Mad Hedge Technology Letter
November 4, 2024
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(A SIDEWAY CORRECTION BEFORE THE MOVE UP)
(AAPL), (BRK-B)
Mad Hedge Technology Letter
November 4, 2024
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(A SIDEWAY CORRECTION BEFORE THE MOVE UP)
(AAPL), (BRK-B)
Warren Buffett shedding millions of Apple (AAPL) stock, and the stock to subsequently avoid a meaningful dip is an inherent victory for Apple and big tech.
In almost any other stock, the price action would be sharp and damaging to the underlying stock, and Apple had a wave of buyers to pick up all the shares Buffett unloaded.
Buffett and his flagship investment company, Berkshire Hathaway (BRK-B), did really well in their Apple investment, where they loaded the boat with Apple stock.
Taking profits is never a bad thing, but I do believe Buffett had a feeling that Apple started getting too ahead of itself.
The company still has not done enough since creating the iPhone, and Buffett certainly was not impressed by the latest “upgrade” to the flagship device.
Apple shares are flat over the past 4 months after a sharp 22% rise in the summer starting from May.
I believe that the sideways price corrections will start to drag out even longer for many big tech companies as their growth engines start to fizzle out.
AI is also due another sideways correction after gangbuster returns.
It is becoming quite evident that “corrections” in big tech aren’t that damaging, and as long as investors can ride out the sideways move, the next move after that is usually to the upper right-hand corner.
Buffett has sent over 515 million shares of Apple to the chopping block since October 2023
Amid Warren Buffett's selling spree, top-holding Apple has been meaningfully reduced. In a three-quarter period from Oct. 1, 2023 through June 30, 2024, Berkshire's stake in Apple declined by more than 515 million shares, or 56%, to precisely 400 million shares.
During Berkshire Hathaway's annual shareholder meeting in early May, he opined that the corporate tax rate would likely climb in the future. With his company sitting on a mammoth unrealized gain in Apple, he suggested that locking in some gains now at a lower tax rate would, eventually, be viewed favorably by Berkshire Hathaway's shareholders.
Apple has done well to engineer the stock higher with its heavy involvement in shareholder returns, particularly buybacks.
Since initiating share repurchases in 2013, Apple has bought back $700.6 billion worth of its common stock and reduced its outstanding share count by 42.2%. This has had a decisively positive impact on the company's earnings per share (EPS).
Sales of its physical devices, including iPhone, iPad, and Mac, have been weak for much of the last two years. If a growth company's sales stall, it can expose its valuation premium.
The Oracle of Omaha's broad-based selling also alludes to the lack of value on Wall Street. This is one of the priciest stock markets in history, and Berkshire's record cash pile of $276.9 billion plainly suggests that Buffett and his team are struggling to find attractive deals.
Big tech is increasingly finding it hard to move the needle.
Anti-trust has also been a thorn in their sides lately as the Fed close it on them from a litigious angle.
In the short term, even without its next growth engine, I do believe Apple and certain big tech companies have the opportunity to experience a winter rally into yearend.
First, we need to get through the election, but the US economy is still running hot at 3%, and tech will do like it usually does, harvest the majority of the gains from the overall economic expansion in the United States.
“Apple doesn't do hobbies as a general rule.” – Said Apple CEO Tim Cook
(A MUCH-HYPED PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION & CENTRAL BANK MEETINGS MAY INFLUENCE MARKET PRICE ACTION THIS WEEK)
November 4, 2024
Hello everyone
WEEK AHEAD CALENDAR
Monday, Nov. 4
10 a.m. Durable Orders final (September)
10 a.m. Factory Orders (September)
10:30 p.m. Australia Rate Decision
Previous: 4.35%
Forecast: 4.35%
Earnings: Marriott International, Diamondback Energy, Wynn Resorts, Palantir Technologies, NXP Semiconductors NV
Tuesday, Nov. 5
8:30 a.m. Trade Balance (September)
9:45 a.m. PMI Composite final (October)
9:45 a.m. S&P PMI Services final (October)
10:00 a.m. ISM Services PMI (October)
Events: U.S. Presidential election
Earnings: Marathon Petroleum, Yum! Brands, Microchip Technology, Super Micro Computer.
