(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD or THE ROUND TRIP TO NOWHERE), plus (A VISIT TO TRINITY),
(ROM), (TQQQ), ($VIX), (TLT), (SLRN), (CAT), (AMZN), and (BRK/B). (NVDA), (TSLA), (AAPL), and (META), ($INDU), (TSLA), (DHI), (DE), (AAPL), (JPM), (DE), (GLD), (DHI)
I am writing this to you from the airport in Vilnius, Lithuania, which is under construction. The airport is packed because people are flying all planes to Paris to catch the closing ceremony of the 2024 Olympics. There is also the inflow of disappointed Taylor Swift fans returning from three concerts in Vienna, Austria that had been canceled due to terrorist threats. Some 150,000 tickets had to be refunded.
It is hard to focus on my writing because every 30 seconds, a beautiful woman walks by.
And I am told at my age I am not supposed to learn. I should know better.
Well, that was some week!
If you had taken a ten-day cruise to Alaska, you would wonder what all the fuss was about, for last week the stock market was basically unchanged. The worst day in two years, down 3%, followed by the best, up 2 ½% amounts to a big fat nothing burger.
It all reminds me of one of those advanced aerobatics classes I used to take. I was busier than a one-armed paper hanger, sending out some 13 trade alerts in all.
And while the volatility is certainly not over, it is probably at least two-thirds over, meaning that we can step out for a cup of coffee and NOT expect a 1,000 move in the Dow Average by the time we get back.
Is the Bottom IN?
I don’t think so. The valuation disparity between big tech and value is still miles wide. Uncertainty reaches a maximum just before the US presidential election. A bottom for the year is coming, but not quite yet. When it does, it will be the buying opportunity of the year. Watch this space! And watch (ROM) and (TQQQ) too.
The average drawdown per year since 2020 stands at 15%, so with our 10% haircut, the worst is over. What will remain in high volatility? After staying stuck at $12 for most of 2024 and then spiking to $65 in two days, the $20 handle should remain for the foreseeable future.
That is a dream come true and a license to print money for options traders because the higher options prices effectively double the profit per trade. So, expect a lot of trade alerts from the Mad Hedge Fund Trader going forward. That is, until the ($VIX) returns to $36, then the potential profit triples.
Up until July, I had been concerned that the market might not sell off enough to make a yearend rally worth buying into. There was still $8 trillion in cash sitting under the market buying even the smallest dips.
The Japanese took care of that in a heartbeat with a good old-fashioned financial crisis. In hours trillions of dollars’ worth of yen carry trades unwound, creating an unprecedented 14% move UP in the Japanese currency and a 26% move DOWN in the Japanese stock market.
Suddenly, the world was ending. Or at least the financial media thought it was.
Some hundreds of hedge funds probably went under as their leverage is so great at 10X-20X. But we probably won’t know who until the redemption notices go out at yearend.
It couldn’t happen to a nicer bunch of people.
Don’t expect the Fed to take any emergency action, such as a surprise 50 basis point rate cut, to help us out. Things are just not bad enough. The headline Unemployment Rate is still a low 4.3%. Corporate profits are at all-time highs. We are nowhere near a credit crisis or any other threats to the financial system. The US still has the strongest major economy in the world.
Of course, if you followed my advice and went heavy into falling interest rate plays, as I have been begging you to do for months, last week was your best of the year. The United States US Treasury Bond Fund (TLT) rocketed to a year high at $100. Junk bonds (JNK), REITS (CCI), BB-rated loan ETFs (SLRN), and high-yield stocks (MO) went up even more.
