Global Market Comments
October 26, 2023
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(LAST CHANCE TO ATTEND THE OCTOBER 31 MIAMI, FLORIDA STRATEGY LUNCHEON)
(THE REAL ESTATE MARKET IN 2030),
(XHB), (ITB), (LEN),
(INDUSTRIES YOU WILL NEVER HEAR FROM ME ABOUT)
Global Market Comments
October 26, 2023
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(LAST CHANCE TO ATTEND THE OCTOBER 31 MIAMI, FLORIDA STRATEGY LUNCHEON)
(THE REAL ESTATE MARKET IN 2030),
(XHB), (ITB), (LEN),
(INDUSTRIES YOU WILL NEVER HEAR FROM ME ABOUT)
Come join me for lunch for the Mad Hedge Fund Trader’s Global Strategy Update, which I will be conducting in Miami, Florida at 12:00 PM on Tuesday, October 31, 2023. A three-course lunch is included.
I’ll be giving you my up-to-date view on stocks, bonds, currencies commodities, precious metals, and real estate.
And to keep you in suspense, I’ll be throwing a few surprises out there too. Enough charts, tables, graphs, and statistics will be thrown at you to keep your ears ringing for a week. Tickets are available for $307.
I’ll be arriving early and leaving late in case anyone wants to have a one-on-one discussion, or just sit around and chew the fat about the financial markets.
The lunch will be held at an exclusive hotel in the Coconut Grove sector of Miami, the details of which will be emailed to you with your purchase confirmation.
I look forward to meeting you, and thank you for supporting my research.
To purchase tickets for this luncheon, please click here.
A number of analysts, and even some of those in the real estate industry, think that there will never be a recovery in residential real estate. With 8.0% mortgage rates who can blame them.
Long time readers of this letter know too well that I went hugely negative on the sector in late 2005, when I unloaded all of my holdings.
However, I believe that “forever” may be on the extreme side. Personally, I believe there will be great opportunities in real estate that run all the way until 2030.
Let's back up for a second and review where the great bull market of 1950-2007 came from.
That's when a mere 50 million members of the “Greatest Generation”, those born from 1920 to 1945, were chased by 80 million baby boomers born from 1946-1962.
There was a chronic shortage of housing, with the extra 30 million never hesitating to borrow more to pay higher prices.
When my parents got married in 1948, they were only able to land a dingy apartment in a crummy Los Angeles neighborhood because my dad was an ex-Marine sergeant. This is where our suburbs came from.
Since 2005, the tables have turned. There are now 80 million baby boomers attempting to unload dwellings on 65 million generation Xers who earn less than their parents, marking down prices as fast as they can.
As a result, the Federal Reserve thinks that 20% of American homeowners still have either negative equity, or less than 10% equity, which amounts to nearly zero after you take out sales commissions and closing costs.
That comes to 30 million homes. Don't count on selling your house to your kids, especially if they are still living rent-free in the basement.
The good news is that the next bull market in housing has already started.
That's when 85 million Millennials have started competing to buy homes from only 65 million upwardly mobile Gen Xers. Add these two generations together, and you have a staggering 150 million buyers competing for the same housing at the same time!
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will soon be gone, meaning that the 30-year conventional mortgage will cease to exist. All future home purchases will be financed with adjustable-rate mortgages, forcing homebuyers to assume interest rate risk, as they already do in most of the developed world.
For you Millennials just graduating from college now, this is a best-case scenario. People will, no doubt, tell you that you are crazy, that renting is the only safe thing to do, and that home ownership is for suckers.
That's what people told me when I bought my first New York coop in 1982 at one-tenth its current market price.
Just remember to sell by 2035 because that's when the next intergenerational residential real estate collapse is expected to ensue. That will leave the next, Generation Z homeowners, holding the bag, as your grandparents are now.
The focus of this letter is to show people how to make money through investing in fast growing, highly profitable companies which have stiff, long term macroeconomic winds at their backs.
That means I ignore a large part of the US economy, possibly as much as 70%, whose time has passed and are headed for the dustbin of history.
According to the Department of Labor's Bureau of Labor Statistics, the seven industries listed below are least likely to generate positive job growth in the next decade.
As most of these stocks are already bombed out, it is way too late to short them. As an investor, you should consider this a “no go” list. I have added my comments, not all of which should be taken seriously.
