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Mad Hedge Fund Trader

February 17, 2023 - Quote of the Day

Diary, Newsletter, Quote of the Day

“It’s not always the troops that storm the beaches who are the right ones to set up the government,” said Steve Vassallo from Foundation Capital about the resignation of founder Travis Kalanick from Uber.

 

https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/war.png 350 562 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2023-02-17 09:00:352023-02-17 13:27:03February 17, 2023 - Quote of the Day
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

February 16, 2023

Diary, Newsletter, Summary

Global Market Comments
February 16, 2023
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:

(IS AIRBNB YOUR NEXT TEN BAGGER?),
(ABNB), (WYNN), (H), (GOOG), (PYPL)

 

CLICK HERE to download today's position sheet.

https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png 0 0 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2023-02-16 09:04:362023-02-16 15:56:02February 16, 2023
MHFTF

Is Airbnb Your Next Ten Bagger?

Diary, Newsletter, Research

Last summer, I stayed at an Airbnb in Long Beach, CA in order to pick up my kids from the Boy Scout Camp on Catalina Island. It was billed as a vintage 1920s residence with all the period finishes, was two blocks from the beach, and was a short drive to the Cataline ferry, so it seemed like the ideal place.

But the second I walked into the place I was overcome by a ghostly Twilight Zone type feeling. Everything seemed strangely familiar. What really freaked me out was that the grill on the electric wall heater exactly matched the scar on my sister’s hand. Even though the place was 100 years old, I had been here before.

When I returned home, I headed straight for a voluminous genealogy file that I maintained. After an hour of going through all the family records, I hit paydirt. The address of the Airbnb was listed as the home address of my grandmother when she was married in 1925.

When the pandemic hit in February 2020, I figured Airbnb (ABNB) was toast. Global travel had ground to a halt, and competitors like Wynn Resorts (WYNN) and Hyatt Hotels (H) saw their share prices plunge to near zero.

Instead, the opposite happened.

While the big hotels continue to roast in purgatory, Airbnb catapulted to a new golden age, and how they did it was amazing.

They turned all travel local. Instead of recommending that I visit Cairo, Tokyo, or Rio de Janeiro, they suggested Carmel, Monterey, or Mendocino, all destinations within driving distance.

It worked spectacularly well, and the company is now moving from strength to strength. Since the pandemic bottom, the shares have rocketed from $69 to $210.

My neighborhood in Incline Village, NV was almost always deserted outside of holidays. Now it is packed with Airbnber’s awkwardly moving in every Friday only to flee on Sunday.

How would you like to get an 80% discount on all of your luxury hotel accommodations?

During my recent trip to Dubrovnik in Croatia, I rented an 800-square-foot, two-bedroom, two-bath home inside the city walls for $300 a night.

A single, cramped 150-square-foot room in the nearest five-star hotel was $600 night.

All that was missing was room service, a handout for a big tip, and a surly attitude at the front desk.

Sounds like a massive, game-changing disruption to me.

Thank you, Airbnb!

The big question for you and me is: Will the valuation soar tenfold from the current $106 billion to $1 trillion?

Is (ABNB) your next ten bagger?

To answer that question, I spent six weeks traveling around the world as an Airbnb customer. This enabled me to understand their business model, their strengths and weaknesses, and analyze their long-term potential.

As a customer, the value you receive is nothing less than amazing.

I have been a five-star hotel guest for most of my life, with someone else picking up the tab much of the time (thank you Morgan Stanley!), so I have a pretty good idea on the true value of accommodations.

What you get from Airbnb is nothing less than spectacular. You get three or four times the floor space for one-third the price. That’s a disruption factor of 7:1.

The standards are often five-star and at the top end, depending on how much you spend. I found I could often get an entire three-bedroom house for the price of a single hotel room, with a better location.

Or, I could get an excellent abode in rural settings, where none other was to be had, whatsoever.

That’s a big deal for someone like me who spends so much of the year on the road.