It's still not too late to pile into yield plays because the Fed hasn’t actually cut interest rates YET. Volatility Index ($VIX) Hits Four-Year High at $65, the most since the 2020 pandemic. That implies a 2% move in the S&P 500 (SPX) every day for the next 30 days, which is $103.42 (SPX) points or $774 Dow ($INDU) points. No doubt, massive short covering played a big role with traders covering shorts they sold in size at $12. Spikes like this are usually great long-term “BUY” signals. $150 Billion in Volatility Plays were Dumped on Monday. Volatility-linked strategies, including volatility funds and equities trend-following commodity trading advisers (CTAs), are systematic investment strategies that typically buy equities when markets are calm and sell when they grow turbulent. They became heavy sellers of stocks over the last few weeks, exacerbating a market rout brought on by economic worries and the unwind of a massive global carry trade.
Weekly Jobless Claims Drop to 233,000, sparking a 500-point rally in the market. It’s a meaningless report, but traders are now examining every piece of jobs data with a magnifying glass.
Commercial Real Estate Has Bottomed, which will be great news for regional banks. Visitations are up big in Manhattan, with Class “A” properties gaining the most attention. New leasing is now exceeding vacations.
Warren Buffet Now Owns More T-Bills than the Federal Reserve. The Omaha, Nebraska-based conglomerate held $234.6 billion in short-term investments in Treasury bills at the end of the second quarter. That compared with $195.3 billion in T-bills that the Fed owned as of July 31. The Oracle of Omaha wisely unloaded $84 billion worth of Apple at the market top.
No Recession Here says shipping giant Maersk. U.S. inventories are not at a level that is worrisome says CEO Vincent Clerc, as fears of a recession in the world’s largest economy mount. Chinese exports have helped drive overall container demand in the most recent quarter reported a decline in year-on-year underlying profit to $623 million from $1.346 billion in the second quarter and a dip in revenue to $12.77 billion from $12.99 billion.
A Refi Boom is About to Begin. Mortgage rates in the high fives are now on offer. Over 40% of existing mortgages have rates of over 6%. It’s all driven by the monster rally in the bond market this week which took the (TLT) to $100 and ten-year US Treasury yields down to 3.65%.
Google (GOOG) Gets Hit with an Antitrust Suit, a Federal judge ruling that the company has a monopoly in search, with a 92% market share. The smoking gun was the $20 billion a year (GOOG) paid Apple (AAPL) to remain their exclusive search engine. Apple is the big loser here, which I just sold short.
In July we ended up a stratospheric +10.92%. So far in August, we are up by +2.51% My 2024 year-to-date performance is at +33.45%.The S&P 500 (SPY) is up +7.34%so far in 2024. My trailing one-year return reached +51.92. That brings my 16-year total return to +710.08.My average annualized return has recovered to +51.94%.
I used the market crash to stop out of three STOP LOSS positions in (CAT), (AMZN), and (BRK/B). When the ($VIX) hit $65 I then made all the losses back when I piled on four new technology longs in (NVDA), (TSLA), (AAPL), and (META). After the Dow Average ($INDU) rallied 2,000 points and volatility was still high I then pumped out short positions in (TSLA), (DHI), (DE), (AAPL), and (JPM). I stopped out of my position in (DE) at breakeven.
This is in addition to existing longs in (GLD) and (DHI), which I will likely run into the August 16 option expiration.
Some 63 of my 70 round trips, or 90%, were profitable in 2023. Some 48 of 66 trades have been profitable so far in 2024, and several of those losses were really break-even. That is a success rate of 72.73%.
If you were wondering why I was sending out so many trade alerts out last week it is because we were getting months’ worth of market action compressed into five days. Make hay while the sun shines and strike while the iron is hot!
Try beating that anywhere.
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 600% 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, August 12 at 8:30 AM EST, the Consumer Inflation Expectations is out. On Tuesday, August 13 at 9:30 AM, the Producer Price Index ispublished.
On Wednesday, August 14 at 8:30 AM, the new Core Inflation Rate is printed.
On Thursday, August 15 at 8:30 AM, the Weekly Jobless Claims are announced. Retail Sales are also printed.
