
You knew when the price of margaritas was going up that the new Mexican tariff dispute was not going to last very long, especially going into the summer. No wonder the Texas senators were so upset.
As of this writing, the tariffs have been called off two days before they were going to be implemented and a week after they were threatened. But who knows? They could be back on again at any time once the Mexicans fail to deliver on their undoubtedly impossible promises.
The Mexican standoff does, however, provide valuable lessons on how markets may perform going into the 2020 presidential election; arbitrarily create an unnecessary crisis, just as arbitrarily end it, and then collect more votes from your base.
Now let's scale this up to the trade war with China. Use fears of an impending recession to get the Fed to lower interest rates in a major way. With the economic data now falling to pieces, futures markets are currently discounting three 25 basis point rate cuts by yearend and two more in 2020. That gets the Fed funds rate down from the current 2.50% to 1.25% in a hurry.
Then what happens? A “beautiful” trade deal is signed with China, hyper-stimulating the economy in the middle of the election. What are stocks worth with a 1.25% fed funds rate? A whole lot more than they are now.
So, here is the setup for the stock market. A treacherous trading range over the next three to six months leading to lower highs and then lower lows. After that, they go ballistic next year.
I have never been a fan of conspiracy theories, and the strategy above depends on a lot of external things going incredibly right. For a start, the Chinese likely do not want to provide any assistance to the president whatsoever in getting reelected.
Still, we all need a model of how the companies, industries, the economy, and world events will transpire before we enter a single trade, and this is the best one I can come up with….today.
It’s not that interest rates are so important anymore. The biggest chunk of the stock market, large-cap tech stocks, are hugely cash flow positive, have no net debt, and actually lose money when rates fall. And rates have been so low for so long that we have all become used to free money.
The biggest impact is on the consumer who accounts for 70% of GDP. Lower credit card rates and home mortgages have an immediate and positive effect on the economy.
The May Nonfarm Payroll Report definitely cast a long shadow over the economy, coming in at only 75,000, less than half of what was expected. March and April were also revised down by an additional 75,000. The headline Unemployment Rate held steady at 3.6%.
Professional Services gained by 33,000, Construction by 4,000, and Health Care by 16,000. Retail was the biggest loser at 7,000.
If it was just one data point that was so horrible, I wouldn’t be so worried. In fact, Private jobs growth hit a nine-year low on Wednesday, with the May ADP in at only 27,000. Is this the canary in the coal mine?
The takeaway here is that the trade war is finally starting to exact its pound of flesh (I’m going to Venice after all), and that the next report could be worse. The Mexican tariffs and the antitrust assault on big tech are too recent to be reflected in the data. It makes a July Fed rate cut a slam dunk (after all, I live in Oakland).
The Justice Department has started an antitrust investigation against Google, claiming that search results favor Google-owned companies. The problem is that Google invented modern online search, with a 92.81% market share. Bing has a 2.38% market share and Yahoo has 1.89%. And while they own search, they contain only 38.2% of the online advertising market.
Microsoft (MSFT) had the same problem during the 1990s, with an antitrust suit brought by the government that lasted a decade. Before that, there was the interminable IBM antitrust suit. I thought Amazon’s (AMZN) head was supposed to be on a plate? Note: I had to Google (GOOGL) the information for this article.
The Fed Beige Book says the economy is slowing, and that is pre-Mexican tariff data. The summer slowdown is here, and GDP growth may fall under 1%. Bond, commodity, and energy markets say the recession is already here, but what do they know?
International trade is in free fall. Expect stocks to hit new 2019 lows while you’re basking on the beach. Your next GM model upgrade is trapped at the border. Sounds like a good time for me to take a trip around the world. Those camels in Egypt are looking better by the minute.
The trade war will cut global airline profits by 21%, from $35.5 billion to $28 billion, says industry trade association IATA in a forecast. More war means less first-class travel. And you wonder why airline share prices have been getting creamed (DAL), (LUV).
The bond market is now gunning for a 1.85% yield, and after that, the 2016 low of 1.33%, as a trade war escalating daily brings forward the next recession. The market has nearly given Trump his 1% cut in interest rates he has been clamoring for. It’s now up to the Fed to follow.
The New York Fed recession indicator is now at 30%, a 12-year high, and with the yield curve now inverted you have to pay attention. This one may be a predicted recession that actually happens. However, recessions usually happen when interest rates spike, not collapse, as they have done.
Thanks to the extreme volatility of the week I gave up my profits for the month of June and have to start all over again. Such is show business. We are now a mere 1.92% below our last all-time high from the previous week. Trading a narrow range with extreme volatility is about the worst kind of market to trade.
It was the antitrust news about the FANGs that really hit me, a core long of mine for the last decade. Thus, I was stopped out of positions in Amazon (AMZN) and Microsoft (MSFT). I was able to hang on to my long in Tesla (TSLA) because the spread was so deep in-the-money.