Wednesday, Nov. 6
10:00 p.m. China Trade Balance
Previous: $81.7B
Forecast: $73.5B
Earnings: CVS Health, Howmet Aerospace, Albemarle, Qualcomm, Gilead Sciences, Take-Two Interactive Software, Marathon Oil, Match Group.
Thursday, Nov. 7
8:30 a.m. Continuing Jobless Claims (10/26)
8:30 a.m. Initial Claims (11/02)
8:30 a.m. Unit Labor Costs preliminary (Q3)
8:30 a.m. Productivity preliminary (Q3)
10:00 a.m. Wholesale Inventories final (September)
2:00 p.m. FOMC Meeting
Previous: 5.00%
Forecast: 4.75%
3:00 p.m. Consumer Credit (September)
Earnings: PG&E, Moderna, Molson Coors Beverage, Halliburton, Tapestry, The Hershey Co., Ralph Lauren, Warner Bros. Discovery, Airbnb, Axon Enterprise, Expedia Group, Akamai Technologies, Fortinet.
Friday, Nov. 8
8:30 a.m. Canada Unemployment Rate
Previous: 6.5%
Forecast: 6.5%
10:00 a.m. Michigan Sentiment preliminary (November)
Earnings: Paramount Global
I’m sure I don’t need to inform you that this week is packed with high-impact market events.
The U.S. election all day Tuesday is sure to garner attention, but I think the subject has been talked to death, and people just need some space and quiet to think now. I mean, what more can be said? Either Trump will win, or Harris will win. The question is, what happens in the Senate/House? I have heard all different people saying that if one or the other wins, the market will crash. Well, let’s wait and see. After all, the market usually rallies in the final months of the year during a presidential election year.
Last week, the US$ pushed higher, shrugging off a weak October jobs report that was likely impacted by hurricanes and ongoing labour strikes. Markets seemed to ignore these temporary disruptions. Inflation numbers came in right on target, and now traders are all but certain we’ll see a 25-point rate cut from the Fed on Thursday.
A similar outcome is expected from the Bank of England, which is also to be announced on Thursday.
MARKET UPDATE
S&P500
Markets are looking interesting.
It is possible to interpret that we are close to a top in the markets and could soon be entering a Wave 4 pullback. We have had a two-year bull market, and risk is rising for a broad corrective pullback. Further price evidence is required to add confidence to this scenario. Last month, the market reached 5,878.
Of course, with the uncertainty of the election out of the way, we could get a sharp upside rally to around 6,200 before we see this Wave 4 pullback take place.
Either way, if you are holding stocks and want to take some profits off the table, now is the time to do it. (You could take half off and let the other half run). (Don’t be worried about catching the last moves in this rally). Likewise, if you are holding any January 2025 LEAPS, take profits now. That way, you can be cashed up to re-enter the market near the base of the Wave 4 decline. (Note that Buffett has been selling big parcels of stock for the last couple of months, as have many other large companies & funds).
And if we do get that sharp rally to the upside, you could also think about buying a few puts at that time on the SPX or buy SDS.
Possible downside target for a Wave 4 decline is around 5,120.
GOLD
Gold reached a high of $2,790 last week. We are now seeing a short-term correction. (If you have a good profit on your gold LEAPS, and they expire in the first half of 2025, you could take half off here and let the other half run). My advice is if you own LEAPS that are a spread – have two legs – then don’t run them to near expiration. Take profits sooner.
Gold can still extend toward the $3000 area over the coming weeks.
Support = ~ $2,700/$2,680
BITCOIN
Bitcoin has just fallen short of making a new high for the year. It now lies at an interesting juncture.
To hold its uptrend from the $49,577 low of early August, support at $66,700/$65,000 should now hold. If this doesn’t hold, we could see a greater decline towards the $50k area. If you look at the Daily Bitcoin chart, you can now see a rectangle pattern set up, where the recent top ($73,600) caps the upside and the $49,577 low caps the downside. Time will show us how the price action will unfold.
