Stocks have risen at an annualized rate of 40% so far in 2021. If that sounds too good to be true, it is.
But then, we have the greatest economic and monetary stimulus of all time rolling out also.
Of the $10 trillion in government spending that has or is about to be approved, virtually none of it has been spent. There hasn’t been enough time. It turns out that it is quite hard to spend a trillion dollars. Corporate America and its investors are salivating.
The best guess is that the new spending will create five million jobs for the economy over eight years, taking the headline Unemployment Rate down to a full employment 3-4%. The clever thing about the proposal is that it is financed over 15 years, which takes advantage of the current century's low interest rates.
That is something many strategists have been begging the US Treasury to do for years. Take the free money while it is on offer.
There is something Rooseveltean about all this, with great plans and huge amounts of money, like 10% of GDP on the table. But then we did just come out of a Great Depression, with unemployment peaking at 25 million, the same as in 1933.
The package is so complex that it is unlikely to pass by summer. Until then, stocks will probably continue to rally on the prospect.
It makes my own forecast of a 30% gain in stocks and a Dow Average of 40,000 for 2021 look overly cautious, conservative, and feeble (click here). But then, you have to trade the market you have, not the one you want.
And here is the really fun part. After a grinding seven-month-long correction, technology stocks have suddenly returned from the dead. All the best names gained 10% or more in the previous four-day holiday-shortened week. Clearly, investors have itchy trigger fingers with tech stocks at these levels.
In the meantime, technology stock prices have fallen 20-50% while earnings have jumped by 20% to 40%. What was expensive became cheap. It was a setup that was begging to happen.
This is great news because technology stocks are the core to all non-indexed retirement funds.
The S&P 500 (SPX) blasted through 4,000, a new all-time high, off the back of one of the largest infrastructure spends in history. Job creation over the next eight years is estimated at 5 million. Corporate earnings will go through the roof. Tech is back from the dead. Leaders were semiconductor equipment makers like my old favorites, Applied Materials (AMAT) and Lam Research (LRCX). The Volatility Index (VIX) sees the $17 handle, hinting at much higher to come. The next leg up for the Roaring Twenties has begun! Biden Infrastructure Bill Tops $2.3 Trillion. Of course, some of it isn’t infrastructure but other laudable programs that starved under the Trump administration, like spending on seniors (I’m all for that!). Still, spending is spending, and this will turbocharge the economy all the way out to say….2024. The impact on interest rates will be minimal as long as the Fed keeps overnight rates near zero, as they have promised to do for nearly three years. Making the power grid carbon-free by 2035 is a goal and would require a 50% increase in solar national installations. Infrastructure spending is always a win-win because the new tax revenues it generates always pay for it in the end. March Nonfarm Payroll Report exploded to the upside, adding a near record 917,000 jobs, and taking the headline Unemployment Rate down to 6.0%. Employers are front running Biden’s infrastructure plans, hiring essential workers while they are still available. Look for labor shortages by summer, especially in high paying tech. Leisure & Hospitality was the overwhelming leader at a staggering 280,000, followed by Government at 136,000 and Construction at 110,000.
Goldilocks lives on, with a 1.0% drop in Consumer Spending in February, keeping inflation close to zero. The Midwest big freeze is to blame. You can’t buy anything when there’s no gas for the car and no electricity once you get there, as what happened in Texas. The $1,400 stimulus checks have yet to hit much of the country, although I got mine. It couldn’t be a better environment for owning stocks. Keep buying everything on dips.
Consumer Confidence soared, up 19.3 points to 109 in February, according to the Conference Board. It’s the second-biggest move on record. A doubling of the value of your home AND your stock portfolio in a year is making people feel positively ebullient. Oh, and free money from the government is in the mail. The Suez Canal reopened, allowing 10% of international trade to resume. A massive salvage effort that freed the 200,000 ton Ever Given. The ship will be grounded for weeks pending multiple inspections. Somebody’s insurance rates are about to rachet up. It all shows how fragile is the international trading system. Deliveries to Europe will still be disrupted for months. It puts a new spotlight on the Arctic route from Asia to Europe, which is 4,000 nm shorter.
Boeing (BA) won a massive order, some 100 planes from Southwest Air (LUV), practically the only airline to use the pandemic to expand. Boeing can fill the order almost immediately from 2020 cancelled orders for the $50 million 737 MAX. Keep buying both (BA), (LUV), and (AKL) on dips.
Tesla blows away Q1 deliveries, with a 184,400 print, or 47.5% high than the 2021 rate. That is without any of the new Biden EV subsidies yet to kick in. Lower priced Model 3 sedans and Model Y SUVs accounted for virtually all of the report. The Shanghai factory is kicking in as a major supplier to high Chinese demand. The one million target for 2021 is within easy reach. Traders saw this coming (including me) and ramped the stock up $100. Buy (TSLA) on dips. My long-term target is $10,000.
United Airlines hires 300 pilots to front-run expected exposure summer travel. CEO Scott Kirby says domestic vacation travel has almost completely recovered. Keep buying (LUV), (AKL), and (DAL) on dips. When we come out the other side of pandemic, we will be perfectly poised to launch into my new American Golden Age, or the next Roaring Twenties. With interest rates still at zero, oil cheap, there will be no reason not to. The Dow Average will rise by 400% to 120,000 or more in the coming decade. The American coming out the other side of the pandemic will be far more efficient and profitable than the old. Dow 120,000 here we come!
My Mad Hedge Global Trading Dispatch profit reached 0.38% gain during the first two days of April on the heels of a spectacular 20.60% profit in March.
I used the Monday low to double up my long in Tesla. After that, it was off to the races for all of tech. I caught a $100 move on the week.
My new large Tesla (TSLA) long expires in 9 trading days.
That leaves me with 50% cash and a barrel full of dry powder.
My 2021 year-to-date performance soared to 44.47%. The Dow Average is up 9.40% so far in 2021.
That brings my 11-year total return to 467.02%, some 2.08 times the S&P 500 (SPX) over the same period. My 11-year average annualized return now stands at an unbelievable 41.20%, the highest in the industry.
My trailing one-year return exploded to positively eye-popping 108.51%. I truly have to pinch myself when I see numbers like this. I bet many of you are making the biggest money of your long lives.
We need to keep an eye on the number of US Coronavirus cases at 30.6million and deaths topping 555,000, which you can find here.
The coming week will be dull on the data front.
On Monday, April 5, at 10:00 AM, the ISM Non-Manufacturing Index for March is released.
On Tuesday, April 6, at 10:00 AM, US Consumer Inflation Expectations for March are published.
On Wednesday, April 7 at 2:00 PM, the minutes of the last Federal Open Market Committee Meeting are published.
On Thursday, April 8 at 8:30 AM, the Weekly Jobless Claims are printed.
On Friday, April 9 at 8:30 AM we get the Producer Price Index for March. At 2:00 PM, we learn the Baker-Hughes Rig Count.
As for me, I recently turned 69, so I used a nice day to climb up to the Lake Tahoe High Sierra rim at 9,000 feet, found a nice granite boulder sit on to keep dry, and tried to figure out what it was all about.
I’ve been very lucky.
I had a hell of a life that I wouldn’t trade for anything. I wouldn’t change a bit (well, maybe I would have bought more Apple shares at a split-adjusted 30 cents in 1998. I knew Steve was going to make it).
Since I’ve always loved what I did, journalist, trader, combat pilot, hedge fund manager, writer, I don’t think I have “worked” a day in my life.
I fought for things I believed in passionately and won, and kept on winning. It’s good to be on the right side of history.
I have loved and lost and loved again and lost again, and in the end outlived everyone, even my younger brother, who died of Covid-19 a year ago. The rule here is that it is always the other guy who dies. My legacy is five of the smartest kids you ever ran into. They’re great traders as well.
So I’ll call it a win.
I visited my orthopedic surgeon the other day to get a stem cell top-up for my knees and she asked how long I planned to keep coming back. I told her 30 years, and I meant it.
There’s nothing left for me to do but to make you all savvy in the markets and rich, something I leap out of bed every morning at 5:00 AM to accomplish.
Enjoy your weekend.
Stay healthy.
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/john-thomas-pilot.png531597Mad Hedge Fund Traderhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMad Hedge Fund Trader2021-04-05 09:02:332021-04-05 12:22:42The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or A Supercharged Economy is Supercharging the Stock Market
Once considered one the safest stock market sectors in which to hide out during bear markets and more recently pandemics, Consumer Staples no longer offer the hideout they once did.
Who needs a hideout anyway now that the Roaring Twenties are on and may make another decade to run.
Take a look at the Consumer Staples Select Sector SPDR ETF (XLP). It’s top five holdings include Proctor & Gamble (PG) (11.13%), Coca-Cola (KO) (10.07%), PepsiCo, Inc. (PEP) (8.7%), Philip Morris (7.80%) (PM), and Walmart (WMT).
Its only remaining attraction is that it has a 30-day SEC yield of 2.67%.
The (XLP) has recently been one of the best performing ETFs. However, costs are rising dramatically, and the bloom is coming off the rose.
In short, the industry is caught in a vice.
In the meantime, ferocious online competition from the likes of Amazon (AMZN) makes it impossible for consumer staples to pass costs on to consumers as they did in past economic cycles.
In fact, the prices for many consumer staples are falling thanks to the world’s most efficient distribution network. And if you are an Amazon Prime member, they will deliver it to your door for free. I just bought a pair of Head Kore 93 skis in Vermont, and they were delivered in two days.
It gets worse. The largest sector of the consumer staples market, the poor and working middle class are seeing the smallest wage gains, the worst layoffs, and the slowest pandemic recovery. Almost all pay increases are now taking place at the top of the wage ladder.
AI specialists and online marketing experts, yes, Safeway checkout clerks and fast food workers, no.
This also will get a lot worse as some 50% of all jobs will disappear over the next 20 years, mostly at the low end.
Blame technology. There is even a robot now that can assemble Ikea furniture. And there goes my side gig!
So, if your friend at the country club locker room tells you it’s time to load up on Consumer Staples because they are cheap, safe, and high-yielding, ignore him, delete his phone number from your contact list, and unfriend him on Facebook.
