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Tag Archive for: (META)

april@madhedgefundtrader.com

August 1, 2024

Diary, Newsletter, Summary

Global Market Comments
August 1, 2024
Fiat Lux

 

Featured Trade:

(WHY AMAZON IS THE MOST UNDERVALUED AI PLAY OUT THERE),
(AMZN), (NVDA), (GOOGL), (META), (AAPL), (MSFT), (WMT)

https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png 0 0 april@madhedgefundtrader.com https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png april@madhedgefundtrader.com2024-08-01 09:04:162024-08-01 10:14:55August 1, 2024
april@madhedgefundtrader.com

Why Amazon is the Most Undervalued AI Play Out There

Diary, Newsletter

Before I took off for the current trip to Europe, I logged into my Amazon Prime account to buy some lightweight polyester T-shirts, size 4XL. Not only are these ideal for long-distance hiking but they can be washed in a hotel sink and dried quickly when I am traveling too fast to use the house laundry.

The next morning when I logged into my laptop, my email account was flooded with ads for every kind of T-shirt in the world, from heavy-duty sports types FOR $100 to bargain basement $5 ones from China (although the Chinese ones were a little light on the 4X sizes).

That is Amazon’s AI at work. And you know what? It is getting smarter. And while the big fear among investors is that the US government will break up this retail giant for antitrust reasons, Amazon is integrating faster than ever. The impact on profits will be enormous.

My friend Jeff Bezos’ creation has a lot to work with. Amazon not only pioneered online retail. It subsequently invented the Kindle, an e-reader (click here where the John Thomas autobiography is for sale) Alexa, a smart speaker and, more consequentially, cloud-computing—Amazon Web Services has a 31% share of that $300bn market (full disclosure: Mad Hedge uses their service).

It also runs Prime Video, America’s fourth-most-watched video-streaming service (full disclosure: Mad Hedge is a Prime member). Its newish, high-margin advertising business is already the third largest in the world behind Alphabet (GOOGL) (Google’s parent company) and Meta (META) (Facebook’s).

Amazon also has a few moonshot projects of its own. One subsidiary, Zoox, is building self-driving cars. Another, Kuiper, is developing a fleet of communications satellites in low-Earth orbit, in competition with SpaceX Starlink (full disclosure: Mad Hedge is a Starlink user).

This year, Amazon’s websites will sell a staggering $554bn-worth of goods in America. That gives it a 42% share of American e-commerce, far beyond the 6% captured by Walmart (WMT), its nearest online competitor (and the country’s biggest retailer overall). The reward for all these efforts was a $2 trillion market capitalization in June and an all-time high share price of $203.

Amazon’s fourth decade looks poised to be an era of integration. The company has grown to the size that any needle-moving new investment is costly and high-risk. Andy Jassy, the former boss of AWS whom Bezos appointed as his successor as CEO in 2021, therefore appears keen to generate value by stitching the company’s existing businesses together more tightly.

Jeff, who I knew at Morgan Stanley, still retains a 9% stake after some hefty recent sales and a big say over strategy, seems to approve. This metamorphosis would make Amazon more similar to Apple (AAPL) and Microsoft (MSFT), two older big-tech rivals that have bundled and cross-sold their way to world domination in consumer devices and business software, respectively—and to $3trn valuations.

Retail and advertising appear to be the first to integrate. The thread running through the two businesses is Prime, Amazon’s $139 a-year subscription service, which has 300m-odd members around the world, providing shoppers with free delivery and access to Prime Video. Prime members like me spend twice as much on Amazon’s websites as non-members do and they tend to be logged in more often. Amazon also has intimate knowledge of their shopping behavior, which allows it to target ads more accurately.

Advertising is another great hope at Amazon. Advertisers are willing to pay handsomely for this service: analysts estimate that Amazon’s ads business enjoys operating margins of around a mind-blowing 40%, higher even than those of the cloud operation, not to mention the much less lucrative retail division.

Most of these ads, responsible for four-fifths of the company’s ad sales, are nestled among search results on its app or next to information about products, as with my above-mentioned T-shirts. But a growing share is coming from third-party websites and, most recently, from Prime Video. In January Amazon started showing commercials to viewers in America, Britain, Canada, and Germany.

Analysts reckon that video ads alone will boost Amazon’s ads sales by about 6% this year, adding $3bn to the top line. Given the ad operation’s fat margins, the impact on profit will be considerably larger.

To turn more Prime members into actual ad-watchers, Amazon is splurging on content. It recently signed a contract with Mr. Beast (??), a YouTube superstar, rumored to be worth $100m. It is trying to seal a deal in which it would pay $2bn a year for the rights to show National Basketball Association games on Prime Video. It is already reportedly spending $1bn annually to stream some National Football League (NFL) fixtures.

