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Mad Hedge Fund Trader

October 19 Biweekly Strategy Webinar Q&A

Diary, Newsletter

Below please find subscribers’ Q&A for the October 21 Mad Hedge Fund Trader Global Strategy Webinar broadcast from Silicon Valley in California. 

Q: Bank of America (BAC) said the US consumer is strong and lending is robust. Does this mean no recession in 2023?

A: It could, because remember that while some sectors are clearly in recession, like real estate and automakers, and have been for a while, others are absolutely booming, like the airline business, and the banking business. There may not be a recession in here, or if there is one, it’s a very slight one. Count on the market to first discount a severe recession which would take the S&P 500 down to $3,000-$3,200 or so; and that’s what markets do, always overly pessimistic at the bottom and overly euphoric at tops. You can make your living off of this.

Q: What do you think about OPEC's behavior (USO) and its influence on the price of oil?

A: Clearly, they’re trying to influence the midterm elections and get an all-republican pro-oil Congress, which will be nicer to OPEC. That’s certainly what they got with the last administration and it’s safe to say that the pro-climate administration of Biden and the Saudis get along like oil and water. But long term, OPEC knows it’s going to zero, and in fact, Saudi Arabia has plans to turn their entire oil supply into hydrogen which can be exported and burned cleanly. I know the team here at UC Berkeley that’s working on that with the Saudi government. Cheap hydrogen also means airships come back, how about that? Hindenburg anyone?

Q: Will draining the Strategic Petroleum Oil Reserve (SPR) backfire, meaning deflation for the US economy and administration?

A: No, the SPR outlived its usefulness maybe 30 years ago—it’s essentially a government subsidy for Texas and Louisiana, and for the oil industry, that has taken on a life of its own. When we started the SPR in 1975, the US got more than half of its oil from the Middle East. Now, it’s almost zero. It goes to China instead. If we are a net energy producer and we have been for over 5 years, why do we even need a petroleum reserve? So no, I think we should shut it down and sell all the oil that’s in there. And it becomes even less relevant as more of the US economy turns over to alternatives.

Q: How do we operate our military with no oil?

A: The pentagon is working on a no-oil future, developing alternative fuels for all kinds of things that you wouldn’t imagine are possible. For example, instead of using diesel, jet fuel, or gasoline for our vehicles, you outfit them with electric batteries, and when the batteries go dead you just air drop new fully charged ones. It’s much better than trying to transport gasoline across the desert in a giant fuel bladder, which can be taken out by a single bullet and is what they do now. Take the pilots out of fighters and they become so light they can operate on battery power. So yes, the pentagon has actually been in the forefront of using every alternative technology they can get their hands on from the early days. Better they get them first before an enemy does.

Q: We will almost always need petroleum; far too many products use it as an ingredient.

A: That is absolutely right. Some will probably never be replaced, like asphalt, feedstock, or plastic. However, those represent less than 10% of the current oil demand. So yes, there always will be an oil industry, it just might be a heck of a lot smaller than it is now. You eliminate cars from the picture, and that’s half of all oil demand in the United States right there. And in most places in the United States, it will be illegal to sell a car that uses gasoline in 12 years. And do you make 30-year investments based on demand for your product dropping by half in 12 years? No, you don’t, which is why the oil companies themselves won’t invest in their own industries anymore. They’re only paying out profits as dividends and buying back shares, which they never used to do.

Q: Do you think the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index (SPX) $3,500 was the bottom?

A: No, we actually did get a little bit lower than that. We will be in a bottoming process over the next several months, but the pattern will be the same. Tiny marginal new bottoms, maybe 100 points lower than the last, and then these gigantic rallies. If we do make bottoms they will only be for seconds, so the way to deal with that is to only put in really low-limit orders to buy stuff, assuming 1,000 points down, and just keep entering the order every day. Eventually, you’ll get one of these throw-away fills when the algorithms panic and a bunch of market orders hit the market. That's the way to deal with that.

Q: I would say that Biden is trying to influence the elections by releasing oil reserves.

A: Absolutely he is, but then so is the oil industry, taking half of the refineries off stream 2 months before the elections, and spiking oil prices. So it’s a battle of the oil price going on here. No love lost between the oil industry and Biden, and US consumers for that matter. I don’t care if gasoline is $7 a barrel because I never buy it; I am all electric. But for a lot of working people, that’s definitely a lot of money.

