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Mad Hedge Fund Trader

December 14 Biweekly Strategy Webinar Q&A

Diary, Newsletter

Below please find subscribers’ Q&A for the December 14 Mad Hedge Fund Trader Global Strategy Webinar broadcast from Silicon Valley in California.

Q: Is it time to short the S&P 500 (SPY), or go into cash?
 

A: I vote for cash. Number 1. We’ve just had a tremendous run in the market. The 200-day moving average at $405 is proving to be massive resistance, and you could get a bunch of profit-taking in January on all the positions people bought up in October. They’ve made a ton of money on that, and they may be deferring to profit-taking, hoping for the Santa Clause rally to continue and to take advantage of all that time decay over the holidays—so, high risk. Risk-reward right now is terrible, so I don’t want to do anything. I’m 100% cash, and I’ll stay that way until the New Year unless something exceptional happens in the markets—you never know what might happen. And I watch markets 24/7, vacation or not because it's in my blood.

Q: What about Financials?

A: Wait until the next dip and then go for call spreads which deliver max profits in sideways markets. JP Morgan (JPM), Bank of America (BAC), Citigroup (C) and you might take a look at Wells Fargo (WFC) next time around, but they always seem to be getting into trouble.

Q: What do we do about interest rates here?

A: Look for the 10-year Treasury bond (TLT) yield to drop to about 2.50% in 2023, about the first half of 2023—maybe by June or so. We did just have a round of profit-taking, but we’re adding on dips.

Q: What do you think about the US sending patriot batteries to Ukraine?

A: The problem is the MIM-104 Patriot SAM system is kind of old—about 41 years old—and it’s been outrun by the new technologies developed by the Ukraine war. Also, 1,000 drones at $1,000 each would be cheaper than 1 patriot missile for $4 million. Sending swarms of hundreds of super cheap drone bombs to attack targets has only been developed over the past six months and you only need one to get through to destroy the target for which the patriot would be useless. Patriot is really designed to shoot down incoming Russian intercontinental ballistic missiles with nuclear warheads with one hour of notice and highly predictable trajectories. We used them a lot in the Gulf War in 1991, and we gave many to Israel which used them to great effect when defending big cities. But they were only firing against slow WWII German-style V2 rockets which Saddam Hussein literally copied off of Wikipedia. If you want to see how effective the new drone strategy is, watch competitive drone racing (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HNRiMgNnuVE ), or robot wars  (http://www.robotwars.tv ), or any of these other online programs where you have drones controlled by humans doing exactly what I’m talking about. Also, 1,000 drones at $1,000 each would be cheaper than 1 patriot missile for $ million.

Q: What’s your Rivian (RIVN) target by the January options expiration?

A: I have no idea, but Elon Musk has had the impact of destroying not only Tesla but the entire EV sector, so Rivian is a great company clearly being dragged down by Tesla. But also, a joint venture to make trucks in Europe was also put on hold with Mercedes. And of course, nobody wants to spend money ahead of a recession. Buy (RIVN) two-year LEAPS.

Q: Why is the US buying Natural Gas (UNG) in Massachusetts from Russia when we have so much already in this country?

 

A: The US does not have a national natural gas pipeline system, so you can have excesses in Texas where it’s produced meet shortages in Massachusetts where it’s consumed. Somebody found a loophole to get Russian gas into the US using offshore shell companies which I’m sure will be closed instantly once that delivery is made. Suffice it to say that the sanctions on Russia are tightening, are having a deeper effect and forcing them to pull out of Ukraine sooner than we expect. That may be the pivotal black swan of 2023—that Russia gives up on Ukraine, which would be a huge positive for all markets.

Q: When will we be using nuclear fusion?

A: I have been following nuclear fusion for 50 years, ever since I worked at the Nuclear Test Site in Nevada—it’s long been the holy grail for alternative energy. I talked to the teams every once in a while, since they live next door. The positive developments we saw in England last week are a big breakthrough, but you’re looking for at least 30 years until we get functional economic nuclear fusion power plants. So, we only have to stay alive for 30 more years (and keep climate change from killing us all off in the meantime) before we get carbon-free energy in an unlimited supply. Having said that, from the time they developed a functional commercial nuclear powerplant using Uranium in 1957 from the initial use of the atomic bomb in 1945, was only 12 years and that had to be equally as daunting. So, I may be wrong, and there may be other breakthroughs coming our way, but you don’t control 150 million degrees easily—that's what’s necessary with fusion. The amounts of power input required are also staggering, like all the power that San Francisco uses in a day, just to produce marginal bits of electricity. And the deuterium fuel needed (H2, or heavy hydrogen) in large quantities would not exactly be cheap either. But in 30 years every city should get its own min sun to provide unlimited electricity. So there’s your science lecture of the day, from a long-term fusion follower. For a more detailed explanation please click here at https://www.energy.gov/science/doe-explainsnuclear-fusion-reactions

Q: Is Tesla (TSLA) a buy here?

A: Absolutely, for the long term, but I would not be amazed to see $110 print first. Number one, there’s a major short play going on here too building huge amounts of buying power, and Number two, we’re flushing out a lot of long-term profit takers for tax loss selling as we go with the year-end to offset 2022 losses in other stocks. Buying Tesla at 27X earnings multiple, and next year’s 19X multiple when it was at 100X just a year ago is kind of unbelievable. An onslaught of new Tesla positives will hit the market in 2023. The new Cybertruck comes out and there is a two-year waiting list out the gate and deposits in hand for 100,000 vehicles. The company is generating such enormous cash flows that it is like to carry out $10 billion in share buybacks, especially with the price this low. There are no real competitors on the horizon, except for a handful with minimal production at big losses outside of China.

Q: Is the demise of FTX the end of crypto?

A: I would say yes, which is why we stopped producing our Bitcoin newsletter. It could take 30 years for this thing to recover. It’s another Japanese stock market type situation, where it literally takes three decades to recover, and by then new technologies will far surpass it. The confidence in anything crypto has been totally destroyed by the FTX scandal—it’s the final nail in the coffin. And there are better things to do—I’d rather be buying NVIDIA (NVDA) or Tesla (TSLA) than crypto. There are too many great trades after a bear market.

Q: Is Blackrock (BLK) in trouble?

A: Not in a million years, and I’d be buying it on any dip. They’re an incredibly well-run company, buy on dips. They have one gated REIT which thei disclosed well in advance that is drawing all the adverse publicity. In bear markets, traders always believe the worst.

Q: Why would you not sell Nvidia (NVDA)?

