Global Market Comments
July 6, 2021
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or ALL EYES ON THE FANGS)
(FB), (AAPL), (AMZN), (MSFT), (NFLX), (NVDA), (AMD), (MU)
Global Market Comments
July 6, 2021
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or ALL EYES ON THE FANGS)
(FB), (AAPL), (AMZN), (MSFT), (NFLX), (NVDA), (AMD), (MU)
If you are a believer in the FANGS (FB), (AAPL), (AMZN), (MSFT), (NFLX), with NVIDIA (NVDA) as an add-on, last week was definitely your week.
They rose every day, ending the week with a melt-up of epic proportions. After eight months in the penalty box, tech came back with a vengeance and is now two months into their comeback tour.
The icing on the cake was Facebook’s big win in the antitrust suit from the FTC. That suitably deep-sixes the issue not just for (FB) but all of big tech, possibly for years. The five stocks above now account for a hefty 22% of the S&P 500 (SPY).
The question now on everyone’s mind is what’s next for tech? 25%? 30% 50%? The answer is all of the above, but you have to give it some time, like years.
We are now in an overbought market where big tech has become the cheapest sector. In addition, the global chip shortage promises to get worse before it gets better, with some products seeing a 10X increase in a single generation.
Companies that can’t get the chips they want are resigning products around the chips they can get on the fly.
This has created enormous spillover demand for marginal suppliers like Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) and Micron Technology (MU). It has also accelerated the evolution of technology.
Companies that already have decade-long supply chains already set up, like Tesla, now have a big advantage. That’s why (TSLA) has managed a healthy 27% gain in six weeks.
The severity of the chip shortage is wildly estimated if you look at future design plans of the biggest industries. A tech rally lasting months, if not years, was a totally natural progression.
I’ll tell you who else is dropping the ball. Analysts and strategists are consistently underestimating the strength of the economic recovery and the torrid growth of earnings. They are lagging by about six months. That is why 80% of announcements have delivered upside surprises.
There are more surprises to come.
When markets peaked in April, an eye-popping 92% of shares were above their 50-day moving average. Now, we are only at 52%. That suggests we have another month of excitement before we get another short-term correction.
June Nonfarm Payroll Report comes in hot, up 850,000, an eye-popping 150,000 better than expected. The headline Unemployment Rate moved up slightly to 5.9%. Accommodation gained 269,000, and Food Services & Drinking Places were up 194,000. It was a true Goldilocks number for the stock market, but not the million some had hoped for. My 30% forecast for the Dow Average is looking good.
The Infrastructure Bill extends the hot economy well into 2023 and longer. Analysts better start upgrading now, who have been badly lagging behind the recovery. Tech stocks saw this six weeks ago and began their torrid rally. Buy everything on dips and stick with the barbell strategy to catch all of the rotations.
Rents will continue to go through the roof. Good thing you don’t live in Boise, ID, which is seeing the fastest rent increases in the county at 39% YOY. Of course, having the Micron Technology (MU) HQ there is a major push. Don’t expect any respite. With home prices soaring, rents will get dragged up as prospective buyers are priced out of the market.
Weekly Jobless Claims moderate further, 364,000 Americans filed new claims for unemployment benefits last week - lowest since pandemic. Still elevated from a typical pre-pandemic week when we would see about 210,000 claims.
Softbank’s capital flooding into Crypto, with Japan's SoftBank Group Corp has invested $200 million in Mercado Bitcoin, one of the largest cryptocurrency exchanges in Latin America signaling the start of the first phase of big institutional money hoping to take advantage of the digital currency craze.
Goldman Sachs is the top financial pick according to JP Morgan Chase. All cylinders are firing and we’ve just come off a fabulous 15% dip. A move to more sustainable revenue streams, like wealth management, is the reason, which Morgan Stanley did decades ago under my watch. I’m looking for $450 on dips. Buy (GS) on dips.
Morgan Stanley doubles its dividend, now that it has passed the Fed stress test and the tethers are off. It also announced a share buyback of $12 billion over the next year which may be increased. Buy (MS) on dips.
S&P Case Shiller National Home Price Index for April hits new high, up 14.6%, the biggest increase in 30 years. Phoenix leads at +22.3%, followed by San Diego at +21.6% and Seattle at +20.2%. The numbers run from incredible to unbelievable.
