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april@madhedgefundtrader.com

Google Gives Us Some Good News

Tech Letter

I am not saying that Google’s (GOOGL) earnings report will save the market; the market isn’t just GOOGL.

However, the company demonstrated there is still some positive performance out there in the tech sector when many out there are having a hard time. 

It is clear that we are about to embark on a journey where big tech actively pulls the levers of shareholder returns to get over the low bar of expectations.

It is true that Google has not innovated for years and is still relying on its cash cow called the Google search engine, to drive ad revenue.

At some point, there will be competition as proprietary technology becomes beatable.

Competition is prompting the company and its rivals to spend heavily on infrastructure, research, and talent. While Google benefits from AI startups spending on its cloud and business tools, it’s also racing to present an answer to popular conversational AI chatbots, which consumers are beginning to think of as an alternative to using Google Search.

Google’s beginning of the answer to that threat — its “AI Overviews” and “AI Mode” in search, in which summarized responses are drafted by generative AI and highlighted ahead of Google’s web links — have seen mixed success. Meanwhile, Google’s AI changes to search have decimated traffic to independent websites across the open web.

Google Cloud brought in an operating profit of $2.18 billion, indicating that Google may be nudging out more profits from Cloud even as sales slow.

The cloud unit is so far the clearest indicator of how the AI boom is contributing to the company’s sales, as startups that require more computing power for their work become customers. Though Google Cloud still lags in third place behind Amazon and Microsoft offerings, it’s one of Alphabet’s most important growth areas.

Alphabet’s board authorized a $70 billion share buyback and boosted its dividend by 5%, to 21 cents a share.

With Google’s search business still holding up at a tough time in global business, I must conclude that Google is doing better than expected.

I believe that we will see a consolidated trend in 2025 of big tech dipping into their huge cash reserves to give back returns to shareholders. Google increasing its dividend by 5% is just the beginning, and we expect bigger returns as we move to the latter part of the year.

There is nowhere to invest in innovation right now in technology, which is why management is quick to buy back stock.

If there is some great project out there, management is keeping it close to its vest.

The long-term problem is that when you fire all the Americans with high wages who secured the company’s success to this point, replacing Americans with cost-cutting employees from India won’t deliver the same amount of innovation as the past in a mature environment.

American tech is supposed to set the bar in innovation, and now they are no,t which is why China is rapidly catching up to Americans on all cutting-edge technology, whether it be EVs or chip manufacturing.

Google is no longer a growth company, and that hurts the stock price.

We could experience a bear market rally that could propel Google along, but that depends on the whims of global politics, which Google has no control over.

If you look at the risk/reward scenario, Google is worth a bullish trade after the wild pullback.

 

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april@madhedgefundtrader.com

April 28, 2025

Jacque's Post

 

(THE “SELL AMERICA” THREAD HAS TAKEN HOLD)

 

 

April 28, 2025

 

Hello everyone

 

WEEK AHEAD CALENDAR

MONDAY, APRIL 28

10:30 a.m. Dallas Fed Index (April)

Earnings:  Universal Health Services, Domino’s Pizza

 

TUESDAY, APRIL 29

8:30 a.m. Wholesale Inventories preliminary (March)

9:00 a.m. FHFA Home Price Index (February)

9:00 a.m. S&P/Case Shiller comp. 20 HPI (February)

9:30 a.m. Australia Inflation Rate

Previous: 2.4%

Forecast: 2.2%

10:00 a.m. Consumer Confidence (April)

10:00 a.m. JOLTS Job Openings (March)

Earnings:  Visa, Seagate Technology Holdings, Starbucks, Mondelez International, PPG Industries, First Solar, Extra Space Storage, Caesars Entertainment, Booking Holdings, Sysco, Corning, Sherwin-Williams, Altria Group, Kraft Heinz, Coca-Cola, American Tower, Pfizer, Regeneron Pharmaceuticals, Royal Caribbean Group, General Motors, United Parcel Service, Honeywell International, Hilton Worldwide, PayPal

 

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 30

8:15 a.m. ADP Employment Survey (April)

8:30 a.m. ECI Civilian Workers (Q1)

8:30 a.m. GDP Chain Price (Q1)

