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MHFTR

The Sky Is the Limit

Tech Letter

After Netflix (NFLX) laid an egg, the tech sector badly needed a cure to calm the fierce, open waters.

Netflix missed expectations by about a million subscribers and weak guidance shredded the stock almost 15% in aftermarket trading.

The FANG boat started to rock and large cap tech needed a savior to quell the increasingly downside risk to the best performing sector in the market this year.

You can rock the boat all you want, but when Microsoft (MSFT) shows up, the seas turn tranquil and placid.

Microsoft delivered a dominant quarter.

I expected nothing less from one of the best CEOs in America, Satya Nadella, and his magic touch is the main wisdom behind the loquaciousness when the Mad Hedge Technology Letter delves into the Microsoft business.

I rate Microsoft as a top three technology stock, and it should be a pillar of any sensible equity portfolio, unless you believe throwing away money in the bin is rational.

Born in Hyderabad, India, Nadella has worked wonders inheriting the reins from Steve Ballmer who was more concerned about buying an NBA team than running one of the biggest American companies.

Ballmer had Microsoft barreling unceremoniously toward irrelevancy.

It got so bad for Microsoft, the "L word" started to pop up.

Legacy tech is the lousiest label a tech company can be pinned with, because it takes years and gobs of cash to turn around investor sentiment, the business, and the share price.

Under Nadella's tutelage, Microsoft has burst through to another all-time high, which is becoming a regular occurrence in 2018 for Microsoft's shares that languished in purgatory for years.

If the macro picture holds up and if the administration can keep quiet for a few news cycles, investors can expect a minimum of 15% appreciation per year in this name.

And that is a conservative estimate.

Microsoft is already up over 20% in 2018.

Queue the applause.

Nadella has orchestrated a 300% jump in valuation during his four and half years at the helm.

Microsoft is now valued at more than $800 billion and climbing.

The only other tech members of the prestigious $800 billion club are Apple (AAPL), Amazon (AMZN), and Alphabet (GOOGL).

Apple leads the charge to claim the prize as the first trillion-dollar company, and it is within striking distance valued at $951 billion.

Nadella bet the farm on software subscriptions and migration to the cloud.

It was the perfect strategy at the ideal time.

Shares cracked the $108 mark at the market open even as the administration kept up its pugnacious rhetoric threatening to topple the overall market.

Tech has held up through these testy times confirming the fluid migration by the scared investor souls into big cap tech.

How can you blame them?

Amazon prime day saw record numbers visit its platform to the point it crashed from overloading the servers.

Coresight Research predicted users would fork over $3.4 billion on Prime Day in 2018, an increase of 40% YOY.

More than 100 million products were sold in the 36 hours.

The staggering Prime Day sales came on the heels of Alphabet being fined $5 billion for being too dominant in Europe.

The market shrugged it off as the fine does nothing to change Alphabet's dominance in Europe.

Android has harvested 80% of the smartphone market and was slapped on the wrist for bundling Google apps out of the cellophane packaging is a cheap trick by the European regulators.

Imagine frequenting a restaurant that cannot serve its own food.

Alphabet even allows users to download whatever bundle of apps through the Google Play app store. It should be enough.

Alphabet is another solid Mad Hedge Technology Letter pick, albeit it is the weaker tier of the vaunted FANG group and just celebrated all-time highs.

Amazon and Netflix (NFLX) still lead the charge at the top tier of the FANG group, and Facebook's risky business model has it grouped with Alphabet in the lower tier.

At the end of the day, a member of the FANG group is a member of the FANG group.

Microsoft should be part of the FANGs, but the acronyms start becoming too pedantic.

The breadth of the tech sector means many winners.

Microsoft is one of the biggest winners.

Microsoft's total revenue levitated 17% YOY to $30.1 billion.

The number every investor was patiently waiting for were insights into the cloud business.

