Global Market Comments
September 21, 2020
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or HERE’S THE BLACK SWAN FOR 2020),
(SPY), (INDU), (TSLA), (JPM), (TLT), (C),
(V), (GLD), (AAPL), (AMZN), (UUP)
Global Market Comments
September 21, 2020
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or HERE’S THE BLACK SWAN FOR 2020),
(SPY), (INDU), (TSLA), (JPM), (TLT), (C),
(V), (GLD), (AAPL), (AMZN), (UUP)
I had the pleasure of meeting Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsberg only last year. She was funny, a great storyteller, and smart as a tack. If she disagreed with you, she pounced like a lion with a prescient one-liner.
She was also a goldmine of historical anecdotes about American history over the past 60 years, recalling incidents seen from her front-row seat as if they had happened yesterday.
She was also frail and rail-thin as if a faint breeze could knock her over at any time. Contracting cancer five times will do this to a person. Assistants helped her walk.
Her unexpected passing is now on the verge of creating a new financial crisis. Any chance of passing further stimulus in the US congress has just turned to ashes. The focus in Washington has turned entirely to the Supreme Court for the rest of 2020.
As a result, tens of thousands more small business will go under, millions of families will be thrown out on to the street, and the Great Depression will drag on. There is nothing left to spike the punch bowl with.
The Dow Average on Monday morning will open down 1,000 points, led by Tesla (TSLA) and the big technology stocks. US Treasury bonds (TLT) will rocket $5. The US dollar (UUP) will soar on a flight to safety bid.
Traders were already cutting positions and scaling back risk to duck the coming turmoil of the presidential election. We are also trying to front-run a yearend stock selloff prompted by a Biden rise in the capital gains tax from 21% to 40%.
That’s a bit of a moot point as 75% of stock ownership is owned by tax-exempt funds. The remaining 25% is most tied up in institutions that duck the tax by never selling or are embedded on corporate cross ownerships which never change.
Now we have uncertainty with a turbocharger, with gasoline poured in the air intake (pilot talk).
With Democrats refighting the battle of the Alamo, I doubt that Trump can ram through a third Supreme Court nomination. Remember how the last one went, for Brett Cavanaugh? Filibusters alone could delay proceeding by a month. These are NOT developments that make stocks go up.
If Trump succeeds, it may be a pyrrhic victory, costing Republicans at least five Senate seats, losing a majority, and increasing the margin of a presidential loss. If retired astronaut wins the Senate in Arizona on November 3, only two Republicans need to fold to make a Supreme Court nomination impossible.
It’s not like the stock market was in such great shape going into this, the biggest black swan of 2020. The market is being flooded with high priced initial public offerings, some 12 in the coming week alone. Apparently, there is an extreme shortage of high growth large-cap technology stocks and Silicon Valley is more than happy to meet that demand.
Cloud storage player Snowflake (SNOW) saw price talk at $70, an IPO of $120, and a first-day peak of $275. This created $70 billion in market value with the stroke of a key.
Of course, flooding the market like this ends up killing the goose thay laid the golden eggs and is a common signal of market tops. Existing stock holdings have to be sold to buy new ones, taking markets south.
We have already seen the 30-day and 50-day moving averages broken, and sights are clearing set on the 200-day. They would take us to a full top to bottom correction in the indexes of 20%. That would take the S&P 500 from $3,600 to $3,000, The Dow Average from $26,298 to $24,000, and Apple from $137 to $84.
If the Volatility Index (VIX) goes over $50, I’ll start sending out lists of very low risk, high return two-year options LEAPS like I did last time.
The Fed says no interest rate hike until 2023 and promises to heat up the economy even more than previously. The long-term average 2% inflation target I reaffirmed. Jay sees a net shrinkage of the US GDP this year ay 3.7%. Since governor Jay Powell promised to run the economy hot weeks ago, ten-year US treasury bonds have only eked out a paltry rise to 72 basis points.
The market isn’t buying it. It’s tough to beat ever hyper-accelerating technology that crushes prices. Still, I’ll keep selling short bond rallies because it’s just a matter of time before the government crushes the market with massive over-issuance. Sell every rally in the (TLT). The Fed put lives! Buy stocks on dips.
Election chaos is starting to price in, with the US dollar (UUP) getting an undeserved bid in a flight to safety trade and stock down 1,000 points from the week’s high. All sorts of Armageddon scenarios are making the rounds now and traders are pulling out of the market to protect hard-earned profits. For details watch the final season of House of Cards, where martial law is declared in Ohio to reverse an election outcome. No kidding!
Citigroup announced a surprise $900 million loss. I can’t wait for the excuse for this surprise, out-of-the-blue “operational error.' It’s most likely an expensive hack. It’s the kind of black swan that can hit you any time if you are a short-term trader. Long term investors should be buying the dip in (C).
