Global Market Comments
October 27, 2023
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(SIX REASONS WHY GOLD WILL CONTINUE RISING),
($GOLD), (GLD), (IAU), (NEM), (GOLD), ($TNX),
(A CONVERSATION WITH THE BOOTS ON THE GROUND)
Global Market Comments
October 27, 2023
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(SIX REASONS WHY GOLD WILL CONTINUE RISING),
($GOLD), (GLD), (IAU), (NEM), (GOLD), ($TNX),
(A CONVERSATION WITH THE BOOTS ON THE GROUND)
If you are a current gold investor, you have to love the latest monthly statistics just published by the World Gold Council.
After years of a death by a thousand cuts inflicted by endless redemptions of gold ETFs and ETNs, recent reports showed a sudden influx into the barbarous relic.
North American ETFs led the charge, with some 28.8 metric tonnes valued at $1.3 billion pouring into the funds.
The SPDR Gold Shares (GLD) took in the most, 22.4 tonnes worth $1.03 billion, followed by the IShares Gold Trust (IAU), which added 4.6 tonnes worth $266 million.
Europe followed with 6.4 tonnes worth $321 million.
Asia was a net seller of 2 tonnes worth $80 million as investors pulled money out of precious metals and placed it in Bitcoin, Ethereum, and other cryptocurrencies.
Global gold-based ETFs collectively hold 2,295 metric tonnes of gold valued at and have picked up 143.5 tonnes so far this year.
For those used to using American measurements of precious metals, there are 32,150.7 troy ounces in one metric tonne.
The figures augur well for continued cash inflows and higher gold prices.
My experience is that sudden directional shifts of fund flows like this are NOT one-offs. They continue for months, if not years.
Of course, the trigger for these large inflows was the yellow metal’s decisive breakout on big volume from a two-year trading range.
Not only did now longs pile into the market, there was frantic short covering as well.
Too many options traders had gotten comfortable selling short gold call options just above the $1,800 level.
Once key upside resistance was shattered, gold tacked on another $50 very quickly. Bearish traders were smartly spanked.
Gold plays that did well, including Van Eck Vectors Gold Miners ETF (GDX), Barrick Gold (ABX), Newmont Mining (NEM), and Global X Silver Miners ETF (SIL), turned profitable.
There are six reasons why gold has gone off to the races.
1) Ten-year Treasury bond yields are peaking out at 5.0%. The opportunity cost of holding gold is about to drop sharply.
2) Falling interest rates guarantee a weaker US dollar, another big pro gold development.
3) The last of the pandemic stimulus is fading fast.
4) The new conflict in the Middle East has poured the fat on the fire.
5) General concerns about the increasing instability in Washington have driven nervous investors into EVERY flight to safety play.
6) The collapse of trust in crypto has propelled a lot of assets back into gold.
Inflation has historically been the great driver of all hard asset prices.
After such a meteoric move, I would expect gold to consolidate here around this level for a while to digest the recent action. It may drift sideways, or fall slightly.
That’s when I’ll pick up my next basket of longs.
We’ve just seen our last interest rate rise in the economic cycle. Yes, I know that our central bank took no action at their last meeting in September. The market has just done its work for it.
And the markets are no shrinking violet when it comes to taking bold action. The 50 basis points it took bond yields up over the last two weeks is far more than even the most aggressive, economy-wrecking, stock market-destroying Fed was even considering.
And that doesn’t even include the rate hikes no one can see, the deflationary effects of quantitative tightening, or QT. That is the $1 trillion a year the Fed is sucking out of the economy with its massive bond sales.
It really is a miracle that the US economy is growing as fast as it is. After a warm 2.4% growth rate in Q2, Q3 looks to come in at a blistering 4%-5%. That is definitely NOT what recessions are made of.
Where is all this growth coming from?
Some of the credit goes to the pandemic spending, the free handouts we call got to avoid starvation while Covid ravaged the country. You probably don’t know this, but nothing happens fast in Washington. Government spending is an extremely slow and tedious affair.
By the time that contracts are announced, bids awarded, permits obtained, men hired, and the money spent, years have passed. That means money approved by Congress way back in 2020 is just hitting the economy now.
But that is not the only reason. There is also the long-term structural push that is a constant tailwind for investors:
Hyper-accelerating technology.
Yes, I know, there goes John Thomas spouting off about technology again. But it is a really big deal.
I have noticed that the farther away you get from Silicon Valley, the more clueless money managers are about technology. You can pick up more stock tips waiting in line at a Starbucks in Palo Alto than you can read a year’s worth of research on Wall Street.
What this means is that most large money managers, who are based on the east coast are constantly chasing the train that is leaving the station when it comes to tech.
On the west coast, managers not only know about the new tech, but the tech that comes after that and another tech that comes after that, if they are not already insiders in the current hot deal. This is how artificial intelligence stole a march on almost everyone, until a year ago, unless you were on the west coast already working in the industry. Mad Hedge has been using AI for 11 years.