1) Realtors - The number of realtors is only down 10% from its 1.3 million peak in 2006. I have always been amazed at how realtors who add so little in value take home so much in fees, still around 6% of the gross sales price. Someone is going to figure out how to break this monopoly.
2) Newspapers - these probably won't exist in five years, as five decades of hurtling technological advances have already shrunk the labor force by 90%. Go online or go away.
3) Airline employees - This is your worst nightmare of an industry, as management has no idea what interest rates, fuel costs, or the economy will do, which are the largest inputs into their business. Pilots will eventually work for minimum wage just to keep their flight hours up.
4) Big telecom - Can you hear me now? Nobody uses landlines anymore, leaving these companies with giant corroding copper networks that are costly to maintain. Since cell phone market penetration is 95%, survivors are slugging it out through price competition, cost cutting, and all that annoying advertising.
5) State and Local Government - With employment still at levels private industry hasn't seen since the seventies, firing state and municipal workers will be the principal method of balancing ailing budgets. Expect class sizes to soar to 80 or go entirely online, to put out your own damn fires, and keep the 9 mm loaded and the back door booby trap for home protection.
6) Installation, Maintenance, and Repair - I have explained to my mechanic that the motor in my new electric car has only eleven moving parts, compared to 1,500 in my old clunker, and this won't be good for business. But he just doesn't get it. The winding down of our wars in the Middle East is about to dump a million more applicants into this sector. The last refuge of the trained blue-collar worker is about to get cleaned out.
7) Bank Tellers - Since the ATM made its debut in 1968, this profession has been on a long downhill slide. Banks have lost so much money in the financial crisis, they can't afford to hire humans anymore. It hasn't helped that hundreds of banks have closed during the recession, with many survivors merging to cut costs (read fire more people). Your next bank teller may be a Terminator.
Out With the Old
And in With the New
Global Market Comments
October 25, 2023
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(AN EVENING WITH THE CHINESE INTELLIGENCE SERVICE),
(FXI), (CYB), (BIDU), (CHL), (BYDDF), (CHA)
The current chip war with China brings back memories of my five-decade-long relationship with the People’s Republic of China.
I normally avoid the diplomatic circuit, as the few non-committal comments and soggy appetizers I get aren’t worth the investment of time.
But I jumped at the chance to celebrate the 62nd anniversary of the founding of the People’s Republic of China with San Francisco Consul General Gao Zhansheng.
Happy Birthday, China!
When I casually mention that I survived the Cultural Revolution and interviewed major political figures like Premier Deng Xiaoping, who launched the Middle Kingdom into the modern era, and his predecessor, Zhou Enlai, modern-day Chinese are enthralled. It’s like going to a Fourth of July party and letting drop that I palled around with Thomas Jefferson and Benjamin Franklin.
Five minutes into the great hall, I ran into my old friend Wen, who started out her career with the Chinese Intelligence Service and had made the jump to the Foreign Ministry, as all their best people did. She was passing through town with a visiting trade mission.
When I was touring China in the seventies as a guest of the Bank of China, Wen was assigned as my guide and translator, and we kept in touch over the years. I was assigned a bodyguard who doubled as the driver of a tank-like Russian sedan.
The Cultural Revolution was on, and while the major cities were safe, we ran the risk of running into a renegade band of xenophobic Red Guards, with potentially fatal consequences.
I asked Wen when China was going to float the Yuan. She explained that this is something China knew it had to do, but it wasn’t going to be rushed into by some opportunistic foreign politicians.
If it moves too soon, millions will lose jobs, creating political instability, something the central government wants to avoid at all costs. Many of the largest scale employers were only marginally profitable, and a hike in the renminbi of only a few percent would force them out of business. I pointed out that that was exactly what was happening in the US.
Worth More Than Meets the Eye
I warned that if the Middle Kingdom waited too long, Washington would force them into an appreciation through punitive import duties and anti-dumping actions, as we did with Japan 50 years ago.
It was Nixon’s surprise ban on textile imports in 1971 that finally persuaded Japan to float the yen, then at ¥360. If that didn’t convince the Chinese, then imported inflation would. The longer China delays, the bigger the pop when their currency is finally set free.
Wen then went on the offensive, claiming that Chinese workers were being exploited by American companies keeping wages low. The product that China made for $1, and sold to the US for $2, was then sold by Walmart (WMT) for $20, which kept all the profits.
