Hi there, I’m John Thomas, the Mad Hedge Fund Trader. Welcome to my trading desk and your new job of attaining financial independence.
The coffee machine is right over there, and the bathrooms are down the hall. Don’t let all the shouting bother you. You’ll get used to it after a while.
You’ve already made one of the best business decisions in your life, signing up for my service. And you won’t just be joining me but an entire community of thousands of successful traders and investors spread around the world in 137 countries.
Some of my best ideas are really coming from them. I just pass them on to you. You should have received your password and full access to my website by now.
So, get started on your homework, learn how the markets function and figure out how to trade. Soon, you’ll have the unfair advantage in the markets that you deserve.
I have issued more than 2,000 trade alerts over the past 12 years so I have a pretty good idea what works for followers.
Every trade alert I issue gives you the choice of buying a stock, an exchange-traded fund (ETF), or an option spread.
Since we have been in a bull market for the past ten years, those who bought stock only outright made the most money. Those who used the leverage of the futures markets relied on me for their market timing and delivered the most spectacular profits, and by spectacular, I mean 1,000% in a single year.
However, those who used option spreads earned the most money with the least risk over time. I know when some of you hear the word “option”, you want to run a mile.
However, if you are willing to invest of few hours of your time learning about options, you will have a trading and investment skill that you can use for the rest of your life. And I’ll be doing the heavy lifting for you.
When you subscribed to this service, you effectively added 50 years of trading experience on your own.
The good news is that options are not that hard to figure out.
If you can turn on a computer, click your mouse, and log into your online trading account, you have all the resources you need to trade options.
All you have to do is get some basic training on how to navigate the options market. Finish this two-hour course, and you will have most of what you need to know.
Better yet, if you implement the options strategies and disciplines that I will teach you, you can tilt the chance of making money overwhelmingly in your favor.
Working together is going to be fun. I have a chair right here for you, so sit down, let’s get down to it and put on some serious money-making positions.
It Not That Hard to Figure Out
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/John-Thomas7-e1440345045344.jpg389400Mad Hedge Fund Traderhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMad Hedge Fund Trader2020-07-27 09:04:522020-07-27 09:50:27Welcome to the Wonderful World of Options
With any luck, by the time you read this, I will be setting up my tent next to a High Sierra lake somewhere over 9,000 feet.
For I will be leading 40 Boy Scouts on a 50-mile hike around the Desolation Wilderness next to Lake Tahoe. The vertical climb for this ambitious route is 6,300 feet, which we will cover in seven days. Bears are everywhere, so we will be hanging our food from trees at night.
Usually, I am hanging out at my chalet in Zermatt, Switzerland this time of year, watching climbers descend from the Matterhorn. However, because of our poor response to the Coronavirus, Americans are banned from Europe for the foreseeable future. We are just too dangerous to let in.
My pack weighs in at a featherlike 50 pounds, including five pounds of medical supplies and a fifth of Jack Daniels, for medicinal purposes only. Gentleman Jack is excellent for sterilizing animal bites, large cuts, and gunshot wounds, and has saved my life many times.
With 40 kids under my control ranging in age from 11-17, what could possibly go wrong? At least they don’t have rattlesnakes and poison oak in the High Sierras.
The hike should take no more than 40 hours, which will give me plenty of time to think of great trades for the second half. Hopefully, I will come back refreshed, invigorated, and 20 pounds lighter.
I deserve the time off.
I have worked the hardest of my career over the last six months, going battle with the pandemic and the worst market crash in history. I knocked out 164 trade alerts, triple the normal rate. As a result, I have pulled in a stunning 28.83% profit so far in 2020, and 68.19% over the past 12 months. I know that many of you have made much more. These are the best numbers I have pulled in during 50 years of trading.
While I am communing with nature over the next two weeks, I will be sending you in daily installments FOR FREE the print edition of my best-selling book, “Options Trading for Beginners.” If you are one of the many recent new subscribers, this will give you the tools with which you can max out your profits in the coming months.
Thank you for supporting my research. Once back, I will do whatever I can to maintain your trust and continue to bring in some blockbuster numbers.
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/john-thomas-hiking-e1595595425372.png450344Mad Hedge Fund Traderhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMad Hedge Fund Trader2020-07-24 09:04:492020-07-24 09:27:08Taking Off for Vacation
I want to take this opportunity to share an experience that has been immensely valuable to me and could be to you as well...
Over the holidays last December, a long-time buddy of mine and I were golfing Quail Creek in Green Valley, AZ. As a career money manager, he mentioned the name of John Thomas, the Mad Hedge Fund Trader. It didn’t take him long to convince me to buy Tesla in late December, based on John’s recommendation in his email, “Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader” After all, Mr. Thomas had been driving the cars for 11 years and had visited the Fremont factory countless times. Soon thereafter, anyone who follows Tesla (TSLA) stock knows what happened then.