This hefty price tag is worth it, the company thinks, because popular sporting moments, such as “Thursday Night Football”, have turned out to be among the biggest sign-up days for Prime. Ads aired during sports events are some of the most lucrative in all of the ad business.

Analysts speculate that clever AWS software may also be assisting the retail operation’s 750,000 warehouse robots in sorting shoppers’ packages. And having a business as gigantic as Amazon’s retail arm as a captive customer gives AWS the confidence to scale up, helping spread costs.

The most important thread stitching Amazon’s two main businesses together is generative AI. Most rivals will struggle to match Amazon’s access to specialized AI hardware, which is in short supply but which it has in abundance thanks to long-standing commercial partnerships with companies like Nvidia (NVDA), which makes advanced AI semiconductors.

Amazon’s recent share-price rise was uninterrupted by a Fair Trade Commission lawsuit. But for every cloud customer that AWS loses to rivals such as Microsoft Azure or Google Cloud Platform, it could win one that is repelled by Microsoft’s and Google’s new businesses in their own increasingly tightly-knit empires.

It all looks like a giant, super-efficient machine to me which should justify at least a 50% gain in Amazon’s share price in the next year or two.

 

 

 

https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/08/The-everything-firm.png 580 576 april@madhedgefundtrader.com https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png april@madhedgefundtrader.com2024-08-01 09:02:372024-08-01 10:14:35Why Amazon is the Most Undervalued AI Play Out There
april@madhedgefundtrader.com

July 29, 2024

Tech Letter

Mad Hedge Technology Letter
July 29, 2024
Fiat Lux

 

Featured Trade:

(THE EYEWEAR STRATEGY IN TECH)
(META), (ESSILORLUXOTTICA)

https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png 0 0 april@madhedgefundtrader.com https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png april@madhedgefundtrader.com2024-07-29 14:04:562024-07-29 16:11:34July 29, 2024
april@madhedgefundtrader.com

The Eyewear Strategy In Tech

Tech Letter

Meta planning on getting into the eyewear business is a little bit of a head-scratcher until pealing back the layers.

Meta in talks to buy a $5 billion minority interest in EssilorLuxottica is more about a mega tech company putting out feelers to how they can corner another premium market.

It’s almost a given that Meta would start to branch out into other venues once their core businesses start to stagnate.

The digital ad game and social media platforms only go so far in terms of growth these days and that doesn’t hack it. Shareholders aren’t excited about what prospects Facebook and Instagram have to offer moving forward.

EssilorLuxottica is the largest maker of eyewear in the world and the owner of many eyewear brands and retailers including Ray-Ban, LensCrafters, and Pearle Vision in the U.S. If the deal happens, Meta would own about 5% of EssilorLuxottica.

EssilorLuxottica also announced its acquisition of Heidelberg Engineering, a maker of imaging and healthcare machinery and technology, largely for the ophthalmic and eyecare markets worldwide.

Prescription glasses are not cheap ranging into the thousands of dollars for designer frames and lenses.

If Meta can figure out how to do this all online without going to the optician, imagine the juicy margins they could extract from this sort of venture.

Meta and EssilorLuxottica have a relationship for the production of the Ray-Ban smart glasses. The glasses’ latest version gives consumers video, camera, and Bluetooth headset capability in a stylish eyewear frame with a cool brand on it.

Heidelberg Engineering makes complex, sophisticated, expensive equipment that you may be exposed to if you’re examined in an ophthalmologist’s office. Buying Heidelberg makes EssilorLuxottica more entrenched in the industry where it is the established leader.

The tie-up with EssilorLuxottica is the perfect onboarding situation to understand how to perfect the optimal glasses and lenses and then transfer it into an online experience.

Remember, even if this investment is for VR purposes, the application revolves around virtual eyewear as well.

Meta now understands they need to secure a monopoly on eyewear and it is a conscious decision to make that a launching point for more of their products.

In the future, Meta wants consumers to access Instagram, Whatsapp, and Facebook through EssilorLuxottica eyewear products.

Meta also hopes to secure the first mover advantage while other big tech firms lack the deep knowledge of eyewear. There have already been numerous failed attempts at smart glasses and so Meta founder Mark Zuckerberg is doubling down with a relationship with Europe’s most deeply entrenched premium eyewear firm.

Although the boost to the bottom and top line won’t happen quickly with a possible relationship with EssilorLuxottica, this could anoint Meta as the gatekeeper to the new virtual world through this new eyewear tech.

