(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or PREPARING FOR THE NEXT LIQUIDITY SURGE)
(JPM) (BA), (TLT), (TSLA), (BAC), (C), (IBKR), (MS), (FCX), (CCJ), (NXE), (UEC), (UUUU), (FDX)
When Elon Musk personally invited me to tour his Gigafactory in Sparks, Nevada, I thought, “How could I pass on this?” He had read my recent report on Tesla and thought the more I know about Tesla the better.
I couldn’t agree more.
As I approached the remote facility 20 miles east of Reno, I spotted a herd of wild Mustangs on the red volcanic hills above. I thought it was a great metaphor for our rapidly evolving transportation system, from horse to all-electric in 100 years.
There are no signs to the Gigafactory until you approach the main gate. I had to find it with my GPS after inputting longitude and latitude. When you upset the apple cart for the global energy system, you make a lot of enemies. Once in, no cameras are allowed.
What I found inside what much what I saw at the original Fremont, CA factory 15 years ago: an army of robots building machines. The factory is in effect a machine that makes machines….by the millions. Occasionally, a worker would swan past with an oil can in his hand and squirt some lubricant into an important joint, then swan away.
If you want a view of the future, this is it.
Elon does nothing small.
The present factory occupies about 2 million square feet, or about 33 football fields. Some 60% of the world’s lithium-ion batteries come out of this one place right now, which are devoted to Tesla Model 3’s and Powerwalls, of which I own six. Japan’s Panasonic, which has the contract to supply the batteries, occupies a substantial part of the factory space.
When completed, it will occupy 6 million square feet, making it the world’s largest building. The planet’s greatest solar array sits on top, making the entire facility energy neutral when combined with local windmills. The plant is fully automated and runs 24/7. There are still a few of those pesky humans around to perform complex tasks which robots can’t do….yet.
The State of Nevada just granted Tesla a ten-year tax holiday to start the second phase, which will employ another 5,000. Whole cities are being carved out of the virgin desert to accommodate them, so the entire city of Reno is rapidly marching east. Burger Kings, Taco Bells, Subways, and Chinese and Mexican restaurants are popping up in the middle of nowhere.
It's all coming into place to assure that Tesla meets its 1.8 million vehicle target for 2023, up 40% from 2022. The last time someone had a technology lead this great was in 1913 when Henry Ford launched assembly lines that mass-produced Model T’s for the first time. He offered them for $400 each and doubled his workers’ pay to $5 a day to buy them. This gave Ford a 75% share of the US car market for two decades.
Elon Musk will achieve the same.
Which all raises a much larger issue.
The future is happening far faster than anyone realizes.
Tesla is just the tip of the iceberg in an AI/automation trend that is rapidly taking over the world. The net effect will be to double or triple the value of the companies that embrace these trends and wipe out those that don’t. ALL companies are AI plays. This is a large part of my Dow 240,000 in a decade prediction.
Microsoft brought out its office in 1990 and it instantly made ALL companies more valuable as they adopted it. The Dow Average soared by 20 times from $600 to $12,000. The same thing is going on now with AI.
If it worked before it will work again. A 20-fold return from here takes the Dow Average from $34,000 to $680,000, except it will happen much more quickly as technology is hyper-accelerating. Dow 240,000 looks like a chipshot.
If you think this is some kind of George Lucas THX 1138 prediction, think again. These are headlines I saw in the last week.
FedEx (FDX) is firing 86,000 drivers, to be replaced by robots. Uber (UBER) is replacing its 5 million drivers with autonomous drivers to increase reliability and cut costs. Dentists adopting AI to read X-rays are catching the 12% of cavities they miss, increasing fillings and increasing profits.
I often get asked for great AI plays in the market and there are no direct ones. But in five years, companies like Microsoft’s (MSFT) ChatGPT and Alphabet’s (GOOGL) DeepMind Technologies will be spun off and sold at enormous multiples to the public, creating a frenzy.
I’ve seen it all before.
What does doubling or tripling the value of surviving companies do to the economy? It reliquefies the financial system with immense corporate cash flows. All asset classes will rocket in value, including stocks, bonds, commodities, precious metals, energy, and real estate.
While the 2010s had endless quantitative easing and zero interest rates, the 2020s will have AI and robots. Except that this time we won’t have to rely on government handouts to get there.
Suddenly, Dow 240,000 looks cheap.
I just thought you’d like to know.
My big bet-the-ranch long in banks and brokers paid off huge. My 2023 year-to-date performance is now at an incredible +49.57%. The S&P 500 (SPY) is up only a miniscule +8.42% so far in 2023. My trailing one-year return maintains a sky-high +106.31% versus -8.03% for the S&P 500.
That brings my 15-year total return to +646.76%, some 2.73 times the S&P 500 (SPY) over the same period. My average annualized return has blasted up to +48.51%, another new high.
I executed four trades last week. I used the spectacular earnings beat at (JPM) to take profits and rolled that money into Boeing (BA), which had just been trashed. I also took profits on my expiring April bond long (TLT) and rolled it into a May bond long. I will run my remaining expiring April long positions in (TSLA), (BAC), (C), (IBKR), (MS), (and FCX) into the Friday, April 21 expiration.
Inflation Takes a Dive, dropping to a 5.6% YOY rate, the ninth consecutive month of decline. I think we will fall to 3%-4% by yearend, prompting the Fed to lower interest rates. That will spark a new bull market and another leg up for residential real estate. It all more fodder for the bull case. Given what the Fed has been facing, a mild recession would be a huge win.
Fed Minutes Fear Banking Crisis May Lead to a Mild Recession, killing off today’s nascent rally. It will also hobble job growth and lead to sharp declines in interest rates in 2024. Markets now see a 75% probability of a 25-basis point rate hike on May 3.
