Not a day goes by without me hearing from a reader about the competition.
They previously subscribed to a newsletter that promised a top-drawer education, an insider’s insights, and spectacular returns, sometimes 100% or more a month.
“Doubled in a day” is a frequently heard term.
The entry-level costs are only a few bucks, but they are ever teased onward by the “trade of the century”, a certain 100X winner that they will reveal to you only after another upgrade to their service.
Customers eventually spend outrageous amounts of money, $5,000, $10,000, or even $100,000 a year for the service.
They then lose their shirts.
I hear from readers who have gone through as many as ten of these scams before they find me. Some have lost millions of dollars. Others have been wiped out.
The sob stories are legion.
Then, they find the Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader.
This is the source of all those effusive testimonials you find on my website (click here)
Believe me, they come in every day. I don’t make this stuff up.
Here is the problem. I work in an industry where 99% of the participants are frauds. They are giant Internet marketing firms with hundreds or thousands of employees.
They spend millions to buy your email address. They then spend millions more on copywriters and programmers to pen and distribute top-rate invitations to you to get rich.
Some of these pitches are so compelling that even I take a look from time to time. These guys are slick, really slick.
None of these people have ever worked on Wall Street. They have never been employed as traders. They have not even traded for their own account.
They would know which end of a stock to hold upward if you handed one to them.
For the most part, they are twenty-something kids who got an “A” in creative writing if they ever went to school. Many haven’t.
So, by putting your faith and your wealth in these newsletters and “trade-mentoring” services, you are placing them in the hands of kids without any experience whatsoever.
Hence the disastrous results. You’d have a better outcome tossing a coin or throwing darts at a dartboard.
Some of the larger services hire washed-out has-been investment professionals who become the “face” of the company and lend it some bogus credibility.
They know the lingo, can quote you statistics all day long, and may even boast of proprietary models and hidden indicators. But chances are they have never made a trading dollar in their life.
Without exception, they are lightweight, has-beens, and wannabes who never made itto the big show. None have ever traded for a living. If they did, they would be broke.
Better to sell the shovels to the gold miners than to try it themselves.
They include the oil newsletter that never saw the crash coming, the fixed income service that is always predicting the return of hyperinflation and a crash, and the perennial prediction that the Dow Average is about to plunge to 3,000.
And because these guys are lousy at their jobs, they always tell you to do THE EXACT OPPOSITE of the right thing to do at market extremes.
Just saw a flash crash? Sell everything! The next crash is here! Just hit a new all-time high? Load the boat! The market is about to double! For them, markets are always about zero or to infinity.
Here’s another problem. Negativity outsells a positive outlook hugely, sometimes by 10:1. It makes people look smarter. That’s the source of all of these Armageddon scenarios. They make a ton of money for their purveyors.
It’s not about being right or dispensing sage advice and proper guidance. It’s only about making a dollar, nothing else. There is no guilt or responsibility involved whatsoever.
All of this is done at your expense. I get emails from victims who sold their houses at the market bottom and want to know what to do now that the house has doubled in value and rents are rising.
There are a lot of people out there who drank the Master Limited Partnership Kool-Aid and put all of their assets there to get double-digit yields. If they are lucky, they are down only 90%.
The precious metal area is a favorite of Internet marketers during the 2010’s. Readers who bought this sector on margin, as they were urged to do with great urgency, lost everything.
I know this all sounds like sour grapes coming from me. The sad reality is that out of hundreds of competing investment and trading newsletters in the industry, I can count on one hand those run by true professionals, and I know most of them.
The rest are all crooks.
Yes, I know who these people are. But I am not going to name any names. No time to sling mud here. I can hear the collective sighs of relief already.
This is why I strive to provide the opposite of the con men. To me, it is more important to be right than to be rich. I will give you my unvarnished, undiluted views, even if it is bad for my business, which it often is.
This is why we publish our model trading performance on a daily basis, warts and all.
Notice that no other newsletter does this. If they did, they would only show huge losses, which don’t sell well. It’s all about making tons of incredible claims without a shred of documentation.