On Friday, August 16 at 8:30 AM, Building Permits are disclosed. We also get the University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment. At 2:00 PM, the Baker Hughes Rig Count is printed.
As for me, with the overwhelming success of the Oppenheimer movie, I thought I’d review my long and fruitful connection with America’s nuclear program.
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. They 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?
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.
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.
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 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.
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 on Tokyo
What’s Left from the Original Test
Good Luck and Good Trading,
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/geiger-counter.png438582april@madhedgefundtrader.comhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngapril@madhedgefundtrader.com2024-08-12 09:02:452024-08-12 10:40:38The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead or The Round Trip to Nowhere
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or THE GREAT ROTATION LIVES), or (FLYING THE 1929 TRAVELAIRE D4D),
(NVDA), (TSLA), (JPM), (CCI), (CAT),
(DHI), (SLV), (GLD), (BRK/B), (DE)
I am writing this from the famed Hornli Hut on the north ridge of the Matterhorn at 10,700 feet. I’m not here to climb the iconic mountain one more time. Seven summits are enough for me. What left do I have to prove? It is a brilliant, clear day and I can see Zermatt splayed out before me a mile below.
No, I am here to inhale the youth, energy, excitement, and enthusiasm of this year’s batch of climbers, and to see them off at 1:00 AM after a hardy breakfast of muesli and strong coffee. My advice for beginners is liberally handed out for free.
Each country in Europe has its own personality. Observing the great variety of Europeans setting off I am reminded of an old joke. What is the difference between Heaven and hell?
In Heaven, you have a French chef, an Italian designer, a British policeman, a German engineer, and a Swedish girlfriend, and it is all organized by the Swiss.
In hell you have an English chef, a Polish designer, a German policeman, a Spanish engineer, no girlfriend, and it is all organized by the Italians.
When I recite this joke to my new comrades, I get a lot of laughs and knowing nods. Then they give me better versions of Heaven and hell
The stock market as well might have been organized by the Italians last week with the doubling of volatility and extreme moves up and down. Some 500 Dow points suddenly became a round lot, up and down. Tesla down $40? NVIDIA off 25%? Instantly, last month’s heroes became this month’s goats. It was a long time coming.
The Great Rotation, ignited by the July 11 Consumer Price Index shrinkage lives on. We are only two weeks into a reallocation of capital that could go on for months. Tech has nine months of torrid outperformance to take a break from. Interest sensitives have years of underperformance to catch up on.
Using a fund manager’s parlance, markets are simply moving from Tech to interest sensitives, growth to value, expensive to cheap, and from overbought to ignored.
A great “tell” of future share price performance is how they deliver in down markets. Last week, the Magnificent Seven (TSLA), (NVDA), got pummeled on the bad days. Interest sensitives like my (CCI), (IBKR), industrials (DE), (CAT), (BRK/B), precious metals (GLD), (SLV), and Housing (DHI) barely moved or rose.
Sector timing is everything in the stock market and those who followed me into these positions were richly rewarded. My performance hit a new all-time high every day last week.
Only the industrial metals have not been reading from the same sheet of music. Copper, (FCX), (COPX), Iron Ore (BHP), Platinum (PPLT), Silver (SLV), uranium (CCJ), and Palladium (PALL) have all suffered poor months.
You can blame China, which has yet to restart its sagging economy. I blamethat on 40 years of the Middle Kingdom’s one-child policy, which is only now yielding its bitter fruit. That means 40 years of missing Chinese consumers, which started hitting the economy five years ago.
And who knows how many people they lost during the pandemic (the Chinese vaccine, Sinovac, was found to be only 30% effective). This is not a short-term fix. You can’t suddenly change the number of people born 40 years ago.
I warned Beijing 50 years ago that the one-child policy would end in disaster. You can’t beat the math. The leadership back then only saw the alternative, a Chinese population today of 1.8 billion instead of the 1.4 billion we have. But they ignored my advice.
It is the story of my life.
