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Tag Archive for: (META)

Mad Hedge Fund Trader

March 20, 2023

Diary, Newsletter, Summary

Global Market Comments
March 20, 2023
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:

(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or QE IS BACK!)
(SPY), (BITCOIN), (GLD), (SLV), (ARKK), (NVDA),
(AAPL), (GOOGL), (META), (SCHW), (MS), (FRC), (TLT), (KBWH)

 

CLICK HERE to download today's position sheet.

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 Trader2023-03-20 09:04:262023-03-20 12:01:01March 20, 2023
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or QE is Back!

Diary, Newsletter

Remember the endless flood of the money supply that went on for a decade, floating all boats?

It's back!

One need look no further than the Fed balance sheet, which ratcheted up a breathtaking $297 billion last week. That offsets three months worth of quantitative tightening if it even still exists.

This is further confirmed by the classic QE asset classes, which saw their best week in a year. Bitcoin jumped by 30%, gold (GLD) gained 8%, silver (SLV) popped 12%, and technology stocks went on a tear. Even bonds did well, with the (TLT) up $8.00 from the previous week’s low.

Big tech stocks like (NVDA), (AAPL), (GOOGL), and (META) are now seen as the new “safe “stocks, thanks to their gigantic balance sheets and immense cash flows. Tech funds have seen net inflows for the past four consecutive weeks, delivering the largest new investment in three years. The ARK Innovation Fund (ARKK) saw its biggest inflows since the 2021 peak.

It's the regional banking crisis that is reverting the Fed to its old habits, all prompted by the mindless management of Silicon Valley Bank. All California assets were dumped as California was about to fall into the ocean, like Charles Schwab (SCHW), Bank of America (BAC), and First Republic Bank (FRC).

That puts the Fed in a quandary, which renders its interest rate decision on Wednesday, March 22 at 2:00 PM EST, because the last thing you do in a financial crisis is raise interest rates. That’s what the Fed did in 1929, extending the Great Depression from 10 days to 10 years.

My bet is that they raise by 25 basis point one more time because it’s already in the mail. The regional banking crisis has pulled forward any recession and therefore the recovery.

After that, there will be no interest rate rises for a decade, which the Fed may hint at in its statement and the following press conference. The cuts will start in June and continue rapidly after that. That’s when the economic data catch up with the reality that is happening right now, which is hugely deflationary.

(NVDA) and (TSLA) already know this, which are rising sharply on Friday.

The action certainly caught the attention of the US Treasury, which seemed willing to jump in with guarantees at the drop of a hat. There has been a massive flight of capital from the heartland to the coasts where the top 20 “too big to fail” banks live.

It’s another example of an industry deregulating itself out of existence, which obtained looser capital requirements after heavy lobbying in 2018. At one point, JP Morgan bank, the safest of the safe, was turning down new account applications. This means that the trade of the decade is setting up for the banks. In the wake of the 2008 financial crisis, the Invesco Bank ETF (KBWB) rose 75% in a year. I expect the same to happen this time around. It has already plunged by 30% in 2023, so it has to rise by 50% just to get back to where it was in January, but with bank deposits now guaranteed and more safeguards in place.

And if you are worried about hidden unrealized losses on bank balance sheets, I list below the safest banks ranked by capital ratios NET of losses when marked to market.

14.5% Goldman Sachs (GS)
13.4% Morgan Stanley (MS)
11.5% JP Morgan Bank (JPM)
11.3% Citigroup (C)
8.7% State Street
5.9% Bank of America (BAC)

No surprise that (GS) and (MS) is at the top where the mark-to-market culture is strong. A strong dose of regulation from the SEC helps too. (BAC) takes a big hit because of the largest holdings of low-yielding mortgages which can’t be marked to market unless they are sold or defaulted.

The crisis brought the traditional recession indicators out of the closet last week. A big one is crude oil prices, which hit a 2 ½ year low at $65 a barrel. It turns out that not only banks but oil producers are hurt by high interest rates as well. Some 120 million barrels have gone into storage in the beast nine months and the market is oversupplied by 300,000 barrels a day.

Only OPEC Plus can put in a floor by cutting production, which they are loathed to do as it brings immediate spending cuts. Or the greatest oil trader in history, Joe Biden of Delaware, can cover his short in the Strategic Petroleum which he sold at $90 last year. You may have to wait for a future Republican administration for that to happen.

While markets crashed, investors have been jumping out of windows, the world appeared to be ending, and the rain continuing incessantly, Mad Hedge continued on up tear with March up +5.61%.

My 2023 year-to-date performance is now at an eye-popping +31.37%. The S&P 500 (SPY) is up +2.63% so far in 2023. My trailing one-year return maintains a sky-high +87.76% versus -15.55% for the S&P 500.

That brings my 15-year total return to +628.56%, some 2.87 times the S&P 500 (SPX) over the same period. My average annualized return has recovered to +47.76%, another new high.

At the market lows, I covered shorts in my Tesla and March NVIDIA positions. I religiously adhered to my stop loss discipline, stopping out of my April short in NVIDIA (NVDA) when the melt-up ensued, my only remaining equity short. I also established a new short in (TLT) at the market high, my first since August.

Silicon Valley Bank fails to sell, but the FDIC stepped in to guarantee all deposits. The FDIC took over Signature Bank in New York as well. If they hadn’t, there would be lines snaking out the doors of every small bank in America Monday morning. The cost is being born by steeper deposit insurance premiums for the banking industry, which will no doubt cause some grumbling. There are 100 banks that would leap to buy Silicon Valley Bank to gain a franchise in the world’s fastest growing technology center. They just need a few hours to get a handle on the bank’s loan portfolio, which only the former management really understand. Buy banks and brokers on dips (SCHW).