You may be asking, “What does all of this mean for my pocketbook?” a perfectly valid question. It means that there isn’t going to be a recession, just a recession scare. That technology will bail us out again, even though our old BFF, the Fed, has abandoned us completely.
Which brings me to the current level of interest rates. I have also noticed that the farther away you get from New York and Washington, the less people know about bonds. On the west coast mention the word “bond” and they stare at you cluelessly. Indeed, I spent much of this year explaining the magic of the discount 90-day T-bill, which no one had ever heard of before (What! They pay interest daily?).
In fact, most big technology companies have positive cash balances. Look no further than Apple’s $140 billion cash hoard, which is invested in, you guessed it, 90-day T-bills when it isn’t buying its own stock, and is earning a staggering $7.7 billion a year in interest.
The great commonality in the recent stock market correction is easy to see. Any company that borrows a lot of money saw its stock get slaughtered. Technology stocks held up surprisingly well. That sets up your 2024 portfolio.
Put half your money in the Magnificent Seven stocks of Apple (AAPL), Amazon (AMZN), Meta (META), Microsoft (MSFT), Tesla (TSLA), (NVIDIA), and Salesforce (CRM).
Put your other half into heavy borrowers that benefit from FALLING interest rates, including bonds (TLT), junk bonds (JNK), (HYG), Utilities (XLU), precious metals (GOLD), (WPM), copper (FCX), foreign currencies (FXA), (FXE), (FXY), emerging markets (EEM).
As for me, I never do anything by halves. I’m putting all my money into Tesla. If I want to diversify, I’ll buy NVIDIA. Diversification is only for people who don’t know what is going to happen.
I just thought you’d like to know.
So far in October, we are up +2.96%. My 2023 year-to-date performance is still at an eye-popping +63.76%. The S&P 500 (SPY) is up +12.89% so far in 2023. My trailing one-year return reached +76.46% versus +22.57% for the S&P 500.
That brings my 15-year total return to +660.95%. My average annualized return has fallen back to +48.07%, another new high, some 2.64 times the S&P 500 over the same period.
Some 44 of my 49 trades this year have been profitable.
Chaos Reigns Supreme in Washington, with the firing of the first House speaker in history. Will the next budget agreement take place on November 17, or not until we get a new Congress in January 2025? Markets are discounting the worst-case scenario, with government debt in free fall. Definitely NOT good for stocks, which are reaching for a full 10% correction, half of 2023’s gains.
September Nonfarm Payroll Report Rockets, to 336,000, and August was bumped up another 50,000. The economy remains on fire. The headline Unemployment Rate remains steady at an unbelievable 3.8%. And that’s with the UAW strike sucking workers out of the system. This is supposed to by impossible with 5.5% interest rates. Throw out you economics books for this one!
JOLTS Comes in Hot at 9.61 million job openings in August, 700,000 more than the July report. The record labor shortage continues. Will the Friday Nonfarm Payroll Report deliver the same?
ADP Rises 89,000 in September, down sharply from previous months, showing that private job growth is growing slower than expected. August was revised down. It’s part of the trifecta of jobs data for the new month. The mild recession scenario is back on the table, at least stocks think so.
Weekly Jobless Claims Rise to 207,000, still unspeakably strong for this point in the economic cycle. Continuing claims were unchanged at 1.664%.
Traders Pile on to Strong Dollar, headed for new highs, propelled by rising interest rates. There is a heck of a short setting up for next year.
Yen Soars on suspected Bank of Japan intervention in the foreign exchange markets to defend the 150 line against the US dollar. The currency is down 35% in three years and could be the BUY of the century.
Kaiser Goes on Strike with 75,000 health care workers walking out on the west coast. The issue is money. The company has a long history of labor problems. This seems to be the year of the strike.
Oil (USO)Gets Slammed on Recession Fears, down 5% on the day to $85, in a clear demand destruction move and worsening macroeconomic picture. Europe and China are already in recession. It’s the biggest one-day drop in a year. Is the top in?
Tesla Delivers 435,059 Vehicles in September, down 5% from forecast, but the stock rose anyway. The Cybertruck launch is imminent, where the company has 2 million new orders. Keep buying (TSLA) on Dips. Technology is accelerating.
EVs have Captured an Amazing 8% of the New Car Market. They have been helped by a never-ending price war and generous government subsidies. EV sales are now up a miraculous 48% YOY and are projected to account for a stunning 23% of all California sales in Q3. Tesla is the overwhelming leader with a 52% share in a rapidly growing market, distantly followed by Ford (F) at 7% and Jeep at 5%. However, a slowdown may be at hand, with EV inventories running at 97 days, double that of conventional ICE cars. This could create a rare entry point for what will be the leading industry of this decade, if not the century. Buy more Tesla (TSLA) on bigger dips, if we get them.
