corrective move.
WHAT IS…
Temporal Discounting
…is the common experience of valuing more immediate rewards over those in the future. In Behavioural economics and neuroeconomics, temporal discounting, or hyperbolic discounting can help us appreciate how our financial decisions are not always rational. Understanding the phenomenon, also known as time discounting or intertemporal choice, can help us make better decisions.
We all know that sometimes we make poor financial decisions, and even unhealthy lifestyle choices, but understanding temporal discounting helps us not only gain greater awareness of our financial and lifestyle choices but also develop insight into the extent it affects our emotional well-being when we opt for short-term gratification, which can ultimately lead to regret or guilt later.
At its core, temporal discounting is about how we perceive the value of time.
Let’s look at an example here. Imagine you have the choice of receiving $100 today or $110 in a month. Many people are going to take the $100 today even though the future number is greater. Many people perceive the $10 as less valuable because it is delayed or seen as so far away. Temporal discounting relates to how we value future rewards or punishments.
Understanding hyperbolic discounting sheds light on why we make illogical or self-defeating choices. Whether it’s skipping a workout, wasting money on a rash purchase, or opting for fast food over a healthy meal, the appeal of immediate gratification frequently overshadows rational decision-making.
WE OVERVALUE IMMEDIATE REWARDS AT THE EXPENSE OF LONG-TERM GOALS
Delaying Gratification is Challenging
The tendency to focus on the now often puts an individual/family at risk of not achieving important long-term goals. Why are people behind on saving for retirement?
The following data shows results from a Franklin Templeton Retirement Strategies and Expectations Survey conducted in early 2022. The sample size was 2,029 adults 40 years of age and older and weighted by age, gender, geographic region, race, and education.
The survey also showed that many of those nearing retirement are ill-prepared. As illustrated in the chart here, 37% of those aged 60-69 have between $0-$100K saved for retirement, and 35% have nothing saved at all.
QI CORNER
AUSTRALIAN CORNER
40-50-year mortgages
Lower deposit requirements
These are a couple of the notions being tossed about by big four bank Australian CEOs to help fix the nation’s housing crisis.
Commonwealth Bank group executive retail banking services Angus Sullivan said, “improving housing affordability is a complex issue and there’s no silver bullet, but product innovation is key, as are partnerships between the public and private sectors.”
SOMETHING TO THINK ABOUT
GOOD VIBES CORNER
Cheers,
Jacquie
Global Market Comments
July 29, 2024
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or THE GREAT ROTATION LIVES), or (FLYING THE 1929 TRAVELAIRE D4D),
(NVDA), (TSLA), (JPM), (CCI), (CAT),
(DHI), (SLV), (GLD), (BRK/B), (DE)
I am writing this from the famed Hornli Hut on the north ridge of the Matterhorn at 10,700 feet. I’m not here to climb the iconic mountain one more time. Seven summits are enough for me. What left do I have to prove? It is a brilliant, clear day and I can see Zermatt splayed out before me a mile below.
No, I am here to inhale the youth, energy, excitement, and enthusiasm of this year’s batch of climbers, and to see them off at 1:00 AM after a hardy breakfast of muesli and strong coffee. My advice for beginners is liberally handed out for free.
Each country in Europe has its own personality. Observing the great variety of Europeans setting off I am reminded of an old joke. What is the difference between Heaven and hell?
In Heaven, you have a French chef, an Italian designer, a British policeman, a German engineer, and a Swedish girlfriend, and it is all organized by the Swiss.
In hell you have an English chef, a Polish designer, a German policeman, a Spanish engineer, no girlfriend, and it is all organized by the Italians.
When I recite this joke to my new comrades, I get a lot of laughs and knowing nods. Then they give me better versions of Heaven and hell
The stock market as well might have been organized by the Italians last week with the doubling of volatility and extreme moves up and down. Some 500 Dow points suddenly became a round lot, up and down. Tesla down $40? NVIDIA off 25%? Instantly, last month’s heroes became this month’s goats. It was a long time coming.
The Great Rotation, ignited by the July 11 Consumer Price Index shrinkage lives on. We are only two weeks into a reallocation of capital that could go on for months. Tech has nine months of torrid outperformance to take a break from. Interest sensitives have years of underperformance to catch up on.
Using a fund manager’s parlance, markets are simply moving from Tech to interest sensitives, growth to value, expensive to cheap, and from overbought to ignored.
