There's nothing like starting the new year with going back to basics and reviewing the rules that worked so well for us in 2019. Call this the refresher course for Trading 101.

I usually try to catch three or four trend changes a year, which might generate 100-200 trades, and often come in frenzied bursts.

Since I am one of the greatest tightwads that ever walked the planet, I only like to buy positions when we are at the height of despair and despondency, and traders are raining off the Golden Gate Bridge like a winter downpour.

Similarly, I only like to sell when the markets are tripping on steroids and ecstasy and are convinced that they can live forever.

Some 99% of the time, the markets are in the middle, and there is nothing to do but deep research and looking for the next trade. That is the purpose of this letter.

Over the five decades that I have been trading, I have learned a number of tried and true rules which have saved my bacon countless times. I will share them with you today.

1) Don’t over trade. This is the number one reason why individual investors lose money. Look at your trades of the past year and apply the 90/10 rule. Dump the least profitable 90% and watch your performance skyrocket. Then aim for that 10%. Overtrading is a great early retirement plan for your broker, not you.

2) Always use stops. Risk control is the measure of the good hedge fund trader. If you lose all your capital on the lemons, you can’t play when the great trades set up. Consider cash as having an option value.

3) Don’t forget to sell. Date, don’t marry your positions. Remember, hogs get fed and pigs get slaughtered. My late mentor, Barton Biggs, told me to always leave the last 10% of a move for the next guy.

4) You don’t have to be a genius to play this game. If that was required, Wall Street would have run out of players a long time ago.

If you employ risk control and stops, then you can be wrong 40% of the time, and still make a living. That’s a little better than a coin toss. If you are wrong only 30% of the time, you can make millions.

If you are wrong a scant 20% of the time, you are heading a trading desk at Goldman Sachs. If you are wrong a scant 10% of the time, you are running a $20 billion hedge fund that the public only hears about when you pay $100 million for a pickled shark at a modern art auction.

If someone says they are never wrong, as is often claimed on the Internet, run a mile because it is impossible. By the way, I was wrong 15% of the time in 2013. That’s what you’re paying for.

5) This is hard work. Trading attracts a lot of wide-eyed, naïve but lazy people because it appears so easy from the outside. You buy a stock, watch it go up, and make money. How hard is that?

The reality is that successful investing requires twice as much work as a normal job. The more research you put into a trade, the more comfortable you will become, and the more profitable it will be. That’s what this letter is for.

6) Don’t chase the market. If you do, it will turn back and bite you. Wait for it to come to you. If you miss the train, there will be another one along in minutes, hours, days, weeks, or months. Patience is a virtue.

7) Limit Your Losses. When I put on a position, I calculate how much I am willing to lose to keep it. I then put a stop just below there. If I get triggered, I just walk away. Emotion never enters the equation.

Only enter a trade when the risk/ reward is in your favor. You can start at 3:1. That means only risk a dollar to potentially make three.

8) Don’t confuse a bull market with brilliance. I am not smart, just old as dirt.

9) Tape this quote from the great economist and early hedge fund trader of the 1930s, John Maynard Keynes, to your computer monitor: "Markets can remain illogical longer than you can remain solvent." Hang around long enough, and you will see this proven time and again (ten-year Treasuries at 1.38%?!).

10) Don’t believe the media. I know, I used to be one of them. Look for the hard data, the numbers, and you’ll see that often the talking heads, the paid industry apologists, and politicians don’t know what they are talking about (the Gulf oil spill will create a dead zone for decades?)

Average out all the public commentary, and half are bullish and half bearish at any given time. The problem is that they never tell you which one is right (that is my job). When they all go one way, the markets usually go the opposite direction.

11) When you are running a long/short portfolio, 80% of your time is spent managing the shorts. If you don’t want to do the work, then cash beats a short any day of the week.

12) Sometimes the conventional wisdom is right.

13) Invest like a fundamentalist, execute like a technical analyst. This is what all the pros do.

14) Use technical analysis only, and you will buy every rally, sell every dip, and end up broke. That said, learn what an “outside reversal” is, and who the hell is that Italian guy, Leonardo Fibonacci.