Then, in late January, John drew upon his experience as a biochemist to identify the companies that would benefit from the Covid-19 pandemic. His statement that “Biotech is today what tech was in 1990” has been a rocket so far as well.
Then, when the market crashed in March, John urged the lead chip stocks, NVIDIA, Advanced Micro Devices, and Micron Technology, which he had been following for decades. Those stocks all doubled. I also increased my position in Tesla some more.
Some six months after hearing about John Thomas, I couldn’t be more grateful. It has given me the financial security to get my family and our three kids through this pandemic while supporting the gallery as well. It has also set me up in a position I never expected through these tough times.
John has been an incredible asset to my family, I believe he could be for yours as well. I am so grateful for his guidance in this stage of my life! I personally subscribed to his biotech newsletter and trade alerts after attending his free seminars and seeing the results. I missed the tech boom of the ’90s. If biotech is the new tech, I don’t want to miss that one too! And I wouldn’t chance it without John’s guidance.
All our best to you all in these difficult times.
Sincerely,
Greg
Las Vegas
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I am really happy with the performance of the Mad Hedge Long Term Portfolio since the last update on October 17, 2019. In fact, not only did we nail the best sectors to go heavily overweight, we completely dodged the bullets in the worst-performing ones, especially in energy.
For new subscribers, the Mad Hedge Long Term Portfolio is a “buy and forget” portfolio of stocks and ETFs. If trading is not your thing, these are the investments you can make, and then not touch until you start drawing down your retirement funds at age 70 ½.
For some of you, that is not for another 50 years. For others, it was yesterday.
There is only one thing you need to do now and that is to rebalance. Buy or sell what you need to reweight every position to its appropriate 5% or 10% weighting. Rebalancing is one of the only free lunches out there and always adds performance over time. You should follow the rules assiduously.
Despite the seismic changes that have taken place in the global economy over the past nine months, I only need to make minor changes to the portfolio, which I have highlighted in red.
To download the entire portfolio in an excel spreadsheet, please go to www.madhedgefundtrader.com, log in, go to “My Account”, then “Global Trading Dispatch”, then click on the “Long Term Portfolio” button.
My 5% holding in Biogen (BIIB) was taken over by Bristol Myers (BMY) at a hefty premium at an all-time high, so I’ll take the win. I am replacing it with Covid-19 vaccine frontrunner Bristol Myers (BMY) itself.
I am also taking out healthcare provider Cigna (CI), whose profits have been hammered by the pandemic. A future Biden administration might also move to a national healthcare system that will cap profits. I am replacing it with another Covid-19 vaccine leader Pfizer (PFE).
My 30% weighting in technology remains the same. Even though these stocks are 30% more expensive than they were three years ago, I believe they will lead the charge into the 2020s. It’s where the big growth is. These have doubled or more over the past nine months.
I am sticking with a 10% weighting in banking. Thanks to trillions in stimulus loans, they are now the most government-subsidized sector of the economy. I also believe that massive bond issuance by the US Treasury will deliver a sharply steepening yield curve, another pro bank development.
With my 10% international exposure, I am taking out a 5% weight in slow-growth Japan and replacing it with Chinese Internet giant Alibaba (BABA). The US will most likely dial back its vociferous anti-Chinese stance next year and (BABA) will soar.
I am executing another switch in my foreign currency exposure, taking out a long in the Japanese yen (FXY) and a short in the Euro (EUO) and substituting in a double long in the Australian dollar (FXA).
Australia will be a leveraged beneficiary of a recovery in the global economy, both through a recovery on commodity prices and gold which has already started, and the post-pandemic return of Chinese tourism and investment. I argue that the Aussie will eventually make it to parity with the US dollar, or 1:1.
I’m quite happy with my 10% holding in gold (GLD), which should move to new all-time highs imminently….and then go ballistic.
As for energy, I will keep my weighting at zero, no matter how cheap it has gotten. Never confuse “gone down a lot” with “cheap”. I think the bankruptcies have only just started and will stretch on for a decade. Thanks to hyper-accelerating technology, the adoption of electric cars, and less movement overall in the new economy, energy is about to become free.
My ten-year assumption for the US and the global economy remains the same.
When we come out the other side of this, we will be perfectly poised to launch into my new American Golden Age, or the next Roaring Twenties. With interest rates still at zero, oil cheap, there will be no reason not to. The Dow Average will rise by 400% or more in the coming decade. The American coming out the other side of the pandemic will be far more efficient and profitable than the old.
I hope you find this useful and I’ll be sending out another update in six months so you can rebalance once again.
Stay healthy.