Apple Upgrades New iPhone 15 to deal with overheating from third-party gaming. It will shut down some of its background activity, including some of the new AI functions, which were stressing the central processor. Third-party apps were adding to the problem, such as Uber and games from (META). This is really cutting-edge technology.
Moderna (MRNA) Bags a Nobel Prize in Chemistry. Katalin Kariko and Drew Weissman’s work helped pioneer the technology that enabled Moderna and the Pfizer Inc.-BioNTech SE partnership to swiftly develop shots. I got four and they saved my life when I caught Covid. I survived but lost 20 pounds in two weeks. It was worth it.
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, October 9, there is no data of note released.
On Tuesday, October 10 at 8:30 AM EST, the Consumer Inflation Expectations is released.
On Wednesday, October 11 at 2:30 PM, the Producer Price Index is published.
On Thursday, October 12 at 8:30 AM, the Weekly Jobless Claims are announced. The Consumer Price Index is also released.
On Friday, October 13 at 1:00 PM the September University of Michigan Consumer Expectations is published. At 2:00 PM, the Baker Hughes Rig Count is printed.
As for me, one of the many benefits of being married to a British Airways senior stewardess is that you get to visit some pretty obscure parts of the world. In the 1970s, that meant going first class for free with an open bar, and occasionally time in the cockpit jump seat.
To extend our 1977 honeymoon, Kyoko agreed to an extra round trip for BA from Hong Kong to Colombo in Sri Lanka. That left me on my own for a week in the former British crown colony of Ceylon.
I rented an antiquated left-hand drive stick shift Vauxhall and drove around the island nation counterclockwise. I only drove during the day in army convoys to avoid terrorist attacks from the Tamil Tigers. The scenery included endless verdant tea fields, pristine beaches, and wild elephants and monkeys.
My eventual destination was the 1,500-year-old Sigiriya Rock Fort in the middle of the island which stood 600 feet above the surrounding jungle. I was nearly at the top when I thought I found a shortcut. I jumped over a wall and suddenly found myself up to my armpits in fresh bat shit.
That cut my visit short, and I headed for a nearby river to wash off. But the smell stayed with me for weeks.
Before Kyoko took off for Hong Kong in her Vickers Viscount, she asked me if she should bring anything back. I heard that McDonald’s had just opened a stand there, so I asked her to bring back two Big Macs.
She dutifully showed up in the hotel restaurant the following week with the telltale paper bag in hand. I gave them to the waiter and asked him to heat them up for lunch. He returned shortly with the burgers on plates surrounded by some elaborate garnish and colorful vegetables. It was a real work of art.
Suddenly, every hand in the restaurant shot up. They all wanted to order the same thing, even though the nearest stand was 2,494 miles away.
We continued our round-the-world honeymoon to a beach vacation in the Seychelles where we just missed a coup d’état, a safari in Kenya, apartheid South Africa, London, San Francisco, and finally back to Tokyo. It was the honeymoon of a lifetime.
Kyoko passed away in 2002 from breast cancer at the age of 50, well before her time.
Stay Healthy,
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
Sigiriya Rock Fort
Kyoko
Global Market Comments
September 1, 2023
Fiat Lux
Featured Trades:
(AUGUST 30 BIWEEKLY STRATEGY WEBINAR Q&A),
(AMZN), (NVDA), (AAPL), (GOOG), (TSLA), (TLT), (TSLA), (FXI), (GOLD), (WPM), (AMC), (MSFT), (CCJ)
CLICK HERE to download today's position sheet.
Below please find subscribers’ Q&A for the August 30 Mad Hedge Fund Trader Global Strategy Webinar, broadcast from Silicon Valley, CA.
Q: I have a question about NVDA. While NVIDIA is a top-of-the-line chip company, there are many companies, i.e., Amazon (AMZN), Microsoft (MSFT), and of course, China (FXI), that are looking to get into the arena and build their own chips-cutting into (NVDA) space. How soon do you think this will happen and how good will those chips be?
A: NVIDIA is ahead now because of decisions on software and platforms they made 20 years ago. As all the important employees are also shareholders with minimal cost there is no way you’re going to pry them away to another company. You can’t copy NVIDIA with a simple cut-and-paste operation as you can with most other companies and the market has figured this out. (NVDA) has a moat that will remain unassailable for years. Now they have the AI turbocharger. My short-term target is $1,000 and it probably goes much higher. I reiterate my strong “BUY” issued in 2015 at $15.
Q: Why do you think the demise of crypto is coming?