So please continue trolling the web for new investment insights and trading opportunities. After all, that’s how you found me all those years ago. But I will give you a piece of advice:
Caveat emptor!
Buyer beware!
I Think I'll Recommend This One
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/Dartboard2-e1454014789841.jpg267400Mad Hedge Fund Traderhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMad Hedge Fund Trader2025-02-25 09:02:072025-02-25 09:19:28Why Your Other Investment Newsletter is Sooo Dangerous
"As successful as solar has become, there was a bloody road of corporate carnage to get there," said Joel Makower, chairman of the GreenBiz Group.
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/Auction-Signs-e1430770931215.jpg200300Mad Hedge Fund Traderhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMad Hedge Fund Trader2025-02-25 09:00:312025-02-25 09:19:58February 25, 2025 - Quote of the Day
Elon Musk wants to buy OpenAI and that partly has to do with the vendetta he has against OpenAI CEO Sam Altman.
This fiery feud isn’t going away anytime soon.
My bet is that it will burst into the open and OpenAI is actively attempting to put the governance in place to block Musk from seizing the company.
The issue Musk has with OpenAI is that it was founded as a non-profit from capital Musk gave.
It was responsible for doing what is right for humanity, but Altman’s attitude to the industry shows the inverse of that.
It appears to the outsiders that Altman is hellbent on driving the price of AI up for the consumer and delivering profits to big tech that have invested into his “non-profit.”
Musk’s recent attempt at an unsolicited takeover was rejected by CEO Sam Altman and OpenAI's nonprofit board.
Now the creator of ChatGPT reportedly wants to make sure that there are indirect poison pills associated with any outsider takeovers.
All of that will take some maneuvering by OpenAI’s board members and Altman, all of whom are defendants in a lawsuit from Musk that seeks to block OpenAI from converting to a for-profit business.
Right now, investors like Microsoft are not equity holders in OpenAI but instead hold limited profit interests in OpenAI's for-profit subsidiary. Once OpenAI is profitable, Microsoft is entitled to 75% of profits until it recoups its $13 billion principal investment. The other 25% of profits go to employees and early investors, up to specified profit caps.
Once Microsoft’s principal is repaid, it is entitled to 50% of its profits until it reaches a profit cap of $92 billion.
OpenAI said it wants to convert its nonprofit parent to a Delaware public benefit corporation (PBC) that would issue ordinary shares of stock.
Charitable organizations aren’t typically targets for hostile takeovers, especially not the type that Musk had in mind — an unsolicited $97.4 billion bid for OpenAI’s estimated $157 billion in intellectual property and other assets.
Musk's lawsuit seeking to prevent OpenAI's conversion to a for-profit enterprise centers around Musk's initial $45 million donation to fund the startup, which he claims was contingent on OpenAI remaining a nonprofit organization.
If Musk ever acquires OpenAI, I believe he will put on his DOGE hat and cut the costs of doing AI.
The genie is now out of the bottle and the Chinese have proved that AI doesn’t need the bloat.
AI can run on cheaper and older chips while not needing the same amount of data centers.
My belief is that Musk wants to democratize AI and make it cheap for everyone and that would be bad for tech shares specifically Nvidia and Microsoft.
Big tech has the incentive to make the price of AI high just like the supermarkets have an incentive to place higher prices in the supermarkets.
Don’t believe in this mumbo jumbo of supermarkets operating on thin margins when they do produce a lot of their own house brands.
Musk wants to take a samurai sword to AI and make it applicable to the average American.
He doesn’t want to see a situation in which AI is used by executives at corporations to fire everyone, and the readers should know that we are barreling right down the path of replacing workers with robots right now.
