I have been in the money management business working for a long time-only manager for 18 years, and in this business for 35.? I know you are the real deal.?
I also know many hedge fund managers. Besides Ken Griffin in Chicago at Citadel, who is up 16% year to date, very few are even up for the year.?
I believe in what you do.
Don
Cleveland, OH
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?Everything begins and ends with quantitative easing?, said Jeffrey Gundlach, the CEO of hedge fund Doubleline Capital, and the new bond king.
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Special Note: I?m sending out the Monday letter early today because this content won?t wait.
Sorry to throw up at your Christmas party, but there have been a number of developments that have occurred over the last two days that I think you should know about.
It won?t wait until the Monday newsletter.
The Third Avenue Fund closed its leveraged junk fund to redemptions this morning, highlighting the disappearance of liquidity in the fixed income market.
Then the International Energy Agency (IEA) announced that they see the oil (USO) glut continuing for all of 2016. Crude dove another dollar to a new seven year low.
But they already said exactly the same thing a few weeks ago. Which means the financial markets are really worrying about far bigger things that we just can?t see yet.
Other than that, how was the play Mrs. Lincoln?
Sure, these are one off?s. I?ll tell you what really bothered me.
I watch the Volatility Index (VIX), (XIV) like a hawk.
On Thursday, The S&P 500 (SPY) closed up on the day, but the (VIX) kept gaining as well, closing at its highs. This is never a sign of good things to come.
On Thursday, the Federal Reserve should hike interest rates for the first time in a decade. My concern is that a 25 basis point move has become so widely expected and discounted that the only possible market reaction is a bad one.
What if Janet doesn?t raise? What if she raises by 50 basis points? What if she raises by 25 basis points, but then makes excessively hawkish or dovish comments afterwards? In either case, you can expect the market to drop 5% very quickly.
In other words, we are setting up for an asymmetric move. The possible upside gains are incremental, but the downside risks are huge. That is not a scenario you want to walk into with a big ?RISK ON? portfolio.
Cast all this against a backdrop of the (SPY) decisively breaking both the 50 and the 200-day moving averages this morning, and all of a sudden the sidelines are looking very alluring.
You can tell by the way that the market has been flip flopping every day for a month now that both traders and investors have the daylights scared out of them.
There have been 27 days in a row when we have not seen two consecutive UP days in the (SPY), the longest since 1970.
Everyone is on a hair trigger.
IT GETS WORSE!
On Friday next week, we will see the biggest S&P 500 options expirations in history, some $1.1 trillion worth. More than $670 billion of these are puts, and $215 billion are close to the money.
To see this kind of mega volume unwind two days after the Fed announcement is somewhat unnerving.
This is the time when a lot of annual hedges get rolled over by big hedge and mutual funds. This is going to take place in waning December liquidity. The net effect will be to put a turbocharger on any move that unfolds next week, WHATEVER IT IS!
All of this put my slow grind up into yearend scenario at risk. This is why I just booted out 60% of my model trading portfolio, much at close to cost.
Oil can reverse at anytime and launch one of those screaming, rip-your-face-off $5 short covering rallies. Then everything will be Hunky-Dory and stocks will rally again. There is just no way of knowing. There are too many random variables. It is, in fact, unknowable.
But I am not willing to bet a quarter of my 2015 performance to find out. Your money either.
Sorry, but eight years into the newsletter business, I still think like an actual hedge fund manager. Part of my motivation is to protect my 40% profit this year, which with the indexes all down, is a performance for the ages.
If you are a medium to long-term investor, you can ignore all of this.
We are not entering a recession. We are not launching into a new bear market. Stocks are on track to produce single digit returns in the US next year, and double digit ones in Europe (HEDJ) and Japan (DXJ).
This is just a trading call. I just want to have more cash to take advantage of any extreme price movements headed our way in the near future. High on the list will be buying technology and financials on any big dip, and selling short the (VIX).
After all, I am the Mad Hedge Fund Trader, not the Mad Long Term Investor.
