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Tag Archive for: (KO)

Mad Hedge Fund Trader

The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or What the Market is Really Discounting Now

Diary, Newsletter

After a half-century in the markets, I have noticed that it is the investors with the correct long-term views who make the biggest money. My favorite example is my friend, Warren Buffet, who doesn’t care if an investment turns good in five minutes or five years.

Buffet’s Berkshire Hathaway (BRKB) is the largest outside investor in Apple (AAPL). And guess what his cost has been? By the time you add up the compounded dividends he has collected since he started buying the stock in 2011, it's zero. The value today? $15.5 billion.

Buffet didn’t buy Apple for its hardware, iPhone, or iTunes. He bought it for the brand, which has improved astronomically. Look at Berkshire’s portfolio and it is packed with brands, like American Express (AXP), Coca-Cola (KO), and Exxon (XOM).

When did Buffet last buy Apple? In May when it hit $130.

That’s why Warren Buffet is Warren Buffet and you are you.

While the inflation news last week has been great and it is likely to get better, I believe that investors are missing the bigger, more important long-term picture.

The fact is that markets are now discounting an earlier than expected end to the Ukraine War, much earlier.

I get constant updates on the war from the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Britain’s Defense Committee, and NATO headquarters and I can tell you that the war has taken a dramatic turn in Ukraine’s favor just in the last two weeks.

Russian casualties have topped 80,000, nearly half the standing army. They have lost 2,200 of their 2,800 operational tanks. Some 120 front line aircraft have been destroyed. This week, Ukraine attacked the principal Russian air base in Crimea, leaving the smoking ruins of seven more aircraft there.

Russia is in effect fighting a modern digitized war with 50-year-old Cold War weapons and it isn’t working. Its generals have no experience fighting wars against determined opposition. Putin would do better listening to the retired generals on CNN for military advice.

America’s High HIMARS (the M142 High Mobility Artillery Rocket System) has become the Stinger missile of this war. The Lockheed Martin (LMT) factory in Camden, Arkansas that makes these missiles is running 24/7 on doubled orders.

The sanctions against Russia have been wildly successful. The Russian economy is utterly collapsing. What oil they are selling now is at half price. Aircraft are being cannibalized for parts to keep others flying. Much of the educated middle class has fled the country. Draft dodging is rampant.

What does all this mean for you and me?

The commodity price spike the war prompted has ended and most are now in steep downtrends. Gold (GLD), where the Russians were major buyers, has been flat as a pancake. This has put our inflation numbers into freefall. Interest rate fears peaked in June and are now in the rear-view mirror.

As is always the case, markets have seen these developments and correctly ascertained their consequences far before we humans did (except for maybe me). It has been no surprise that they have been tracking the Russian defeat day by day and have been on an absolute tear since June 15.

Even small techs suffering 18-month bear markets have now begun major recoveries, with companies like Snowflake (SNOW), up 50%, Netflix (NFLX), up 39%, and Cathie Wood’s Innovation Fund (ARKK) up 57%. Even crypto has returned from the grave, with Ethereum (ETHE) up an eye-popping 105%.

But don’t go gaga over stocks just yet.

The Fed ramps up quantitative tightening in September to $95 billion a month and will deliver another interest rate hike. That's why I am running a double short in the bond market (TLT), (TBT) once again.

We also have the midterms to worry about which, with recent developments, promise to be more contentious than ever. Look for another round of tiring new election fraud claims.

That’s great because these events will give us good entry points lower down for trade alerts, not the short-term top we are looking at right now.

It helps that with ten-year US Treasury yields at 2.80%, it has an effective price earning multiple of 37, while stocks growing earnings at 10% a year boast a price earnings multiple of only 16. That sets up a massive, long stock/short bond trade which Mad Hedge will be pushing well on into 2023.

And you know what?

The smart guys I know in the hedge fund community are starting to model for the next Fed interest rate CUT. Markets will love it and discount this far in advance.

If you want to get on the train with me before it leaves the station, just keep reading this newsletter.

Yes, markets are now being driven by rate cuts and peace prospects, not rate rises and war!

Your retirement fund will love it.

I just thought you’d like to know.

CPI Dives to 8.5%, down 0.6% in July. The peak is in, and stocks rallied 500. Look for another drop in August, with gasoline prices falling daily. The 800-pound gorilla in the room has exited.

The Producer Price Index Dives 0.5%, confirming last week’s weak CPI number. And many core prices are indicating that we will get another drop when the August numbers are reported in September. It was worth another 300-point rally in the Dow Average, which is getting seriously overbought.

Consumer Inflation Expectations dive to 6.2% for the coming year and only 3.2% for three years. according to a New York Fed Survey. Expectations for food costs saw the largest decline. The CPI is out on Wednesday. No doubt a media onslaught over a coming recession has a lot to do with it.

Elon Musk Sells $6.9 billion worth of Tesla (TSLA) Stock, explaining the $100 drop in the shares last week. Ostensibly, this is to pay for Twitter if he loses his court case. Musk clearing took advantage of a 60% rise in (TSLA) to head off distress sales in the future. Musk also opened the door to share buy backs in the future. Buy (TSLA) on dips.