If Musk ever gets into the position of neutralizing OpenAI, sell your tech stocks right away, because there will be less peaks and more valleys in tech share prices after that.
https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png00april@madhedgefundtrader.comhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngapril@madhedgefundtrader.com2025-02-24 14:02:512025-02-24 14:51:28AI Is In Question
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
9:00 a.m. S&P/Case Shiller comp. 20 HPI M/M December
10:00 a.m. Consumer Confidence (February)
10:00 a.m. Richmond Fed Index (February)
7:30 p.m. Australia CPI Indicator
Previous: 2.5%
Forecast: 2.5%
Earnings:Extra Space Storage, Workday, Axon Enterprise, First Solar, Caesars Entertainment, Public Service Enterprise Group, Keurig Dr Pepper, Home Depot
A weak response to Chinese warships off our coastline
I considered our Prime Minister’s, Anthony Albanese, response to the Chinese warships performing live-firing drills in the Tasman Sea to be weak, and less than robust. Most alarming is the fact that Beijing did not formally warn the Australian Defence Force (ADF) about its warships’ live fire testing. Authorities were only aware on Friday, just before the drill took place.Can you imagine if our Australian warships did the same to China and sat off their coastline and informed China – or did not inform them - that they were just performing live-firing drills, what the response would be?? I very much doubt the response would have been weak.
Earlier in February, a Chinese fighter jet released flares in front of an Australian military aircraft, which was condemned as “unsafe and unprofessional.”
China is flexing their muscle and showing their might, whilst trade relations between Australia and China rest on shaky ground.
This week Nvidia earnings and PCE could embolden the market - or not
On Wednesday, Nvidia reports earnings, and this event could be potentially market-moving.It’s the first earnings report since Deep Seek disturbed the outlook for artificial intelligence companies.Nvidia shares are up 4% so far this year after rallying some 170% in 2024 and 200% in 2023.And these moves accounted for much of the S&P500’s bull run for those two years. Wealth is concentrated in a basket of stocks, and the story does not usually end well when you see that inequitable distribution. Some analysts are advising to buy Nvidia ahead of earnings, however, I would prefer to stand aside.Even if the chipmaker beats expectations for the quarter, investors are going to need a lot of reassurance that the chipmaker can deal with the concerns raised by Deep Seek earlier this year, as well as any tariff uncertainty.Great earnings results are all very well, but if investors are not confident that Nvidia can navigate the many challenges dotting the economic landscape, then sentiment could turn against it.
Another possible market-moving event this week is the personal consumption expenditure price data.This is the Fed’s preferred measure of inflation, and this data could decide the short-term path of monetary policy.
If the data comes in line the markets could run higher, however, if we get a hotter data print, markets could sell off, especially with the rising concerns over the potential inflationary impact of higher tariffs.
MARKET UPDATE
S&P500
Even though the S&P did turn lower on Friday, it is possible that we see more wide-ranging movement as part of the topping process.A decisive break of $5773 should indicate the bears have taken over control of the market.
Resistance:~$6065
Support: ~$5995/$5930
GOLD
This market has been surging since December, but it looks like momentum might be slowing and a recent peak may have been formed (for a month or so).This is yet to be confirmed, but a failure to build on recent gains would give weight to this observation.
Resistance: ~$2955/60
Support:~$2800
BITCOIN
Wide-ranging behaviour to continue as there are no firm signs that the crypto will break out in the near term.
Resistance: $109.5/$110.5k area
Support: $91/$92k)
QI CORNER
WORD OF THE WEEK
Hygge
Noun: Danish [hou-geh]
Cozy blankets, warming candles, relaxing with friends.All your worries melting away.These are all considered ‘hygge’.
‘Hygge’ is when you take pleasure from and can appreciate gentle and soothing things.It’s being surrounded by things that make you feel cozy and comfortable, which then engender feelings of contentment.
Something that we all need in these tumultuous times.
WHAT IS…?
Cockroach Theory
You are aware of the notion – for every cockroach you see, there’s 100 more you don’t.Cockroach theory applies that thinking to the world of investing – when a piece of bad news relating to the markets is released to the public, there’s likely more lurking in the wings.
Let’s assume that the new government is successful in all its goals and government spending is cut by $2 trillion. That is 7.2% of the $27.2 trillion US GDP. A loss of that magnitude of economic activity is known as a recession on the order of the one triggered by the pandemic.
What if that loss continues for three years? That amounts to a loss of $21.6% of the economy. The name for this? The Great Depression, when we lost 29% of GDP from 1929 to 1933.