Q: How concerned are you about the US going to a cashless currency?

A: I’m not worried because I pay my taxes and I don’t break any laws. If you don’t pay taxes and do break laws, like engaging in drug dealing or bribery, you should be extremely worried, as that would be the eventual goal of a cashless economy. That and the fact that the government has to spend $300 million a year printing paper money, which they’d love to get rid of. And of course, it’s cheaper for businesses to use digital currencies. Most countries in Europe don’t use physical currency anymore—it’s credit cards only.

Q: Do you expect Tesla (TSLA) to pop after earnings?

A: I have no idea; it depends on what the report says but suffice it to say that Tesla is historically cheap. It has the lowest PE multiple now than it has in the entire 13-year history of the company. Scale in on the LEAPS with Tesla—that’s what I’d be doing down here.

Q: Could the US debt situation spiral into something that gets out of hand?

A: No, because the purchasing power of debt is now deflating at an 8.4% annual rate, which means that it goes to zero in about 8.57 years. This is how the government always wins when issuing debt. It’s been going on since the French first issued government debt 300 years ago. Who pays for that? Bond investors. Anybody who owns bonds now has seen their purchasing power go up in smoke. That’s why it’s been a one-way zero bid market for two and a half years—they’ve been dumping like crazy.

Q: Should I buy debt here or sell it?

A: We’re actually getting close to a bottom in the junk debt market, which means you’re going to be yielding around 10%. That means the value of your holding doubles in 6 years, and the default rates never reach the high levels predicted by analysts in junk bonds. That has always been the key to junk bonds in the whole 50 years that I've been following this market. My neighbor up in Tahoe, Mike Milliken, made billions off that assumption.

Q: What do you think about Netflix (NFLX)?

A: Well, my advice was to buy it, to a lot of people. They’re clearly changing their business model for the better—they’re going to start picking up ad revenues, they’re cracking down on password sharing, and they delivered a 20% return in stocks. Plus their share price has just dropped down from $700 to $165. Great LEAP candidate here. 

Q: What kind of position is best if a recession hits?

A: Cash. Cash is now yielding 4.4%. The best cash alternative is 90-day T-bills issued by the US Treasury. Execution costs almost zero, and liquidity is essentially infinite; but, remember also that bull markets start 6 to 9 months before recessions end. You just have to watch your timing. Which means that if the recession ends in say July, you have to be buying stocks today. Just keep that in mind, ladies and gentleman.

Q: How do you see the futures of semis?

A: Anything you buy here now will triple in three years, but it becomes a question of how much pain you want to take in the meantime. Everyone in the investment management industry thinks the same, and it really is a classic “catch-a-falling-knife” situation— knowing that the payoff down the road is enormous. Virtually all companies are designing new semis into their products at an exponential rate.

Q: Are LEAPS part of the service?

A: Yes, they are. I will send you one tomorrow. But concierge customers get first priority because that’s what they’re paying for.

Q: How far out should we go?

A: On LEAPS, always take the maximum maturity, which is usually 2 years and 4 months. And the reason is that the second year is almost free—they charge you almost nothing for going out to maximum maturity. And if we have a recession that does last longer than people think, that extra year of maturity will be worth its weight in gold. It’ll be the difference between a zero return and a 10x return.

Q: Can we go back into the ProShares UltraShort 20+ Year Treasury (TBT)?

A: No, it would be a horrible idea to buy the (TBT) here after it just moved from $14 to $36. That’s what you buy before it goes from $14 to $36. We’re topping out in all of these short bond plays, so avoid them like the plague.

Q:  How much is the Concierge Service?

A: It’s $12,000 a year—and a bargain price at that! Almost everybody ends up covering that on their first trade, and you get an entire portfolio of LEAPS and a dedicated LEAPS website with the service. You also get my personal cell phone number so you can call me while I'm either on the beach in Hawaii or on the ski slopes of Lake Tahoe. If anyone has questions about the concierge service, contact customer support at  support@madhedgefundtrader.com.

Q: What are your thoughts on data analytics companies Snowflake (SNOW) and Palantir (PLTR)?