If anything, the sector is a great “sell short on rallies” candidate.
As I never tire of telling followers, never confuse “gone down a lot” with “cheap.”
Eventually, the sector will fall enough to where it offers value. But that point is not now. There has to be a bottom somewhere.
After all, everyone needs toilet paper, right? Or will a robot soon take over that function as well? They already have in Japan.
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/Charmin-story-2-image-5.jpg237336MHFTRhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMHFTR2021-04-02 09:04:302021-04-05 10:50:20Why Consumer Staples Are Peaking
Below please find subscribers’ Q&A for the March 31 Mad Hedge Fund TraderGlobal Strategy Webinar broadcast from frozen Incline Village, NV.
Q: Would you buy Facebook (FB) or Zoom (ZM) right here?
A: Well, Zoom was kind of a one-hit wonder; it went up 12 times on the pandemic as we moved to a Zoom economy, and while Zoom will permanently remain a part of our life, you’re not going to get that kind of growth in stock prices in the future. Facebook on the other hand is going to new highs, they just announced they’re laying a new fiber optic cable to Asia to handle a 70% increase in traffic there. So, for the longer term and buying here, I think you get a new high on Facebook soon; there's maybe another 20-30% move in Facebook this year.
Q: I can’t really chase these trades here, right?
A: Correct; if you wait any more than a day or 2 on executing a trade alert, you’re missing out on all of the market timing value we bring to the game. So that's why I include an entry price and the “don’t pay more than” price. And we never like to chase, except last year, when we did it almost all the time. But last year was a chase market, this year not so much.
Q: How are LEAP purchase notifications transmitted?
A: Those go out in the daily newsletter Global Trading Dispatch when I see a rare entry point for a LEAP, then we’ll send out a piece and notify everybody. But it’s very unusual to get those. Of course, a year ago we were sending out lists of LEAPS ten at a time when the Dow Average ($INDU) is at 18,000. But that is not now, you only wait for those once or twice a year. On huge selloffs to get into two-year-long options trades, and that is definitely not now. The only other place I've been looking out for LEAPS right now are really bombed out technology stocks begging for a rotation. Concierge members get more input on LEAPS and that is a $10,000 a year upgrade.
Q: What are your thoughts on silver (SLV) and long-term gold (GLD)?
A: I see silver going to $50 and eventually $100 in this economic cycle, but it's out of favor right now because of rising interest rates. So, once we hit 2.00% in the ten years, it’s not only off to the races for tech but also gold and silver. Watch that carefully because your entry point may be on the horizon. That makes Wheaton Precious Metals (WPM) a very attractive “BUY” right now.
Q: Are you going to trade the (TLT)?
A: Absolutely yes, but I’m kind of getting picky now that I’m up 42% on the year; and I only like to sell 5-point rallies, which we got for about 15 minutes last week. And I also only like to buy 5- or 10-point dips. Keep your trading discipline and you’ll make a ton of money in this market. Last year we made about 30% trading bonds on about 30 round trips.
Q: How much further upside is there for US Steel (X) and Nucor Corp. (NUE)?
A: More. There's no way you do infrastructure without using millions of tons of steel. And I kind of missed the bottom on US Steel because it had been a short for so long that it kind of dropped off the radar for me. I think we have gone from $4 to 27 since last year, but I think it goes higher. It turns out the US has been shutting down steel production for decades because it couldn't compete with China or Japan, and now all of a sudden, we need steel, and we don’t even make the right kind of steel to build bridges or subways anymore—that has to be imported. So, most of the steel industry here now is working for the car industry, which produces cold-rolled steel for the car body panels. Even that disappears fairly soon as that gets taken over by carbon fiber. So enough about steel, buy the dips on (X) and (NUE).
Q: What stocks should I consider for the infrastructure project?
A: Well, US Steel (X) and Nucor Corp (NUE) would be good choices; but really you can buy anything because the infrastructure package, the way it’s been designed, is to benefit the entire economy, not just the bridge and freeway part of it. Some of it is for charging stations and electric car subsidies. Other parts are for rural broadband, which is great for chip stocks. There is even money to cap abandoned oil wells to rope in Texas supporters. All of this is going to require a massive upgrade of the power grid, which will generate lots of blue-collar jobs. Really everybody benefits, which is how they get it through Congress. No Congressperson will want to vote against a new bridge or freeway for their district. That’s always the case in Washington, which is why it will take several months to get this through congress because so many thousands of deals need to be cut. I’ve been in Washington when they’ve done these things, and the amount of horse-trading that goes on is incredible.
Q: Is it a good thing that I’ve had the United States Treasury Bond Fund (TLT) LEAPS $125 puts for a long time.
A: Yes. Good for you, you read my research. Remember, the (TLT) low in this economic cycle is probably around $80, so you probably want to keep rolling forward your position….and double up on any ten-point rally.
Q: Do you think we get a pop back up?
A: We do but from a lower level. I think any rallies in the bond market are going to be extremely limited until we hit the 2.00%, and then you’re going to get an absolute rip-your-face-off rally to clean out all the short term shorts. If you're running put LEAPS on the (TLT) I would hang on, it’s going to pay off big time eventually.
Q: If we see 3.00% on the 10-year this year, do you see the stock market crashing?
A: I don’t think we’ll hit 3.00% until well into next year, but when we do, that will be time for a good 10% stock market correction. Then everyone will look around again and say, “wow nothing happened,” and that will take the market to new highs again; that's usually the way it plays out. Remember, then year yields topped all the way up at 5.00% when the Dotcom Bubble topped in April 2020.
Q: Has the airline hospitality industry already priced in the reopening of travel?
A: No, I think they priced in the hope of a reopening, but that hasn’t actually happened yet, and on these giant recovery plays there are two legs: the “hope for it” leg, which has already happened, and then the actual “happening” leg which is still ahead of us. There you can get another double in these stocks. When they actually reopen international travel to Europe and Asia, which may not happen this year, the only reopening we’re going to see in the airline business is in North America. That means there is more to go in the stock price. Also coming back from the brink of death on their financial reports will be an additional positive.
Q: Do you think a corporate tax increase will drive companies out of the US again and raise the unemployment rate?
A: Absolutely not. First of all, more than half of the S&P 500 don’t even pay taxes, so they’re not going anywhere. Second, I think they will make these offshoring moves to tax-free domiciles like Ireland illegal and bring a lot of tax revenues back to the US. And third, all Biden is doing is returning the tax rate to where it was in 2017; and while the corporate tax rate was 35%, the stock market went up 400% during the Obama administration, if you recall. So stocks aren't really that sensitive to their tax rates, at least not in the last 50 years that I’ve been watching. I'm not worried at all. And Biden was up on the polls a year ago talking about a 28% tax rate; and since then, the stock market has nearly doubled. The word has been out for a year and priced in for a year, and I don't think anybody cares.
Q: What about quantum computers?
A: I’m following this very closely, it’s the next major generation for technology. Quantum computers will allow a trillion-fold improvement in computing power at zero cost. And when there's a stock play, I will do it; but unfortunately, it’s not (IBM), because we’re not at the money-making stage on these yet. We are still at the deep research stage. The big beneficiaries now are Alphabet (GOOGL), Microsoft (MSFT), and Amazon (AMZN).
Q: Is it time to buy Chinese stocks?
A: I would say yes. I would start dipping in here, especially on the quality names like Tencent (TME), Baidu (BIDU), and Alibaba (BABA), because they’ve just been trashed. A lot of the selloff was hedge fund-driven which has now gone bust, and I think relations with China improve under Biden.
Q: Your timing on Tesla (TSLA) has been impeccable; what do you look for in times of pivots?
A: Tesla trades like no other stock, I have actually lost money on a couple of Tesla trades. You have to wait for things to go to extremes, and then wait two more days. That seems to be the magic formula. On the first big selloff go take a long nap and when you wake up, the temptation to buy it will have gone away. It always goes up higher than you expect, and down lower than you expect. But because the implied volatilities go anywhere from 70% to 100%, you can go like 200 points out of the money on a 3-week view and still make good money every month. And that’s exactly what we’re going to do for the rest of the year, as long as the trading’s down here in the $500-$600 range.
Q: Is Editas Medicine (EDIT), a DNA editing stock, still good?
A: Buy both (EDIT) and Crisper (CRSP); they both look great down here with an easy double ahead. This is a great long-term investment play with gene editing about to dominate the medical field. If you want to learn more about (EDIT) and (CRSP) and many others like them, subscribe to the Mad Hedge Fund Biotech & HealthcareLetter because we cover this stuff multiple times a week (click here).
Q: Is the XME Metals ETF a buy?
A: I would say yes, but I'd wait for a bigger dip. It’s already gone up like 10X in a year, but the outlook for the economy looks fantastic. (XME) has to double from here just to get to the old 2008 high and we have A LOT more stimulus this time around.
Q: What about hydrogen?
A: Sorry, I am just not a believer in hydrogen. You have to find someone else to be bullish on hydrogen because it’s not me. I've been following the technology for 50 years and all I can say is: go do an image Google for the name “Hindenburg” and tell me if you want to buy hydrogen. Electricity is exponentially scalable, but Hydrogen is analog and has to be moved around in trucks that can tip over and blow up at any time. Hydrogen batteries are nowhere near economic. We are now on the eve of solid-state lithium-ion batteries which improve battery densities 20X, dropping Tesla battery weights from 1,200 points to 60 pounds. So “NO” on hydrogen. Am I clear?
Q: Why do you do deep-in-the-money call and put spreads?
A: We do these because they make money whether the stock goes up down or sideways, we can do them on a monthly basis, we can do them on volatility spikes, and make double the money you normally do. The day-to-day volatility on these positions is very low, so people following a newsletter don’t get these huge selloffs and sell at bottoms, which is the number one source of retail investor losses. After 13 years of trade alerts, I have delivered a 40.30% average annualized return with a quarter of the market volatility. Most people will take that.
Q: Is ProShares Ultra Short 20 Year Plus Treasury ETF(TBT) still a play for the intermediate term?
A: I would say yes. If ten-year US Treasury bonds Yields soar from 1.75% to 5.00% the (TBT) should rise from $21 to $100 because it is a 2X short on bonds. That sounds like a win for me, as long as you can take short term pain.
