Global Market Comments
January 23, 2015
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(STOCKS TO BUY AT THE BOTTOM),
(CRASH TESTING THE TESLA), (TSLA)
Tesla Motors, Inc. (TSLA)
Global Market Comments
January 23, 2015
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(STOCKS TO BUY AT THE BOTTOM),
(CRASH TESTING THE TESLA), (TSLA)
Tesla Motors, Inc. (TSLA)
My friend and esteemed colleague, Mad Day Trader Jim Parker, spent the weekend perusing hundreds of long term charts. He was assembling a short list of attractive names to buy after the next major sell off.
I am not talking about a modest 4% decline. Even a textbook 10% won?t get his attention. I?m talking about the kind of gut churning, rip your face off, time to change the shorts panic that you only see in your worst nightmares.
Keep in mind that Jim is a technical and momentum analyst. He doesn?t know the CEO?s, hasn?t done the channel checks, nor has he gone through the balance sheets and income statements with a fine tooth comb. That is my job.
These are picks that are simply interesting on a chart basis only. Here they are, with ticker symbols included. For specific upside targets, please contact Jim directly.
BUY (KITE) Kite Pharmaceuticals
BUY (PCYC) Pharmacyclics, Inc.
BUY (AGN) Allergan
BUY (ACT) Actavis
BUY (PANW) Palo Alto Networks
BUY (GS) Goldman Sachs
BUY?(BRKA) Berkshire Hathaway
BUY?(SMH) Market Vectors Semiconductors Index
BUY?(MMM) 3M Co.
BUY?(DIS) Walt Disney Co.
BUY?(SWKS) Skyworks Solutions
BUY?(LNG) Cheniere Energy
Keep in mind that companies with great fundamentals often have fantastic charts as well. This is why you often have researchers and technicians frequently making identical recommendations.
One approach might be to trade around these over time, but only from the long side. Another might be to enter deep out-of-the-money limit orders to buy in case we get a mini flash crash in your favorite name.
While the Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader focuses on investments over a one week to six-month time frame, Mad Day Trader will exploit money-making opportunities over a brief ten minute to three day window. It is ideally suited for day traders, but can also be used by long-term investors to improve market timing for entry and exit points.
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader is written by me, John Thomas, who you may have met during my recent series of conferences in the southern hemisphere.
I use a combination of deep, long term fundamental research, technical analysis and a global network of contacts to generate great investment ideas. The target holding period can be anywhere from three days to six months, although if something fortuitously doubles in a day, I don?t need to be told twice to take a profit (yes, this happens sometimes).
Last year, I issued some 200 Trade Alerts, of which 80% were profitable.
The Mad Day Trader is a separate, but complimentary service run by my Chicago based friend, Jim Parker. He uses a dozen proprietary short-term technical and momentum indicators he developed himself to generate buy and sell signals.
These will be sent to you by email for immediate execution. During normal trading conditions, you should receive three to five alerts and updates a day. The target holding period can be anywhere from a few minutes to three days.
Jim issues far more alerts and updates than I, possibly as many as 1,000 a year. He also uses far tighter stop loss limits, given the short-term nature of his strategy. The goal is to keep losses miniscule so you can always live to fight another day.
You will receive the same instructions for order execution, like ticker symbols, entry and exit points, targets, stop losses, and regular real time updates, as you do from the Mad Hedge Fund Trader. At the end of each day, a separate short-term model portfolio will be posted on the website for both strategies.
Jim Parker is a 40-year veteran of the wild and wooly trading pits in Chicago. Suffice it to say, Jim knows which end of a stock to hold up. I have followed his work for yonks, and can?t imagine a better partner in the serious business of making money for you, the reader.
Together, the?Mad Hedge Fund Trader?and the?May Day Trader?comprise?Mad Hedge Fund Trader PRO, which is for sale on my website for $4,500 a year.
You can upgrade your existing Global Trading Dispatch service, to include the Mad Day Trader. For more information, please call my loyal assistant, Nancy, in Florida at 888-716-1115 or 813-388-2904, or email her directly at?support@madhedgefundtrader.com.
Global Market Comments
January 22, 2015
Fiat Lux
SPECIAL GOLD ISSUE
Featured Trade:
(IS THE BULL MARKET IN GOLD BACK?),
(GLD), (GDX), (SIL), (ABX), (REMX), (SLV),
(ANOTHER NAIL IN THE NUCLEAR COFFIN),
(NLR), (CCJ)
SPDR Gold Shares (GLD)
Market Vectors Gold Miners ETF (GDX)
Global X Silver Miners ETF (SIL)
Barrick Gold Corporation (ABX)
Market Vectors Rare EarthStrat Mtls ETF (REMX)
iShares Silver Trust (SLV)
Market Vectors Uranium+Nuclear Engy ETF (NLR)
Cameco Corporation (CCJ)
After a prolonged, four year hibernation, it appears that the gold bulls are at long last back.