85,000 IRS Agents are Headed Your Way, but only if the government can hire them and only if you are a billionaire or a profitable large oil company. The rest of us will be ignored by this unpublicized portion of the Biden inflation bill.

US Dollar (UUP) Takes a Hit on CPI Report, which effectively showed that the US saw deflation in July. The greenback is pulling back the 20-year highs which gave you the cheapest European vacation in your lives. The prospect of interest rates rising at a slower pace is dollar negative. Buy (FXA) and (FXC) on dips.

Boeing (BA) Delivered its First 787 Dreamliner in a year, after long-awaited regulatory approval. The monster 30% rise in the shares off the June low predicted as much. A global aircraft shortage helps. Airbus is going to have to start earnings its money again. Keep buying (BA) on dips.

Weekly Jobless Claims Pop 12,000 to 262,000, a new high for the year. It’s not at concerning levels yet but is definitely headed in the wrong direction. Maybe it’s just a summer slowdown? Maybe not.

Shipping Container Charges are Plunging Everywhere, except in the US, which currently has the world’s strongest economy. It’s a sign that global supply chain problems are easing. But the US leads the world in demurrage, or delays, with New York the worst, followed by Long Beach.

Import Prices
are Plunging, thanks to a super strong dollar, taking more pressure off of inflation. They fell 1.4% in July according to the Department of Labor. Easing supply chain problems are helping. Biden has had the run of the table for months now

My Ten-Year View

When we come out the other side of pandemic and the recession, we will be perfectly poised to launch into my new American Golden Age, or the next Roaring Twenties. With oil prices now rapidly declining, and technology hyper accelerating, there will be no reason not to. The Dow Average will rise by 800% to 240,000 or more in the coming decade. The America coming out the other side will be far more efficient and profitable than the old. Dow 240,000 here we come!

My August performance climbed to +2.14%. My 2022 year-to-date performance ballooned to +56.97%, a new high. The Dow Average is down -7.0% so far in 2022. It is the greatest outperformance on an index since Mad Hedge Fund Trader started 14 years ago. My trailing one-year return maintains a sky-high 74.76%.

That brings my 14-year total return to 569.53%, some 2.56 times the S&P 500 (SPX) over the same period and a new all-time high. My average annualized return has ratcheted up to 44.96%, easily the highest in the industry.

We need to keep an eye on the number of US Coronavirus cases at 93 million, up 300,000 in a week and deaths topping 1,037,000 and have only increased by 2,000 in the past week. You can find the data here.

On Monday, August 15 at 8:30 AM EDT, the New York Empire State Manufacturing Index for August is released.

On Tuesday, August 16 at 8:30 AM, the Housing Starts for July are out.

On Wednesday, August 17 at 8:30 AM, Retail Sales for July are published. At 11:00 AM the Fed Minutes from the last meeting are printed.

On Thursday, August 18 at 8:30 AM, Weekly Jobless Claims are announced. Existing Home Sales for July are announced.

On Friday, August 19 at 2:00 the Baker Hughes Oil Rig Count is out.

As for me, while we’re all waiting for the dog days of August to end, it is time to reminisce about my old friend George Schultz who passed away last year at the age of 101.

My friend was having a hard time finding someone to attend a reception who was knowledgeable about financial markets, White House intrigue, international politics, and nuclear weapons.

I asked who was coming. She said Reagan’s Treasury Secretary George Shultz. I said I’d be there wearing my darkest suit, cleanest shirt, and would be on my best behavior, to boot.

It was a rare opportunity to grill a high-level official on a range of top-secret issues that I would have killed for during my days as a journalist for The Economist magazine. I guess arms control is not exactly a hot button issue these days.

I moved in for the kill.

I have known George Shultz for decades, back when he was the CEO of the San Francisco-based heavy engineering company, Bechtel Corp in the 1970s.

I saluted him as “Captain Schultz”, his WWII Marine Corp rank, which has been our inside joke for years. Now that I am a major, I guess I outrank him.

Since the Marine Corps didn’t know what to do with a PhD in economics from MIT, they put him in charge of an anti-aircraft unit in the South Pacific, as he was already familiar with ballistics, trajectories, and apogees.

I asked him why Reagan was so obsessed with Nicaragua, and if he really believed that if we didn’t fight them there, would we be fighting them in the streets of Los Angeles as the then-president claimed.

He replied that the socialist regime had granted the Soviets bases for listening posts that would be used to monitor US West Coast military movements in exchange for free arms supplies. Closing those bases was the true motivation for the entire Nicaragua policy.

To his credit, George was the only senior official to threaten resignation when he learned of the Iran-contra scandal.

I asked his reaction when he met Soviet premier Mikhail Gorbachev in Reykjavik in 1986 when he proposed total nuclear disarmament.

Shultz said he knew the breakthrough was coming because the KGB analyzed a Reagan speech in which he had made just such a proposal.