Eventually, US and European growth will make up for the lost Chinese demand, but that may take a while. Avoid all Chinese plays like a bad dish of egg foo young. They’re never going back to the 13% growth of the 2000’s.
So far in July, we are up a stratospheric +11.82%. My 2024 year-to-date performance is at +31.84%.The S&P 500 (SPY) is up +14.05%so far in 2024. My trailing one-year return reached +xx. That brings my 16-year total return to +xx.My average annualized return has recovered to +708.47.
I used the market collapse to take a profit in my shorts in (NVDA) and (TSLA). Then on the first rally in these names, I slapped new shorts right back on. I used monster rallies to take profits in (JPM) and (CCI). I added new longs in interest sensitives like (CAT), (DHI), and (SLV). This is in addition to existing longs in (GLD), (BRK/B), and (DE), which I will likely run into the August 16 option expiration.
That will take my year-to-date performance up to an eye-popping 43.77% by mid-August.
Some 63 of my 70 round trips were profitable in 2023. Some 45 of 53 trades have been profitable so far in 2024, and several of those losses were break-even. That is a success rate of 84.91%.
Try beating that anywhere.
One of the great joys of hiking around Zermatt is that you meet happy people from all over the world. The other morning, I was walking up to Mount Gornergrat when I ran into two elementary school teachers from Nagoya, Japan. After recovering from the shock that I spoke Japanese I told them a story about when I first arrived in Japan in 1974.
Toyota Motors (TM) hired me to teach English to a group of future American branch sales managers. A Toyota Century limo picked me up at the Nagoya train station and drove me up to a training facility in the mountains. As we approached the building, I witnessed 20 or so men in dark suits, white shirts, and thin ties lined up. One by one they took a baseball bat and savagely beat a dummy that lay prostrate on the grass before them.
I asked the driver what the heck they were doing. He answered that they were beating the competition. A decade later, Japan had seized 44% of the US car market, with Toyota taking the largest share.
I like to think that a superior product did that and not my language instruction abilities.
US Q2 GDP Pops, up 2.8% versus 2.1% expected. The US still has the strongest major economy in the world. Consumer spending helped propel the growth number higher, as did contributions from private inventory investment and nonresidential fixed investment. Goldilocks Lives!
Personal Consumption Expenditure Drops, a key inflation indication for the Fed, up only 0.1%in June and 2.5% YOY. Core inflation, which excludes food and energy, showed a monthly increase of 0.2% and 2.6% on the year, both also in line with expectations. Personal income rose just 0.2%, below the 0.4% estimate. Spending increased 0.3%, meeting the forecast, while the personal savings rate decreased to 3.4%.
Leveraged NVIDIA Bets Cause Market Turmoil. Great when (NVDA) is rocketing, not so much when it is crashing, with (NVDA) plunging 25.7% in a month. (NVDA) is now the largest holding in 500 traded ETF’s. I already made a nice chunk of money on an (NVDA) and will go back for another bight on the smallest rally.
The US Treasury Knocks Out a Blockbuster Auction, shifting $180 Billion worth of 7 ear paper, taking yields down 5 basis points. Foreign demand was huge. Bonds are trading like interest rates are going to be cut. Stock rallied an impressive 800 points the next day.
Durable Goods Get Slammed, down 6.6% versus an expected +0.6% in June. More juice for the interest rate cut camp.
Tesla Bombs, with big earnings and sales disappointments, taking the stock down 15%. Thank goodness we were short going into this. The EV maker put off its Mexico factory until after the November election. Adjusted earnings fell to 52 cents per share in the three months ended in June, missing estimates for the fourth consecutive quarter. Tesla will now unveil robotaxis on Oct. 10, and the cars shown will only be prototypes. Cover your Tesla Shorts near max profit.
Home Sales Dive, in June, off 5.4%. Inventory jumped 23.4% from a year ago to 1.32 million units at the end of June, coming off record lows but still just a 4.1-month supply. The median price of an existing home sold in June was $426,900, an increase of 4.1% year over year.