FedEx Looking to Fire All Drivers, moving to autonomously driven delivery vehicles. It may take 20 years but it’s in the works. (FDX) has already cut 12,000 jobs since June in an effort to maintain profitability and surpass rival (UPS). In 2022, (FDX) took in $93.5 billion in revenues delivering 3 billion packages, 9 for each American. I received more than my share.
PC Sales Drop 29% YOY, in Q1, adding more ammunition to the recession camp. Apple Macs led the charge to the downside with a heart-thumping 40% decline. The news slugged (AAPL). Only 56.9 million PCs we sold during the last quarter. Even with heavy discounting inventories remain high. Amazing, isn’t it?
Tesla Cuts Prices Again, knocking $3,000 off the Model 3 and $5,000 for the Model X. That sets the cat among the pigeons with traditional car companies desperately trying to catch up. Tesla is simply passing on the 50% drop in lithium prices this year. If they flush competitors out of business in the meantime so much the better. Ford has ordered designers to cut the number of parts by 80%, which Tesla did 14 years ago. (F) and (GM) are just too slow to react, even when the writing is on the wall.
$1.5 Trillion in Commercial Real Estate Debt coming due is a Threat to all asset classes. Refi’s are coming due that will double or triple interest rates from the zero-rate era and many won’t qualify. The sector is already being hammered by the “stay-at-home” work trend, with big tech firms virtually vacating whole office building in San Francisco. Regional banks may no longer have the capital to roll over at any prices given recent massive deposit withdrawals. Avoid commercial real estate REITS.
Banks Shares Explode to the Upside. JP Morgan announced blockbuster earnings, taking the stock up a ballistic $11, or 8.6%. Revenues came in at $39.34 billion versus an expected $36.19 billion. Adjusted EPS was $4.32 a share versus an expected $3.41. It is the biggest gap up in share prices on an earnings announcement in 20 years. As a result, we are just short of the maximum profit in our long (JPM), with the shares up an eye-popping 21% from the nearest strike price.
PPI Gives Another Deflation Hint, dropping a shocking 0.5% in March to only a 2.7% YOY rate. That’s a big drop from 4.9% in February. It’s the lowest inflation indicator in two years. Stocks loved the news, jumping $383. Low inflation, and therefore sharp interest rate cuts are coming within reach.
Boeing Goes Back in the Penalty Box, with a recurring bulkhead problem halting 737 MAX production. The stock dumped 8%. Buy (BA) on the dip. They’ll fix it. The company has a massive order backlog of 4,000 planes and will crush it on the earnings. The 737 MAX will shortly be flying again, the company’s largest selling product. With the airline business booming a global aircraft shortage has emerged. The end of the trade wars with China will bring a resurgence of orders there. And Boeing just surpassed Airbus in aircraft deliveries in Q1
Weekly Jobless Claims Jump 11,000 to 239,000, showing that the Fed’s harsh medicine is starting to work. It’s all consistent with a stock market that may start to roll over soon.
Private Sector Payrolls Slow to 145,000, according to ADP, a substantial drop from the previous month. Financials took the big hit with a loss of 51,000 jobs, followed by Business Services at 46,000. Leisure & Hospitality leads again with a 98,000 gain. It is more evidence of the economic slowdown the FED has been attempting to engineer for the past year.
My Ten-Year View
When we come out the other side of the recession, we will be perfectly poised to launch into my new American Golden Age, or the next Roaring Twenties. The economy decarbonizing and technology hyper accelerating, creating enormous investment opportunities. The Dow Average will rise by 800% to 240,000 or more in the coming decade. The new America will be far more efficient and profitable than the old.
Dow 240,000 here we come!
On Monday, April 17 at 7:30 AM EST, the New York State Manufacturing Index is out.
On Tuesday, April 18 at 6:00 AM, the US Building Permits are announced. On Wednesday, April 19 at 11:00 AM, the Fed Beige Book is printed. On Thursday, April 20 at 8:30 AM, the Weekly Jobless Claims are announced. Existing Home Sales are out.
On Friday, April 21 at 8:30 AM, the Global Composite Flash PMI is released. We also get the April options expiration at the 4:00 PM stock market close.
As for me, I don’t get invited to help design new nuclear weapons systems very often. So when the order came from Washington to report to Los Alamos, New Mexico, I was on the next plane.
When the Cold War ended in 1992, the United States judiciously stepped in and bought the collapsing Soviet Union’s entire uranium and plutonium supply.
For good measure, my client George Soros provided a $50 million grant to hire every Soviet nuclear engineer. The fear then was that starving scientists would go to work for Libya, North Korea, or Pakistan, which all had active nuclear programs. There ended up here instead.
That provided the fuel to run all US nuclear power plants and warships for 20 years. That fuel has now run out and chances of a resupply from Russia are zero. The Department of Defense attempted to reopen our last plutonium factory in Amarillo, Texas, a legacy of the Johnson administration.
But the facilities were deemed too old and out of date, and it is cheaper to build a new factory from scratch anyway. What better place to do so than Los Alamos, which has the greatest concentration of nuclear expertise in the world.
Before they started, they launched a nationwide search for those who were still alive and had nuclear expertise the last time we made our own plutonium, and they came up with….me?
Los Alamos is a funny sort of place. It sits at 7,320 feet on a mesa on the edge of an ancient volcano so if things go wrong, they won’t blow up the rest of the state. The homes are mid-century modern built when defense budgets were essentially unlimited. As a prime target in a nuclear war, there are said to be miles of secret underground tunnels hacked out of solid rock.