Q: What is the timing to buy TLT LEAPS?
A: The answer was in January when we were in the $155-162 range for the (TLT). Down here I would be reluctant to do LEAPS on the TLT because we’ve already had a $25 point drop this year, and a drop of $48 from $180 high in a year. So LEAP territory was a year ago but now I wouldn’t be going for giant leveraged trades. That train has left the station. That ship has sailed. And I can’t think of a third Metaphone for being too late.
Q: Would you buy Kinder Morgan (KMI) here?
A: That’s an oil exploration infrastructure company. No, all the oil plays were a year ago, and even six months ago you could have bought them. But remember, in oil you’re assuming you can get in and out before it crashes again, it’s just a matter of time before it does. I can do that but most of you probably can’t, unless you sit in front of your screens all day. You’re betting against the long-term trend. It works if you’re a hedge fund trader, not so much if you are a long-term investor. Never bet against the long-term trend and you always have a tailwind behind you. All surprises work to your benefit.
Q: If you get a head and shoulders top on bitcoin, how far does it fall?
A: How about zero? 80% is the traditional selloff amount for Bitcoin. So, the thing is: if bitcoin falls you have to worry about all other investments that have attracted speculative interest, which is essentially everything these days. You also have to worry about Square (SQ), PayPal (PYPL), and Tesla (TSLA), which have started processing Bitcoin transactions. Bitcoin risk is spread all over the economy right now. Those who rode the bandwagon up will ride it back down.
Q: Is Boeing (BA) a long-term buy?
A: Yes, especially because the 737 Max is back up in the air and China is back in the market as a huge buyer of U.S. products after a four-year vacation. Airlines are on the verge of seeing a huge plane shortage.
Q: What about Ags?
A: We quit covering years ago because they’re in permanent long-term downtrends and very hard to play. US farmers are just too good at their jobs. Efficiencies have double or tripled in 60 years. Ag prices are in a secular 150-year bear market thanks to technology.
Q: Is this recorded to watch later?
A: Yes, it goes on our website in about two hours. For directions on where to find it, log in to your www.madhedgefundrader.com account, go to “My Account,” and it will be listed under there, as are all the recorded webinars of the last 12 years.
Q: Would you buy Canadian Pacific (CP) here, the railroad?
A: No, that news is in the price. Go buy the other ones—Union Pacific (UNP) especially.
Q: What are your thoughts on Bitcoin?
A: We don’t cover Bitcoin because I think the whole thing is a Ponzi scheme, but who am I to say. There is almost ten times more research and newsletters out there on Bitcoin as there is on stock trading right now. They seem to be growing like mushrooms after a spring storm. There are always a lot of exports out there at market tops, as we saw with gold in 2010 and tech stock in 2000.
Q: What do you think about Juniper Networks (JNP)?
A: It’s a Screaming “BUY” right here with a double ahead of it in two years. I’m just waiting for the tech rotation to get going. This is a long-term accumulate on dips and selloffs.
Q: Did the Archagos Investments hedge fund blow threaten systemic risk?
A: No, it seems to be limited just to this one hedge fund and just to the people who lent to it. You can bet banks are paring back lending to the hedge fund industry like crazy right now to protect their earnings. I don’t think it gets to the systemic point, but this is the Long Term Capital Management for our generation. I was involved in the unwind of the last LTCM capital, which was 23 years ago. I was one of the handful of people who understood what these people were even doing. So, they had to bring me in on the unwind and huge fortunes were made on that blowup by a lot of different parties, one of which was Goldman Sachs (GS). I can tell you now that the statute of limitations has run out and now that it's unlikely I'll ever get a job there, but Goldman made a killing on long-term capital, for sure.
Q: Will Tesla benefit from the Biden infrastructure plan?
A: I would say Tesla is at the top of the list of companies the Biden administration wants to encourage. That means more charging stations and more roads, which you need to drive cars on, and bridges, and more tax subsidies for purchases of new electric cars. It’s good not just Tesla but everybody’s, now that GM (GM) and Ford (F) are finally starting to gear up big numbers of EVs of their own. By the way, I don't see any of the new startups ever posing a threat to Tesla. The only possible threats would be General Motors, Ford, and Volkswagen, which are all ten years behind.
Q: Would you put 10% of your retirement fund into cryptocurrencies?
A: Better to flush it down the toilet because there’s no commission on doing that.
Q: Is growing debt a threat to the economy? How much more can the government borrow?
A: It appears a lot more, because Biden has already indicated he’s going to spend ten trillion dollars this year, and the bond market is at a 1.70%—it’s incredibly low. I think as long as the Fed keeps overnight rates at near-zero and inflation doesn't go over 3%, that the amount the government can borrow is essentially unlimited, so why stop at $10 or $20 trillion? They will keep borrowing and keep stimulating until they see actual inflation, and I don’t think we will see that for years because inflation is being wiped out by technology improvements, as it has done for the last 40 years. The market is certainly saying we can borrow a lot more with no serious impact on the economy. But how much more nobody knows because we are in uncharted territory, or terra incognita.
To watch a replay of this webinar just log in to www.madhedgefundtrader.com , go to MY ACCOUNT, click on GLOBAL TRADING DISPATCH, then WEBINARS, and all the webinars from the last ten years are there in all their glory.
Good Luck and Stay Healthy.
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/john-thomas-lakeshore-e1608229033313.png338450Mad Hedge Fund Traderhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMad Hedge Fund Trader2021-04-01 11:02:522021-04-01 14:14:23March 31 Biweekly Strategy Webinar Q&A
We are now seven months into the tech correction, and it may come to an end in a month or two. That turn will be dictated by the topping in the ten-year US Treasury bond somewhere around the 10% yield.
So, generational opportunities are starting to open up in some of the best long-term market sectors. It’s time to start building your list of names for when the sun, moon, and stars line up.
Suppose there was an exchange-traded fund that focused on the single most important technology trend in the world today.
You might think that I was smoking California’s largest export (it’s not grapes). But such a fund DOES exist.
The Global X Robotics & Artificial Intelligence ETF (BOTZ) drops a golden opportunity into investors’ laps as a way to capture part of the growing movement behind automation.
The fund currently has an impressive $2.6 billion in assets under management.
The universal trend of preferring automation over human labor is spreading with each passing day. Suffice to say there is the unfortunate emotional element of sacking a human and the negative knock-on effect to the local community like in Detroit, Michigan.
But simply put, robots do a better job, don’t complain, don’t fall ill, don’t join unions, or don’t ask for pay rises. It’s all very much a capitalist’s dream come true.
Instead of dallying around in single stock symbols, now is the time to seize the moment and take advantage of the single seminal trend of our lifetime.
No, it’s not online dating, gambling, or bitcoin, it’s Artificial Intelligence.
Selecting individual stocks that are purely exposed to A.I. is challenging endeavor. Companies need a way to generate returns to shareholders first and foremost, hence, most pure A.I. plays do not exist right now.
However, the Mad Hedge Fund Trader has found the most unadulterated A.I. play out there. A real diamond in the rough.
The best way to expose yourself to this A.I. trend is through Global X Robotics & Artificial Intelligence ETF (BOTZ).
This ETF tracks the price and yield performance of ten crucial companies that sit on the forefront of the A.I. and robotic development curve. It invests at least 80% of its total assets in the securities of the underlying index. The expense ratio is only 0.68%.
Another caveat is that the underlying companies are only derived from developed countries. Out of the 10 disclosed largest holdings, seven are from Japan, two are from Silicon Valley, and one, ABB Group, is a Swedish-Swiss multinational headquartered in Zurich, Switzerland.
Robotics and A.I. walk hand in hand, and robotics are entirely dependent on the germination prospects of A.I. Without A.I., robots are just a clunk of heavy metal.
Robots require a high level of A.I. to meld seamlessly into our workforce. The stronger the A.I. functions, the stronger the robot’s ability, filtering down to the bottom line.
A.I. embedded robots are especially prevalent in military, car manufacturing, and heavy machinery. The industrial robot industry projects to reach $80 billion per year in sales by 2024 as more of the workforce gradually becomes automated.
The robotic industry has become so prominent in the automotive industry that they constitute greater than 50% of robot investments in America.
Let’s get the ball rolling and familiarize readers of the Mad Hedge Technology Letter with the top 5 weightings in the underlying ETF (BOTZ).
Nvidia (NVDA)
Nvidia Corporation is a company I often write about as their main business is producing GPU chips for the video game industry.
This Santa Clara, California-based company is spearheading the next wave of A.I. advancement by focusing on autonomous vehicle technology and A.I. integrated cloud data centers as their next cash cow.
All these new groundbreaking technologies require ample amounts of GPU chips. Consumers will eventually cohabitate with state-of-the-art IOT products (internet of things), fueled by GPU chips, coming to mass market like the Apple Homepod.
The company is led by genius Jensen Huang, a Taiwanese American, who cut his teeth as a microprocessor designer at competitor Advanced Micro Devices (AMD).
Yasakawa Electric is the world's largest manufacturer of AC Inverter Drives, Servo and Motion Control, and Robotics Automation Systems, headquartered in Kitakyushu, Japan.
It is a company I know well, having covered this former zaibatsu company as a budding young analyst in Japan 45 years ago.
Yaskawa has fully committed to improve global productivity through Automation. It comprises the 2nd largest portion of BOTZ at 8.35%.
Fanuc was another one of the hot robotics companies I used to trade in during the 1970s, and I have visited their main factory many times.
The 3rd largest portion in the (BOTZ) ETF at 7.78% is Fanuc Corp. This company provides automation products and computer numerical control systems, headquartered in Oshino, Yamanashi.
They were once a subsidiary of Fujitsu, which focused on the field of numerical control. The bulk of their business is done with American and Japanese automakers and electronics manufacturers.
They have snapped up 65% of the worldwide market in the computerized numerical device market (CNC). Fanuc has branch offices in 46 different countries.
To visit their company website, please click here.
Intuitive Surgical (ISRG)
Intuitive Surgical Inc (ISRG) trades on Nasdaq and is located in sun-drenched Sunnyvale, California.
This local firm designs, manufactures, and markets surgical systems and is completely industriously focused on the medical industry.