Oil Glut to continue into 2025, thanks to massive tax subsidies creating overproduction. Morgan Stanley said it expects OPEC and non-OPEC supply to grow by about 2.5 million barrels per day next year, well ahead of demand growth. Refinery runs are set to reach a peak in August this year, and unlikely to return to that level until July 2025, it said. Avoid all energy plays until they bottom.
Homebuilders Catch on Fire, with the prospect of falling interest rates. The US has a structural shortage of 10 million homes with 5 million Millennial buyers. Homebuilders have been underbuilding since the 2008 Great Financial Crisis, seeking to emphasize profits and share buybacks over to development land purchases. Buy (DHI), (LEN), (PMH), (KBH) on dips.
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 600% 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, July 29 at 9:30 AM EST, the Dallas Fed Manufacturing Index is out. On Tuesday, July 30 at 9:30 AM, the JOLTS Job Openings Report ispublished. The Federal Reserve Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting begins
On Wednesday, July 31 at 2:00 PM, Jay Powell announced the Fed’s interest rate decision.
On Thursday, August 1 at 8:30 AM, the Weekly Jobless Claims are announced.
On Friday, August 2 at 8:30 AM, the July Nonfarm Payroll Report is released. At 2:00 PM, the Baker Hughes Rig Count is printed.
As for me, I am reminded as to why you never want to fly with Major John Thomas
When you make millions of dollars for your clients, you get a lot of pretty interesting invitations. $5,000 cases of wine, lunches on superyachts, free tickets to the Olympics, and dates with movie stars (Hi, Cybil!).
So it was in that spirit that I made my way down to the beachside community of Oxnard, California just north of famed Malibu to meet long-term Mad Hedge follower, Richard Zeiler.
Richard is a man after my own heart, plowing his investment profits into vintage aircraft, specifically a 1929 Travel Air D-4-D.
At the height of the Roaring Twenties (which by the way we are now repeating), flappers danced the night away doing the Charleston and the bathtub gin flowed like water. Anything was possible, and the stock market soared.
In 1925, Clyde Cessna, Lloyd Strearman, and Walter Beech got together and founded the Travel Air Manufacturing Company in Wichita, Kansas. Their first order was to build ten biplanes to carry the US mail for $125,000.
The plane proved hugely successful, and Travel Air eventually manufactured 1,800 planes, making it the first large-scale general aviation plane built in the US. Then, in 1929, the stock market crashed, the Great Depression ensued, aircraft orders collapsed, and Travel Air disappeared in the waves of mergers and bankruptcies that followed.
A decade later, WWII broke out and Wichita produced the tens of thousands of the small planes used to train the pilots who won the war. They flew B-17 and B-25 bombers and P51 Mustangs, all of which I’ve flown myself. The name Travel Air was consigned to the history books.
Enter my friend Richard Zeiler. Richard started flying support missions during the Vietnam War and retired 20 years later as an Army Lieutenant Colonel. A successful investor, he was able to pursue his first love, restoring vintage aircraft.
Starting with a broken down 1929 Travel Air D4D wreck, he spent years begging, borrowing, and trading parts he found on the Internet and at air shows. Eventually, he bought 20 Travel Air airframes just to make one whole airplane, including the one used in the 1930 Academy Award-winning WWI movie “Hells Angels.”
By 2018, he returned it to pristine flying condition. The modernized plane has a 300 hp engine, carries 62 gallons of fuel, and can fly 550 miles in five hours, which is far longer than my own bladder range.
Richard then spent years attending air shows, producing movies, and even scattering the ashes of loved ones over the Pacific Ocean. He also made the 50-hour round trip to the annual air show in Oshkosh, Wisconsin. I have volunteered to copilot on a future trip.
