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
Global Market Comments
June 3, 2024
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(The Mad June traders & Investors Summit is ON!)
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or WELCOME TO THE MALLARD MARKET and ME AND 23 AND ME),
(AAPL), (GOOGL), (AMZN), (TSLA), (MSFT), (META), (AVGO), (LRCX), (SMCI), (NVR), (BKNG), (LLY), (NFLX), (VIX), (COPX), (T), (NVDA), (LEN), (KBH)


(ENERGY STOCKS ARE IN CONFLICT OVER GUYANA OIL ASSETS)
June3, 2024
Hello everyone,
Week Beginning June 3
The Bank of Canada and the European Central Bank are set to kick off June’s Central bank meetings on Wednesday and Thursday, respectively. Both are anticipated to reduce their interest rates by 25 bp. For the ECB, this adjustment would mark its first rate cut since 2016.
Investors are heading into a seasonally weak period for the markets, and while signs of inflation easing has buoyed investors, traders will still be relying on and watching macroeconomic data closely to navigate an expected choppy market.
The week ahead calendar
Monday, June 3
9:45 a.m. Markit PMI Manufacturing final (May)
10 a.m. Construction Spending (April)
10 a.m. ISM Manufacturing (May)
Tuesday, June 4
10 a.m. Durable Orders final (April)
10 a.m. Factory Orders (April)
10 a.m. JOLTS Job Openings (April)
Australia's GDP Growth Rate
Previous: 0.2%
Time: 9:30pm ET
Earnings: Hewlett Packard Enterprise, Bath & Body Works
Wednesday, June 5
9:45 a.m. PMI Composite final (May)
9:45 a.m. Markit PMI Services final (May)
10 a.m. ISM Services PMI (May)
Canada Interest Rate Decision
Previous: 5.0%
Time: 9:45 am ET
Earnings: Campbell Soup, Dollar Tree
Thursday, June 6
8:30 a.m. Continuing Jobless Claims (05/25)
8:30 a.m. Initial Claims (06/01)
8:30 a.m. Unit Labor Costs final (Q1)
8:30 a.m. Productivity final (Q1)
8:30 a.m. Trade Balance (April)
Euro Area Interest Rate Decision
Previous: 4.5%
Time: 8:15 am ET
Earnings: J.M. Smucker Co.
Friday, June 7
8:30 a.m. May Jobs report
Previous: 175k
10 a.m. Wholesale Inventories final (April)
12 p.m. Fed Governor Lisa Cook gives commencement address at Girls Global Academy, University of the District of Columbia, Washington, D.C.
3 p.m. Consumer Credit (April)
Exxon Mobil and Chevron are in a battle over lucrative offshore oil assets in Guyana.
Exxon has outpaced Chevron this year with the oil majors gaining roughly 15% and 6%, respectively.
But the environment for Chevron may look brighter in the second half of the year if it can exercise a favourable outcome from its feud with Exxon over an offshore oil development in Guyana called the Stabroek Block.
Exxon leads that development with a 45% stake, but Chevron is seeking to get in on the action through its pending acquisition of Hess Corp, which has a 30% holding in Stabroek.
Hess shareholders approved the Chevron merger last Tuesday, but it’s still unclear when the deal will close.
Exxon has dragged Chevron and Hess before an arbitration court to defend its claims to a right of first refusal over Hess’ Guyana assets under a joint operation agreement.
Chevron came into the year facing production issues in the Permian Basin and cost overruns at its Tengiz project in Kazakhstan that frustrated investors. Chevron has been bouncing around in a price range between $40 and $65 for most of this year.
Exxon, on the other hand, hasn’t really faced any execution issues this year. In fact, Exxon’s performance is a reversal from the decade leading up to the Covid-19 pandemic, when the company underperformed Chevron due to its capital expenditures during a period when oil prices were low.
Since 2020, Exxon has outperformed Chevron as the company has implemented capital discipline. Additionally, investors have noted Exxon’s lead position in the lucrative offshore oil development in Guyana.