A: Love Snowflake, hate Palantir because the CEO isn’t interested in promoting a share price. With (SNOW), you have Warren Buffet as a major holder, so that’s all you need to know there. (SNOW) also has a 75% fall behind it.

Q: Thoughts on the Ukraine/Russia war?

A: It’ll drag on well into next year, and obviously the Iranian drones are the new factor here. I wouldn’t be surprised if there were suddenly an accident at a certain factory in Iran; that’s what happens when these things play out.

Q: Is Snowflake (SNOW) a buy right now?

A: It’s like all the rest of tech. High volatility, could have lower lows, but long-term gains are at least a triple from here. You know how much risk you can take.


To watch a replay of this webinar with all the charts, bells, whistles, and classic rock music, just log in to www.madhedgefundtrader.com, go to MY ACCOUNT, click on GLOBAL TRADING DISPATCH, then WEBINARS, and all the webinars from the last 12 years are there in all their glory.

Good Luck and Stay Healthy,

John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader

 

Dungeon in Montreux Castle on Lake Geneva in Switzerland

 

 

 

 

 

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Mad Hedge Fund Trader

October 21, 2022 - Quote of the Day

Diary, Newsletter, Quote of the Day

The 40-year bull market in bonds is over,” said Dr. Jeremy Siegal of the Wharton School of Business. I agree heartily.

 

https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/dead-bear.png 243 465 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2022-10-21 09:00:342022-10-21 11:10:42October 21, 2022 - Quote of the Day
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

October 20, 2022

Diary, Newsletter, Summary

Global Market Comments
October 20, 2022
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:

(Berkshire Hathaway B Shares (BRKB) January 2025 $420-$430
 deep out-of-the-money vertical Bull Call spread LEAPS)
(BRKB)

https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png 0 0 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2022-10-20 11:04:082022-10-20 12:27:16October 20, 2022
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

Berkshire Hathaway B Shares (BRKB) January 2025 $420-$430 deep out-of-the-money vertical Bull Call spread LEAPS

Diary, Newsletter

BUY the Berkshire Hathaway B Shares (BRKB) January 2025 $420-$430 deep out-of-the-money vertical Bull Call spread LEAPS at $1.00 or best

Opening Trade

10-20-2022

expiration date: January 17, 2025

Number of Contracts = 1 contract

You don’t necessarily need to enter this position today. A big selloff would be ideal. But Berkshire Hathaway should be at the core of any long-term LEAPS portfolio.

If you are looking for a lottery ticket, then here is a lottery ticket.

While the chance of winning a real lottery is something like a million to one, this one is more like 2:1 in your favor. And the payoff is 9:1. That is the probability that (BRKB) shares will double over the next two years and four months.

We have one of the greatest double bottoms on the charts of all time setting up for Berkshire Hathaway right here.

With the Volatility Index (VIX) above $32 today, it’s time to start loading the boat with risk again.

Berkshire Hathaway is the investment vehicle managed by Oracle of Omaha Warren Buffet. The 40-year average annualized increase in book value is 19.0%. It is heavily weighted in high cash flow financials and domestic recovery stocks. Its sole major technology stock is Apple, which it has recently been selling.

The top holdings of (BRKB) are Apple (AAPL), Bank of America (BAC), Coca-Cola (KO), American Express (AXP), and Kraft Heinz (KHC).

Berkshire Hathaway “B” shares are the seventh largest component of the S&P 500 (SPY) with a market capitalization of $609 billion, and the only class of shares that trade options. It is a great play on the domestic cyclical recovery half of the US economy. For more about Berkshire Hathaway, please read my extended research piece below.

To learn more about the company, please visit their website at https://berkshirehathaway.com.

I am therefore buying the Berkshire Hathaway B Shares (BRKB January 2025 $420-$430 deep out-of-the-money vertical Bull Call spread LEAPS at $1.00 or best.

Don’t pay more than $1.50 or you’ll be chasing on a risk/reward basis.

January 2025 is the longest expiration currently listed. Please note that these options are illiquid, and it may take some work to get in or out. Executing these trades is more an art than a science.

Let’s say the Berkshire Hathaway B Shares (BRKB) January 2025 $420-$430 deep out-of-the-money vertical Bull Call spread LEAPS are showing a bid/offer spread of $0.50-$1.50, which is typical. Enter an order for one contract at $0.50, another for $0.60, another for $0.70, and so on. Eventually, you will enter a price that gets filled immediately. That is the real price. Then enter an order for your full position at that real price.