A: Well, we dumped all our tech stocks in January, so we did sell there. But I try not to go against long-term trends, and the long-term trends for Nvidia is a double or triple from here since they are the 8-pound gorilla in the high-end chip business.

Q: Why is cybersecurity (PANW), (CRWD) so unloved in this environment?

A: They are over-owned. When everybody owns something, you can have the greatest story in the world and it doesn’t go up because you need new buyers for things to go up, and the Cybersecurity story is pretty well known. That’s why it won’t go down either, people are not selling because they believe in the long-term story of cyber security—and quite correctly so, and I might add at the bottom of the ranges.

Q: Isn’t Warren Buffet’s age a worry regarding Berkshire Hathaway (BRKB)?

A: No, the replacement management team that has been there for 20 years, is generating great results. Warren is basically just the front-end mouthpiece for Berkshire Hathaway, just like I’m the front-end mouthpiece for the Mad Hedge Fund Trader and isn't really involved in day-to-day decisions. That’s how Berkshire was able to step up its technology exposure during the teens. When he goes, the stock might drop 5% from algorithm and uninformed sales, but no more.

Q: What do you think of the iShares 20 Plus Year Treasury Bond ETF (TLT) versus the ProShares UltraShort 20+ Year Treasury (TBT)?

A: Avoid the (TBT) because it’s a 2x—you have extra management fees, and extra dealing costs—it’s better just to buy (TLT) on a 2x margin than it is shorting the (TBT) which is already a 2x. I’m looking for $120-$130 in the (TLT) by mid-2023, which is also a great LEAPS candidate.

Q: Is the market rethinking technology multiples here which are IBIDTA based?

A: It has already rethought the technology multiples because they have collapsed. They have dropped, in Tesla’s case 100X to 19X, which looks like a pretty serious piece of rethinking to me, so yes absolutely. Where is the final level? My theory always has been that when tech falls to a market multiple, which for the S&P 500 right now is 18.5X, that is your final bottom in tech multiples which means they may have more to go down. And what might really happen is you may have a situation where the market multiples start to rise again and get back up to the 20’s, tech falls, and they meet somewhere in the low 20s. That’s your final bottom for tech, and then you buy it to own for the next 10 years.

Q: When do you think the Fed will start lowering rates?

A: It will be a second-half affair. First of all, they have to raise rates by 50 basis points on Wednesday, then raise them again in February by 50 and again in March by 25, and then leave them alone for 3 months. Then we will have a recession, or dramatically lower inflation by then, or both. And then they’ll have room to start cutting, which sets a calendar of about June where they start several 75 basis point CUTS. Remember, markets discount things 6-9 months in advance, which is why we had that $20 rally in the (TLT) that started in February. There’s your calendar. So far, it’s working.

Q: Will you give a buy signal on Tesla (TSLA)?

A: More like a Hail Mary on Tesla, hoping that it’s the bottom. When you get these capitulation selloffs, which is what we’re getting on Tesla, there is absolutely no way of predicting where the final number is, because you’re dealing with human emotions here, which are totally unpredictable and are panicking. I’d rather wait, give the first 10% of the move to the next guy, and then play the new trend from there. But I think Tesla could be one of the top performers of 2023. Especially if you get down to like $110 or so, something unbelievable—you know, get Tesla to market multiple, that means it’s got to drop another $30 essentially, and in this environment, it could do that. It could keep going down every day for the rest of this year because a lot of these big reversals tend to happen at year ends. When you get the last Tesla bull out of there, that’s when it goes up. After that, it’s all short covering.

Q: Do you think it will be 50 or 75 basis points?

A: It’s a coin toss for whether it’s 50 or 75. Knowing Jay Powell as I do, I’d go for 50, but with harsh talk. I think he wants to shock us, wants to kill off this stock market rally, wants to kill off any hope you can get one more price rise through the system before we hit a recession. A 50 basis points would be a real shocker and, by the way, would also give us easily a 1000-point selloff, which we could then use to buy into for the new year.

Q: Could Tesla reach $600?

A: Yes, I think it could. Remember, the fundamental story for Tesla is still on track. They are still growing at a 40% rate, while the rest of Detroit is going nowhere. All of their leads are overwhelming, and the really telling aspect for the future of Tesla is that Apple gave up on its autonomous driving program. Every other car company in the world is going to come to the same decision, except for maybe Google. So yes, the bull case is absolutely there, you just have to wait for the current capitulation to flush out, and then it becomes a buy for years.

Q: Does the adoption of a digital currency impact the economy?

A: No, I think anything digital money is on hold for the foreseeable future as the FTX disaster unfolds.

Q: Do you like Salesforce (CRM)?

A: Yes, long-term. It’s also in a capitulation “catch a falling knife” stage. Wait for that to finish—better to buy it on the way up than on the way down is all I can say.

Q: Will there be any restrictions on copper mining (FCX)?

A: Not that I can think of—we’re looking at an enormous shortage of copper going forward and a future copper shock. Most of this is produced in emerging markets that have no environmental restrictions, which is why it happens there, like Chile. So yes, looking for new copper sources will be one of the big plays of this decade.

Q: Do you think the market will bottom in 2023?

A: Yes, if it hasn’t already.

To watch a replay of this webinar with all the charts, bells, whistles, and classic rock music, 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 12 years are there in all their glory.

Good Luck and Stay Healthy.

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

 

Peleliu in 1978 with a Japanese 8 Inch Gun

 

 

 

 

https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/10/john-thomas-peleliu-island-1975.png 434 628 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2022-12-16 09:02:322022-12-16 14:32:18December 14 Biweekly Strategy Webinar Q&A
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

November 4, 2022

Diary, Newsletter, Summary

Global Market Comments
November 4, 2022
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:

(NOVEMBER 2 BIWEEKLY STRATEGY WEBINAR Q&A),
(SPY), (LLY), (TSLA), (GOOG), (GOOGL), (JPM), (BAC), (C), (BRK), (V), (TQQQ), (CCJ), (BLK), (PHO), (GLD), (SLV), (UUP)

https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png 0 0 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2022-11-04 09:04:522022-11-04 11:25:47November 4, 2022
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

November 2 Biweekly Strategy Webinar Q&A

Diary, Newsletter

Below please find subscribers’ Q&A for the November 2 Mad Hedge Fund Trader Global Strategy Webinar broadcast from Silicon Valley in California.

 

Q: The country is running out of diesel fuel this month. Should I be stocking up on food?