What happens if the 25% tariffs on our major trading partners take place, and they bump up the inflation rate from 3% to 5%. Then the Federal Reserve will have to raise interest rates in the face of a weakening economy. That is exactly what caused the last great depression.
Believe it or not, this is not the worst-case scenario.
It is illegal to fire government employees, except for cause, like fraud, theft, or sexual harassment. So unless the government instantly comes up with cases for cause against 10,000 dismissed employees at USAID, it is facing a massive liability in the form of a gigantic class action suit. If they settle for $1 million each that works out to $10 billion. If the court awards $10 million per wrongfully dismissed employee, which is typical, the bill comes to $100 billion.
Multiply that figure across the many government agencies where wrongful dismissals are taking place, and you could easily get to $1 trillion. This is known as a contingent liability, which any corporation would have to disclose.
Here's another problem.
Let’s go back to USAID since that is where we have the clearest set of numbers. About $1 billion of their budget was for salaries. The other $39 billion went to US farmers for the purchase of food, like wheat, corn, and soybeans, to ship abroad to starving foreigners. USAID didn’t send any money to poor countries, just American goods and expertise.
If you take that amount of buying out of the economy, it will have a huge impact. USAID bought some $550 million worth of the $16 billion US wheat market, or 3.5%. This is happening in an already weak wheat market. The three largest wheat-growing states are North Dakota, Kansas, and Montana. They will buy less fuel to operate farm machinery, less demand for bulk shipping, and certainly a lot less hiring of farm workers. I know because I have several farmers as subscribers.
These are all known as “downstream economic effects” and I have a feeling that no one has thought of these. But they are huge, a multiple of the initial cost savings. Trump is discovering the inverse cost multiplier, that a dollar worth of cost cuts creates $3 of service cuts or more.
We will also find out that by firing half the workers in an agency you lose 100% of the functionality. It has an exponential effect. We learned today that the IRS fired 7,000 of its 100,000 workers. When you’re downsizing a company, the last people you get rid of are the bill collectors.
How much this will cut revenues is anyone’s guess, especially when you include the end of audits on high-income earners. But I bet there are more than a few considering that marginal deduction when preparing their 2024 tax returns, due April 15, like claiming that expensive dinner with a wife as an unreimbursed business expense.
That’s great news for me because I have been audited by the IRS every year for the last 12 years. It turns out that the IRS considers an online business with $200,000 a year in travel expenses a high-value target.
Who knew?
These are all known as “downstream economic effects” and I have a feeling that no one has thought of these. But they are huge, a multiple of the initial cost savings.
All of the above is known in the hedge fund industry as “long tail risks,” and is a reference to the far right and left data points in a bell-shaped curve. These are low-probability events that have an astronomical impact on markets when they occur. And you know what? The long tail risks are rising.
You know who is watching the long tail risks? The Federal Reserve, which in the new government has become the sole source of independent, well-researched economic thought.
The Federal Reserve has certainly taken notice of the above risks. One governor opined last week that the trade war would deliver a shock to the economy on the order of the COVID epidemic. Another cited the heightened risks of “pervasive ambiguity”, meaning that no one anywhere knows what the hell is going on. “Pervasive ambiguity” will probably become the “irrational exuberance” of this generation.
If these long-tail risks come to pass the stock market will notice. We got a free sample on Thursday and Friday when the down plunged intraday by some or 2.6%. The (SPX) is now up just 1.5% YTD, versus +23% for China. What was most important is that many of the highest momentum US stocks saw double-digit losses. Did momentum just die but nobody told us?
Just to prove I am not biased, there is one government move I totally agree with.
They actually asked the Department of Defense if there were any programs they would like to get rid of. I happen to know that our defense spending is greatly diluted by thousands of useless programs that exist for the sole reason that they create jobs in rural states. I know of hundreds of examples but I’ll give you just one.