Is Platinum the Precious Metals Play of 2023? I am told by the insiders who know that platinum (PPLT) could be the big precious metals play of 2023. The white metal has become the principal metal used in the manufacture of catalytic converters for conventional internal combustion cars of which 15 million a year is still made in the US. There is rising demand for hydrogen fuel cells and the green hydrogen movement. The world’s second largest producer of platinum is Russia, whose supplies have been cut off. As a result, there is expected to be a 556,000-ounce shortage this year after two years of surpluses.

Say Goodbye to the 50 Basis Point Rate Hike, at the Fed meeting on March 22 in the wake of a regional banking Crisis. It’s now a quarter point….or nothing at all. In 48 hours, we have gone from “higher rates for longer” to “maybe the next rate rise is the last one.” Tech stocks are buying it after holding up incredibly well. Buy tech and big banks on dips (JPM), (BAC), (C), (SCHW).

Core Inflation Comes in Moderate, up 0.4% and 0.5% without food and energy. That is a 6.0% YOY rate, down from the 2023 high of 8.7%. Stocks extended a 300-point rally on the news. Inflation has been running at a 3.5% annual rate for the past four months, my yearend target.

Mortgage Rates Dive, off the back of a three-day, $8.00 rally in the bond market. Mortgage rates plunged by 50 basis points to 6.50% and may have more to go. Will this kick off the spring residential real estate market?

Gold (GLD) Breaks Out, crossing a key technical level and setting the options market on fire. Some gold minders saw options volume up 400%. Did the regional banking crisis put the top in interest rates, which have been weighing heavily on gold? Or maybe it’s just an old fashioned flight to safety triggered by the financial crisis. It could be presaging a global economic recovery and a coming commodity boom. (GOLD) LEAPS on the way.

Ron Baron Loaded the Boat with Charles Schwab (SCHW) Shares on Friday, as all the smart money did, including Mad Hedge. My old friend was also an early investor in Tesla (TSLA) and is now one of the largest outside shareholders. When someone offers you a dollar for 40 cents, you take it!

Swiss National Bank Steps in to Bail Out Credit Suisse, taking pressure off US market. I knew they would come in as I was a director of UBS for a year, The Swiss take care of their own. More importantly, the rolling global bank crisis has put the fear of God into the Fed, meaning that the 25 basis point hike next week may be the last for a decade. Buy “RISK ON”, especially banks.

Europe Raises Interest Rates by 50 Basis Points, catching up with the US. It’s an overreaction given the fragility of the banking system. The markets didn’t like the move. Europe has inflation at 2% higher than the US so they really had no choice

Weekly Jobless Claims Drop to 192,000, a surprising fall. The worker shortage continues unabated. It’s the biggest decline since July. If the Fed were looking for a reason to continue quantitative tightening this is it.

First Republic Bank is for Sale, the next bailout target. The mere fact that it is based in California is the problem, which many investors now apparently believe is about to break off of the North American Continent and fall into the Pacific Ocean. You never see a bank with $70 billion in cash and equivalents get in trouble. Morgan Stanley (MS) and JP Morgan are thought to be in the bidding. A group of banks deposited $30 billion into (FRC) to firewall the rest of the banking system.

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, March 20, there are no data points of note.

On Tuesday, March 21 at 7:00 AM, the Existing Home Sales are announced.

On Wednesday, March 22 at 7:00 AM, the Federal Reserve Open Market Committee announces its interest rate decision. A hike of 25 basis points is in the market. The published statement and following press conference will be the most important of the year, indicating whether they recognize the seriousness of the regional banking crisis and are now leaning hawkish or dovish.

On Thursday, March 23 at 8:30 AM, the Weekly Jobless Claims are announced.

On Friday, March 17 at 8:30 AM, the Durable Goods are released.

As for me, I recall my last trip around the world in 2018. I took the trip because I feared climate change would soon make visits to the equator impossible because of intolerable temperatures and the breakdown of civilization. As it turned out, the global pandemic came six months later, making such travel out of the question for two years.

I beat Phileas Fogg by 55 days, who needed 88 days to complete his trip around the world to settle a gentleman’s bet. But then, he had to rely on elephants, sailing ships, and steam engines to complete his epic voyage, or at least, the one imagined by Jules Verne.

I actually took a much longer route, using a mix of Boeings and Airbuses to fly 80 hours over 40,000 miles on 18 flights through 12 countries in only 33 days. Incredibly, our baggage made it all the way, rather than see its contents sold on the black markets of Manila, New Delhi, or Cairo.

It was a trip around the world for the ages, made even more challenging by dragging my 13 and 15-year-old girls along with me. I have always considered my most valuable asset to be the trips I took to Europe, Africa, and Asia in 1968. The comparisons I can make today some 55 years later are nothing less than awe-inspiring. I wanted to give the same gift to them.

It began with a 12 ½ hour flight from San Francisco to Auckland, New Zealand. Straight out of the airport, I rented a left-hand drive Land Rover and drove three hours to high in the steam-covered mountains of Rarotonga where we were dinner guests of a Māori tribe. To earn my dinner of pork and vegetables cooked underground, I had to dance the haka, a Māori war dance.

 

The Haka

 

Of course, with kids in tow, a natural stop was the Hobbit Village of Hobbiton 1½ hours outside of Auckland. I figured the owners of the idyllic sheep farm were earning at least $25 million a year showing tourists the movie set.

In all, I put 1,000 miles on the car in four days, even crossing New Zealand’s highest mountain range on a dirt road. The thick forests were so primeval my daughter expected to see a dinosaur around every curve. We reached our southernmost point at Mt. Ruapehu, a volcano used as the inspiration for Mt. Doom in Peter Jackson’s Lord of the Rings.