Kevin Holt, senior portfolio manager of the Invesco Energy Fund (FSTEX) believes that the Guyana development is probably the best project the oil sector has seen in 25 years with very productive wells at a relatively low cost. Holt goes on to say that Chevron would look very attractive if the Hess deal closes due to the latter’s large stake in Guyana. However, if Exxon prevails in the arbitration case, the merger will terminate and Hess would remain a stand-alone company, raising questions about Chevron’s next move.
It is unclear how long the arbitration will take. There is a possibility it may drag into 2025.
Holt sees the odds in Chevron’s favour regarding the arbitration, and points to other issues at Tengiz and in the Permian as short-term bumps in the road that will be resolved. The resolution of all the latter will see Chevron in a very good position.
The fund manager argues that both companies are inexpensive
QI CORNER



I found this post interesting form Jason Sen. I have underlined the parts of the post that I have recommended to other traders and investors:
Scaling into a trade or an investment – not committing all your capital at once.
Place your stop loss when you enter the trade – takes the emotion out as you now have a defined risk, and you are sticking to a plan.
Scaling out of positions – allows you to take some profits but still let part of the position run to capture further potential profits. In other words, you can have two take profit positions set.
I refer to the scaling in and out strategy as pyramiding in and out of a position.
Monthly May Zoom Meeting
Thank you to all those who attended the May monthly meeting on Friday afternoon/evening.
We had a great turn out – subscribers from United Kingdom, Australia and the U.S. tuned in.
A recording will be sent out shortly after the presentation has been edited.

Cheers,
Jacquie
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
There’s nothing like the comfort and self-satisfaction of having a 100% cash position in a falling market. While everyone else is bleeding red ink, I am happily plotting my next trades.
Of course, the rest of the market isn’t really bleeding red ink, just giving up windfall profits. Still, it’s better to trade from a position of strength than weakness. It makes identifying the next winners easier.
Think of this as the “Mallard Market”. On the surface, it seems calm and peaceful, while underwater, it is paddling along like crazy. The damage has been unmistakable. Dell, the faux AI stock (DELL) crashed by 28%, Salesforce (CRM) got creamed for 34%, and ServiceNow (NOW) got taken to the woodshed for 22%.
It all belies a market that is incredibly nervous and fast on the trigger. The tolerance for any bad news is zero. Yet there has been no market crash as I expected. The 5,300 level for the (SPX) seems to possess a gravitational field, powered by $250 earnings per share and a multiple of 51X.
It was NVIDIA that put the writing on the wall by announcing a 10:1 split that has opened the floodgates for similar prosperous and high-priced companies.
There are now 36 stocks with share prices of $500 or more ripe for splits with $7 trillion in market cap, or 16% of the total market. While splits don’t change the value of a company, perceptions are everything, as they prove shareholder-friendly policies. While individual investors are confused by an onslaught of contradictory research recommendations, splits are a great “tell” on what to buy next.
Apple (AAPL), Alphabet (GOOGL), Amazon (AMZN), and Tesla (TSLA) have already carried out splits, some multiple times, to great success. Of the Magnificent Seven, only Microsoft (MSFT) and Meta (META) have yet to split.
In the tech area Broadcom (AVGO), Lam Research (LRCX), Super Micro Computer (SMCI), and Service Now (NOW) have yet to split. In the non-tech area, there are NVR Inc. (NVR), Booking Holdings (BKNG), Eli Lilly (LLY), and Netflix (NFLX). Many of these are well-known Mad Hedge recommended stocks.
History has shown that stocks rise 25% one year after a split compared to 12% for the market as a whole. A stock’s addition to the Dow Average or the S&P 500 (SPY) provides a boost. If both occur, stocks will absolutely explode. Stock splits are also much more attractive than buybacks at these high prices.
So, I’ll be trolling the market for split-happy candidates.
You should too.
Since it may be some time before we capitulate and take a worthwhile run at new highs, I thought I’d update you on the global demographic outlook, which is always a long-term driver of economies and markets.
People are now living longer than ever before. But postponing death is only a part of the demographic story. The other is the decline in births. The combination of the two is creating huge changes in the global economy.