Reagan had in fact pursued this as a lifetime goal, wanting to return the world to the pre nuclear age he knew in the 1930s, although he never mentioned this in any election campaign. Reagan didn’t mention a lot of things.

As a result of the Reykjavik Treaty, the number of nuclear warheads in the world has dropped from 70,000 to under 10,000. The Soviets then sold their excess plutonium to the US, which has generated 20% of the total US electric power generation for two decades.

Shultz argued that nuclear weapons were not all they were cracked up to be. Despite the US being armed to the teeth, they did nothing to stop the invasions of Korea, Hungary, Vietnam, Afghanistan, and Kuwait.

Schultz told me that the world has been far closer to an accidental Armageddon than people realize.

Twice during his term as Secretary of State, he was awoken in the middle of the night by officers at the NORAD early warning system in Colorado to be told that there were 200 nuclear missiles inbound from the Soviet Union.

He was given five minutes to recommend to the president to launch a counterstrike. Four minutes later, they called back to tell him that there were no missiles, that it was just a computer glitch projecting ghost images on a screen.

When the US bombed Belgrade in 1989, Russian president Boris Yeltsin, in a drunken rage, ordered a full-scale nuclear alert, which would have triggered an immediate American counter-response. Fortunately, his generals ignored him.

I told Schultz that I doubted Iran had the depth of engineering talent needed to run a full-scale nuclear program of any substance.

He said that aid from North Korea and past contributions from the AQ Khan network in Pakistan had helped them address this shortfall.

Ever in search of the profitable trade, I asked Schultz if there was an opportunity in nuclear plays, like the Market Vectors Uranium and Nuclear Energy ETF (NLR) and Cameco Corp. (CCR), that have been severely beaten down by the Fukushima nuclear disaster.

He said there definitely was. In fact, he was personally going to lead efforts to restart the moribund US nuclear industry. The key here is to promote 5th generation technology that uses small, modular designs, and alternative low-risk fuels like thorium.

Schultz believed that the most likely nuclear war will occur between India and Pakistan. Islamic terrorists are planning another attack on Mumbai. This time, India will retaliate by invading Pakistan. The Pakistanis plan on wiping out this army by dropping an atomic bomb on their own territory, not expecting retaliation in kind.

But India will escalate and go nuclear too. Over 100 million would die from the initial exchange. But when you add in unforeseen factors, like the broader environmental effects and crop failures (CORN), (WEAT), (SOYB), (DBA), that number could rise to 1-2 billion. This could happen as early as 2023.

Schultz argued that further arms control talks with the Russians could be tough. They value these weapons more than we do because that’s all they have left.

Schultz delivered a stunner in telling me that Warren Buffet had contributed $50 million of his own money to enhance security at nuclear power plants in emerging markets.

I hadn’t heard that.

As the event ended, I returned to Secretary Shultz to grill him some more about the details of the Reykjavik conference held some 36 years ago.

He responded with incredible detail about names, numbers, and negotiating postures. I then asked him how old he was. He said he was 100.

I responded, “I want to be like you when I grow up”.

He answered that I was “a promising young man.” I took that as encouragement in the extreme.

Stay healthy,

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

 

We’re Getting Pretty High

 

 

 

 

 

 

https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/08/wristwatch.jpg 331 441 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2022-08-15 09:02:082022-08-15 13:26:22The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or What the Market is Really Discounting Now
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

January 11, 2022

Diary, Newsletter, Summary

Global Market Comments
January 11, 2022
Fiat Lux

Featured Trades:

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

https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png 0 0 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2022-01-11 14:04:332022-01-11 14:38:29January 11, 2022
MHFTR

Why Consumer Staples Are Peaking

Diary, Newsletter, Research

Everyone always needs toilet paper, right?

Wrong. At least stock investors don’t.

Once considered one the safest stock market sectors in which to hide out during bear markets and more recently pandemics, Consumer Staples no longer offer the hideout they once did.

Who needs a hideout anyway now that the Roaring Twenties are on and may make another decade to run.

Take a look at the Consumer Staples Select Sector SPDR ETF (XLP). It’s top five holdings include Proctor & Gamble (PG) (11.13%), Coca-Cola (KO) (10.07%), PepsiCo, Inc. (PEP) (8.7%), Philip Morris (7.80%) (PM), and Walmart (WMT).

Its only remaining attraction is that it has a 30-day SEC yield of 2.67%.

The (XLP) has recently been one of the best performing ETFs. However, costs are rising dramatically, and the bloom is coming off the rose.

In short, the industry is caught in a vice.

In the meantime, ferocious online competition from the likes of Amazon (AMZN) makes it impossible for consumer staples to pass costs on to consumers as they did in past economic cycles.

In fact, the prices for many consumer staples are falling thanks to the world’s most efficient distribution network. And if you are an Amazon Prime member, they will deliver it to your door for free. I just bought a pair of Head Kore 93 skis in Vermont, and they were delivered in two days.