You also get a new best friend in every city you visit.

On most occasions, the host greeted me on the doorsteps with the keys, and then introduced me to the mysteries of European kitchen appliances, heating, and air conditioning.

Pre-stocking the refrigerator with fresh milk, coffee, tea, and jam seems to be a tradition the hosts pick up in their Airbnb orientation course.

One in Waterford, Ireland even left me a bottle of wine, plenty of beer, and a frozen pizza. She read my mind. She then took me on a one-hour tour of their city, divulging secrets about their favorite restaurants, city sights, and nightspots. Everyone proved golden. Thanks, Mary!

After you check out, Airbnb asks you to review the accommodation. These can be incredibly valuable in deciding your next pick.

I had one near miss with what I thought was a great deal in London, until I read, “The entire place reeks of Indian cooking.” Having caught amoebic dysentery in India once Indian cooking does not exactly bring back fond memories.

Similarly, the hosts rate you as a guest.

One hostess in Dingle, Ireland shared a story about picking up her clients from town after they got drunk and lost in the middle of the night. Then they threw up in the back of the car on the way home.

Guests forgetting to return keys is another common complaint.

Needless to say, I received top ratings from my hosts, as fixing their WIFI to boost performance became a regular and very popular habit of mine.

After my initial fabulous experience in London, I thought it might be a one-off, limited to only the largest cities. So, I started researching accommodations for my upcoming trips.

I couldn’t have been more wrong.

Just the Kona Coast on the big island of Hawaii had an incredible 300 offerings, including several bargain beachfront properties.

The center of Tokyo had over 300 listings. The historic district in Florence, Italy had a mind-blowing 351 properties. When I stayed there, six of seven floors of the building I stayed in were devoted to (ABNB) accommodations. The one full time resident was pissed and often slammed his door.

Fancy a retreat on the island of Bali in Indonesia and tune up your surfing? There are over 197 places to stay!

Airbnb has truly gone global.

Airbnb’s business model is almost too simple to be true, involving no more than a couple of popular applications. Call it an artful melding of Google Earth (GOOG), email, text, and PayPal (PYPL).

While no one was looking, it became the world’s largest hotel at a tiny fraction of the capital cost.

The company has 6 million hosts in 100,000 cities worldwide in 220 countries who so far have earned $150 billion, and 150 million users. The all-time number of guests is 1 billion. The company recently shut down all of its Russia listings.

That supply/demand imbalance shifts the burden of the cost to the renters, who usually have to fork out a 12% fee, plus the cost of the cleaning service.

Hosts only pay 3% to process the credit card fees for the payment.

To say that Airbnb has created controversy would be a huge understatement.

For a start, it has emerged as a major challenge to the hotel industry, which is still stuck with a 20th century business model. There’s no way hotels can compete on price.

One Airbnb “super host” in Manhattan managed 200 apartments, essentially, creating out of scratch, a medium-sized virtual “hotel” until the city caught on to them.

Taxes are another matter.

Some municipalities require hosts to pay levies of up to 20%, while others demand quarterly tax filings and withholding taxes. That is, if tax collectors can find them.

Airbnb may be the largest new source of tax evasion today.

In cities where housing is in short supply, Airbnb is seen as crowding out local residents. After all, an owner can make far more money subletting their residence nightly than with a long-term lease.

Several owners told me that Airbnb covered their entire mortgage and housing cost for the year while paying off the mortgage at the same time.

Owners in the primmest of areas, like mid-town Manhattan off of Central Park, or the old city center in Dubrovnik rent, their homes out as much as 180 days a year.

It is doing nothing less than changing lives.

That has forced local governments to clamp down.

San Francisco has severe, iron-clad planning and zoning restrictions that only allow 2,000 new residences a year to come on the market.

It is cracking down on Airbnb, as well as other home-sharing apps like FlipKey, VRBO, and HomeAway, by forcing hosts to register with the city or face brutal $1,000 a day fine.