The notion of a “demographic transition” is almost a century old. Human societies used to have roughly stable populations, with high mortality matched by high fertility. Families had eight kids and 3-5 usually died in childhood, barely maintaining population growth.
In England and Wales in the 18th and 19th centuries, death rates suddenly plummeted. But fertility did not. The result was a population explosion. As the benefits of economic growth and advances in medicine and public health spread, most of the world has followed a similar transition, but far faster. As a result, human numbers rose fourfold over the last hundred years, from 2 billion to 8 billion.
In time, fertility followed mortality on a downward path across most of the world. As a result, fertility rates in more than half of all countries and territories in 2021 fell below the replacement level. For the world as a whole, the fertility rate was 2.3 in 2021, barely above the replacement of 2.1, down from 4.7 in 1960.
For high-income countries, the fertility rate was a mere 1.6, down from 3.0 in 1960. In general, poor countries still have higher fertility rates than richer ones, but they have been falling there, too.
What explains this collapse in fertility rates? An important part of the answer is the wonderful surprise that more children survived than expected. So, people started to practice various forms of birth control.
But the desire to have many children also shrank sharply. When husbands realized that smaller families meant high standards of living for themselves, family sizes dropped sharply. Even in ultra-conservative Iran, the fertility rate has collapsed from 6.6 in 1980 to only 1.7 in 2021.
A big reason for this shift was that, for their parents, children have moved from being a valuable productive asset in the 19th century to an expensive luxury today. That was back when 50% of our population worked on farms. Today it’s only 2%.
In the meantime, female participation in the economy rose dramatically in the 20th century, including in highly skilled careers. That raised the “opportunity cost” of producing children, especially for mothers. So, they have children later, or even not at all.
Where public childcare is more generous women are encouraged to combine careers with having children. The absence of such help helps explain the exceptionally low fertility rates in much of East Asia and Southern Europe, where parental support is limited.
This global shift towards very low fertility, with the exception (so far) of sub-Saharan Africa, is among the most important events driving the global economy. One implication is that the population of Africa is forecast to be larger than that of all today’s high-income countries, plus China by 2060, thanks to the elimination of many diseases there.
Why is all this important?
Because rising populations create larger markets, more profits for corporations, and rising share prices. Shrinking populations have the opposite effect, as China is learning about its distress now. One reason the US is growing faster than the rest of the world is that a continuous stream of new immigrants since its foundation has created endless numbers of new workers and customers. Dow 240,000 here we come!
Just thought you’d like to know.

So far in May, we are up +3.74%. My 2024 year-to-date performance is at +18.35%. The S&P 500 (SPY) is up +10.48% so far in 2024. My trailing one-year return reached +35.74%.
That brings my 16-year total return to +694.78%. My average annualized return has recovered to +51.48%.
As the market reaches higher and higher, I continue to pare back risk in my portfolio. I bailed on my last position early in the week, covering a short in Apple for a profit.
Some 63 of my 70 round trips were profitable in 2023. Some 27 of 37 trades have been profitable so far in 2024.
The Fed’s Favorite Inflation Gauge Cools by 0.2% in April, with the PCE, or the Personal Consumer Inflation Expectations Price Index. This one strips out the volatile food and energy components. It gives more credibility to a September rate cut and gave bonds a good day.
NVIDIA Shares Continues to Go Ballistic, creating another $800 billion in market capitalization in three trading days. That is the most in history. That took NASDAQ to a new all-time high at 17,000. At $2.8 trillion (NVDA) could become the largest publicly traded company in the world in another day. Today’s tailwind came from an Elon Musk comment that his new xAI start-up would buy the company's high-end H100 graphics cards. Buy (NVDA) on the next 20% dip.
Pending Home Sales Dive, down 7.7% in April, the worst since the Covid market three years ago. The impact of escalating interest rates throughout April dampened home buying, even with more inventory in the market. But the anticipated rate cuts later this year should lead to better conditions, with improved affordability and more supply. Buy (LEN) and (KBH) on dips.