8:30 a.m. GDP first preliminary (Q1)

8:30 a.m. Chicago PMI (April)

10:00 a.m. Core PCE Deflator (March)

10:00 a.m. PCE Deflator (March)

10:00 a.m. Personal Consumption Expenditure (March)

10:00 a.m. Personal Income (March)

10:00 a.m. Pending Home Sales (March)

11:00 p.m. Japan Rate Decision

Previous: 0.5%

Forecast: 0.5%

Earnings:  Prudential Financial, MGM Resorts International, Allstate, eBay, Qualcomm, Public Storage, Microsoft, Meta Platforms, Invitation Homes, Albemarle, Aflac, Hess, yum! Brands, Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings, Caterpillar, GE Healthcare Technologies, Stanley Black & Decker, Humana, Generac Holdings, Western Digital, Martin Marietta Materials, Automatic Data Processing

 

THURSDAY, MAY 1

8:30 Continuing Jobless Claims (04/19)

8:30 a.m. Initial Claims (04/26)

9:45 a.m. S&P PMI Manufacturing final (April)

10:00 a.m. Construction Spending (March)

10:00 a.m. ISM Manufacturing (April)

Earnings:  Apple, Motorola Solutions, Live Nation Entertainment, GoDaddy, Airbnb, Monolithic Power Systems, Amazon.com, Ingersoll Rand, DexCom, Kellanova, McDonalds, Howmet Aerospace, Hershey, Quanta Services, KKR & Co, Eli Lilly & Co, Estee Lauder Companies, Moderna, IDEXX Laboratories, CVS Health, Mastercard

 

FRIDAY, MAY 2

8:30 a.m. Hourly Earnings preliminary (April)

8:30 a.m. Average Workweek preliminary (April)

8:30 a.m. Manufacturing Payrolls (April)

8:30 a.m. Nonfarm Payrolls (April)

Previous: 228k

Forecast: 130k

8:30 a.m. Participation Rate (April)

8:30 a.m. Private Nonfarm Payrolls (April)

8:30 a.m. Unemployment Rate (April)

10:00 a.m. Durable Orders (March)

10:00 a.m. Factory Orders (March)

Earnings:  T. Rowe Price Group, Chevron, Exxon Mobil, Apollo Global Management

 

 

Since April 2, investors have been trying to see through the noise of a tariffed landscape – which has seemingly toppled the U.S. from its perceived position of power.

“Sell America” is now a theme in the macro landscape.  U.S. equities have slumped, the U.S dollar has been pummelled, and bonds have sold off.  This has forced investors into a rethink on the U.S. exceptionalism trade in the future.

 

 

Hiding away from the volatility is possible – diversify into a mix of short-term bonds, gold, utilities, and consumer staples.  Think of stocks like Coca-Cola, Procter & Gamble, Walmart & Costco.  Or you could also think about an ETF – Vanguard Consumer Staples ETF (VDC).  This ETF holds Walmart & Costco. You could also look at the Swiss franc currency ETF – (FXF).

Last Friday, stocks closed out a winning week.  The Dow Jones Industrial Average ended 2.5% higher on the week.  The S&P 500 was up by 4.6%, while the Nasdaq Composite rose by 6.7%.

This week will be busy with more than 180 companies in the S&P 500 set to release results.  Of those, 11 companies in the Dow Industrials are expected to report, as well as four of the Magnificent Seven companies – Amazon, Apple, Meta Platforms, and Microsoft.

The Mag 7  - not what they used to be –have been well and truly knocked off the top rung of the ladder – and investors would be wise to stop putting all their eggs in that one basket.  While these companies are still expected to show strong earnings in 2025, mostly, the rest of the market, that is, the other 493 S&P 500 companies, are expected to post double-digit earnings growth next calendar year, catching up to the mega cap leadership.

On Wednesday, the Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation gauge – the personal consumption expenditure price index – is expected to show the annual rate of inflation eased to 2.2% in March from 2.5% in February.

Jobs data will be one to watch this week, as it could start to show signs that the labour market is slowing.  Nonfarm payrolls on Friday are projected to show the U.S. added 150,000 jobs in April, down from 209,000 previously, according to FactSet data.  The unemployment rate is expected to stay at 4.2%.