You need to bring a Geiger counter to garage sales because sometimes interesting items are work castaways. A friend almost bought a cool coffee table which turned out to be part of an old cyclotron. And for a town designing the instruments to bring on the possible end of the world, it seems to have an abnormal number of churches. They’re everywhere.
I have hundreds of stories from the old nuclear days passed down from those who worked for J. Robert Oppenheimer and General Leslie Groves, who ran the Manhattan Project in the early 1940s. They were young mathematicians, physicists, and engineers at the time, in their 20’s and 30’s, who later became my university professors. The A-bomb was the most important event of their lives.
Unfortunately, I couldn’t relay this precious unwritten history to anyone without a security clearance. So, it stayed buried with me for a half century, until now. Suddenly, I had an entire room of young scientists who were fair game, and it was fun relaying stories, they hung on my every word. It was like being a Revolutionary War buff and out of the blue you meet someone who knew George Washington.
Some 1,200 engineers will be hired for the first phase of the new plutonium plant, which I got a chance to see. That will create challenges for a town of 13,000 where existing housing shortages already force interns and graduate students to live in tents. It gets cold at night and dropped to 13 degrees F when I was there.
As a reward for my efforts, I was allowed to visit the Trinity site at the White Sands Missile Test Range, the first visitor to do so in many years. This is where the first atomic bomb was exploded on July 16, 1945. The 20-kiloton explosion set off burglar alarms for 200 miles and was double to ten times the expected yield.
Enormous targets hundreds of yards away were thrown about like toys (they are still there). Half the scientists thought the bomb might ignite the atmosphere and destroy the world but they went ahead anyway because so much money had been spent, 3% of the US GDP for four years. Of the original 100-foot tower, only a tiny stump of concrete is left (picture below).
With the other visitors, there was a carnival atmosphere as people worked so hard to get there. My Army escort never left me out of their sight. Some 78 years after the explosion, the background radiation was ten times normal, so I couldn’t stay more than an hour.
Needless to say, that makes uranium plays like Cameco (CCJ), NextGen Energy (NXE), Uranium Energy (UEC), and Energy Fuels (UUUU) great long-term plays, as prices will almost certainly rise and all of which look cheap. US government demand for uranium and yellow cake, its commercial byproduct, is going to be huge. Uranium is also being touted as a carbon-free energy source needed to replace oil.
I know the numbers, but I can’t tell you as they are classified. Otherwise, I’d have to kill you and you might not renew your subscription to Mad Hedge Fund Trader.
Good Luck and Good Trading,
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
At Ground Zero in 1945
What’s Left of a Trinity Target 200 Yards Out
Playing With My Geiger Counter
Atomic Bomb No.3 Which was Never Used
What’s Left from the Original Test
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/john-thomas-atomic-bomb.jpg282302Mad Hedge Fund Traderhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMad Hedge Fund Trader2023-04-17 09:02:082023-04-17 14:52:51The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or Preparing for the Next Liquidity Surge
That is the question plaguing traders and portfolio managers alike around the world. For the average bear market is only 9.7 months long and we are already 16 months into the present one.
Even the longest postwar bear market was only 2.5 years, or 30 months, the 2000-2002 Dotcom Bust, and we are nowhere near that level of economic hardship. Back then, companies posted losses for several quarters in a row, and many ceased to exist (Webvan, Alta Vista, Pets.com).
That means we only have a few more months of pain to take before another decade-long bull market resumes, or 8 months if the bear stretches to a full two years.
That is unless the new bull was actually born last October, which is entirely possible. Certainly, the stock market thinks so, with its refusal to drop on even the worst of news.
Inflation at 6%? Who cares.
A Fed that hates the stock market? Couldn’t give a damn.
Pathetic earnings growth? Call me when it’s over.
This indifference chalked up the deadest trading week I can remember, putting the Volatility Index (VIX) firmly back into “Do Nothing Land” under 20%.
So investors are cautiously putting cash into stocks on every dip, even minor ones, confident that they will be higher by yearend. If a black swan arrives in the meantime, or a political crisis boils out of control, tough luck if you can’t take a joke.
All of which is focusing a lot more attention on gold (GLD), which moved within 2% of a new all-time high last week. I am always looking for cross-asset class confirmations of current trends and the barbarous relic has certainly been one of those.
I have been bullish on gold since I put out LEAPS on Barrick Gold (GOLD) and silver (SLV) last October. They have since performed spectacularly well. The move into precious metals confirms the following. That the Fed tightening cycle will end imminently. Interest rates will fall, and the US dollar (UUP) will weaken. Everything else flows from there.
You are even seeing this in US Treasury Bond yields, with the ten-year plunging to 3.30%, a one-year low. The (TLT) hit $109 last week. Aren’t bonds supposed to be held back by the looming default by the US government?
I’m starting to wonder if the debt ceiling crisis is this generation’s Y2K. At worst, your toaster may show the wrong year but nothing further. Or maybe the pent-up demand for bonds and high yields is so great that it overwhelms all other considerations?
My 2023 year-to-date performance is now at an incredible +46.38%. The S&P 500 (SPY) is up only a miniscule +7.0% so far in 2023. My trailing one-year return maintains a sky-high +103.2% versus +7.0% for the S&P 500.
That brings my 15-year total return to +643.57%, some 2.71 times the S&P 500 (SPY) over the same period. My average annualized return has blasted up to +48.26%, another new high.
I executed no trades during the holiday-shortened week, content to run my ten profitable positions into the April 21 options expiration. If a strategy ain’t broke, don’t fix it. If I see something I like, I’ll take profits on an existing position and replace it with a new one.