Notice that the day-to-day volatility of LEAPS prices is miniscule since the time value is so great. This means that the day-to-day moves in your P&L will be small. It also means you can buy your position over the course of a month just entering new orders every day. I know this can be tedious but getting screwed by overpaying for a position is even more tedious.

Look at the math below and you will see that a mere 60% rise in (BRKB) shares will generate a 900% profit with this position, such is the wonder of LEAPS. That gives you an implied leverage of 9:1 across the $420-$430 space.

Only use a limit order. DO NOT USE MARKET ORDERS UNDER ANY CIRCUMSTANCES. Just enter a limit order and work it.

This is a bet that (BRKB) will not fall below $430 by the January 17, 2025 options expiration in 2 years and 3 months.

Here are the specific trades you need to execute this position:

Buy 1 January 2025 (BRKB) $420 calls at………….………$7.00

Sell short 1 January 2025 (BRKB) $430 calls at…………$6.00

Net Cost:………………………….………..…………...........….....$1.00

Potential Profit: $10.00 - $1.00 = $9.00

(1 X 100 X $9.00) = $900 or 900% in 2 years and 3 months.

 

 

 

If you are uncertain on how to execute an options spread, please watch my training video by clicking here.

The best execution can be had by placing your bid for the entire spread in the middle market and waiting for the market to come to you. The difference between the bid and the offer on these deep in-the-money spread trades can be enormous.

Don’t execute the legs individually or you will end up losing much of your profit. Spread pricing can be very volatile on expiration months farther out.

Keep in mind that these are ballpark prices at best. After the alerts go out, prices can be all over the map.

 

The Barbell Play with Berkshire Hathaway

It’s time to give myself a dope slap.

I have been pounding the table all year about the merits of a barbell strategy, with equal weightings in technology and domestic recovery stocks. By owning both, you’ll always have something doing well as new cash flows bounce back and forth between the two sectors like a ping-pong ball.

After all, nobody gets sector rotation right, unless they have been practicing for 50 years, like me.

Full disclosure: I have to admit that after 50 years of following him, I love Buffet. He was one of the first subscribers to my newsletter when it started up in 2008. Some of his best ideas have come from the Mad Hedge Fund Trader, like buying Bank of America for $5 in 2008.

Oh, and he hates Wall Street for constantly fleecing people. Ditto here.

In reading Warren Buffet’s annual letter (click here for the link), it occurred to me that his Berkshire Hathaway (BRKB) shares were in effect a one-stop barbell investment.

For a start, Warren owns a serious slug of Apple (AAPL), some $120 billion worth, or 2.5% of the total fund. That gives (BRKB) some technology weighting. It cost him only $20 billion. The dividends he received entirely paid for the initial cost. So he owns 4% of Apple for free.

I remember the battle over the initial “BUY” five years ago. Warren fought it, insisting he didn’t understand the smartphone business. In the end, he bought Apple for its global brand value alone.

That is Warren Buffet to a tee.

The next five largest publicly listed holdings are Bank of America (BAC), Coca-Cola (KO), American Express (AXP), and Verizon Communications (VZ). These are your classic domestic recovery sectors. And with a heavy weighting in other banks (BK) (USB), Buffet is effectively short the bond market (TLT), another position I hugely favor.

Also included in the package is a liberal salting of pharmaceuticals, Merck (MRK) and AbbVie (ABBV). He has a small energy weighting with Chevron (CVX). He even has a position in old heavy metal America with General Motors (GM).

Berkshire is also one of the world’s largest property & casualty insurance owners. Its current “float” is $138 billion. You all know his flagship holding, GEICO. And the gecko mascot isn’t going anywhere as long as Warren lives. It was Warren’s idea.

It all seems to work for Warren. In 2020, he earned a staggering $42.5 billion. All told, Berkshire’s businesses employ 360,000, second to only Amazon (AMZN), and is the largest taxpayer in the United States, accounting for 3% of government revenues. Berkshire is also the largest owner of capital goods & equipment in the US worth $156 billion, topping (AT&T).

Many of Warrens's early 1956 $1,000 investors are millionaires many times over….and over 100 years old, prompting him to muse if ownership of his shares extended life.