China’s Retail Sales rise for the first time in 2020, up 0.5% in August. First into the pandemic, first out. Keeping Corona deaths to 4,000 was also a big help. It’s proof that economies CAN recover post-COVID-19. Buy China on dips (BABA), (BIDU). Stocks there will enjoy a huge post-election rally once the trade war winds down.
US Consumer Sentiment hits six-month high, up from a 75 estimate to 78.9. The University of Michigan report is proof that those who have money are spending it. Another green shoot. Didn’t help stocks today though.
Oil collapsed 15% on the dimming outlook for the global economy. Not even massive well shutdowns caused by this week’s hurricane could boost prices. Avoid all energy plays like the plague.
Morgan Stanley says the trading boom won’t last forever, says my former employer coming off of a record quarter. Too much of a good thing won’t last forever. Make hay while the sun shines.
The value rotation is on, with large scale selling of technology stocks and the chasing of banks and other recovery plays. It’s been a long time coming and could well persist until the end of the year. The option expiration at the close on Friday was exacerbating all moves, which is why I dumped my last two tech positions days prior. It’s too early to buy tech again on dips. Wait for a pre-election meltdown.
Copper hit a new four-year high as traders bet on an accelerating recovery in the global economy. My favorite, Freeport McMoRan, the world’s largest copper producer and a long time Mad Hedge subscriber is soaring, up 257% from the market lows. China, which is done with the Coronavirus and whose economy is recovering rapidly, has returned as a major buyer of the red metal. Keep buying (FCX) on dips.
When we come out the other side of this, we will be perfectly poised to launch into my new American Golden Age, or the next Roaring Twenties. With interest rates still at zero, oil cheap, there will be no reason not to. The Dow Average will rise by 400% or more in the coming decade. The American coming out the other side of the pandemic will be far more efficient and profitable than the old.
My Global Trading Dispatch clocked its third blockbuster week in a row. I cashed in on my winnings with longs in (JPM), (TLT), (V), (GLD), (AAPL), and (AMZN), rang the cash register with shorts in (TLT) and (SPY), and booked a small loss in a long in (C). This took my cash position from 0% to 80% and I am looking to go to 100% in the coming week. The risk/reward in the market now is terrible.
Notice that I am shifting my longs away from tech and toward domestic recovery plays.
That takes our 2020 year-to-date back up to a blistering 35.74%, versus -2.93% for the Dow Average. September stands at a nosebleed 9.19%. That takes my eleven-year average annualized performance back to 36.43%. My 11-year total return is back for another new all-time high at 392.12%. My trailing one-year return popped back up to 54.87%.
The coming week is a big one for housing data. The only numbers that really count for the market are the number of US Coronavirus cases and deaths, which you can find here.
On Monday, September 21 at 8:30 AM EST, the Chicago Fed National Activity Index is out.
On Tuesday, September 22 at 10:00 AM EST, Existing Home Sales for July are released.
On Wednesday, September 23 at 9:00 AM EST, the US Home Price Index for July is printed. At 10:30 AM EST, the EIA Cushing Crude Oil Stocks are out.
change.
On Thursday, September 24 at 8:30 AM EST, the Weekly Jobless Claims are announced. At 10:00 AM the all-important Existing Home Sales for July are published.
On Friday, September 25, at 8:30 AM EST, US Durable Goods Sales for August are disclosed. At 2:00 PM The Bakers Hughes Rig Count is released.
As for me, I’ll climb up on the roof this weekend and clean the ash from my 59 solar panels. The fallout from the nearby raging forest fires has been so extreme that it has cut my solar output by 25%.
It’s not just me. Over a million homes in California have the same problem, putting a serious dent in the state’s electricity production.
Stay healthy.
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
Global Market Comments
September 14, 2020
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or THE 200-DAYS ARE IN PLAY),
($INDU), (SPX), (SPY), (AAPL), (AMZN),
(JPM), (C), (BAC), (GLD), (TLT), (TSLA)
Six months into the quarantine, I feel like I’ve been under house arrest with no visiting privileges. And if I go outside for even a few minutes, I have to inhale the equivalent of a pack of cigarettes as I am surrounded by three monster fires.
All I can say is that I’m getting a heck of a lot of work done.
We are in the middle of a 20-year move in the Dow Average from 6,500 to 120,000. We have just completed a fourfold move off the 2009 bottom. All that remains is to complete a second fourfold gain by 2030.
The move is being driven by hyper-accelerating technology on all fronts. The first half of this move was wrought with constant fear and disbelief. The second half will be viewed as a new “Golden Age” and a second “Roaring Twenties.” The euphoria of July and August were just a foretaste.