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/graph2.png7461196Mad Hedge Fund Traderhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMad Hedge Fund Trader2020-07-22 09:02:112020-07-22 09:05:52My Newly Updated Long-Term Portfolio
$1 trillion is about to hit the stock market if another government stimulus package passes in July. So far, most stimulus has ended up in the stock market, one way or the other.
Perhaps that is why we saw a golden cross in the S&P 500 weeks ago, where the 50-day moving average rose sharply through the 200-day moving average. That is usually a bullish signal.
The problem is that everyone knows this, and there are more important issues to consider.
The stock market is now more overpriced than it has been over the last 20 years when the Dotcom Bubble exploded. The (SPY) has risen and an unprecedented 40% in four months.
And the pandemic is triggering a secondary shutdown of much of the economy, trashing the most optimistic “V” shaped recovery scenarios.
We are also solidly into the high risk, low return time of the year from May to November. Historically, the total return for stocks this time of year for the past 70 years is precisely zero.
I, therefore, think it is timely to review how to make money when prices are falling. I call it Short Selling School 101.
I don’t think we are going to crash to new lows from here, maybe drop only 10%-20%. So, some of the most aggressive bearish strategies described below won’t be appropriate.
If you are long stocks in general a low-risk hedge for you might be to sell short the August S&P 500 August 21, 2020, $340 call options for $1.40. If stocks plunge, you have some downside cushion ($1.40 X 100) = $140 in cash. Sell short one call option for every 100 shares of (SPY) you own. If stocks rise and your stock gets called away 6% higher you will think you died and went to heaven. Just buy them back on the next dip.
If the bear move extends you can simply repeat this gesture every month until the cows come home.
If you have big positions in single stocks, like Tesla (TSLA) or Apple (AAPL), you can execute the same kind of strategy. Selling short the Tesla August 21, 2020 $2,000 call option for $70.00 to hedge an existing long in the stock look like the no brainer here. You should sell one option contract for every 100 shares you own to bring in ($70.00 X 100) = $7,000 in cash.
There is nothing worse than closing the barn door after the horses have bolted or hedging after markets have crashed.
No doubt, you will receive a wealth of short selling and hedging ideas from your other research sources and the media right at the next market bottom.
That is always how it seems to play out, great closing the barn doors after the horses have bolted.
So I am going to get you out ahead of the curve, putting you through a refresher course on how to best trade falling markets now, while stock prices are still rich.
I’m not saying that you should sell short the market right here. But there will come a time when you will need to do so.
Watch my Trade Alerts for the best market timing. So here are the best ways to profit from declining stock prices, broken down by security type:
Bear ETFs
Of course, the granddaddy of them all is the ProShares Short S&P 500 Fund (SH), a non-leveraged bear ETF that is supposed to match the fall in the S&P 500 point for point on the downside. Hence, a 10% decline in the (SPY) is supposed to generate a 10% gain in the (SH).
In actual practice, it doesn’t work out like that. The ITF has to pay management operating fees and expenses, which can be substantial. After all, nobody works for free.
There is also the “cost of carry,” whereby owners have to pay the price for borrowing and selling short shares. They are also liable for paying the quarterly dividends for the shares they have borrowed, around 2% a year. And then you have to pay the commissions and spread for buying the ETF.
Still, individuals can protect themselves from downside exposure in their core portfolios through buying the (SH) against it (click here for the prospectus). Short selling is not cheap. But it’s better than watching your gains of the past seven years go up in smoke.
Virtual all equity indexes now have bear ETFs. Some of the favorites include the (PSQ), a short play on the NASDAQ (click herefor the prospectus), and the (DOG), which profits from a plunging Dow Average (click herefor the prospectus).
My favorite is the (RWM) a short play on the Russell 2000, which falls 1.5X faster than the big cap indexes in bear markets (click herefor the prospectus).
Leveraged Bear ETFs
My favorite is the ProShares UltraShort S&P 500 (SDS), a 2X leveraged ETF (click herefor the prospectus). A 10% decline in the (SPY) generates a 20% profit, maybe.
Keep in mind that by shorting double the market, you are liable for double the cost of shorting, which can total 5% a year or more. This shows up over time in the tracking error against the underlying index. Therefore, you should date, not marry this ETF, or you might be disappointed.
3X Leveraged Bear ETF
The 3X bear ETFs, like the UltraPro Short S&P 500 (SPXU), are to be avoided like the plague (click here for the prospectus).
First, you have to be pretty good to cover the 8% cost of carry embedded in this fund. They also reset the amount of index they are short at the end of each day, creating an enormous tracking error.
Eventually, they all go to zero and have to be periodically redenominated to keep from doing so. Dealing spreads can be very wide, further added to costs.