The company's da Vinci Surgical System converts surgeon's hand movements into corresponding micro-movements of instruments positioned inside the patient.
The products include surgeon's consoles, patient-side carts, 3-D vision systems, da Vinci skills simulators, da Vinci Xi integrated table motions.
This company comprises 7.60% of BOTZ. To visit their website, please click here.
Keyence Corp (Japan)
Keyence Corp is the leading supplier of automation sensors, vision systems, barcode readers, laser markers, measuring instruments, and digital microscopes.
They offer a full array of service support and closely work with customers to guarantee full functionality and operation of the equipment. Their technical staff and sales teams add value to the company by cooperating with its buyers.
They have been consistently ranked as the top 10 best companies in Japan and boast an eye-opening 50% operating margin.
They are headquartered in Osaka, Japan and make up 7.54% of the BOTZ ETF.
(BOTZ) does have some pros and cons. The best AI plays are either still private at the venture capital level or have already been taken over by giant firms like NVIDIA.
You also need to have a pretty broad definition of AI to bring together enough companies to make up a decent ETF.
However, it does get you a cheap entry into many for the illiquid foreign names in this fund.
Automation is one of the reasons why this is turning into the deflationary century and I recommend all readers who don’t own their own robotic-led business, pick up some Global X Robotics & Artificial Intelligence ETF (BOTZ).
And by the way, the entry point right here on the charts is almost perfect.
To learn more about (BOTZ), please visit their website by clicking here.
https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png00Mad Hedge Fund Traderhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMad Hedge Fund Trader2021-03-31 10:02:412021-03-31 11:07:08Here an Easy Way to Play Artificial Intelligence
Of course, WWII historians know well the man who never was, the popular name for Operation Mincemeat.
In 1943, British intelligence found a homeless man who died on the streets of London, dressed him up as a Royal Marine Major William Martin, and released his body from a submarine off the coast of Spain, a German ally.
Handcuffed to his wrist was a briefcase with highly detailed plans for the allied invasion of Greece and the Balkans. The Germans shifted ten divisions to defend the region.
When the allies invaded Sicily instead, it came completely out of the blue. The invading American and British forces found the island almost undefended and inadequately manned and supplied by Italian troops. The allies planned for three months to capture Sicily. Instead, they did it in a mere 38 days. Allied losses came in at a tenth of those expected, thanks to Royal Marine Major William Martin.
The analogy here is that last week, we witnessed the market that never was. Stocks went down, then up. Bonds went up, then down. Even Tesla was virtually unchanged. It all ended up as a big fat zero for traders.
What all of this means for us investors is a subject of heated discussion among strategists. Of course, the Cassandras are always out there arguing that this is all proof that markets are peaking and that the mother of all stock market crashes is just ahead of us.
I take a different tack.
I think we are well into a long-overdue “time” correction whereby stocks go sideways for weeks or months before resuming their heroic assault on new highs. The timing will be dictated by the frantic reversal of the bond market at a ten-year Treasury yield of 2.00%.
Investors will rotate from the newly expensive recovery plays like banks into the newly cheap, such as technology stocks. Notice the sudden recent interest in legacy companies like Oracle (ORCL), Intel (INTC), and Cisco Systems (CSCO), which completely missed the great 2020 tech rally.
All of this sets up perfectly for the barbell portfolio which I have been advocating all year.
If there is a selloff, it will be by things that normal people don’t own. Those include SPACS, anything the Reddit crowd chases, stay-at-home stocks, and very high-priced tech stocks with no earnings.
Much focus has been placed on the Taiwanese-owned Ever Given stuck in the Suez Canal. As a Middle Eastern war correspondent for many years, I spent endless hours debating with my compatriots over what closure of the canal would mean.
What hasn’t been mentioned was that the accident was not caused by a Chinese captain, but Egyptian pilot ships are required to take on to raise revenues, and bribes, for the impoverished country. This all happened in the middle of a sandstorm where visibility is near zero.
I can tell you right now that they won’t get the Ever Given off there until they start to unload containers and lift off some weight so the 200,000-ton ship can rise of its own accord. Good luck with that in the middle of the Sinai Desert. Why not just sell all the contents on Amazon and have them deliver it for free as part of their prime membership?
This is a debacle that will last weeks, if not months, and will cost $9 billion a day in international trade until it’s over. In the meantime, commercial shippers have asked for protection from pirates from the US Navy as they navigate the unfamiliar water around the tip of Africa.
The Mad Hedge Summit Videos are Up, from the March 9,10, and 11 confab. Listen to 27 speakers opine on the best strategies, tactics, and instruments to use in these volatile markets. The product discounts offered last week are still valid. Start, stop, and pause the videos at your leisure. Best of all, access to the videos is FREE. Access them all by clicking here, click on CURRENT SUMMIT REPLAYS in the upper right-hand corner, and then choose the speaker of your choice.
Weekly Jobless Claims dive by 100,000, to 684,000, a one-year low. The decline was led by Illinois and Ohio. Labor shortages are popping up around the country in skilled areas, but bars and restaurants are still lagging severely.
Huge Office Cuts are coming, with execs planning a permanent 20% cut. Better to give the money to shareholders. Downtowns across the country will change beyond all recognition. How do you turn an office into an apartment?
CP Rail buys Kansas City Southern, for $25 billion, further concentrating the north American rail industry. It’s a steal because an economy entering a decade-long boom moves lots of stuff. It’s also a great North/South international trade play, which is recovering strongly with the exit of our last president. I used to ride box cars on the old Canadian Pacific back in the sixties (you can’t hitch hike where there are no cars), and occasionally the engineers would let me drive. It suddenly makes Norfolk South (NSC) and Union Pacific (UNP) look very tempting.
Another Tesla $3,000 Target was issued by Ark’s Cathie Wood, an early investor. Cathie’s Ark Innovation Fund ETF was up 180% last year largely on the strength of a massive Tesla (TSLA) holding. Her bear case is a low of $1,500 by 2025, nearly triple the current price. She has only one more triple to go to get to my own $10,000 forecast.
Biden has $3 Trillion More to Spend on top of the just passed $1.9 trillion rescue package. It's all rocket fuel for the stock market, not so much for bonds. The money will be spent on a mix of old-line freeway and bridge repair along with new spending on decarbonizing the power grid and social measures. It will be financed by tax hikes on those earning over $400,000. Remember, Roosevelt hiked the maximum tax rate to 90% on the wealthy, where it stayed for 30 years, and Biden is old enough to remember. Daily Air Travelers top 1.5 Million, for the first time in a year. The pandemic low was 200,000 a day. It’s an indication of how anxious Americans have become to travel, and how strong the imminent economic boom will be.
Intel to build two chip fabs for $20 billion in Arizona to address the current severe shortage. US construction is a positive as it helps reduce reliance on foreign supplies. Too bad it will still leave them five years behind (AMD), but it’s a major move in the right direction. It deals with everything investors wanted to hear and moves them solidly into the 10nm architecture market. Buy (INTC) on dips.
New Home Sales Dive, off 18.2% in February, now that the free money train has left the station. Weather was blamed as a factor, with giant snowstorms slamming much of the country. Shortage of supply is another big issue. Some big builders are basically out of inventory and are reduced to selling floor plans with extended completion dates.
US Dollar (UUP) hits a four-month high, with a major assist from rising US bond interest rates. Expect the rally to continue until ten-year yields hit 2.00%, then sell the daylights out of it. With the US money supply growing at a near exponential 30% annual rate, there’s no way the dollar strength can continue. When you increase the supply, you decrease the value, simple supply and demand. My first pick is to buy the Aussie (FXA) a call option on a global synchronized economic recovery. When we come out the other side of pandemic, we will be perfectly poised to launch into my new American Golden Age, or the next Roaring Twenties. With interest rates still at zero, oil cheap, there will be no reason not to. The Dow Average will rise by 400% to 120,000 or more in the coming decade. The American coming out the other side of the pandemic will be far more efficient and profitable than the old. Dow 120,000, here we come!
It’s amazing how well patience can help your performance. My Mad Hedge Global Trading Dispatch profit reached a super-hot 18.61% so far in March on the heels of a spectacular 13.28% profit in February.
It was a go-nowhere week in the market, so I limited myself to a single trade all week, a double short in the bond market (TLT) on top of a welcome $5 rally. The position turned immediately profitable.
I still have a deep in-the-money call spread Tesla (TSLA) that is profitable and expires in 14 trading days. That leaves me with 70% cash and a barrel full of dry powder.
This is my fifth double-digit month in a row. My 2021 year-to-date performance soared to 42.10%. The Dow Average is up 9.9% so far in 2021.
That brings my 11-year total return to 464.65%, some 2.08 times the S&P 500 (SPX) over the same period. My 11-year average annualized return now stands at an unbelievable 41.30%.
My trailing one-year return exploded to positively eye-popping 119.39%. I truly have to pinch myself when I see numbers like this. I bet many of you are making the biggest money of your long lives.
We need to keep an eye on the number of US Corona virus cases at 30.2million and deaths topping 550,000, which you can find here.
Thankfully, death rates have slowed dramatically, but Obituaries are still the largest sector in the newspaper. At this point, some 47% of the US population has achieved immunity through vaccination or catching the disease. Herd immunity is near.
The coming week is a big one for jobs data.
On Monday, March 29, at 9:00 AM, the Dallas Fed Manufacturing Index for March is released.
On Tuesday, March 30, at 9:00 AM, the S&P Case Shiller National Home Price Index for January is published.
On Wednesday, March 31 at 8:15 AM, the ADP Challenger Private Employment Report for March is out. Pending Home Sales for February are indicated at 9:00 AM.
On Thursday, April 1 at 8:30 AM, the Weekly Jobless Claims are published.
On Friday, April 2 at 8:30 AM we get the Nonfarm Payroll Report for March. At 2:00 PM, we learn the Baker-Hughes Rig Count.
As for me, tax time is coming up and let me tell you, I have absolutely the best IRS story of all time.
It comes from my late, dear friend, Al Pinder, who I sat next to for ten years at the Foreign Correspondents of Japan in Tokyo, pounding away on antiquated Royal typewriters until our shoulders were as stiff as boards. Al then was the shipping correspondent for the New York Journal of Commerce newspaper.