Warren’s annual letter, which he spends practically the entire year working on, is always one of the best reads in the financial markets. There isn’t a better 50,000-foot view out there. He also admits to his mistakes, such as his disastrous purchase of Precision Castparts (PCC) in 2016 for $37 billion, which later suffered from the crash in the aerospace industry. In 2020, Buffet wrote off $11 billion of that acquisition.

He can do worse. In 1993, he bought the Dexter Shoe Company for $433 million worth of Berkshire stock. The company went under, but the Berkshire stock today is worth $8.7 billion.

Buffet’s letters always refer back to some of his “greatest hits,” today legends in the business history of the United States: GEICO, Furniture Mart, Berkshire Hathaway Energy, and See’s Candies, one of the largest employers of women in the US using 150-year-old recipes. Its peanut brittle is to die for.

In 2009, Buffet snatched away from me BNSF for a song, now the most profitable railroad in the country, an amalgamation of 360 railroads over 170 years. I say “snatched away” because it was my favorite railroad trading vehicle for decades until he bought the entire company. I hear its trains run by my home every night as a grim reminder.

Another benefit to owning (BRKB) is that Buffet is far and away the largest buyer of his own shares, soaking up $25 billion worth in 2020. And he is buying the shares of other companies that are also aggressively buying their own shares, like Apple ($200 billion last year). It all sounds like the perfect money-creation machine to me.

It gets better. Berkshires “B” shares trade options, meaning you can buy LEAPS (Long Term Equity Anticipation Securities), which by now, you all know and love. I’ll run some numbers for you.

With (BRKB) now trading at $254, you can buy the January 2023 $300-$310 call spread for $2.50. If the shares close anywhere over $310 by the 2023 expiration, the position will be worth $10.00, giving you a gain of 300%. And you only need an appreciation of $56, or 22% in the shares to capture this blockbuster profit, giving you upside leverage of an eye-popping 13.63X in the best-run company in America.

See, I told you you’d like it.

This is how poor people become rich. In fact, my target for (BRKB) is $300 for end of 2021 and $400 for 2022, right when the two-year LEAPS expire.

One question I often get about Berkshire is what happens when Warren Buffet goes to his greater reward, not an impossible concept given that he is 90 years old.

I imagine the shares will have a bad day or two, and then recover. Buffet has been hiring his replacements for a decade or more, and he handed off day-to-day operation years ago (I didn’t want to move to Omaha, no mountains).

When that happens, it will be the best buying opportunity of the year. And another chance to load up on those LEAPS.

 

 

https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/Alert-e1457452190575.jpg 135 150 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2022-10-20 11:02:532022-10-20 15:53:39Berkshire Hathaway B Shares (BRKB) January 2025 $420-$430 deep out-of-the-money vertical Bull Call spread LEAPS
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

October 19, 2022

Diary, Newsletter, Summary

Global Market Comments
October 19, 2022
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:

(THE BARBELL PLAY WITH BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY),
(BRKA), (BRKA), (BAC), (KO), (AXP), (VZ), (BK) (USB),
(MRK), (ABBV), (CVX), (GM), (PCC), (BNSF), (TLT), (AAPL)

https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png 0 0 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2022-10-19 10:04:402022-10-19 10:54:07October 19, 2022
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

October 18, 2022

Diary, Newsletter, Summary

Global Market Comments
October 18, 2022
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:

(FRIDAY, OCTOBER 28 INCLINE VILLAGE, NEVADA STRATEGY LUNCHEON)
(TESTIMONIAL)

https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png 0 0 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2022-10-18 11:06:472022-10-18 14:56:47October 18, 2022
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

October 17, 2022

Diary, Newsletter, Summary

Global Market Comments
October 17, 2022
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:

(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or BLUNDER 3.0)
(RIVN), (TSLA), (V), (JPM), (AMAT), (HPE), (DELL), (KBH), (LEN)

https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png 0 0 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2022-10-17 11:04:002022-10-17 13:23:45October 17, 2022
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or Blunder 3.0

Diary, Newsletter

There is no doubt whatsoever that the stock market tried to break down last week and failed. At worst, the Dow Average double bottomed at $29,600, the same level it reached on September 28.

And even that low was a mere 800 points lower than the one we set on June 14.