QI CORNER
SOMETHING TO THINK ABOUT
Cheers
Jacquie
When John identifies a strategic exit point, he will send you an alert with specific trade information as to what security to sell, when to sell it, and at what price. Most often, it will be to TAKE PROFITS, but, on rare occasions, it will be to exercise a STOP LOSS at a predetermined price to adhere to strict risk management discipline. Read more
When John identifies a strategic exit point, he will send you an alert with specific trade information as to what security to sell, when to sell it, and at what price. Most often, it will be to TAKE PROFITS, but on rare occasions, it will be to exercise a STOP LOSS at a predetermined price to adhere to strict risk management discipline. Read more
Global Market Comments
November 4, 2024
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD or TRADING ONE UNCERTAINTY FOR ANOTHER plus RECOLLECTIONS OF A MARINE),
(NVDA), (DHI), (LEN), (KBH), (PHM), (TOL), (JPM)
Here I am holed up in a mountaintop retreat.
I have six months of canned food, one month of water, and a year supply of ammo. There is an AR-15 and 12 gauge shotgun at the front door. There is a 45 caliber Colt Peacemaker and a Browning 45 at the backdoor. I sleep with a 9mm Glock 17 under my pillow and a baseball bat next to the bed. There are empty tin cans strung from the shrubbery to sound the alarm for any unexpected intruders.
Let the election begin!
Actually, I think the big surprise will be how little violence takes place. The violence threatened by one political party will fail to show. It was all talk, no substance, and just one big con. That alone should be worth a thousand-point rally in the Dow Average.
Of course, the passing of the election isn’t going to end the uncertainty for the stock market. All we are really doing is trading one kind of uncertainty for another. If Harris wins, will she be able to govern from the middle and how much will she be able to keep her party’s left wing at bay?
If Trump is elected, how many of his threats will be carried out, or was it all just talk? And how much will the courts allow him to carry out extreme policies? Then, there is the issue of who has control of the House and the Senate.
It will all add up to increased market volatility, which I love as a trader. Volatile markets yield much higher returns.
Buy this year’s winners and sell the losers. That is what every professional money manager will be doing on Wednesday morning. They want to window dress their holdings for yearend and harvest tax losses, mostly in energy. That makes the post-election rally really very easy to play.
In one of the most curious market timings in history, Dow Jones announced that it is adding Nvidia (NVDA) to their 30-strong stock market average on Friday, November 8, just three days after the presidential election, and possibly when the outcome is not yet known.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average was the only major US equity benchmark that didn't hold Nvidia. Intel (INTC) will be taken out to the woodshed, which just announced a massive $16 billion loss and has shrunk to a mere $100 billion in market cap. (INTC) is a mere shadow of its former self with a caricature of a CEO.
The normal reaction by the market is a 5-10% pop in the new Dow entrants and a similar 5-10% decline in the shares of the banished company. This is good news for followers of the Mad Hedge Fund Trader because virtually everyone now has (NVDA) as their largest holding, either by selection or capital appreciation.
The 19th century Dow has been playing catchup in gaining exposure to the largest technology companies. The Dow became 30 stocks in 1928. The DJIA was originally created by Charles Dow in 1896 and contained just 12 stocks. The number of stocks in the DJIA increased to 20 in 1916.
The move will increase the volatility of the Dow by adding a stock that is up 170% this year while removing one that has fallen 50%. It will lead to higher highs and then lower lows. Remember, (NVDA) fell 40% in July. It also continues to technology drift of the Dow to keep up with its main competitor, NASDAQ. The last company to join the Dow was Amazon.
When you do the hard work and perform your research well, all surprises tend to be happy ones.
A number of readers have expressed concern over DH Horton’s (DHI) disappointing results. But if anything, the bull case for the industry is stronger than ever. An imminent post-election rally in the bond market and drop in interest rates is about to cause the industry to explode to the upside.