Al was a colorful character, to say the least.
In the run up to WWII, Al took an extended vacation in Japan where he toured and photographed the country’s beaches, looking for the best landing sites for the US military in case war broke out.
To sneak the top-secret pictures out of the country, he bought a large steamer trunk and placed them a false bottom. Then he went to Tokyo’s red-light district in Yoshiwara, bought a dubious sex toy, an inflatable life-sized Japanese doll, and placed it on top.
When the trunk was searched, the customs officials found the doll, had a good laugh and passed him on. Al’s photos were the basis of Operation Olympic, the 1945 US invasion of Japan, made unnecessary by the dropping of the atomic bomb.
When the war broke out, Pinder parachuted into western China, where he acted as the liaison with Mao Zedong’s guerilla forces in Hunan province. In 1944, Al received a coded message from headquarters ordering him to intercept a top-secret airdrop from a DC3 in the middle of the night.
Knowing he would be mercilessly tortured by the Japanese if caught, he set up three signal fires in a triangle in a remote part of the desert and managed to find the parachute. Dodging enemy patrols all the way, he returned to his hideout in a mountain cave and opened the package.
In it was a letter from the IRS asking why he had not filed a tax return for the past three years.
I told this story at Al’s wake a few years ago and everyone had a good laugh. Al went on to run CIA operations in Japan during the fifties and sixties. When he passed away, there was a frantic search for a safe deposit box by American intelligence officials containing records of all CIA payoffs to Japan’s leading conservative party.
When the box was finally found, there was an enormous sigh of relief at the embassy. I still miss Al.
Stay healthy.
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/john-thomas-apple-visitor.png460468Mad Hedge Fund Traderhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMad Hedge Fund Trader2021-03-29 09:02:262021-03-29 10:47:39The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or The Week that Never Was
I am once again writing this report from a first-class sleeping cabin on Amtrak’s legendary California Zephyr.
By day, I have two comfortable seats facing each other next to a panoramic window. At night, they fold into two bunk beds, a single and a double. There is a shower, but only Houdini could navigate it.
I am anything but Houdini, so I go downstairs to use the larger public hot showers. They are divine.
We are now pulling away from Chicago’s Union Station, leaving its hurried commuters, buskers, panhandlers, and majestic great halls behind. I love this building as a monument to American exceptionalism.
I am headed for Emeryville, California, just across the bay from San Francisco, some 2,121.6 miles away. That gives me only 56 hours to complete this report.
I tip my porter, Raymond, $100 in advance to make sure everything goes well during the long adventure and to keep me up-to-date with the onboard gossip. The rolling and pitching of the car is causing my fingers to dance all over the keyboard. Microsoft’s Spellchecker can catch most of the mistakes, but not all of them.
As both broadband and cell phone coverage are unavailable along most of the route, I have to rely on frenzied Internet searches during stops at major stations along the way to Google obscure data points and download the latest charts.
You know those cool maps in the Verizon stores that show the vast coverage of their cell phone networks? They are complete BS.
Who knew that 95% of America is off the grid? That explains so much about our country today.
I have posted many of my better photos from the trip below, although there is only so much you can do from a moving train and an iPhone 12 Pro.
After making the rounds with strategists, portfolio managers, and hedge fund traders in the run-up to this trip, I can confirm that 2020 was one of the most challenging for careers lasting 30, 40, or 50 years.
This was the year that EVERYTHING crashed, then posted heroic recoveries. Comparisons with 2008, 1999, and 1929 were frequently made. It truly was a year of extremes.
My own 66.64% return for last year is the best in the 13-year history of the Mad Hedge Fund Trader, nearly ten times the Dow Average performance of 7.3%. Yet, even during the darkest days of the March bottom, when the Dow was down 40%, we were never down more than 12%.
That took my eleven-year average annualized return up to an eye-popping 38.18%.
If you think I spend too much time absorbing conspiracy theories from the Internet, let me give you a list of the challenges I see financial markets are facing in the coming year:
The Ten Key Variables for 2020
1) Will the Covid-19 vaccine work, or will new mutations render it useless?
2) When will the pandemic peak, at 500,000 or 1 million deaths?
3) Will there be a double dip recession in Q1, or will the economy keep powering on?
4) Will the Democrats get control of the Senate through the Georgia Senate races, paving the way for more government spending?
5) Will technology stocks continue to dominate, or will domestic recovery stocks take over for good?
6) How long will the commodities boom continue?
7) Is the US dollar dead for good or are we approaching a bottom?
8) How long can the Fed artificially support the bond market, or is a crash imminent?
9) Has international trade been permanently impaired or will it recover?
10) Is oil seeing a dead cat bounce or is this a sustainable recovery?
With the worst economic whipsaw in American history taking place in 2020, one might be hesitant about making forecasts for 2021. However, I shall press onward.
Last year saw a horrific 32.8% drawdown in Q2 GDP followed by an explosive 33.4% growth in Q3. It was the perfect “V” shaped recovery. However, we won’t see 2019 GDP levels until 2022, so there is plenty of growth to come, both nationally and on an individual company basis.
The reopening of the economy will bring us more double-digit growth after a Q1 slowdown mired by a peaking pandemic and delayed stimulus spending.
But it won’t be the same economy.
I figured out early that the pandemic was instantly moving us ten years into the future, placing a turbocharger on all existing trends. The economy is digitized at a rate that it has never seen before at the expense of mass closings of shopping malls and other old-line business models.
This will continue.
The online economy, working at home, and Zoom meetings are here to stay. You can’t get the genie back into the bottle. That has permanently increased the profitability of all the benefiting industries, while many others will never come back. As a result, the investment portfolio you should own in the future will look nothing like the one you had in the past. It’s not your father’s stock market.
It all sets out a base for an economic boom that could extend for another decade. Yes, Virginia, the Roaring Twenties are here. Better learn that Charleston!
Stocks will finish much higher in 2021, and with much less volatility. I doubt we see pullbacks of more than 10%. The entire gain in stocks last year came from a massive expansion in earnings multiples. That could continue.
S&P 500 earnings per share will grow in 2021 from the current $180 per share to $200. If we increase the market earnings multiple from the current 18X to 22X, that brings us a combined gain in stock prices of 30%. That will take the (SPX) from a current $3,754 to $4,860. If that sounds high, remember that tech stocks reached 100X multiples in 2000. Many already have.
Why are earnings multiples headed to twenty-year highs? Because the pandemic has greatly increased the productivity of American companies, boosting their profitability and making them vastly more valuable.
Stocks also will rally from here because they are STILL receiving the greatest monetary stimulus in history, some $120 billion a month from the Fed alone, and this is a global trend. And Federal Reserve governor Jay Powell has promised NOTto raise interest rates from near zero for three years. Most of the excess cash is going into the stock market, either directly or indirectly.
Finally, the stock buybacks that drove the market from 2010 to 2019 but were frozen in 2020 will boisterously resume in 2021, exceeding $1 trillion a year.
And here’s the part you don’t want to hear. When QE ends a few years down the road and interest rates rise, the bull market in stocks will take a break. That’s when you get your cut churning 20% correction. I’ll give you the heads up right before that happens.
Technology stocks will continue their relentless rise, although less than at last year’s torrid pace. Love them or hate them, big tech accounts for 27% of stock market capitalization but 50% of US profits. It's why Willie Sutton robbed banks. That is where the money is.
However, in 2021, they will be joined by domestic recovery stocks, such as banks, online financials, constructions, commodities, delivery companies, hotels, airlines, and railroads. This, a barbell portfolio split between the two groups, will be the most effective strategy in 2021.
You can add on Biotech and Healthcare companies as a further diversification, which are entering a golden age of their own.
Passive index investing is over. This year, portfolio managers are going to have to earn their crust of bread through perfect market timing, sector selection, and individual name picking. Good luck with that. But then, that’s why you read this newsletter. I expect the blockbuster 2020 rally to continue into 2021. After that, I expect a correction. Piece of cake!
Amtrak needs to fill every seat in the dining car to get everyone fed on time, so you never know who you will share a table with for breakfast, lunch, and dinner.
There was the Vietnam Vet Phantom Jet Pilot who now refused to fly because he was treated so badly at airports. A young couple desperately eloping from Omaha could only afford seats as far as Salt Lake City. After they sat up all night, I paid for their breakfast.
A retired British couple was circumnavigating the entire US in a month on a “See America Pass.” Mennonites returning home by train because their religion forbade automobiles or airplanes.
The national debt ballooned to an eye-popping $28 trillion in 2020, a gain of an incredible $5 trillion and a post-World War II record. Yet, as long as global central banks are flooding the money supply with trillions of dollars in liquidity, bonds will not fall in value too dramatically. I’m expecting a slow grind down in prices and up in yields.
With a stable Fed, the best-case scenario is that the ten-year Treasury bond yield (TLT) will rise from 0.95% to 1.25% in 2021, and the worst case is they rise all the way up to 2.00%. That would take the price of the (TLT) down from $158 to $136. Remove any of that record liquidity from the system sooner than expected, and the bond market crashes, causing interest rates to soar and prices to crater.
It’s not impossible. We now have a democratic president and a republican Fed governor. Suffice it to say that all risks and surprises in the bond market are overwhelmingly to the downside.
What is different this year is that the US dollar is in free fall. That will dampen foreign demand for US debt, about half of the total.
Bond investors today get an unbelievably bad deal. If they hang on to the longer maturities, they will get back only 90 cents worth of purchasing power at maturity for every dollar they invest a decade down the road, at best.
Throughout human history, whenever a country’s borrowing exceeded its GDP, its currency collapsed. It happened to the Roman Empire, Bourbon France, Weimer Germany, post-colonial Great Britain, and now the US. Quite simply, whenever you print more of a currency, it becomes less valuable.
The national debt just exploded from $23 trillion to $28 trillion in 2020, and we are in store for $32 trillion in a year or 152% of the US GDP of $21 trillion. How many people have noticed?
Check out your charts and you’ll see that the US dollar started to depreciate while the Japanese yen and Euro started to gain, after we topped the 100% mark. This greenback weakness could continue for a decade.
There is even more trouble.