Money Supply Rises for the First Time in More than a Year. Remember money supply? As measured by M2, it sums up the currency, coins, and savings deposits held by banks, balances in retail money-market funds, and more. Data for April released on Tuesday afternoon showed an increase of 0.6% from a year ago. The Fed balance sheet has shrunk by $1.5 trillion in two years, the fastest decline in history, slowing the economy.
AT&T’s (T) Copper is Worth More Than the Company, and with plans to convert half its copper network to fiber by 2025 could free up billions of tons of the red metal to sell on the market. Copper prices have doubled over the past two years, and they could double again by next year. Worldwide there are 7 trillion tons of copper wire in place. Fiber is cheaper and exponentially more efficient than copper, which is facing huge demands from AI, EVs, and the electrification of the grid. Buy copper (COPX) on dips.
Markets are Underpricing Low Volatility (VIX), not a good thing at all-time highs. Volatility across equity and currency markets is low. The Volatility Index (VIX) at $12.46 compares with an average over five years of $21.5 and over the longer term of $19.9. Markets are heavily discounting good news and a disinflationary environment. It is not only stocks. There is also low volatility across currency markets. The DB index of foreign exchange volatility is at $6.3 versus an average of $7.6 over five years and $9.3 over the longer term. This will end in tears.
S&P Case Shiller Jumps to New All-Time High, with its National Home Price Index. The index rose by 1.29%, the fastest growth since April 2023. All 20 major metro cities were up last month and gained 6.5% YOY. Four cities are currently at all-time highs: San Diego, Los Angeles, Washington, D.C., and New York. Prices in San Diego saw the biggest gain, up 11.4% from February of 2023. Both Chicago and Detroit reported 8.9% annual increases. Portland, Oregon, saw the smallest gain in the index of just 2.2%. Unaffordability is the big story in the market right now. The sunbelt is seeing the most weakness, thanks to a post-pandemic construction boom.
Space X’s Starlink Tops 3 million Subscribers, and is rapidly moving towards a global WiFi network. I set up a dozen of these in Ukraine last October and even the Russians couldn’t hack them. It sets a global 200 Mb standard usable in most countries, even the remote Galapagos Islands in the Pacific. It’s only a VC investment now but could become Elon Musk’s next trillion-dollar company.
My Ten-Year View
When we come out the other side of the recession, we will be perfectly poised to launch into my new American Golden Age or the next Roaring Twenties. The economy decarbonizing and technology hyper accelerating, creating enormous investment opportunities. The Dow Average will rise by 800% to 240,000 or more in the coming decade. The new America will be far more efficient and profitable than the old.
Dow 240,000 here we come!
On Monday, June 3, the ISM Manufacturing PMI is released.
On Tuesday, June 4 at 7:00 AM, the JOLTS Job Openings Report will be published.
On Wednesday, June 5 at 7:00 AM, the ISM Services PMI is published.
On Thursday, June 6 at 8:30 AM, the Weekly Jobless Claims are announced. We also get the Challenger Job Cuts Report.
On Friday, June 7 at 8:30 AM, the Nonfarm Payroll and headline Unemployment Rate are announced. At 2:00 PM the Baker Hughes Rig Count is printed.
As for me, when Anne Wojcicki founded 23andMe in 2007, I was not surprised. As a DNA sequencing pioneer at UCLA, I had been expecting it for 35 years. It just came 70 years sooner than I expected.
For a mere $99 back then they could analyze your DNA, learn your family history, and be apprised of your genetic medical risks. But there were also risks. Some early customers learned that their father wasn’t their real father, learned of unknown brothers and sisters, that they had over 100 brothers and sisters (gotta love that Berkeley water polo team!), and other dark family secrets.
So, when someone finally gave me a kit as a birthday present, I proceeded with some foreboding. My mother spent 40 years tracing our family back 1,000 years all the way back to the 1086 English Domesday Book (click here)
I thought it would be interesting to learn how much was actually fact and how much fiction. Suffice it to say that while many questions were answered, alarming new ones were raised.
It turns out that I am descended from a man who lived in Africa 275,000 years ago. I have 311 genes that came from a Neanderthal. I am descended from a woman who lived in the Caucuses 30,000 years ago, which became the foundation of the European race.