 

The Real Mount Doom

 

The focus of the Australia leg were ten strategy lectures which I presented around the country. I was mobbed at every stop, with turnouts double what I expected. The Mad Hedge Fund Trader and the Mad Hedge Technology Letter picked up 100 new subscribers in the Land Down Under in five days.

Maybe it was something I said?

My kids’ only requirements were to feed real kangaroos and koala bears, which we duly accomplished on a freezing cold morning outside Melbourne. We also managed to squeeze in a tour of the incredible Sydney Opera House in between lectures, dashing here and there in Uber cabs.

I hosted five Mad Hedge Global Strategy Luncheons for existing customers in five days. The highlight was in Perth, where eight professional traders and I enjoyed a raucous, drunken meal. They had all done well off my advice, so I was popular, to say the least. Someone picked up the tab without me even noticing.

 

 

 

After that, it was a brief ten-hour flight to Manila in the Philippines, with a brief changeover in Hong Kong, where massive protest demonstrations were underway. Ever the history buff, I booked myself into General Douglas MacArthur’s suite at the historic Manila Hotel. The last time I was here, I interviewed President Ferdinand Marcos and his lovely wife Imelda. After a lunch with my enthusiastic Philippine staff and I was on my way to the airport.

 

 

I took Malaysian Airlines to New Delhi, India, which has lost two planes over the last five years and where the crew was definitely on edge. I asked why a second plane was lost somewhere over the South Indian Ocean and the universal response was that the pilot had gone insane. Security was so tight that they confiscated a bottle of Jamieson Irish Whiskey that I had just bought in duty free.

India turned out to be a dystopian nightmare. If climate change continues, this is your preview. With temperatures up to 120 degrees in 100% humidity, people were dying of heat stroke by the hundreds. Elephants had to be hosed down to keep them alive. It was so hot you couldn’t stray from the air conditioning for more than an hour. The national radio warned us to stay indoors.

In Old Delhi, the kids were besieged by child beggars pawing them for food and there were mountains of trash everywhere. In the Taj Mahal, my older daughter passed out and we had to dump our remaining drinking water on her to cool her down and bring her back to life. We spent the rest of the day sightseeing indoors at the most heavily air-conditioned shops.

If global temperatures rise by just a few more degrees, you’re going to lose a billion people in India very soon.

 

 

On the way to Abu Dhabi, we flew directly over the tanker war at the Straits of Hormuz, one of my old flight paths during my Morgan Stanley days. It was too dusty to see any action there. We got a much better view of Sinai and the Red Sea, which, I told the kids, Moses parted 5,000 years ago (they’ve seen Charlton Heston in The Ten Commandments many times).

 

The Red Sea

 

Upon landing at Cairo, Egypt’s ever-vigilant military intelligence service immediately picked me up. Apparently, I was still in their system dating back to my coverage of Henry Kissinger’s shuttle diplomacy for The Economist in 1976. That was all a long time ago. Having two kids with me meant I was not there to cause trouble, so they were very friendly. They even gave us a free ride to the downtown Nile Hilton.

After India, Cairo, and the Sahara Desert were downright pleasant, a dry and comfortable 100 degrees. We did the standard circuit, the pyramids, and the Sphynx followed by a camel ride into the desert.

 

 

If you are the least bit claustrophobic, don’t even think about crawling into the center of the Great Pyramid on your hands and knees as we did. I was sore for two days. We spent the evening on a Nile dinner cruise, looking for alligators, entertained by an unusually talented belly dancer.

The next stage involved a one-day race to Greece, where we circled the Acropolis in all its glory, and then argued with a Greek taxi driver on how to get back to the airport. We ended up taking an efficient airport train, a remnant of the 2000 Athens Olympics. If impoverished and bankrupt Athens has such great airport train, why doesn’t New York or San Francisco?

 

 

It was a quick hop across the Adriatic to Venice Italy, where we caught an always exciting speed boat from the Marco Polo to our Airbnb near St. Mark’s Square. We ran through the ancient cathedral and the Palace of the Doges, admiring the massive canvases, the medieval weaponry, and of course, the dungeon.

One of the high points of the trip was a performance of Vivaldi’s Four Seasons in the very church it was composed for. A ferocious thunderstorm hit, flooding the plaza outside and causing the lead violinist’s string to break, halting the concert (rapid humidity change I guess).

When we got home with soggy feet, the Carabinieri had cordoned off our block with police tape because a big chunk of our 400-year-old roof had fallen into the street. It taxed my Italian to the max to get into our apartment that night. The Airbnb host asked me not to mention this in my review (I didn’t).

 

 

The next day brought a circuitous trip to Budapest via Brussels. Budapest was a charm, a former capital of the Austria-Hungarian Empire and the architecture to prove it. The last time I was here 55 years ago, the Russian Army was running the place and it was grim, oppressive, and dirty.

Today, it is a thriving hot spot for Europe’s young, with bars and night clubs everywhere. Dinners dropped from $150 in Venice to $30. We topped the night with a Danube dinner cruise with a folk dancing troupe. I’m telling you, you can live there like a king for $1,000 a month.

 

Visiting the Golden Age in Budapest

 

The next morning, we drew closer to our final destination of Switzerland. A four-hour train ride brought us to my summer chalet in Zermatt and some much-needed rest. At the end of a long valley and lacking any cars, Zermatt is one of those places where you can just give the kids 50 Swiss francs and tell them to get lost. I spent mornings hiking up from the valley floor and afternoons getting caught up on the markets and my writing.

There’s nothing like recharging my batteries in the clean mountain air of the Alps. The forecast was rain every day for two weeks, but it never showed. As a result, I ended up hiking ten miles a day to the point where my legs were made of lead by the end.