And that’s how it’s going to go.

Incremental new lows, followed by violent “rip your face off” rallies on enormous volume.

Until it ends.

That happens when markets start speculating about coming interest rate cuts sometime in 2023. And remember, you’re buying stocks for not what the economy is doing today, but for how well it will be performing in six to nine months.

You’re buying the future, not the present, or heaven forbid, the past.

That means you should use these throw-up-on-your-shoes days to scale into your favorite long-term companies. When markets inevitably rally, you can either sell for a short-term profit and rewind the video once again or keep it as part of a long-term holding.

It's a nice choice to have. I’ve been doing it all year.

With some of the greatest market volatility in market history, my October month-to-date performance ballooned to +5.00%.

I used last week’s extreme volatility to roll down strike prices for Tesla (TSLA) and JP Morgan (JPM) option spreads to manage my risk. I was still able to hang on to a 40% long position and threw out a new short in the S&P 500 at the end of Thursday.

My 2022 year-to-date performance ballooned to +75.06%, a new high. The Dow Average is down -18.48% so far in 2022. With the coming Friday options expiration, I will be up +76.49%.

It is the greatest outperformance on an index since Mad Hedge Fund Trader started 14 years ago. My trailing one-year return maintains a sky-high +78.54%.

That brings my 14-year total return to +587.62%, some 3.03 times the S&P 500 (SPX) over the same period and a new all-time high. My average annualized return has ratcheted up to +44.23%, easily the highest in the industry.

Remember that old 60/40 equity/bond investment strategy? The idea was that whenever stocks went down, the losses would be offset by the profits from rising bonds.

This year, it delivered the worst performance in 100 years, down 34.4% year-to-date. That is the inevitable end result of a decade of zero interest rates and free money that took everything up.

So what is the best strategy you could probably employ right now? A 60/40 strategy. Even I find myself checking out bond yields these days, where I got my start in life as a trader 50 years ago. Yes, before there were stocks, there were bonds. Junk is now yielding 10%. Remember, that means a holding doubles in value every six years.

The market is clearly in a mood to throw out the babies with the bathwater. I would be remiss not to mention the recent decline of Tesla posing one of its periodic tests of the faithful, now approaching a once unheard-of price earnings multiple of 30X.

Up until September 20, Elon Musk’s creation was almost immune to the bear market.

Then Twitter (TWTR) happened.

Musk agreed to take majority control of a $44 billion company, of which Elon himself is only contributing $16 billion. He sold Tesla shares last July to fund this. But the market wiped $333 billion, or 34.6%, off the market capitalization of the company. It is a wild overreaction to the move.

This has nothing to do with Tesla itself, as the richest man in the world is buying Twitter with his own pocket change. But it is undeniable that it will be a distraction of management time.

And here is all you need to know about Tesla. Tesla is the fastest growing large company in the world. Profit margins are increasing, thanks to the recent collapse of commodity prices. Unit sales will rise by 40% this year. Every time Tesla opens a new factory at a cost of $7 billion, it generates $15 billion of profit per year, forever!

Remember also, that the stock market gets an 800-pound gorilla off its back with the end of the midterm elections on November 8. It makes no difference who wins, a major uncertainty will be gone. That much IS certain.

And what happens when the Fed keeps interest rates too low for long, then raises them too much? It lowers them again too much, igniting a monster bull market in stocks. That’s also what you’re buying down here. That's what you get when you appoint a central bank governor with a political science major rather than PhDs and Nobel Prizes in Economics like the last ones.

Call it blunder 3.0.

Consumer Price Index Rockets Up to 8.6%, up 0.4% on the month and a new 40-year high. Stocks, bonds, crypto, and currencies were crushed and the US Dollar Soared. Look for new lows in stocks. Growth really took it on the nose. Expect another month of volatility until the next CPI report comes out.

Stocks Mount Historic Rally, gaining $1,420 points, or 5% of the intraday low. Stocks were down 500 in the wake of the CPI report, then up $1,420. It was mostly hedge short covering, as most institutions are too slow to react. Still, we now have a low to trade against.

The Fed Minutes are Out, and our central bank is clearly worried about doing too little than too much, when they are doing too much. At least they did six weeks, or 4,000 Dow points ago. The inflation goal is still 2.0%. Interest rates will go higher before they go lower.