I have pounded away at you for years that interest rate differentials are far and away the biggest decider of the direction in currencies.
This year will prove that concept once again.
With American overnight rates now at 0.25% and ten-year Treasury bonds at 0.92%, the US has the highest interest rates of any major industrialized economy with the exception of China. This means that the US will be the last to raise interest rates from here.
Compounding the problem is that a weak dollar begets selling from foreign investors. The Chinese government, the world’s largest buyer of government bonds, have been boycotting US Treasuries for three years now. Maybe it’s something the president said? They are in a mood to do so anyway, as they see a chronically high US trade deficit as a burgeoning threat to the value of the greenback.
So, the dollar will continue weak against all major currencies, especially the Japanese yen (FXY), the Australian (FXA), and Euro (FXE).
This explains the recent success with points all weak dollar plays, including emerging markets (EEM), commodities (FCX), and precious metals (GLD).
You can take that to the bank!
5) Commodities (FCX), (VALE), (DBA)
The global synchronized economic recovery now in play can mean only one thing, and that is sustainably higher commodity prices.
Industrial commodities, like copper and iron ore, have just posted their best years in a decade, the red metal rising by an eye-popping 87% off of the March market bottom.
The heady days of the 2011 commodity bubble top are now in play. That is as investors are already front running that move, loading the boat with Freeport McMoRan (FCX), US Steel (X), and BHP Group (BHP).
Now that this sector is convinced of a permanently weak US dollar and higher inflation, it is taking off like a scalded chimp.
China will still demand prodigious amounts of imported commodities, but not as much as in the past. Much of the country has seen its infrastructure build out, and it is turning from a heavy industrial to a service-based economy, like the US. Miners are keeping a sharp eye on India as the next major commodity consumer.
The great thing about commodities is that it takes a decade to bring new supply online, unlike stocks and bonds, which can merely be created by an entry in an excel spreadsheet. As a result, they always run far higher than you can imagine.
Snow Angel on the Continental Divide
6) Energy (DIG), (RIG), (USO), (DUG), (UNG), (USO), (XLE), (AMLP)
One of my best predictions of 2020 was that energy would be a complete disaster, and so it was. In fact, energy has been a horrific investment for the last 20 years. I never thought I’d see negative oil prices in the futures market, but we got them in April.
The industry invested trillions in infrastructure in a grand plan to export natural gas to China. Just as it was coming onstream, the president declared a trade war against China, its principal customer. Then the pandemic collapsed the global economy.
So, where does that leave us for 2021?
A lot of people have been piling into energy lately on the hope that happy days are here again.
I view carbon-based energy companies as the next generation of buggy whip makers. No matter how green the seven sisters talk, we are moving to an all-alternative energy economy over the next 20 years. That means you should sell energy NOW. Tesla (TSLA) shares rocketing from $3.30 to $600 in a decade tells you as much.
I believe what we are seeing is a lot of buying on technicals, on cheap prices, and of dogs of the Dow. No one is talking about an embedded structural oversupply of oil that will never be unwound.
Saudi Arabia said as much with the flotation of Saudi Aramco, which has a monopoly on oil production in the kingdom. After a three-year effort, they were only able to shift 1.5% of the company in a local stock exchange listing. It was one of the greatest accounting frauds in history. Only global index funds that HAD to buy shares picked it up. When Saudi Arabia wants to get out of the oil business, so should you.
OPEC Plus engineered a modest 500,000 production increase at their December Vienna meeting, and that has helped prices rise 10%. It is no more than a band-aid on a great gaping wound.
And now, ESG investing has banned new money from going into energy by most of the investment community. Like tobacco, that will leave a permanently cheap energy sector to a handful of niche players.
Use this as your last chance to get out at a decent price.
Our train has moved over to a siding to permit a freight train to pass, as it has priority on the Amtrak system.
Three Burlington Northern engines are heaving to pull over 100 black, spanking brand-new tank cars, each carrying 30,000 gallons of oil from the fracking fields in North Dakota.
There is another tank car train right behind it. No wonder Warren Buffett tap dances to work every day, as he owns the railroad.
We are also seeing relentless improvements on the energy conservation front with more electric vehicles, high mileage conventional cars, and newly efficient buildings. Electric cars are now 4% of US car sales and that could rise to 25% by 2025. Conventional Energy doesn’t fit anywhere in this industry.
In addition, the incoming administration is distinctly pro-environment and anti-energy and could deep six a 100-year accumulation of oil and gas subsidies in the next tax bill. The energy industry now carries far more political risk than the drug industry, once an unimaginable thought.
Any one of these inputs is miniscule on its own. But, add them all together, and you have a game-changer, a new paradigm.
We will never see $100/barrel crude again. The last peak in oil prices is the last one we ever see. The word is that leasing companies will stop offering five-year agreements in five years because cars with internal combustion engines will become worthless by then.
As a result, I think I will stand aside from the energy industry in 2021, and maybe, forever. You should too.
The train has added extra engines at Denver, so now we may begin the long laboring climb up the Eastern slope of the Rocky Mountains.
On a steep curve, we pass along an antiquated freight train of hopper cars filled with large boulders.
The porter tells me this train is welded to the tracks to create a windbreak. Once, a gust howled out of the pass so swiftly that it blew a passenger train over on to its side.
In the snow-filled canyons, we sight a family of three moose, a huge herd of elk, and another group of wild mustangs. The engineer informs us that a rare bald eagle is flying along the left side of the train. It’s a good omen for the coming year.
We also see countless abandoned 19th century gold mines and the broken-down wooden trestles leading to them, relics of previous precious metals booms. So, it is timely here to speak about the future of precious metals.
Gold (GLD) brought in a respectable 21% return in 2020, its best performance in ten years. It’s not as much as many hot stocks, but better than a poke in the eye with a sharp stick.
As long as the world was clamoring for paper assets like stocks, gold was just another shiny rock. After all, who needs an insurance policy if you are going to live forever?
But the long-term bull case is still there. Gold is not dead; it is just resting.
If you forgot to buy gold at $35, $300, or $800, there is another entry point up here at $1,800 for those who, so far, have missed the gravy train.
To a certain extent, the belief that high interest rates are bad for gold is a myth. Wealth creation is a far bigger driver, and we have had plenty of that lately. Since the March bottom, stock has gained some $12.6 trillion in value, a meteoric 70% gain. To see what I mean, take a look at a gold chart for the 1970s when interest rates were going through the roof.
Remember, this is the asset class that takes the escalator up and the elevator down, and sometimes the window.
If the institutional world devotes just 5% of their assets to a weighting in gold, and an emerging market central bank bidding war for gold reserves continues, it has to fly to at least $2,300, the inflation-adjusted all-time high, or more.
This is why emerging market central banks step in as large buyers every time we probe lower prices. China and India emerged as major buyers of gold in the final quarters of 2020.
They were joined by Russia, which was looking for non-dollar investments to dodge US economic and banking sanctions.
That means it’s just a matter of time before gold breaks out to a new all-time high, above $2,080 an ounce. ETF players can look at the 1X (GLD) or the 2X leveraged gold (DGP).
I would also be using the next bout of weakness to pick up the high beta, more volatile precious metal, silver (SLV), which I think could rise from the present $18 and hit $50 once more, and eventually $100. Next year will see the production of one million electric cars and 500,000 solar panels and all of them require some amount of silver.
The turbocharger for gold will hit sometime in 2021 with the return of inflation. Hello stagflation, it’s been a long time.
Would You Believe This is a Blue State?
8) Real Estate (ITB), (LEN)
The majestic snow-covered Rocky Mountains are behind me. There is now a paucity of scenery, with the endless ocean of sagebrush and salt flats of Northern Nevada outside my window, so there is nothing else to do but write.
My apologies in advance to readers in Wells, Elko, Battle Mountain, and Winnemucca, Nevada.
It is a route long traversed by roving banks of Indians, itinerant fur traders, the Pony Express, my own immigrant forebearers in wagon trains, the transcontinental railroad, the Lincoln Highway, and finally US Interstate 80, which was built for the 1960 Winter Olympics at Squaw Valley.
Passing by shantytowns and the forlorn communities of the high desert, I am prompted to comment on the state of the US real estate market.
There is no doubt a long-term bull market in real estate is underway.
The good news is that we will not see a 2008 repeat when home values cratered by 50%-70%. There is just not enough leverage in the system yet to do any real damage. That has gone elsewhere, like in exchange traded funds, leveraged ETFs, Bitcoin, and SPACs. You can thank Dodd/Frank for that, which imposed capital rules so strict that it is now almost impossible for banks to commit suicide.
You are not going to see any serious damage in a market where there is a generational structural shortage of supply, as with housing.
We are probably ten years into an 18-year run at the next peak in 2028.
There are only three numbers you need to know in the housing market for the next 20 years: there are 80 million baby boomers, 65 million Generation Xer’s who follow them, and 86 million in the generation after that, the Millennials.
The boomers have been unloading dwellings to the Gen Xer’s since prices peaked in 2007. But there is not enough of the latter, and three decades of falling real incomes mean that they only earn a fraction of what their parents made. That’s what caused the financial crisis.
If they have prospered, banks won’t lend to them. Brokers used to say that their market was all about “location, location, location.” Now it is “financing, financing, financing.” Imminent deregulation is about to deep six that problem.
There is a happy ending to this story.
Millennials now aged 25-40 are already starting to kick in as the dominant buyers in the market. They are transitioning from 30% to 70% of all new buyers of homes.
The Great Millennial Migration to the suburbs has just begun. So has the migration from the coast to the American heartland. Personally, I like Reno, Nevada.
As a result, the price of single-family homes should rocket tenfold during the 2020s, as they did during the 1970s and the 1990s when similar demographic forces were at play.
This will happen in the context of a coming labor shortfall, soaring wages, and rising standards of living.
Rising rents are accelerating this trend. Renters now pay 35% of their gross income, compared to only 18% for owners, and less, when multiple deductions and tax subsidies are taken into account.
Remember, too, that the US will not have built any new houses in large numbers in 12 years. The 50% of small homebuilders that went under during the crash aren’t building new homes today.
We are still operating at only a half of the peak rate. Thanks to the Great Recession, the construction of five million new homes has gone missing in action.