15) The simpler a market approach, the better it works. Everyone talks about “buy low and sell high”, but few actually do it. All black boxes eventually blow up, if they were ever there in the first place.

16) Markets are made up of people. Understand and anticipate how they think, and you will know what the markets are going to do.

17) Understand what information is in the market and what isn’t and you will make more money.

18) Do the hard trade, the one that everyone tells you that you are “Mad” to do. If you add a position and then throw up on your shoes afterwards, then you know you’ve done the right thing. This is why people started calling me “Mad” 40 years ago. (What? Tech stocks were a huge buy the first week of January?).

19) If you are trying to get out of a hole, the first thing to do is quit digging and throw away the shovel. Sell everything. A blank position sheet can be invigorating and illuminating.

20) Making money in the market is an unnatural act, and fights against the tide of evolution.

We humans are predators and hunters evolved to track game on the horizon of an African savanna. Modern humans are maybe 5 million years old, but civilization has been around for only 10,000 years.

Our brains have not had time to make the adjustment. In the market, this means that if a stock has gone up, you believe it will continue to do so.

This is why market tops and bottoms see volume spikes. To make money, you have to go against these innate instincts.

Some people are born with this ability, while others can only learn it through decades of training. I am in the latter group.

 

Great Hunter, Lousy Trader

 

Global Market Comments
December 4, 2019
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:

(THE DEATH OF KING COAL),
(KOL), (PEA),
(THE BRAVE NEW WORLD OF ONLINE RETAILING),
(SNAP), (GPRO), (APRN), (SFIX)

Global Market Comments
December 3, 2019
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:

(WHY WATER WILL SOON BE WORTH MORE THAN OIL),
(CGW), (PHO), (FIW), (VE), (TTEK), (PNR), (BYND),
(WHY WARREN BUFFETT HATES GOLD),
(GLD), (GDX), (ABX), (GOLD),

Global Market Comments
December 2, 2019
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:

(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or 2020 IS ALREADY HAPPENING),
(TSLA), (X), (GE), (FCX), (SLB), (GOOGL), (MSFT), (GLD)

You know the melt-up that is going on in the stock market right now? That is your 2020 performance being pulled forward.

One thing I have noticed over the past half-century of trading is that when market participants agree on a direction, it gets accelerated. Once the traditional October selloff failed to show, it was pedal to the metal to achieve new all-time highs.

Traders have become so overconfident that they have already completed this year’s performance and are now working on next year's. They are in effect pulling performance forward from 2020.

This historic run is taking place in the face of year-on-year earnings growth that is zero. ALL of the 29% price appreciation in the S&P 500 (SPY) in 2019 has been due to multiple expansion, from 14 times earnings to 19 times, a 20-year high. Market multiples rising by 50% anytime is almost unprecedented in history. I can only recall that happening twice: in 1929 and 1999.

So, that leaves only two possibilities for 2020. Either the multiple rises to a new 20-year multiple high, say to 20, 21, or 22, or the stock market goes down.

With a trade war-induced global economic slowdown still unfolding, don’t expect any respite from a sudden earnings recovery. Enjoy 2019 because the more we go up now means the more we will go down in 2020.

Were you waiting for the euphoria to make a market top? This is it. Sharply rising markets in the face of sharply falling earnings can only end in tears.

Needless to say, risk in the stock market is very high right now.

Jay Powell gave the market another boost, promising to hit the Fed’s 2% inflation target, giving plenty of room for wage hikes. The last inflation reading was 1.7% YOY. He might as well have said Dow 29,000 by yearend. I wish it were always this easy.

Hong Kong stalled the rally with the passage of a pro-democracy support by congress, with sanctions. China is warning of “firm countermeasures.” That throws cold water on any trade deal for 2019. New all-time highs for stocks may have to take a vacation.

US Q3 GDP was revised up to 2.1%, an improvement of 0.2% from the last read. The trade war seems to be costing us 1% of growth a year or about one-third of the total. That’s why we’re getting such a strong stock market move on the possibility of a trade deal. No-deal means lookout below.