Richard now claims over 5,000 hours flying tailwheel aircraft, probably more than anyone else in the world. Believe it or not, I am also one of the few living tailwheel-qualified pilots in the country left. Yes, antiques are flying antiques!
As for me, my flying career also goes back to the Vietnam era as well. As a war correspondent in Laos and Cambodia, I used to hold Swiss-made Pilatus Porter airplanes straight and level while my Air America pilot friend was looking for drop zones on the map, dodging bullets all the way.
I later obtained a proper British commercial pilot license over the bucolic English countryside, trained by a retired Battle of Britain Spitfire pilot. His favorite trick was to turn off the fuel and tell me that a German Messerschmidt had just shot out my engine and that I had to land immediately. He only turned the gas back on at 200 feet when my approach looked good. We did this more than 200 times.
By the time I moved back to the States and converted to a US commercial license, the FAA examiner was amazed at how well I could do emergency landings. Later, I added additional licenses for instrument flying, night flying, and aerobatics.
Thanks to the largesse of Morgan Stanley during the 1980’s, I had my own private twin-engine Cessna 421 in Europe for ten years at their expense where I clocked another 2,000 hours of flying time. That job had me landing on private golf courses so I could sell stocks to the Arab Prince owners. By 1990, I knew every landing strip in Europe and the Persian Gulf like the back of my hand.
So, when the first Gulf War broke out the following year, the US Marine Corps came calling at my London home. They asked if I wanted to serve my country and I answered, “Hell, yes!” So, they drafted me as a combat pilot to fly support missions in Saudi Arabia.
I only got shot down once and escaped with a crushed L5 disk. It turns out that I crash better than anyone else I know. That’s important because they don’t let you practice crashing in flight school. It’s too expensive.
My last few flying years have been more sedentary, flying as a volunteer spotter pilot in a Cessna-172 for Cal Fire during the state’s runaway wildfires. As long as you stay upwind there’s no smoke. The problem is that these days, there is almost nowhere in California that isn’t smokey. By the way, there are 2,000 other pilots on the volunteer list.
Eventually, I flew over 50 prewar and vintage aircraft, everything from a 1932 De Havilland Tiger Moth to a Russian MiG 29 fighter.
It was a clear, balmy day when I was escorted to the Travel Air’s hanger at Oxnard Airport. I carefully prechecked the aircraft and rotated the prop to circulate oil through the engine before firing it up. That reduced the wear and tear on the moving parts.
As they teach you in flight school, it is better to be on the ground wishing you could fly than being in the air wishing you were on the ground!
I donned my leather flying helmet, plugged in my headphones, received a clearance from the tower, and was good to go. I put on max power and was airborne in less than 100 yards. How do you tell if a pilot is happy? He has engine oil all over his teeth. After all, these are open-cockpit planes.
I made for the Malibu coast and thought it would be fun to buzz the local surfers at wave top level. I got a lot of cheers in return from my fellow thrill seekers.
After a half hour of low flying over elegant sailboats and looking for whales, I flew over the cornfields and flower farms of remote Ventura County and returned to Oxnard. I haven’t flown in a biplane in a while and that second wing really put up some drag. So, I had to give a burst of power on short finals to make the numbers. A taxi back to the hangar and my work there was done.
There are old pilots and there are bold pilots, but there are no old, bold pilots. I can attest to that.
Richard’s goal is to establish a new Southern California aviation museum at Oxnard airport. He created a non-profit 501 (3)(c), the Travel Air Aircraft Company, Inc. to achieve that goal, which has a very responsible and well-known board of directors. He has already assembled three other 1929 and 1930 Travel Air biplanes as part of the display.
The museum’s goal is to provide education, job training, restoration, maintenance, sightseeing rides, film production, and special events. All donations are tax-deductible. To make a donation please email the president of the museum, my friend Richard Conrad at rconrad6110@gmail.com
Who knows, you might even get a ride in a nearly 100-year-old aircraft as part of a donation.