It gets worse. The largest sector of the consumer staples market, the poor and working middle class are seeing the smallest wage gains, the worst layoffs, and the slowest pandemic recovery. Almost all pay increases are now taking place at the top of the wage ladder.

AI specialists and online marketing experts, yes, Safeway checkout clerks and fast food workers, no.

This also will get a lot worse as some 50% of all jobs will disappear over the next 20 years, mostly at the low end.

Blame technology. There is even a robot now that can assemble Ikea furniture. And there goes my side gig!

So, if your friend at the country club locker room tells you it’s time to load up on Consumer Staples because they are cheap, safe, and high-yielding, ignore him, delete his phone number from your contact list, and unfriend him on Facebook.

If anything, the sector is a great “sell short on rallies” candidate.

As I never tire of telling followers, never confuse “gone down a lot” with “cheap.”

Eventually, the sector will fall enough to where it offers value. But that point is not now. There has to be a bottom somewhere.

After all, everyone needs toilet paper, right? Or will a robot soon take over that function as well? They already have in Japan.
 

 

 


 

https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/Charmin-story-2-image-5.jpg 237 336 MHFTR https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png MHFTR2021-04-02 09:04:302021-04-05 10:50:20Why Consumer Staples Are Peaking
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

March 4, 2021

Diary, Newsletter, Summary

Global Market Comments
March 4, 2021
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:

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

https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png 0 0 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2021-03-04 10:04:292021-03-04 13:02:02March 4, 2021
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

The Barbell Play with Berkshire Hathaway

Diary, Newsletter

It’s time to give myself a dope slap.

I have been pounding the table all year about the merits of a barbell strategy, with equal weightings in technology and domestic recovery stocks. By owning both, you’ll always have something doing well as new cash flows bounce back and forth between the two sectors like a ping pong ball.

After all, nobody gets sector rotation right, unless they have been practicing for 50 years, like me.

Full disclosure: I have to admit that after 50 years of following him, I love Buffet. He was one of the first subscribers to my newsletter when it started up in 2008. Some of his best ideas have come from the Mad Hedge Fund Trader, like buying Bank of America for $5 in 2008.

Oh, and he hates Wall Street for constantly fleecing people. Ditto here.

In reading Warren Buffet’s annual letter (click here for the link), it occurred to me that his Berkshire Hathaway (BRKB) shares were in effect a one-stop barbell investment.

For a start, Warren owns a serious slug of Apple (AAPL), some $120 billion worth, or 2.5% of the total fund. That gives (BRKB) some technology weighting. It cost him only $20 billion. The dividends he received entirely paid for the initial cost. So he owns 4% of Apple for free.

I remember the battle over the initial “BUY” five years ago. Warren fought it, insisting he didn’t understand the smart phone business. In the end, he bought Apple for its global brand value alone.

That is Warren Buffet to a tee.

The next five largest publicly listed holdings are Bank of America (BAC), Coca-Cola (KO), American Express (AXP), and Verizon Communications (VZ). These are your classic domestic recovery sectors. And with a heavy weighting in other banks (BK) (USB), Buffet is effectively short the bond market (TLT), another position I hugely favor.

Also included in the package is a liberal salting of pharmaceuticals, Merck (MRK) and AbbVie (ABBV). He has a small energy weighting with Chevron (CVX). He even has a position in old heavy metal America with General Motors (GM).

Berkshire is also one of the world’s largest property & casualty insurance owners. Its current “float” is $138 billion. You all know his flagship holding, GEICO. And the gecko mascot isn’t going anywhere as long as Warren lives. It was Warren’s idea.

It all seems to work for Warren. In 2020, he earned a staggering $42.5 billion. All told, Berkshire’s businesses employ 360,000, second to only Amazon (AMZN), and is the largest taxpayer in the United States, accounting for 3% of government revenues. Berkshire is also the largest owner of capital goods & equipment in the US worth $156 billion, topping (AT&T).

Many of Warrens's early 1956 $1,000 investors are millionaires many times over….and over 100 years old, prompting him to muse if ownership of his shares extended life.

Warren’s annual letter, which he spends practically the entire year working on, is always one of the best reads in the financial markets. There isn’t a better 50,000-foot view out there. He also admits to his mistakes, such as his disastrous purchase of Precision Castparts (PCC) in 2016 for $37 billion, which later suffered from the crash in the aerospace industry. In 2020, Buffet wrote off $11 billion of that acquisition.

He can do worse. In 1993, he bought the Dexter Shoe Company for $433 million worth of Berkshire stock. The company went under, but the Berkshire stock today is worth $8.7 billion.

Buffet’s letters always refer back to some of his “greatest hits,” today legends in the business history of the United States: GEICO, Furniture Mart, Berkshire Hathaway Energy, and See’s Candies, one of the largest employers of women in the US using 150-year-old recipes. Its peanut brittle is to die for.

In 2009, Buffet snatched away from me BNSF for a song, now the most profitable railroad in the country, an amalgamation of 360 railroads over 170 years. I say “snatched away” because it was my favorite railroad trading vehicle for decades until he bought the entire company. I hear its trains run by my home every night as a grim reminder.