Microsoft Azure was up 89% YOY and cemented together with strong guidance, ensured Microsoft's shares would continue on its merry way upward.

Gross margins for the commercial cloud offerings, grouped as Azure, Office 365, accelerated to 58% YOY from 52%.

Microsoft's intelligent cloud described by Nadella as "Microsoft's drive to build artificial intelligence into all its apps and services" rose 23% YOY to $9.6 billion.

Management said that it expects Cloud margins to ameliorate through the rest of 2018.

Even the hardware side of the operations caught an updraft with Microsoft Surface, a series of touchscreen Windows personal computers, pole vaulted by 25% YOY.

Simply put, Microsoft is a lean, mean cash-making machine. Last quarter's profit of $8.87 billion coincided with the first time the company eclipsed $100 billion in annual sales.

Microsoft Azure's 16 percent share of the global cloud infrastructure market, according to data by research firm Canalys in April, is rapidly approaching Amazon's Amazon Web Services (AWS) business.

A Morgan Stanley poll of 100 U.S. and European CIOs gleaned insight into the broad-based acceptance of Microsoft's products.

The poll saw 34% planned to upgrade to a higher and more expensive tier of Office 365 software in the next two years, and more than 70% plan to deploy Microsoft Azure and its collection of hybrid cloud solutions.

Microsoft still has its cash cow business injecting healthy profits into its business with Microsoft's productivity and business processes unit, including Office 365, rising 13.1% YOY to $9.67 billion.

The tech sector needs the mega cloud stocks to stand up and be accountable at a precarious time when the macro picture is doing its best to suppress the robust tech sector.

Amazon and Alphabet are in the limelight next week, and Amazon will divulge frighteningly strong cloud numbers along with the braggadocio numbers about its record-breaking Prime Day.

The more I look at Microsoft's last quarter performance, it becomes harder and harder to identify any chink's in Microsoft's armor.

This is not your father's Microsoft.

This is the flashy, innovative Microsoft on top of the most influential trend in the technology sector - the migration to the cloud.

Sticking to this stock could be the rich new uncle of which you've always dreamed. But in this case, it's Satya Nadella providing the free flow of funds.

The spike in the shares is well deserved and any remnant of a retracement should be bought with two hands.

Saying that I am bullish about Microsoft's prospects is an understatement.

 

 

 

 

________________________________________________________________________________________________

Quote of the Day

"Your margin is my opportunity," said founder and CEO of Amazon Jeff Bezos.

 

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Mad Hedge Fund Trader

July 20, 2018 - MDT Pro Tips A.M.

MDT Alert

While the Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader focuses on investment over a one week to six-month time frame, Mad Day Trader, provided by Bill Davis, will exploit money-making opportunities over a brief ten minute to three day window. It is ideally suited for day traders, but can also be used by long-term investors to improve market timing for entry and exit points. Read more

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 Trader2018-07-20 09:33:172018-08-20 12:42:38July 20, 2018 - MDT Pro Tips A.M.
MHFTR

July 20, 2018

Diary, Newsletter

Global Market Comments
July 20, 2018
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:
(AN EVENING WITH TRAVEL GURU ARTHUR FROMMER),
(THE MAD HEDGE DICTIONARY OF TRADING SLANG)

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MHFTR

July 20, 2018

Tech Letter

Mad Hedge Technology Letter
July 20, 2018
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:
(A SELLERS' MARKET)
(CSCO), (MSCC), (GOOGL), (MCHP), (SWKS), (JNPR), (AMAT),
(PANW), (UBER), (AMZN), (AVGO), (QCOM), (CA), (CRM)

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MHFTR

A Sellers' Market

Tech Letter

I bet you are wondering where all that money from the tax cuts is going.

Believe it or not, the No. 1 destination of this new windfall is technology companies, not just the stocks, but entire companies.

In fact, the takeover boom in Silicon Valley has already started, and it is rapidly accelerating.