A: No, any shortages of any fuel type are all deliberately engineered by the refiners to get higher fuel prices and will go away soon. I think there was a major effort to get energy prices up before the election. If that's the case, then look for a major decline after the election. The US has an energy glut. We are a net energy exporter. We’re supplying enormous amounts of natural gas to Europe right now, and natural gas is close to a one-year low. Shortages are not the problem, intentions are. And this is the problem with the whole energy industry, and the reason I'm not investing in it. Any moves up are short-term. And the industry's goal is to keep prices as high as possible for the next few years while demand goes to zero for their biggest selling products, like gasoline. I would be very wary about doing anything in the energy industry here, as you could get gigantic moves one way or the other with no warning.

Q Is the SPDR S&P 500 ETF (SPY) put spread, correct?

A: Yes, we had the November $400-$410 vertical bear put spread, which we just sold for a nice profit.

Q: I missed the LEAPS on J.P. Morgan (JPM) which has already doubled in value since last month, will we get another shot to buy?

A: Well you will get another shot to buy especially if another major selloff develops, but we’re not going down to the old October lows in the financial sector. I believe that a major long-term bull move has started in financials and other sectors, like healthcare. You won’t get the October lows, but you might get close to them. 

Q: I’m waiting for a dip to get into Eli Lilly (LLY), but there are no dips.

A: Buy a little bit every day and you’ll get a nice average in a rising market. By the way, I just added Eli Lilly to my Mad Hedge long-term model portfolio, which you received on Thursday.

Q: Any thoughts about the conclusion of the Twitter deal and how it will affect tech and social media?

A: So far all of the indications are terrible. Advertisers have been canceling left and right, hate speech is up 500%, and Elon Musk personally responded to the Pelosi assassination attempt by trotting out a bunch of conspiracy theories for the sole purpose of raising traffic and not bringing light to the issue. All indications are bad, but I've been with Elon Musk on several startups in the last 25 years and they always look like they’re going bust in the beginning. It’s not even a public stock anymore and it shouldn’t be affecting Tesla (TSLA) prices either, which is still growing 50% a year, but it is.

Q: In terms of food commodities for 2023, where are prices headed?

A: Up. Not only do you have the war in Ukraine boosting wheat, soybean, and sunflower prices, but every year, global warming is going to take an increasing toll on the food supply. I know last summer when it hit 121 degrees in the Central Valley, huge amounts of crops were lost due to heat. They were literally cooked on the vine. We now have a tomato shortage and people can’t make pasta sauce because the tomatoes were all destroyed by the heat. That’s going to become an increasingly common issue in the future as temperatures rise as fast as they have been.

Q: Do I trade options in Alphabet (GOOG) or Alphabet (GOOGL)?

A: The one with the L is the holding company, the one without the L is the advertising company and the stock movements are really identical over the long term, so there really isn’t much differentiation there.

Q: Why can’t inflation be brought down by increasing the supply of all goods?

A: Because the companies won’t make them. The companies these days very carefully manage output to keep prices as high as possible. It’s not only the energy industry that does that but also all industries. So those in the manufacturing sector don’t have an interest in lowering their prices—they want high prices. If they see the prices fall, they will cut back supply.

Q: What do you think about growth plays?

A: As long as interest rates are rising, growth will lag and value will lead, and that has been clear as day for the last month. This is why we have an overwhelming value tilt to our model portfolio and our recent trade alerts. They’ve all been banks—JP Morgan (JPM), Bank of America (BAC), Citigroup (C), plus Berkshire Hathaway (BRK) and Visa (V) and virtually nothing in tech.

Q: I don’t know how to execute spread trades in options so how do I take advantage of your service?

A: Every trade alert we send out has a link to a video that shows you exactly how to do the trade. I have to admit, I’m not as young as I was when I made the videos, but they’re still valid.

Q: Is the US housing market about to crash?

A: There is a shortage of 10 million houses in the US, with the Millennials trying to buy them. If you sell your house now, you may not be able to buy another one without your mortgage going from 2.75% to 7.75%—that tends to dissuade a lot of potential selling. We also have this massive demographic wave of 85 million millennials trying to buy homes from 65 million gen x-ers. That creates a shortage of 20 million right there. That's why rents are going up at a tremendous rate, and that's why house prices have barely fallen despite the highest interest rates in 20 years.

Q: If we get good news from the Fed, should we invest in 3X ETFs such as the ProShares UltraPro QQQ (TQQQ)?

A: No, I never invest in 3X ETFs, because they are structured to screw the investor for the benefit of the issuer. These reset at the close every day, so do 2 Xs and not more. If you're not making enough money on the 2Xs, maybe you should consider another line of business.

Q: Do you think BlackRock Corporate High Yield Fund (HYT) will show the pain of slights because of their green positioning?

A: No I don’t, if anything green investing is going to accelerate as the entire economy goes green. And you’ll notice even the oil companies in their advertising are trying to paint themselves as green. They are really wolves in sheep’s clothing. They’ll never be green, but they’ll pretend to be green to cover up the fact that they just doubled the cost of gasoline.

Q: Where do you find the yield on Blackrock?

A: Just go to Yahoo Finance, type in (BLK), and it will show the yield right there under the product description. That’s recalculated by algorithms constantly, depending on the price.

Q: Do you like Cameco (CCJ)?

A: Yes, for the long term. Nuclear reactors have been given an extra five years of life worldwide thanks to the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Even Japan is opening theirs.

Q: Should I short the US dollar (UUP) here?

A: The answer is definitely maybe. I would look for the dollar to try to take one more run at the highs. If that fails, we could be beginning a 10-year bear market in the dollar, and bull market in the Japanese yen, Australian dollar, British pound, and euro. This could be the next big trade.

Q: What is your outlook on Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs) now?

A: I think it looks great. REITs are now commonly yielding 10%. The worst-case scenario on interest rates has been priced in—buying a REIT is essentially the same thing as buying a treasury bond, but with twice the leverage, because they have commercial credits and not government credits. We’ll be doing a lot more work on REITS. We also have tons of research on REITS from 12 years ago, the last time interest rates spiked. I'll go in and see who’s still around, and I'll be putting out some research on it.

Q: How do you see the price development of gold (GLD)?

A: Lower—the charts are saying overwhelmingly lower. Gold has no place in a rising interest rate world. At least silver (SLV) has solar panel demand.

Q: Do you have any fear of Korea going into IT?

A: Yes, they will always occupy the low end of mass manufacturing, and you can see that in the cellphone area; Samsung actually sells more phones than Apple, but they’re cheaper phones with lower-end lagging technology, and that’s the way it’s always going to be. They make practically no money on these.

Q: When can we get some more trade alerts?