Another benefit to owning (BRKB) is that Buffet is far and away the largest buyer of his own shares, soaking up $25 billion worth in 2020. And he is buying the shares of other companies that are also aggressively buying their own shares, like Apple ($200 billion with last year). It all sounds like the perfect money creation machine to me.

It gets better. Berkshires “B” shares trade options, meaning you can buy LEAPS (Long Term Equity Anticipation Securities), which by now, you all know and love. I’ll run some numbers for you.

With (BRKB) now trading at $254, you can buy the January 2023 $300-$310 call spread for $2.50. If the shares close anywhere over $310 by the 2023 expiration, the position will be worth $10.00, giving you a gain of 300%. And you only need an appreciation of $56, or 22% in the shares to capture this blockbuster profit, giving you upside leverage of an eye-popping 13.63X in the best run company in America.

See, I told you you’d like it.

This is how poor people become rich. In fact, my target for (BRKB) is $300 for end of 2021 and $400 for 2022, right when the two-year LEAPS expire.

One question I often get about Berkshire is what happens when Warren Buffet goes to his greater reward, not an impossible concept given that he is 90 years old.

I imagine the shares will have a bad day or two, and then recover. Buffet has been hiring his replacements for a decade or more, and he handed off day-to-day operation years ago (I didn’t want to move to Omaha, no mountains).

When that happens, it will be the best buying opportunity of the year. And another chance to load up on those LEAPS.

 

 

https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png 0 0 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2021-03-04 10:02:012021-04-22 09:10:54The Barbell Play with Berkshire Hathaway
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

February 22, 2021

Diary, Newsletter, Summary

Global Market Comments
February 22, 2021
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:

(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or TIME FOR A BREAK)
(GME), (TLT), (FB), (AMZN), (AAPL), (XME), (FCX), (MS), (GS), (BLX), (KO), (AMD)

https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png 0 0 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2021-02-22 09:04:572021-02-22 10:20:47February 22, 2021
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or Time for a Break

Diary, Newsletter

I know you’re not going to want to hear this. I might as well be trying to pull your teeth, lead you down a garden path, or sell you a high-priced annuity.

But there is nothing to do in the market right now. Nada, diddly squat, bupkis, and for all you Limey’s out there, bugger all.

For during the first six weeks of 2021, we have pretty much squeezed all there is out of the market.

Not only did we nail the timing and the direction, we also got the lead sectors, financials, brokers, chips, and short bonds (MS), (GS), (BLK), (AMD). We also chased the Volatility Index (VIX) down from $38 to a lowly $20, baying and protesting all the way.

That enabled us to extract a 28.29% profit so far in 2021, the best return in the 13-year history of the Mad Hedge Fund Trader. The only other time you see numbers this high is when Ponzi schemes get busted. And not a dollar of this was earned from the really marginal plays like Bitcoin, SPAC’s, GameStop (GME), or pot stocks.

If I feel like I did a year’s worth of work during the first seven weeks of 2021, it’s because I have, issuing 60 trade alerts since January 1.

However, bonds (TLT) are reaching the end of their current leg down. The 1.34% yield we saw on Friday is suspiciously close to the 1.36% yields we saw during the 2012 and 2017 market double bottom.

So, there may be some wood to chop around these, levels, possibly for weeks or months.

This is important because a collapsing bond market has been the principal driver of the winning trades of 2021, such as in banks, brokers, money managers, and other domestic recovery plays.

And when one side of the barbell goes dead, what do you do? You buy the other side. FANGs are just completing a six-month “time” correction where they have gone absolutely nowhere. So, Facebook (FB), Amazon (AMZN), and Apple (AAPL) may be getting ready for a roll.

One other sector that might keep running is the SPDR Mining & Metals ETF (XME), and Freeport McMoRan (FCX). That’s because it's not just us buying metals to front-run a recovery, it’s the entire world. What do you think a $2 trillion infrastructure budget will do to this area?

New lows for bonds, as the ten-year US Treasury yield hits 1.26%, up 38 basis points since January 1 and a one-year high. 1.50% here we come! Ever hear the expression “Don’t fight the Fed”? All financials are off to the races, where we were 60% long. Biden’s $1.9 trillion rescue package will be 100% borrowed and take total US borrowing to a back-breaking 55% of GDP. I hate to sound like a broken record but keep selling rallies in the (TLT), buy (JPM), (BAC), (GS), (MS), and (BRK/B) on dips.

Volatility index hit a one-year Low, which is what you’d expect at the dawn of a decade-long bull market in stocks. The (VIX) may flat line here for a while before the next out-of-the-blue spike.

The Nikkei Stock Average topped 30,000, for the first time in 31 years, Yes, it’s been a long haul. I was heavily short in the initial 1990 meltdown from 39,000 to 20,000 and many fortunes were made. The top marked the end of the Japanese company’s ability to copy their way into leadership. After that, rapidly advancing technology made copying too slow to compete in a global economy.