Ratting out your neighbor as an off-the-grid Airbnb member has become a new cottage industry in the City of the Bay.

Airbnb is fighting back with multiple lawsuits, citing the federal Communications Decency Act, the Stored Communications Act, and the First Amendment covering the freedom of speech.

It is a safe bet that a $91 billion company can spend more on legal fees than a city the size of San Francisco.

The company has also become the largest contributor in San Francisco’s local elections. In 2015, it fought a successful campaign against Proposition “F”, meant to place severe restrictions on their services.

An Airbnb stayover is not without its problems.

The burden of truth in advertising is on the host, not the company, and inaccurate listings are withdrawn only after complaints.

A twenty-something-year-old guy’s idea of cleanliness may be a little lower than your own.

Long-time users learn the unspoken “code”.

“Cozy” can mean tiny, “as is” can be a dump, and “lively” can bring the drunken screaming of four-letter words all night long, especially if you are staying upstairs from a pub.

And that spectacular seaside view might come with relentlessly whining Vespa’s on the highway out front as I was once confronted with in coastal Italy. Always brings earplugs and blindfolds as backups.

Researching complaints, it seems that the worst of the abuses occur in shared accommodations. Learning new foreign cultures can be fascinating. But your new roommate may want to get to know you better than you want, especially if you are female.

In one notorious incident, a Madrid guest was raped and had to call customer service in San Francisco to get the local police to rescue her. The best way to guard against such unpleasantries is to rent the entire residence for your use only, as I do.

Another problem arises when properties are rented out for illegal purposes, such as prostitution or drug dealing. Near my San Francisco home five people were shot and killed in an illegal block party nearby in a Airbnb weekend rental that was supposed let out to a “quiet couple.”

More than once, an unsuspecting resident woke up one morning to discover they were living next door to a new bordello.

Coming out of the pandemic, my conclusion is that the travel industry is entering a hyper-growth phase. Blame the emerging middle-class Chinese, who are going to be everywhere.

The real shock came when I left Airbnb and stayed in a regular hotel. Include the fees and the cleaning charges, and the service is no longer competitive for a single-night stay. Total costs now regularly run double the posted one-night price posted on websites.

In any case, most hosts have two or three-night minimums to minimize hassle.

When I checked in at a Basel, Switzerland Five Star hotel, all I got was a set of keys and a blank stare. No great restaurant tips, no local secrets, no new best friend.

I spent that night surfing www.airbnb.com, planning my next adventure.

 

 

 

Grandparents at Future Airbnb in 1925

https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/John-Thomas-Airbnb.png 466 456 MHFTF https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png MHFTF2023-02-16 09:02:202023-02-16 15:55:35Is Airbnb Your Next Ten Bagger?
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

February 15, 2023

Diary, Newsletter, Summary

Global Market Comments
February 15, 2023
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:

(LAST CHANCE TO ATTEND THE FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 2023 HONOLULU, HAWAII STRATEGY LUNCHEON)
(HOW TO FIND A GREAT OPTIONS TRADE)

 

CLICK HERE to download today's position sheet.

https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png 0 0 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2023-02-15 09:06:212023-02-15 15:26:27February 15, 2023
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

SOLD OUT - Friday, February 17, 2023 Honolulu, Hawaii Global Strategy Luncheon

Diary, Lunch, Luncheon, Newsletter

Come join me for lunch at the Mad Hedge Fund Trader’s Global Strategy Update, which I will be conducting in Honolulu, Hawaii on Friday, February 17, 2023. 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, and real estate. And to keep you in suspense, I’ll be throwing a few surprises out there too. Tickets are available for $289.

I’ll be arriving at 11:30 am 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 private club in downtown Honolulu on the island of Oahu. The precise location will be emailed with your purchase confirmation.

As I am unlikely to make it down to Australia and New Zealand this winter, I urge my many followers there who are chock-a-block with frequent flier points to make the trip up to the balmy Hawaiian Islands to attend the lunch.