MARKET UPDATE

S&P500

The index is near recent highs in the up move from the April 7th low at 4835, breaking above resistance at 5475/85.  This is a near-term positive sign and, along with positive technical data, argues for further gains.  We can’t be sure yet whether this will be a pattern of limited ranging or a run back to the Feb high at 6147. 

Resistance:  $5640/50

Support: $5475/85 & $5350/60 & $5185/95

 

GOLD

Gold has fallen from the April 22 high at $3500.  The market was extremely overbought, and this could be the top for at least a few weeks to a month or more.  In the short term, there could be more retests towards the high before rolling over.

Resistance: $3367/77 & $3447

Support:  $3305/15 & $3257/67 (recent lows) & $3218/28

 

BITCOIN

There has not really been much change in the big picture view over the last few months.  We have seen a large bottoming taking place, with eventual gains above the Jan. peak at 109.40k expected.

The recent rally argues that the final low is likely in place.  Bitcoin is now testing resistance at 95.9/96.4k, and this movement could trigger some consolidation for a week or two (not yet confirmed).

On March 17, I suggested several option trades in (IBIT) and (MSTR) that you could enter.   A few of these are already in profit, and I expect the rest soon will be.

Further resistance: 98.9/99.4k

Support: 91.3/88.5k

 

QI CORNER

 

 

HISTORY CORNER

On April 28

 

 

SOMETHING TO THINK ABOUT

 

Cheers

Jacquie

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april@madhedgefundtrader.com

April 28, 2025

Diary, Newsletter, Summary

Global Market Comments
April 28, 2025
Fiat Lux

 

Featured Trade:

(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or HERE’S THE BEST-CASE SCENARIO)
(SPY), (TLT), (NFLX), (COST), (NVDA), (TSLA), (MSTR)

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april@madhedgefundtrader.com

The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or Here’s the Best Case Scenario

Diary, Homepage Posts, Newsletter

Last week, a concierge customer asked me an excellent question. Having correctly called the top in this market to the hour, what would it take for me to go all in on the long side and get maximum bullish?

With everyone now laser-focused on downside risks, which was really a last February game, I thought I’d take the opportunity this morning to examine the upside possibilities, if there are any at all.

Let’s say that the trade war ends before the ninety-day deadline is up on July 9, and the Chinese tariffs are reduced from a trade embargo of 145% to, say, only 20%. Markets will instantly rally 10%, with possibly half of that move happening at a market opening, so you can’t participate.

That is in effect, as what happened last week, with investors willing to look through the trade war to a less onerous business environment sometime in the future. A 20% tariff still takes the US growth rate down to zero, but it at least takes a recession off the table. Problem number one: Zero-growth economies don’t command high earnings multiples.

The problem with that scenario is that we hit a wall of selling above 5,800, where the late entrants came in but are now trying to get out, at close to cost. To get above that level, we need a really powerful fundamental bull case, which is now nowhere on the horizon. That’s why it’s unlikely that the stock market will see any positive returns for 2025.

The reality is that the trade war is not the only place where the economy has been driven off the rails. Even a 20% tariff brings substantially higher prices. International trade is falling off a cliff. Massive cuts in government spending are highly deflationary. Deporting large numbers of immigrants reduces demand and shrinks the labor supply. Unless Congress can pass a budget bill soon, we are on track to see an automatic $5 trillion tax increase by yearend. The budget deficit will hit a new record for this year.

Needless to say, companies will continue to sit on their hands with this amount of uncertainty and wait for the many unknowns to play out. None of these commands higher multiples for equities, let alone the near record S&P 500 multiple at 20X that prevails now.

To really get maximum bullish like I was for most of the last 15 years, the economy would have to return to the conditions that took stocks to record highs like we had until three months ago. That would be a globalized free-trading economy with the US playing a dominant role. That’s an economy that deserves high earnings multiples.

We won’t see that for at least four more years, but markets may start to discount it in only three years as we run up to the next presidential election in 2028. Imagine a future presidential candidate who campaigns on a zero-tariff regime and a return to globalization.

To get a sustainable multi-year bull market in stocks, it would help a lot if we started from a much lower base first. New bull markets don’t start at 20X multiples. A 16X multiple is much more likely, or 20% lower than we are now. We may get that.