Equity Inflows Hit a Record Last Week, the third highest week since 2008. Long term investors are willing to bottom fish here, even if the final bottom isn’t found for months.

Bond Liquidity Issues Haunting the Fed, and bids dry up in an endlessly falling market. The matter has been greatly exacerbated by a Fed that is now selling $95 billion a month as part of its quantitative tightening policy. It’s becoming increasingly difficult to move big blocks of bonds in a zero-bid market. Spreads are widening and size is shrinking. The bad news is that the worst is yet to come.

You Just Got an 8.7% Raise, if you are older than 61 and collecting Social Security. That is the payment increase that kicks in from January. Fortunately, some thoughtful person eons ago tied payments to the CPI, which is now going through the roof. I’m going to Hawaii with my money, even if the increase means that Social Security goes bankrupt by 2034, when I’m 82.

PC Sales Dive 19.5% in Q3, reaching only 68 million units. It’s the steepest decline since PC data collection began 30 years ago. And you wonder why they are selling the chip stocks so aggressively. High inventories are also a big problem. Lenovo was the top seller in the world at 20.2 million units, followed by Hewlett Packard’s (HPE) 17.6 million, and Dell (DELL) at 15.2 million.

Applied Materials Cuts Estimates, in line with everyone else in the industry. The new government export restrictions will cost it $250-$500 million in the current quarter. But how much is already in the price? Buy (AMAT) on dips.

Home Financing
Pours into 5/1 ARMS, which can be had for a doable 5.56%. That compares to over 7.0% for the 30-year fixed, the highest since 2006. It will be low enough to keep homebuilders on life support for a couple of years Avoid (LEN) and (KBH).

REITS are Still Getting Slaughtered, with the plunge in the bond market today to multidecade lows. The REIT Index is down 30% this year, while the (SPY) is off only 21%. Real Estate Investment Trusts do best when interest rates are low. Too many investors piled into REITS in a desperate reach for yield. There’s a great trade here someday, but not yet.

My Ten-Year View

When we come out the other side of pandemic and the recession, we will be perfectly poised to launch into my new American Golden Age, or the next Roaring Twenties. With oil in a sharp decline and technology hyper-accelerating, there will be no reason not to. The Dow Average will rise by 800% to 240,000 or more in the coming decade. The America coming out the other side will be far more efficient and profitable than the old. Dow 240,000 here we come!

On Monday, October 17 at 8:30 AM, the New York Empire State Manufacturing Index for September is released.

On Tuesday, October 18 at 7:00 AM, the D for September is out.

On Wednesday, October 19 at 8:30 AM, Housing Starts and Permits for September are published.

On Thursday, October 20 at 8:30 AM, Weekly Jobless Claims are announced. At 10:00 AM, we get Existing Home Sales for September.

On Friday, October 21 at 2:00 PM, the Baker Hughes Oil Rig Count is out.

As for me, it was in 1986 when the call went out at the London office of Morgan Stanley for someone to undertake an unusual task. They needed someone who knew the Middle East well, spoke some Arabic, was comfortable in the desert, and was a good rider.

The higher-ups had obtained an impossible-to-get invitation from the Kuwaiti Royal family to take part in a camel caravan into the Dibdibah Desert. It was the social event of the year.

More importantly, the event was to be attended by the head of the Kuwait Investment Authority, who ran over $100 billion in assets. Kuwait had immense oil revenues, but almost no people, so the bulk of their oil revenues were invested in western stock markets. An investment of goodwill here could pay off big time down the road.

The problem was that the US had just launched air strikes against Libya, destroying the dictator, Muammar Gaddafi’s royal palace, our response to the bombing of a disco in West Berlin frequented by US soldiers. Terrorist attacks were imminently expected throughout Europe.

Of course, I was the only one who volunteered.

My managing director didn’t want me to go, as they couldn’t afford to lose me. I explained that in reviewing the range of risks I had taken in my life, this one didn’t even register. The following week found me in a first-class seat on Kuwait Airways headed for a Middle East in turmoil.

A limo picked me up at the Kuwait Hilton, just across the street from the US embassy, where I occupied the presidential suite. We headed west into the desert.