A great “tell” of future share price performance is how they deliver in down markets. Last week, the Magnificent Seven (TSLA), (NVDA), got pummeled on the bad days. Interest sensitives like my (CCI), (IBKR), industrials (DE), (CAT), (BRK/B), precious metals (GLD), (SLV), and Housing (DHI) barely moved or rose.
Sector timing is everything in the stock market and those who followed me into these positions were richly rewarded. My performance hit a new all-time high every day last week.
Only the industrial metals have not been reading from the same sheet of music. Copper, (FCX), (COPX), Iron Ore (BHP), Platinum (PPLT), Silver (SLV), uranium (CCJ), and Palladium (PALL) have all suffered poor months.
You can blame China, which has yet to restart its sagging economy. I blame that on 40 years of the Middle Kingdom’s one-child policy, which is only now yielding its bitter fruit. That means 40 years of missing Chinese consumers, which started hitting the economy five years ago.
And who knows how many people they lost during the pandemic (the Chinese vaccine, Sinovac, was found to be only 30% effective). This is not a short-term fix. You can’t suddenly change the number of people born 40 years ago.
I warned Beijing 50 years ago that the one-child policy would end in disaster. You can’t beat the math. The leadership back then only saw the alternative, a Chinese population today of 1.8 billion instead of the 1.4 billion we have. But they ignored my advice.
It is the story of my life.
Eventually, US and European growth will make up for the lost Chinese demand, but that may take a while. Avoid all Chinese plays like a bad dish of egg foo young. They’re never going back to the 13% growth of the 2000’s.
So far in July, we are up a stratospheric +11.82%. My 2024 year-to-date performance is at +31.84%. The S&P 500 (SPY) is up +14.05% so far in 2024. My trailing one-year return reached +xx.
That brings my 16-year total return to +xx. My average annualized return has recovered to +708.47.
I used the market collapse to take a profit in my shorts in (NVDA) and (TSLA). Then on the first rally in these names, I slapped new shorts right back on. I used monster rallies to take profits in (JPM) and (CCI). I added new longs in interest sensitives like (CAT), (DHI), and (SLV). This is in addition to existing longs in (GLD), (BRK/B), and (DE), which I will likely run into the August 16 option expiration.
That will take my year-to-date performance up to an eye-popping 43.77% by mid-August.
Some 63 of my 70 round trips were profitable in 2023. Some 45 of 53 trades have been profitable so far in 2024, and several of those losses were break-even. That is a success rate of 84.91%.
Try beating that anywhere.
One of the great joys of hiking around Zermatt is that you meet happy people from all over the world. The other morning, I was walking up to Mount Gornergrat when I ran into two elementary school teachers from Nagoya, Japan. After recovering from the shock that I spoke Japanese I told them a story about when I first arrived in Japan in 1974.
Toyota Motors (TM) hired me to teach English to a group of future American branch sales managers. A Toyota Century limo picked me up at the Nagoya train station and drove me up to a training facility in the mountains. As we approached the building, I witnessed 20 or so men in dark suits, white shirts, and thin ties lined up. One by one they took a baseball bat and savagely beat a dummy that lay prostrate on the grass before them.
I asked the driver what the heck they were doing. He answered that they were beating the competition. A decade later, Japan had seized 44% of the US car market, with Toyota taking the largest share.
I like to think that a superior product did that and not my language instruction abilities.
US Q2 GDP Pops, up 2.8% versus 2.1% expected. The US still has the strongest major economy in the world. Consumer spending helped propel the growth number higher, as did contributions from private inventory investment and nonresidential fixed investment. Goldilocks Lives!
Personal Consumption Expenditure Drops, a key inflation indication for the Fed, up only 0.1%in June and 2.5% YOY. Core inflation, which excludes food and energy, showed a monthly increase of 0.2% and 2.6% on the year, both also in line with expectations. Personal income rose just 0.2%, below the 0.4% estimate. Spending increased 0.3%, meeting the forecast, while the personal savings rate decreased to 3.4%.
Leveraged NVIDIA Bets Cause Market Turmoil. Great when (NVDA) is rocketing, not so much when it is crashing, with (NVDA) plunging 25.7% in a month. (NVDA) is now the largest holding in 500 traded ETF’s. I already made a nice chunk of money on an (NVDA) and will go back for another bight on the smallest rally.