My Uncle Tim was a Master Sergeant in the US Air Force and was chief mechanic for B-52 bombers stationed at Andersen Air Force Base in Guam. I used to visit him frequently when I lived in Tokyo. He showed me that the big bird was cleverly designed to be built from parts in all 50 states. That made maintenance difficult because it was hard to get replacement parts, forcing him to maintain supplies at much higher levels. Reordering was hard because many of these parts were supplied by companies that only existed on paper and no longer existed. Of the original production run of 744 B-52s from 1952 to 1962, there are only 58 in active duty today. The Air Force plans to continue with these aircraft until 2052 when they will become 100 years old.
If we get a Great Depression, we will get a Great Depression-type stock market. From 1929 we dropped 95%. Personally, I’d settle for the 52% we saw in 2008.
I still think the euphoria trade still has another month or two left. We still have one more cup of Kool-Aid left to drink. After that, we may get some rough sledding and you should seriously consider selling.
Another way of describing this course of events is “The End of American Exceptionalism” The global markets have been shouting as much at us with the massive amounts of investment capital pouring out of the US and into Europe and China, as their stock markets have indicated. The US dollar has been in free fall since mid-January. Who does worst with “The End of American Exceptionalism”? The Magnificent Seven.
Oops! Sorry to piss on your largest position from a great height. But numbers don’t lie.
Every day I go to work I ask myself what I have got wrong, what have I missed”? Do you do the same? If you don’t, maybe you should start. It will have a “long tail” effect on your own investment performance, as it has on mine.
I outlined the out-of-consensus thoughts in today’s letter with an old hedge fund friend last week and after agreeing on every point, he made an interesting observation. Warren Buffet may completely nail this near-century-long bull market in American stocks. He was born in 1930 when most of the stock market damage was done.
The really bad news? Warren Buffet is about to turn 95. In at the bottom, out at the top?
February has started with a respectable +1.76% return so far. That takes us to a year-to-date profit of +6.60% so far in 2025. My trailing one-year return stands at a spectacular +87.93% as a bad trade a year ago fell off the one-year record. That takes my average annualized return to +50.07% and my performance since inception to +759.45%.
I used the February 21 options expiration to take my model portfolio from 60% cash to 90% cash. My long positions in Nvidia (NVDA), Vistra Energy (VST), and my short position in Tesla (TSLA) all expired at their maximum profit points. That leaves me with a sole long position in Goldman Sachs (GS).
Some 63 of my 70 round trips, or 90%, were profitable in 2023. Some 74 of 94 trades have been profitable in 2024, and several of those losses were really break-even. That is a success rate of +78.72%.
Try beating that anywhere.
Economic Data Has Flipped from Mixed to Universally Bad, which is why the stock market volatility is increasing. The US now has the worst-performing major stock market in the world. Certain economies have stocks that trade at high multiples. Uncertainty, now at an 85-year high, trades at low multiples.
Goldman Boosts Gold Forecast, to $3,100 per ounce, up from $2,890 previously. Spot gold gained on Tuesday after hitting a record high at $2,942.70 per ounce on February 11. Bullion has hit eight record highs so far this year and is up 11% so far on an annual basis. (Buy (GLD) on dips.
Silver is Catching Up with Gold, which hit a new all-time high weeks ago. Usually, silver outperforms gold by 2:1. But Chinese savers are after the yellow metal, not the white one, as are central banks. Silver depends more on industrial uses and alternative energy, which is seeing all subsidies eliminated. Buy (GLD) over (SLV).
Homebuilders are Panicking Over Tariff Prospects. Sentiment among the nation’s single-family homebuilders dropped to the lowest level in five months in February. The drop was largely due to concern over tariffs, which would raise homebuilder costs significantly. Sales expectations in the next six months took a major hit in the National Association of Home Builders’ Housing Market Index.
Washington DC Economy is in Recession. Unemployment claims are up 400% YOY, home prices are down 10%, and the commute is noticeably lighter. The condition will get much worse before it gets better. Will it spread to the rest of the country? A lot of rural states are far more dependent on Washington than they realize. Alaska, Montana, Louisiana, Wyoming, and Kentucky are the top six per capita recipients of federal government money. Four out of five voted for Trump in 2024. California and Vermont received the least.