She pointed out that the Walton family had a combined net worth of $238 billion, more than the total worth of the lower 40% of the US population. This could never happen in China.
I told her that by selling the product at $20, Walmart wiped out another US company that used to make that product domestically and sold it for $40, throwing those people out of work.
Modern Times in China
I then asked Wen what were her country’s plans for its massive foreign exchange reserves, now at $3.2 trillion. She agreed that this was a problem because the reserves were pouring in so fast at an embarrassingly high rate of $10 billion a month and that it was the most rapid accumulation of wealth in history (click here for the data). In any case, reserves have been falling for the past year from a peak of $4.1 trillion.
While it had more than enough Treasury bonds, any attempt to sell might cause their value to collapse and freeze relations with the US. I suggested China should start hedging its gigantic holdings without selling them, or some managers would be facing a firing squad in the future.
China tried to recycle its surpluses by buying foreign companies that produce the natural resources it desperately needs. But takeover attempts were fought tooth and nail as a foreign invasion, or on national security grounds, such as the attempt to buy California’s Unocal in 2005 and Australia’s Oz Minerals in 2012.
It was now using a strategy of buying low profile minority stakes in foreign resource companies. China took a big stake in the Petrobras (PBR) secondary equity offering, which didn’t work out so well, as the company is now facing bankruptcy.
I asked her about the real estate bubble in China that was causing so many foreign investors to lose sleep. She said it was true that sales were slow at some luxury buildings in Beijing and Shanghai, but the great majority of developments were aimed at working people and were filling up as soon as they came on the market.
The 40% down payment demanded by the People’s Bank of China headed off the rampant speculation that brought the American financial system down. Buyers of second homes were required to pay entirely in cash.
Rooms With Views
Wen then complained about the aggressive military stance the US was taking towards China, ringing it in with the Seventh Fleet. Holding a knife so close to the country’s foreign supply line jugular vein made them nervous.
China was basically indefensible. All it would take was the sinking of a few grain ships, and 50 million would starve within a year.
Wen told me there is a school of thought in Beijing that as the country’s economic power grows- it passed Japan to become second in GDP in 2010– that the US will increasingly perceive it as a military threat. This would lead America to mete out the same hostile treatment to China as it has done to Russia since the Ukraine War began.
Walking Softly, But Carrying a Big Stick
I assured her that the Seventh Fleet was there to watch and listen, but to do nothing. It was really in a position to provide a security blanket for allies, like Japan and South Korea, but nothing more. China wasn’t engaging in the belligerent behavior that Russia was at the height of the Cold War, like blockading Berlin, basing missiles in Cuba, stationing fast attack nuclear submarines off our coasts, and invading Afghanistan.
I argued that if China truly has no expansionary intentions, the more we know about you, the better. It is always prudent for a potential adversary to conclude you are not a threat, and that no action is needed.
The more you help the US do that, the better. China is decades behind the US in military technology, and you really have nothing we want. Little more than 200 nuclear weapons without an ICBM or submarine delivery systems were hardly viewed as a major threat.
Wen seemed perturbed that I was aware of her country’s nuclear stockpiles, and asked how I knew this. I said that former CIA director Leon Panetta told me. She said “Oh.” I asked what was that test downing of a satellite in space about, anyway. She didn’t answer.
Looking at the world for the next 30 years, who is the Pentagon going to model and war game against, but China, with its 2.5 million-man army?
Wen countered that the People’s Liberation Army was purely a defensive force. With a 12,000-mile land border, an 11,000-mile coastline, and dubious neighbors like Russia, Iran, and India, they have no other choice. Its ability to project force over great distances, as the US can, is virtually nonexistent.
Its 1979 invasion of Vietnam was about reclaiming ten miles of lost territory. China got involved in Korea only after General Douglas MacArthur threatened to rain atomic bombs on the mainland, losing 2 million men, including Chairman Mao’s son. China could have done a lot more in the Vietnam War, but didn’t, limiting its participation to a supply, logistical, and advisory role.
That’s a Lot of Border to Defend
I then warned that if you really are worried about the Pentagon, you should stop hacking into our computers. She replied that the US started this by emptying out Chinese mainframes many times, and they were only responding in kind.
I said yes, but that China was targeting private companies, like Google (GOOG), Microsoft (MSFT), and Oracle (ORCL) that without military-grade software, were unable to defend themselves. The Chinese agencies involved then used the data to their own commercial advantage.