The US Treasury Knocks Out a Blockbuster Auction, shifting $180 Billion worth of 7 ear paper, taking yields down 5 basis points. Foreign demand was huge. Bonds are trading like interest rates are going to be cut. Stock rallied an impressive 800 points the next day.
Durable Goods Get Slammed, down 6.6% versus an expected +0.6% in June. More juice for the interest rate cut camp.
Tesla Bombs, with big earnings and sales disappointments, taking the stock down 15%. Thank goodness we were short going into this. The EV maker put off its Mexico factory until after the November election. Adjusted earnings fell to 52 cents per share in the three months ended in June, missing estimates for the fourth consecutive quarter. Tesla will now unveil robotaxis on Oct. 10, and the cars shown will only be prototypes. Cover your Tesla Shorts near max profit.
Home Sales Dive, in June, off 5.4%. Inventory jumped 23.4% from a year ago to 1.32 million units at the end of June, coming off record lows but still just a 4.1-month supply. The median price of an existing home sold in June was $426,900, an increase of 4.1% year over year.
Oil Glut to continue into 2025, thanks to massive tax subsidies creating overproduction. Morgan Stanley said it expects OPEC and non-OPEC supply to grow by about 2.5 million barrels per day next year, well ahead of demand growth. Refinery runs are set to reach a peak in August this year, and unlikely to return to that level until July 2025, it said. Avoid all energy plays until they bottom.
Homebuilders Catch on Fire, with the prospect of falling interest rates. The US has a structural shortage of 10 million homes with 5 million Millennial buyers. Homebuilders have been underbuilding since the 2008 Great Financial Crisis, seeking to emphasize profits and share buybacks over to development land purchases. Buy (DHI), (LEN), (PMH), (KBH) on dips.
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 600% 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, July 29 at 9:30 AM EST, the Dallas Fed Manufacturing Index is out.
On Tuesday, July 30 at 9:30 AM, the JOLTS Job Openings Report is published. The Federal Reserve Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting begins
On Wednesday, July 31 at 2:00 PM, Jay Powell announced the Fed’s interest rate decision.
On Thursday, August 1 at 8:30 AM, the Weekly Jobless Claims are announced.
On Friday, August 2 at 8:30 AM, the July Nonfarm Payroll Report is released. At 2:00 PM, the Baker Hughes Rig Count is printed.
As for me, I am reminded as to why you never want to fly with Major John Thomas
When you make millions of dollars for your clients, you get a lot of pretty interesting invitations. $5,000 cases of wine, lunches on superyachts, free tickets to the Olympics, and dates with movie stars (Hi, Cybil!).
So it was in that spirit that I made my way down to the beachside community of Oxnard, California just north of famed Malibu to meet long-term Mad Hedge follower, Richard Zeiler.
Richard is a man after my own heart, plowing his investment profits into vintage aircraft, specifically a 1929 Travel Air D-4-D.
At the height of the Roaring Twenties (which by the way we are now repeating), flappers danced the night away doing the Charleston and the bathtub gin flowed like water. Anything was possible, and the stock market soared.
In 1925, Clyde Cessna, Lloyd Strearman, and Walter Beech got together and founded the Travel Air Manufacturing Company in Wichita, Kansas. Their first order was to build ten biplanes to carry the US mail for $125,000.
The plane proved hugely successful, and Travel Air eventually manufactured 1,800 planes, making it the first large-scale general aviation plane built in the US. Then, in 1929, the stock market crashed, the Great Depression ensued, aircraft orders collapsed, and Travel Air disappeared in the waves of mergers and bankruptcies that followed.
A decade later, WWII broke out and Wichita produced the tens of thousands of the small planes used to train the pilots who won the war. They flew B-17 and B-25 bombers and P51 Mustangs, all of which I’ve flown myself. The name Travel Air was consigned to the history books.
Enter my friend Richard Zeiler. Richard started flying support missions during the Vietnam War and retired 20 years later as an Army Lieutenant Colonel. A successful investor, he was able to pursue his first love, restoring vintage aircraft.
Starting with a broken down 1929 Travel Air D4D wreck, he spent years begging, borrowing, and trading parts he found on the Internet and at air shows. Eventually, he bought 20 Travel Air airframes just to make one whole airplane, including the one used in the 1930 Academy Award-winning WWI movie “Hells Angels.”
By 2018, he returned it to pristine flying condition. The modernized plane has a 300 hp engine, carries 62 gallons of fuel, and can fly 550 miles in five hours, which is far longer than my own bladder range.