Nonfarm Payroll Report Holds Up, at 236,000 in March, the lowest since December 2020. It shows that high interest rates still have not impacted the jobs market. February was revised up to 326,000. The headline Unemployment Rate dropped back to a 50-year low at 3.5%. Average Hourly Earnings dropped to 4.2% YOY, a two-year low, showing that inflation is in retreat. Leisure & Hospitality led at 74,000 followed by Government at 47,000.
Weekly Jobless Claims Drop, to 228,000, down 18,000 as recession fears rise. High interest rates are finally taking their toll, with a banking crisis thrown in for good measure.
Open Jobs Tighten, The June JOLTS survey of job openings fell to 10.698 million, down from 11.3 million last month and well below expectations of 11 million. Is this the calm before the storm when job openings disappear? This report is highly negative for the US dollar.
Tesla (TSLA) Posts Record EV Deliveries, Deliveries grew 36% from a year ago, below the 50% growth Elon Musk promised for the year on the last earnings call, but Musk has a habit of overpromising. The expansion is still a healthy sign that consumers are spending. Any pullback in Tesla is a gift for shareholders.
Oil (USO) Production Cut Sends Price Soaring, with OPEC+ including Russia has pledged a total of 3.66-million-barrel oil output cut which is nearly 3.7% of global demand. The jump in oil price will only accelerate global inflation and force the Fed into a tougher predicament. The Saudi – US cooperation is at its lowest ebb.
Walmart’s (WMT) Automation Effort Goes Into Overdrive, Walmart said it expects around 65% of its stores to be serviced by automation by 2026. The company said around 55% of packages that it processes through its fulfillment centers will be moved to automated facilities and unit cost average could improve by around 20%. This is the first step to getting rid of human employees. Eventually, the government will need to deliver universal basic income (UBI).
Gold and Miners Threaten New All-Time Highs, suggesting that a collapse in interest rates is imminent. So is an economic recovery and a resurgence of monetary expansion. Russian and China continue to be major buyers to evade sanctions. Keep buying (GLD) and (GOLD) on dips.
Apple (AAPL) Cash Hoard Soars to $165 Billion, as the cash flow king of all time goes from strength to strength. This will be one of the top targets in any tech rebound, which may be imminent. But you’re have to compete with apple to buy the shares, which is a huge buyer of its own stock.
Chip Stocks are On Fire, clocking the best sector of any in Q1. Too far, too fast, say I, but I’ll be in there buying with both hands on any serious dips. This is no future without (NVDA), (MU), and (AMAT) playing a major role.
Stock Dividends Hit New All-Time Highs, at $146.8 billion, up 7% YOY. As interest rates rose, companies had to raise dividends to keep up. The economy is also far stronger those most realize, with many analysts believing we should have entered a recession a long time ago. A high dividend also gives downside protection in bear markets.
Uranium Demand is Surging with the Nuclear Renaissance. And now the US is restarting plutonium production for the first time in 20 years, a uranium derivative. The 20-year supply we bought from the old Soviet Union has run out with a scant chance of renewal. The Los Alamos Labs in New Mexico is seeking to hire 1,200 engineers to build a brand-new factory from scratch. Buy (CCJ) on dips. And buy Los Alamos real estate if you can get a security clearance.
Keep Buying 90-Day T-Bills, now pushing a 5% risk-free yield. The regional banking crisis highlights another reason. If your bank or broker goes under, your cash deposits can be tied up in bankruptcy for three years. If you own US government securities, they can be ordered and transferred out in days to another institution. You can also buy them directly from the US government free of fee. Just thought you’d like to know.
My Ten-Year View
When we come out the other side of the recession, we will be perfectly poised to launch into my new American Golden Age, or the next Roaring Twenties. The economy decarbonizing and technology hyper accelerating, creating enormous investment opportunities. The Dow Average will rise by 800% to 240,000 or more in the coming decade. The new America will be far more efficient and profitable than the old.
Dow 240,000 here we come!
On Monday, April 10 at 7:30 AM EST, the Consumer Inflation Expectations are out.
On Tuesday, April 11 at 6:00 AM, the NFIB Business Optimism Index is announced. On Wednesday, April 12 at 7:00 AM, the US Core Inflation Rate and Consumer Price Index are printed. On Thursday, April 13 at 8:30 AM, the Weekly Jobless Claims are announced. The Producer Price Index is also released.
On Friday, April 14 at 8:30 AM, the US Retail Sales are released.
As for me, I covered the Persian Gulf for Morgan Stanley for ten years during the 1980s when medieval sheikdoms still living in the 14th century were suddenly showered with untold wealth. Needless to say, the firm, which we called Morgan Stallion, had a few ideas on what they should do about it.
I was picked as the emissary to the region because I had already been visiting the Middle East for 20 years and had been doing business there for 15 years. My press visa to cover the Iran-Iraq War was still valid.
In addition, I had already developed a reputation for being wild, reckless, and up for anything to enjoy a thrill or make a buck. In addition, with all the wars, terrorist attacks, and revolutions underway, everyone but me was scared to death to go near the place.
In other words, I was perfect for the job.
Being a veteran combat pilot proved particularly useful. I used to fly down on Kuwait Airlines and I still have a nice collection of the cute little Arabic artifacts they used to hand out in first class. Once in Abu Dhabi, I rented a local plane and hopped from one sheikdom to the next drumming up business. Once, I landed on a par five fairway at a private golf course just to give a presentation to a nation’s ruler.
My last stop was always Kuwait, where I turned the plane back in and met the CIA station chief for lunch to fill him in on what I had learned. It was all considered part of the job. When Iraq invaded Kuwait in 1991, I was their first call.