A: We are dead in the middle of my market timing index, so it says do nothing. I’m looking for either a big move down or big move up to get back into the market. This is a terrible environment to chase trades when you're trading, so I'm going to wait for the market to come to me.

Q: What about water as an investment? The Invesco Water Resources ETF (PHO)?

A: Long term I like it. There’s a chronic shortage of fresh water developing all over the world, and we, by the way, need major upgrades of a lot of water systems in the US, as we saw in Jackson, MS, and Flint, MI.

Q: Will REITs perform as well as buying rental properties over the next 10 to 20 years?

A: Yes, rental properties should do very well, as long as you’re not buying any city that has rent control. I have some rental properties in SF and dealing with rent control is a total nightmare, you’re basically waiting for your tenants to die before you raise the rent. I don’t think they have that in Nevada. But in Las Vegas, you have the other issue that is water. I think the shortage of water will start to drag on real estate prices in Las Vegas.

To watch a replay of this webinar with all the charts, bells, whistles, and classic rock music, just log on to www.madhedgefundtrader.com go to MY ACCOUNT, click on GLOBAL TRADING DISPATCH, then WEBINARS, and all the webinars from the last 12 years are there in all their glory.

Good Luck and Stay Healthy,

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

 

It’s Been a Tough Market

 

 

 

 

 

https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/john-thomas-lying-on-grass-e1667574535879.jpg 500 349 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2022-11-04 09:02:192022-11-04 11:26:35November 2 Biweekly Strategy Webinar Q&A
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

October 21, 2022

Diary, Newsletter, Summary

Global Market Comments
October 21, 2022
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:

(OCTOBER 19 BIWEEKLY STRATEGY WEBINAR Q&A),
(BAC), (USO), (SPY), (TSLA), (NFLX), (TBT), (PLTR), (SNOW)

https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png 0 0 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2022-10-21 09:04:352022-10-21 11:11:55October 21, 2022
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

October 19 Biweekly Strategy Webinar Q&A

Diary, Newsletter

Below please find subscribers’ Q&A for the October 21 Mad Hedge Fund Trader Global Strategy Webinar broadcast from Silicon Valley in California. 

Q: Bank of America (BAC) said the US consumer is strong and lending is robust. Does this mean no recession in 2023?

A: It could, because remember that while some sectors are clearly in recession, like real estate and automakers, and have been for a while, others are absolutely booming, like the airline business, and the banking business. There may not be a recession in here, or if there is one, it’s a very slight one. Count on the market to first discount a severe recession which would take the S&P 500 down to $3,000-$3,200 or so; and that’s what markets do, always overly pessimistic at the bottom and overly euphoric at tops. You can make your living off of this.

Q: What do you think about OPEC's behavior (USO) and its influence on the price of oil?

A: Clearly, they’re trying to influence the midterm elections and get an all-republican pro-oil Congress, which will be nicer to OPEC. That’s certainly what they got with the last administration and it’s safe to say that the pro-climate administration of Biden and the Saudis get along like oil and water. But long term, OPEC knows it’s going to zero, and in fact, Saudi Arabia has plans to turn their entire oil supply into hydrogen which can be exported and burned cleanly. I know the team here at UC Berkeley that’s working on that with the Saudi government. Cheap hydrogen also means airships come back, how about that? Hindenburg anyone?

Q: Will draining the Strategic Petroleum Oil Reserve (SPR) backfire, meaning deflation for the US economy and administration?

A: No, the SPR outlived its usefulness maybe 30 years ago—it’s essentially a government subsidy for Texas and Louisiana, and for the oil industry, that has taken on a life of its own. When we started the SPR in 1975, the US got more than half of its oil from the Middle East. Now, it’s almost zero. It goes to China instead. If we are a net energy producer and we have been for over 5 years, why do we even need a petroleum reserve? So no, I think we should shut it down and sell all the oil that’s in there. And it becomes even less relevant as more of the US economy turns over to alternatives.

Q: How do we operate our military with no oil?

A: The pentagon is working on a no-oil future, developing alternative fuels for all kinds of things that you wouldn’t imagine are possible. For example, instead of using diesel, jet fuel, or gasoline for our vehicles, you outfit them with electric batteries, and when the batteries go dead you just air drop new fully charged ones. It’s much better than trying to transport gasoline across the desert in a giant fuel bladder, which can be taken out by a single bullet and is what they do now. Take the pilots out of fighters and they become so light they can operate on battery power. So yes, the pentagon has actually been in the forefront of using every alternative technology they can get their hands on from the early days. Better they get them first before an enemy does.

Q: We will almost always need petroleum; far too many products use it as an ingredient.

A: That is absolutely right. Some will probably never be replaced, like asphalt, feedstock, or plastic. However, those represent less than 10% of the current oil demand. So yes, there always will be an oil industry, it just might be a heck of a lot smaller than it is now. You eliminate cars from the picture, and that’s half of all oil demand in the United States right there. And in most places in the United States, it will be illegal to sell a car that uses gasoline in 12 years. And do you make 30-year investments based on demand for your product dropping by half in 12 years? No, you don’t, which is why the oil companies themselves won’t invest in their own industries anymore. They’re only paying out profits as dividends and buying back shares, which they never used to do.

Q: Do you think the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index (SPX) $3,500 was the bottom?

A: No, we actually did get a little bit lower than that. We will be in a bottoming process over the next several months, but the pattern will be the same. Tiny marginal new bottoms, maybe 100 points lower than the last, and then these gigantic rallies. If we do make bottoms they will only be for seconds, so the way to deal with that is to only put in really low-limit orders to buy stuff, assuming 1,000 points down, and just keep entering the order every day. Eventually, you’ll get one of these throw-away fills when the algorithms panic and a bunch of market orders hit the market. That's the way to deal with that.

Q: I would say that Biden is trying to influence the elections by releasing oil reserves.

A: Absolutely he is, but then so is the oil industry, taking half of the refineries off stream 2 months before the elections, and spiking oil prices. So it’s a battle of the oil price going on here. No love lost between the oil industry and Biden, and US consumers for that matter. I don’t care if gasoline is $7 a barrel because I never buy it; I am all electric. But for a lot of working people, that’s definitely a lot of money.

Q: How concerned are you about the US going to a cashless currency?

A: I’m not worried because I pay my taxes and I don’t break any laws. If you don’t pay taxes and do break laws, like engaging in drug dealing or bribery, you should be extremely worried, as that would be the eventual goal of a cashless economy. That and the fact that the government has to spend $300 million a year printing paper money, which they’d love to get rid of. And of course, it’s cheaper for businesses to use digital currencies. Most countries in Europe don’t use physical currency anymore—it’s credit cards only.