I am 13.7% French and German, 13.4% British and Irish, and 1.4% North African (the Moors occupied Sicily for 200 years). Oh, and I am 50% less likely to be a vegetarian (I grew up on a cattle ranch).
I am related to King Louis XVI of France, who was beheaded during the French Revolution, thus explaining my love of Bordeaux wines, women wearing vintage Channel dresses, and pate foie gras.
Although both my grandparents were Italian, making me 50% Italian, I learned there is no such thing as pure Italian. I come out only 40.7% Italian. That’s because a DNA test captures not only my Italian roots, plus everyone who has invaded Italy over the past 250,000 years, which is pretty much everyone.
The real question arose over my native American roots. I am one-sixteenth Cherokee Indian according to family lore, so my DNA reading should have come in at 6.25%. Instead, it showed only 3.25% and that launched a prolonged and determined search.
I discovered that my French ancestors in Carondelet, MO, now a suburb of Saint Louis, learned of rich farmland and easy pickings of gold in California and joined a wagon train headed there in 1866. The train was massacred in Kansas. The adults were all killed, and the young children were adopted into the tribe, including my great X 5 Grandfather Alf Carlat and his brother, then aged four and five.
When the Indian Wars ended in the 1880s, all captives were returned. Alf was taken in by a missionary and sent to an eastern seminary to become a minister. He then returned to the Cherokees to convert them to Christianity. By then, Alf was in his late twenties so he married a Cherokee woman, baptized her, and gave her the name of Minto, as was the practice of the day.
After a great effort, my mother found a picture of Alf & Minto Carlat taken shortly after. You can see that Alf is wearing a tie pin with the letter “C” for his last name Carlat. We puzzled over the picture for decades. Was Minto French or Cherokee? You can decide for yourself.
Then 23andMe delivered the answer. Aha! She was both French and Cherokee, descended from a mountain man who roamed the western wilderness in the 1840s. That is what diluted my own Cherokee DNA from 6.50% to 3.25%. And thus, the mystery was solved.
The story has a happy ending. During the 1904 World’s Fair in St. Louis (of Meet Me in St. Louis fame), Alf, then 46, placed an ad in the newspaper looking for anyone missing a brother from the 1866 Kansas massacre. He ran the ad for three months and on the very last day, his brother answered and the two were reunited, both families in tow.
Today, getting your DNA analyzed starts from $119, but with a much larger database, it is far more thorough. To do so, click here.

My DNA Has Gotten Around

It All Started in East Africa

1880 Alf & Minto Carlat, Great X 5 Grandparents

The Long-Lost Brother
Good Luck and Good Trading,
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader









(NYT), (GCI), (NWSA), (MSFT), (GOOGL), (IBM), (PLTR), (ADBE)
Well, slap me with a wet noodle and call me gullible. It turns out Nina Singh-Hudson, the "long-time writer and Bay Area native" gracing Hoodline SF with her byline, is about as real as a $3 bill.
Turns out she, along with her "colleagues" Tony Ng, Leticia Ruiz, Eileen Vargas, and Eric Tanaka, are nothing more than figments of someone's AI-powered imagination.
Since I began my journalism career as a news reporter, seeing fake bylines made my stomach turn. So, I dug deeper. What I unearthed, well, let's just say it didn't exactly brighten my day.
Hoodline, a supposed hyperlocal news site, has been caught red-handed serving up AI-generated fluff across over two dozen cities.
Their "journalists?" Phony personas dreamt up by algorithms. The only hints of this digital deception? A tiny "AI" badge and a disclaimer hidden deep within the website – and only after they were called out.
Their CEO, Zack Chen, admits these AI-spun yarns are published under fake names, claiming it's the "future of news." But hold on a minute – this isn't just harmless innovation. It's a blatant betrayal of reader's trust.
And get this: Hoodline isn't the lone wolf in this game. Sports Illustrated and CNET have also been caught red-handed, trying to pass off AI-generated content as the real deal. And let's be honest, they won't be the last.