Long considered nut cases, crackpots and the wearers of tin hats, lovers of the barbarous relic have just enjoyed the first decent trading month in a very long time.
The question for the rest of us is whether there is something real and sustainable going on here, or whether the current rally will end with yet another whimper, to be sold into.
To find the answer, you?ll have to read until the end of this story.
Let me recite all the reasons that perma bulls used to buy the yellow metal.
1) Obama is a socialist and is going to nationalize everything in sight, prompting a massive flight of capital that will send the US dollar crashing.
2) Hyperinflation is imminent and the return of ruinous double digit price hikes will send investors fleeing into the precious metals and other hard assets, the last true store of value.
3) The Federal Reserve?s aggressive monetary expansion through quantitative easing will destroy the economy and the dollar, triggering an endless bid for gold, the only true currency.
4) To protect a collapsing greenback, the Fed will ratchet up interest rates, causing foreigners to dump the half of our national debt they own, causing the bond market to crash.
5) Taxes will skyrocket to pay for the new entitlement state, the government?s budget deficit will explode, and burying a sack of gold coins in your backyard is the only safe way to protect your assets.
6) A wholesale flight out of paper assets of all kind will cause the stock market to crash. Remember those Dow 3,000 forecasts?
7) Misguided government policies and oppressive regulation will bring the Armageddon, and you will need gold coins to bribe the border guards to get out of the country. You can also sew them into the lining of your jacket to start a new life abroad, presumably under an assumed name.
Needless to say, it didn?t exactly pan out that way. The end-of-the-world scenarios that one regularly heard at Money Shows, Hard Asset Conferences, and other dubious sources of investment advice all proved to be so much bunk.
I know, because I was a regular speaker on this circuit. I alone, a voice in the darkness, begged people to buy stocks at the beginning of the greatest bull markets of all time, which was then, only just getting started.
Eventually, I ruffled too many feathers with my politically incorrect views, and they stopped inviting me back. I think it was my call that rare earths (REMX) were a bubble that was going to collapse was the weighty stick that finally broke the camel?s back.
So, here we are, five years later. The Dow Average has gone from 7,000 to 18,000. The dollar has blasted through to a 12 year high against the Euro (FXE). The deficit has fallen by 75%. Gold has plummeted from $1,920 to $1,100. And no one has apologized to me, telling me that I was right all along, despite the fact that I am from California.
Welcome to the investment business.
Except that now, gold is worth another look. It has rallied a robust $200 off the bottom in a mere two months. Some of the most frenetic action was seen in the gold miners (GDX), where shares soared by as much as 50%. Even mainstay Barrick Gold (ABX) managed a 30% revival.
The gold bulls are now looking for their last clean shirt, sending suits out to the dry cleaners, and polishing their shoes for the first time in ages, about to hit the road to deliver almost forgotten sales pitches once again.
The news flow has certainly been gold friendly in recent weeks. Technical analysts were the first to raise the clarion call, noting that a string of bad news failed to push gold to new lows. Charts started putting in the rounding, triple bottoms that these folks love to see.
The New Year stampede into bonds gave it another healthy push. One of the long time arguments against the barbarous relic is that it pays no yield or dividend, and therefore has an opportunity cost.
Well guess what? With ten year paper now paying a scant 0.40% in Germany, 0.19% in Japan, and an eye popping -0.04% in Switzerland, nothing else pays a yield anymore either. That means the opportunity cost of owning precious metals has disappeared.
Then a genuine black swan appeared out of nowhere, improving gold?s prospects. The Swiss National Bank?s doffing of its cap against the Euro (FXE) ignited an instant 20% revaluation of the Swiss franc (FXF).
In addition to wiping out a number of hedge funds and foreign exchange brokers around the world, they shattered confidence in the central bank. And if you can?t hide in the Swiss franc, where can you?
This all accounts for the $200 move we have just witnessed.
So now what?
From here, the picture gets a little murky.
Certainly, none of the traditional arguments in favor of gold ownership are anywhere to be seen. There is no inflation. In fact, deflation is accelerating.
The dollar seems destined to get stronger, not weaker. There is no capital flight from the US taking place. Rather, foreigners are throwing money at the US with both hands, escaping their own collapsing economies and currencies.
And once global bond markets top out, which has to be soon, the opportunity cost of gold ownership returns with a vengeance. You would think that with bond yields near zero we are close to the bottom, but I have been wrong on this so far.