A: Not so much a demise as a long nuclear winter. The SEC has declared war on all the intermediaries, and if you don’t have intermediaries you can’t trade. That shrinks the market to hot wallets only, which only computer programmers can do. That is much smaller than the current market. The other reason is that crypto prospered when we had a cash surplus and an asset shortage. We had to invent new assets to soak up all that cash—that's what Bitcoin did, it soaked up about $2 trillion dollars. Now we have the opposite: a cash shortage thanks to high-interest rates and an asset oversupply—all of the busted stocks that emanated from crypto, all the SPACS, the ETFs, and so on, where people lost 90%-100% of their money. #3, there is still a massive fraud and theft problem with crypto running in the hundreds of billions of dollars. I’d rather just buy Apple (AAPL) or Google (GOOG) or Tesla (TSLA) with my money. Those are cheaper alternatives than existed 18 months ago.
Q: Will iShares 20+ Year Treasury Bond ETF (TLT) visit the $92.25 low or have yields peaked?
A: I hope it visits the $92 low—I’m going to be buying my pants off if we get that low, plus issuing two-year LEAPs with 100% returns. So absolutely, yes. (TLT) is bottoming here and starting to discount interest rate cuts which will begin in March or June.
Q: What do you think of sells on Tesla (TSLA)?
A: I ignore all sells on Tesla, as I have done for the last 13 years. Keep in mind that Tesla has always had one of the largest short interests in the market, and will continue to do so as many people don’t buy the hype, or the vision.
Q: Why haven’t we gotten any trade alerts on gold and silver?
A: We sent out trade alerts for the concierge customers on gold (GOLD) and silver (WPM), and if we see another good entry point we’ll send those out also to the regular Global Trading Dispatch customers.
Q: When you say dip, how much of a dip do you mean?
A: We’ve really only had a 7% dip in the S&P 500 (SPY) this summer top to bottom. Usually, you get 10%, but with $5.6 trillion in cash on the sideline and with AI and multiple other technologies accelerating, people are just not willing to wait. When you throw cold water on the market, as we have been doing all summer, you buy the heck out of it.
Q: Will China’s (FXI) real estate collapse cause a black swan for US markets? Will China go the way of Japan?
A: No, the Chinese real estate market is almost completely isolated from the rest of the global economy. Additionally, most of the Chinese debt is owned by a dozen or so government-controlled banks. So, real estate prices there can implode and have virtually no effect on anywhere else. I’m not worried about that at all. You might get a down day of a few hundred points when one of the biggest companies goes under, but no more than that, and it doesn’t affect China’s trading economy at all. On a list of things to worry about, that’s probably number 100.
Q: It’s said a lot of the recent gains in the market are from short covering—how do you determine the number of shorts out there?
A: Well, most short interest in stocks is in the public domain; all you have to do is Google the term “how many Tesla shorts,” and you’ll get a number—it’ll be like 20-25% of the outstanding shares. For some companies, like AMC Entertainment Holdings (AMC), the short interest can be 50% or more. So, it’s easy to find out; however, you want to buy the market before people start covering shorts, not after, because that buying power is then already in the market, and that would have been a couple of months ago. For any of the big hedge funds, almost none of them were shorting stocks. All of them were looking to buy on any declines; that’s what they’ve been doing all summer, and that's why the market was unable to appreciably fall.
Q: Outlook on Microsoft Corp (MSFT)?
A: Double in the next 3 years, as is the case with all of big tech.
Q; What about my iShares 20+ Year Treasury Bond ETF (TLT) 2024 LEAPS?
A: I think we will get enough of a rally in TLT by January for all of those Jan 2024 LEAPS to expire at max profit. They’re only $4 points away from max profit for the $95/$100s and $9 points away for the $100/$105s, and that is entirely doable if the Fed stops raising interest rates or even cuts them. At one point these LEAPS were up 70% from cost so that might have been a great time to take profits.
Q: Is your AI product different from the one offered by Tradesmith?
A: Yes, we have completely different trade alerts than Tradesmith has; and they are using different algorithms than we are, so, totally they’re different services. If you have the Tradesmith product, just keep watching it and see if it performs. Usually, it takes six months to decide whether a new service is worth renewing, so I would keep watching it. Also, Tradesmith has a ton of analytical tools which we don’t offer. They made a massive seven-year investment in their own AI tools, which are completely different than ours. They disclose some of theirs, but we don’t. Why give away the keys to the kingdom? We’ll just send you our trade alerts, which by the way have been 100% profitable.
Q: Whatever happened to meme stocks like AMC Entertainment Holdings (AMC)? Should I look at these?
A: Absolutely not—they’re pure gambling. You’re better off just buying a New York lottery ticket. No fundamentals; I’m amazed AMC is even still in business. I went to the movies a few weeks ago and I was the only person in the theater. I went to see the Oppenheimer movie, which I highly recommend by the way. I’m still radioactive from when I worked with his lot.
Q: Credit card debt has spiked to historic levels—will this eventually come back to haunt the US economy?