It’s becoming clear that Meta is running up to certain upper limits in regards to the growth of their 3 platforms and they are looking for another super booster to prop up profits.

I don’t believe that Meta will be allowed to acquire this eyewear company because of anti-competitive laws, but adopting its best products and hiring their best talent seems a lot more on brand from Meta.

Meta has never been shy at poaching outside talent and rewarding them handsomely.

On the flip side, EssilorLuxottica would be smart to adopt some tech now by hiring the right people and trying to digitize the experience further otherwise Meta will get what they are coming for.

Meta pushing the envelope is one of the big reasons why they have stayed ahead of other big tech companies and why the stock has done so well the past few years.

Buy Meta stock once the tech market consolidates.

 

https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png 0 0 april@madhedgefundtrader.com https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png april@madhedgefundtrader.com2024-07-29 14:02:582024-07-29 16:11:09The Eyewear Strategy In Tech
april@madhedgefundtrader.com

June 3, 2024

Diary, Newsletter, Summary

Global Market Comments
June 3, 2024
Fiat Lux

 

Featured Trade:

(The Mad June traders & Investors Summit is ON!)
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or WELCOME TO THE MALLARD MARKET and ME AND 23 AND ME),
(AAPL), (GOOGL), (AMZN), (TSLA), (MSFT), (META), (AVGO), (LRCX), (SMCI), (NVR), (BKNG), (LLY), (NFLX), (VIX), (COPX), (T), (NVDA), (LEN), (KBH)

https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png 0 0 april@madhedgefundtrader.com https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png april@madhedgefundtrader.com2024-06-03 12:06:452024-06-03 11:58:37June 3, 2024
april@madhedgefundtrader.com

The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or Welcome to the Mallard Market

Diary, Newsletter

There’s nothing like the comfort and self-satisfaction of having a 100% cash position in a falling market. While everyone else is bleeding red ink, I am happily plotting my next trades.

Of course, the rest of the market isn’t really bleeding red ink, just giving up windfall profits. Still, it’s better to trade from a position of strength than weakness. It makes identifying the next winners easier.

Think of this as the “Mallard Market”. On the surface, it seems calm and peaceful, while underwater, it is paddling along like crazy. The damage has been unmistakable. Dell, the faux AI stock (DELL) crashed by 28%, Salesforce (CRM) got creamed for 34%, and ServiceNow (NOW) got taken to the woodshed for 22%.

It all belies a market that is incredibly nervous and fast on the trigger. The tolerance for any bad news is zero. Yet there has been no market crash as I expected. The 5,300 level for the (SPX) seems to possess a gravitational field, powered by $250 earnings per share and a multiple of 51X.

It was NVIDIA that put the writing on the wall by announcing a 10:1 split that has opened the floodgates for similar prosperous and high-priced companies.

There are now 36 stocks with share prices of $500 or more ripe for splits with $7 trillion in market cap, or 16% of the total market. While splits don’t change the value of a company, perceptions are everything, as they prove shareholder-friendly policies. While individual investors are confused by an onslaught of contradictory research recommendations, splits are a great “tell” on what to buy next.

Apple (AAPL), Alphabet (GOOGL), Amazon (AMZN), and Tesla (TSLA) have already carried out splits, some multiple times, to great success. Of the Magnificent Seven, only Microsoft (MSFT) and Meta (META) have yet to split.

In the tech area Broadcom (AVGO), Lam Research (LRCX), Super Micro Computer (SMCI), and Service Now (NOW) have yet to split. In the non-tech area, there are NVR Inc. (NVR), Booking Holdings (BKNG), Eli Lilly (LLY), and Netflix (NFLX). Many of these are well-known Mad Hedge recommended stocks.

History has shown that stocks rise 25% one year after a split compared to 12% for the market as a whole. A stock’s addition to the Dow Average or the S&P 500 (SPY) provides a boost. If both occur, stocks will absolutely explode. Stock splits are also much more attractive than buybacks at these high prices.

So, I’ll be trolling the market for split-happy candidates.

You should too.

Since it may be some time before we capitulate and take a worthwhile run at new highs, I thought I’d update you on the global demographic outlook, which is always a long-term driver of economies and markets.

People are now living longer than ever before. But postponing death is only a part of the demographic story. The other is the decline in births. The combination of the two is creating huge changes in the global economy.

The notion of a “demographic transition” is almost a century old. Human societies used to have roughly stable populations, with high mortality matched by high fertility. Families had eight kids and 3-5 usually died in childhood, barely maintaining population growth.