In an hour, I came across the most amazing sight - a collection of large tents accompanied by about 100 camels. Everyone was wearing traditional Arab dress with a ceremonial dagger. I had been riding horses all my life, camels not so much. So, I asked for the gentlest camel they had.

The camel wranglers gave me a tall female, which was more docile and obedient than the males. Imagine that! Getting on a camel is weird, as you mount them while they are sitting down. My camel had no problem lifting my 180 pounds.

They were beautiful animals, highly groomed, and in the pink of health. Some were worth millions of dollars. A handler asked me if I had ever drunk fresh camel milk, and I answered no, they didn’t offer it at Safeway. He picked up a metal bowl, cleaned it out with his hand, and milked a nearby camel.

He then handed me the bowl with a big smile across his face. There were definitely green flecks of manure floating on the top, but I drank it anyway. I had to lest my host to lose face. At least it was white. It was body temperature warm and much richer than cow’s milk.

The motion of a camel is completely different from a horse. You ride back and forth in a rocking motion. I hoped the trip was short, as this ride had repetitive motion injuries written all over it. I was using muscles I had never used before. Hit your camel with a stick and they take off at 40 miles per hour.

I learned that a camel is a super animal ideally suited for the desert. It can ride 100 miles a day, and 150 miles in emergencies, according to TE Lawrence, who made the epic 600-mile trek to Aquaba in only four weeks in the heat of summer. It can live 15 days without water, converting the fat in its hump.

In ten miles, we reached our destination. The tents went up, clouds of dust rose, the camels were corralled, and the cooking began for an epic feast that night.

It was a sight to behold. Elaborately decorated huge five wide bronze platers were brought overflowing with rice and vegetables, and every part of a sheep you can imagine, none of which was wasted. In the center was a cooked sheep’s head with the top of the skull removed so the brains were easily accessible. We all ate with our right hands.

I learned that I was the first foreigner ever invited to such an event, and the Arabs delighted in feeding me every part of the sheep, the eyes, the brains, the intestines, and gristle. I pretended to love everything, and lied back and thought of England. When they asked how it tasted, I said it was great. I lied.

As the evening progressed, the Johnny Walker Red came out of hiding. Alcohol is illegal in Kuwait, and formal events are marked by copious amounts of elaborate fruit juices. I was told that someone with a royal connection had smuggled in an entire container of whiskey and I could drink all I wanted.

The next morning I was awoken by a bellowing camel and the worst headache in the world. I threw a rock at him to get him to shut up and he sauntered over and peed all over me.

The things I did for Morgan Stanley!

Four years later, Iraq invaded Kuwait. Some of my friends were kidnapped and held for ransom, while others were never heard from again.

The Kuwaiti government said they would pay for the war if we provided the troops, tanks, and planes. So they sold their entire $100 million investment portfolio and gave the money to the US.

Morgan Stanley got the mandate to handle the liquidation, earning the biggest commission in the firm’s history. No doubt, the salesman who got the order was considered a genius, earned a promotion, and was paid a huge bonus.

I spent the year as a Marine Corps captain, flying around assorted American generals and doing the odd special opp. I got shot down and still set off airport metal detectors. No bonus here. But at least I gained insight and an experience into a medieval Bedouin lifestyle that is long gone.

They say success has many fathers. This is a classic example.

You can’t just ride out into the Kuwait desert anymore. It is still filled with mines planted by the Iraqis. There are almost no camels left in the Middle East, long ago replaced by trucks. When I was in Egypt in 2019, I rode a few mangy, pitiful animals held over for the tourists.

When I passed through my London Club last summer, the Naval and Military Club on St. James Square, who’s portrait was right at the front entrance?  None other than that of Lawrence of Arabia.

It turns out we were members of the same club in more ways than one.

Stay healthy,

John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader

 

John Thomas of Arabia

 

Checking Out the Local Camel Milk

This One Will Do

 

Traffic in Arabia

 

 

 

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Mad Hedge Fund Trader

October 14, 2022

Diary, Newsletter, Summary

Global Market Comments
October 14, 2022
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:

(FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 2023 HONOLULU, HAWAII STRATEGY LUNCHEON)

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Mad Hedge Fund Trader

October 14, 2022 - Quote of the Day

Diary, Newsletter, Quote of the Day

“If markets were rational, I would be washing dishes for a living,” said Oracle of Omaha Warren Buffet.

 

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