All of which adds up to the likelihood that the present gold rally is getting long in the tooth, and probably only has another $50-$100 to go, from which it will return to the dustbin of history, and possibly new lows.
I am not a perma bear on gold. There is no need to dig up your remaining coins and dump them on the market, especially now that the IRS has a mandatory withholding tax on all gold sales. I do believe that when inflation returns in the 2020?s, the bull market for gold will return for real.
You can expect newly enriched emerging market central banks to raise their gold ownership to western levels, a goal that will require them to buy thousands of tons on the open market.
Gold still earns a permanent bid in countries with untradeable currencies, weak banks, and acquisitive governments, like China and India, still the world?s largest buyers.
Remember, too, that they are not making gold anymore, and that all of the world?s easily accessible deposits have already been mined. The breakeven cost of opening new mines is thought to be around $1,400 an ounce, so don?t expect any new sources of supply anytime soon.
These are the factors which I think will take gold to the $3,000 handle by the end of the 2020?s, which means there is quite an attractive annualized return to be had jumping in at these levels. Clearly, that?s what many of today?s institutional buyers are thinking.
Sure, you could hold back and try to buy the next bottom. Oh, really? How good were you at calling the last low, and the one before that?
Certainly, incrementally scaling in around this neighborhood makes imminent sense for those with a long-term horizon, deep pockets and a big backyard.
Global Market Comments
January 21, 2015
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(JANUARY 21 GLOBAL STRATEGY WEBINAR),
(THE TECHNICAL/FUNDAMENTAL TUG OF WAR: WHO WILL WIN?)
(MAKE YOUR NEXT KILLING IN AFRICA),
(AFK), (GAF)
Market Vectors Africa ETF (AFK)
SPDR S&P Emerging Middle East&Afr ETF (GAF)
Global Market Comments
January 20, 2015
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(THE YEAR OF THE BLACK SWAN),
(FXF), (FXE), (EUO)
(THE PRICE OF STARDOM AT DAVOS),
(WILL GOLD COINS SUFFER THE FATE OF THE $10,000 BILL), (GLD),
(SIGN UP NOW FOR TEXT MESSAGING OF TRADE ALERTS)
CurrencyShares Swiss Franc ETF (FXF)
CurrencyShares Euro ETF (FXE)
ProShares UltraShort Euro (EUO)
SPDR Gold Shares (GLD)
I?ve just spent the entire morning on the phone, and it?s clear that thousands of individuals, hedge funds and brokers have just been wiped out as a result of The Swiss National Bank?s surprise move to remove its cap against the Euro.
This is a black swan on steroids.
And it hasn?t just been Swiss franc positions that have been bedeviling traders. You can add to the list bonds, energy, and this week, financial stocks as well. All of a sudden, the world seems to have gone mad.
The great flaw in the management of big brokers and hedge funds is that they base their risk models on historic data. It is rare to see a foreign currency move more than 1% against the US dollar in a day. You might see that one-day a year.
Risk models, and margin requirements, are therefore based on this assumption. To bomb proof themselves, margin departments might require clients to post collateral assuming that a 2% or even a 3% move in a currency will happen tomorrow.
Even with an ultra conservative 3% margin requirement, a house would only be protected by a move in the underlying of 33%. Any move greater than that, the customer account is completely wiped out, leaving the broker on the hook for the balance of the loss if they can?t get clients to pony up more money.
Of course, US based brokers can always sue their former clients and get their money back that way. But that is a three-year process. Just ask anyone who went through the whole MF Global disaster.
As a former broker myself, I can tell you that clients wiped out by margin calls have a bad habit of disappearing, changing their names and moving to unpronounceable countries to bury the paper trail, or move beyond the reach of extradition treaties. So good luck with that one.
After speaking to several foreign exchange traders, it seems that the first tick after the SNB?s announcement was up a staggering 40% from the last print. The world had stop loss orders to sell Euros as market, and this was the fill they got.
It gets worse. Some brokers, particularly small, undercapitalized foreign ones, were only demanding 0.5% margin or less. These guys are toast, but it may take weeks to find out exactly who.
The news services this morning are ablaze with such losses. Citibank (C) has admitted to a $150 million hickey. Very conservative Interactive Brokers has fessed up to a $120 million hit. FXCM is thought to be out $225 million. All of a sudden, foreign exchange brokers everywhere are for sale at fire sale prices.
These aren?t just some interesting, entertaining and colorful market anecdotes that I?m providing you. The debacle is so severe that it has cast a black cloud over all asset classes.
You see this in the sharply diminished trading volumes in all instruments, from stocks, to options, to futures contracts and exchange traded funds.
If you have just heard of a colleague or a counterparty who has just gone under, trading any of the recent straight line one way moves, guess what? You don?t go out and bet the ranch.
