Global Market Comments
April 19, 2021
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or LIE BACK AND THINK OF ENGLAND)
(JPM), (BAC), (AAPL), (FXI), (TLT), (VIX), (TSLA)
Global Market Comments
April 19, 2021
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or LIE BACK AND THINK OF ENGLAND)
(JPM), (BAC), (AAPL), (FXI), (TLT), (VIX), (TSLA)
If you have to ask what this classic phrase from Britain’s colonial past means, you are too young to know.
The stock market equivalent is that there is nothing to do. Just sit back and relax, watching the value of your stocks go up every day. Let the greatest monetary and fiscal stimulus work its inevitable magic.
When I said last week that stocks might go up every day in April, I wasn’t kidding. NASDAQ (QQQ) has gone up every day this month except one. The S&P 500 has seen only two down days when it was virtually unchanged.
And the best may be yet to come.
The mere prospect of a $2.3 infrastructure trillion budget is enough to keep stocks powering upward for the foreseeable future. Biden may have to negotiate the total down to get it through congress and that may be the cause of the next correction…in about three months.
What really had the phones buzzing on Thursday was the bizarre move in the bond market. After seeing spectacularly positive data, the Weekly Jobless Claims plunging by 200,000 and Retail Sales coming in at a prolific 9.8%, bonds should have crashed.
Instead, the (TLT) jumped by $2.60. That took interest rate and inflation fears packing and sent the indexes soaring to all-time highs once again.
It’s proof yet again that inflation is the boogie man that will never show. Despite the incredible strength of the economy, any time anyone tries to raise prices, another company comes along with a better product or service at half the price. Such is the relentless tide of technology.
In the meantime, Goldilocks has moved in, unpacked her bags, gotten comfortable, and has settled in for the duration. I have been so aggressive in trading the market for the last six months it is wearing me out.
So, I took a rare Saturday off, weeding the garden, setting up a new computer, and generally fixing things that I haven’t had time to attend to since last year. I lived almost normally….for a day.
One of the best Earnings Seasons in history started last week, with 25% growth expected at 81% beating forecasts. JP Morgan (JPM) and Bank of America (BAC) kicks off on Wednesday, with the big kahuna, Apple (AAPL) reporting on April 28. Expect stocks to rally until then. It may give us the first hint of the massive stimulus on the economy to come. Q2 and Q3 will be the monster quarters.
Equity Funds pick up a half trillion dollars in five months, more than they attracted over the last 12 years. It’s all rocket fuel for the ongoing market melt-up. With the Volatility Index (VIX) at a one-year low at $17, the best may be yet to come. Equity investors are the most bullish in years.
Tesla is upgraded to $1,071 per share by research firm Canaccord Genuity. The company is transitioning from low-volume high-priced cars to high-volume low-priced cars, as seen in the 47% leaps in sales during Q1. The stationary battery business is booming, thanks to a new generation of technology. Tesla is developing an Apple-type brand value in the energy market, which is worth a big premium, which competitors can’t match. Tesla has brought a machine gun to a knife fight. Global chip shortages are a risk. The stock jumped $25 on the news.
Consumer Price Index comes in muted at 0.6% in April and 2.6% YOY. The market had been fearing worse, sparking another leg up in technology stocks. Much of the gain was from a jump in gasoline prices, which are now falling. Food prices are also rising.
JP Morgan pops on upside earnings surprise, with Q1 profits soaring from $2.9 billion a year ago to an eye-popping $14.5 billion. Revenues were up 14% to $33.1 billion. Loan demand is weakening because so many people are getting government money for free. Credit card debts are being paid down.
Retail Sales explode in March, up a staggering 9.8%. New spending at bars and restaurants was a major factor, and we haven’t even started yet! Stocks soar to new highs, and the bond market takes off like a scalded chimp, taking ten-year US Treasury yields below 1.57%. It confirms my thesis that when we see actual real numbers of an unprecedented recovery, we get another new leg in the bull market.
Weekly Jobless Claims collapse to 576,000, the lowest of 2021. That's down a massive 193,000 jobs from the previous week. Herd immunity is here! Keep getting those shots!