A: Not really, it really doesn’t translate to lower consumer spending or a weaker economy yet. My bet is these people get bailed out by falling interest rates again as they always are. Consumer Spending Rocketed in July, up a monster 0.8%, the second-best number of the year, in further evidence of improving economic growth. Never underestimate the ability of Americans to spend money
Q: Can we access recordings of these webinars?
A: Yes, we post them on the website in your members' section two hours after it’s recorded. Just log into madhedgefundtrader.com, go to your membership section, and it’ll list webinars as one of the services you have purchased and have access to.
Q: How will markets respond if Trump gets back in the White House?
A: Major market crash—that’s an easy one. The Trump who won in 2016 is not the same Trump as today.
Q: What will happen to the price of EVs when the world runs out of lithium?
A: The world will never run out of lithium, it’s one of the world's most abundant elements. The bottleneck is in lithium processing, and there are multiple lithium processing facilities using new technologies under construction around the country. That gets you around that bottleneck, and you also free yourself from Chinese sources of processed lithium. Elon Musk planned all this out 25 years ago when he first started Tesla. He planned for a 20 million unit/year scale-up and has locked up the lithium supplies to accommodate that level of construction, leaving the rest of the world in the dust.
Q: Would you comment on the potential of new EV car batteries to enhance travel distances?
A: Tesla has a new solid-state battery that increases battery ranges from 10 times to 20 times, but it hasn’t been able to economically produce them in large enough numbers to put them in new cars. That’s in the wings. If that happens, Tesla will be able to cut costs by $10,000 per car and shrink the battery size from 1,000 pounds to 50 pounds, which would be revolutionary and absolutely wipe out Detroit, China, and Japan. That would allow Tesla to take over the entire global car market. So, yes, when you consider all that, it makes my current forecast of $1,000 for Tesla look stupidly conservative.
Q: What’s your take on the state of the Russia/Ukraine war?
A: Ask me in three weeks, when I will be in Ukraine seeing the actual state of the war, visiting the front lines, delivering doctors and supplies to children’s hospitals, and doing assorted odd jobs that have been requested of me. You’ll get the full read on Ukraine then. For now, I can tell you that Ukraine is still winning, but 18 months in, the people are getting tired. The people in my team in Ukraine who are organizing this trip sometimes break down in tears from the sheer weight of the war on them. Of course, being bombed every day doesn’t help your sleep either. So be prepared for my report and video of the century on the Ukraine war.
Q: Stanley Druckenmiller has a big position in Cameco Corp (CCJ).
A: That’s absolutely true, and I’d be a LEAPS buyer there on any kind of pullback. Stanley is a billionaire for a reason.
Q: What happens to gold at the introduction of the US government's digital currency?
A: It probably goes up. Actually, it’ll probably have no impact, but if it’s going to do anything it’ll make gold go up because people who are frightened of digital currencies will buy gold as a safe haven. I happen to know a few of those who have millions of dollars worth of gold stashed away under their mattresses for this purpose.
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
2023 in the Naval & Military Club in London
Global Market Comments
August 25, 2023
Fiat Lux
Featured Trades:
(THE NEXT COMMODITY SUPERCYCLE HAS ALREADY STARTED),
(COPX), (GLD), (FCX), (BHP), (RIO), (SIL),
(PPLT), (PALL), (GOLD), (ECH), (EWZ), (IDX)
CLICK HERE to download today's position sheet.
When I closed out my position in Freeport McMoRan (FCX) near its max profit earlier this year, I received a hurried email from a reader if he should still keep the stock. I replied very quickly:
“Hell, yes!”
When I toured Australia a couple of years ago, I couldn’t help but notice a surprising number of fresh-faced young people driving luxury Ferraris, Lamborghinis, and Porsches.
I remarked to my Aussie friend that there must be a lot of indulgent parents in The Lucky Country these days. “It’s not the parents who are buying these cars,” he remarked, “It’s the kids.”
He went on to explain that the mining boom had driven wages for skilled labor to spectacular levels. Workers in their early twenties could earn as much as $200,000 a year, with generous benefits.
The big resource companies flew them by private jet a thousand miles to remote locations where they toiled at four-week on, four-week off schedules.
This was creating social problems, as it is tough for parents to manage offspring who make far more than they do.
The Next Great Commodity Boom has started and, in fact, we are already years into a prolonged supercycle that could stretch into the 2030s.
China, the world’s largest consumer of commodities, is currently stimulating its economy on multiple fronts, to break the back of a Covid hangover.
Those include generous corporate tax breaks, relaxed reserve requirements, government bailouts of financial institutions, and interest rate cuts. Get triggers like the impending moderation of its trade war with the US and it will be off to the races once more for the entire sector.
The last bear market in commodities was certainly punishing. From the 2011 peaks, copper (COPX) shed 65%, gold (GLD) gave back 47%, and iron ore was cut by 78%. One research house estimated that some $150 billion in resource projects in Australia were suspended or cancelled.