What Did You Say the Password Was Again?
By the time Wen married, China had already adopted its one-child policy. As much as she wanted more children, she understood the government’s need to adopt such a drastic policy. Without it, the population today would be 1.8 billion, not 1.2 billion, and all of the money that went into buying capital goods would have been spent on food imports instead.
The country would have stagnated at its 1980 per capita income of $100/year. There would have been no Chinese economic miracle. She was very proud of her one son, who was a software engineer at Microsoft (MSFT) in Beijing.
Her husband, a mid-level official at the Ministry of Commerce, fared less well, dying of lung cancer at a relatively early age. The US and Europe had exported their worst polluting industries to China to take advantage of lax environmental controls, turning the air in Beijing into a choking haze.
Sometimes her son would come home from school coughing and wheezing so badly that he couldn’t play outside. The two packs of cigarettes a day her husband smoked didn’t help either.
Imported From the USA
I asked if she recalled our first trip together and a dark cloud came over her face. We were touring a section of Fuzhou when three policemen marched up. They started shouting at Wen that we were in a restricted section of the city where foreigners were not allowed. They started mercilessly beating her with clubs.
I was about to intercede when my late wife, Kyoko, let go with a blood-curdling tirade in Japanese that froze them in their tracks. I saw from the fear in their faces that she had ignited their wartime fear of Japanese authority and the dreaded Kempeitai, or secret police, and they beat a hasty retreat.
To this day, I’m not exactly sure what Kyoko said. We took Wen back to our hotel room and bandaged her up, putting ice on the giant goose egg on her head. When I left, I gave her my copy of HG Well’s A Short History of the World, which she treasured, as the book was then banned in China.
Wen mentioned that she was approaching the mandatory retirement age of 60, and soon would be leaving the Foreign Service. I suggested she move to San Francisco, which offered a thriving Chinese community. She laughed. No matter how much prices had fallen, she could never afford anything here on a Chinese civil servant’s salary.
Wen told me that China was grateful for the billions of dollars that foreigners had poured into her country as a result of my writings. I replied that I was simply trying to show my readers where to make some money, nothing more. It was pure opportunistic self-interest.
One of my early recommendations, Chinese search engine Baidu (BIDU), was up more than tenfold in less than two years. Did she happen to know about any more future Baidu’s? Wen said that she wasn’t that close to the stock market, but that she would get back to me.
I asked Wen if she still had the book I gave her nearly five decades ago. She said it had become a family heirloom and was being passed down through the generations. As she smiled, I noticed the faint scar on her eyebrow from that unpleasantness so long ago.
In view of Wen’s comments, I think you have to pass on investing in China (FXI) for the short term.
Global Market Comments
October 24, 2023
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(POPULATION BOMB ECHOES),
(MOS), (AGU), (WEAT), (CORN), (SOYB), (RJA)
(A SHORT HISTORY OF HEDGE FUNDS)
Legendary Fortune Magazine editor, Winslow Jones, created the first hedge fund out of a shabby office on Broadway Avenue in New York City in 1948 and generated monster returns over the next 20 years.
He got the idea of a 20% performance bonus, now an industry standard, from ancient Phoenician sea captains who kept a fifth of the profits from successful voyages. Jones must have had a historical bent.
Then came the second generation titans, George Soros, Julian Robertson, and Michael Steinhardt, who made their debut in the sixties.
I count myself among the third generation along with Paul Tudor Jones and Louis Bacon, who launched funds in the late eighties when there were still fewer than 200 funds and $25 million was still considered a lot of money.
The really big money showed up in the nineties when the pension funds found them during the 1990s.
After that, we suffered through the many ordeals that followed, including the collapse of Long Term Capital in 1995, the Amaranth blow-up in natural gas in 2006, the Lehman Brothers bankruptcy in 2008, and John Paulson’s hair-raising 50% drawdown in 2011.
Today, there are over 7,000 hedge funds, thought to manage some $2.8 trillion, which dominate all financial markets.
Hedge Funds Do Have Their Advantages
“Wall Street denizens are always ready to suspend disbelief when dubious maneuvers are used to manufacture rising per-share earnings , particularly if these acrobatics producer mergers that generate huge fees for investment bankers,” said Oracle of Omaha, Warren Buffet.
Global Market Comments
October 23, 2023
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or WAS THAT THE CAPITULATION?),
(SPY), (TLT), (TSLA), (NVDA)
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