So should readers in Alaska, British Columbia, Washington state, and Oregon. There are plenty of things to do there other than listen to the dulcet tones of John Thomas speak.

You can’t lose by renting a car and spending a day driving around the island to experience the lush, fragrant jungle and gigantic crashing waves at Waimea Bay. Pineapple plantations offer an enticing lunch stop.

A visit to the USS Missouri at Pearl Harbor, the site of Japan’s surrender ending WWII, is a must-see for history buffs. You can still see the dent in the hull from a crashing Kamikaze plane.

I always try to squeeze in a workout by climbing to the top of Diamond Peak. The surfing instructors at Waikiki Beach are always ready to tune up your skills. A trip to the Polynesian Cultural Center will set you up with dancing natives in grass skirts and a pig roasted on a spit.

While in America’s 50th state, I’ll be renewing my interisland flying skills, renting a plane to fly to Maui, Kauai, and the Big Island. Flying there is so dangerous that the state requires mainland pilots to obtain a special amendment to their licenses, which I have had for the last 40 years.

Among the many challenges, there are erupting volcanoes, unbelievable wind shear, sudden tropical thunderstorms, and enormous waves that threaten to hit your plane on takeoff and bend your propellers forward. If you crash on Mt. Haleakala, the Park Service will charge you (or your estate) for carting down the wreckage.

And the slightest miscalculation in fuel consumption will find you drifting back to Australia in a life raft, Unbroken style. Don’t worry, they closed the leper colony on Molokai a few years ago.

It’s all worth it just to see the torrential waterfalls cascading off the southern cliffs of Molokai, to catch a pod of migrating humpback whales, or witness one of those amazing tropical sunsets.

I look forward to meeting you, and thank you for supporting my research. To purchase tickets for this luncheon, please click here.

 

 

https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/hawaiian-girl-hula.png 305 458 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2023-02-15 09:04:452023-06-29 10:16:29SOLD OUT - Friday, February 17, 2023 Honolulu, Hawaii Global Strategy Luncheon
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

February 14, 2023

Diary, Newsletter, Summary

Global Market Comments
February 14, 2023
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:

(WHERE THE ECONOMIST “BIG MAC” INDEX FINDS CURRENCY VALUE TODAY),
(UUP), (FXE), (FXY), (CYB)

 

CLICK HERE to download today's position sheet.

https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png 0 0 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2023-02-14 09:04:322023-02-14 17:24:56February 14, 2023
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

Where the Economist “Big Mac” Index Finds Currency Value Today

Diary, Newsletter, Research

My former employer, The Economist, once the ever-tolerant editor of my flabby, disjointed, and juvenile prose (Thanks to Peter Martin and Marjorie Deane!), has just released its "Big Mac" index of relative international currency valuations.

Although initially launched as a joke five decades ago, I have followed it religiously and found it an amazingly accurate predictor of future economic success.

The index counts the cost of McDonald's (MCD) premium two beef patty sandwiches around the world, ranging from $8.35 in Venezuela to $1.68 in Lebanon, and comes up with a measure of currency under and overvaluation.

What are its conclusions today?

The Venezuelan Bolivar is wildly expensive, with 235 years of annual per capita income needed to buy a single Big Mac in local currency terms if you can find one. There are currently 4 million Bolivars to the US Dollar in this sadly bankrupt country.

 The Norwegian Kroner, Swiss franc (FXF), and the US Dollar (UUP) are also dear, with the average cost of an American Big Mac at $5.35. Every year I make a ritual visit to what is often the most expensive McDonald’s in the world at Zermatt Switzerland (see pictures below). There the Big Macs taste slightly acidic.

The cheapest currencies are the South African Rand, the Russian Ruble, and the Lebanese Pound, a Big Mac coming in at $1.68 in Beirut.

I couldn't agree more with many of these conclusions. It's as if the august weekly publication was tapping The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader for ideas.