Hoodline's deceptive tactics erode trust in an already chaotic news landscape. With 62% of Americans already wary of AI-generated misinformation, transparency is paramount.
While AI can be a useful tool (think Bloomberg's labeled automated reports), Hoodline's lack of disclosure is a betrayal. In the end, journalism's most valuable currency isn't clicks, it's credibility.
Still, don't get me wrong. I'm not throwing the AI baby out with the bathwater.
Media giants like The New York Times (NYT), Gannett (GCI), and News Corp (NWSA) are already dipping their toes into the AI pool, using it for everything from content personalization to operational efficiency.
Even BuzzFeed (BZFD) is getting in on the action, using AI to spice up their quizzes.
In fact, a recent World Economic Forum survey revealed that a whopping 79% of media executives believe AI will be a major player in journalism within the next five years.
Needless to say, AI is here to stay, and it's got the potential to shake up the news industry. But let's not kid ourselves - this AI gold rush comes with a hefty dose of fool's gold.
Hoodline's lack of transparency is just the tip of the iceberg. As AI gets smarter, the ethical dilemmas get stickier.
Thankfully, companies like IBM (IBM) and Palantir (PLTR) are stepping up to tackle the misinformation monster and wrestle with the biases lurking within AI algorithms. Their efforts are crucial in ensuring that the future of news isn't just automated, but trustworthy.
And for those of you who speak fluent "dollar signs," this AI revolution isn't just about fancy algorithms and sci-fi headlines. It's about cold, hard cash.
AI-driven operational efficiencies are streamlining newsrooms, cutting costs, and boosting profit margins. Take Microsoft (MSFT), for example – their AI initiatives have reportedly slashed operational expenses, padding their bottom line in the process.
But that's not all. AI's ability to serve up personalized content is like a turbocharger for user engagement and advertising revenues. Just look at Alphabet's (GOOGL) soaring ad revenue, fueled by the AI-powered engine of Google Ads.
Meanwhile, Adobe Inc. (ADBE), with its AI-powered Adobe Sensei tools has been on a tear, thanks to their successful integration of AI into their service.
So, is AI journalism's savior or saboteur? The answer, as usual, is more nuanced. It's less a Frankenstein's monster and more a trusty sidekick – a Robin to journalism's Batman if you will.
As a former correspondent for The Economist back in the '70s and '80s, I find this whole AI journalism thing exciting. Instead of fearing this technology, I'm curious about what I could have done with it back in the day. Imagine me, running around Tokyo, chasing down leads with an AI sidekick in my pocket.
But, as exciting as this sounds, it's not just about the money (or the shiny new tech). It's about making sure AI plays nice with journalism's code of ethics.
We can't have AI running around spreading fake news like a drunken cowboy at a saloon. The companies that can wrangle AI and keep it on the straight and narrow? They're the ones that are going to come out ahead. I suggest you add them to your watchlist.
Mad Hedge Technology Letter
May 31, 2024
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(ANOTHER AI SERVER STOCK)
(DELL), (SMCI), (NVDA), (ORCL)

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang complimented Dell by saying it’s a “great partnership” at its GTC conference and said that “nobody is better at building end-to-end systems of very large scale for the enterprise than Dell.”
Words like this go a long way in this industry let alone partnering with the best tech firm in the industry.
To have the best CEO in tech flatter your products means staying power but in the short-term, the stock has come too far too fast.
That’s what this deep selloff is about as Dell shares.
The stock is down 19% today but that doesn’t diminish the 207% gain in the past 365 days.
Dell has reinvented itself as an AI stock and specifically a company specializing in servers that serve AI chips.
The company has done so well lately that they are gearing themselves up for inclusion into the S&P index.
That would honestly be a game-changer for the stock.
Super Micro Computer (SMCI), another play on AI servers, was added in March, despite having a market cap below $50 billion.
Confirmation of improving growth prospects could continue to support a stock that’s at a record high while trading at a discount to other tech favorites.