Goldman Sachs Gets Whacked, down $25, or 3.9%, along with the rest of the financial sector. The new administration has decided to continue with Biden’s ultra-tough mergers & acquisitions policy, which is pro-consumer and anti-monopoly. (GS) is still a great company and the deregulation story still applies, but the bloom is off the rose.
Cruise Line Shares Get Sunk, with big losses in (CCL) and (RCL). The New Commerce Secretary indicated that their tax-free status may end. The ships are registered in Bermuda and employ all low-paid foreign crews but almost all of the passengers and revenues come from the US.
Wal-Mart Gets Crushed, with the shares down 7%. Nobody wants to take the risk that tariffs get implemented when (WMT) would take the biggest hit. The recession risk is on.
Weekly Jobless Claims Jump 5,000, to 219,000. A big surge is coming from newly laid-off government workers.
Consumer Sentiment Nosedives, to a 30-year low according to the University of Michigan. Consumers expect prices will climb at an annual rate of 3.5% over the next five to 10 years, according to the final February reading from the University of Michigan. The news shaved 31 points off the S&P 500.
Early Recession Indicators are Collapsing, like FedEx, down 7% today. A slowing economy ships fewer packages. Warning signals for the economy are flashing red everywhere.
Has Momentum Died? Big momentum stocks like Palantir (PLTR) have been crushed, down 25% in two days. Did we miss the memo that the bear market already started?
My Ten-Year View – A Reassessment
We have to substantially downsize our expectations of equity returns in view of the election outcome. My new American Golden Age, or the next Roaring Twenties is now looking at multiple gale-force headwinds. The economy will completely stop decarbonizing. Technology innovation will slow. Trade wars will exact a high price. Inflation will return. 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.
My Dow 240,000 target has been pushed back to 2035.
On Monday, February 24, at 8:30 AM EST, the Chicago Fed National Activity Index is announced.
On Tuesday, February 25, at 8:30 AM, the S&P Case Shiller National Home Price Index is released.
On Wednesday, February 26, at 8:30 AM, the New Home Sales are printed.
On Thursday, February 27, at 8:30 AM, the Weekly Jobless Claims are disclosed. We also get the second estimate for Q4 GDP.
On Friday, February 28, at 8:30 AM, the Core PCE Prices Index is announced. At 2:00 PM, the Baker Hughes Rig Count is printed.
As for me, I usually get a request to fund some charity about once a day. I ignore them because they usually enrich the fundraisers more than the potential beneficiaries. But one request seemed to hit all my soft spots at once.
Would I be interested in financing the refit of the USS Potomac (AG-25), Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s presidential yacht?
I had just sold my oil and gas business for an outrageous profit and had some free time on my hands so I said, “Hell Yes,” but only if I get to drive. The trick was to raise the necessary $5 million without it costing me any money.
To say that the Potomac had fallen on hard times was an understatement.
When Roosevelt entered the White House in 1932, he inherited the presidential yacht of Herbert Hoover, the USS Sequoia. But the Sequoia was entirely made of wood, which Roosevelt had a lifelong fear of. When he was a young child, he nearly perished when a wooden ship caught fire and sank, he was passed to a lifeboat by a devoted nanny.
Roosevelt settled on the 165-foot USS Electra, launched from the Manitowoc Shipyard in Wisconsin, whose lines he greatly admired. The government had ordered 34 of these cutters to fight rum runners across the Great Lakes during Prohibition. Deliveries began just as the ban on alcohol ended.
Some $60,000 was poured into the ship to bring it up to presidential standards and it was made wheelchair accessible with an elevator, which FDR operated himself with ropes. The ship became the “floating White House,” and numerous political deals were hammered out on its decks. Some noted guests included King George VI of England, Queen Elizabeth, and Winston Churchill.
During WWII, Roosevelt hosted his weekly “fireside chats” on the ship’s short-wave radio. The concern was that the Germans would attempt to block transmissions if the broadcast came from the White House.
After Roosevelt’s death, the Potomac was decommissioned and sold off by Harry Truman, who favored the much more substantial 243-foot USS Williamsburg. The Potomac became a Dept of Fisheries enforcement boat in 1960 and then was used as a ferry to Puerto Rico until 1962.