I am no longer the frequent consumer of Big Macs that I once was, as my metabolism has slowed to such an extent that in eating one, you might as well tape it to my ass. Better to use it as an economic forecasting tool than a speedy lunch.

 

 

 

 

 

The Big Mac is a Steal Here in Turkey

 

No Bargain Here in Italy Either

 

And Costs a King’s Ransome Here in Zermatt

https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/08/zermatt-mcdonalds.png 488 652 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2023-02-14 09:02:022023-02-14 17:23:40Where the Economist “Big Mac” Index Finds Currency Value Today
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

February 14, 2023 - Quote of the Day

Diary, Newsletter, Quote of the Day

“I’ve drunk to your health in company. I drank to your health alone. I’ve drunk to your health so many times that I’ve damn near ruined my own, said WWII Admiral “Bull” Halsey.

 

https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/08/halsey.png 294 238 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2023-02-14 09:00:162023-02-14 17:23:17February 14, 2023 - Quote of the Day
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

February 13, 2023

Diary, Newsletter, Summary

Global Market Comments
February 13, 2023
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:

(HOW CRISPR TECHNOLOGY MAY SAVE YOUR LIFE)
(TMO), (OVAS), (CLLS), (SGMO)

 

CLICK HERE to download today's position sheet.

https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png 0 0 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2023-02-13 09:04:092023-02-13 15:35:12February 13, 2023
DougD

How CRISPR Technology May Save Your Life

Diary, Newsletter

When I was a DNA scientist at UCLA 50 years ago, the team used to slack off whenever our professor was attending an out-of-town conference.

We used to take pure 200 proof ethanol the university kept on hand “for research purposes,” used it to bring our beer up to 100 proof, and then speculate about the future of our obscure, neglected field.

With the technology at hand, we predicted it would take 3,000 years to fully decode the 3 billion base pairs of a length of human DNA. It then might take another 1,000 years to manipulate our genes to accomplish something useful, like curing cancer.

Maybe it was our “enhanced” beer talking, but we were off on our bold forecast by only 2,970 years.

Dr. Craig Venter published a map of his own DNA in 2001 using sophisticated algorithms to vastly accelerate our own snail-like progress.

The second step, that of functional genetic engineering, took only another decade instead of a millennium.

Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeats (CRISPR).

Memorize this term, write it in your diary, and put it on a post-it note on your computer.

It may save your life someday, if not add decades to your life. And it could also make you a multimillionaire if you play your cards right. More on that below.

And I count myself on becoming one of its fortunate users, once the technology goes retail, which should be soon.

If you are another DNA scientist, all I need to tell you is that CRISPR is used to manipulate segments of prokaryotic DNA containing short repetitions of base sequences.

Each repetition is followed by short segments of spacer DNA from previous exposures to a bacteriophage virus or plasmids. The protein fragments that identify and snip these crucial gene segments are called CRISPRs.

If you are the average Joe stock trader, which most of you are, suffice it to say that CRISPR technology is being developed that will enable you to edit your own DNA on a customized basis and then pass the changes on to your future generations.

This will eventually allow you to become immune to all diseases, increase your intelligence, and possibly live forever. Just cut out a bad gene and put in a new one and you and all your future decedents are fixed for good.

You only have to make it five or ten more years at the most with your current vintage DNA, and you can easily live another century.

Oh, and by the way, the company that successfully brings CRISPR products to market in an economical, cost affordable way should see its stock price rise tenfold, if not one hundredfold.

Interested?

Reading up on the research for this piece, one thought kept recurring in my mind: “I can’t believe they are already doing this NOW!”

CRISPR technology was first mooted by a Japanese researcher in 1987. It turns out that the Japanese have a huge head start in developing DNA technologies thanks to a 300-year track record in brewing potent rice wines, like sake.

By 2007, CRISPR went mainstream, attracting funding from a broad range of industries. There was initial heavy interest from the food producers, which sought to make plants and their seeds immune to common crop-destroying diseases.