The only downer was watching helicopters pick up the bodies of two climbers who fell near the top of the Matterhorn. As temperatures rise rapidly, the ice holding the mountain together is melting, leading to a rising tide of fatal accidents.

 

 

 

I caught my last flight home from Milan. Anything for one more great dinner in Italy, which I enjoyed in the Galleria. At the train station, I chatted with a troop of Italian Boy Scouts in blue uniforms headed for the Italian Alps. The city was packed with Chinese tour groups, and there was a one-month wait to buy tickets for Leonardo DaVinci’s The Last Supper. Another Airbnb made sure I stayed up all night listening to the city’s yellow trolleys trundle by.

 

 

Finally, an 11-hour flight brought me back to the City by the Bay. Thanks to two sleeping pills of indeterminate origin I went to sleep over England and woke up over Oregon, preparing for a landing. It seems that somewhere along the way I proposed marriage to the Arab woman sitting next to me, but I have no memory of that whatsoever. At least that’s what the head flight attendant thought.

I am now planning this summer trip. After the Queen Mary and the Orient Express should I climb the Matterhorn again? Or should I summit Mount Kilimanjaro in Africa first? No transatlantic trip should ever be wasted.   And I have to get home in time to join a 50-mile hike with the Boy Scouts in New Mexico and then cart two kids off to college.

What a great problem to have.

 

 

Good Luck and Good Trading,

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

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/spqr.jpg 185 246 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2023-03-20 09:02:082023-03-20 12:01:30The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or QE is Back!
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

March 13, 2023

Tech Letter

Mad Hedge Technology Letter
March 13, 2023
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:

(METAVERSE FLAMES OUT WITH SILICON VALLEY BANK)
(SIVB), (META)

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 Trader2023-03-13 16:04:072023-03-13 17:45:46March 13, 2023
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

Metaverse Flames Out With Silicon Valley Bank

Tech Letter

The word “metaverse” is a popular word recently and it has to do with a world almost from science fiction.

It refers to a future version of the internet accessed through immersive technologies such as virtual reality and augmented reality headsets.

Metaverse could supposedly be a $13 trillion market by 2030 according to a prominent research firm.

The internet built around decentralized technologies and virtual worlds is a novel idea.

The definition of the metaverse goes beyond sticking to virtual worlds, like gaming and applications in virtual reality.

A comprehensive vision of the metaverse includes smart manufacturing technology, virtual advertising, online events like concerts, as well as digital forms of money such as cryptocurrencies like bitcoin.

The metaverse could see 5 billion unique internet visitors by the end of the decade, funneling trillions of dollars in revenue in this next-generation of the internet.

This isn’t the only source labeling the metaverse and web3 a trillion-dollar opportunity. In research published in December, Goldman Sachs put a $12.5 trillion number on the space, in a bullish outlook that assumed one-third of the digital economy shifts into virtual worlds and then expands by 25%.

But so far, the metaverse has been a cash guzzler with not much to show for it.

With a huge amount of money already flowing into companies addressing the space and not much revenue, companies face years of poor revenue showing.

Unit economics wasn’t about to turn the corner at all with all signs showing that the Metaverse has stalled, but the bank contagion at Silicon Valley Bank (SIVB) means that many employees from metaverse projects simply won’t get paid their salary.

That’s how the momentum has been demonstrably pushed back lately.

Call the Metaverse dead in the short term.

What are the Metaverse risks?

Besides funding drying up like the Sahara desert in the short term - it doesn’t stick because it’s only tolerable for a few minutes.

There’s definitely a real risk that the metaverse never goes from the “fake it until you make it” to the real killer app that every consumer is clamoring for.

Just take for instance the art of a business meeting.

One might argue that using VR for meetings is less enticing than familiar technologies such as Zoom.

Would you rather see a real version of someone on a video or a fake avatar of someone up close?

The metaverse could turn out to be just hype and nothing more because the leaders of these companies building it are surrounded by yes-men who tell them it’s a great idea.

Many analysts have mentioned that Meta’s version of the virtual now is “terrible.”

Many also chime in saying “it’s been tried many, many times over the past four decades and it's never worked."

Even if Meta does improve on the technology and it does become more advanced, it still could be turn out to be mediocre.

If many can remember, we were already supposed to have self-driving cars 3 years ago and that never happened.

A lot of this failed technology has a tendency to just fall by the wayside never to be talked about again or regurgitated with a new headline.

I am not a believer of the Metaverse and you can bet your hard-earned bacon that these bank blowups means that metaverse and crypto employees will be more focused in the short term of how to pay rent and put food on the table than figuring out how to trap the rest of us in a virtual world.

Even if the salary is issued for employees of crypto firms, web3 firms, and metaverse firms by another third party saving their bacon, I can guarantee that no cash burn company will be funded to lose money in the short term.

 

 

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 Trader2023-03-13 16:02:102023-03-13 17:45:17Metaverse Flames Out With Silicon Valley Bank
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

February 27, 2023

Diary, Newsletter, Summary

Global Market Comments
February 27, 2023
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:

(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or MAKING A SILK PURSE FROM A SOW’S EAR)
(META), (GOOGL), (MSFT), (AAPL), (AMZN), (NFLX), (TSLA), (SPY), (TLT), (ENPH), (UUP), (GLD), (SLV), (EEM)

 

CLICK HERE to download today's position sheet.

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 Trader2023-02-27 09:04:152023-02-27 15:41:19February 27, 2023
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or Making a Silk Purse from a Sow’s Ear

Diary, Free Research, Newsletter

Call this the Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde market.

On the up days, we see the kindly ministrations of Dr. Jekyll.