The government is currently trying to break up three of the Magnificent Seven with antitrust actions, which led the march to higher stock markets for years. Corporate earnings are now rapidly shrinking, but we won’t see the hard numbers until August. Until then, we only get forecasts. Lower earnings command much lower multiples. That leaves on the table my 4,500 forecast low for the (SPX).

We could well be stuck in a trading range for years. Stocks could continue to bump their heads up against a (SPX) 5,800 ceiling but also get talked up by the administration whenever it collapses towards 4,800. Some 1,000 (SPX) points is quite a wide trading range to play with and plenty enough to make money on.

I did it only last week. You have to ignore the news flow and use the volatility index ($VIX) for your market timing. When the ($VIX) hit $54 last week, I piled on longs in (NFLX), (NVDA), (MSTR), and (JPM). By Friday, I gained 8.12% in new performance, my best weekly return in the 17-year history of Mad Hedge Fund Trader.

What if you just want to take a long-term view and not have to check the ($VIX) in between every putt on the golf course?

Gold (GLD) is looking pretty darn good right now. With the collapse of the US dollar ongoing, flight to safety assets is in short supply. American economic conditions will get worse before they get better. Central bank accumulation has continued at its torrid decade-long pace. And gold seems to have broken the link with interest rates that held it back for so long, eliminating opportunity cost as an issue. Even ultra-cautious JP Morgan expects the barbarous relic to reach $4,000 an ounce this quarter.

The great mystery in the sector has been the lagging performance of the gold miners. While gold doubled, the shares of Barrack Gold (GOLD) went nowhere.

Gold miners have yet to be taken seriously by mainstream institutional investors, as they are often the subject of excessive promotion, scams, and outright fraud. Token or non-existent dividends are another impediment. Millennials have clearly gravitated towards crypto instead. Miners also got a bad rap from the ESG investment trend as they are considered a “dirty” industry. Anything US dollar-denominated is being dragged down by the weak greenback. That’s why gold only accounts for 0.54% of global portfolios today, versus 2.48% in 1998.

That may all be about to change.

Last week, Barrack Gold, which mines gold at a cost of $1,600 an ounce and sells it at the recent $3,500, completed a monster 23% move in the shares. Newmont Mining (NEM) completed an incredible 32% move. Gold attractiveness is such that only a 5% decline was enough to pull me back in on the long side last week.

High prices atone for a lot of sins.

 

April is now up by a spectacular +10.31%. That takes us to a year-to-date profit of +24.14% so far in 2025. My trailing one-year return stands at a spectacular +84.47%. That takes my average annualized return to +50.61% and my performance since inception to +776.03%, a new all-time high.

It has been another wild week in the market. I used the 1,200-point meltdown in the Dow Average on Monday to add longs in (NFLX), (JPM), and (MSTR). I also quickly covered a short in (MSTR). After the market rallied 2,000 points, I added shorts in (TSLA), (SPY), and a new long in (GLD). That leaves me 40% long, 30% short, and 30% cash. If everything goes our way on the May 16 options expiration day, we will be up 30% on the year.

Some 63 of my 70 round trips in 2023, or 90%, were profitable. Some 74 of 94 trades were profitable in 2024, and several of those losses were really break-even. That is a success rate of +78.72%.

Try beating that anywhere.

Stock Market Suffers the Worst Start to a Year in History. April was the worst since 1932, and lower lows beckon. The Real “Trump Trade” was a “Sell America” trade, with stocks, bonds, energy, and the US dollar all collapsing.

Fed Beige Books Point to Stagflation
. Prices are rising and economic activity has begun to slow across parts of the nation as businesses and households try to adapt to Trump’s erratic rollout of sweeping tariffs aimed at reshaping global trade, a report Wednesday from the Federal Reserve showed. Uncertainty around international trade policy was pervasive across reports, the U.S. central bank said.

Leading Economic Indicators Plunge, published Monday by research group The Conference Board, fell 0.7%, to 100.5, in March, following an upwardly revised 0.2% decline in February. Economists polled by The Wall Street Journal had expected a 0.5% decline for March. The recession is here, you just don’t know it yet.