Budgeted capital spending during 2012-2015 was slashed by a blood-curdling 30%. Contract negotiations for price breaks demanded by end consumers broke out like a bad case of chicken pox.
The shellacking was reflected in the major producer shares, like BHP Billiton (BHP), Freeport McMoRan (FCX), and Rio Tinto (RIO), with prices down by half or more. Write-downs of asset values became epidemic at many of these firms.
The selloff was especially punishing for the gold miners, with lead firm Barrack Gold (GOLD) seeing its stock down by nearly 80% at one point, lower than the darkest days of the 2008-9 stock market crash.
You also saw the bloodshed in the currencies of commodity-producing countries. The Australian dollar led the retreat, falling 30%. The South African Rand has also taken it on the nose, off 30%. In Canada, the Loonie got cooked.
The impact of China cannot be underestimated. In 2012, it consumed 11.7% of the planet’s oil, 40% of its copper, 46% of its iron ore, 46% of its aluminum, and 50% of its coal. It is much smaller than that today, with its annual growth rate dropping by more than half, from 13.7% to 3.50% today.
What happens to commodity prices when China recovers even a fraction of the heady growth rates of yore? It boggles the mind.
The rise of emerging market standards of living will also provide a boost to hard asset prices. As China goes, so does its satellite trading partners, who rely on the Middle Kingdom as their largest customer. Many are also major commodity exporters themselves, like Chile (ECH), Brazil (EWZ), and Indonesia (IDX), who are looking to come back big time.
As a result, Western hedge funds will soon be moving money out of paper assets, like stocks and bonds, into hard ones, such as gold, silver (SIL), palladium (PALL), platinum (PPLT), and copper.
A massive US stock market rally has sent managers in search of any investment that can’t be created with a printing press. Look at the best-performing sectors this year and they are dominated by the commodity space.
The bulls may be right for as long as a decade thanks to the cruel arithmetic of the commodities cycle. These are your classic textbook inelastic markets.
Mines often take 10-15 years to progress from conception to production. Deposits need to be mapped, plans drafted, permits obtained, infrastructure built, capital raised, and bribes paid in certain countries. By the time they come online, prices have peaked, drowning investors in red ink.
So a 1% rise in demand can trigger a price rise of 50% or more. There are not a lot of substitutes for iron ore. Hedge funds then throw gasoline on the fire with excess leverage and high-frequency trading. That gives us higher highs, to be followed by lower lows.
I am old enough to have lived through a couple of these cycles now, so it is all old news for me. The previous bull legs of supercycles ran from 1870-1913 and 1945-1973. The current one started for the whole range of commodities in 2016. Before that, it was down from seven years.
While the present one is short in terms of years, no one can deny how business cycles will be greatly accelerated by the end of the pandemic.
Some new factors are weighing on miners that didn’t plague them in the past. Reregulation of the US banking system is forced several large players, like JP Morgan (JPM) and Goldman Sachs (GS) to pull out of the industry completely. That impairs trading liquidity and widens spreads— developments that can only accelerate upside price moves.
The prospect of falling US interest rates is also attracting capital. That reduces the opportunity cost of staying in raw metals, which pay neither interest nor dividends.
The future is bright for the resource industry. While the gains in Chinese demand are smaller than they have been in the past, they are off of a much larger base. In 20 years, Chinese GDP has soared from $1 trillion to $14.5 trillion.
Some 20 million people a year are still moving from the countryside to the coastal cities in search of a better standard of living and improved prospects for their children.
That is the good news. The bad news is that it looks like the headaches of Australian parents of juvenile high earners may persist for a lot longer than they wish.
Buy all commodities on dips for the next several years.
Global Market Comments
August 18, 2023
Fiat Lux
Featured Trades:
(WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 2023 SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA GLOBAL STRATEGY LUNCHEON)
(TESTIMONIAL)
(AUGUST 16 BIWEEKLY STRATEGY WEBINAR Q&A),
(SNOW), (PANW), (AMZN), (FCX), (WPM), (CCI), (GOLD), (WEAT), (JNK), (TLT), (X), (XOM), (HD), (AA), (UNG), (TSLA)
CLICK HERE to download today's position sheet.
Below please find subscribers’ Q&A for the August 16 Mad Hedge Fund Trader Global Strategy Webinar, broadcast from Silicon Valley, CA.
Q: Did you hear that Michael Burry was putting on a big short (the guy who made a fortune shorting housing in 2009)?
A: Yes, I heard that, but I never, ever trade-off of those kinds of comments. First of all, I think he’s wrong; and often, what happens in those situations is you hear about them going into the trade, but you never hear about them getting out, which might be tomorrow or next week. Also, there’s a nasty habit of big hedge fund managers telling you the opposite of what they’re actually doing. We hear big hedge fund traders like Bill Ackman getting super bearish at market bottoms, and then a few months later learn that they were buying with both hands, as was the case with the pandemic bottom. Be careful about other people’s opinions—they can be hazardous to your wealth. Just look at the data and the facts. That’s what I do.