The US new homes market is massively underbuilt. We are short anywhere from 10-20 million homes. Normal inventory is 6 months, and we are currently at 3 months. We went into the pandemic short of homes and then demand exploded. The average home price is now $420,000 against an average income of $75,000, requiring $130,000 in annual income to qualify for a conventional 30-year fixed rate loan.
If you want to live in San Jose, CA you need to earn $463,000 a year. Half of the new homes built this year are in only ten cities, with four in Texas as Americans continue a century-long trend of moving from north to south and from the coasts to the southwest. Building permits are actually falling, down 7% this year.
Concentration of the industry, and therefore the elimination competition, has continued at an incredible pace. Only ten firms control 50% to 80% of new home construction, making it difficult for new entrants. That’s up from only 10% 30 years ago. As a result, the number of floor plan options has shrunk dramatically.
Vice President Harris is proposing a $25,000 tax credit for first-time buyers if elected. She has also suggested subsidies to build 3 million affordable housing units. You always buy a sector that is about to see a big inflow of government largess. Buy (LEN), (KBH), (PHM), (TOL), and (DHI) on dips.
In October, we have gained a breathtaking +7.68%. My 2024 year-to-date performance is at an amazing +52.92%. The S&P 500 (SPY) is up +19.92% so far in 2024. My trailing one-year return reached a nosebleed +65.56. That brings my 16-year total return to +729.55%. My average annualized return has recovered to +52.42%.
I am going into the election as cautious as possible, with 80% in cash and 20% long. When you’re up this much you don’t take chances. I maintained two longs in (DHI) and (JPM) that are well in the money.
Some 63 of my 70 round trips, or 90%, were profitable in 2023. Some 63 of 82 trades have been profitable so far in 2024, and several of those losses were really break-even. Some 22 out of the last 23 trade alerts were profitable. That is a success rate of +76.82%.
Try beating that anywhere.
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, November 4 at 8:30 AM EST, the US Factory Orders are published.
On Tuesday, November 5 at 6:00 AM, the US Presidential Elections take place. The last polls close in Hawaii at 1:00 AM EST.
On Wednesday, November 6 at 11:00 AM, the MBA Mortgage rate is printed.
On Thursday, November 7 at 11:00 AM, the Federal Reserve announces its interest rates decision. A 25-basis point cut is in the bag. A press conference follows at 11:30 AM.
On Friday, November 8 at 8:30 AM, the University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment is announced. At 2:00 PM the Baker Hughes Rig Count is printed.
As for me, as the son of a Marine who served on Guadalcanal in 1942, I had an unusual childhood. The memories all came flooding back to me as the HBO program, The Pacific, which aired once again over last Memorial Day weekend.
Every scene in the ten-hour series I had already heard about around campfires, at veteran’s reunions, or in officers clubs around the world. At five, I learned how to open a coconut by tapping around the three eyes with a bayonet. At ten, I could shinny up a palm tree with a belt wrapped around my ankles.
I learned that you can shoot down a Japanese zero fighter by leading with four hand widths and aiming high. A tank can be disabled by ramming a log into its tracks. There was the survival training; practicing how to find water in the desert, setting a snare trap to catch small animals to eat, and starting a fire with only flint and steel. All the sniper training was fun but was fortunately never put to use.
I can still thrill the kids by hitting a quarter taped to a tree 50 feet away with a Winchester lever action 30-30. We outfitted ourselves with surplus WWII equipment from the “Supply Sergeant” for camping trips, which you could buy for a couple of dollars. Now, you only find these things in museums. We ate leftover C-rations.
Perhaps it was dad’s explanation of how to make highly alcoholic hooch out of canned peaches that led to my degree in biochemistry. In the end, I had my own Marine career as a combat pilot in Desert Storm, and many tasks that followed. There you learn the true meaning of “gung ho.”
At 73, I stay in boot camp shape. In my free time, I hike 100 miles in the High Sierras over 8,000 feet in eight days. I am carrying a 50-pound pack, and living on only 500 calories a day entirely composed of fruit and nuts. I love every minute of it.
Watching the series, I was reminded how feeble and meaningless my profession is, toiling away all year just to create a spreadsheet full of numbers, and how the men of eight decades ago were made of sterner stuff. Buying a dip on a bad day just doesn’t equate to “taking out that machine gun.”