Europe Lowers Interest Rates, down 0.25% to 2.25%, to head off a recession caused by Trump tariffs. The bank’s rate-setting council decided at a meeting in Frankfurt to lower its benchmark rate by a quarter percentage point to 2.25%. The bank has been steadily cutting rates after raising them sharply to combat an outbreak of inflation from 2022 to 2023.

Netflix Earnings rocket, setting the stock on fire, as an indication that the stock may be recession-proof. Netflix reported first-quarter adjusted earnings of $6.61 a share on revenue of $10.54 billion. Analysts surveyed by FactSet expected earnings of $5.67 a share on revenue of $10.5 billion. The stock climbed 3.4% in after-hours trading. As of the market close Thursday, it has risen 9.2% this year. Buy (NFLX) on dips.

IMF Cuts US GDP forecast for 2025 from 2.8% to 1.8%, and they are a deep lagging indicator. The prediction is part of a wide-ranging reduction in global growth. Tariffs are to blame.

US Dollar Hits Three-Year Low, as the flight from American trade accelerates. No trade with the US means no need to buy the greenback.

Gold Tops $3,424, the 1980 inflation-adjusted all-time high. A shortage of “Sell America” trades is driving everyone into gold all at once. The (GDX) gold miners ETF hit a 13-year high. Gold imports are now a major contributor to the US trade deficit.

JP Morgan Targets Gold at $4,000 in Q2, as the “Sell America” trade gathers steam. Central banks are the big winners here, which have been hoovering up the barbarous relic for years.

Tesla Bombs, with Q1 earnings down a gob-smacking 71%, a four-year low. Sales are in free fall globally. Tesla’s cost of making and selling vehicles dropped over 17% year over year, driven by lower raw material prices and reduced expenses of ramping up Cybertrucks production. Automotive gross margin for the period, excluding regulatory credits, was 12.5%, down from 30% a year ago, compared with expectations of 11.8%. Tesla short sellers have earned $11.5 billion so far this year, including myself, with the stock down 55%. The shares rose $10 on news that Elon Musk will spend significantly less time with DOGE. Buy only the biggest dips in (TSLA).

Record Funds are Pouring into Japan. Overseas investors have bought a net ¥9.64 trillion ($67.5 billion) of the Asian nation’s debt and equities so far in April, according to preliminary weekly figures released by the Ministry of Finance on Thursday. That level is already the most for any month on record, based on balance-of-payments data going back to 1996. What was the only thing Warren Buffett was buying last year? Japanese trading companies.

Existing Homes Sales Hit 16-Year Low. Sales of previously owned US homes fell 5.9% in March to an annualized rate of 4.02 million, the weakest March since 2009. The median sales price increased 2.7% from a year ago to $403,700, a record for the month of March and extending a run of year-over-year price gains dating back to mid-2023.

Apple to Move All iPhone Production to India. It is a move that has been underway for some time due to China’s soaring labor costs. Since I began covering China in the early 1970s, China's average annualized income has risen from $300 a year to $16,000, up 5,300%.

Alphabet (GOOG) Beats, after the company topped Wall Street estimates and showed growth in its advertising and search business. The company suggested that it’s too soon to tally the impact of Trump’s tariffs, but the ending of the de minimis loophole could create a “slight headwind” to its advertising business. The really interesting number was Alphabet’s estimate of a potential market size of 4 billion rides a year for its Waymo autonomous driving taxi service.

My Ten-Year View – A Reassessment

We have to substantially downsize our expectations of equity returns in view of the election outcome. My new American Golden Age, or the next Roaring Twenties, is now looking at multiple gale-force headwinds. The economy will completely stop decarbonizing. Technology innovation will slow. Trade wars will exact a high price. Inflation will return. The Dow Average will rise by 600% to 240,000 or more in the coming decade. The new America will be far more efficient and profitable than the old. My Dow 240,000 target has been pushed back to 2035.

On Monday, April 28, at 8:30 AM EST, the Dallas Fed Manufacturing Index is announced.

On Tuesday, April 29, at 3:30 AM, the S&P Case Shiller National Home Price Index is released. We also get the JOLTS job openings report.

On Wednesday, April 30, at 8:30 PM, the Q1 GDP growth rate is published, as is the CPI for April. 