And here is the dilemma for all investors.
The Dow has just pulled back 6.1% from the all-time high of 29,300 to 27,500. Should you be buying here, keeping the eventual 120,000 target in mind? Or should you hold back and wait for 26,000, 25,000, or 24,000?
The risk is that if you lean out too far to grab the brass ring, you’ll fall off your horse. By getting too smart attempting to buy the bottom, you might miss the next 93,000 points.
And now, I’ll make your choice more complicated.
The president has recently whittled away at his deficit in the polls, however slightly, typical of the run-up to the November elections. That increases the uncertainty of the election outcome and increases market volatility (VIX). Ironically, the better Trump does, the lower stocks will fall. So, if you do hang out for the lower numbers you might actually get them, and then more.
That puts the 200-day moving averages in play, not only for the major indexes but for single stocks as well. That could take Apple (AAPL) from a high of $137 to $80, a Tesla down from a meteoric $500 to $300.
Hey, if this were easy, your cleaning lady would be doing this for a tiny fraction of the pay.
Did I just tell you the market may go up, down, or sideways? I sound like a broker.
The 200-day moving averages are definitely in play. The 200-day moving average for the Dow Average is 26,298, down an even 10% from the high for the year. The technology-heavy S&P 500 could fall as much as 14% to its 200-day at 3,097.
Don’t bet against the Fed as Tuesday’s 700-point rally in the Dow Average sharply reminded traders. Don’t bet against the global scientific community either. That’s why I am fully invested and within spitting distance of a new all-time high. After a pre-election low, the market will soar to new highs. Even if Trump loses the election, quantitative easing and fiscal stimulus will continue as far as the eye can see.
The elephant unwinds. Softbank dumped $718 million worth of technology call options deleveraging in a hurry. (NFLX), (FB), and (ADBE) were the targets according to market makers. They still own $1.66 billion worth of long positions in call options. Softbank’s position has grown so large that even my cleaning lady and gardener know about them.
The Tesla bubble popped, down a record 22% in one day after traders learned it would NOT be added to the S&P 500. Tesla approached my medium-term downside target of down 40%, or $300 a share. It seems too much of its earnings were coming from non-recurring EV subsidies from the Detroit carmakers. With a peak market cap for an eye-popping $450 billion, it’s probably the largest company ever turned down from the Index.
Google ditched Irish office space, putting on ice a plan to rent additional office space for up to 2,000 people in Dublin. The retreat from global office space continues. The company was close to taking 202,000 sq ft (18,766sq m) of space at the Sorting Office building before the virus hit.
AstraZeneca halted their vaccine trial after a patient fell ill. It’s not clear if the vaccine killed off the phase 3 trial volunteer, a preexisting condition felled them, or an unrelated illness hit. The company was developing the “Oxford” vaccine, which had been the best hope for developing Covid-19 immunity. It definitely creates a pause for the headline rush to develop a vaccine. Notice the tests are being held in South Africa where patients have little legal recourse. Keep buying (AZN) on dips.
“Skinny” failed, tanking the Dow Average by 450 points. A Republican Senate failed to provide even $500 billion to support a COVID-19-ravaged economy. There will be no more stimulus until a new administration takes office. Until then, unemployment will remain in the high single digits, tens of thousands of small businesses will fail, and home foreclosures will explode. The stock market cares about none of this, as it is dominated by large, heavily subsidized companies.
Nikola crashed, down 33%, in response to a damning report from a noted short-seller. They don’t have a truck, they lack a claimed hydrogen fuel source, and the founder is milking the company for every penny he can. It’s all hype, thanks to endless quantitative easing. None of the Tesla wannabees are going anywhere. General Motors (GM), which just bought 11% of the company, has egg on its face. With a market cap of $20 billion, Nikola is this year’s Enron. Sell short (NKLA) on rallies.
US inflation jumped, with the Consumer Price Index up 1.3% YOY in August, compared to only 1% in July. Soaring used car prices accounted for the bulk of the gain. More proof that the economy lives. Is this the beginning of the end or the end of the beginning?
Goldman Sachs moved global stocks to “overweight”. They’re preparing for the post-pandemic world. Cyclical “recovery” stocks like banks will take the lead. It fits in nicely with my view of a monster post-election rally and a Dow 120,000 by 2030.
When we come out the other side of this, we will be perfectly poised to launch into my new American Golden Age, or the next Roaring Twenties. With interest rates still at zero, oil cheap, there will be no reason not to. The Dow Average will rise by 400% or more in the coming decade. The American coming out the other side of the pandemic will be far more efficient and profitable than the old.