Durable Goods came in at 0.6% in October, a nine-month high and better than expected. What does this week’s spate of positive data means, the first in many months? Is the recession risk over? If so, how much is already in the price?

Stocks love a steepening yield curve, with long term interest rates rising faster than short term ones. It puts the recession talk on hold, if not in abeyance.

It’s time to go dumpster diving, as the upside breakout in the Russell 2000 demonstrated last week. So, it’s time to start looking at the forlorn and the ignored of this bull market, like US Steel (X), General Electric (GE), Freeport McMoRan (FCX), and Schlumberger (SLB). There are no fundamentals in any of these names, they’ve just been down for so long anything looks like up from here. The liquidity-driven bull market has to find some fresh meat to rotate into, even temporarily, or it will die.

S&P Case Shiller rose 3.2% in September, the third consecutive month of price increases. Only San Francisco is showing falling prices. Phoenix (6.0%), Charlotte (4.6%), and Tampa (4.5%) are showing the greatest prices rises. Only a shortage of inventory is preventing prices from rising faster, now at a record low of 3.9 months. The builders who went under ten years ago aren’t building anymore.

New Home Sales drop 0.7%, in October, but are still up a massive 31.6% YOY. Sales in the northeast and south plunged, while those in the Midwest and west rise. The seasonally adjusted annual rate is 733,000 units. The Median Home Price fell 3.6% to $316,700. A 30-year fixed-rate mortgage at 3.66% is a major factor.

Merger mania in drug land continues, with the Novartis takeover of The Medicines Co. for $9.7 billion. It wants to take on Amgen (AMGN), Regeneron (REGN), and Sanofi in the heart drug space. No wonder this is the top-performing sector since I launched the Mad Hedge Biotech and Healthcare Letter.

Tesla shattered, both windows and sales records with an incredible 250,000 cyber trucks sold in a week. It’s one of the largest consumer orders in history, second only to the Tesla Model 3 launch four years ago. I may get one myself to make the Lake Tahoe run on a single 500-mile charge. Keep buying (TSLA) on dips. It is the clearest ten bagger out there.

Who is the mystery gold (GLD) buyer? Someone made a massive bet in the options market that gold will rise above $4,000 an ounce in 18 months. It would take a 32% move just to get gold back to its old $1,927 high. If the trade war continues, we may get it.

This was a week for the Mad Hedge Trader Alert Service to burst upon new all-time highs. I know this sounds boring, but I made all the money long technology stocks. This is net a -2.16% loss on my short position in Tesla (TSLA). If I’d only held on two more days this would have been a big winner over the disappointment over the shocking Cyber truck design. My long positions have shrunk to my core (MSFT) and (GOOGL).

By the way, running out of positions at a market top is a good thing.

My Global Trading Dispatch performance held steady at +352.76% for the past ten years, pennies short of an all-time high. My 2019 year-to-date catapulted back up to +52.62%. We closed out November with a respectable +3.07% profit. My ten-year average annualized profit ground back up to +35.28%. 

The coming week will be hot with the jobs data trifecta.

On Monday, December 2 at 8:00 AM, the ISM Manufacturing PMI for November is out.

On Tuesday, December 3 at 2:30 PM, the API Crude Oil Stocks are announced.

On Wednesday, December 4, at 6:15 AM, the private sector ADP Employment Report is published.

On Thursday, December 5 at 8:30 AM, the Weekly Jobless Claims are printed.

On Friday, December 6 at 8:30 AM, the November Nonfarm Payroll Report is released.

The Baker Hughes Rig Count follows at 2:00 PM.

As for me, I am going to battle my way through the blizzards at Donner Pass this weekend to get back to the San Francisco Bay Area. There, I’ll be helping the local Boy Scout troop to set up their Christmas tree lot. The enterprise helps finance all the camping trips for the coming year.

Good luck and good trading.