A midwest storm upended energy markets, with oil popping $8 to $67 and gas deliveries spiking from $4 to $999. It would have gone higher, but the software only provided for three digits. Electricity prices are all over the map. Some 4 million Texas customers are without power. Fracking has ground to a halt. Windfarms are frozen solid.  If you are a net producer (as I am), you are in heaven. The turmoil is expected to be gone by the weekend. It’s another high price paid for ignoring global warming.

Weekly Jobless Claims soared, to 861,000, casting a dark cloud over the economic recovery. The news took a 300-point bite out of the Dow. Illinois and California saw the biggest gains. We are not out of the woods yet.

SpaceX was valued at $74 Billion, according to an $850 billion venture capital fundraising round this week. However, Elon Musk’s rocket company won’t go public until men are landed on Mars. The company is also the launching pad for its Starlink global WIFI project, which will cost at least $10 billion to build out. Blowing up rockets is not a good backdrop for an IPO.

Cash is still pouring off the sidelines
, with equity mutual funds attracting some $7.8 billion last week. As long as this is the case, which could be for years, any market corrections will be limited. Strangely, bond funds are still pulling in money too, some $5.7 billion. It’s called a liquidity-driven market, silly!

When we come out the other side of pandemic, we will be perfectly poised to launch into my new American Golden Age, or the next Roaring Twenties. With interest rates still at zero, oil cheap, there will be no reason not to. The Dow Average will rise by 400% to 120,000 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. Dow 120,000 here we come!

My Mad Hedge Global Trading Dispatch earned an amazing 17.27% so far in February after a blockbuster 10.21% in January. The Dow Average is up a trifling 2.92% so far in 2021.

This is my fourth double-digit month in a row. My 2021 year-to-date performance soared to 27.28%. After the February 19 option expiration, I am now 80% in cash, with a single long in Tesla (TSLA) left.

That brings my 11-year total return to 450.03%, some 2.05 times the S&P 500 (SPX) over the same period. My 11-year average annualized return now stands at an Everest-like new high of 40.30%.

My trailing one-year return exploded to 94.09%, the highest in the 13-year history of the Mad Hedge Fund Trader. We have earned 109.00% since the March 20, 2020 low.

We need to keep an eye on the number of US Coronavirus cases at 28 million and deaths approaching 500,000, which you can find here. We are now running at a heart breaking 3,000 deaths a day. But that is down 35% from the recent high.

The coming week will be a boring one on the data front.

On Monday, February 22, at 8:30 AM EST, the Chicago Fed National Activity Index is out. Zoon (ZM) reports.

On Tuesday, February 23 at 9:00 AM, the S&P Case-Shiller National Home Price Index for December is announced. Square (SQ) and Intuit (INTU) report.

On Wednesday, February 24 at 8:30 AM, New Home Sales for January are printed. NVIDIA (NVDA) reports.

On Thursday, February 25 at 9:30 AM, Weekly Jobless Claims are printed. US Durable Goods for January and Q4 GDP are out. Salesforce (CRM), (Moderna (MRNA), and Airbnb (ABNB) report.

On Friday, February 26 at 8:30 AM, US Personal Income and Spending are published. DraftKings (DKNG) reports. At 2:00 PM, we learn the Baker-Hughes Rig Count.

As for me, if you want to see what it is like to work at Amazon, watch the movie Nomadland. It’s an artsy Francis McDormand film made with a $4 million budget about the end of life, which I caught over the weekend on Hulu.

It covers a contemporary trend in US society where retirees with no savings move into RVs and live off the grid, working occasionally to earn gas money. They raved about it in Europe.

If I don’t keep those trade alerts coming, that could be me in a couple of years.

Stay healthy.

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

 

 

 

 

 

 

https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/11yr-feb22.png 454 864 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2021-02-22 09:02:012021-02-22 10:23:06The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or Time for a Break
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

February 19, 2021

Diary, Newsletter, Summary

Global Market Comments
February 19, 2021
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:

(FEBRUARY 17 BIWEEKLY STRATEGY WEBINAR Q&A),
(USO), (XLE), (AMZN), (SPY), (RIOT), (T), (ZM), (ROKU), (TSLA), (NVDA) (TMQ) (TLRY), (ACB), (KO), (XLF), (AAPL) (REMX), (GLD), (SLV), (CPER)

https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png 0 0 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2021-02-19 10:04:152021-02-19 10:28:18February 19, 2021
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

February 17 Biweekly Strategy Webinar Q&A

Diary, Newsletter

Below please find subscribers’ Q&A for the February 17 Mad Hedge Fund Trader Global Strategy Webinar broadcast from frozen Incline Village, NV.

 

Q: Are we buying gold on dips?

A: Not yet. As long as you have a ballistic move in bitcoin going on, you don't want to touch gold. Eventually gold does get dragged up by the global bull market in commodities, but silver is more preferable since it moves up at twice the rate of gold in bull markets.

 

Q: Is it time to buy Amazon (AMZN) LEAPS?