China’s (FXI) GDP grew by a staggering record of 18.3% in Q1 at an annualized rate YOY. Strong industrial production and exports were the leaders. It presages a similar explosive growth rate for the US in Q2. We won’t know until the end of July. Having your largest customers breaking growth records is great for your business too. Buy everything on dips.
Hedge funds nailed the Bond Crash, selling short some $100 billion in paper since January. It will be more than enough to cover their losses in equity shorts.
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 7.17% gain during the first half of April on the heels of a spectacular 20.60% profit in March.
It was a very busy week for trade alerts, with five positions expiring at their maximum profit points in (TSLA) and the (TLT). It’s been so long since I’ve had a loss, I forgot what they looked like.
I used a puzzling $2.60 spike in the (TLT) to add to my already substantial short position in bonds (TLT) with a distant May expiration. Ten-year US Treasury yields fell all the way to 1.51%.
My 2021 year-to-date performance soared to 51.26%. The Dow Average is up 12.9% so far in 2021.
That brings my 11-year total return to 473.81%, some 2.00 times the S&P 500 (SPX) over the same period. My 11-year average annualized return now stands at an unbelievable 40.81%, the highest in the industry.
My trailing one-year return exploded to positively eye-popping 129.19%. 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. Every time I think these numbers can’t be topped, they increase by another 10% during the following two weeks.
We need to keep an eye on the number of US Corona virus cases at 31.6 million and deaths topping 567,000, which you can find here.
The coming week will be dull on the data front.
On Monday, April 19 at 11:00 AM, earnings for (IBM), Coka-Cola (KO), and United Airlines (UAL) are released.
On Tuesday, April 20, at 4:30 PM, API Crude Stocks are published. We also get earnings for Johnson & John (JNJ) and Netflix (NFLX).
On Wednesday, April 21 at 1:00 PM, there is a big 20-year US Treasury bond auction. Chipotle (CMG) and Verizon (VZ) earnings are out.
On Thursday, April 22 at 8:30 AM, the Weekly Jobless Claims are printed. At 10:00 AM Existing Home Sales for March are announced. Snap (SNAP) and Intel (INTC) announce earnings.
On Friday, April 23 at 10:00 AM, we get the New Home Sales for March. American Express (AXP) and Honeywell (HON) release earnings. At 2:00 PM, we learn the Baker-Hughes Rig Count.
As for me, someone commented that I walk kind of funny the other day, and the memories flooded back.
In 1975, The Economist magazine in London heard rumors that a large part of the population was getting slaughtered in Cambodia. We expected this to happen after the fall of Vietnam, but not in the Land of the Khmers. So my editor, Peter Martin, sent me to check it out.
Hooking up with a right-wing guerrilla group financed by the CIA was the easy part. Humping 100 miles in 100-degree heat wasn’t.
We eventually came to a large village that was completely deserted. Then my guide said, “Over here.” He took me to a nearby cave containing the bodies of over 1,000 women, children, and old men that had been there for months.
I’ll never forget that smell.
With the evidence and plenty of pictures in hand, we started the trek back. Suddenly, there was a large explosion and the man 20 yards in front of me disappeared. He had stepped on a land mine. Then the machine-gun fire opened up. It was an ambush.
I picked up an M-16 to return fire, but it was bent, bloody, and unusable. I picked up a second rifle and fired until it was empty. Then everything suddenly went black.
I woke up days chained to a palm tree, covered in shrapnel wounds, a prisoner of the Khmer Rouge. Maggots infested my wounds, but I remembered from my Tropical Diseases class at UCLA that I should leave them alone because they only ate dead flesh and would prevent gang green. That class saved my life. Good thing I got an “A”.
I was given a bowl of rice a day to eat, which I had to gum because it was full of small pebbles and might break my teeth. Farmers loaded their crops with these so the greater weight could increase their income. I spent my time pulling shrapnel out of my legs with a crude pair of plyers.
Two weeks later, the American who set up the trip for me showed up with cases of claymore mines, rifles, ammunition, and antibiotics. My chains we cut and I began the long walk back to Thailand.
It’s nice to learn your true value.
Back in Bangkok, I saw a doctor who attended to the 50 caliber bullet that grazed my right hip. It was too old to sew up so he decided to clean it instead. “This won’t hurt a bit,” he said as he poured in hydrogen peroxide and scrubbed it with a stiff plastic brush.