To watch the video of my joyride please click here.
Good Luck and Good Trading
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
Where I Go My Kids Go
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/John-Thomas-with-friends.png690912april@madhedgefundtrader.comhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngapril@madhedgefundtrader.com2024-07-29 09:02:332024-07-29 11:38:16The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or The Great Rotation is On
I received a call from a real estate agent the other day asking if I wanted to sell my San Francisco home. She knew I wasn’t planning on going anywhere. But would $1 million over market tempt me?
Lately, I have been getting a lot of calls from concerned readers worried that we might be going into another 2008-2011 style real estate crash when home prices cratered by 50%-70%.
It’s not going to happen and there are a dozen reasons why. Worst case, I expect a short, shallow pause in the market, followed by a ballistic move to new all-time highs starting now. The latest S&P Case Shiller Data showing a 6.5% rise in home prices confirms my view.
Some sectors are already starting to heat up, while others, like San Diego, Miami, Tampa, and Atlanta never really cooled down.
If you have any doubt, look no further than the superheated bond market which is taking interest rates to new all-time highs. Despite a hefty 30-year fixed rate mortgage rate of 7.00%, prices are still holding up, except for San Francisco and Seattle where they have barely fallen.
You see, there is a method to my Madness.
It is all fresh fuel for a continuation in the bull market for US residential real estate, not just for this year, but for another decade, or more. More high-paying jobs means more big-spending home buyers and AI is creating those high-paying jobs at a record pace.
Although prices seem high now, I am convinced that we are only at the beginning of a long-term secular bull market in housing. If you don’t believe me check out the sky-high prices in Shanghai, Vancouver, and Sydney Australia.
Anything you purchase now is going to make you look like a genius ten years down the road.
The best is yet to come.
The big driver will be demographics, as it always is.
From 2023 onward, 65 million Gen Xers will be joined by 85 million late-blooming Millennials in a bidding war for the same houses. That will create a market of 150 million buyers, unprecedented in the history of the American real estate market.
In the meantime, 80 million baby boomers, net sellers and downsizers of homes for the past decade, will slowly die off and disappear from the scene as a negative influence. Only one-third are still working.
The first boomer, Kathleen Casey-Kirschling, born seconds after midnight on January 1, 1946, became 78 years old this year. A former schoolteacher, she took early retirement at 62.
The real fat on the fire here is that 10 million homes went missing in action this past decade, thanks to the 2008 financial crisis. They were never built.
This is the result of the bankruptcy of several homebuilding companies, and the new-found ultra-conservatism of the survivors, like DR Horton (DHI), Lennar Homes (LEN), and Pulte Group (PHM).
Did I mention that all of this makes this sector a screaming “BUY”?
Talk to any real estate agent and they will complain about the shortage of inventory (except in Chicago, the slowest growing market in the country).
Prices are so high already that flippers have been squeezed out of the market for good. Bottom feeders, like hedge funds buying at the bankruptcy auctions, are a distant memory. Some, like BlackRock (BLK) now own more than 40,000 homes and are the biggest landlords in the county.
Nobody wants to sell because it means giving up ultra-low 2.75% mortgages which they obtained during the salad days and will not see again in their lifetimes. I am one of those happy homeowners. We are prisoners of our own mortgages.
The rising rents that are turning Millennials from renters to buyers may be the first sign of real inflation beyond the increasingly dear health care and higher education that we’re already seeing.
And Millennials are having kids that demand a bigger living space! Who knew?
Have I Got a Fixer-Upper for You!
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/John-Fixer-Upper-e1484005396454.jpg367400Mad Hedge Fund Traderhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMad Hedge Fund Trader2024-05-29 09:02:042024-05-29 10:15:08Why the Real Estate Boom Has a Decade to Run
Featured Trade:
(MY UPDATED PERSONAL ECONOMIC INDICATOR),
(HMC), (NSANY), (GM), (F), (TSLA) (HERE IS YOUR TOP PERFORMING INVESTMENT FOR THE NEXT FIVE YEARS),
(ITB), (PHM), (KBH), (DHI)
(TESTIMONIAL)
Will gold be your best-performing asset for the next five years?