Global Trading Dispatch closed the week up 14.43% year-to-date and is down by -1.29% so far in May. My trailing one-year declined to +13.07%.
My nine and a half year profit fell back to +314.57%. The average annualized return shrank to +33.11%. With the trade war with China raging, I am now 90% in cash with Global Trading Dispatch and 100% cash in the Mad Hedge Tech Letter.
I’ll wait until the markets enjoy a brief short-covering rally before adding any short positions to hedge my longs.
The coming week will be a fairly sedentary one on the data front after last week’s jobs fireworks.
On Monday, June 10 at 12:00 PM, the May Consumer Inflation Expectations report is out.
On Tuesday, June 11, 9:00 AM EST, the May US Producer Price Index is released.
On Wednesday, June 12 at 9:30 AM, the May US Core Inflation is published.
On Thursday, June 13 at 8:30 AM, the Weekly Jobless Claims are printed.
On Friday, June 14 at 9:30 AM, May US Retail Sales are out. The Baker Hughes Rig Count follows at 2:00 PM.
As for me, I am spending the weekend packing for my 2019 Mad Hedge World Tour. I’ll be chasing down my mosquito spray for the Philippines, my ice ax and loden hat for Switzerland, my plug adapters and diarrhea treatments for India, and my hangover medicine for Australia. I know I already have all this stuff somewhere, I just have to find it.
Good luck and good trading.
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
"If a cluttered desk is a sign of a cluttered mind, what is an empty desk a sign of?" asked Albert Einstein.
Global Market Comments
June 7, 2019
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(SUNDAY, JUNE 30 MANILA, PHILIPPINES STRATEGY LUNCHEON)
(THE CONTINUING DEATH OF RETAIL),
(AMZN), (WMT), (M), (JWN),
(TESTIMONIAL)
Global Market Comments
June 6, 2019
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(WEDNESDAY, JUNE 28 PERTH, AUSTRALIA STRATEGY LUNCHEON)
(THE IRS LETTER YOU SHOULD DREAD),
(PANW), (CSCO), (FEYE),
(CYBR), (CHKP), (HACK), (SNE)
(CHINA’S COMING DEMOGRAPHIC NIGHTMARE)
Global Market Comments
June 5, 2019
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(WEDNESDAY, JUNE 26 BRISBANE, AUSTRALIA STRATEGY LUNCHEON)
(WHY CONSUMER STAPLES ARE DYING),
(XLP), (PG), (KO), (PEP), (PM), (WMT), (AMZN),
(WHY YOUR OTHER INVESTMENT NEWSLETTER IS SO DANGEROUS)
"If horses could have voted, there never would have been cars," said my friend, Tom Friedman, a columnist at the New York Times.
Global Market Comments
June 4, 2019
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(WEDNESDAY, JUNE 26 SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA STRATEGY LUNCHEON)
(TEN UGLY MESSAGES FROM THE BOND MARKET),
(TLT), (TBT), (USO), (GLD), (GS), (SPY)
Global Market Comments
June 3, 2019
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(MONDAY, JUNE 24 MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA STRATEGY LUNCHEON)
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, OR WHAT A WASTE OF TIME!),
(SPY), ($INDU), (JPM), (MSFT), (AMZN), (TSLA)
Come join me for lunch at the Mad Hedge Fund Trader’s Global Strategy Update which I will be conducting in Melbourne, Australia on Monday, June 24, 2019 at 1:15 PM.
An excellent meal will be followed by a wide-ranging discussion and an extended question-and-answer period.
I’ll be giving you my up to date view on stocks, bonds, currencies commodities, precious metals, energy, and real estate.
I also hope to provide some insight into America’s opaque and confusing political system. And to keep you in suspense, I’ll be throwing a few surprises out there too.
Tickets are available for $232.
I’ll be arriving at 1:00 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 a downtown five-star hotel, the details of which will be emailed 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.
“Sell in May and go away” has long suffered from the slings and arrows of non-believers, naysayers, and debunkers.
Not this time.
Looking at the trading since April 30, we have barely seen an up day. Since then, the Dow Average has plunged 1,900 points from a 26,700 high, a loss of 7.1%. We are now sitting right at my initial downside target of the 200-day moving average.
The Dow has now given up virtually all its 2019 gains, picking up only 2.0%. In fact, the market is dead unchanged since the end of 2017. If you have been an index investor for the past 17 months, your return has been about zero. In other words, it has been a complete waste of time.
There are a lot of things I would have preferred to do rather than invest in index funds for the past year and a half. I could have hiked the Pacific Crest Trail….twice. I might have taken six Cunard round-the-world cruises and met several rich widows along the way. I might even have become fluent in Italian and Latin. Such is the value of 20-20 hindsight.