On the down days, we suffer from the evil hand of Mr. Hyde.

To say that traders are confused would be an understatement. Many seasoned pros have told me that this is one of the most difficult markets they have ever seen.

Fridays have been particularly treacherous when weekly options expire. Some 56% of all options trading now takes place with expirations of five days or less. Trading before 4:00 PM sees billions of dollars of hot money trying to force closing prices just in or out of the money for key at-the-money strike prices.

What is especially disturbing is that some 80% of the gain in the S&P 500 (SPY) this year has been in just seven names, Meta, (META), Alphabet (GOOGL), Microsoft (MSFT), Apple (AAPL), Amazon (AMZN), Netflix (NFLX) and Tesla (TSLA). Most other stocks went nowhere….or down. That much concentration means that any rallies lack confidence and will fail….for now.

Remember these names because when we finally do get a real upside breakout, they will be the leaders. You can take that to the bank.

Thanks to turmoil in the House of Representatives intent on a national default, bonds have given up 70 of the 120-basis point drop in yields since October. That deprives us of one of our biggest money makers of 2022, our long bond trades.

That means were are also seeing the automatic flip side of the bond trade, a strong US Dollar (UUP), and weak precious metals, (GLD) and (SLV), and emerging markets (EEM).

This too shall end.

If it was excess liquidity that caused stocks to rocket for 13 years, then maybe we should be focusing on what little liquidity is left. That would be the font of government money pouring into infrastructure and alternative energy plays.

Some $370 billion I know available for investment in ESG, would most of it going into the battery industry for the burgeoning electric vehicle industry. Even foreign firms like Finland’s Neste is moving to the US to cash in on federal munificence, converting an old US oil refinery to produce diesel fuel out of animal and vegetable fat (click here for the link).

Probably the best bet here is in California-based Enphase Energy (ENPH), which makes a 40% gross profit margins on microinverters for solar panels and has just seen a 42% dive in its share price. That makes (ENPH) a BUY. Hint: solar stocks always follow the price of oil to which it is tied, which has lately been down.

Some nimble and aggressive trading managed to push me back in the green for February, taking me up +0.93% on the month. That’s a dramatic improvement of +5.48% from a week ago.

You might even call it making a silk purse from a sow’s ear.

My 2023 year-to-date performance is still at the top at +23.28%. The S&P 500 (SPY) is up +4.32% so far in 2023. My trailing one-year return maintains a sky-high +86.58% versus -12.97% for the S&P 500.

That brings my 15-year total return to +620.47%, some 2.78 times the S&P 500 (SPX) over the same period. My average annualized return has recovered to +46.83%, still the highest in the industry.

Last week, I piled on a Tesla (TSLA) March $155-$260 short strangle betting that the stock can stay within a $95 range for 19 trading days. I also added a deep in-the-money long in the bond market for the first time in six weeks. Both positions turned immediately profitable.

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!

Q4 GDP Dips, from 3.9% to 2.7% in the October-December quarter. Consumption took a dive, which is amazing over the holidays. This is nowhere near a recession.

Fed Minutes Show More Hikes to Come, with the emphasis on the plural. That could take the overnight borrowing rate to a 5.40% high. It certainly pees on the parade for the falling interest rates crowd.

The Tail is Wagging the Dog, with short, dated options, often same-day expiration dominating trading every Friday. Billions of dollars are battling around key strike prices attempting to force expirations in or out of the money. No place for the little guy. Better to take Fridays off.

Netflix Slashes Prices in 30 countries, taking the stock down a modest 3%. (NFLX) is still the leader in the sector with 231 million subscribers, followed by Amazon (200 million), Disney Plus (162 million, HBO Max (95 million, Peacock (18 million), and Hulu 47 million). Buy (NFLX) and (AMZN) on dips.

Individual 401k’s Lost 23% in 2022, according to a study from Fidelity. High inflation is shrinking the remaining purchasing power even faster. A rising number of workers are also borrowing against their 401k’s to make ends meet. Such loans can go up to 50% of the principal. Better start making up the losses or you’ll be spending your golden years working at Taco Bell.

Apple to Add Glucose Monitor on its Watches, to aid diabetic clients. Some 38 million Americans have diabetes and given the obesity epidemic that figure is certain to rise. It highlights Big Tech’s move into the low-hanging fruit in health care.

Existing Home Sales Dive 0.7% in January, to a 4 million annualized rate, the weakest since October 2010. That makes 12 consecutive months of falling sales. The Median Home Price sold rose to $359,000. An imminent national debt crisis and spiking interest rates is not a great environment in which to sell your home.

Biden Ukraine Visit Tanks Gas and Oil Prices, cutting Russia’s chances of a win and eventually leading to a flood of oil on the market. Biden’s visit is sending the message to Putin that there’s no chance of a win here. Energy is hitting two-year lows across the board. Only energy stocks are staying high. Energy is getting so cheap it might be worth a trade.

Germany Accelerates Move Towards Alternatives, permanently cutting all ties with Russia energy. Europe’s biggest economy, and the fourth largest in the world, hopes to get 80% of its electricity from solar and wind by 2030. Hydrogen is also entering the picture. Other countries will follow.

On Monday, February 27 at 8:30 AM EST, US Durable Goods are out.

On Tuesday, February 28 at 9:00 AM, the S&P Case Shiller National Home Price Index for December is released.

On Wednesday, March 1 at 10:00 AM, the ISM Manufacturing PMI is printed.

On Thursday, March 2 at 8:30 AM, the Weekly Jobless Claims are announced.

On Friday, March 3 at 8:30 AM, the ISM Non-Manufacturing PMI. At 2:00 the Baker Hughes Oil Rig Count is out.