Richard then spent years attending air shows, producing movies, and even scattering the ashes of loved ones over the Pacific Ocean. He also made the 50-hour round trip to the annual air show in Oshkosh, Wisconsin. I have volunteered to copilot on a future trip.
Richard now claims over 5,000 hours flying tailwheel aircraft, probably more than anyone else in the world. Believe it or not, I am also one of the few living tailwheel-qualified pilots in the country left. Yes, antiques are flying antiques!
As for me, my flying career also goes back to the Vietnam era as well. As a war correspondent in Laos and Cambodia, I used to hold Swiss-made Pilatus Porter airplanes straight and level while my Air America pilot friend was looking for drop zones on the map, dodging bullets all the way.
I later obtained a proper British commercial pilot license over the bucolic English countryside, trained by a retired Battle of Britain Spitfire pilot. His favorite trick was to turn off the fuel and tell me that a German Messerschmidt had just shot out my engine and that I had to land immediately. He only turned the gas back on at 200 feet when my approach looked good. We did this more than 200 times.
By the time I moved back to the States and converted to a US commercial license, the FAA examiner was amazed at how well I could do emergency landings. Later, I added additional licenses for instrument flying, night flying, and aerobatics.
Thanks to the largesse of Morgan Stanley during the 1980’s, I had my own private twin-engine Cessna 421 in Europe for ten years at their expense where I clocked another 2,000 hours of flying time. That job had me landing on private golf courses so I could sell stocks to the Arab Prince owners. By 1990, I knew every landing strip in Europe and the Persian Gulf like the back of my hand.
So, when the first Gulf War broke out the following year, the US Marine Corps came calling at my London home. They asked if I wanted to serve my country and I answered, “Hell, yes!” So, they drafted me as a combat pilot to fly support missions in Saudi Arabia.
I only got shot down once and escaped with a crushed L5 disk. It turns out that I crash better than anyone else I know. That’s important because they don’t let you practice crashing in flight school. It’s too expensive.
My last few flying years have been more sedentary, flying as a volunteer spotter pilot in a Cessna-172 for Cal Fire during the state’s runaway wildfires. As long as you stay upwind there’s no smoke. The problem is that these days, there is almost nowhere in California that isn’t smokey. By the way, there are 2,000 other pilots on the volunteer list.
Eventually, I flew over 50 prewar and vintage aircraft, everything from a 1932 De Havilland Tiger Moth to a Russian MiG 29 fighter.
It was a clear, balmy day when I was escorted to the Travel Air’s hanger at Oxnard Airport. I carefully prechecked the aircraft and rotated the prop to circulate oil through the engine before firing it up. That reduced the wear and tear on the moving parts.
As they teach you in flight school, it is better to be on the ground wishing you could fly than being in the air wishing you were on the ground!
I donned my leather flying helmet, plugged in my headphones, received a clearance from the tower, and was good to go. I put on max power and was airborne in less than 100 yards. How do you tell if a pilot is happy? He has engine oil all over his teeth. After all, these are open-cockpit planes.
I made for the Malibu coast and thought it would be fun to buzz the local surfers at wave top level. I got a lot of cheers in return from my fellow thrill seekers.
After a half hour of low flying over elegant sailboats and looking for whales, I flew over the cornfields and flower farms of remote Ventura County and returned to Oxnard. I haven’t flown in a biplane in a while and that second wing really put up some drag. So, I had to give a burst of power on short finals to make the numbers. A taxi back to the hangar and my work there was done.
There are old pilots and there are bold pilots, but there are no old, bold pilots. I can attest to that.
Richard’s goal is to establish a new Southern California aviation museum at Oxnard airport. He created a non-profit 501 (3)(c), the Travel Air Aircraft Company, Inc. to achieve that goal, which has a very responsible and well-known board of directors. He has already assembled three other 1929 and 1930 Travel Air biplanes as part of the display.
The museum’s goal is to provide education, job training, restoration, maintenance, sightseeing rides, film production, and special events. All donations are tax-deductible. To make a donation please email the president of the museum, my friend Richard Conrad at
rconrad6110@gmail.com
Who knows, you might even get a ride in a nearly 100-year-old aircraft as part of a donation.
To watch the video of my joyride please click here.
Good Luck and Good Trading
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
Where I Go My Kids Go
“There are old pilots and there are bold pilots, but there are no old, bold pilots,” according to the US Marine Corps flight school.