My Global Trading Dispatch clocked its second blockbuster week in a row, thanks to aggressively loading up on stocks at the previous week’s bottom (JPM), (C), (AMZN). My long in gold (GLD) looked shinier than ever. I bet the ranch again on a massive short in the US Treasury bond market (TLT) which paid off big time. My short position in the (SPY) is looking sweet.
My only hickey was an ill-fated long in Apple (AAPL), which I stopped out of at close to cost. Notice that I am shifting my longs away from tech and toward domestic recovery plays.
You only need 50 years of practice to know when to bet the ranch.
That takes our 2020 year-to-date back up to a blistering 35.51%, versus -2.93% for the Dow Average. September stands at a robust 8.96%. That takes my 11-year average annualized performance back to 36.41%. My 11-year total return has reached to another new all-time high at 391.42%. My trailing one year return popped back up to 58.13%.
It will be a dull week on the data front, with only the Federal Reserve Open Market Committee Meeting drawing any attention.
The only numbers that really count for the market are the number of US Coronavirus cases and deaths, which you can find here.
On Monday, September 14 at 11:00 AM US Inflation Expectations are released.
On Tuesday, September 15 at 8:30 AM EST, the New York Empire State Manufacturing Index for September is published. A two-day meeting at the Federal Reserve begins.
On Wednesday, September 16, at 8:30 AM EST, September Retails Sales are printed. At 10:30 AM EST, the EIA Cushing Crude Oil Stocks are out. At 2:00 the Fed announces its interest rate decision, which will probably bring no change.
On Thursday, September 17 at 8:30 AM EST, the Weekly Jobless Claims are announced. Housing Starts for August are also out.
On Friday, September 18, at 8:30 AM EST, the University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment is announced. At 2:00 PM The Bakers Hughes Rig Count is released.
As for me, the Boy Scout camporee I was expected to judge and supervise this weekend was cancelled, not because of Covid-19, but smoke. This will certainly go down in history as the year from hell.
Stay healthy.
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
Global Market Comments
September 4, 2020
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
Below please find subscribers’ Q&A for the September 2 Mad Hedge Fund Trader Global Strategy Webinar broadcast from Silicon Valley, CA with my guest and co-host Bill Davis of the Mad Day Trader. Keep those questions coming!
Q: Tesla (TSLA) is down 25% today from the Monday high. What are your thoughts?
A: Yes, I've been recommending to people all last week that they dump their big leverage positions, like their one- and two-year LEAPS in Tesla and quite a few people got out at the absolute highs near $2,500 just before the new stock issue was announced. People who bought the Tesla convertible bonds ten years ago got an incredible tenfold return, plus interest!
Q: Are we at-the-money at the bear put spread in (SPY)?
A: Yes, and if we go any higher, you are going to get a stop loss in your inbox because I have good performance this year to protect. I do this automatically without thinking about it. In this kind of crazy market, you cannot run shorts indefinitely. Hope is not a strategy. And it’s easy to stop out of a loser when 90% of the time you know the next one is going to be a winner.
Q: Doesn’t gold (GLD) normally go up in falling stock markets?
A: Yes, in a normal market that’s what it does. The problem is that all asset classes have produced identical charts in the last 2.5 years, and when they all go up in unison, they all go down in unison. This time around, gold will sell off with the stock market and gold miners (GDX) will go down three times as fast. Remember gold miners are stocks first and gold plays second, so when a big stock dive hits, will see big dives in gold miners as well, as we saw in February and March.
Q: Why is JP Morgan (JPM) a good buy?
A: JP Morgan is the quality play in the banks. And once inflation starts to kick in and interest rates rise, and you get a positive yield curve and a strengthening economy—that is fantastic news for banks. They are also one of the few underperforming sectors left in the market, so in any stock market selloff banks will rise. And that’s JP Morgan (JPM), Bank of America (BAC), Citigroup (C) that will lead the charge. Avoid Wells Fargo (WFC). It’s still broken.
Q: I see iPath Series B S&P 500 VIX Short Term Futures ETN (VXX) starting to move up. Should we buy it?
A: Only on dips and only if you expect a dramatic selloff in the stock market very soon, which I do. The (VXX) trade is very high risk. The contango is huge. I tried making money on it a couple of times this year and failed both times; this really is for professional intraday traders in Chicago with an inside look at customer order flows. Retail traders rarely make money on the (VXX) trade—usually, they get killed.
Q: Will gold hold up as interest rates rise?
A: No, it won’t. Rising interest rates are death for gold and other precious metals. Your gold theory is that interest rates stay lower for longer, which the Fed has essentially already promised us.
Q: What do you think of the United States Treasury Bond Fund (TLT)?