CRISPR Therapeutics goes through the roof, up 12% at the highs, on successful drug trials by Intellia Therapeutics (NTLA) and Regeneron (REGN). The Mad Hedge Biotech Letter core holding provided the gene-editing technology behind the 45% gain in (NTLA) today. It enabled the 85% elimination of a rare inherited fatal liver disease, transthyretin amyloidosis. Say that fast three times. Buy (CRSP) on dips. With Editas, there are only three small companies that have a monopoly here.
Facebook wins antitrust action, a federal judge dismissing an FTC action against the company. The move set the entire tech sector on fire. It looks like all of NASDAQ is going to much higher highs. I bet you had a great day. The court found that (FB) did not enjoy a monopoly which might have forced them to sell off Instagram and WhatsApp.
My Ten-Year View
When we come out the other side of pandemic, we will be perfectly poised to launch into my new American Golden Age, or the next Roaring Twenties. With interest rates still at zero, oil cheap, there will be no reason not to. The Dow Average will rise by 400% to 120,000 or more in the coming decade. The American coming out the other side of the pandemic will be far more efficient and profitable than the old. Dow 120,000 here we come!
My Mad Hedge Global Trading Dispatch profit reached 0.71% gain so far in June on the heels of a spectacular 8.13% profit in May. That leaves me 100% in cash.
My 2021 year-to-date performance appreciated to 68.60%. The Dow Average is up 13.7% so far in 2021.
I spent the week sitting in 100% cash, waiting for a better entry point on the long side. Up this much this year, there is no reason to reach for the marginal trade, then maybe instead of the certainty. I’ll leave that for the Millennials.
That brings my 11-year total return to 491.15%, some 2.00 times the S&P 500 (SPX) over the same period. My 11-year average annualized return now stands at an unbelievable 42.40%, easily the highest in the industry.
My trailing one-year return exploded to positively eye-popping 112.59%. I truly have to pinch myself when I see numbers like this. I bet many of you are making the biggest money of your long lives.
We need to keep an eye on the number of US Coronavirus cases at 33.7 million and deaths topping 606,000, which you can find here.
The coming week will be a weak one on the data front.
On Monday, July 5, markets are closed for the US Independence Day celebration.
On Tuesday, July 6 at 10:00 AM, the ISM Non-Manufacturing Index for June is released.
On Wednesday, July 7 at 10:00 AM, the Federal Open Market Committee Meeting from the last meeting are published.
On Thursday, July 8 at 8:30 AM, the Weekly Jobless Claims are published.
On Friday, July 9 at 2:00 PM, we learn the Baker-Hughes Rig Count.
As for me, with all the hiking I have been doing during the pandemic, I have been listening to a lot of WWII audio books lately. That reminds me of an old friendship I had with Toshiro Mifune, then the most movie famous star in Japan.
Mifune was drafted into the Japanese army during WWII where he served as an aerial reconnaissance photographer. After the war, that led him to work as a cameraman at Toho Productions, then the largest movie company in Japan.
A friend submitted his photo with an application for a casting call without his knowledge, and Toshiro, a good-looking guy, was one of 48 picked out of 4,000. He then met the legendary director, Akia Kurosawa, and the two launched the golden age of Japanese cinema in the late 1940s.
In just a couple of years, they produced blockbuster classic films like the Seven Samurai, Rashomon, and Throne of Blood, all of which are now required viewing by every American film school, and where Mifune demonstrated his impressive skills with a sword he picked up in the army.
I met Toshiro late in his career when he was cast as Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto for the 1976 Universal movie Midway. The problem was that Mifune couldn’t speak a word of English. I was brought in to bring Toshiro up to par in a crash course held at his west Tokyo mansion every afternoon seven days a week. We became good friends.
After a heroic effort, Mifune’s English was still awful, so the producers brought in a voice actor to dub Mifune’s part in Midway. That was Paul Frees, who provided the voice for the Disneyland’s Haunted House and Pirates of the Caribbean rides, as well as the cartoon Boris Badenov. His voice is still attached to those rides today, and I recognize it every time I take the kids.
Midway was a huge success and Mifune’s next big role was to play Commander Mitamura in Stephen Spielberg’s 1941. He followed that up with a role as Toranaga in James Clavell’s 1980 miniseries, Shogun, another old friend. (Clavell is a story for another day). My tutoring skills came back into demand once again, with better results.
Mifune died in 1997 at 77 and I miss him still.
Stay healthy,
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
Global Market Comments
July 4, 2021
Fiat Lux
SPECIAL FOURTH OF JULY ISSUE
Featured Trade:
(COULD YOU QUALIFY TO BECOME A U.S. CITIZEN?)