On Thursday, May 1, at 8:30 AM, the Weekly Jobless Claims are disclosed.

On Friday, May 2, at 8:30 AM, we get the Nonfarm Payroll Report for April.


As for me, when I was shopping for a Norwegian Fjord cruise a few years ago, each stop at a port was familiar to me because a close friend had blown up bridges in every one of them during WWII.

During the 1970s at the height of the Cold War, my late wife Kyoko flew a monthly round trip from Tokyo to Moscow as a British Airways stewardess. As she was checking out of her Moscow hotel, someone rushed up to her and threw a bundled typed manuscript that hit her in the chest.

Seconds later, a half dozen KGB agents dog piled on top of Kyoko. It turned out that a dissident was trying to get her to smuggle a banned book to the West. She was arrested as a co-conspirator and bundled away to the notorious Lubyanka Prison.

I learned of this when the senior KGB agent for Japan contacted me, who had attended my wedding the year before and filmed it. He said he could get her released, but only if I turned over a top-secret CIA analysis of the Russian oil industry.

At a loss for what to do, I went to the US Embassy to meet with Ambassador Mike Mansfield, whom, as The Economist correspondent in Tokyo, I knew well. He said he couldn’t help me as Kyoko was a Japanese national, but he knew someone who could.

Then in walked William Colby, head of the CIA.

Colby was a legend in intelligence circles. After leading the French resistance with the OSS, he was parachuted into Norway with orders to disable the railway system. Hiding in the mountains during the day, he led a team of Norwegian freedom fighters who laid waste to the entire rail system from Tromso all the way down to Oslo. He thus bottled up 300,000 German troops, preventing them from retreating home to defend from an allied invasion.

During Vietnam, Colby became known for running the Phoenix assassination program. It was wildly successful.

I asked Colby what to do about the Soviet request. He replied, “Give it to them.” Taken aback, I asked how. He replied, “I’ll give you a copy.” Mansfield was my witness, so I could never be arrested for being a turncoat.

Copy in hand, I turned it over to my KGB friend, and Kyoko was released the next day and put on a flight out of the country. She never took a Moscow flight again.

I learned that the report predicted that the Russian oil industry, its largest source of foreign exchange, was on the verge of collapse. Only a massive investment in modern Western drilling technology could save it. This prompted Russia to sign deals with American oil service companies worth hundreds of millions of dollars.

Ten years later, I ran into Colby at a Washington event, and I reminded him of the incident. He confided in me, “You know that report was completely fake, don’t you?” I was stunned. The goal was to drive the Soviet Union to the bargaining table to dial down the Cold War. I was the unwitting middleman. It worked.

That was Bill, always playing the long game.

After Colby retired, he campaigned for nuclear disarmament and gun control. He died in a canoe accident on the lake in front of his Maryland home in 1996.

Nobody believed it for a second.

 

William Colby

 

Kyoko

 

Good Luck and Good Trading,

John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Mad Hedge Fund Trader

April 28, 2025 - Quote of the Day

Quote of the Day

“It's very difficult to navigate a business through a paradigm shift. You must hard wire your system to second guess all the time, questioning what is next, and then what is next. You've got to retain optionality for both investment portfolios and the business you run to navigate this well,” said Mohamed El-Erian, former co-chairman of the bond house PIMCO.

 

 

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april@madhedgefundtrader.com

Trade Alert - (MSTR) April 25, 2025 - BUY

Trade Alert

When John identifies a strategic exit point, he will send you an alert with specific trade information as to what security to sell, when to sell it, and at what price. Most often, it will be to TAKE PROFITS, but, on rare occasions, it will be to exercise a STOP LOSS at a predetermined price to adhere to strict risk management discipline. Read more

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april@madhedgefundtrader.com

April 25, 2025

Tech Letter

Mad Hedge Technology Letter
April 25, 2025
Fiat Lux

 

Featured Trade:

(THIS TECHNOLOGY IS A FLOP)
(META), (AAPL), (MSFT)

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april@madhedgefundtrader.com

This Technology Is A Flop

Tech Letter

Meta (META) cutting staff in its virtual reality and augmented reality divisions means uncertainty about future products originating from these places.