That makes a home purchase now particularly attractive for the long term, to live in, and not to speculate with.
You will boast to your grandchildren how little you paid for your house, as my grandparents once did to me ($3,000 for a four-bedroom brownstone in Brooklyn in 1922), or I do to my kids ($180,000 for a two-bedroom in Upper East Side Manhattan high rise with a great view of the Empire State Building in 1983).
That means the major homebuilders like Lenar (LEN), Pulte Homes (PHM), and KB Homes (KBH) are a buy on the dip.
Quite honestly, of all the asset classes mentioned in this report, purchasing your abode is probably the single best investment you can make now.
If you borrow at a 2.8% 30-year fixed rate, and the long-term inflation rate is 3%, then, over time, you will get your house for free.
How hard is that to figure out?
Crossing the Bridge to Home Sweet Home
9) Postscript
We have pulled into the station at Truckee in the midst of a howling blizzard.
My loyal staff has made the ten-mile trek from my beachfront estate at Incline Village to welcome me to California with a couple of hot breakfast burritos and a chilled bottle of Dom Perignon Champagne, which has been resting in a nearby snowbank. I am thankfully spared from taking my last meal with Amtrak.
After that, it was over legendary Donner Pass, and then all downhill from the Sierras, across the Central Valley, and into the Sacramento River Delta.
Well, that’s all for now. We’ve just passed what left of the Pacific mothball fleet moored near the Benicia Bridge (2,000 ships down to six in 50 years). The pressure increase caused by a 7,200-foot descent from Donner Pass has crushed my plastic water bottle. Nice science experiment!
The Golden Gate Bridge and the soaring spire of Salesforce Tower are just around the next bend across San Francisco Bay.
A storm has blown through, leaving the air crystal clear and the bay as flat as glass. It is time for me to unplug my Macbook Pro and iPhone 12 Pro, pick up my various adapters, and pack up.
We arrive in Emeryville 45 minutes early. With any luck, I can squeeze in a ten-mile night hike up Grizzly Peak and still get home in time to watch the ball drop in New York’s Times Square.
I reach the ridge just in time to catch a spectacular pastel sunset over the Pacific Ocean. The omens are there. It is going to be another good year.
I’ll shoot you a Trade Alert whenever I see a window open at a sweet spot on any of the dozens of trades described above.
Good luck and good trading in 2021!
John Thomas
The Mad Hedge Fund Trader
The Omens Are Good for 2021!
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When I joined Morgan Stanley some 35 years ago, one of the grizzled old veterans took me aside and gave me a piece of sage advice.
“Never buy a Dow stock”, he said. “They are a guarantee of failure.”
That was quite a bold statement, given that at the time the closely watched index of 30 stocks included such high-flying darlings as Eastman Kodak (EK), Sears Roebuck & Company (S), and Bethlehem Steel (BS). It turned out to be excellent advice.
Only ten of the Dow stocks of 1983 are still in the index (see tables below), and almost all of the survivors changed names. Standard Oil of California became Chevron (CVX), E.I du Pont de Nemours & Company became DowDuPont, Inc. (DD), and Minnesota Mining & Manufacturing became 3M (MMM).
Almost all of the rest went out of business, like Union Carbide Corporation (the Bhopal disaster) and Johns-Manville (asbestos products) or were taken over. A small fragment of the old E.W. Woolworth is known as Foot Locker (FL) today.
Charles Dow created his namesake average on May 26, 1896, consisting of 12 names. Almost all were gigantic trusts and monopolies that were broken up only a few years later by the Sherman Antitrust Act.
In many ways, the index has evolved to reflect the maturing of the US economy, from an 18th century British agricultural colony, to the manufacturing powerhouse of the 20th century, to the technology and services-driven economy of today.
Of the original Dow stocks, only one, US Leather, vanished without a trace. It was the victim of the leap from horses to automobile transportation and the internal combustion engine. United States Rubber is now part of France’s Michelin Group (MGDDY).
American Tobacco reinvented itself as Fortune Brands (FBHS) to ditch the unpopular “tobacco” word. National Lead moved into paints with the Dutch Boy brand. It sold off that division when the prospects for leaded paints dimmed in 1970 (they cause mental illness in children).
What was the longest-lived of the original 1896 Dow stocks? General Electric (GE), originally founded by light bulb inventor Thomas Edison. It went down in flames thanks to poor management and was delisted in 2018. It was a 122-year run. Today, it is one of the great turnaround challenges facing American Industry.
Which company is the American Leather of today? My bet is that it’s General Motors (GM), which is greatly lagging behind Tesla (TSLA) in the development of electric cars (99% market share versus 1%). With a product development cycle of five years, it simply lacks the DNA to compete in the technology age.
What will be the largest Dow stock in a decade? Regular readers of the Mad Hedge Fund Trader already know the answer.
Sears: Not the Path to Wealth and Riches
Me Not Buying Dow Stocks in 1983
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/12/john-tokyo.jpg425318Mad Hedge Fund Traderhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMad Hedge Fund Trader2020-12-02 10:02:562020-12-02 10:11:12What Happened to the Dow?
Say you owned 10% of Apple (AAPL) and you sold it for $800 in 1976.
What would that stake be worth today?
Try $80 billion.
That is the harsh reality that Ron Wayne, 84, faces every morning when he wakes up, one of the three original founders of the consumer electronics giant.
Wayne first met Steve Jobs when he was a spritely 21-year-old marketing guy at Atari who never took a bath, the inventor of the hugely successful “Pong” video arcade game.
Wayne dumped his shares when he became convinced that Steve Jobs’ reckless spending was going to drive the nascent startup into the ground, and he wanted to protect his assets in a future bankruptcy.
Co-founders Jobs and Steve Wozniak each kept their original 45% ownership.
Today, Jobs' widow has 0.5% ownership that is worth $4.2 billion, while the Woz’s share remains undisclosed.
Wayne designed the company’s original logo and wrote the manual for the Apple 1 computer which boasted all of 8,000 bytes of RAM (which is 0.008 megabytes to you non-techies).
Today, Wayne is living off of a meager monthly Social Security check in remote Pahrump, Nevada, about as far out in the middle of nowhere you can get where he can occasionally be seen playing the penny slots.
As they say in the stock market, timing is everything.
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/apple-1.jpg333300MHFTRhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMHFTR2020-11-18 09:02:382020-11-18 08:58:40The Worst Trade in History
I remember the last time that the market went up 10% in ten days.
In the fall of 1982, I was in the office of Carl Van Horn, the chief investment officer of JP Morgan Bank. I was interviewing him about the long-term prospects for the stock market with the Dow Average at 600 and gurus like Joe Granville predicting Dow 300 by yearend.
The odd thing about the interview was that he kept ducking out of the room for a minute at a time and then coming back in. I finally asked him what he was doing. He answered, “Oh, I had to go out and buy $100 million worth of stock.”
And that was back when $100 million actually bought you something!
Over the last two weeks, the Dow Average has tacked on a historic $4,000 points. For a few fleeting second, it actually touched 30,000. Cassandras everywhere are tearing their hair out.
The monster rally began a few days before the election and has continued unabated. In my view, this is the second leg of a 20-fold move that started in 2009 when the Dow was at 6,000 and will continue all the way up to 120,000 by 2029.
No wonder investors are so bullish! It seems that recently, quite a few have come over to my way of thinking.
And how could they not be so bovine-inclined?
The most contentious election in history over. The pandemic is about to end. In a year we’ll, all have our Covid-19 vaccinations, at least those who want them. I’m planning on getting all six.
The greatest burst of economic growth in history is about to be unleased. Consumption wasn’t destroyed, just deferred into 2021 and 2022, unless you’re in the cruise, airline, or restaurant business. The exponential profit growth unleashed by the pandemic isn’t even close to being discounted.
This hasn’t been just any old rally. Stocks left for dead years ago, the old-line industrials and cyclicals have sprung back to life. Union Pacific (UNP) has exploded. JP Morgan Chase (JNP) has gone off to the races. Caterpillar (CAT) is in orbit.
The great thing about these moves is that it is very early days. They could run for years. But where will the money come from to pay for these? How about raising the big tech piggy bank, which has been leading markets for years and is now wildly overvalued.
However, $4,000 points is a lot. So, we may get some back and fill and a sideways “time” correction before we attempt higher highs by yearend. The only thing that could upset this scenario is if Covid-19 cases explode, which they are now doing.
Where will the market care? Who knows, but like stock prices, US Corona cases have doubled in ten days to 160,000.
Covid-19 is cured! News that Pfizer (PFE) has discovered a Covid-19 vaccine that is 90% effective has sent stocks soaring to new all-time highs! The Dow futures were up $1,800 at the highs pre-market. The Great Depression is over. Recovery stocks like banks, cruise ships, restaurants, energy, and railroads are exploding to the upside, with stay-at-home stocks such as couriers, precious metals, and streaming companies in free fall. Some 500,000 health care workers have priority in getting the two-shot regime. The US Army will begin national distribution almost immediately, but you may not get it until the summer.
Market volatility crashed, with the Volatility Index (VIX) down from $41 last week to $18. Happy times are here again, at least says the market, this minute. I told you to go short last week!
Walt Disney is the best recovery play in the market. With theme parks, hotels, and cruise ships, it had the most exposure of any blue-chip company to the pandemic. It is also best positioned for any recovery. The stock was up 26% at the highs this morning. Only its rock-solid balance sheet gets this company alive. My 2021 target is $200 a share. Back to waiting in lines for hours, packing shoulder to shoulder on rides, and paying $20 for hamburgers. The end of the depression may be in sight, but the US still faces a massive loan default wave that could erode confidence in the economy. A full economic recovery in a year will be too late for millions of businesses, especially small ones. The Fed says the risks are “severe,” and Disneyland is still laying off workers. Just when you think we are risk-free; we are not. A big recovery in dividend stocks is coming after sitting in the doghouse for years while big tech hogged the limelight. Phillip Morris (PM) at a 6.7% yield? AbbVie (ABBV) at 5.5%? Williams Co (WMB) at 8.3%? They certainly will draw some buyers in this near-zero interest rate world. High yields REITs are also in for some joy now that a vaccine is on the horizon.