How times have changed. Fall down on your knees and give thanks for your simple life.
You can buy the Hugh Ambrose book the series was based on by clicking here. You can purchase the DVD by clicking here.
Good Luck and Good Trading,
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
(NVDA)
Well, well, well. It looks like the $3.2 trillion elephant in the room is about to get company. After watching Nvidia (NVDA) morph into a multi-trillion behemoth that now makes up 6% of the S&P 500, I've been scanning the horizon for the next big play. And folks, I think I may have a contender.
Meet Cerebras Systems, a gutsy newcomer that reminds me of the early semiconductor players I covered in Tokyo back when transistors were still considered cutting edge. They're eyeing a $1 billion IPO with a valuation north of $7 billion, which might sound ambitious until you see what they're bringing to the table.
So what’s their secret? They have a monster chip called the Wafer-Scale Engine that makes conventional processors look like pocket calculators. We're talking about 4 trillion transistors packed into silicon that's 57 times larger than Nvidia's best offerings.
After decades of watching tech cycles come and go, I've learned that sometimes the most promising plays come from companies willing to completely reimagine the fundamentals. And that's exactly what Cerebras is doing.Let's dive into the nuts and bolts.
Founded in 2016 by CEO Andrew Feldman, Cerebras took the traditional chip design playbook and tossed it out the window.
Instead of dealing with thousands of individual dies - each with their own defects that need to be tossed - they went big. Really big. Their WSE-3 chip can train models ten times larger than OpenAI's GPT-4 and pushes out 125 petaflops with over 21 PB/sec bandwidth.
The clever bit? They've integrated the memory right into the chip. Anyone who's spent time optimizing systems knows that shuffling data between memory and processors is like trying to drink through a coffee stirrer.
Cerebras just eliminated that bottleneck entirely.
But here's where it gets even more interesting. Cerebras is planning to list on the Nasdaq under CBRS, which would make them the first pure-play AI chip maker to IPO during this AI gold rush.
The timing could be perfect - or perfectly terrible.
The challenge? They're going up against Nvidia's full-stack empire. Jensen Huang and his team haven't just built chips; they've created an entire ecosystem that runs from silicon to software. That's a tough act to follow.
And there's a red flag we need to talk about.
Right now, 87% of Cerebras' revenue comes from one client - G42, an Abu Dhabi-based AI outfit. That's the kind of customer concentration that keeps risk managers up at night. While they claim to be in talks with major U.S. tech players, they'll need to diversify fast to be taken seriously.
But the performance numbers? They're eye-popping.
Recent tests show their CS-3 system smoking Nvidia's H100 GPUs by up to 22 times in inference tasks. They're pushing 2,100 tokens per second as of October, up from 450 in August. That's the kind of improvement curve that makes tech investors salivate.
There are limitations, of course. The current SRAM setup puts a ceiling on their memory capacity. To handle the really big models - like the 405 billion parameter Llama - they'll need some clever engineering solutions.
Now, let's talk dollars and sense.
Cerebras is playing the cost game smart. Their cloud offerings run about 2.75 times cheaper per token per second than Nvidia's H100 systems.
For public cloud users, that advantage jumps to 5.2 times. That's the kind of math that makes CFOs pay attention.
So what's the play here?
Cerebras isn't going to dethrone Nvidia overnight. Nobody is. But they don't need to. In the AI chip space, even capturing a small slice of the pie means billions in potential revenue.
For investors looking at the upcoming IPO, here's my take: This is classic high-risk, high-reward territory.
The technology is solid. The market opportunity is massive. But they'll need to execute flawlessly to justify that $7-8 billion valuation.
Keep your eye on three things: customer diversification, U.S. market penetration, and their ability to scale up production without scaling up problems.
Remember, today's underdog can become tomorrow's top dog faster than you can say "semiconductor." Just ask anyone who passed on Nvidia at $25 a share.
The AI chip war is far from over. And Cerebras just might be the dark horse worth watching.
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