?Under current law there will be a massive fiscal contraction in 2013,? said Ben Bernanke, chairman of the Federal Reserve.

?Under current law there will be a massive fiscal contraction in 2013,? said Ben Bernanke, chairman of the Federal Reserve.

The Japanese yen has been flat lining since the tsunami struck in March of last year and was quickly followed by the nuclear meltdown and an economic collapse. In the meantime, the country?s long term structural problems have gotten steadily worse.
Last week, the yen was driven back to the very top of the range with a modest ?RISK OFF? trade in the global financial markets that has so far only lasted three days. It was enough to take the (FXY) from $125.80 to $129.10, a big move for such a normally quiescent currency. So I am going to buy the Currency Shares Japanese Yen Trust ETF (FXY) March 2012 $129 puts at $1.60 or best.
Because the yen has been stuck in such a narrow range for so long, the options are fantastically cheap. You can buy the March Yen puts with an implied volatility of only 8%, compared to 50% for the (UNG) puts, and a nose bleeding 80% for the (VIX) calls. Break out of this range, and these implieds, and put prices, go through the roof.
If the yen moves back to the bottom end of this range, which appears on the charts etched in stone, then you should get a triple on the puts. If the rapid deterioration of Japan?s horrific fundamentals starts to accelerate, then you could get a downside breakout on the (FXE) and far larger profits that many hedge fund managers have been calling for.
Those unable to execute trades in options can buy the Pro Shares Ultra Short Yen ETF (YCS), a double leveraged bet that the yen goes down.
I also have a tactical reason for putting on a short yen trade here. A short position in the yen is clearly a ?RISK OFF? trade, a place that people can go when they are feeling good about the world. I can use this to counterbalance my existing ?RISK ON? positions in the (SPY), the (EUO), and the (SDS). With a balanced portfolio I can simply sell whatever is up, buy more of whatever is down, and hopefully make money hand over fist. This is the approach that I used to such great effect last year.
For a much more detailed explanation of the problems besetting the Land of the Rising Sun, please click here for ?Is This the Chink in Japan?s Armor?? by clicking here.
Subscribers to my Global Trading Dispatch received this research piece as a trade alert on Monday. To subscribe to the Mad Hedge Fund Trader?s Trade Alert Service, please go to my website at www.madhedgefundtrader.com , find the Global Trading Dispatch box on the right, and click on the lime green ?SUBSCRIBE NOW? button at the bottom.



Finally, all that driving down dusty, bumpy, washboard dirt roads in the Barnet Shale in Texas paid off. The thing about a great trade is that when it works, new reasons to justify it that you never thought of suddenly come out of the woodwork. That is exactly what happened with my decision to sell short natural gas two days ago.
That unloved molecule, CH4, cratered this morning, the ETF (UNG) trading all the way down to $5.07. The value of my April puts soared, jumping 75% in a mere two days. Being a trader all the way down to my DNA, I took the money and run. The gain took the value of my Global Trading Dispatch model trading portfolio up to 1.41% year to date.
I got up at 4:00 AM this morning to call my friends in Texas before they headed off the fields. I wanted to get the lowdown on what caused the catastrophic decline in natural gas yesterday, the sharpest one day sell off in 18 months. What I got was a complete earful, which I will summarize below:
1) Chesapeake Energy?s (CHK) announcement that they would cut natural gas production was complete BS. If you cap a well prematurely you damage the field. You might as well blow it up. What they probably will do is cut back new drilling by 50% going forward. But that does nothing to address the glut of gas that is spewing out of the wells now.
2) The fear is that so much gas will be produced that we will completely run out of storage by summer, leading to a further collapse in prices. While new storage is being built, it will be woefully inadequate.
3) The winter never showed. This has been the warmest winter in a decade, and traditional heating demand for gas has vaporized.
4) Efforts to build an LNG export industry to ship product to China are being slowed by law suits from pesky environmentalists and zoning officials in local neighborhoods nervous about the construction of new liquifaction facilities that might blow up.
5) In the meantime, other companies are in a race to out produce each other to offset lower prices with volume, causing further price cuts.
6) President Obama can promise all he wants about natural gas corridors, but is unlikely to get anything he wants through a gridlocked congress. See a national map of the proposed corridors below.
The pros in the pits assure me that we are not anywhere close to a bottom in natural gas. If we break the ten year low at $2/MBTU, then we could see trapdoor stop loss selling that takes is all the way down from the current $2.36 to $1.75, down 25%. That would take the ETF (UNG) down to $3.75 and the April, 2012 $6 puts up to $2.20, up 340% from my cost. But hey, nobody ever got fired for taking a profit.
To subscribe to the Mad Hedge Fund Trader?s Trade Alert Service, please go to my website at www.madhedgefundtrader.com , find the Global Trading Dispatch box on the right, and click on the lime green ?SUBSCRIBE NOW? button at the bottom. I look forward to working with you. And thank you for supporting my research.