(PLTR), (LDOS), (CACI), (NVDA), (AMD), (AI), (IBM), (GOOGL), (CRWD), (PANW)
As the late, great Stephen Hawking once said, "The only way to win an AI arms race is not to fight it." And it seems like the Trump administration's allies are taking that advice to heart, but with a twist.
Former President Donald Trump's allies have drafted a sweeping AI executive order that's being compared to the Manhattan Project.
You know, the one that brought together some of the brightest minds in science to create the atomic bomb? Yeah, that one.
Only this time, instead of splitting atoms, they want to split the very fabric of reality with artificial intelligence.
Now, I know what you're thinking. "John, isn't this just another case of politicians blowing smoke and making grandiose promises they can't keep?" Well, maybe.
But there's no denying that AI is already transforming industries left and right, from healthcare to finance to manufacturing.
And if the U.S. government throws its weight behind AI research and development, we could see an explosion of innovation that makes the dot-com boom look like a kid's lemonade stand.
So, what exactly is in this proposed executive order?
For starters, it calls for launching several "Manhattan Projects" to advance military AI capabilities. Because apparently, the only thing scarier than a robot overlord is a robot overlord with a gun.
The plan also includes creating industry-led agencies to evaluate AI models and secure systems from foreign adversaries.
In other words, they want to make sure that the AI we create doesn't end up in the wrong hands, like some sort of digital doomsday device.
But here's where it gets even more interesting: the proposed order also calls for reducing AI regulations. That's right. They want to take the leash off of AI development and let it run wild.
The idea is that by getting rid of "burdensome regulations," we can accelerate AI innovation and implementation across various sectors. It's like giving a bunch of mad scientists the keys to the lab and telling them to go nuts.
Of course, there are plenty of companies that stand to benefit from this AI gold rush.
In the defense and AI contracting sectors, we've got heavy hitters like Palantir Technologies (PLTR), Leidos Holdings (LDOS), and CACI International (CACI).
These guys are already knee-deep in government contracts, and with the proposed boost in military AI spending, they could be swimming in cash faster than Scrooge McDuck.
But it's not just the defense industry that's poised for a payday.
The cloud computing and AI infrastructure sectors are also gearing up for a wild ride. NVIDIA Corporation (NVDA), the king of AI chips, is like the pick-and-shovel seller in a gold rush.
They provide the tools that make AI possible, and with increased AI investments, they could be raking in the dough.
Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) is another one to watch, with their fancy processors that make AI purr like a kitten.
And let's not forget about the software side of things.
Companies like C3.ai (AI), IBM (IBM), and Alphabet (GOOGL) are like the prospectors in this AI gold rush. They specialize in creating the AI solutions that businesses need to stay ahead of the curve.
With fewer regulatory hurdles to jump, these companies could be unleashing new AI innovations faster than you can say "Siri, what's the meaning of life?"
But wait, there's more. As AI becomes more ubiquitous, the need for cybersecurity is going to skyrocket.
After all, we don't want our shiny new AI toys to get hacked by some basement-dwelling teenager with a grudge.
That's where companies like CrowdStrike Holdings (CRWD) and Palo Alto Networks (PANW) come in. They're like the digital sheriff's keeping the AI wild west safe from outlaws and bandits.
Now, I know what you're thinking. "John, this all sounds too good to be true. What's the catch?"
Well, there are certainly risks and considerations to keep in mind. Regulatory uncertainty is always a big one.
While the proposed reduction in AI regulations could spur innovation, there's no guarantee that it will last forever.
One minute you're riding high on the AI hype train, the next minute you're getting slapped with a bunch of new rules and restrictions.
And then there's the international competition, particularly with China. It's like the space race all over again, only instead of landing on the moon, we're trying to create the most advanced AI possible.
This global game of one-upmanship could create all sorts of market volatility and geopolitical tensions.
But perhaps the biggest risk of all is the ethical concerns surrounding AI. As the technology advances at a breakneck pace, we're going to have to grapple with some tough questions.
How do we ensure that AI is being developed and used responsibly? How do we prevent it from being weaponized or used to violate privacy and civil liberties?
These are the kinds of issues that keep philosophers and policymakers up at night, and they're not going away anytime soon.
Despite these risks, however, the potential rewards of the AI revolution are simply too great to ignore.
With the right investments and a bit of luck, we could be riding the AI wave to untold riches. It's like the old saying goes: fortune favors the bold.
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