Q: Would you buy Snowflake (SNOW) around current prices?
A: Yes—first of all Snowflake is a Warren Buffet favorite, which I always tend to follow. However, Warren can wait 5 years for a stock to work, and you can’t. So, I would wait for a bigger dip before getting into SNOW. So far, we are down 25% from the recent peak. One thing’s for sure, cybersecurity is a long-term winner, as seen by the ballistic move in Palo Alto Networks (PANW) since we started recommending it about 8 years ago.
Q: Why are US consumers so strong, and will that hold up for the rest of 2023?
A: US consumers are so strong because they banked so much money during 10 years of QE and all the pandemic stimulus, that they have a lot saved. They are now happy to spend to make up for the spending they couldn’t do during the pandemic. They’re basically in spending catch-up mode or revenge spending.
Q: How far do you see the iShares 20 Plus Year Treasury Bond ETF (TLT) go?
A: My worst-case scenario has it going to $90 down from $94—that’s a yield of about 4.50%. And that's where a lot of bond investors see fair value, and will start piling in. But as long as the momentum is against it, I’m not touching it. As soon as I am convinced there is a real bottom in the (TLT), I’m going to jump in with both hands and buy long-term LEAPS, where you can get a 100% or 200% return pretty quickly.
Q: Time to buy the Tesla (TSLA) dip?
A: We’re getting close. My guess is you might get a spike down to $200 from the recent $300 high. That’s also going to be LEAPS territory for us because the long-term outlook for this company is spectacular.
Q: What do you think of Freeport McMoRan (FCX), Silver (WPM), and United States Natural Gas Fund (UNG)?
A: I think they are all strong buys; I have LEAPS out on all of them. I think we start to get a big move in the 4th quarter of this year that’ll go well into next year—so big money just sitting on the table begging for you to take it.
Q: What are we to make of the crash of the Chinese Yuan?
A: The Chinese economy is weak and looks like it’s getting weaker. They still have a pandemic hangover. We don’t know what their real pandemic numbers are—they adopted our pandemic policy 2 years after we did, and they’re suffering as a result. They also insist on using their own vaccine, Sinovac, for nationalist reasons which is only 30% effective. But, when the Chinese economy does come back on stream, that’ll be the gasoline on the fire for the global economy, and that’s why we like commodities, industrials, energy, and so on.
Q: What does an 8% mortgage rate mean for the housing sector?
A: It is a disaster. I don’t think prices will drop very much—it’ll just cease all new buying because nobody qualifies for an 8% mortgage. They are going to either be only cash buyers out there or people waiting for the next drop in interest rates, and we’re already seeing that with the mortgage rate at 7.24%. If we do get a move up to 8%, it’ll just be a short-term spike that won’t last very long.
Q: Aren’t high-interest rates pushing rents higher?
A: Yes, absolutely. Since people can’t afford to buy houses, they are renting until they can, which pushes rental prices up and adds to the inflation numbers.
Q: When do you think the tech sector will rebound? It’s had a really bad three weeks.
A: End of August or sometime in September. I think. When people come back from the beach, they’re going to look at the long-term future of these companies and think “holy smokes,” why don’t I own more of these?” And we may even be doing LEAPS at high prices, which I almost never do, but the growth rate in tech next year is looking to be spectacular, and I think if we do a conservative at-the-money, we should at least double our money in a few months, similar to how US Steel (X) LEAPS did.
Q: Is Amazon (AMZN) a buy? They’re starting to develop their pharmacy rather well.
A: Yes, Amazon is on the buy list—it’s already up 50% this year. Jassy, the new CEO, is doing a great job. They also have a massive investment in AI which they can monetize anytime they want, and online pharmacies are a great place to start. They’ve been talking about doing that for at least 10 years.
Q: Are gold (GLD), wheat (WEAT), and precious metals a buy?
A: Yes, those are all strong buys on the dip.
Q: What about Tesla (TSLA) LEAPS?
A: Yes Tesla is definitely a LEAPS candidate $30 down from where it is now.
Q: What about Crown Castle International (CCI)?
A: CCI took a major hit from Verizon, canceling a contract with them (which is their biggest customer), so I want to wait for that to digest before I do anything yet. However, we are definitely approaching “BUY” territory; I think the yield is up to about 6.5% now.
Q: Should I take profits on the next jump up in United States Steel Corporation (X)?
A: Yes, it’s not worth hanging on 16 more months to maturity when there’s only 30% of the profit left. And, if all the takeover bids fail for some reason, the stock goes back to $20, and then your LEAPS becomes worthless. So, I would take profits; 100% profit in 2 months is nothing to turn up your nose at.
Q: How confident are you in (TLT) going to $110 by the end of the year?