The only logical conclusion in 2018 is that tech firms are about to get a lot more expensive. I'll explain exactly why.

The corporate cash glut is pushing up prices for unrealized M&A activity in 2018. U.S. firms accumulated an overseas treasure trove of around $2.6 trillion and the capital is spilling back into the States with a herd-type mentality.

I have chewed the fat with many CEOs about their cash pile road map. All mirrored each other to a T: strategic acquisition and share buybacks, period. The acquisition effect will be felt through all channels of the tech arterial system in 2018.

As the global race to acquire the best next generation technology heats up, domestic mergers could pierce the 400-deal threshold after a lukewarm 2017.

Spend or die.

Apple alone boomeranged back more than $250 billion with hopes of selective mergers and share buybacks. Cisco (CSCO), Microsoft (MSFT), and Google (GOOGL) were also in the running for most cash repatriated.

The tech behemoths are eager to make transformative injections into security, big data, semiconductor chips, and SaaS (service as a software) among others.

Hint: You want to own stocks in all of these areas.

Even non-traditional tech companies are getting in on the act with Walmart concentrating the heart of its strategic future on the pivot to technology.

Walk into your nearest Walmart every few months.

You'll notice major changes and not for decorative measures.

U-turns from legacy technology firms hawking desktop computers and HDD's (Hard Disk Drive) suddenly realize they are behind the eight ball.

M&A activity will naturally tilt toward firms dabbling in earlier-stage software and 5G supported technology. This flourishing trend will reshape autonomous vehicles and IoT (Internet of Things) products.

The dilemma in waiting to splash on a potential new expansion initiative is that the premium grows with the passage of time. Time is money.

It's a sellers' market and the sellers know this wholeheartedly.

Unleashing the M&A beast comes amid a seismic shift of rapid consolidation in the semiconductor sector. Cut costs to compete now or get crushed under the weight of other rivals that do. Ruthless rules of the game cause ruthless executive decisions.

The best way to cut costs is with immense scale to offer nice shortcuts in the cost structure. Buying another company and using each other's dynamism to find a cheaper way to operate is what Microchip Technology's (MCHP) culling of Microsemi Corporation (MSCC) in a deal worth $10bn was about.

Microsemi, based in Aliso Viejo, California, focuses on manufacturing chips for aerospace, military, and communications equipment.

Microchip's focal point is industrial, automobile and IoT products.

Included in the party bag is a built-in $1.8 billion annual revenue stream and more than $300 million of dynamic synergies set to take effect within three years. The bonus from this package is the ability to cross-sell chips into unique end markets opposed to selling from scratch.

Each business hyper-targets different segments of the chip industry and is highly complementary.

Benefits of a relatively robust credit market create an environment ripe for mergers. Some 57% of tech management questioned intend to go on the prowl for marquee pieces to add to their arsenal.

Then we have chip company Broadcom (AVGO) led by CEO Hock Tan, whose entire strategy is based on M&A and minimal capital spending.

His low-quality strategy of buying market share will ultimately fritter out. His lack of capital spending was also a salient reason for blocking Broadcom's purchase of Qualcomm (QCOM), which if stripped of its capital spending budget would have fallen behind China's Huawei to develop critical 5G infrastructure.

Tan's strategy flies in the face of the most powerful tech companies that are using M&A to enhance their products expanding their halo effect around the world.

Gutting innovation and skimming profits off the top is an entirely self-serving, myopic strategy to the detriment of long-term shareholders.

Investors punished Broadcom for it's latest investment of CA Technologies (CA) for $18.9 billion, even though this pickup signals a different tack.

CA Technologies is a leading provider of information technology (IT) management software, which suggests a belated move into the enterprise software market dominated by incumbents such as Salesforce (CRM).

Better late than never.

No need to mince words here as 2018 won't see any discounts of any sort. Nimble buyers should prepare for price wars as the new normal.

Not only are the plain vanilla big cap tech firms dicing up ways to enter new markets, alternative funds are looking to splash the cash, too.