Your risk appetite has been diminished for weeks, if not months. In fact, you may not want to trade at all. This is not good for markets of any description.
I have been through many of these. The best thing to do is to shrink your book, hedge up what?s left, and put your more aggressive tendencies on hold. You may have noticed that the model portfolio for my Trade Alert service has just done exactly that.
Come back only when it?s safe to play, and the markets gets easy again.
Global Market Comments
January 16, 2015
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(SWISS SURPRISE RATTLES MARKETS)
(FXF), (FXE), (EUO)
(FRIDAY, APRIL 3 HONOLULU, ALASKA, WASHINGTON, OREGON, BRITISH COLUMBIA, JAPAN, AND CHINA STRATEGY LUNCHEON)
CurrencyShares Swiss Franc ETF (FXF)
CurrencyShares Euro ETF (FXE)
ProShares UltraShort Euro (EUO)
It was one of those moves that appeared so gigantic and so unreal that you had to blink, while checking the cables on the back of your computer and your broadband connection.
The Swiss franc has just skyrocketed by 17% against the dollar in one tick.
First the bad news: the rent on my summer chalet in Zermatt, Switzerland had just risen by 17%.
And the good news? Holders of the ProShares Ultra Short Euro ETF (EUO), which I have been pounding the table on for the past seven months, just instantly appreciated by nearly 10%.
In a market that rarely sees moves of more than 1% a day, 17% is positively earth shaking, if not unbelievable.
A quick scan of my Bloomberg revealed that the Swiss National Bank had eliminated its cap against the Euro. Until now, the central bank had been buying Euros and selling Swiss francs to keep its own currency from appreciating.
This was to subsidize domestic exports of machinery, watches, cheese, and chocolate with an artificially undervalued currency.
The SNB?s move essentially converts the country to a free float with its currency, hence the sudden revaluation. Switzerland has thus run up the white flag in the currency wars, the inevitable outcome for small countries in this game.
One wonders why the Swiss made the move. Their emergency action immediately knocked 10% off the value of the Swiss stock market (which is 40% banks), and 20% off some single names.
I was kind of pissed when I heard the news. Usually I get a heads up from someone in a remote mountain phone booth when something is up in Switzerland. Not this time. There wasn?t even any indication that they were thinking of such a desperate act. Even IMF Director, Christine Lagarde, confessed a total absence of advance notice.
Apparently, the Swiss knew that eliminating the cap would have such an enormous market impact that they could not risk any leaks whatsoever.
This removes the world?s largest buyer of Euro?s (FXE) from the market, so the beleaguered currency immediately went into free fall. The last time I checked, the (FXE) had hit a 12 year low at $114, and the (EUO) was pawing at an all time high.
My prediction of parity for the Euro against the greenback, made only a few weeks ago in my 2015 Annual Asset Review (click here) were greeted as the ravings of a Mad man. Now it looks entirely doable, sooner than later.
The Germans have to be thinking ?There but for the grace of God go I?. If the European Community?s largest member exited the Euro, which has been widely speculated, the new Deutschmark would instantly get hit with a 20% appreciation, then another, and another.
Your low end, entry level Mercedes would see its price jump from $40,000 to $80,000. Kiss the German economy goodbye. Political extremism to follow.
There was another big beneficiary of the Swiss action today. Gold (GLD) had its best day in years, at one point popping a gob smacking $40. After losing its way for years, the flight to safety bid finally found the barbarous relic.
It seems there is nowhere else to hide.
By the way, the rent on my Swiss chalet may not be going up that much. My landlord has already emailed me that whatever increase I suffer in the currency will be offset by a decline in the cost in local currency terms.
It seems that the almost complete disappearance of Russians from the European tourism market during the coming summer, thanks to the oil induced collapse of their economy, is emerging as a major drag on Alpine luxury rentals.
That?s the way it is in the currency world. What you make in one pocket, gets picked out of the other.
Global Market Comments
January 15, 2015
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(2014 TRADE ALERT REVIEW),
(FXE), (EUO), (SPY), (AAPL), (GILD),
?(F), (GM), (TLT), (UNG), (VIX), (VXX)
CurrencyShares Euro ETF (FXE)
ProShares UltraShort Euro (EUO)
SPDR S&P 500 ETF (SPY)
Apple Inc. (AAPL)
Gilead Sciences Inc. (GILD)
Ford Motor Co. (F)
General Motors Company (GM)
iShares 20+ Year Treasury Bond (TLT)
United States Natural Gas ETF (UNG)
VOLATILITY S&P 500 (^VIX)
iPath S&P 500 VIX ST Futures ETN (VXX)
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