A: I’m looking to sell shorts in big size as I did in the spring and I’m looking for five-point rallies to sell into. I missed the last one last week because it just rolled over so fast on an opening gap down that you couldn’t get any trade alerts out, and that’s happening more and more. So, if we get going up to $166-$167, that will be a decent short and then you want to be doing something like the $175-$178 vertical bear put spread in October. I don’t think bonds are going to go to 0% interest rates, I think the real range is 50-95 basis points in a 10-year treasury yield. That is your trading range.
Q: Do you think big oil (USO) will transform into a low carbon energy industry if Biden wins?
A: I’ve been telling big oil that that’s what they’re going to have to do for 20 years. They all read Mad Hedge Fund Trader. And, they always laugh, saying oil will be dominant at least until 2050. Since then, they have become the worst-performing sector of the S&P 500 on a 20-year view, and my thought is that eventually, big oil takes over and buys the entire alternative energy industry, and slowly pulls out of oil. They have the engineering talent to pull it off and they have the cash to make the acquisitions. They will have to reinvent themselves or go out of business, just like everybody else.
Q: What could trigger the stock market pullback you mention in your slides? Because the bullish Fed quantitative easing trade is hard to stop.
A: It’s like the 2000 top, there was no one thing or even a couple things, that could trigger the top. It’s just the sheer weight of prices and exhaustion of new buyers, and that is impossible to see in advance, so all you can do is watch your charts. One down out of the blue the Dow Average ($INDU) will suddenly drop 1,000 points for no reason.
Q: When you say Europe is recovering, which data indicates this?
A: Well, when you look at Q2 GDP growth in Europe, they were only down 10% while the US was down 26%. That is purely a result of Europe having a much more aggressive COVID-19 response than the United States. There is no mask debate in Europe, it’s like 100% compliance. Here you have blue states wearing masks and red states not. The result of that, of course, is that the death rate in the red states is about five times higher than it is in blue states, on a per capita basis. That is why the US has the highest infection rate in the world, the highest death rate, and is why we lost an extra 16% of GDP growth in Q2.
Q: Will you trade a short Tesla again?
A: No, I’ve been hit twice on Tesla shorts in the last six months and we are now in La La land—it’s essentially untradable. I got a lot of people out of Tesla earlier this week, and then they announced their share new $5 billion issue, which they should have done a while ago
Q: Is there any way to play the home mortgage refi boom in the stock market with the 30-year mortgages at a record low 2.88%?
A: You buy the banks. If you call your bank and ask for a refi quote, it might be a week before they get back to you, they are so busy. Banks are also getting enormous subsidies from all these various lending and stimulus type programs, so money is raining down on them right now. Banks are now the cheapest sector in the market, selling at 6x earnings. It is probably the single greatest sector in the stock market right now to buy.
Q: I’ve been holding the ProShares UltraShort 20 year Plus Treasury fund (TBT) and it is moving up and down in the short-range. Should I sell?
A: No, I think we have more room to go on the (TBT), I think we could get to $18, which is about a 0.90% yield in the US Treasury bond market.
Q: Do you have a target on Tesla?
A: Well, my downside target would be its old breakout level. So, divide by five and you get $300. That equates to $1450 in the pre-split price. So, we could have a real monster selloff, like 40%, once this market loses momentum. It’s safe to say don’t buy Tesla up here.
Q: Is the ProShares UltraShort S&P 500 ETF (SDS) offering a good entry point here?
A: It is as soon as we rollover. In these momentum-driven markets, it’s best to wait for proof of a top before you start getting fancy with short plays. You can see how I got hammered several times in the last month by being too early on my shorts; and fortunately, I was able to hedge out most of those losses. You might not be able to do so.
Q: Are you planning on keeping your Fortinet spread?
A: Yes, to expiration, which is only 11 days off, unless we get an out-of-the-blue meltdown.
Q: Do you like Ali Baba (BABA)?
A: Yes; that is essentially a play on a Biden win in the election. If he wins, our war with China will cease and all of the China plays will go ballistic as we return to international trade, which has been powering our economy for the last 70 years.
Q: What about cruise lines like Carnival (CCL)?
A: I know they’re cheap. They’re selling out their 2021 summer cruises with customers betting that there will be a corona vaccine by then, or simply not caring whether there is a pandemic or not. The dedicated cruisers are desperate to cruise. That’s one reason why these stocks are holding up, but I don’t want to touch them. I think the recovery will take much longer than people realize.
Q: When do you buy gold?
A: Wait for a bigger dip.
Q: Should I be holding gold for the long term?
A: Yes; if you don’t want to trade it, just sitting on your position is fine. I think gold eventually goes to 3,000 after hitting an initial target of 2,200.