Sovereign wealth funds and private equity firms are ambitiously circling around like vultures above waiting for the prey to show itself.

Private equity firms dove head first into the M&A circus already tripling output for tech firms.

Highlighting the synchronized show of force is none other than Travis Kalanick, the infamous founder of Uber. He christened his own venture capital fund that hopes to invest in e-commerce, real estate, and companies located in China and India.

The new fund is called 10100 and is backed by his own money. All this is possible because of SoftBank CEO Masayoshi Son's investment in Uber, which netted Kalanick a cool $1.4 billion representing Kalanick's 30% stake in Uber.

It is undeniable that valuations are exorbitant, but all data and chip related companies are selling for huge premiums. The premium will only increase as the applications of 5G, A.I., autonomous cars start to pervade deeper into the mainstream economy.

Adding fuel to the fire is the corporate tax cut. The lower tax rate will rotate more cash into M&A instead of Washington's tax coffers enhancing the ability for companies to stump up for a higher bill. Sellers know firms are bloated with cash and position themselves accordingly.

Highlighting the challenges buyers face in a sellers' market is Microsemi Corp.'s (MSCC) purchase of PMC-Sierra Inc. Even though PMC-Sierra had been looking to get in bed with Skyworks Solutions Inc. (SWKS) just before the MSCC merger, PMC-Sierra reneged on the acquisition after (SWKS) refused to bump up its original offer.

(SWKS) manufactures radio frequency semiconductors facilitating communication among smartphones, tablets and wireless networks found in iPhones and iPads.

(SWKS) is a prime takeover target for Apple. (SWKS) estimates to have the highest EPS growth over the next three to five years for companies not already participating in M&A. Apple (AAPL) could briskly mold this piece into its supply chain. Directly manufacturing chips would be a huge boon for Apple in a chip market in short supply.

In 2013, Japan's Tokyo Electron and Applied Materials (AMAT) angled to become one company called Eteris. This maneuver would have created the world's largest supplier of semiconductor processing equipment.

After two years of regulatory review, the merger was in violation of anti-trust concerns according to the United States. (AMAT), headquartered in Santa Clara, California, is a premium target as equipment is critical to manufacturing semiconductor chips. (AMAT) competes directly with Lam Research (LRCX), which is an absolute gem of a company.

Juniper Networks (JNPR) sells the third-most routers and switches used by ISP's (Internet Service Providers). It is also No. 2 in core routers with a 25% market share. Additionally, (JNPR) has a 24.8% market share of the firewall market.

In 2014, Palo Alto Networks (PANW), another takeover target focusing on cybersecurity, paid a $175 million settlement fee for allegedly infringing (JNPR)'s application firewall patents.

In data center security applications, (JNPR) routinely plays second fiddle to Cisco Systems (CSCO). Cisco, the best of breed in this space would benefit by snapping up (JNPR) and integrating its expertise into an expanding network.

Unsurprisingly, health care is the other sector experiencing a tidal wave of M&A, and it's not shocking that health care firms accumulated cash hoards abroad too. The dots are all starting to connect.

Firms want to partner with innovative companies. Companies hope to focus on customer demands and build a great user experience that will lead the economy. Health care costs are outrageous in America, and Jeff Bezos could flip this industry on its head.

Amazon (AMZN) pursuing lower health costs ultimately will bind these two industries together at the hip and is net positive for the American consumer.

Ride-sharing company Uber embarked on a new digital application called Uber Health that book patients who are medically unfit for regular Uber and shuttle them around to hospital facilities.

Health care providers can hail a ride for sick people immediately and are able to make an appointment 30 days in advance. It is a little difficult to move around in a wheel chair, and tech solves problems that stir up zero appetite for most business ventures. Apple is another large cap tech titan keeping close tabs on the health care space.

It's a two-way street with health care companies looking to snap up exceptional tech and vice versa.