Today’s Fourth of July celebration brings back memories of my late wife’s campaign to become an American citizen 25 years ago. Kyoko originally came from Japan.
Part of the process required a verbal quiz about U.S. history and government. Our family spent a year energetically prepping her, with nightly grillings over dinner about the most obscure details of our independent form of government. She took cram courses and read a dozen prep books.
By the time the test day came, she was a veritable constitutional law scholar, and any one of us could have qualified for a seat on the Supreme Court.
I drove her up to the Federal Building in Santa Rosa, California, with the greatest trepidation. As the interviewing officer entered, the tension in the room was so thick, you could cut it with a knife.
There were only three questions:
1) What colors are in the American flag? (Answer: red, white, and blue).
2) Who was the first general of the U.S. army? (Answer: George Washington).
(3 What are the three branches of government? (Answer: legislative, executive, and judicial).
I was stunned.
All that work and she got a test that a child could pass. Two months later, we were in an auditorium on San Francisco’s posh Nob Hill with 1,500 others to be sworn in by a federal judge. By tradition, the ceremony is led by the oldest English applicant.
In 2008, the Bush administration revamped the test to make it a little harder in an attempt to keep immigrants out.
Here are some sample questions:
1) Who wrote the Articles of Confederation? (Answer: Alexander Hamilton).
2) How many seats are in the House of Representatives? (Answer: 435 voting, six nonvoting).
3) How many amendments are there to the Constitution? (Answer: 27).
Whoa!
I’m not sure I could pass this test. Just as my SAT scores are probably too low to get into a decent university today, I’m not sure that I could meet the standard to become a citizen either. But over 1 million immigrants did last year.
Happy Independence Day to all.
The Swearing-in Ceremony in 1997
Global Market Comments
July 2, 2021
Fiat Lux
SPECIAL EARLY RETIREMENT ISSUE
Featured Trade:
(HOW TO JOIN THE EARLY RETIREMENT STAMPEDE)
Global Market Comments
July 1, 2021
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(A VERY BRIGHT SPOT IN REAL ESTATE)
I feel obliged to reveal one corner of this bubbling market that might actually make sense.
By 2050, the population of California will soar from 39 million to 50 million, and that of the US from 330 million to 400 million, according to data released by the US Census Bureau and the CIA Fact Book (check out the two population pyramids below).
That means enormous demand for the low end of the housing market, apartments in multi-family dwellings.
Many of our new citizens will be cash-short immigrants. They will be joined by generational demand for limited rental housing by 65 million Gen Xers and 85 million Millennials enduring a lower standard of living than their parents and grandparents.
These people aren't going to be living in cardboard boxes under freeway overpasses.
If you have any millennial kids of your own (I have three!), you may have noticed that they are far less acquisitive and materialistic than earlier generations.
They would rather save their money for a new iPhone than a mortgage payment. Car ownership is plunging, as the “sharing” economy takes over.
This explains why the number of first-time homebuyers, only 32% of the current market now, is near the lowest on record.
It’s not like they could buy if they wanted to.
Remember that this generation is almost the most indebted in history, with $1.6 trillion in student loans outstanding.
They don’t care. Coming of age since the financial crisis, to them, homeownership means falling prices, default, and bankruptcy. Bring on the “renter” generation!
The trend towards apartments also fits neatly with the downsizing needs of 85 million retiring Baby Boomers.
As they age, boomers are moving from an average home size of 2,500 sq. ft. down to 1,000 sq ft condos and eventually 100 sq. ft. rooms in assisted living facilities.
The cumulative shrinkage in demand for housing amounts to about 4 billion sq. ft. a year, the equivalent of a city the size of San Francisco.
In the aftermath of the economic collapse, rents are now rising dramatically, and vacancies rates are shrinking, boosting cash flows for apartment building owners.
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac Financing is still abundantly available at the lowest interest rates on record. Institutions combing the landscape for low volatility cash flows and limited risk are starting to pour money in.
Run the numbers on the multi-dwelling investment opportunities in your town. You’ll find that the net after-tax yields beat almost anything available in the financial markets.
"The difference between a Tesla and all of its competitors is the difference between an iPod and a cassette player," said Harvard Law fellow Vivek Wadhwa.
Global Market Comments
J Read more
Global Market Comments
June 29, 2021
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(RIGHTSIZING YOUR TRADING)
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