Good Luck and Stay Healthy
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
Global Market Comments
August 31, 2020
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
Listening to 27 presentations during the Mad Hedge Traders & Investors Summit last week (click here for the replays), I couldn’t help but notice something very interesting, if not alarming.
All the charts are starting to look the same.
You would expect all the technology charts to be similar on top of the historic run we have seen since the March 23 bottom.
But I wasn’t only looking at technology stocks.
Analyzing the long-term charts for stock indexes, bonds, real estate, and gold, it is clear that they ALL entered identical parabolic moves that began during the notorious Christmas bottom in December 2018.
With the exception of the pandemic induced February-March hiccup this year, it has been straight up ever since.
The best strategy of all for the past three years has been to simply close your eyes and buy EVERYTHING and then forget about it. It really has been the perfect idiot’s market.
This isn’t supposed to happen.
Stocks, bonds, real estate, and gold are NEVER supposed to be going all in the same direction at the same time. The only time you see this is when the government is flooding the financial system with liquidity to artificially boost asset prices.
This latest liquidity wave started when the 2017 Trump tax bill initiated enormous government budget deficits from the get-go. It accelerated when the Federal Reserve backed off of quantitative tightening in mid-2019.
Then it really blew up to tidal wave proportions with the Fed liquidity explosion simultaneously on all fronts with the onset of the US Corona epidemic.
Asset classes have been going ballistic ever since.
From the March 23 bottom, NASDAQ is up an astounding 78%, bonds have gained an unprecedented 30%, the US Homebuilders ETF has rocketed a stagging 187%, and gold has picked up an eye-popping 26%.
That’s all well and good if you happen to be long these asset classes, as we have been advising clients for the past several months.
So, what happens next? After all, we are in the “What happens next?” business.
What if one of the charts starts to go the other way? Is gold a good hedge? Do bonds offer downside protection? Is there safety in home ownership?
Nope.
They all go down in unison, probably much faster than they went up. If fact, such a reversal may be only weeks or months away. If you live by the sword you die, by the sword.
Assets are now so dependent on excess liquidity that any threat to that liquidity could trigger a selloff of Biblical proportion, possibly worse than what we saw during February-March this year.
And you wouldn’t need simply a sudden tightening of liquidity to prompt such a debacle. A mere slowdown in the addition of new liquidity could bring Armageddon. The Fed in effect has turned all financial markets into a giant Ponzi scheme. The second they quit buying, they all crash.
The Fed and the US Treasury have already started executing this retreat surreptitiously through the back door. Some Treasury emergency loan programs were announced with a lot of fanfare but have yet to be drawn down in size because the standards are too tight.
The Fed has similarly shouted from the rooftops that they would be buying equity convertible bonds and ETFs but have yet to do so in any meaningful way.
If there is one saving grace for this bull market, it's that it may get a second lease on life with a new Biden administration. Now that the precedent for unlimited deficit spending has been set by Trump, it isn’t going to slow down anytime soon under the Democrats. It will simply get redirected.
One of the amazing things about the current administration is that they never launched a massive CCC type jobs program to employ millions in public works as Roosevelt did during the 1930s to end that Great Depression. Instead, they simply mailed out checks. Even my kids got checks, as they file their own tax returns to get a lower tax rate than mine.
I think you can count on Biden to move ahead with these kinds of bold, expansionist ideas to the benefit of the nation. We are still enjoying enormously the last round of such spending 85 years ago, the High Sierra trails I hiked weeks ago among them.
Stocks soared on plasma hopes. Trumps cited “political” reasons at the FDA for the extended delay. Scientists were holding back approval for fears plasma was either completely useless and would waste huge amounts of money or would kill off thousands of people. At best, plasma marginally reduces death rates for those already infected, but you’re that one it’s worth it. Anything that kills Covid-19 is great for stocks.
Existing Home Sales were up the most in history in July, gaining a staggering 24.7% to 5.86 million units. Bidding wars are rampant in the suburbs. Investors are back in too, accounting for 15% of sales. Inventories drop 21% to only 3.1 months. These are bubble type statistics. Can’t hold those Millennials back! This will be a lead sector in the market for the next decade. Buy homebuilders on dips.
Goldman said a quarter of job losses are permanent, as the economy is evolving so fast. Many of these jobs were on their way out before the pandemic. That could be good news for investors as those cost cuts are permanent, boosting profits. At least, that’s what stocks believe.
Hedge funds still love big tech, even though they are now at the 99th percentile of historic valuation ranges. Online financials, banks, and credit card processors also rank highly. Live by the sword, die by the sword.
Massive Zoom crash brought the world to a halt for two hours on Monday morning. It looked like a Chinese hack attack intended to delay online school opening of the new academic year. Unfortunately, it also delayed the start of the Mad Hedge Traders & Investors Summit.