Dell recently generated excitement by unveiling a line of PCs optimized for AI, adding to hopes that such features could prompt a long-awaited upgrade cycle from customers and businesses. HP even reported the first increase in PC sales in two years.
The firm has become a critical cog in the AI ecosystem.
Both the PC and the server businesses will drive growth in coming years, and that’s supportive of both the stock price and the multiple.
I believe we can now say the company has turned itself into both a growth and a value play since the growth story is still under-appreciated and the multiple is very low relative to other AI plays.
The S&P 500 is rebalanced quarterly, with the next scheduled to occur in June. Becoming a component would open Dell up to a fresh avalanche of investors who use the S&P 500 as their benchmark, as well as flows into passive funds that track the index.
All things considered, I believe this is one of the best tech stocks to play server momentum, sky-rocketing storage demand, and an improving PC market.
Dell is becoming an increasingly strategic vendor in AI, but there’s a lot more appreciation for this than there was a few months ago.
Demand for AI systems remains healthy, but other parts of the business remain cyclical, and if we see a macro downturn, even a growth story as powerful as AI could slow down.
I like that investors are looking through the bad PC numbers and only focusing on Dell's AI server story.
This means that readers should be dissuaded from reach for this tech play even though they have a saturated computer business.
The most important and hardest endeavor in the tech industry is to reinvent when business is slowing down.
Only so many firms can pull it off and now that the pivot is into AI, companies are scrambling like Google and Apple in order to stay relevant.
Dell is a stock that should be bought on dips now and I feel funny saying that because that wasn’t the case not too long ago.
Another stock that has reinvented itself with the AI craze has been Oracle (ORCL).




(SUMMARY OF JOHN’S MAY 29, 2024 WEBINAR)
Friday, May 31, 2024
Hello everyone,
TITLE: The Nvidia Boom
PERFORMANCE:
Month to date - +3.74%
Since inception - +694.98%
Trailing one-year return - +33.25%
Average annualized return - +51.79%
PORTFOLIO:
No Positions.
THE METHOD TO MY MADNESS:
Focus has shifted to the spectacular performance of NVDA and other AI stocks.
Downside is expected to be limited to 5-8% with $8 trillion in cash on the sidelines and a further $26.8 trillion in short-term US treasury bills.
John says technology stocks won’t crash; look for a sideways “time” correction.
All economic data is globally slowing, including the US.
Interest rates are higher for longer but September is on the plate in view of recent data releases.
Buy stocks and bonds on dips.
THE GLOBAL ECONOMY – STILL SLOWING
CPI comes in cool in April at 0.3% versus 0.4% expected.
Global Flash PMI jumps 50.9 for services, and 54.8 for manufacturing, a one-year high.
Weekly jobless claims fall, down 215,000 – down 8,000, the steepest decline since September.
Federal Reserve officials are looking for further weakening in demand as they try to tame inflation without triggering a surge in unemployment.
Consumer Inflation expectations at 3.3%, according to the University of Michigan, the amount of price rises expected in the coming year.
Fed Minutes turn bearish, from their last meeting a month ago.
Chinese government to buy unsold homes to rescue the local real estate market.
STOCKS – BLOWOFF TOP
As the DOW tops 40,000 investors are pouring money into both bonds and stocks, according to the Bank of America. Equity funds saw $11.9 billion in inflows, while bond funds drew in $11.7 billion.
NVDA has triggered split fever in the wake of its own 10:1 announcement last week and traders are piling into the shares of the next candidates.
DOJ to break up Live Nation, seeking to end the monopoly on ticket sales which have sent ticket prices soaring.
Thousands of young traders are getting wiped out following the trading advice of London-based IM Academy and the so-called guru, Chris Terry.
Biggest bear on Wall Street turns bullish. Mike Wilson at Morgan Stanley is targeting $5,400 on the S&P500.
Elon Musk’s X.ai is potentially a trillion-dollar company.
Netflix may be the next candidate to stock split, and to offer a dividend. If it does stock split, the stock will perform very well. Google and Amazon could also be stock split candidates.
Caterpillar (CAT) buy near 200-day MA. If you see weakness in Freeport McMoRan (FCX) buy.