It's practically a game of musical chairs.

Ultimately, Tech M&A is the catch of the day, and boosting earnings requires cutting-edge technology no matter how expensive it is. Investors will be kicking themselves for waiting too long. Buy now while you can.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Yes, It's All Going Into Tech Stocks

________________________________________________________________________________________________

Quote of the Day

"Companies in every industry need to assume that a software revolution is coming," - said American venture capitalist Marc Andreessen.

 

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Mad Hedge Fund Trader

July 19, 2018 - MDT Pro Tips A.M.

MDT Alert

While the Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader focuses on investment over a one week to six-month time frame, Mad Day Trader, provided by Bill Davis, will exploit money-making opportunities over a brief ten minute to three day window. It is ideally suited for day traders, but can also be used by long-term investors to improve market timing for entry and exit points. Read more

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MHFTR

July 19, 2018

Diary, Newsletter

Global Market Comments
July 19, 2018
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:
(FRIDAY, JULY 27, 2018, ZERMATT, SWITZERLAND GLOBAL STRATEGY SEMINAR),
(THOUGHTS AT SEA ABOARD THE QUEEN MARY 2, PART III),
(TESTIMONIAL)

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MHFTR

Thoughts at Sea Aboard the Queen Mary 2, Part III

Diary, Newsletter

50 degrees, 26.68 minutes North, 022 degrees, 29.98 minutes East, or 1,000 nautical miles South of Iceland, heading 089 degrees.

Four days of hearing foghorns is starting to get tiring. Captain Wells has been ducking many of his social responsibilities, feeling more secure in the bridge close to the radar.

After a few days of intermittent access, the Internet is now gone for good, the satellite connection having given up the ghost.

People are blaming everything from a lightning strike on the Virginia ground station to late night watching of porn by the crew.

Instead of surfing the web, I am devoting more time to exercise in anticipation of my upcoming Swiss mountain climbing adventures.

I have developed a careful routine where I fast walk three times around deck 7 in a brisk wind, take the elevator down to deck 1, walk up the stairs to deck 13, speed past the kennels, the practice golf range, two swimming pools, and a bar.

I can accomplish all of this three times in an hour and do it with 40 pounds of books stashed in my backpack.

My butler, Peter, tells me there is always a certifiable nutcase on every cruise, and this time, I have been designated by the crew as "THE ONE."

The 2,600 passengers are quite a mixed batch. We have 1,200 British, 750 Americans, 350 Germans, 80 Canadians, four dogs, three cats, and an assortment of other nationalities, and exactly one Japanese couple who don't speak a word of English.

I took pity on them and spent an evening translating and catching up on the world at large with them. He was a retired dance instructor, which explains why he and his wife owned the dance floor on most nights.

They were grateful for the conversation, for during their entire 30-day cruise from New York to Southampton, then the Baltic Sea and the Norwegian fjords, then back to New York, they had no one to speak to.

Still, that was better than last year, when they completed a 105-day round-the-world cruise with absolutely no one to talk to at all.

Before they left, they gave me an exquisite, handmade, traditional Japanese purse as a gift. What a nice gesture!

All those hours on the Tokyo subway memorizing flash cards finally paid off!

Queen Mary - Stateroom The Hard Life at Sea

John Thomas - Queen MaryOn the High Seas


John Thomas - Queen Mary IIYour Intrepid Reporter

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MHFTR

Testimonial

Diary, Newsletter

Thanks John...rough ride out of the gates here...but I wouldn't want to be riding with anyone but you...you are my life raft in this treacherous world of investing, and thank you for being who you are and for all that you do.

Take care,

Greg
Agoura, California

 

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MHFTR

July 19, 2018

Tech Letter

Mad Hedge Technology Letter
July 19, 2018
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:
(AVOIDING THE BULLY),
(MSFT), (AMZN), (WMT), (GME), (ORCL), (GE), (CPB)

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