Q: Do you expect Tesla (TSLA) to pop after earnings?

A: I have no idea; it depends on what the report says but suffice it to say that Tesla is historically cheap. It has the lowest PE multiple now than it has in the entire 13-year history of the company. Scale in on the LEAPS with Tesla—that’s what I’d be doing down here.

Q: Could the US debt situation spiral into something that gets out of hand?

A: No, because the purchasing power of debt is now deflating at an 8.4% annual rate, which means that it goes to zero in about 8.57 years. This is how the government always wins when issuing debt. It’s been going on since the French first issued government debt 300 years ago. Who pays for that? Bond investors. Anybody who owns bonds now has seen their purchasing power go up in smoke. That’s why it’s been a one-way zero bid market for two and a half years—they’ve been dumping like crazy.

Q: Should I buy debt here or sell it?

A: We’re actually getting close to a bottom in the junk debt market, which means you’re going to be yielding around 10%. That means the value of your holding doubles in 6 years, and the default rates never reach the high levels predicted by analysts in junk bonds. That has always been the key to junk bonds in the whole 50 years that I've been following this market. My neighbor up in Tahoe, Mike Milliken, made billions off that assumption.

Q: What do you think about Netflix (NFLX)?

A: Well, my advice was to buy it, to a lot of people. They’re clearly changing their business model for the better—they’re going to start picking up ad revenues, they’re cracking down on password sharing, and they delivered a 20% return in stocks. Plus their share price has just dropped down from $700 to $165. Great LEAP candidate here. 

Q: What kind of position is best if a recession hits?

A: Cash. Cash is now yielding 4.4%. The best cash alternative is 90-day T-bills issued by the US Treasury. Execution costs almost zero, and liquidity is essentially infinite; but, remember also that bull markets start 6 to 9 months before recessions end. You just have to watch your timing. Which means that if the recession ends in say July, you have to be buying stocks today. Just keep that in mind, ladies and gentleman.

Q: How do you see the futures of semis?

A: Anything you buy here now will triple in three years, but it becomes a question of how much pain you want to take in the meantime. Everyone in the investment management industry thinks the same, and it really is a classic “catch-a-falling-knife” situation— knowing that the payoff down the road is enormous. Virtually all companies are designing new semis into their products at an exponential rate.

Q: Are LEAPS part of the service?

A: Yes, they are. I will send you one tomorrow. But concierge customers get first priority because that’s what they’re paying for.

Q: How far out should we go?

A: On LEAPS, always take the maximum maturity, which is usually 2 years and 4 months. And the reason is that the second year is almost free—they charge you almost nothing for going out to maximum maturity. And if we have a recession that does last longer than people think, that extra year of maturity will be worth its weight in gold. It’ll be the difference between a zero return and a 10x return.

Q: Can we go back into the ProShares UltraShort 20+ Year Treasury (TBT)?

A: No, it would be a horrible idea to buy the (TBT) here after it just moved from $14 to $36. That’s what you buy before it goes from $14 to $36. We’re topping out in all of these short bond plays, so avoid them like the plague.

Q:  How much is the Concierge Service?

A: It’s $12,000 a year—and a bargain price at that! Almost everybody ends up covering that on their first trade, and you get an entire portfolio of LEAPS and a dedicated LEAPS website with the service. You also get my personal cell phone number so you can call me while I'm either on the beach in Hawaii or on the ski slopes of Lake Tahoe. If anyone has questions about the concierge service, contact customer support at  support@madhedgefundtrader.com.

Q: What are your thoughts on data analytics companies Snowflake (SNOW) and Palantir (PLTR)?

A: Love Snowflake, hate Palantir because the CEO isn’t interested in promoting a share price. With (SNOW), you have Warren Buffet as a major holder, so that’s all you need to know there. (SNOW) also has a 75% fall behind it.

Q: Thoughts on the Ukraine/Russia war?

A: It’ll drag on well into next year, and obviously the Iranian drones are the new factor here. I wouldn’t be surprised if there were suddenly an accident at a certain factory in Iran; that’s what happens when these things play out.

Q: Is Snowflake (SNOW) a buy right now?

A: It’s like all the rest of tech. High volatility, could have lower lows, but long-term gains are at least a triple from here. You know how much risk you can take.


To watch a replay of this webinar with all the charts, bells, whistles, and classic rock music, 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 12 years are there in all their glory.

Good Luck and Stay Healthy,

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

 

Dungeon in Montreux Castle on Lake Geneva in Switzerland

 

 

 

 

 

https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/john-thomas-Montreux-Castle--e1666366030403.jpg 550 361 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2022-10-21 09:02:112022-10-21 11:12:04October 19 Biweekly Strategy Webinar Q&A
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

October 19, 2022

Diary, Newsletter, Summary

Global Market Comments
October 19, 2022
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:

(THE BARBELL PLAY WITH BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY),
(BRKA), (BRKA), (BAC), (KO), (AXP), (VZ), (BK) (USB),
(MRK), (ABBV), (CVX), (GM), (PCC), (BNSF), (TLT), (AAPL)

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Mad Hedge Fund Trader

September 23, 2022

Diary, Newsletter, Summary

Global Market Comments
September 23, 2022
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:

(SEPTEMBER 21 BIWEEKLY STRATEGY WEBINAR Q&A),
(SPY), (INTC), (NVDA), (AMD), (MU) (TBT), (TLT), (AMGN),
(VIX), (CHPT), (TSLA), (GS), (BAC), (MS), (JPM), (USO), (TLT)

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Mad Hedge Fund Trader

September 21 Biweekly Strategy Webinar Q&A

Diary, Newsletter, Research

Below please find subscribers’ Q&A for the September 21 Mad Hedge Fund Trader Global Strategy Webinar broadcast from Silicon Valley in California.

Q: What would cause you to look for a lower bottom than $330 on the (SPY)?

A: Nuclear war with Russia would certainly do the trick—they’re now threatening to use tactical nuclear weapons in Ukraine—and higher-than-expected interest rates. If we get another 75 basis points after this one today, then I think you’re looking at new lows, but we won’t find that out until November 2. So, the market may just bounce along the bottom here for a while until it sees what the Fed is going to do, not on this rate hike but the next one after that. Other than that, a few dramatically worse earnings from corporations would also allow us to test a lower low.

Q: Is it time to nibble on Nvidia Corporation (NVDA)?