An attempt was made to sail it through the Panama Canal to the 1962 World’s Fair in Seattle, but it broke down on the way in Long Beach, CA. In 1964 Elvis Presley bought the Potomac so it could be auctioned off to raise money for St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital. It sold for $65,000. It then disappeared from maritime registration in 1970. At one point there was an attempt to turn it into a floating disco.
In 1980 a US Coast Guard cutter spotted a suspicious radar return 20 miles off the coast of San Francisco. It turned out to be the Potomac loaded to the gunnels with bales of illicit marijuana from Mexico. The Coast Guard seized the ship and towed it to the Treasure Island naval base under the Bay Bridge. By now the 50-year-old ship was leaking badly. The marijuana bales soaked up the seawater and the ship became so heavy it sank at its moorings.
Then a long rescue effort began. Not wanting to get blamed for the sinking of a presidential yacht on its watch the Navy raised the Potomac at its own expense, about $10 million, putting its heavy life crane to use. It was then sold to the City of Oakland, CA for a paltry $15,000.
The troubled ship was placed on a barge and floated upriver to Stockton, CA, which had a large but underutilized unionized maritime repair business. The government subsidies started raining down from the skies and a down to the rivets restoration began. Two rebuilt WWII tugboat engines replaced the old, exhausted ones. A nationwide search was launched to recover artifacts from FDR’s time on the ship. The Potomac returned to the seas in 1993.
I came on the scene in 2007 when the ship was due for a second refit. The foundation that now owned the ship needed $5 million. So, I did a deal with National Public Radio for free advertising in exchange for a few hundred dinner cruise tickets. NPR then held a contest to auction off tickets and kept the cash (what was the name of FDR’s dog? Fala!).
I also negotiated landing rights at the Pier One San Francisco Ferry Terminal, which involved negotiating with a half dozen unions, unheard of in San Francisco maritime circles. Every cruise sold out over two years, selling 2,500 tickets. To keep everyone well-lubricated I became the largest Bay Area buyer of wine for those years. I still have a free T-shirt from every winery in Napa Valley.
It turned out to be the most successful fundraiser in the history of NPR and the Potomac. We easily got the $5 million and then some. The ship received a new coat of white paint, new rigging, modern navigation gear, and more period artifacts. I obtained my captain’s license and learned how to command a former Coast Guard cutter.
It was a win-win-win.
I was trained by a retired US Navy nuclear submarine commander, who was a real expert at navigating a now thin-hulled 73-year-old ship in San Francisco’s crowded bay waters. We were only licensed to cruise up to the Golden Gate Bridge and not beyond, as the ship was so old.
The inaugural cruise was the social event of the year in San Francisco with everyone wearing period Depression-era dress. It was attended by FDR’s grandson, James Roosevelt III, a Bay area attorney who was a dead ringer for his grandfather. I mercilessly grilled him for unpublished historical anecdotes. A handful of still-living Roosevelt cabinet members also came, as well as many WWII veterans.
As we approached the Golden Gate Bridge, some poor soul jumped off and the Coast Guard asked us to perform search and rescue until they could get a ship on station. Nobody was ever found. It certainly made for an eventful first cruise.
Of the original 34 cutters constructed only four remain. The other three make up the Circle Line tour boats that sail around Manhattan several times a day.
Last summer I boarded the Potomac for the first time in 14 years for a pleasant afternoon cruise with some guests from Australia. Some of the older crew recognized me and saluted. In the cabin, I noticed a brass urn oddly out of place. It contained the ashes of the sub-commander who had trained me all those years ago.
Good Luck and Good Trading,
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
Captain Thomas at the Helm
https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png00Mad Hedge Fund Traderhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMad Hedge Fund Trader2025-02-24 10:02:532025-02-24 17:57:44The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or The Downside of Doge and The Last Glass of Kool-Aid
“Apple is an electric utility now. People don’t want them changing the wall sockets. People will pay them not to change,” said Roger McNamee, cofounder of venture capitalist Elevation Partners.