The Dow Rebalancing is huge. Dow Jones rarely rejiggers the makeup of its famed but outdated index. But changing three names at once is unprecedented. One, Amgen (AMGN) I helped found, working on the team the discovered its original DNA sequencing. All of the founding investors departed yonks ago. The departure of Exxon (XOM) is a recognition that oil is a dying business and that the future is with Salesforce (CRM), whose management I know well. One big victim is Apple (AAPL) whose weighting in the index has shrunk.
The end of the airline industry has begun, with American (AAL) announcing 19,000 layoffs in October. That will bring to 40,000 job losses since the pandemic began. The industry will eventually shrink to a handful of government subsidized firms and some niche players. Avoid like a plat in a spiral dive.
30 million to be evicted in the coming months, as an additional stimulus bill stalls in Congress. It will no doubt be rolling evictions that stretch out over the next year. This will be the true cost of failing to deal with the virus.
When we come out the other side of this, we will be perfectly poised to launch into my new American Golden Age, or the next Roaring Twenties. With interest rates still at zero, oil cheap, there will be no reason not to. The Dow Average will rise by 400% or more in the coming decade. The American coming out the other side of the pandemic will be far more efficient and profitable than the old.
My Global Trading Dispatch suffered one of the worst weeks of the year, giving up most of its substantial August performance. If you trade for 50 years, occasionally you get a week like this. The good news is that it only takes us back to unchanged on the month.
Longs in banks (JPM) and gold (GLD) and shorts in Facebook (FB) and bonds (TLT) held up fine, but we paid through the nose with shorts in Apple (AAPL), Amazon (AMZN), and Tesla (TSLA).
That takes our 2020 year to date down to 26.56%, versus +0.05% for the Dow Average. That takes my eleven-year average annualized performance back to 35.58%. My 11-year total return retreated to 382.47%.
It is jobs week so we can expect a lot of fireworks on the data front. The only numbers that really count for the market are the number of US Coronavirus cases and deaths, which you can find here.
On Monday, August 31 at 10:30 AM EST, the Dallas Fed Manufacturing Index for August is released.
On Tuesday, September 1 at 9:45 AM EST, the Markit Manufacturing Index for August is published.
On Wednesday, September 2, at 8:13 AM EST, the August ADP Employment Change Index for private-sector job is printed.
At 10:30 AM EST, the EIA Cushing Crude Oil Stocks are out.
On Thursday, September 3 at 8:30 AM EST, the Weekly Jobless Claims are announced.
On Friday, September 4, at 8:30 AM EST, The August Nonfarm Payroll Report is released.
At 2:00 PM The Bakers Hughes Rig Count is released.
As for me, I’ll be catching up on my sleep after hosting 27 speakers from seven countries and entertaining a global audience of 10,000 from over 50 countries and all 50 US states. We managed to max out Zoom’s global conferencing software, and I am now one of their largest clients.
It was great catching up with old trading buddies from decades past to connect with the up-and-coming stars.
Questions were coming in hot and heavy from South Africa, Singapore, all five Australian states, the Persian Gulf States, Saudi Arabia, East Africa, and every corner of the United Kingdom. And I was handling it all from my simple $2,000 Apple laptop from nearby Silicon Valley.
It is so amazing to have lived to see the future!
To selectively listen to videos of any of the many talented speakers, you can click here.
See you there.
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
Global Market Comments
August 24, 2020
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or ON FIRE EVERYWHERE)
(INDU), (JPM), (GLD), (GDX), (GOLD), (FB),
(TLT), (AAPL), (AMZN), (TSLA)
I am no longer able to breathe. The pandemic demands that I wear a mask. The wildfires prevent me from going outside, as the air is so heavy from smoke.
So, I decided to flee the San Francisco Bay Area south to Big Sir for a couple of days to catch up on my writing. On the way, I passed dozens of sadly abandoned schools as the pandemic has moved all of California to online distance learning.
By the second day, I was surrounded by fire. At an afternoon wine tasting, I tipped the waiter to hurry up as my glass was filling with ash and fire trucks were passing every five minutes.
By the next morning, I was surrounded by out-of-control wildfires and there was only one open road out of town. What really lit a fire under my behind was a text message from Tesla stating they would shut down charging at the Monterey station after 3:00 PM to help head off rolling blackouts.
The Golden State was not the only place on fire last week. Stocks were en flagrante as well, led by Tesla, Amazon, and Apple. The S&P 500 hit a new high for the year. It is the most concentrated market in history, with only 12 technology names accounting for 85% of the 2020 gains. Yet, 57% of shares are showing losses for 2020.
With a 33X multiple, Apple is pricing in only a 3% annual gain in the coming years. The price of Tesla at $2,100 a share is assuming the 2040 earnings have already arrived. We are firmly in bubble territory.