A: Very confident; by then we will start seeing more hints of Fed interest rate cuts, inflation should be lower, and Goldman Sachs is in fact forecasting that the first rate cut will happen in March. So you’ll certainly start discounting that in the (TLT) by December. We could see the high in yields and the low in prices at the central bankers conference in Jackson Hole next week.
Q: What do you think about cruise lines and hotels right now?
A: The business is great, they’re all packed. However, during the pandemic, these sectors had to take on massive amounts of debt to keep from going under when their ships were tied up with zero revenue for two years; same with the hotels. So, the balance sheets are terrible in all of these areas including airlines. That’s why I’ve been avoiding them, too many better plays. Don’t go away from your core trades looking for trouble.
Q: When do we finally start seeing the Fed stop raising rates?
A: I think they already have; I think the most recent rate rise was the last one. If I’m wrong, they’ll do one more quarter—it’s totally dependent on the numbers.
Q: Won’t falling rates be bullish for bonds and gold?
A: Yes, that's why we’re buying them; but I’m waiting on the bond LEAPS—I want to see a firm bottom before getting back in there. 2024 will be all about falling interest rates plays.
Q: What’s causing the volatility in the United States Natural Gas Fund (UNG)?
A: A Strike in Australia, collapsing supplies in Europe (where prices are up 40%), and expectation of a global economic recovery in China. Ultimately, it’ll be China that takes this thing up to $10, $12, or $14 for the UNG, but you need them to recover first. That’ll probably happen next year, which is why we have the two-year LEAPS on there.
Q: With junk (JNK), have we seen the high rates?
A: Yes. If not, we’re very close, so it’s worth starting to scale in here.
Q: Should I short Home Depot (HD), as US consumers are holding back on home upgrades?
A: No, you should not short anything because you’re going against a long-term bull market trend that probably continues for another 10 years. So, any shorts should be measured in days and not weeks.
Q: Should I start chasing oil, because it’s been on quite a run, and should I buy Exxon (XOM)?
A: Yes, if we get an economic recovery next year, oil goes over 100 easily and will take all the oil companies up with it.
Q: Is (UNG) a domestic or foreign gas ETF?
A: It’s mostly domestic, and it’s a mix of the top natural gas producers in the US.
Q: Are the BRIC countries going to bring down the dollar?
A: You’ve got to be out of your mind. Would you rather store your money in China and Indonesia or the US? That’s your choice. I know there’s a lot of internet conspiracy theories out there—I get about a question a day on this. It’s Never going to happen; not in my lifetime. But it does attract internet traffic, which is the purpose of putting out these ridiculous stories like a BRIC-engineered digital currency replacing the dollar as a reserve currency. It’s just clickbait.
Q: Why is there a short squeeze in copper?
A: EV production is going from 2 million to 10 million a year in 2030, and every EV needs 200 pounds of copper. By the way, there are now 527 EV models on the market, but only one company makes money doing this, and that’s Tesla (TSLA).
Q: We’ve been waiting for a recession in the US for years, and US consumers are still going strong. What gives? I want rates to drop so I can invest in real estate again.
A: Well, yes. This recession has been predicted for 2 years. The problem is we have a certain political party telling us every day that the economy is the worst it’s ever been when, in actuality, the health of the economy is amazingly strong, and certainly the strongest economy in the world. So, I don't think we get a real recession until well into the 2030s because of massive technological development and a huge demographic tailwind—that’s an absolute winning combination, last seen in the 1990s. Plus, now we have AI accelerating everything. So, look at the numbers; don’t listen to opinions. Opinions can be fatal to your wealth.
Q: Does the use of an adjustable-rate loan make sense for the purchase of a second home?
A: Yes, it does. During the great interest rate spike of the 1980s, I bought my home in New York with an adjustable-rate loan. The initial interest rate was 18%, but when rates dropped to 11%, the value of the home tripled. Not a bad trade—and I bet the same kind of opportunity is out there now, provided you can get another adjustable-rate loan. By the way, in Europe, they only have adjustable-rate loans. The 30-year fixed anomaly only exists in the US and Canada because you have the US government as the unlimited buyer of last resort for 30-year fixed mortgages.
Q: Thoughts on other steel companies and aluminum?
A: I like them all. The country needs 200,000 miles of new long-distance transmission lines to accommodate the electrification of the economy, and those are all made out of aluminum except for the last mile—most people don’t know that. Buy Alcoa (AA).
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
Global Market Comments
June 29, 2023
Fiat Lux
Featured Trades:
(SATURDAY, AUGUST 5, 2023 ROME, ITALY STRATEGY LUNCHEON)
(MY 2022 LEAPS TRACK RECORD),
(FCX), (PANW), (RIVN), (NVDA), (BRKB), (JPM), (MS), (VRTX), (TLT), (GOLD), (SLV), (TSLA)
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