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/03/Electrical-Adapters.jpg312450Mad Hedge Fund Traderhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMad Hedge Fund Trader2025-02-24 10:00:102025-02-24 17:57:34February 24, 2025 - Quote of the Day
One of my hedge fund buddies called me last week about Super Micro Computer (SMCI), sounding more worried than I've heard him since the 2008 crash.
"What's the real story behind these missing financials?" he demanded.
I had to smile. After decades of watching companies navigate regulatory waters, I've learned that sometimes the best opportunities come disguised as paperwork problems.
And SMCI's numbers tell a fascinating story.
Let's dive into what matters. Their preliminary Q2 FY25 earnings show revenue of $5.6-5.7 billion – a staggering 54% growth from last year.
Yes, gross margins have dipped to 11.8-11.9% from 13.3%, but here's what the market is missing: their capacity utilization is only 55% in the US, 60% in Taiwan, and a mere 1% in Malaysia.
That's not a company struggling to meet demand – that's a coiled spring waiting to launch.
The regulatory drama? They finally found a new auditor, confirmed no restatement of prior financials is needed, and committed to filing their delayed reports – the FY24 10-K and Q1/Q2 FY25 10-Qs – by February 25, 2025.
The market's initial relief sent the stock up 6% in mid-February, but there's more upside here.
Follow the technology trail. SMCI just started full-scale production of NVIDIA's (NVDA) Blackwell Rack-Scale Solutions for the HGX B200 system. Their servers are already certified for NVIDIA H100 and H200 GPUs.
But here's the game-changer: liquid cooling technology.
With over 30% of new data centers expected to adopt liquid-cooling systems in the next twelve months, SMCI is positioned perfectly.
They've smartly raised $700 million through 2.25% convertible senior notes due 2028 to expand these capabilities.
I've seen plenty of tech companies come and go in my years covering the market, but SMCI's approach to the AI infrastructure challenge is different.
When you're running advanced AI workloads, traditional air cooling is like trying to cool a blast furnace with a desk fan. Their direct-liquid cooling technology gives them a significant edge as data centers struggle with power density challenges.
The numbers tell the story: while traditional air-cooled data centers typically support 15-20 kW per rack, liquid cooling can handle upwards of 100 kW.
That's the difference between hosting basic enterprise applications and running complex AI workloads.
Despite this technology, the valuation disconnect is striking.
SMCI trades at 12x forward earnings while NVIDIA commands 30x and Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) sits at 18x.
Yes, management revised down their FY25 revenue guidance from $26-30 billion to $23.5-25 billion, but they're still targeting $40 billion by FY26.
Having watched tech cycles for decades, I know ambitious targets when I see them – and these are actually achievable.
Why? The shift from AI training to inference workloads changes everything.
While training demands massive computing power, inference needs efficient, scalable solutions – exactly what SMCI provides.
Management projects 65% annual revenue growth through FY26, moderating to 30% as the market matures, then settling around 10% long-term.
Margins might only see 10 basis points of expansion due to competition, but the volume growth more than compensates.
For those wondering about timing, here's my take: The Special Committee found no accounting fraud or inappropriate revenue recognition.
This isn't an Enron with imaginary Nigerian barges and "special purpose entities" – it's just a filing delay from a company that actually makes real products that actually work.
Once SMCI meets the Nasdaq deadline – and my sources suggest they will – we would most likely see a significant re-rating of the stock.
So, I recommend that you keep a close watch of the next few weeks. In this market, companies solving real AI infrastructure problems don't stay discounted for long.
Just keep your position size reasonable – even the best tech plays require disciplined risk management.
As for me, I'll be tracking this one closely and will alert you the moment I see a clear entry point.
After all, in tech, today's paperwork problem often becomes tomorrow's profit engine. Just ask my old friend who panic-sold Microsoft (MSFT) in 1987 over their messy IPO filing.
https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png00Douglas Davenporthttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngDouglas Davenport2025-02-22 11:13:292025-02-22 11:13:29COOL UNDER PRESSURE
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