A: Nvidia is one of the most volatile stocks in the market. You don’t want to go into it until you’re absolutely sure the bottom is in. If that means you miss the first 10% of the following move up, that’s fine because when this thing moves, you get a double or triple out of it. I would wait for the indecision in the market to resolve itself before you get too aggressive on the most volatile stocks in the market. The same is true for the rest of the semiconductor sector.

Q: What does a final capitulation look like?

A: The Volatility Index (VIX) ever $40. We’ve had a high of VIX at $37 so far this year. If really get over $40, that would be a new high for the year. That would signal people that are throwing in the towel, giving up the market, selling everything—of course that is always the best time to buy.

Q: How do we get LEAPS guidance?

A: We send our LEAPS recommendations first to our concierge members—we only have a small number of those—and then after that, they go out to all subscribers to the Mad Hedge Global Trading Dispatch. Everyone gets exposure to the LEAPS. By the way, with LEAPS, you can take up to a month to execute a position. What I do is literally buy 1 contract a day, so I get a nice average over the period of a month when the market is most likely bottoming.

Q: Do you see Intel Corporation (INTC) as a good candidate for a Taiwan invasion hedge?

A: Well, first of all, China’s not going to invade Taiwan. I’ve been waiting for this for 70 years and it’s not going to happen. Also, Intel’s new management has yet to prove itself. You have a salesman running the company; I never like companies run by a salesman. I’d prefer to have an engineer run an engineering company. The court is still out on Intel and whether they can turn that company around or not; so, I would much rather buy the market leaders, Nvidia (NVDA), Advanced Micro Devices (AMD), and Micron Technology (MU) in the semiconductor space.

Q: You talked dollar/cost averaging before. Should we pause on averaging in?

A: No, that's why I say buy one contract a day and put it in order to buy at the bid side of the market. That way, any sudden swoosh down in the market and you’ll get filled. The spreads on these LEAPS are quite wide, so you want to try to buy as close to the middle or bottom end of the spread, and putting in single contract orders over a month, of course, will do that to you.

Q: Does that mean it’s time to sell the ProShares UltraShort 20+ year Treasury Yield (TBT)?

A: I would say yes; (TBT) hit $30.30 yesterday, which is a new multi-year high. I would be taking profits on that because on the next turnaround in bonds, you could get a very rapid move in (TBT) from $30 back down to $20. I’d rather have you keep that profit than try to squeeze the last dollar out of it. Remember, the (TBT) has a negative cost of carry now of 8% a year and that is a big nut to cover.

Q; Market outlook for mid-2023?

A: We could hit my $4,800 target by mid-2023; that is up 28% from here.

Q: Can we buy LEAPS on Amgen (AMGN)?

A: Absolutely yes, you can. Go for the highest listed strike prices on the call side with the longest possible maturity. I would do the January 17, 2025 $350-$360 vertical bull call spread which you can buy now for $1.00. That gives two years and four months to get a tenfold return. That’s enough time for a full-bore recession to happen and then a recovery where markets take off like a rocket.  The call spread you bought for $1.00 becomes worth $10.00.

Q: Is there a long position on the beneficiary of government plans to build EV charging stations?

A: There is, but I'm not recommending EV charging stations because it’s a low value-added business. You buy electric power from the local utility, add 10 cents and resell it. The margins are small, the competition is heating up. There are much smarter ways to play EVs than the charging station. ChargePoint (CHPT) is certainly one of them, but it’s not a great investment idea. Look at how ChargePoint (CHPT) has performed over the last six months compared to Tesla (TSLA) and you see what I mean.

Q: Given the very poor investor sentiment, why don’t we get a testing of the lows and result in a (VIX) pop?

A: Absolutely yes—that is what everybody in the market is waiting for. And it could happen as soon as this afternoon. If it doesn’t happen this afternoon, allow for a little rally and then a meltdown on the next piece of bad news.

Q: I’m not able to get an email response from customer support.

A: Try emailing filomena@madhedgefundtrader.com. If that doesn’t work, you can try calling at (347) 480-1034. Filomena will always be happy to take care of you.

Q: What maturity of US Treasury securities would you buy now?

A: I would buy the 30-year. You’re getting close to a 4% yield on that—that is starting to look attractive to people who don’t want to work for a living picking stocks on a daily basis. We are about to see the rebirth of bond investing.

Q: What about banks?

A: Banks will be a screaming buy and a three-year double once recession fears end, which could be in a couple of months. We now have sharply rising interest rates, which banks love, but the bear market in stocks has killed off the IPO business, credit risk is rising, and of course, the Bitcoin business has gone to zero also. So, I would wait for fears of credit quality to end, and then you’ll get a double in the banks very quickly, and notice how they’re all flatlining at a bottom, they’re not actually going down anymore. 

Q: Which banks are good choices?

A: Goldman Sachs (GS) and Bank of America (BAC) are two great ones, along with Morgan Stanley (MS) and JP Morgan (JPM).

Q: Do you think the market will bottom by the midterms?

A: I do, I think we will bottom a few weeks before the midterms, or the day after. Sometimes that’s the way it goes, and then it will be off like a rocket for the rest of the year. If we can do this from a much lower level in the SPYs, so much the better. Remember, the next Fed meeting is six days before the election. Yikes!

Q: If OPEC cuts production (USO), won’t the supply/demand cause oil prices to start rising again, increasing inflation and people’s prices at the pump?

A: Yes, but OPEC needs the money. Not necessarily Saudi Arabia, but all the other members of OPEC are starved for cash, and that is always how these shortages end. The smaller members cheat on quotas and bust the price. That's clearly what’s driven us down $50 since the February high, small member cheating. And that will continue. It is a cartel with some serious internal conflicts that will never resolve.

Q: Does it cost $17,000 to mine a Bitcoin?

A: It did four months ago. My guess is it’s more expensive now because of the higher cost of electricity around the world. We may even be up to $20,000 cost, which is why it tends to hang around the $20,000 level on the low side. Below that, miners lose money and the supply dries up, just like you see in the gold market.

Q: Do you have an opinion on Real Estate Investment Trusts (REIT)?

A: Yes; credit risk is rising, as are the yields. In a real estate recession, you start to get more defaults on REITS, but the yields on them are very high; so if you are going to play, buy a basket to spread your risk.

Q: Would you buy ProShares UltraShort 20+ year Treasury Yield (TLT) calls spreads now?

A: Yes, but I would go farther in the money, like the mid $90s, because I don’t think we’ll get that low in this cycle. I would also go out another month; instead of a one-month call spread in the mid $90s, I would do a two-month maturity. You could probably take in about $2,000 on a $10,000 position in the mid $90s.