So it might be a good year to take a long Christmas cruise. The balmy climes of the Caribbean are pleasant this time of year, especially if you have kids. You can let them have the run of this ship and not be concerned. There?s nothing like listening to Christmas carols on steel drums. I hear Norwegian Cruise Lines is still offering some great packages (click here for their site).
For a preview of how stock markets behave ahead of single digit years, look at the chart below for the (SPY) for December and January exactly a year ago.
It amounts to a whole lot of nothing, tedious trading in a very narrow range. That?s why I was buying very deep-in-the-money vertical bull debit spreads until three days ago.
Enjoy the cruise!
And Merry Christmas to You Too!
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Featured Trade: (DECEMBER 16 GLOBAL STRATEGY WEBINAR), (THE TECHNICAL/FUNDAMENTAL TUG OF WAR: WHO WILL WIN?) (MAKE YOUR NEXT KILLING IN AFRICA), (AFK), (GAF) (TESTIMONIAL)
Feel like investing in a state sponsor of terrorism? How about a country whose leaders have stolen $400 billion in the last decade and has seen 300 foreign workers kidnapped? Another country lost four wars in the last 40 years.
Still interested? How about a country that suffers the world?s highest AIDS rate, regularly endures insurrections where all of the Westerners are rounded up and massacred, and racked up 5 million dead in a continuous civil war?
Then, Africa is the place for you, the world?s largest source of gold, diamonds, chocolate, and cobalt!
The countries above are Libya, Nigeria, Egypt, and the Congo. Below the radar of the investment community since the colonial days, the Dark Continent has recently been attracting the attention of large hedge funds and private equity firms.
Goldman Sachs has set up Emerging Capital Partners, which has already invested $2 billion there. China sees the writing on the wall, and has launched a latter day colonization effort, taking a 20% equity stake in South Africa?s Standard Bank, the largest on the continent.
In fact, foreign direct investment last year jumped from $53 billion to $61 billion, while cross border M & A leapt from $10.2 billion to $26.3 billion.
The angle here is that all of the headlines above are in the price, that price is very low, and the perceived risk is much greater than actual risk. Price earnings multiples are low single digits, cash flows are huge, and returns of capital within two years are not unheard of.
The reality is that Africa?s 900 million have unlimited demand for almost everything, and there is scant supply, with many firms enjoying local monopolies.
African GDP growth took off like a rocket in 2003, nearly tripling, thanks to the global commodity and precious metals boom and the taming of AIDS with free generic antiretroviral drugs. Equity markets don?t reflect this yet.
The big plays are your classic early emerging market targets, like a rising middle class, banking, telecommunications, electric power, and other infrastructure.
For example, in the last decade, the number of telephones has soared from 350,000 to 10 million. It reminds me of the early days of investing in China in the seventies, when the adventurous only played when they could double their money in two years, because the risks were so high.
This is long term back book stuff and is definitely not for day traders. If you are willing to give up a lot of short-term liquidity for a high return, then look at the Market Vectors Africa Index ETF (AFK), and the SPDR S&P Emerging Middle East & Africa ETF (GAF).
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I had a fascinating dinner last week at Morton?s, San Francisco?s best steak restaurant, with one of John Hamm?s original investors.
You remember John, the legendary Texas oilman who saw fracking coming a mile off and made billions?
Since some of what my friend had to say came true in a matter of days, I thought I?d pass on the essence of our conversation.
The oil storage facility at Cushing, Oklahoma is full, at 480 million barrels. The US Strategic Petroleum Reserve has been full for a long time, with 713 million barrels (36 days of US consumption).
Contangos are exploding. It might as well be the end of the world for the oil industry.
The oil Armageddon is here, and the final flush is upon us.
There is a 50% chance we will bottom at $32/barrel, and another 50% chance that we go all the way down to $20. If we go down to $20, the last three ticks of the move will be $22?.$20?.$22. Then a saw tooth bottom will unfold between $24 and $32 which will last for several months.
There will be many chances to buy this bottom. There isn?t going to be a ?V? shaped bottom in oil this time, like we saw in past energy crashes.
The margin clerks and risk control managers are in control now, so we may see the final low sooner than you think. But it could be some time before we break $40 again to the upside and hold it.