It was the greatest pain of my life. Tears rolled down my face.
But you know what? The Economist got their story and the world found out about the Great Cambodian Genocide, where 3 million died. There is a museum in Phnom Penh devoted to it today.
So, if you want to know why I walk funny, be prepared for a long story. I still set off metal detectors.
Stay healthy.
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
Global Market Comments
April 16, 2021
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(APRIL 14 BIWEEKLY STRATEGY WEBINAR Q&A),
(TSLA), (JPM), (ROM), (AAPL), (MSFT), (FB) (CRSP), (TLT), (VIX), (DIS), (NVDA), (MU), (AMD), (AMAT) (PLTR), (WYNN), (MGM)
Below please find subscribers’ Q&A for the April 14 Mad Hedge Fund Trader Global Strategy Webinar broadcast from Silicon Valley, CA.
Q: How do you choose your buy areas?
A: It’s very simple; I read the Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader. Beyond that, there are two main themes in the market right now: domestic recovery and tech; and I try to own both of those 50/50. It's impossible to know which one will be active and which one will be dead, and some of that rotation will happen on a day-by-day basis. As for single names, I tend to pick the ones I have been following the longest.
Q: In my 401k, should I continue placing my money in growth or move to something like emerging markets or value?
A: It depends on your age. The younger you are, the more aggressive you should be and the more tech stocks you should own. Because if you’re young, you still have time to earn the money back if you lose it. If you’re old like me, you basically only want to be in value stocks because if you lose all the money or we have a recession, there's not enough time to go earn the money back; you’re in spending mode. That is classic financial advisor advice.
Q: When you say “Buy on dips”, what percentage do you mean? 5% or 10%
A: It depends on the volatility of the stock. For highly volatile stocks, 10% is a piece of cake. Some of the more boring ones with lower volatility you may have to buy after only a 2% correction; a classic example of that is the banks, like JP Morgan (JPM).
Q: Even though you’re not a fan of cryptocurrency, what do you think of Coinbase?
A: It’ll come out vastly overvalued because of the IPO push. Eventually, it may fall to a lower level. And Coinbase isn’t necessarily a business model dependent on bitcoin; it is a business model based on other people believing in bitcoin, and as long as there’s enough of those creating two-way transactions, they will make money. But all of these things these days are coming out super hyped; and you never want to touch an IPO—wait for it to drop 50%, as I once did with Tesla (TSLA).
Q: Please explain the barbell portfolio.
A: The barbell works when you have half tech, half domestic recovery. That way you always have something going up, because the market tends to rotate back and forth between the two sectors. But over the long term everything goes up, and that is exactly what has been happening.
Q: Is the ProShares Ultra Technology Fund (ROM) an ETF?
A: Yes, it is an ETF issuer with $53 billion worth of funds based in Bethesda, MD. (ROM) is a 2x long technology ETF, and their largest holdings include all the biggest tech stocks like Apple (AAPL), Microsoft (MSFT), Facebook (FB), and so on.
Q: Will all this government spending affect the market?
A: Yes, it will make it go up. All we’re waiting to see now is how fast the government can spend the money.
Q: What is the target for ROM?
A: $150 this year, and a lot more on the bull call spread. The only shortcoming of (ROM) is you can only go out six months on the expiration. Even then, you have a good shot at making a 500% return on the farthest out of the money LEAPS, the November $130-$135 vertical bull call spread. That's because market makers just don’t want to take the risk being short technology two years out. It’s just too difficult to hedge.
Q: There have been many comments about hyperinflation around the corner. Will we be seeing hyperinflation?
A: No, the people who have been predicting hyperinflation have been predicting it for at least 20 years, and instead we got deflation, so don’t pay attention to those people. My view is that technology is accelerating so fast, thanks to the pandemic, that we will see either zero inflation or we will see deflation. That has been the pattern for the last 40 years and I like betting on 40-year trends.
Q: When we get called away on our short options, is it easier to close the trade than to exercise your option?
A: No, any action you take in the market costs money, costs commissions, costs dealing spreads. And it's much easier just to exercise the option if you have to cover your short, which is either free or will cost you $15.