As for me, I usually get a request to fund some charity about once a day. I ignore them because they usually enrich the fundraisers more than the potential beneficiaries. But one request seemed to hit all my soft spots at once.

Would I be interested in financing the refit of the USS Potomac (AG-25), Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s presidential yacht?

I had just sold my oil and gas business for an outrageous profit and had some free time on my hands so I said, “Hell Yes,” but only if I get to drive. The trick was to raise the necessary $5 million without it costing me any money.

To say that the Potomac had fallen on hard times was an understatement.

When Roosevelt entered the White House in 1932, he inherited the presidential yacht of Herbert Hoover, the USS Sequoia. But the Sequoia was entirely made of wood, which Roosevelt had a lifelong fear of. When he was a young child, he nearly perished when a wooden ship caught fire and sank, he was passed to a lifeboat by a devoted nanny.

Roosevelt settled on the 165-foot USS Electra, launched from the Manitowoc Shipyard in Wisconsin, whose lines he greatly admired. The government had ordered 34 of these cutters to fight rum runners across the Great Lakes during Prohibition. Deliveries began just as the ban on alcohol ended.

Some $60,000 was poured into the ship to bring it up to presidential standards and it was made wheelchair accessible with an elevator, which FDR operated himself with ropes. The ship became the “floating White House,” and numerous political deals were hammered out on its decks. Some noted guests included King George VI of England, Queen Elisabeth, and Winston Churchill.

During WWII Roosevelt hosted his weekly “fireside chats” on the ship’s short-wave radio. The concern was that the Germans would attempt to block transmissions if broadcast came from the White House.

After Roosevelt’s death, the Potamac was decommissioned and sold off by Harry Truman, who favored the much more substantial 243-foot USS Williamsburg. The Potamac became a Dept of Fisheries enforcement boat until 1960 and then was used as a ferry to Puerto Rico until 1962.

An attempt was made to sail it through the Panama Canal to the 1962 World’s Fair in Seattle, but it broke down on the way in Long Beach, CA. In 1964 Elvis Presley bought the Potomac so it could be auctioned off to raise money for St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital. It sold for $65,000. It then disappeared from maritime registration in 1970. At one point there was an attempt to turn it into a floating disco.

In 1980 a US Coast Guard cutter spotted a suspicious radar return 20 miles off the coast of San Francisco. It turned out to be the Potomac loaded to the gunnels with bales of illicit marijuana from Mexico. The Coast Guard seized the ship and towed it to the Treasure Island naval base under the Bay Bridge. By now the 50-year-old ship was leaking badly. The marijuana bales soaked up the seawater and the ship became so heavy it sank at its moorings.

Then a long rescue effort began. Not wanting to get blamed for the sinking of a presidential yacht on its watch the Navy raised the Potomac at its own expense, about $10 million, putting its heavy lift crane to use. It was then sold to the City of Oakland, Ca for a paltry $15,000.

The troubled ship was placed on a barge and floated upriver to Stockton, CA, which had a large but underutilized unionized maritime repair business. The government subsidies started raining down from the skies and a down-to-the-rivets restoration began. Two rebuilt WWII tugboat engines replaced the old, exhausted ones. A nationwide search was launched to recover artifacts from FDR’s time on the ship. The Potomac returned to the seas in 1993.

I came on the scene in 2007 when the ship was due for a second refit. The foundation that now owned the ship needed $5 million. So, I did a deal with National Public Radio for free advertising in exchange for a few hundred dinner cruise tickets. NPR then held a contest to auction off tickets and kept the cash (what was the name of FDR’s dog? Fala!).

I also negotiated landing rights at the Pier One San Francisco Ferry Terminal, which involved negotiating with a half dozen unions, unheard of in San Francisco maritime circles. Every cruise sold out over two years, selling 2,500 tickets. To keep everyone well-lubricated I became the largest Bay Area buyer of wine for those years. I still have a free T-shirt from every winery in Napa Valley.

It turned out to be the most successful fundraiser in the history of NPR and the Potomac. We easily got the $5 million and then some. The ship received a new coat of white paint, new rigging, modern navigation gear, and more period artifacts. I obtained my captain’s license and learned how to command a former coast guard cutter.

It was a win-win-win.

I was trained by a retired US Navy nuclear submarine commander, who was a real expert at navigating a now thin-hulled 73-year-old ship in San Francisco’s crowded bay waters. We were only licensed to cruise up to the Golden Gate bridge and not beyond, as the ship was so old.

The inaugural cruise was the social event of the year in San Francisco with everyone wearing period Depression-era dress. It was attended by FDR’s grandson, James Roosevelt III, a Bay area attorney who was a dead ringer for his grandfather. I mercilessly grilled him for unpublished historical anecdotes. A handful of still-living Roosevelt cabinet members also came, as well as many WWII veterans.

As we approached the Golden Gate Bridge, some poor soul jumped off and the Coast Guard asked us to perform search and rescue until they could get a ship on station. No body was ever found. It certainly made for an eventful first cruise.

Of the original 34 cutters constructed only four remain. The other three make up the Circle Line tour boats that sail around Manhattan several times a day.

Last summer I boarded the Potomac for the first time in 14 years for a pleasant afternoon cruise with some guests from Australia. Some of the older crew recognized me and saluted. In the cabin, I noticed a brass urn oddly out of place. It contained the ashes of the sub-commander who had trained me all those years ago.

Good Luck and Good Trading,

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

 

 

Captain Thomas at the Helm

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Mad Hedge Fund Trader

February 24, 2023

Diary, Newsletter, Summary

Global Market Comments
February 24, 2023
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:

(FEBRUARY 22 BIWEEKLY STRATEGY WEBINAR Q&A)
(SPY), (BA), (CCI), (HD), (TLT), (TSLA), (PPLT), (PALL),
(JPM), (NVDA), (AAPL), (GOOGL), (META), (AMZN)

 

CLICK HERE to download today's position sheet.