Having been in many bubbles over my half-century of trading, I can tell you they all have one thing in common. They run a lot longer than anyone imagines possible. In the meantime, traders, analysts, and investors are tearing their hair out wondering why they are so underweight stocks.
So trade if you must. But understand that the risk/reward here is terrible. You are better off here buying gold and banks and selling short US Treasury bonds and the US dollar.
Much has been made about share splits, which were the primary drivers of markets last week. However, the history of these things as that share prices fade shortly after the splits are completed. That was last Friday for Tesla and this Friday for Apple.
Apple may run a little longer, as it typically sees shares peak right after new generational cell phone launches, due in October.
Weekly Jobless Claims topped 1.1 million, ending a four-month downtrend. New Jersey, New York, and Texas were worst hit. Without further stimulus, they should continue to rise from here. These are Great Depression levels, and now massive layoffs from state and local governments are starting to kick in.
Apple topped $2 trillion in market cap. It is hard for those of us to believe it who bought the stock under $1 in 1998. It looks like more gains are to come. The coming 5G iPhone is going to market the peak in the shares this year, as new generational phones always do.
Uber and Lyft received a stay of execution, for 60 days, over whether they must treat drivers as full-time employees with benefits. Looks like I won’t have to take BART until October.
The U.S. Economy is falling back into the abyss. Last week’s total for new claims was well above the pre-pandemic Great Recession high of 665,000. Over 57.4 million Americans have now filed new unemployment insurance claims.
The airline industry is about to implode. With six months of operating at 20% capacity, how can they not? At least 75,000 in layoffs are imminent. Avoid the sector at all costs. You won’t recognize what comes out the other end. The next administration won’t be so generous to shareholders.
US Corona cases are slowing, even though we’ve just seen five consecutive days above 1,000 deaths. It’s the temporary ebb in the epidemic I was expecting that would rally the “recovery” stocks and sink the bond market. It’s sad, but we are celebrating suffering another 9/11 every three days instead of two.
Warren Buffet hates gold (GLD), but loves gold miners (GDX), loading the boat on Barrick Gold (GOLD) in Q2. It’s a rare move for the Oracle of Omaha into precious metals and the only way the cash flow king can collect a dividend in the sector. Warren seems to share my own long-term view on rising inflation caused by massive government bond issuance and spending.
U.S. Housing Starts mushroomed, surging 22.6% on the month to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.496 million. Building permits also came in ahead of expectations, up 18.8% to 1.495m. Migration to the suburbs may explain some of the increase in activity but record-low mortgage rates and tight existing home inventory are the primary drivers. Soaring lumber prices mean growth in single-family starts will slow over the remainder of the year, not to mention the extra 0.50% fee on refinances.
When we come out the other side of this, we will be perfectly poised to launch into my new American Golden Age, or the next Roaring Twenties. With interest rates still at zero, oil cheap, there will be no reason not to. The Dow Average will rise by 400% or more in the coming decade. The American coming out the other side of the pandemic will be far more efficient and profitable than the old.
My Global Trading Dispatch suffered one of the worst weeks of the year, giving up most of its substantial August performance. If you trade for 50 years, occasionally you get a week like this. The good news is that it only takes us back to unchanged on the month.
Longs in banks (JPM) and gold (GLD) and shorts in Facebook (FB) and bonds (TLT) held up fine, but we paid through the nose with shorts in Apple (AAPL), Amazon (AMZN), and Tesla (TSLA).
That takes our 2020 year to date down to 28.88%, versus -2.00% for the Dow Average. That takes my eleven-year average annualized performance back to 36.06%. My 11-year total return retreated to 384.79%.
It's a relatively low rent week on the data front. The only numbers that count for the market are the number of US Corona virus cases and deaths, which you can find here.
On Monday, August 24 at 8:30 AM EST, the Chicago Fed National Activity Index is out.
On Tuesday, August 25 at 9:00 AM EST, the S&P Case Shiller National Home Price Index for June is released.
On Wednesday, August 26, at 8:30 AM EST, Durable Goods for July are printed. At 10:30 AM EST, the EIA Cushing Crude Oil Stocks are out.
On Thursday, August 27 at 8:30 AM EST, the Weekly Jobless Claims are announced. We also get the second estimate for Q2 GDP.
On Friday, August 28, at 8:30 AM EST, US Personal Spending is announced. At 2:00 PM, the Bakers Hughes Rig Count is released.
As for me, I am reading up on bios and generally preparing for my upcoming Mad Hedge Traders & Investors Summit, which I will be hosting for three days and starts on Monday morning at 9:00 AM EST. The attend please click here.
See you there.
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
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