Q: Are you worried about overspending?
A: No, the proof in that is we have a 1.53% ten-year US Treasury yield, and $20 trillion in QE and government spending is already known, it’s already baked in the price. So don’t listen to me, listen to Mr. Market; and it says we haven't come close to reaching the limit yet on borrowing. Look at the markets, they're the ones who have the knowledge.
Q: My Walt Disney (DIS) LEAPs are getting killed. I don't understand why my LEAPS go down even on green days for the stock.
A: The answer is that the Volatility Index (VIX) has been going down as well. Remember, if you’re long volatility through LEAPS, and volatility goes down, you take a hit. That said, we’re getting close to the lows of the year for volatility here, so any further stock gains and your LEAPS should really take off. And remember when you buy LEAPS, you’re doing multiple bets; one is that volatility stays high and goes higher, and one is that your stock is high and goes higher. If both those things don’t happen, and you can lose money.
Q: How do you best short the (TLT)?
A: If you can do the futures market, Treasury bonds are always your best short there because you have 10 to 1 leverage.
Q: How would you do a spread on Crisper Technology (CRSP)?
A: We have a recommendation in the Mad Hedge Biotech & Healthcare service to be long the two-year LEAP on Crisper, the $160-$170 vertical bull call spread.
Q: When do you see the largest dip this year?
A: Probably over the summer, but it likely won’t be over 10%. Too much cash in the market, too much government spending, too much QE. People will be in “buy the dips” mode for years.
Q: Is the SPAC mania running out of steam?
A: Yes, you can only get so many SPACS promising to buy the same theme at a discount. I think eventually, 80% of these SPACS go out of business or return the money to investors uninvested because they are promising to buy things at great bargains in one of the most expensive markets in history, which can’t be done.
Q: What do you think about Joe Biden’s attempt to tame the semiconductor chip shortage?
A: Most people don't know that all chips for military weapons systems are already made in the US by chip factories owned by the military. And the pandemic showed that a just-in-time model is high risk because all of a sudden when the planes stop flying, you couldn't get chips from China anymore. Instead, they had to come by ship which takes six weeks, or never. So a lot of companies are moving production back to the US anyway because it is a good risk control measure. And of course, doing that in the midst of the worst semiconductor shortage in history shows the importance of this. Even Tesla has had to delay their semi truck because of chip shortages. Keep buying NVIDIA (NVDA), Micron Technology (MU), Advanced Micro Devices (AMD), and Applied Materials (AMAT) on dips.
Q: Do you see a sell the news type of event for upcoming earnings?
A: Yes, but not by much. We got that in the first quarter, and stocks sold off a little bit after they announced great earnings, and then raced back up to new highs. You could get a repeat of that, as people are just sitting on monster profits these days and you can’t blame them for wanting to pull out a little bit of money to spend on their summer vacation.
Q: Has the stock market gotten complacent about COVID risk?
A: No, I would say COVID is actually disappearing. Some 100 million Americans have been vaccinated, 5 million more a day getting vaccinated, this thing does actually go away by June. So after that, you only have to worry about the anti-vaxxers infecting the rest of the population before they die.
Q: Do you see any imminent foreign policy disasters in Asia, the Middle East, or Europe that could derail the stock market?
A: I don’t, but then you never see these things coming. They always come out of the blue, they're always black swans, and for the last 40 years, they have been buying opportunities. So pray for a geopolitical disaster of some sort, take the 5-10% selloff and buy because at the end of the day, American stockholders really don't care what’s going on in the rest of the world. They do care, however, about increasing their positions in long-term bull markets. I don't worry about politics at all; I don’t say that lightly because it’s taking 50 years of my own geopolitical experience and throwing it down the toilet because nobody cares.
Q: Would you buy Coinbase?
A: Absolutely not, not even with your money. These things always come out overpriced. If you do want to get in, wait for the 50% selloff first.
Q: Is Canada a play on the dollar?
A: Absolutely yes. If they get a weaker dollar, it increases Canadian pricing power and is good for their economy. Canada is also a great commodities play.
Q: The IRS is using Palantir (PLTR) software to find US citizens avoiding taxes with Bitcoin.