You would have done much better investing in the bond market, which has exploded to a new two-year high, taking the ten-year US Treasury yield down to a once unimaginable 2.16%. During the same period, the (TLT) has gained 11 points, or 9.0% plus another 3.0% worth of interest. You did even better if you invested in lower grade credits.
Which leads us to the big question: Will stocks bottom out here, or are we in for a full-on retrace to the December lows?
Unfortunately, recent events have conspired to point to the latter.
The United States has now declared trade wars against all neighbors and allies around the world: China, Mexico, Europe, and Canada. On Friday, it announced 25% punitive tariffs against Mexico before NAFTA 2.0 was even ratified before Congress, thus rendering it meaningless. Businesses are dropping like flies.
As a result, GDP forecasts have been falling off a cliff, down from 3.2% in Q1 to under 1% for Q2. The administration’s economic policy seems to be a pain now, and more pain later. It is absolutely not what stock investors want to hear.
If you are a business owner now, what do you do with the global supply chain being put through a ringer? Sit as firmly on your hands as possible and do nothing, waiting for either the policy or the administration to change. Stock investors don’t want to hear this either. The fact that stock markets entered this cluster historically expensively is the fat on the fire.
Having hummed the bear national anthem, I would like to point out that stocks could rally from here. We enter a new month on Monday. There will be plenty of opportunities to make amends and the G-20 meeting which starts on June 20. This should provide a backdrop for a rally of at least one-third of the recent losses, or about 600 points.
But quite honestly, if that happens, I’ll be a seller. The economy is doing the best impression of going down the toilet that I can recall, and that includes 2008. Only this time, all the injuries are self-inflicted.
As the trade war ramped up, China moved to ban FedEx (FDX) and restrict rare earth exports (REMX) to the US essential for all electronics manufacture. Most modern weapons systems can’t be built without rare earths. The big question in investors' minds becomes “Is Apple next?”
The OECD cut its global growth forecast from 3.9% to 3.1% for 2019 because of you know what. Stock markets are now down for their sixth week as the 200-day moving average comes within striking distance.
There was more bad news for real estate with April Pending Home Sales down 1.5%. If rates this low can’t help it, nothing will. Where are those SALT deductions?
The bear market in home prices continued in March with the Case Shiller CoreLogic National Home Price Index showing a 3.7% annual price gain, down 0.2%. Home price in San Francisco is posting negative numbers. When will those low-interest rates kick in?
The bond market says the recession is already here with ten-year interest rates at 2.16%, a new 2019 low. German bunds hit negative -0.21%. JP Morgan (JPM) CEO Jamie Diamond says the trade war could cause real damage to the US economy.
US Capital Goods fell out of bed in April, down 0.9%, in another important pre-recession indicator. No company with sentient management wants to expand capacity ahead of an economic slowdown.
Despite all the violence and negativity, the Mad Hedge Fund Trader managed to crawl to new all-time highs last week, thanks to some very conservative positioning on the long side in the right names.
Those would include Microsoft (MSFT), Amazon (AMZN), and Tesla (TSLA). All of these names were down on the week, but the vertical bull call spreads were up. You see, there is a method to my madness!
Global Trading Dispatch closed the week up 16.30% year-to-date and is up 0.51% so far in May. My trailing one-year declined to +19.71%.
The Mad Hedge Technology Letter did fine, making money on longs in Microsoft (MSFT) and Amazon (AMZN). Some 10 out of 13 Mad Hedge Technology Letter round trips have been profitable this year.
My nine and a half year profit jumped to +316.55%. The average annualized return popped to +33.32%. With the trade war with China raging, I am now 70% in cash with Global Trading Dispatch and 80% cash in the Mad Hedge Tech Letter.
I’ll wait until the markets enjoy a brief short-covering rally before adding any short positions to hedge my longs.
The coming week will be a big one with the trifecta of big jobs reports.
On Monday, June 3 at 7:00 AM, the May US Manufacturing PMI is out.
On Tuesday, June 4, 9:00 AM EST, the April US Factory Orders are published.
On Wednesday, June 5 at 5:15 AM, the May US ADP Employment Report of private hiring trends is released.
On Thursday, June 6 at 5:30 AM, the April US Balance of Trade is printed. At 8:30 Weekly Jobless Claims are published.
On Friday, June 7 at 8:30 AM, we learn the May Nonfarm Payroll Report is announced which lately has been incredibly volatile.
As for me, I am going to be leading the local Boy Scout troop on a 20-mile hike with a 2,500-foot vertical climb in the Oakland Hills. Hey, you never know when Uncle Sam is going to come calling again. I need to stay boot camp-ready at all times.
At least I can still outpace the eleven-year-olds. I’ll be leaving my 60-pound pack in the garage so it should be a piece of cake.
Good luck and good trading.
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader



