To watch a replay of this webinar with all the charts, bells, whistles, and classic rock music, 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 12 years are there in all their glory.

Good Luck and Stay Healthy,

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

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Back at Lake Tahoe

https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/01/John-Thomas-snow.png 622 472 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2022-09-23 11:02:472022-09-23 11:36:58September 21 Biweekly Strategy Webinar Q&A
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

June 14, 2022

Diary, Newsletter, Summary

Global Market Comments
June 14, 2022
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:

(THE MAD HEDGE TRADERS & INVESTORS SUMMIT IS ON FOR JUNE 14-16)
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD,
or WHAT HAPPENS WHEN YOUR BEST FRIEND BECOMES YOUR WORST ENEMY?)
(SPY), (TLT), (TSLA), (CCJ), (TGT), NVDA), (JPM), (BAC), (C)

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Mad Hedge Fund Trader

The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or What Happens When Your Best Friend Becomes You Worst Enemy

Diary, Newsletter

Of course, I am talking about the Federal Reserve.

The Fed was the best friend of share owners, pressing interest rates lower from March 2009. That remained the case for 12 years until November 2021 when its notorious pivot took place, flipping overnight from an easing to a tightening posture.

It's actually worst than that. In fact, our nation’s central bank morphed overnight from the easiest monetary policy in history to the most aggressive tightening.

Stock markets have noticed, the Dow average giving up 20% in six months, and the final lows are probably not in yet.

I would bet money that you are expecting the worst-case scenario to happen. After all, the last serious selloff in 2008-2009 took the index down a heart-palpitating 52%.

What’s more, every oil shock of the last 50 years was followed by a recession, and we are clearly in one now. So, you are right to fear for your net worth and retirement security.

However, my work suggests that the best-case scenario will happen. Who is right, you or me?

You already know the answer.

Let me tell you what is already priced in the stock market: a Russian invasion of Ukraine, inflation at a 40-year high and climbing, a doubling of mortgage interest rates in a half year, peaking of the housing bubble, popping of technology and Bitcoin bubbles, and 200 basis points of Fed interest rate hikes.

With all this negativity already in the market, I would say that it is impossible for stocks NOT to go up. All that is left is to suck in one last round of non-believers on the short side before the indexes start a move to new all-time highs. That could take months at the most.

The only question now is whether a further 5% decline to an S&P 500 of 3,600, or a final puke out low of 3,500, down 7.5%. That means you should start scaling into your favorite longs now, the  Cadillacs at Volkswagen prices.

So, let’s do some thinking outside the box here.

Tech stocks are cheaper now than after the low point of the Great 2000 Dotcom Bust. But they are still expensive compared to the main market. The S&P without technology stocks is now valued at earnings multiple of 13X versus 17x main market.

That is well into decade-low territory. That’s why I have included financials like (JPM), (BAC), and (C) in my list of “must own sectors'.

It's clear that inflation will bedevil the market for months to come given the dramatic acceleration we saw in May, from 0.3% to 1%. Let me tell you that there are only two ways to end inflation, and they could be done overnight.

*End all US support for Ukraine and throw in with Vladimir Putin. That would shave $50 off the price of oil immediately and get gas prices below $3.00 a gallon. You might have a hard time selling this to the thousands of Americans going over to Ukraine to volunteer.

*Cause a sharp recession immediately. The Fed is already well on their way to doing this with three guaranteed 50 basis point rate hikes by September. The first thing to collapse in a recession is oil demand. In the last recession, it went to negative $37 in the futures market (I got stopped out at -$5). This is why the oil industry isn’t interested in investing a dime at these oil prices. They are responsible to their shareholders, not Biden’s reelection prospects.

If there is a recession, it’s an invisible one. It’s a recession where you can’t hire anyone, can’t buy anything, subcontractors give you a six-month timeline with a straight face, and it takes a year to get delivery of a damn sofa. This recession miserably fails my “look out the window test.”

But at my advanced age, I don’t get surprised anymore.

Boba tea anyone? Who knew?

Consumer Price Index slaughters stocks, taking the Dow Average down 1,600 points, or 5% in two days, the worst move in two years. It’s typical bear market action. May inflation hit 8.6%, a new 40-year high. But you have to more than double to hit the old 1980s peak. New stock lows are in easy reach.

Lumber crashes, down 50% from the highs in months, with the near-complete cessation of new orders from builders. They see a recession just around the corner with higher interest rates and no new home buyers. It’s proof that the current inflation is spiking and setting up for a big fall.

Luxury Home Sales are plunging in New York, in numbers, but not in prices. Anyone who needed debt to trade up is out of the picture.

US drop Covid Testing Requirement for international travelers. Too many Americans trying to get home were getting stranded overseas for weeks because they failed a Covid test. Wheww!! That was a close call!

Americans will spend an extra $730 Billion on energy this year. That’s a heck of a lot to take out of consumer spending. So far, there has been no decline in demand. Much of this money ended up in Russian coffers.

Amazon (AMZN) splits 20:1, triggering an avalanche of new retail buyers. The company is also at the low end of its valuation range anger a gut-punching 41% decline in the share price this year. It may be early, but (AMZN) is definitely a BUY.

Target (TGT) warns of more margin squeeze, with too much inventory and flagging demand. (TGT) has become a bellwether for all of retail, which points to inflation, labor, and supply chain problems.

Uranium Stocks soar on Biden’s plan to buy $4.3 billion worth of enriched uranium, or yellow cake. The move is aimed to replace Russian imports where Russia is one of the world’s largest suppliers. It is the most unexploited form of non-carbon energy out there. Mad Hedge recommended Cameco (CCJ), the world’s second-largest supplier, a month ago. It was up 15% yesterday at the high.

New Home Mortgages hit a 22-year low. With 30-year fixed-rate loans soaring from 2.8% to 5.58% in six months, how can they not? Refis have crashed 75% YOY. Now that the Fed has quit buying, investors won’t touch mortgage-backed securities with a ten-foot pole.

Weekly Jobless Claims pop 29,000 to a five-month high in another hint toward a recession. Continuing Claims are at 1.306 million. The preemptive layoffs by ultra-cautious companies have begun, especially in technology.

Tesla (TSLA) gets an upgrade by UBS, which sees 51% of upside from here to $1,200. Total sales should top 1.4 million vehicles in 2022, up 40% YOY, and that includes lost production of 60,000 in Shanghai. A new Gigafactory in Indonesia is planned with a locked-up supply of Nickel, where the world’s largest supply of the metal resides. Cheap labor helps a lot where 5,000 need to be hired. The company will need six gigafactories to reach 20 million annual production.