A: Yes, I am looking for a move to $5,000 a share in Amazon with the onset of enormous GDP figures. Exploding consumer spending may be what breaks Amazon out of its current six-month range. I would do something like a two-year LEAP with the $3,600-$3,700 in Amazon. Be cautious and stay near the money. You should get like a 400% or 500% return on that LEAP at expiration, or sooner.

 

Q: What's your view on Tesla (TSLA)?
 

A: It looks tired—lower lows, lower highs. We’re in a short-term downtrend that could last several months. I’m holding off on buying Tesla until we find a bottom. I just have one $150 out-of-the-money call spread that expires in 20 days, and that’s it. We paired our position way back on Tesla. Wait for the market to come to you, if you can get Tesla under $700, that's a great time to buy LEAPS on Tesla.

 

Q: Are you still bearish on energy (XLE)?

A: Short term no, long term yes. You’re trying to catch a rally in a long-term bear market. Some people can do that, some people can’t. It’s the next buggy whip industry, the next American Leather, which completely vaporized.

 

Q: What about the calls for $100 oil (USO)?

A: Yes, after the markets went up $10 dollars in a day you always see calls for $100 oil. If the energy crisis in Texas shows us anything, it’s that we have to move away from oil as an energy source much faster than we thought because its distribution and production system freeze.

 

Q: Are you expecting a short-term correction (SPY)?
 

A: Yes but no more than 4%; there is still too much cash on the sidelines.

 

Q: Have airline leisure stocks run too far?

A: No, they are coming off of much lower lows so they can go to much higher highs. Almost all restrictions should be gone in six months—I’m trying to time my Australia trips and I think in six months may get to the point where, if you show proof of vaccination and submit to a 3 day test, they will let you into the country. But in six months you won’t be able to get an airline or hotel reservation.

 

Q: What about the AT&T (T) yield play and 5G play?

A: Yes, I still like AT&T and you should probably buy it about here. All these legacy telecom companies are going to have big moves once 5G accelerates allowing a vast expansion of streaming and other high-end services.

 

Q: Is CRISPR (CRSP) a good LEAP candidate?

A: Yes, and you can do something like the $200-$210 two years out because it’ll almost certainly get taken over before then.

 

Q: What’s a good LEAP for Tesla?

A: Wait for it to drop to $700 first and then buy something like the $900-$1000 two years out.

 

Q: What do you think of Apple?

A: Apple (AAPL) is taking a rest waiting for the 5G rollout to reaccelerate. Our target for Apple this year is $200.

 

Q: Do we sell in May and go away?

A: I would just go away and keep all your longs. The trouble is, trying to be ultra-smart and time all this stuff in a runaway bull market, you find it a lot harder to get in when you come back; you go “oh my gosh these things are up so much,” you don’t buy anything, and then it doubles. I’ve seen that a lot in the past, New York in 1971, Tokyo in 1987, Dotcom stocks in 1985, add US stocks in 2015.

 

Q: What do you think of Riot (RIOT) stock?

A: Wouldn't touch it with a ten-foot pole. If I didn’t want to buy bitcoin at $1, I'm not going to want to buy it at $51,000. Go elsewhere for your bitcoin advice, except you’ll hear the same thing: it will go up because it’s gone up. You should use it as a risk indicator. That’s essentially what all bitcoin analysts will tell you because there's nothing to analyze. There are no earnings, there's not even any physical presence anywhere to analyze, no customer support. If you can get seven 10 baggers like we did last year, with Zoom (ZM), Roku (ROKU), Tesla (TSLA), and Nvidia (NVDA) —why bother with cryptocurrencies?

 

Q: What are your thoughts on travel?

A: My take is that leisure travel is returning in mass but that the business travelers will shy away; and that will be true for this year but probably not next year. I think business travel will come back once it’s 100% safe and once all the companies are making money again and can afford travel.

 

Q: Is Trilogy Metals Inc. (TMQ) a good buy? It has Copper, Zinc, and some exposure to Gold and Silver.

A: Yes, it is a buy. Most commodity prices should double from these levels; and probably the smartest ones to buy are the ones that haven't moved yet—gold and silver, but silver especially. The world will come roaring back and it needs every possible metal it can get its hands on.

 

Q: What do you think of the cannabis stocks (TLRY), (ACB)?

A: That is one of several small bubbles in the markets that I don't want to touch at all. How hard is it to grow a weed? Barriers to entry are zero. Massive competition from the black market, as about 30% of the cannabis demand is still going to your local drug dealer who doesn’t have to pay taxes, whereas you get double taxed with a pot company—35% retail sales taxes and then taxes on the profits on top of that. So no thank you, Mary Jane.

 

Q: Do you think Warren Buffet is still the leading thought contributor to personal finance, or is he outdated?

A: Berkshire Hathaway is up 10% this year, and the Dow is up only 2.8%, so I would say he’s still pretty well in touch with the markets; and he has very heavy weightings in Coca Cola (KO), Financials (XLF), and Apple (AAPL), as well as some energy stocks. Good discipline and good strategy never go out of style.