Is it high-growth technology stocks?
Energy stocks?
Or maybe biotech shares?
How about French collectible postage stamps or vintage racing cars?
Nope, you’re not even close. I’ll give you a hint: you’re probably sitting in it.
Yes, the best-performing investment you will own for the next five years will most likely be the home you live in.
Psshaww you may say. Perhaps even balderdash!
However, if you look at the crucial data that drives this long-ignored sector, my conclusions are unassailable.
You can count on your home to appreciate at a 3%-4% annual rate until well into the next decade, and more if you are fortunate enough to live on the red-hot West Coast.
Net out the copious tax breaks that come with home ownership, and your take home will be even higher than that.
For a start, the Federal Reserve’s imminent interest rate cuts are hugely pro-housing.
The conventional 30-year fixed home mortgage can now be had for a bargain of 7.40%%. They are on their way to 5.0%. And many finance their properties with the 5/1 ARM’s that I have been recommending which are currently going for only 6.60%.
Wait a few quarters and you’ll probably get a lower rate than you can get now.
That is, assuming you still have a job and haven’t been replaced yet by an algorithm.
The good news for those homeowners who rely on the floating rates of an adjustable-rate mortgage is that this is not a low-interest-rate decade coming, but a low-interest-rate century.
Another big housing positive is plunging fuel prices, which have cratered 35% in two months.
Cheap fuel means that consumers have more money in their pockets with which to qualify for loans, buy houses, and meet their mortgage payments.
Not only will this be a low-interest-rate century, but it will also be a low-energy cost century as well. If solar energy costs continue their dramatic rate of improvement, around 50% every four years, it will nearly be free by 2030.
Not only will free energy provide a big underpinning under home values, but it will also increase the value of suburban homes where commuting is a major factor.
It gets better.
You know that Millennial of yours who’s been living in your basement since he graduated from college?
Go downstairs and take a look. Chances are he probably moved out when you weren’t looking, turning his prodigious gaming skills into a high-paying coding job.
What’s more, he’s now dating a girl. You know, the one with the nose ring, the streak of purple hair, and tattoos up and down both arms.
That leads to family formation.
And you know what? The most important trend affecting the economy that no one knows about is that THE UNITED STATES IS ABOUT TO ENJOY ANOTHER BABY BOOM!
That’s why new household formations are likely to jump from the current 1.2 to 1.5 million a year in the coming decade.
However, only 1 million homes a year are being built, thanks to the halving of construction capacity in the aftermath of the Great Recession. Subtract from that 250,000 houses a year that get demolished.
Does anyone hear the words “short squeeze”?
That means 86 million Millennials will be chasing the homes of only 55 Gen Xers. Americans aren’t the only ones buying homes.
Are you convinced now? Are you ready to jump into the real estate boom and participate more than just through your residence?
Fortunately, there are several ways you can achieve this.
Residential Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs), like Anally Capital Management (NLY), offer the opportunities of both a high yield and capital appreciation.
Better yet is that all of these trade at deep discounts to book values because of the wreckage caused by the recent interest rate spike.
They include traditional new homebuilders, such as KB Homes (KBH), Pulte Homes (PHM), and DH Horton (DHI). Another option is to take a basket approach by picking up the iShares US Home Construction ETF (ITB).
See you at the next open house!
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/05/Open-House-Sign.jpg260386DougDhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngDougD2023-11-24 09:04:092023-11-24 12:07:15Here is Your Top Performing Investment for the Next Five Years
https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png00Mad Hedge Fund Traderhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMad Hedge Fund Trader2023-05-04 09:04:462023-05-04 19:29:36May 4, 2023
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