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

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Global Market Comments
November 29, 2019
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:

(WHATEVER HAPPENED TO THE GREAT DEPRESSION DEBT?)
($TNX), (TLT), (TBT)

Global Market Comments
November 27, 2019
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:

(IS USA, INC. A SHORT?)
(TESTIMONIAL)

What would happen if I recommended a stock that had no profits, was losing billions of dollars a year and had a net worth of negative $44 trillion?

Chances are, you would cancel your subscription to the Mad Hedge Fund Trader, demand a refund, unfriend me from your Facebook account, and unfollow me on Twitter.

Yet, that is precisely what my former colleague at Morgan Stanley did a few years ago, technology guru Mary Meeker.

Now a partner at venture capital giant Kleiner Perkins, Mary has brought her formidable analytical talents to bear on analyzing the United States of America as a stand-alone corporation.

The bottom line: the challenges are so great they would daunt the best turnaround expert. The good news is that our problems are not hopeless or unsolvable.

The US government was a miniscule affair until the Great Depression and WWII when it exploded in size. Since 1965 when Lyndon Johnson’s “Great Society” began, GDP rose by 2.7 times, while entitlement spending leapt by 11.1 times.

If current trends continue, the Congressional Budget Office says that entitlements and interest payments will exceed all federal revenues by 2025.

Of course, the biggest problem is with health care spending, which will see no solution until health care costs are somehow capped. Despite spending more than any other nation, we get one of the worst results, with lagging quality of life, life spans, and infant mortality.

Some 28% of Medicare spending is devoted to a recipient’s final four months of life. Somewhere, there are emergency room cardiologists making a fortune off of this. A night in an American hospital costs 500% more than in any other country.

Social Security is an easier fix. Since it started in 1935, life expectancy has risen by 26% to 78, while the retirement age is up only 3% to 66. Any reforms have to involve raising the retirement age to at least 70 and means testing recipients.

The solutions to our other problems are simple but require political suicide for those making the case.

For example, you could eliminate all tax deductions, including those for home mortgage deductions, charitable contributions, IRA contributions, dependents, and medical expenses, and raise $1 trillion a year. That would more than wipe out the current budget deficit in one fell swoop.

Mary reminds us that government spending on technology laid the foundations of our modern economy. If the old DARPANET had not been funded during the sixties, Google, Yahoo, eBay, Facebook, Cisco, and Oracle would be missing today. Tech generates about 50% of all the profits in the US today.

Global Positioning Systems (GPS) were also invented by and is still run by the government and has been another great wellspring of profits. I got to use it during the 1980s while flying across Greenland when it was still top secret. The Air Force base that ran it was called “Sob Story.”

There are a few gaping holes in Mary’s “thought experiment.” I doubt she knows that the Treasury Department carries the value of America’s gold reserves, the world’s largest at 8,965 tons worth $576 billion, at only $34 an ounce, versus an actual current market price of $1,288.

Nor is she aware that our ten aircraft carriers are valued at $1 each, against an actual cost of $10 billion each in today’s dollars. And what is Yosemite worth on the open market, or Yellowstone, or the Grand Canyon? These all render her net worth calculations meaningless.

Mary expounds at length on her analysis which you can buy in a book entitled USA Inc. at Amazon by clicking here.

 

Worth More Than a Dollar?

Thanks to both of you for taking the time to answer me back. I am going to hang in there.

I like your newsletter because the unbiased perspectives you share and the way in which you look at market opportunities in a realistic, factual manner. I am just hoping to turn that advantage into profit and learn.

I don’t like financial advisors as they open your account, offer canned advice, and disappear after they take your money. I want to have the independent skills needed to manage my own wealth, as I grow old.

I don’t expect that to happen overnight or without advice, but I am hoping that your newsletter is something above par not just in appearance, but in results.

Time will tell.

Thank you again for returning my emails. That says a lot.

Best,
Ryan
Hammond, New York

Global Market Comments
November 26, 2019
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:

(WHAT HAPPENED TO THE DOW?)
($INDU), (EK), (S), (BS), (CVX), (DD), (MMM),
 (FBHS), (MGDDY), (FL), (GE), (TSLA), (GM)
(WHY YOUR OTHER INVESTMENT NEWSLETTER IS SO DANGEROUS)