A: Yes, absolutely they are. Anybody who thinks this is tax-free money is delusional. And this is one reason to buy Palantir; they’re involved in all sorts of these government black ops type things and we have a very strong buy recommendation on Palantir and their 2-year LEAPS.
Q: Are NFTs, or Non-Fundable Tokens, another Ponzi scheme?
A: Absolutely, if you want to pay millions of dollars for Paris Hilton’s music collection, go ahead; I'd rather buy more Tesla.
Q: When do you think you can go to Guadalcanal again?
A: Well, I’m kind of thinking next winter. Guadalcanal is one of the only places you can go and get more diseases than you can here in the US. Last year, I went there and picked up a bunch of dog tags from marines who died in the 1942 battle there, sent them back to Washington DC, and had them traced and returned to the families. And I happen to know where there are literally hundreds of more dog tags I can do this with. It’s not an easy place to visit and it’s very far away though. Watch out for malaria. My dad got it there.
Q: Walt Disney is already above the pre-pandemic price. Do you suggest any other hotel company name at this time?
A: Go with the Las Vegas casinos, Wynn (WYNN) and MGM (MGM) would be really good ones. Las Vegas is absolutely exploding right now, and we haven't seen that yet in the earnings yet, so buy Las Vegas for sure.
Q: Is the upcoming Roaring Twenties priced into the stock market already?
A: Absolutely not. You didn't want to sell the last Roaring Twenties in 1921 as it still had another eight years to go. You could easily have eight years on this bull market as well. We have historic amounts of money set up to spend, but none of it has been actually spent yet. That didn’t exist in 1921. I think that when they do start hitting the economy with that money, that we get multiple legs up in stock prices.
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
Global Market Comments
April 6, 2021
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(THE IRS LETTER YOU SHOULD DREAD),
(PANW), (CSCO), (FEYE),
(CYBR), (CHKP), (HACK), (SNE)
(FB), (AAPL), (NFLX), (GOOGL), (MSFT), (TSLA), (VIX)
(TESTIMONIAL)
Global Market Comments
March 25, 2021
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(HOW TO EXECUTE A VERTICAL BULL CALL SPREAD)
(AAPL)
(TESTIMONIAL)
(DINING WITH THE BOTTOM 20%)
Global Market Comments
March 24, 2021
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(FIVE TECH STOCKS TO BUY AT THE BOTTOM),
(AAPL), (AMZN), (SQ), (ROKU), (MSFT)
I have prudently ignored investing in tech stocks for the past seven months, and justly so.
Tech has been peddling hard on the business front, but the shares have been going nowhere in a hurry. Many of the leading names are down 30%-50% from their peak prices.
As a result, they are rapidly approaching value territory. When growth becomes cheap and value gets expensive, it’s time to shift from one side of the barbell strategy to the other.
I’m not saying that tech stocks have bottomed. But we are getting close, perhaps within 10% in the best names. It’s now time to lists of stocks to pounce on when the big turn inevitably comes.
Fortunately, Arthur Henry’s Mad Hedge Technology Letter has already done that job for you. See below his list of recommendations.
By the way, if you want to subscribe to Arthur’s groundbreaking, cutting-edge service, please click here.
It’s the best read on technology investing in the entire market.
You don’t want to catch a falling knife, but at the same time, diligently prepare yourself to buy the best discounts of the year.
Here are the names of five of the best stocks to slip into your portfolio in no particular order when the next downside whoosh occurs.
Remember, tech ALWAYS comes back.
Apple
Steve Job’s creation is weathering the gale-fore storm quite well. Apple has been on a tear reconfirming its smooth pivot to software services tilted tech company. The timing is perfect as China has enhanced its smartphone technology by leaps and bounds.
Even though China cannot produce the top-notch quality phones that Apple can, they have caught up to the point local Chinese are reasonably content with its functionality.
That hasn’t stopped Apple from vigorously growing revenue in greater China 20% YOY during a feverishly testy political climate that has their supply chain in Beijing’s crosshairs.
The pivot is picking up steam and Apple’s revenue will morph into a software company with software and services eventually contributing 25% to total revenue.