Buy Berkshire Hathaway (BRK/B) on weakness.
Adobe in LEAPS territory. Visa (V) is setting up for another buy.
BONDS – TAKING IT ON THE NOSE:
Today’s treasury auction bombed for two- and five-year notes taking the TLT down $1.31. Oversupply is the big problem. Traders are nervous about this week’s looming inflation data.
Bond investors are making a killing, with the US Treasury paying out $900 billion in interest in 2023.
That’s double the annual cost of the past decade. Remember those coupons?
That’s another reason for the Fed to cut rates soon, so it lessens the backbreaking burden on the government.
After being held hostage by zero-rate policies for almost two decades, US Treasuries are finally reverting to their traditional role in the economy.
Bonds are becoming respectable again after a long winter. Buy (TLT) on dips.
The US Treasury announced a Bond buyback program, with the first scheduled on May 29.
The Treasury’s last regular buyback program began in the early 2000s and ended in April 2002.
FOREIGN CURRENCIES – DOLLAR ROLLING OVER
Most currencies have been hitting two-month highs due to the coming dollar interest rate cuts and are close to upside breakouts.
Japanese yen collapsed to 160 and looking for lower lows.
Bank of Japan intervened with a $35 billion yen buy, dollar sell. Avoid (FXY).
Chinese Yuan remains weak. International trade is collapsing.
Declining exports, collapsing foreign investment, and minimal population growth = weaker Chinese economy.
Higher for long rates means higher for longer greenback (although a downturn in the $ is close).
ENERGY & COMMODITIES – CHEVRON WIN
Chevron's takeover of Hess for $53 billion goes through, creating the second-largest US oil major.
The approval clears one hurdle, but the deal still requires regulatory approval and must face a lengthy arbitration battle with Exxon and CNOOC, Hess’s partners in Guyana.
Buy (CVX) on dips.
Copper slide continues - down 7% in three days as the extent of Chinese speculation becomes clear.
The takeover battle for Anglo American continues with the company turning down the latest $49 billion offer from BHP.
While Anglo’s copper assets have long been coveted by rivals, its complicated corporate structure and unusual mix of commodities have largely deterred potential suitors until now.
(OXY) great buy for the long term.
PRECIOUS METALS – NEW HIGHS
Silver goes ballistic on Chinese speculation to $32.70/ounce heading for $50.
Gold follows by half to $2,460. It is targeting $3,000.
Solar panels are driving global silver demand.
Global investment in solar PV manufacturing more than doubled last year to around $80 billion.
Miners are expanding their operations and ramping up production as prices for the precious metal climb to decade highs.
Demand for silver from the makers of solar PV panels, particularly those in China is forecast to increase by almost 170% by 2030 to roughly 273 million ounces – or about one-fifth of total silver demand.
Buy (SLV) and (WPM) on dips. (GLD) is a great buy on dips – correlates with the price of gold.
REAL ESTATE – SOARING PRICES, FALLING SALES
New Home Sales tank in Aril is down 4.4% and 7.7% in March.
The median price of a new home was $433,500, 4% higher than it was in April 2023.
Builders say they cannot lower prices due to high costs for land, labor, and materials.
The big production builders have been buying down mortgage rates to help boost sales, as they are able to do that because of their size. Smaller ones can’t.
30-year fixed rate mortgage drops below 7.0%. The housing market is taking a step back in April after a strong performance in the first quarter.
Existing home sales fall, down for the second month in a row at -1.9% to 4.14 million rate in April.
The nascent recovery in demand from a 13-year low in October is being hindered by limited inventory which is keeping asking prices elevated.
TRADE SHEET:
Stocks – buy any dips.
Bonds – buy dips.
Commodities – buy dips.
Currencies – sell dollar rallies, buy currencies.
Precious Metals – buy dips.
Energy – buy dips.
Volatility – buy $12
Real Estate – buy dips.
NEXT STRATEGY WEBINAR
Wednesday, June 12 from Incline Village, Nevada.
QI CORNER



Cheers,
Jacquie
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