The juice has not been worth the squeeze.

I think everyone remembers when Founder Mark Zuckerberg had those goofy metaverse commercials depicting him as an avatar when he debuted the company name change from Facebook to Meta.

Well, the metaverse project isn’t working, which is why he’s firing staff from those projects.

The metaverse division has underdelivered and overpromised.

This lethal cocktail of failure is finally forcing management to cut off the fat from its body.

VR and AR are now losing billions of dollars per year, and as the business environment turns more pragmatic, these experimental projects are thrown out for good. 

META said its Reality Labs unit recorded an operating loss of $4.97 billion while generating $1.1 billion in sales.

A nice quarterly performance of minus 3 billion dollars has forced management to make some tough decisions.

Now, the AR and VR divisions will be gutted.

Reality Labs is Meta’s unit that makes the Quest family of virtual-reality headsets and Ray-Ban Meta Smart Glasses.

Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg kick-started his company’s VR endeavors in 2014 when it acquired the startup Oculus for $2 billion. Since then, Zuckerberg has characterized VR and AR as central to his plans to develop the futuristic digital world known as the metaverse, which he has said represents the next major computing platform.

Reality Labs has piled up an operating loss of more than $60 billion since 2020.

The losses cannot just be swept under the carpet.

Meta last week said it would invest between $60 billion and $65 billion in 2025 capital expenditures to expand its computing infrastructure related to artificial intelligence.

Even this AI infrastructure build-out is questionable at this point, as other big tech firms pull back from this type of investment.

Meta released its latest VR headset, the $299 Quest 3S, during its September Connect event and pitched the device as a way for people to watch movies, play games, and work out in VR.

Microsoft (MSFT) has lost at least $5 billion on HoloLens since the launch of the first model in 2016.

The Microsoft HoloLens is a mixed reality headset that allows users to overlay digital information onto the real world, creating a blended experience of physical and digital environments.

Microsoft’s withdrawal from the market for augmented and virtual reality hardware leaves competitors such as Apple and Meta with a less crowded field on which to compete.

Apple (AAPL) is another company that has bet on AR and VR.

In short, VR and AR have been money pits that suck up investment dollars, but deliver nothing in terms of profit.

Whether it is Meta, Apple, or Microsoft, they have all struck out at this technology and will need to embrace the reality that consumers don’t want Google-type technology on their face to interact with a screen.

AR and VR divisions should be buried in the graveyard of attempted technology that people aren’t interested in.

Back to the drawing board…

 

 

 

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april@madhedgefundtrader.com

April 25, 2025

Jacque's Post

 

(SUMMARY OF JOHN’S APRIL 16, 2025, WEBINAR)

 

April 18, 2025

 

Hello everyone

 

TITLE – The Special Chaos Issue

 

PERFORMANCE

April +0.95 MTD

2025 year to date = +14.78%

Since inception = +766.33%

One year return = 75.65%

Average annualised return = 50.28%

 

PORTFOLIO REVIEW

Risk On

(COST) 4/$840-$850 call spread

(TSLA) 4/$160-$170 put spread

(NFLX) 4/$800-$810 call spread

(NVDA) 4/$70- $75 call spread

 

Risk Off

(MSTR) 4/$340-$350 put spread

(All expired in profit this week)

 

THE METHOD TO MY MADNESS

Trump announced worst-case scenario tariffs, tanking stocks and crypto, triggering the biggest tax increase in 85 years.

Trump then cracks, announcing a 90-day delay in trade tariffs forced by the imminent collapse of global financial markets, with possible exceptions for smartphones, computers, and chips.

All asset classes are dumped, presaging global economic crisis.

Bonds have worst week in 25 years, spiking yields by 60 basis points to 4.5%

Both inflation and unemployment are about to take off like a rocket.

Recession call is still on.

US Dollar has been pummelled.

Oil crashes.

 

THE GLOBAL ECONOMY – TURMOIL

Chinese tariffs raised to 145% this evening in a US retaliation to the retaliation.  China counters with 125%

Unemployment rises to 4.2%, a multi-year high – the March Nonfarm Payroll Report.

Nonfarm payrolls in March increased by 228,000 for the month, up from the revised 117,000 in February.