They aren’t just an iPhone company anymore. Apple has led the charge with stock buybacks and will gobble up a total of $200 billion in shares by the end of 2021. Get into this stock while you can as entry points are few and far between.
Oh, and their 5G phones are selling like hotcakes. Some one billion need to be replaced to bring consumers into the new high-speed 5G world.
Amazon (AMZN)
This is the best company in America hands down and commands 5% of total American retail sales or 49% of American e-commerce sales. The pandemic has vastly accelerated the growth of their business.
It became the second company to eclipse a market capitalization of over $1 trillion. Its Amazon Web Services (AWS) cloud business pioneered the cloud industry and had an almost 10-year head start to craft it into its cash cow. Amazon has branched off into many other businesses since then oozing innovation and is a one-stop wrecking ball.
The newest direction is the smart home where they seek to place every single smart product around the Amazon Echo, the smart speaker sitting nicely inside your house. A smart doorbell was the first step along with recently investing in a pre-fab house start-up aimed at building smart homes.
Microsoft (MSFT)
The optics in 2021 look utterly different from when Bill Gates was roaming around the corridors in the Redmond, Washington headquarter and that is a good thing.
Current CEO Satya Nadella has turned this former legacy company into the 2nd largest cloud competitor to Amazon and then some.
Microsoft Azure is rapidly catching up to Amazon in the cloud space because of the Amazon-effect working in reverse. Companies don’t want to store proprietary data to Amazon’s server farm when they could possibly destroy them down the road. Microsoft is mainly a software company and gained the trust of many big companies especially retailers.
Microsoft is also on the vanguard of the gaming industry taking advantage of the young generation’s fear of outside activity. Xbox-related revenue is up 36% YOY, and its gaming division is a $10.3 billion per year business.
Microsoft Azure grew 87% YOY last quarter. The previous quarter saw Azure rocket by 98%. Shares are cheaper than Amazon and almost as potent.
Square (SQ)
CEO Jack Dorsey is doing everything right at this fin-tech company blazing a trail right to the doorsteps of the traditional banks.
The various businesses they have on offer make me think of Amazon’s portfolio because of the supreme diversity. The Cash App is a peer-to-peer money transfer program that cohabits with a bitcoin investing function on the same smartphone app.
Square has targeted the smaller businesses first and is a godsend for these entrepreneurs who lack immense capital to create a financial and payment infrastructure. Not only do they provide the physical payment systems for restaurant chains, but they also offer payroll services and other small loans.
The pipeline of innovation is strong with upper management mentioning they are considering stock trading products and other bank-like products. Wall Street bigwigs must be shaking in their boots.
Roku (ROKU)
Benefitting from the broad-based migration from cable tv to online steaming and cord-cutting, Roku is perfectly placed to delectably harvest the spoils.
This uber-growth company offers an over-the-top (OTT) streaming platform along with the necessary hardware and picks up revenue by selling digital ads.
Founder and CEO Anthony Woods owns 21 million shares of his brainchild and insistently notes that he has no interest in selling his company to a Netflix or Apple.
Viewers are reaffirming the obsession with on-demand online streaming content with hours streamed on the platform increasing 58% to 5.5 billion.
The Roku platform can be bought for just $30 and is easy to set-up. Roku enjoys the lead in the over-the-top (OTT) streaming device industry controlling 37% of the market share leading Amazon’s Fire Stick at 28%.
The runway is long as (OTT) boxes nestle cozily in only 40% of American homes with broadband, up from a paltry 6% in 2010.
They are consistently absent from the backbiting and jawboning the FANGs consistently find themselves in partly because they do not create original content and they are not an offshoot from a larger parent tech firm.
This growth stock experiences the same type of volatility as Square.
Global Market Comments
March 9, 2021
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(THE CODER BOOM)
(HOW TO EXECUTE A VERTICAL BULL CALL SPREAD)
(AAPL)
Global Market Comments
March 8, 2021
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or WHAT’S UP WITH TECH?),
(MSFT), (TSLA), (AAPL), (QQQ), (NVDA), (MU), (AMD), (BRKB), (ARRK), (ROM), (VIX), (FCX), (TLT), (BRKB), (TSLA), (JPM), (SPY), (QQQ), (SPX)
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