The industry was really drinking the Kool-Aid with both hands to get it this wrong. Ultra low interest rates drove in billions in capital from first time oil investors looking to beat zero interest rates. They also saw China continuing an endless economic boom forever, and the energy demand that went with it.
In the end, they got both the supply and demand sides of the equation completely wrong on a global scale, always a recipe for disaster.
Many of the fields drilled in places like North Dakota would never have been touched during normal times. Then Saudi Arabia came out of left field with a grab for global market share that has yet to play out.
The seeds of this recovery are already evident. Chinese auto sales are up 19% YOY. China is buying all the cheap oil it can to fill up its own strategic oil reserve. Miles driven in the US are already up 4.6% YOY, which is a huge gain.
All of this will contribute to a higher US GDP in 2016.
Once we put in a final bottom in oil, don?t expect $100 a barrel any time soon. The ma and pa investor in the oil patch will not be back in this generation.
Marginal sources, like high cost Canadian tar sands, deep offshore, and some in North Dakota aren?t coming back either. These supplies needed $100/barrel just to break even.
Personally, my friend does not see oil topping $80/barrel this decade. He see?s a $62-$80 trading range persisting for a long time.
As the US has become more energy independent, the geopolitical factors have mattered less and less. That is why oil moved only $1 on an ISIS victory, the Paris attacks, or some other disaster.
To call the bottom in oil, watch the shares of ExxonMobil (XOM), Conoco Phillips (COP), and Occidental Petroleum (OXY). When they revisit their August lows, down 5%-10% down from here, that will be a great time to jump back into the oil space.
None of these companies are going under, and the dividend payouts are now enormous, (XOM) at (3.7%), (COP) at (5.8%), and (OXY) at (4.2%).
Distressed debt is where the smart money is focusing now, where double-digit returns have become common. If the issuer goes bankrupt the equity owners get wiped out while the bondholders get the company for pennies on the dollar.
Energy companies and master limited partnerships (MLP?s) have far and away been the biggest borrowers in the high yield market in recent years.
There is a junk maturity cliff looming, with $145 billion in bonds due for refinancing from 2017-2021. Expect the default ratio to rocket from this year?s 2.8% to 25%. A 12% default rate is a normal peak in a recession.
Individual company research now has a bigger payoff than in any time in history, even the 2008-09 crash.
Small leveraged companies with exposure to the price of oil are toast.
The play is for the toll takers, master limited partnerships that profit from the volume of oil pumped, and not the price of oil. Over time, volumes will increase, and so will the profits at these MLP?s.
In the meantime, everything is getting thrown out with the bathwater, regardless of fundamentals. People just don?t want to be near the space, especially going into yearend book closing.
Nobody wants to be seen as the idiot who owned oil in 2015.
Linn Energy (LINE) is a perfect example of this. It suspended its dividend so it could buy more assets on the cheap. It has plenty of cash, and will be backstopped by Blackrock with additional credit lines, if necessary.
While this raises volatility for the short term, it increases returns over the long term. It?s definitely your ?E? ticket ride.
I pointed out that President Obama did the oil industry the biggest favor in history by dragging his feet on the Keystone Pipeline, and then ultimately killing it. It prevented US consumers from loading the boat with $100/barrel tar sands crude at the top of the market.
My friend conceded that it is unlikely the pipeline would ever be built. The market has moved away.
I have accumulated a variety of odd tastes in my half-century of traveling around the world.
So when I heard we were eating at Morton?s, I brought my own jar of Coleman?s hot English mustard. It makes a medium rare cooked filet mignon taste perfect, but my action always puzzles the waiters. They never have it.
John Hamm gained public notoriety last year when he wrote a $974 million divorce settlement check to is ex wife and she refused to cash the check. I asked if the check ever got cashed?
?She cashed the check,? he said.
Needless to say, my friend picked up the check for the dinner as well. I let him drive my Tesla Model S-1 back to his hotel.
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?The bears have the run of the table here in oil,? said John Kilduff from Again Capital Partners.
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