U.S. inflation expectations hit a 44-year high.

Consumer Price Index falls to 2.4% in March, a big drop from 2.8%.

Canadian Visitors fall 32%, in line with other forecasts of a collapse in international travel.

NFIB Business Optimism Index plunges.

JP Morgan raises recession risk to 79%

 

STOCKS – PANIC!

All Capital gains of the last 13 months were wiped out at market lows.

Chaos reigns supreme, with the (SPX) dropping 20% at the lows.

Volatility hits 16 16-year high at 62.

Hedge funds are still dumping technology stocks, as they still command big premiums to the main market.

Tech leads the downturn on every selloff.

All long-term technical indicators have rolled over, meaning that the bear market could continue until summer at the earliest and next year at the latest.

Delta Airlines collapses 50% on recession expectations and foreign travel fall off, pulls forward guidance.

2025 will be a down year for stocks.

Visa (V) buy any dips

Banks are good buys – PE multiples are in low teens.

 

BONDS – DEFAULT RISK

The Financial Crisis trade is still on, with 10-year US Treasury bonds hitting 4.6% yields.

Bonds suffer their worst sell-off in 25 years.

Foreign investors panic-sell, worried about US default or capital controls.

Collapse of the US dollar is pouring gasoline on the fire.

If countries can’t run trade surpluses with the US anymore, they don’t need to buy US bonds or dollars.

Bond Credit Quality is crashing as recessions lead to more defaults.

Junk bonds have fallen by $6.00 in a month, a massive move for this market, no doubt partially due to margin calls across all asset classes.

Avoid (TLT), (JNK), (NLY), (SLRN) and REITS

 

FOREIGN CURRENCIES – Dead Dumping

Shrinking international trade brings a shrinking demand for the US dollar.

US dollar declines as a reserve currency in the last quarter of 2024, while the percentage of actual dollars held as reserve ticked up, IMF data showed on Monday.

The Trump economy is forcing investors to flee all US assets, including stocks and currency.

Massive cash flight is running away from the US and into Europe and China.

Buy (FXA), (FXE), (FXB), (FXC), and (FXY)

 

ENERGY & COMMODITIES – CRASH!

Oil crashes down an amazing $13, or down 18% in a week, from $72 to $59.

High dividend-paying (XOM) has collapsed by 18%.

It is the sharpest fall in Texas tea prices since the 1919 Gulf War.

Recession fears are running rampant, and no one wants to pay for storage until a recovery, which may be years off.

Sell all energy rallies.

A global recession is looming large.

Avoid all energy plays like the plague.

 

PRECIOUS METALS – MELT UP

Gold hits a new all-time high, as the only flight to safety asset that is really working.  My target is $5,000.

Gold sees first $100 up day in history.

Q1 gold inflows hit three-year high, according to the World Gold Council.

Gold ETF’s saw an inflow of 226.5 metric tonnes worth $21.1 billion in the first quarter.

Central bank buying and Chinese savings demand continues unabated with China devaluing its currency.

Keep buying all (GLD) metal dips.

 

REAL ESTATE – GREEN SHOOTS SQUASHED

Existing home prices may rise due to the tariffs, as their replacement cost has just shot up enormously.

Lumber comes from Canada, and drywall and labour come from Mexico. A recession will also drive interest rates lower.

Mortgage rates rising back to 7.1% demolish any recovery.

Pending Home Sales rise, based on signed contracts. Pending home sales decreased 3.6% from a year earlier.

Homebuilder sentiment craters to a seven-month low in March as tariffs on imported materials raised construction costs.

 

TRADE SHEET – THE RECESSION TRADE

Stocks – sell rallies

Bonds – stand aside

Commodities – stand aside

Currencies – buy dips

Precious Metals – buy dips

Energy – stand aside

Volatility – sell over $50

Real Estate – stand aside

 

NEXT STRATEGY WEBINAR

12:00 EST Wednesday, April 30, 2025

From Incline Village, NV

 

 

Cheers

Jacquie

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april@madhedgefundtrader.com

April 25, 2025

Diary, Newsletter, Summary

Global Market Comments
April 25, 2025
Fiat Lux

 

Featured Trade:

(THE UNITED STATES OF DEBT)
(TLT)

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