Their work is partly responsible for the record crop yields that are presently crushing agricultural prices across the board.

As of today, there have been over 3,000 peer-reviewed papers published about CRISPR, each one taking us an infinitesimal step forward.

Currently, there are clinical trials underway employing CRISPR technology to fight multiple forms of cancer, herpes viruses, and advance immunosuppression in human organ transplants.

A legal battle broke out over who owns the rights to CRISPR technology, with Thermo Fisher Scientific (TMO) holdings several key patents.

OvaScience Inc. (OVAS) has started applying CRISPR to human embryos. It didn’t take long to ignite a firestorm of controversy over the prospect of permanently altering the human germline.

Will the wealthy buy their way into genetic superiority and immortality? Or will we accidentally create an organism that could wipe out the human race? Cries of “Social Darwinism” are everywhere.

Or worse, what if the Chinese make their own population immune to bioweapons which they then unleash on the rest of the world?

What if a gene treatment that cures cancer also makes individuals, aggressive, paranoid, or violent?

Talk about letting a genie out of a bottle while also opening Pandora’s Box!

Some leading scientific journals, like Nature and Science, have refused to publish some CRISPR paper over ethical concerns. Unsurprisingly, Chinese scientists have the lead in the most controversial applications.

It’s all way beyond my pay grade.

During my lifetime, I have seen science drop some real clangers.

While in Europe this summer, I saw a Thalidomide baby grown up, now in his fifties. The anti-morning sickness drug developed by a German company produced children with horrifying flippers instead of arms.

Even today, Thalidomide is held out as an example of the need for enhanced drug regulation in the US.

In the early 1950s, one doctor developed the bright idea of giving newborn babies pure oxygen. Everyone who received this treatment went completely blind for life.

And then the CIA developed LSD as a potential weapon, testing it on its own unwitting employees, who developed an unfortunate tendency to jump out of windows from high floors. We all know how that one worked out.

We already know what genes people will choose when given the opportunity to do so, instead of using the ones they inherited, the old-fashioned way.

The unregulated human artificial insemination industry makes available genotypes of every race and nationality in abundance. More than 90% choose tall, blonde, intelligent donors, inadvertently creating a financial windfall from the UC Berkeley Men’s Water Polo Team.

It is an outcome Adolph Hitler would have been proud of, as more than 1 million of these children have been born in the US alone.

Some prolific water polo players have sired more than 100 children, which are now using websites like 23andMe and Ancestry.com to find each other and socialize.

It was not in the game plan.

As is always the case with new, cutting edge, groundbreaking technologies, it is hard to find a rifle shot investment that gives you a pure play.

Many such efforts are subsumed inside huge companies where a specific technology never moves the needle. Starts ups often go bust because they can’t keep up with rapidly evolving technology.

That’s what happened to the 3D printing industry, and I can’t remember how many hard drive companies and PC makers that have gone under.

Editas (EDIT), Caribou Biosciences (CRBU), Intellia (NTLA), CRISPR Therapeutics (CRSP), and Precision Biosciences (DTIL) have all gone public over the last five years. Here is your bite of the apple.

Cellectis (CLLS) is a $1.1 billion French company that is involved in both gene editing and cancer immunotherapy. The Company has improved the quality of crops for the food and agriculture industries.

And here is the really good news.

Many of these shares have dropped 70%-80% in the last year, thanks to the generalized biotech meltdown and the wholesale flight from profitless companies. Crisper alone fell 77% top to bottom, much to my own personal financial destruction.

Many will find the prospect of living another century enticing. I might be interested if I could get back the body I has when I was 25 but still know what I know now.

The possibility of finding a stock that could rise 10 or 100 times is MUCH more interesting.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Cell Membrane

 

CRISPR

Putting Another 100 Years on the Clock?

https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/12/john-old-car-e1512925077646.jpg 316 400 DougD https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png DougD2023-02-13 09:02:132023-02-13 15:39:00How CRISPR Technology May Save Your Life
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