My Ten-Year View

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 historically cheap, oil peaking out soon, and technology hyper-accelerating, there will be no reason not to. The Dow Average will rise by 800% to 240,000 or more in the coming decade. The America coming out the other side of the pandemic will be far more efficient and profitable than the old. Dow 240,000 here we come!

With some of the greatest market volatility seen since 1987, my June month-to-date performance recovered to +2.57%.

My 2022 year-to-date performance ratcheted up to 44.44%, a new all-time high. The Dow Average is down -13.52% so far in 2022. It is the greatest outperformance on an index since Mad Hedge Fund Trader started 14 years ago. My trailing one-year return maintains a sky-high 66.63%.

That brings my 14-year total return to 557%, some 2.56 times the S&P 500 (SPX) over the same period and a new all-time high. My average annualized return has ratcheted up to 44.56%, easily the highest in the industry.

We need to keep an eye on the number of US Coronavirus cases at 85.6 million, up 200,000 in a week, and deaths topping 1,011,200 and have only increased by 2,000 in the past week. You can find the data here.

On Monday, June 13 at 8:00 AM EDT, US Consumer Inflation Expectations are out.

On Tuesday, June 14 at 8:30 AM, the Producer Price Index for May is published.

On Wednesday, June 15 at 10:30 AM, Retails Sales for May are announced. The Fed interest rates decision is out at 11:00 AM. The press conference follows at 11:30.

On Thursday, June 16 at 8:30 AM, Weekly Jobless Claims are out. We also get Housing Starts and Building Permits for May.

On Friday, June 10 at 8:15 AM, Industrial Production for May is published. At 2:00, the Baker Hughes Oil Rig Count is out.

As for me, I have benefited from many mentors and role models over the years, but Al Pinder, last of the New York-based Shipping and Trade News, is one of my favorites. Short with blown hair, glasses, and an always impish smile, he was a regular at lunch where we always played an old dice game called “ballout.”

I sat next to Al for ten years at the Foreign Correspondents Club of Japan high up in Tokyo’s Yukakucho Denki Building, we were pounding away on our antiquated Royal typewriters. At the end of the day, our necks would be stiff as boards. Al’s idea of work was to type for five minutes, then tell me stories for ten.

Saying that Al lived a colorful life would be the understatement of the century.

Al covered the Japanese invasion of China during the 1930s, interviewing several key generals like Hideki Tojo and Masaharu Homma, later executed for war crimes. He told me of child laborers in Shanghai silk processors who picked cocoons out of boiling water with their bare hands.

Al could see war with Japan on the horizon, so he took an extended tour of every west-facing beach in Japan during the summer of 1941, taking thousands of black and white pictures. The trick was how to get them out of the country without being arrested as a spy.

So he bought an immense steamer trunk and visited a sex shop in Tokyo’s red-light district where he bought a life-sized, blow-up doll of a Japanese female. His immensely valuable photos were hidden below a false bottom in the trunk and the blow-up doll placed on top.

When he passed through Japanese customs on the ship home from Yokohama, the inspectors opened the trunk, had a good laugh, and then closed it. These photos later became the basis of Operation Coronet, the American invasion of Japan in 1945.

Al was working for the Honolulu Star Bulletin when the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941. Many antiaircraft shells fired at the attacking zeros landed in Honolulu causing dozens of casualties. Al told me every woman on the island wanted to get laid that night because they feared getting raped by the Japanese Army the next day.

Since Al knew China well, he was parachuted into western Yunan province to act as a liaison with Mao Zedong, then fighting a guerrilla war against the Japanese with his Eighth Route Army. Capture by the Japanese then meant certain torture and certain death.

In 1944, Al received a coded message in Morse code to pick up an urgent communication from Washington. So, he hiked a day to the drop zone and when the Army Air Corps DC-3 approached, he lit three signal fires.

A package parachuted to the ground, which he grabbed and then he fled for the mountains. Dodging enemy patrols all the way, he returned to his hideout in a mountain cave and opened the package. It was a letter from the Internal Revenue Service asking why he had not filed a tax return in three years.

When the second atomic bomb fell on Nagasaki, the war ended on August 15. Since Al was the closest man on the spot, he flew to Korea where he accepted the Japanese surrender there.

Al was one of the first to move into the Press Club, which housed war correspondents in one of the only buildings still standing in a city that had been bombed flat.

Al never left Japan because, as with many other war correspondents who arrived with the US military, it was the best thing that ever happened to him. After some initial hesitation, they were treated like conquering heroes, it was incredibly cheap at 800 yen to the dollar, and the women were beautiful.

During the Japanese occupation when the people were starving, Al bought an acre of land in Tokyo’s burned-out prime Akasaka district for a ten-pound can of ham. He spent the rest of his life living off this investment, selling one piece at a time, until it eventually became worth $10 million.

Al went to work for the Shipping and Trade News, an obscure industry trade publication which no one had ever heard of. I sat next to him when he artfully lifted every story out of an ancient book, Ships of the World. But Al always had plenty of money to spend.

When Al passed away in the early 2000s, an official from the American embassy in Tokyo showed up at the Press Club asking if anyone knew all Pinder. We eventually traced a bank branch which held a safe deposit box in his name. In it was proof that the CIA had been bribing every Japanese prime minister of the 1950s. He kept the evidence as an insurance policy against the day when his lucrative deal with the Shipping and Trade News was ever put at risk.

I flew in for Al’s wake and his Japanese wife was there along with most of the foreign press. Everyone was crying until I told the IRS story, then they had a good laugh.

A few years ago, I was invited to give the graduation speech at Defense Language Institute in Monterey, California. The latest bunch of graduates, including my nephew, were freshly versed in Arabic and headed for the Middle East.

The school was founded in 1941 to train Americans in Japanese to gain an intelligence advantage in the Pacific war.

General 'Vinegar Joe' Stillwell said their contribution shortened the war by two years. General Douglas MacArthur believed that an army had never before gone to war with so much advance knowledge about its enemy.

To this day, the school's motto is 'Yankee Samurai'. There on the wall with the school’s first graduates was a very young Al Pinder, still with that impish grin.

Al lived a full life and I still miss him to this day. I hope I can do as well.

Stay Healthy,

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

 

Al Pinder

 

Press Club 1976

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/06/john-thomas-press-club-1976.png 434 642 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2022-06-14 08:02:382022-06-14 08:27:59The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or What Happens When Your Best Friend Becomes You Worst Enemy
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