 

Q: Is the Texas energy disaster going to set the US’ way on renewable energy faster?

A: Yes, it does force people to consider the move into alternative energy sources much faster, especially when the old energy sources go to zero and then have whole states lose their power sources. Look how the governor of Texas is blaming frozen windmills, which only account for 7% of the Texas energy supply. What a joke! I’ll lend him my hairdryer and they’ll work. Notice the propensity to immediately blame others for their own mistakes. That is terrible leadership. Texas is going to turn blue.

 

Q: Is climate change overhyped in the US stock market?

A: Absolutely yes, that’s why I haven’t been buying any of these. They tend to be smaller companies, and ever since Biden got the lead in the primaries and the polls last spring this whole sector, and ESG investing in general, has been on an absolute tear and is wildly expensive. I call these feel-good stocks; people buy them because they make them feel good but very few of these actually make real money. I prefer to stick to the real money plays of which there are more than enough around.

 

Q: Do you like rare earth such as the Van Eck Vectors Rare Earth/Strategic Metals ETF (REMX)?

A: I do like rare earths. You need them for practically anything electronic. China's been withholding supplies again, which they like to do from time to time just to rattle our cage because we need them for all our weapons systems. But this is also prone to bubbles, so be careful when you buy it that you’re not paying up too much. By the way, the (REMX) ETF was brought out at the absolute peak of the last rare earth bubble, which we covered extensively 11 years ago. We got people in at the very bottom of rare earth, and things went up ten times. Then we got everybody out and people said I was being bearish too soon, so I never got invited to conferences again. After that, it went down for eight straight years.

 

Q: Don’t you think frozen windmills and solar speak for more reliance on oil than less? Biden administration limits on oil will drive up prices.

A: You’re right on the second part; creating shortage of supply will cause price increases. But frozen windmills are a result of lack of capital investment and planning. It turns out all of the windmills in the northern part of the US have electric heaters, so they don’t freeze because it gets colder up there. They didn’t do that in Texas to save money, and now they have lost about 7% of the total Texas energy supply. So bad management was the issue there. Penny-wise and pound-foolish.

 

Q: Are commodities in general in play? What is the best ETF for commodities?

A: The trouble with commodities is there is no one big catch all commodity ETF. However, you can expect one soon; as things peak or have big runs, they tend to generate new ETFs like new children because the demand is there. In the commodities world, there are lots of individual 1x and 2x ETFs like the gold ETF (GLD), the silver (SLV), the copper (CPER), and so on. But there isn’t one good basket I’ve found. You can always create your own by buying small amounts of each of the leading companies, which is probably the best thing to do.

 

Q: What is the best property value right now?
 

A: That would be Mississippi; they have the lowest housing prices in the United States. Unfortunately, low cost of living, low tax states also have the worst education systems, which doesn’t matter of course if you don't have kids. In the end, you get what you pay for. It’s OK if you don’t mind dealing with stupid people every day, which I do. I can always tell when I’m dealing with customer support in the deep south because literacy falls off a cliff.

 

Q: Should we get a 10% correction soon?

A: Probably not; the last 10% correction needed a presidential election to scare the daylights out of you, and there's nothing like that on the horizon now. Maybe we’ll get another 5% correction on a game stop type incident, but there's just too many people trying to get into the stock market now. People who were selling last March/April are the same people who are buying now.

 

Q: Is there a bright future for hydrogen?

A: No, electricity is infinitely scalable, and hydrogen isn’t. It’s about as scalable as gasoline because you have to move it around in big tankers, keep it at 434.5 degrees Fahrenheit below zero, which is very expensive and has an unfortunate tendency to blow up. So, I never bought into the hydrogen thesis, except for local use of fleets where everyone gets all their hydrogen from a central facility.

 

Q: What will be the best performing sector in the next 1-3 months?


A:
Your bond short and your financials. It’s the same trade. And it’s the one sector that no one asked about today.

 

Q: Do you think bitcoin is a bubble poised to pop at some point?

A: Yes, but who knows where that is; bubble tops are impossible to predict, especially when there are no valuation metrics. Bottoms can be measured with valuation metrics, but tops can’t because greed is an immeasurable quantity. However, it will certainly pop when they suddenly decide to increase the total outstanding number of bitcoins, which may seem unlikely now but is inevitable.

 

 

Good Luck and Stay Healthy.

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

 

 

 

 

 

https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/john-thomas-tropics.png 432 324 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2021-02-19 10:02:082021-02-19 10:28:48February 17 Biweekly Strategy Webinar Q&A
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

February 17, 2021

Diary, Newsletter, Summary

Global Market Comments
February 17, 2021
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:

(HOW TO HANDLE THE FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 19 OPTIONS EXPIRATION),
(TSLA), (MS), (BA), (BLK), (GS), (AMD), (KO), (BAC), (NFLX), (AMZN), (AAPL), (INTU), (QCOM), (CRWD), (AZN), (GILD)

https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png 0 0 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2021-02-17 10:04:252021-02-17 10:14:12February 17, 2021
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