My name is Julian and I am currently a finance student in Montreal, Canada. I've been reading some of the free material you've posted and I think you are dead on with your analysis. It?s really good stuff. I've been trading for 4 years and turned $3000 into $17000. It?s paying my way through college.
Wishing you continued success in 2012.
Julian
Montreal, Canada

?The only way out for Europe is to devalue the Euro to help the peripheral countries,? said Scott Minerd, chief investment officer at Guggenheim Partners.

As a potentially profitable opportunity presents itself, John will send you an alert with specific trade information as to what should be bought, when to buy it, and at what price. Read more
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Long term readers are well aware of my antipathy towards natural gas, which has been in your worst nightmare of a bear market for the past three years.
Well, the simple molecule finally got some good news last week. First, major producer, Chesapeake Energy (CHK) announced that it was cutting its natural gas production by 50%, taking some immediate pressure off the market. Sure, (CHK) is just one company, but others may follow suit.
Second, at the urging of my friend, Boone Pickens, Present Obama announced funding of some natural gas corridors in his State of the Union address. These are chains of natural gas stations placed every 100 miles stretching from east to west and north to south that would allow heavy trucks on transcontinental routes to refuel. This would provide the extra incentive for these 18 wheelers to convert from diesel fuel to CH4 at a nominal cost and put a major dent in our oil imports.
The news was enough to trigger a massive short covering rally in this most unloved of molecules. The spot market soared 25%, from $2.25 to $2.82 per MBTU?s, while the ETF (UNG) leapt from $5 to $6.
I am going to call the bluff of the market here and buy the United States Natural Gas Fund April, 2012 $6 puts at $0.65 or best. That way I can take advantage of the huge contango that exists between the spot and forward markets for natural gas futures contracts. To avoid actually drilling its own wells, the (UNG) buys forward contracts at huge premiums and holds them until they expire at spot. They then roll the cash forward into new contracts and repeat the process. It is one of the best wealth destruction machines I have ever seen and explains why (UNG) has, by far, outperformed natural gas on the downside. It is a great thing to be short.
To see how extreme this contango is, please visit the CME website. June futures natural gas futures are trading at a 10% premium to March, which is more than 40% annualized. All of that premium goes to money heaven for the (UNG).
If (UNG) double bottoms at $5, the put options should double in value. If a continuing glut of gas breaks us down to new lows, you could make much more. With the industry expected to run out of new storage capacity by the summer, I am betting on the latter, hence the heavy position. One other thing worth knowing here is that once drilled with the fracking process, you cannot turn off or cap a natural gas well without damaging the output. There is no ?OFF? switch.
For a much more detailed explanation on why natural gas is in dire straits, please click here. Subscribers to my Global Trading Dispatch received this research piece as a trade alert on Monday. To subscribe to the Mad Hedge Fund Trader?s Trade Alert Service, please go to my website at www.madhedgefundtrader.com , find the Global Trading Dispatch box on the right, and click on the lime green? ?SUBSCRIBE NOW? button at the bottom.




Where Did You Say the ?OFF? Switch is?
Favorite headline of the day: ?Greece Offers to Pay Back Debt With Giant Horse.?

As a potentially profitable opportunity presents itself, John will send you an alert with specific trade information as to what should be bought, when to buy it, and at what price. Read more
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