Of course, flying across vast expanses of the Arabian desert is not without its risks. Whenever you fly a single-engine plane you are betting your life on an internal combustion engine, never a great idea. I always carried an extra gallon bottle of water in case of a forced landing. The survival time without water is only three days.
Whenever I refueled, I filtered the 100LL aviation gas through a chamois cloth to keep out water and sand. Still, I was pretty good at desert survival, growing up near Indio California in the Lower Colorado Desert and endlessly digging my grandfather’s pickup truck out of the sand.
Once my boss tried to ban me from a trip to the Middle East because the US Navy had bombed Libya. I assured him that something as minor as that didn’t even move the needle on the risk front, at least in my lifetime.
The problem with the Persian Gulf was that they had all the money in the world and no way to spend it. An extreme Wahabis religion was strictly adhered to, and alcohol was banned. But you could have four wives and I enjoyed some of the best fruit juice in my life.
So my clients came to rely on me for diversions. The Iran-Iraq War was taking place then. I took them up in my plane to 10,000 feet and we watched the aerial war underway 50 miles to the north. The nighttime display of rockets, machine gun fire, and explosions was spectacular.
During one such foray, the wind shifted dramatically as a sandstorm rolled in. Suddenly I was landing in a 50-knot crosswind instead of a 10-knot headwind. A quick referral to the aircraft manual confirmed that the maximum crosswind component for the plane was 27 knots.
Oops!
Then I got a bright idea. I radioed the tower and asked for permission to land on the taxiway at a 90-degree angle to the main runway. After some hesitation, they responded, “If you’re willing to try it”. They knew my only alternative was to ditch at sea with two high-ranking gentlemen who couldn’t swim.
The tower very kindly talked me down with radar vectors and at the last possible second, with the altimeter reading 20 feet, the taxiway popped into view. With such a stiff wind I was able to pancake the plane down in yards, slam it on the runway, and then immediately shut the engine down. I asked for a tow, not wanting to risk the windstorm flipping the plane over.
My passengers thanked me profusely.
When Iraq invaded Kuwait in 1991, I lost most of my friends there. They were either killed, kidnapped and held for ransom, or volunteered as translators for US forces. I never saw them again.
I didn’t return to the Middle East until 2019 when I took two teenage girls to Egypt to introduce them to that part of the world. They wore hijabs, rode camels, and opened their eyes. I even set up some meetings with an educated Arab woman.
I will probably go back someday. I still haven’t seen the ruins at Petra in Jordan, nor ridden the Hijaz Railway, which Lawrence of Arabia blew up in 1918. But I have an open invitation from the king there.
I knew his dad.
Good Luck and Good Trading
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/john-and-daughters-egypt.jpg352260Mad Hedge Fund Traderhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMad Hedge Fund Trader2023-04-10 09:02:282023-04-10 15:50:59The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or Mad Hedge Clocks 46.38% Profit in Q1
Below please find subscribers’ Q&A for the November 16 Mad Hedge Fund Trader Global Strategy Webinar broadcast from Silicon Valley in California.
Q: What do you see Tesla (TSLA) moving to from here until next year?
A: Not much; I mean if you’re lucky, Tesla won’t move at all. The problem is Twitter is looking like a disaster of huge proportions—firing half the staff on day one? Never good for building a business. Tesla has also been tied to the rest of big tech, which has been in awful condition and may not see a continuous move upward until the Fed actually starts lowering interest rates in the second quarter of next year. Tesla could be dead money here for a while; eventually, a company growing at 50% a year will go up—especially when it’s just had a 50% decline in the share price. As to when that is, I don’t know, and asking me 15 more times will get you just the same answer.
Q: Should we start piling into iShares 20 Plus Year Treasury Bond ETF (TLT) longs now or wait?
A: You go now. Every day you waited meant paying one point more in TLT. I think the bottom is in; we have a 20-30 point move ahead of us. Everybody in the world is now trying to get into this trade, just like I spent all this year trying to get out of it. And if anything, November CPI could be a long term-term top in inflation, especially if we came in with another cold number. So, I would start scaling in now, even though we’re over $100 in the (TLT) today and I first recommended this around $95.
Q: If the Fed keeps raising interest rates, will the US Treasury market fall?
A: Probably not because the Fed only has control of overnight interest rates—the discount rate, the interbank rate—whereas the (TLT) is a 10-to-20-year maturity bond. No matter what short term rates do, the inversion will just keep getting bigger, but in fact, the bond market itself was yielding 4.46%, yielding 8% with junk, has bottomed and will probably start going up from here. So that is the difference between the Fed and what the actual market does.
Q: Do you prefer Junk (JNK), (HYG), or (TLT)?
A: I always go for the highest risk. Junk has about an 8% yield here compared to 3.75% for the TLT. By the way, if you want to do one trade and go to sleep, buy the junk on 2 to 1 margin, get your 16% yield next year, and just take a one-year vacation. That’s what some people do.
Q: When you say the dollar is going to go down what do you mean?
A: I mean the US dollar, while Canadian (FXC) and Australian dollars (FXA) will go up.
Q: What is the best time to buy US dollars?
A: Maybe in five years, as it could go down for five or 10 years from here, now that it’s going to imminently give up its yield advantage.
Q: What's the forecast for casinos?
A: I think casinos do better. Las Vegas was absolutely packed, you couldn’t get into the best hotels—people are spending money like crazy.
Q: What’s the best way to play (TLT)?
A: With a one-year LEAP. I put out the $95/$100 last week for my concierge members. Here, you probably want to do the $100/$105; that’ll still give you a one-year return of 100%.
Q: How do you short the dollar?
A: There are loads of short dollar ETFs out there, or you can just sell short the Invesco DB US Dollar Index Bullish Fund (UUP), which is the dollar basket, or buy the (FXA) or (FXE).