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Mad Hedge Fund Trader

February 22 Biweekly Strategy Webinar Q&A

Diary, Free Research, Newsletter

Below please find the subscribers’ Q&A for the February 22 Mad Hedge Fund Trader Global Strategy Webinar broadcast from Silicon Valley in California.

 

Q: Will Russia use nuclear weapons on Ukraine?

A:
No, they won’t. If you’re trying to take over a country, you don’t exactly want to drop atomic bombs on it first and render it useless. If they do, Ukraine will retaliate in kind with the nukes they have. Most of the nuclear weapons the old Soviet Union had were assembled in Ukraine and the machinery is still there. We know Ukraine has four nuclear power plants and hundreds of tons of fuel so they have uranium. You only need to increase the purity from 80% to 93% and then convert it to plutonium to get weapons-grade and you only need 20 pounds to make a small bomb. At the very least, they could build a dirty truck bomb and make Moscow uninhabitable for 100 years. If the Russians did explode a nuke, the fallout cloud would blow back on them the next day, China in three days, the US in 10 days, and back on Russia again in two weeks. If Ukraine doesn’t remember how to make nuclear weapons, they can just ask me. I do have “Nuclear Test Site” on my resume.

Q: What would be the impact on the markets of a government debt default?

A: Bonds would collapse, causing interest rates to spike, and taking down stocks big time. Higher interest rates would crash the real estate market. You also can’t do real estate closings during a shutdown because Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac aren’t there to buy the debt. Commodities would fall sharply on recession fears. Even gold and silver do poorly on a massive liquidity squeeze. Government payments would cease, including Social Security, Medicare, and military salaries. Air traffic control would stop unless they are happy to work for free. The only place to hide is cash under your mattress since US Treasury bills and commercial banks will also be at risk. This is what the House Republicans are risking. It really depends on how long the shutdown lasts. Every time Georgia representative Marjorie Taylor Greene shouted “liar” at the State of the Union address you could see bond prices ticking down. She is one of the people who has to agree to a rise in the debt ceiling and she didn’t inspire a lot of confidence in bondholders. All that said, a $10 dip is a good place to buy the (TLT).

Q: Would you buy Boeing up here?

A: I loved Boeing at $100 and we did a could trades down there. At $220 not so much. It’s more than doubled off the October low and all the best-case scenarios have happened. The 737 MAX, which crashed twice due to an AI issue, got back in the air. The 787 Dreamliner is selling well. The company now has a two-year order backlog. And Air India followed up with the biggest aircraft order in history, some 450 planes over ten years. If Boeing dips $50 that would be another story because I think it hits a new all-time high at $450 in a couple of years. By the way, I took a 737 MAX on my flight back from Hawaii last weekend and the crew loved it. There are no screens on the seats. Instead, they broadcast the 800 greatest movies of all time on free WIFI.

Q: How do we know if your trade alert is for the stock, the ETF, or another underlying position?

A: Look at the ticker symbol—it always tells you exactly which security we are working in.

Q: With Bullard signaling a 50 basis-point rate hike, will the S&P (SPY) go down in the near term and how much?

A: Well Bullard is only one guy out of nine, so he doesn’t have the final say. It really depends on what Jay Powell wants. And if the data continues hot and inflation keeps rising, we will get a 50 basis point rise, and that should take the index down 10% from the recent high, or give up half of its recent year-to-date gains, so that’s a good rule of thumb. As long as we’re waiting for bad news, (which we won’t get until March 22) the markets will do nothing until then.

Q: What do you think about Crown Castle International (CCI), the cell tower company, taking a big hit with the bond market?

A: It pretty much moves in sync with the bond market, which has just dropped 10 points, so you probably want to be buying or doubling up on (CCI) right here, because it will be the first thing to recover once we see a negotiated increase in the debt ceiling which has to happen before the summer. The 5G buildout continues unabated.

Q: Would you recommend buying Tesla (TSLA) shares again?

A: Yes, but at least $50 lower, which we may get. Or at least $50 off the $217 top. I think Tesla goes to $1,000 sometime in the next couple of years and so does Elon Musk. All of the factors that could drive the stock that high are in progress. I know it’s happening over there, and that’s easily a $1,000 stock once their current breakthroughs go mass-market.

Q: Any interest in Iron Condors?

A: It is the same as Strangles, with more limited risk with four legs, a call spread and a put spread because you stop out your losses at much lower levels. But they are very trading-intensive, commission-intensive trades, and it’s really too much for most beginners to handle. However, if you’re a professional, you might consider doing iron condors on these positions. Iron Condors also max profits when nothing moves, and lately, no move is a pretty rare event. We’re going to get it for the next couple of months, but don’t count on that being a frequent trade.

Q: Any iShares 20 Plus Year Treasury Bond ETF (TLT) LEAPS to buy now?

A: Yes I've been kind of sitting on my hands waiting to see if this bottom here holds at 99 before I put out LEAPS, but we’re so close it really almost makes no difference. And if I were to do a LEAPS here it probably would be the $100-$105 one-year out. That might get you about a 100% profit in a year. That’s a very safe LEAPS, and I’ll get the numbers out when I get a chance.

Q: What’s your opinion on Home Depot (HD)?

A: I like it for the long term. Clearly, their disastrous earnings report shows that the economy for home repair is not as strong as we thought it was, so it may go lower first. I would hold off until we get a real capitulation selloff in those stocks.

Q: Are gold and silver possible candidates for LEAPS?