Home Prices are soaring at the fastest rate in seven years. Ultra-low interest rates and a structural shortage create the perfect storm for higher prices. Houses are now seen as “safe” since they didn’t crash 40% like the stock market did in the spring. Mortgage brokers are so overloaded it takes three months to get a refi done. This could continue for another decade. China’s “Single’s Day” breaks all records, bringing in an eye-popping $116 billion in sales for Alibaba (BABA). US customers were the biggest buyers, eclipsing our “Black Friday” by a huge margin. I told you (BABA) was a “BUY”. Biden could lock down the economy for 4-6 weeks if new cases keep growing at their current rate. That would knock the pandemic on the nose for good, but is it worth the price? That is an idea making the rounds in the incoming Biden administration. Cases could be peaking at 250,000 a day right around the inauguration. I may not go this year. Stocks may Go up for years. That’s is what the Volatility Index (VIX) is telling us down here at $22. If we break below $20 and stay there, then the long-term Bull market becomes a sure thing. Stocks are now discounting the end of the pandemic. When we come out the other side of pandemic, we will be perfectly poised to launch into my new American Golden Age, or the next Roaring Twenties. With interest rates still at zero, oil cheap, there will be no reason not to. The Dow Average will rise by 400% to 120,000 or more in the coming decade. The American coming out the other side of the pandemic will be far more efficient and profitable than the old. Dow 120,000 here we come!
My Global Trading Dispatch exploded to another new all-time high last week. November is up 12.31%, taking my 2020 year-to-date up to a new high of 48.34%. That brings my eleven-year total return to 404.25% or double the S&P 500 over the same period. My 11-year average annualized return now stands at a new high of 37.03%.
It was a week of profit-taking on the fully invested portfolio I piled on just before the election. My one new long was in the silver ETF (SLV) and my one new short was in (TLT), both of which turned immediately profitable. I used the one dip of the week to cover a short in the (SPY) close to cost.
It worked in spades.
The coming week will be a sleeper compared to the previous one. We also need to keep an eye on the number of US Coronavirus cases and deaths, now over 10 million and 240,000, which you can find here.
When the market starts to focus on this, we may have a problem.
On Monday, November 16 at 9:30 AM EST, the Empire State Manufacturing Index is out.
On Tuesday, November 17 at 9:30 AM, US Retail Sales are published. On Wednesday, November 18 at 9:30 AM, US Housing Starts for October are released.
On Thursday, November 19 at 8:30 AM, the Weekly Jobless Claims are announced. At 11:00 AM, the big Existing Home Sales for October are announced. On Friday, November 13, at 2:00 PM we learn the Baker-Hughes Rig Count.
As for me, I’ll be cleaning off the grime from the last Boy Scout trip of the year up to the giant redwoods of north Mendocino County. I haven’t been up there in 13 years and boy has it changed. The vineyards have ground enormous and entire new exurbs have been constructed. There are only a few apple farms left, where I picked up some nice cider, pie, and bags of fresh apples.
There are still a few bits of the old California left.
Stay healthy.
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/john-thomas-camo-e1605551503183.png466350Mad Hedge Fund Traderhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMad Hedge Fund Trader2020-11-16 09:02:192020-11-16 09:43:21The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or Raiding the Piggy Bank
Below please find subscribers’ Q&A for the November 11 Mad Hedge Fund TraderGlobal Strategy Webinar broadcast from Silicon Valley, CA with my guest and co-host Bill Davis of the Mad Day Trader. Keep those questions coming!
Q: I bought Amazon (AMZN) on the dip and am concerned.
A: What I would say for all tech questions is take profits for the short term but keep them for the long term. All we’re seeing is a natural rotation out of big tech into domestic recovery stocks, which is long overdue; Where do you raid the piggy bank to get the money to buy domestic recovery stocks? Tech! But tech always comes back so if you can take the pain then keep them. Otherwise, if you’re a trader, then you probably should be looking at other new sectors like the one we’ve been calling.
Q: How does Tesla (TSLA) compete with Chinese electric vehicles? They copy, then improve, that’s their mojo.
A: Not actually; 12 years ago, I toured China visiting all of their electric car factories. They were pumping out tens of thousands of electric cars before Tesla ever produced even one of them. The problem is that the quality and safety standards are terrible, and they have a nasty habit of catching on fire. They have never been able to produce a car to compete in the US market and I expect that to remain true in the foreseeable future. What is more likely is Tesla will build more cars in China and invite the Chinese to participate as partners.
Q: Is there more downside in tech?
A: Probably, but not much. Apple (AAPL) down 40% from the high after a new iPhone generation launch is always a good rule of thumb. So far, it dropped 25% from the September high.
Q: Will we get another lockdown in the US?
A: Probably not; the states are handling it on a state-by-state basis. I don’t think we’ll ever go back to the total lockdown we had in March/April. It will be much more selective than it was, and the economy will be still able to function to some extent. Plus, it will be over in 3-6 months. The market is trading on recovery, not on the prospect of a further lockdown economy. Use the lockdown risk down days to buy.
Q: Do you see Facebook (FB) going down next year because of anti-trust issues?
A: No, antitrust will go absolutely nowhere; at the very worst they’ll put a disclosure on page 25 of their website, get fined a million dollars and then walk away. That's how these things always work. I was at Facebook quarters yesterday and antirust was the furthest thing from their minds.
Q: What happens to stocks if the vaccines don’t work?
A: We all die and stock go to new lows.
Q: Are you positive on Roku (ROKU)?
A: Yes, but it's overbought and having a correction just like all of the rest of tech.
Q: Would you sell homebuilders based on the chance of interest rates rising under a new administration?
A: Probably yes. Homebuilders (ITB) practically doubled this year. We’ve been recommending them for the entire year, and they have had a fantastic run, but there are better fish to fry right now buying these domestic stocks where you have much more upside potential. It a great place to raid the piggy bank.
Q: Are you saying the dollar (UUP) is going lower against all of the currencies?
A: Yes. The multiyear prospects for the greenback are grim. Sell every rally.
Q: Should we be buying the ProShares Ultra Short 20-year plus US Treasury Fund (TBT) now?
A: No, $14-$15 was the buy. Here you just want to run your long unless we get another $5-$7-point rally in the (TLT), then you want to go into the (TBT); but right now is a terrible entry point for any short bond plays.
Q: If we get a big increase in COVID-19, could the Treasury Bond ETF (TLT) make it back to $161?
A: That is entirely possible because then the fear will become a return to lockdown, and that could cause interest rates to crash and bonds to rally sharply.
Q: Is Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) a buy now or wait for pullback?
A: Wait for a pullback on all of tech, it looks like it has more to go. A lot of these domestic stocks haven’t been touched for years. That's where the money is going in now, and the only way to raid the piggy bank is to sell your tech stocks.
Q: Are the S&P 500 (SPY) put spreads you have risky?
A: Yes, but we don’t get $4,000 points in the Dow Average very often, basically once every 100 years, so I'm hanging on trying to get a better exit point. With any luck, the market will move sideways, and time decay will take our position to max profit next week. The rational thing to do here is at least to come out of one position for a small loss on the next big dip, and then run the other one into expiration and recover that loss.
Q: Can Chevron hit $100?
A: Maybe, as the entire sector is so oversold. But oil will still be the wrong industry to be in going into a Biden administration. Remember, the US had one million leatherworkers back when the population was only 100 million, or about 2% of the workforce. There are no more ten 10,000 leatherworkers today. You don’t want to be investing in the next leather industry.
Q: Any chance that Tesla will be added to the S&P 500 this December?
A: Probably not because all of the Tesla profits are coming from Zero Emission Vehicle (ZEV) credits they receive from other car companies. That’s considered accounting-based income, which Standard and Poor’s does not permit in their profit calculations. You have to have three quarters of consecutive operating profits to qualify for inclusion in the S&P 500, and these green credits don’t meet that qualification.
Q: Is Alibaba (BABA) a good buy now?
A: Probably yes, because the disaster over the Ant Financial listing is a short-term problem. I think eventually, they will list Ant Financial somewhere, they’ll get that money and then it’s off to the races again for (BABA). I predict that US China relations (FXI) are about to improve and that will be good for all Chinese assets.
Q: Is it too late to get into Copper (FCX) or wait for a pullback?
A: Wait for a pullback, that’s why I said stand aside on commodities. They really have had incredible runs already.
Q: Do you think once all the votes are recounted, Trump will be elected? And what will the market do?
A: Recounts never, or very rarely, produce changes in vote counts of more than 500 votes, so that is definitely a short-dated option. If Trump were elected, the Dow would drop about 4,000 points, probably in a day. We would give up the entire Biden rally that’s occurred over the last 6 days and a lot of you would end up jumping out of windows because your stocks have just been slaughtered.
Q: Is Chinese tech a buy?
A: Yes, and that’s one of the reasons I recommended Alibaba. We also like Baidu (BIDU), Tencent Holding (TCTZF), and several of the other Chinese majors. We think there's about to be an improvement in trade relations with China for some strange reason...
Q: Do you record this?
A: Yes, we post it on the website in about 2 hours later to allow for the format conversion. You just have to log in and go to your account section. If you can’t find it, just send an email to our customer support.
Q: Is International Paper (IP) a buy?
A: Yes, it is one of the domestic commodity plays that should do better.
Q: What about Natural Gas ($NATGAS)?
A: We’re not touching that right now because we’re trying to avoid the entire energy sector as the current tax system guarantees never-ending gluts of supply in the face of falling demand. That makes it very difficult to trade against unless you have inside information, on which 90% of all the trading in energy is indeed based.
Q: Best domestic stock play now?
A: Walt Disney Corp. (DIS). Buy Disney on the dip if we get one for some reason. Disney was a perfect storm on the downside, with theme parks, hotels, and cruise lines. It will become a perfect storm on the upside as well. It is also one of the best run companies in the world but hell to work for. Disney characters are not allowed to throw up on duty. They have to do it inside their character suits.
Q: Do you think the Vertex Pharmaceutical (VRTX) pipeline justifies a buy now?
A: Yes, we love the entire biotech sector; and the same is true for Biogen (BIIB).
Good Luck and Stay Healthy.
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
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