Q: Freeport McMoRan (FCX) just went from 25 to 38; is it time to take a profit and re-enter at a lower point?
A: Short term yes, long term no. My long-term target for (FCX) is $100 because of the exponential growth of copper demand caused by EV production going from 1.5 million to 20 million a year in the next 10 years. Each EV needs 200 pounds of copper, so by 2030, annual copper demand for EVs only will be 20 billion pounds. In 2021, the total annual global copper production was 46.2 billion pounds. In order words, global copper production has to double in eight years just to accommodate EV growth only.
Q: Do you think there’ll be a rail worker strike?
A: I have no idea, but it will be a disaster if there is. There’s your recession scenario.
Q: What strike prices do you like for a Tesla LEAP?
A: Anything above here really. You could be cautious and do something like a $200/$210 two years out—that has a double in it. Or you could be more adventurous and go for a 400% return with like a $250/$260 in two years. I’m almost sure that we’ll have a major recovery in Tesla within two years.
Q: What’s your opinion on PayPal (PYPL) and Albemarle (ALB)?
A: I’m trying to stay away from the fintech area, partly because it’s tech and partly because the banks are recapturing a lot of the business they were losing to fintech a couple of years ago by moving into fintech themselves. That is the story and we’re clearly seeing that in the share prices of both banks and PayPal. I like Albemarle because the demand for lithium going forward is almost exponential.
Q: What’s your thought on the Australian dollar (AUD)?
A: Buy it with both hands as it is going to parity. Australia is a great indirect play on trade with China (FXI), gold (GLD), uranium (CCJ), and iron ore (BHP). It’s a great play on the recovery of the global economy, which will start next year.
Q: What do you think about Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd (RCL)?
A: Probably a buy but remember all the cruise lines will be impaired to some extent by the massive debts they had to take on to survive two years of shutdown with the pandemic. I took the Queen Victoria last July on their Norwegian Fjord cruise, and it had not been operated for two years. None of the staff had any idea what to do. I had to show them.
Q: Will big tech have a good second half?
A: Probably, but it’s going to be a slow first quarter, and I think if we start getting actual cuts in interest rates, then it’s going to be off to the races for tech and they’ll all go to all-time highs as they always do.
Q: How come you haven’t issued any trade alerts yet on the currencies?
A: Calling a five-year turnaround is a big job. Now that we have the turnaround in play, we’re in dip-buying mode. So, you will see these in the future. But I also have to look at what currency trades are offering compared to other trades in other asset classes. And for the last year or two, the big opportunities have all been in stocks. You had volatility constantly visiting the mid $30s, you didn’t get that in the currencies, and more money was to be made in stock trades than foreign currency trades. That is changing now; let's see if we have a sustainable trend and if we get a good entry point. There’s a lot that goes into these trade alerts that you don’t always get to see. We only get a 95% success rate by being very careful in sending out trade alerts and that means long periods of doing nothing when the risk/reward is mediocre at best, which is right now. The services that guarantee you a trade alert every day all lose money.
Q: What is the recommended minimum portfolio size to amortize the cost of the concierge service?
A: I tell people to have a half a million in assets because we want people who are financially sophisticated to understand what we’re telling them. That said, we do have people with as little as 100,000 in the concierge service and they usually make the money back on the first trade. This is a very sophisticated high-return, very active service. You get my personal cell phone number and all that, plus your own dedicated website, and specific concierge-only research. It’s a much higher level of service. It’s by application only and we currently have no places available for new concierge members. However, if you’re interested, we can put you on the waitlist so that when another millionaire retires, we can open up a space.
Q: Despite recent moves, the algo looks bearish. There are lots of mixed signals.
A: Yes, it does. And yes, that’s often the case when the market timing index hangs around 50.
Q: Do concierges go for short term moves?
A: No, concierges are looking for the big, long-term trades that they can just buy and forget about. That is where the big money is made. At least 90% of the people that try day trading lose money but make all the brokers rich.
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 or Technology Letter, 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
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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
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Below please find subscribers’ Q&A for the September 7 Mad Hedge Fund Trader Global Strategy Webinar broadcast from Silicon Valley in California.
Q: Do you think a snapback rally has started? If so, should we increase the size of the September Microsoft (MSFT) spread?
A: Absolutely not. There is no money in 7-day-to-expiration trades. That's why you never see them from me. If you are going to do a position, we’re now looking at October, which has five weeks to run; and I'm waiting for a better entry point. One day does not make a bull market. We also have the volatility index at $25, which is not a good entry point either, so don’t double up on Microsoft here, and avoid 7-day options trades unless you want to be a day trader.
Q: What is your target for the year-end S&P 500?
A: I’m still looking at 4,800. I think we could bottom sometime in the next few weeks—the worst case is the beginning of October—and then it’ll be straight up for the rest of the year. Once we go from discounting the next CPI, which is out on Tuesday the 13th, then we have sort of a no man's land and in October, we start discounting the midterm election, which at the moment is looking like a Democratic win on all fronts.
Q: Amazon (AMZN) has been losing money over the past 2 quarters due to fuel expenses. Is the solution investment in new electric delivery trucks?
A: Yes. In fact, Amazon owns 25% of Rivian (RIVN), and their initial order was to manufacture 100,000 all-electric delivery trucks for Amazon. That has always been the basis for investing in Rivian. It’s been a fantastic investment for Amazon as a stock so far, and when Amazon goes all electric you can bet they’ll power that largely with solar energy. Then they will be out of the energy business entirely; they’ll be producing their own energy and then consuming it, which is the most efficient way to use alternatives, cutting out about 10 different middlemen.