A: Yes, especially in view of the recent correction in these metals. And we did put these out last October at the market bottom. I probably will be updating that sometime in the next few weeks.

Q: How much longer will the Ukraine/Russia war last?

A: The general consensus among the military now is that this goes on for several more years, and both sides will just keep pouring troops into the meat grinder until they get exhausted.

Q: Any way to play Platinum (PPLT) or Palladium (PALL)?

A: Yes, there are ETFs on each of them.

Q: Any thoughts on the crypto industry?

A: I have given up on the crypto industry because it has been shown that so many of these trading platforms were stealing from their customers. Once you lose the confidence of a customer on trust, you never get it back in the financial industry. Also, crypto was interesting a couple of years ago when it was going up and everything else in the world was too expensive, but now you have all the best stocks trading not far from multi-year lows, and that makes quality stocks much more attractive than a crypto where you really don't know what’s going to happen. Crypto could be another Nikkei, which after 32 years still hasn’t reached its old highs. That is unless it gets taken over by big banks like (JPM) and regains respectability that way.

Q: Any thoughts on investing in the AI trend?

A: AI has suddenly become what crypto was 2 years ago, and what 3D printing was 15 years ago. It’s just the theme of the day, and something to promote. There are no pure AI plays. Basically, all companies have been using it for 10 or 15 years, it’s not a new thing. In fact, AI is already in every aspect of your life, you just might not know it yet. NVIDIA (NVDA) is probably the purest AI play out there whose chips everyone needs to execute AI. Beyond that, the biggest AI users are Apple (AAPL), Alphabet (GOOGL), Meta (META), and Amazon (AMZN). When Amazon makes ten more recommendations on books you might like or movies you might watch, that is AI.

To watch a replay of this webinar with all the charts, bells, whistles, and classic rock music, just log in to www.madhedgefundtrader.com, go to MY ACCOUNT, click on GLOBAL TRADING DISPATCH or TECHNOLOGY LETTER, then WEBINARS, and all the webinars from the last 12 years are there in all their glory.

Good Luck and Stay Healthy,

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

 

With Medal of Honor Winner Colonel Mitchel Paige

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Mad Hedge Fund Trader

February 17, 2023

Tech Letter

Mad Hedge Technology Letter
February 17, 2023
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:

(MAKE FACEBOOK GREAT AGAIN)
(META), (APPL)

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Mad Hedge Fund Trader

Make Facebook Great Again

Tech Letter

Well, it doesn’t have to be the 2008 version, but Meta (META) CEO Mark Zuckerberg needs to go back to his roots, because this metaverse thing isn’t going to work out.

And if it does, it will be miles into the future.

For quite a few years now, Zuckerberg has focused on his pet project as if it's his real business.

That’s when the trouble started.

He even renamed his company after his new pet project - the Metaverse.

It's a vague concept that can describe a number of things, but broadly it's the idea of ​​people connecting through virtual worlds rather than a traditional social network.

Meta's big move into the Metaverse was a catastrophe, resulting in a mediocre experience, increasingly expensive headsets, and a stock plunge of over 60% in 2022.

Even though Meta’s stock has experienced a dead cat bounce in 2023, it doesn’t make up for the stagnation of the business model.

What should Zuck do?

He should slow down and focus on strengthening his company's core apps, Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp.

While Meta poured $15 billion into its Metaverse project, the other apps were noticeably neglected.

Meta should boost engagement and revenue from these apps, which have billions of users worldwide. Meanwhile, Horizon Worlds, Meta's flagship Metaverse app, only has a pitiful 200,000 monthly active users.

Even though Instagram has faced headwinds of late, it's still Meta's crown jewel. Keeping users happy with the app and laying out a plan for the years to come should be the company's top priority.

Meta should spend its time and energy monetizing that usage as much as possible without alienating users.

The company should do the same with WhatsApp, the world's most popular communication app.

The platform does not contain advertising to preserve its identity as a user-friendly service.

However, Meta has promised to use its popularity in other ways to increase revenue, including with paid features.

But instead of focusing on its proven uses, Meta is investing billions of dollars in an idea that may not pay off for five or 10 years.

Left unaddressed, a bet of this magnitude risks alienating investors and employees while they face economic challenges.

Apple (APPL) was one of the main reasons for the swan dive in ad revenue. Last year, the tech giant rolled out a privacy change for iOS, asking users if they didn't want to be tracked on other companies' apps as well. Meta responded at the time by saying that advertisers "may see an overall decline in ad performance and personalization and an increase in cost per action."

To stave off competition, Zuckerberg is attempting to invent the next future platform.

The issue I take with this pivot is that Zuck thinks it’s a lay-up, but I believe it’s something closer to a Hail Mary.

It’s rarely the incumbents who invent the next big platform, which is why Zuckerberg's metaverse vision is more suited to a VC-funded startup than a company-wide rallying cry.

Apple has also been exploring future platforms, albeit far more quietly than Meta (its own VR headset is rumored to roll out in June 2023).

Apple’s stock price has ground sideways while Meta has borne the full brunt of investor skepticism.

That hasn't stopped Zuckerberg from making his Metaverse foray into a contest between Meta and Apple, which of course takes up a lot of space.

Ultimately, the smart move here would be for Zuckerberg to take a page out of Apple's book by prioritizing the tried and tested cash cows to keep investors happy and relegate the Metaverse stuff to the dustbin of history.

The stock has doubled since October 2022 and Meta should improve on its self-labeled “year of efficiency.”

I do believe Meta shares will rise from here if they keep firing staff and simplify the platform.

They still employ over 86,000 people and I believe they can streamline down to 25,000 employees.

 

metaverse zuckerberg

 

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