Yes, I know the charts can be tempting. Leave these for the professional hedge fund intraday traders for which they are meant.
Buying Put Options
For a small amount of capital, you can buy a ton of downside protection. For example, the April (SPY) $182 puts I bought for $4,872 on Thursday allows me to sell short $145,600 worth of large-cap stocks at $182 (8 X 100 X $6.09).
Go for distant maturities out several months to minimize time decay and damp down daily price volatility. Your market timing better is good with these because when the market goes against you, put options can go poof and disappear pretty quickly.
That’s why you read this newsletter.
Selling Call Options
One of the lowest risk ways to coin it in a market heading south is to engage in “buy writes.” This involves selling short call options against stock you already own but may not want to sell for tax or other reasons.
If the market goes sideways or falls, and the options expire worthless, then the average cost of your shares is effectively lowered. If the shares rise substantially they get called away, but at a higher price so you make more money. Then you just buy them back on the next dip. It is a win-win-win.
Selling Futures
This is what the pros do, as futures contracts trade on countless exchanges around the world for every conceivable stock index or commodity. It is easy to hedge out all of the risks for an entire portfolio of shares by simply selling short futures contracts for a stock index.
For example, let’s say you have a portfolio of predominantly large-cap stocks worth $100,000. If you sell short 1 June 2016 contract for the S&P 500 against it, you will eliminate most of the potential losses for your portfolio in a falling market.
The margin requirement for one contract is only $5,000. However, if you are short the futures and the market rises, then you have a big problem, and the losses can prove ruinous.
But most individuals are not set up to trade futures. The educational, financial, and disclosure requirements are beyond mom-and-pop investing for their retirement fund.
Most 401Ks and IRAs don’t permit the inclusion of futures contracts. Only 25% of the readers of this letter trade the futures market. Regulators do whatever they can to keep the uninitiated and untrained away from this instrument.
That said, get the futures markets right, and it is the quickest way to make a fortune if your market direction is correct.
Buying Volatility
Volatility (VIX) is a mathematical construct derived from how much the S&P 500 moves over the next 30 days. You can gain exposure to it through buying the iPath S&P 500 VIX Short-Term Futures ETN (VXX) or buying call and put options on the (VIX) itself.
If markets fall, volatility rises, and if markets rise, then volatility falls. You can, therefore, protect a stock portfolio from losses through buying the (VIX).
I have written endlessly about the (VIX) and its implications over the years. For my latest in-depth piece with all the bells and whistles, please read “Buy Flood Insurance With the (VIX)” by clicking here.
Selling Short IPOs
Another way to make money in a down market is to sell short recent initial public offerings. These tend to go down much faster than the main market. That’s because many are held by hot hands, known as “flippers,” don’t have a broad institutional shareholder base.
Many of the recent ones don’t make money and are based on an, as yet, unproven business model. These are the ones that take the biggest hits.
Individual IPO stocks can be tough to follow to sell short. But one ETF has done the heavy lifting for you. This is the Renaissance IPO ETF (click here for the prospectus at http://www.renaissancecapital.com/ipoinvesting/ipoetf/ipoetf.aspx ). As you can tell from the chart below, (IPO) was warning that trouble was headed out way since the beginning of March. So far, a 6% drop in the main indexes has generated a 20% fall in (IPO).
Buying Momentum
This is another mathematical creation based on the number of rising days over falling days. Rising markets bring increasing momentum while falling markets produce falling momentum.
So, selling short momentum produces additional protection during the early stages of a bear market. Blackrock has issued a tailor-made ETF to capture just this kind of move through its iShares MSCI Momentum Factor ETF (MTUM). To learn more, please read the prospectus by clicking here.
Buying Beta
Beta, or the magnitude of share price movements, also declines in down markets. So, selling short beta provides yet another form of indirect insurance. The PowerShares S&P 500 High Beta Portfolio ETF (SPHB) is another niche product that captures this relationship.
The Index is compiled, maintained and calculated by Standard & Poor's and consists of the 100 stocks from the (SPX) with the highest sensitivity to market movements, or beta, over the past 12 months.
The Fund and the Index are rebalanced and reconstituted quarterly in February, May, August, and November. To learn more, read the prospectus by clicking here.
Buying Bearish Hedge Funds
Another subsector that does well in plunging markets is publicly listed bearish hedge funds. There is a couple of these that are publicly listed and have already started to move.
One is the Advisor Shares Active Bear ETF (HDGE) (click here for the prospectus). Keep in mind that this is an actively managed fund, not an index or mathematical relationship, so the volatility could be large.
Oops, Forgot to Hedge
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“If you’re a retail CEO and the tariff announcement comes, you’re on your front porch looking for a cloud of locusts,” said Charlie O’Shea, a retail debt analyst at Moody’s.
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