Q: Will the UK pound perform well with this new prime minister?
A: No, the pound is being driven down by rising US interest rates and the energy crisis in Europe, and in fact, I think no matter who the prime minister is, they’re going to have a really difficult time with the economy because of Brexit, which I believe over the long term will reduce British standards of living by half. I don’t know much about the new prime minister as she was in diapers when I was living in England, but it’s a terrible place to invest for the foreseeable future for all of those reasons.
Q: Is it time to buy Tesla (TESLA) for a trade?
A: Well you know me, I’m a perfectionist always trying to buy the bottom. I’m waiting for the market to throw up on its shoes, which it just hasn’t done this year. And I did make a killing on that last move down to $210. We then went up to $310. So, I'm sitting here, 100% cash, waiting to go 100% into Tesla again. It just seems to be a money-making machine for me, and the good news about the company just keeps coming every day.
Q: What strategy would you recommend for income?
A: I would go short dated. 2-year papers now paying 3.5%. I would not go long dated at all, that would be just throwing your money away. Locking in a 3.5% yield for 10 or 20 years would be a perfect money destruction machine. So, go to 2 years, which is essentially going to cash. At least you’ll get the 3.5% with no volatility.
Q: Prediction for the midterms?
A: I’m looking for a Democratic sweep. I analyzed all 33 Senate seats last night that are up for grabs and the Democrats could pick up 2 or even 3 seats. The weak candidates the Republican party has put forward in the most important states are performing very poorly in both fundraising and the polls.
Q: When do you think would be a good time to buy a house for your personal residence?
A: I would say the next time they start to cut interest rates in a couple of years. That is when housing takes off again. I was actually researching this just yesterday—the worst housing crisis we had in 100 years, you had a bear market for houses that only lasted 2 years. That was of course the 2008-2009 disaster driven by massive overbuilding of speculative housing. We haven't had that happen this time. And in fact, we’re short 10 million houses because the capacity cutbacks that happened in ‘08 and ‘09 never recovered. So, I’m kind of thinking, you don’t get crashes in real estate prices now, you get flatlines, and then they take off again because everybody in the world now has 2.75% interest rates and if they sell their house and move their cost-of-living doubles because their mortgage interest rate doubles. So we’re all kind of trapped in our houses now and can’t sell because the alternatives are so much more expensive. That takes enormous pressure off the real estate market, which leans in favor of the flat market thesis.
Q: Do you still love Nvidia (NVDA)?
A: I still love Nvidia. They’ll make up the China losses in no time. And by the way, guess who else uses Nvidia chips? The HIMARS missiles, where demand has suddenly rocketed from 3,000 to 14,000 missiles a year, which is more than the Chinese were ever going to use, and we’re using those up very rapidly by giving them to Ukraine. Every time one of those missiles gets fired uses a whole batch of Nvidia AI cards. So use this dip to load the boat, you’re looking at 20% of downside and maybe 300% of upside on Nvidia on a three-year view. NVIDIA is now down 58% from its high so averaging anywhere around here is fine.
Q: Can you suggest a hedge for the next 4-6 weeks?
A: The only hedge that works is cash. I’ve tried a million hedging strategies over the last 50 years, and the only thing you can rely on is cash. And by the way, cash actually pays you money now. You can earn 2% in interest or more if you’re going to deposit it with a broker.
Q: With electricity shortages already happening, what electricity infrastructure company would you be looking at for investing in the future of EVs?
A: I’ve been investing based on exploding electric power costs myself for the last 15 years. A lot of my plays like SunPower (SPWR) and First Solar (FSLR) have already had enormous moves. That said, I’d use any weakness in the market to buy those on dips because one thing we know for sure is that alternative electricity demand is going to be soaring over the next several years as oil and gas are phased down to zero. And of course, the whole sector got a huge push from Vladimir Putin, who’s massively bringing forward the shift to alternative because he’s using carbon-based energy as a weapon of war against us now.
Q: What’s a good entry point on Nvidia?
A: I tell people to start scaling. A perfect scale would be, let’s say, if you want to put $100,000 into Nvidia, break it up into 10 $10,000 pieces, put in $10,000 today and $10,000 every day until you have a full position, and then you get a nice low average. This is what the companies themselves do when they’re buying their own stock—they just buy small pieces every day to minimize the market impact.
Q: How do you see the Euro?
A: Down 10% in another year, because Jay Powell is going to keep raising interest rates. And even if he doesn’t and the next rate rise is the last one, we’re still going to have interest rates 3.5% higher than everyone else in the world for at least 1 or 2 years, so you could easily get another 10% against all the currencies and maybe more. The outlook for foreign currencies: grim. Outlook for dollar: great.
Q: What about the Porsche (POAHY) IPO?
A: I always avoid IPOs because they get overhyped at the beginning, prices get too high, and then when the restrictive stock comes off, everybody dumps. So wait. I did that with Tesla. Tesla was overhyped—it had a $15 IPO price that went straight up to $30 on opening day. I waited for it to back off to the original IPO price and that’s when I went in and split-adjusted that price which today is $2.35.
Q: Wouldn’t it be good to pick up the speculator houses that aren’t really selling even 50% down with a 5% mortgage?
A: If you could get them 50% down, that would be great; but I don't think any place in the country has seen a 50% drawdown yet—maybe 5% or 10%. The markets that will have the biggest drops will be rural markets that saw the biggest increases, and I’m thinking specifically about Boise, Idaho, where prices doubled in two years, and then they’ll give up a major piece of that. That's where you’ll see the biggest declines the fastest. But, for your bigger quality markets like New York and San Francisco, they went down maybe 5% at worst, and then they go back up again. The only selling you have now is demographic selling, where people die, get married, have more kids and need to change houses for those reasons.
Q: On the electric power side, any thoughts about Clean Sparks (CLSK)?
A: I would be careful not to buy things just because they are “electrical”. You have to be discriminating in your alternative power plays because a lot of these will never make money. In the case of (CLSK), they have yet to make any money and the stock is down 90%. They are in low-margin businesses. Buying electric power and reselling it for charging stations is not a high-margin business. You’re in competition with your local utilities and unless you have something special about your business model, like putting them in shopping malls like Tesla does, the added value there is not that great. I would look very carefully at their business plans and figure out if they’re actually going to make money doing this. Tesla has the perfect model— a giant 20,000 charging station network that only Tesla cars can use, and they’re making the cars that use the power and the panels that generate it and the batteries that store it. It’s a fully integrated vertical model. Remember, anything entering alternative anything now is competing against Tesla, which has a 15-year head start and a dominant market share. So, that is the issue there.
Q: What is the risk of a European crisis and how is that going to affect the US?
A: It is going to affect the US, and we don’t have to wait for a crisis—there's one happening now. I looked at the numbers this morning, and the average British household is looking at a $4,000 annual power bill this year against a per capita income of $47,000 pretax, and their taxes are much higher than ours. Moreover, this is for a country that is a net energy producer. It’s going to be double that cost in energy-consuming countries in eastern Europe and Germany. About ⅓ of all US exports go to Europe, so yes it will affect us but we’ll have to see how it plays out.
Q: What’s your forecast for profit margins for next year?
A: I’m looking for S&P 500 earnings of 10% for 2023. That may be one reason why stocks keep failing to break down.
Q: Would a price cap on oil prices raise the price of oil?
A: No, it’s having the opposite effect, making oil go down; and you’re seeing this at the free market price, which is the price at which Russia is selling their oil to China and India. That’s happening at a 20% discount to market, so all the Russian oil going to China now is happening at $12 below the current spot price for oil, which is around $82.
Q: How about Nuclear energy plays?
A: Yeah, we did put out one recommendation for Cameco (CCJ) in the spring. I’m still buying that on the dips. Germany resuscitated three nuclear power plants, California one, and Japan is doing the same. Of course, France is sitting pretty—they already have 75% of their electric power coming from nuclear. Who ever knew the French would outsmart the Germans? But betting your energy future on Russia was a terrible idea, and only happened because a lot of key German politicians were bribed by Russians. So yes, oil is dropping and you should expect it to continue.
Q: Did we just see the peak in interest rates for the year?
A: No, at a minimum we’re looking at 3.50% on the yield. We were 3.35% yesterday but could easily overshoot to 3.60% or 3.70% which is why I’m being a little cautious jumping in on the long side here.
Q: When is the time to do LEAPS on Freeport McMoRan (FCX)?
A: Soon. If we can double bottom at around $24, that would be great LEAP territory because I expect in 2 to 3 years this will be a $100 stock and a good LEAPS to do here. If we get down to $24, then you really want to look hard at doing something like a $30/$32, because then you could get like a 500% return on that maybe a year or two out. The leverage in LEAPS is astronomical as many of you discovered with my (TLT) put LEAPS last year. If you want more specific information about LEAPS, please sign up for my Concierge service.
Q: When will you send out LEAP recommendations?
A: On a cataclysmic capitulation selloff day—that is the time to do them.
Q: If Tesla does attempt to raise more capital with new share issues, will that drive the price down?
A: Yes, that's usually what happens, but Elon Musk is a great market timer, and you can bet that he’ll wait for a massive run-up in the stock first before he does this. Every one of these capital races he’s done has been after a massive run-up in the stock and then it tends to cap the stock for 6 months after that. You can safely buy it now because Elon doesn’t think the stock has topped out yet, since he hasn’t announced any new secondary equity issues yet.
Q: What is the actual cause of the surge in natural gas prices?
A: The complete shutoff of natural gas flows from Russia to Europe, especially Germany, which used to get 55% of its total natural gas from Russia.
Q: What is your take on the current Ukraine situation?
A: Ukraine is winning—they’re doing it slowly. The US has quadrupled production of the HIMARS missiles, from 3,000 a year to 14,000 a year, and that has made all the difference in the world. Ukraine has been able to take the upper hand in this war because of literally just 16 vehicles we gave them to fire these missiles. My guess is it goes on for another year, there's a coup in Russia, Putin gets assassinated or deposed, giving us a new government in Russia, and Ukraine gets all its old territory back, joining NATO and the EC.
Q: Thoughts on Google (GOOGL)?
A: Good long-term hold but could be an antitrust target in the near future.
Q: Some say energy will be in critical shortage for many years. Why are you long-term bearish on energy/oil?
A: You have to separate the two; I’m long-term bullish on energy, which is why I built this massive solar system. But oil will be illegal within a decade—that you can count on. Demand will go to zero. It won’t be governments that do this, it’ll be the market. By the way, we’ve already gone to zero once before. If you look at the Spring of 2020, we had negative $37 in the futures market on oil. This is not some far-out thing—the zero prices will just come back. On the way to zero though, you will get several doubles, triples, and quadruples in the price. The smaller the market becomes, the more volatile the price becomes; oil is no exemption from that. That’s why Elon Musk says we need to increase our oil production for the short term to get ourselves on the way to zero—you have to do the transition. The problem is that nobody wants to make 30-year investments in a product that is going to be banned in eight years, hence the shortages.
Q: What's a flight-to-safety asset right now?
A: There are three: Cash, cash, and cash. 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
Teslas are Great, but they are not Crash Proof
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