In England and Wales in the 18th and 19th centuries, death rates suddenly plummeted. But fertility did not. The result was a population explosion. As the benefits of economic growth and advances in medicine and public health spread, most of the world has followed a similar transition, but far faster. As a result, human numbers rose fourfold over the last hundred years, from 2 billion to 8 billion.

In time, fertility followed mortality on a downward path across most of the world. As a result, fertility rates in more than half of all countries and territories in 2021 fell below the replacement level. For the world as a whole, the fertility rate was 2.3 in 2021, barely above the replacement of 2.1, down from 4.7 in 1960.

For high-income countries, the fertility rate was a mere 1.6, down from 3.0 in 1960. In general, poor countries still have higher fertility rates than richer ones, but they have been falling there, too.

What explains this collapse in fertility rates? An important part of the answer is the wonderful surprise that more children survived than expected. So, people started to practice various forms of birth control.

But the desire to have many children also shrank sharply. When husbands realized that smaller families meant high standards of living for themselves, family sizes dropped sharply. Even in ultra-conservative Iran, the fertility rate has collapsed from 6.6 in 1980 to only 1.7 in 2021.

A big reason for this shift was that, for their parents, children have moved from being a valuable productive asset in the 19th century to an expensive luxury today. That was back when 50% of our population worked on farms. Today it’s only 2%.

In the meantime, female participation in the economy rose dramatically in the 20th century, including in highly skilled careers. That raised the “opportunity cost” of producing children, especially for mothers. So, they have children later, or even not at all.

Where public childcare is more generous women are encouraged to combine careers with having children. The absence of such help helps explain the exceptionally low fertility rates in much of East Asia and Southern Europe, where parental support is limited.

This global shift towards very low fertility, with the exception (so far) of sub-Saharan Africa, is among the most important events driving the global economy. One implication is that the population of Africa is forecast to be larger than that of all today’s high-income countries, plus China by 2060, thanks to the elimination of many diseases there.

Why is all this important?

Because rising populations create larger markets, more profits for corporations, and rising share prices. Shrinking populations have the opposite effect, as China is learning about its distress now. One reason the US is growing faster than the rest of the world is that a continuous stream of new immigrants since its foundation has created endless numbers of new workers and customers. Dow 240,000 here we come!

Just thought you’d like to know.

 

 

So far in May, we are up +3.74%. My 2024 year-to-date performance is at +18.35%. The S&P 500 (SPY) is up +10.48% so far in 2024. My trailing one-year return reached +35.74%.

That brings my 16-year total return to +694.78%. My average annualized return has recovered to +51.48%.

As the market reaches higher and higher, I continue to pare back risk in my portfolio. I bailed on my last position early in the week, covering a short in Apple for a profit.

Some 63 of my 70 round trips were profitable in 2023. Some 27 of 37 trades have been profitable so far in 2024.

The Fed’s Favorite Inflation Gauge Cools by 0.2% in April, with the PCE, or the Personal Consumer Inflation Expectations Price Index. This one strips out the volatile food and energy components. It gives more credibility to a September rate cut and gave bonds a good day.

NVIDIA Shares Continues to Go Ballistic, creating another $800 billion in market capitalization in three trading days. That is the most in history. That took NASDAQ to a new all-time high at 17,000. At $2.8 trillion (NVDA) could become the largest publicly traded company in the world in another day. Today’s tailwind came from an Elon Musk comment that his new xAI start-up would buy the company's high-end H100 graphics cards. Buy (NVDA) on the next 20% dip.

Pending Home Sales Dive, down 7.7% in April, the worst since the Covid market three years ago. The impact of escalating interest rates throughout April dampened home buying, even with more inventory in the market. But the anticipated rate cuts later this year should lead to better conditions, with improved affordability and more supply. Buy (LEN) and (KBH) on dips.

Money Supply Rises for the First Time in More than a Year. Remember money supply? As measured by M2, it sums up the currency, coins, and savings deposits held by banks, balances in retail money-market funds, and more. Data for April released on Tuesday afternoon showed an increase of 0.6% from a year ago. The Fed balance sheet has shrunk by $1.5 trillion in two years, the fastest decline in history, slowing the economy.

AT&T’s (T) Copper is Worth More Than the Company, and with plans to convert half its copper network to fiber by 2025 could free up billions of tons of the red metal to sell on the market. Copper prices have doubled over the past two years, and they could double again by next year. Worldwide there are 7 trillion tons of copper wire in place. Fiber is cheaper and exponentially more efficient than copper, which is facing huge demands from AI, EVs, and the electrification of the grid. Buy copper (COPX) on dips.

Markets are Underpricing Low Volatility (VIX), not a good thing at all-time highs. Volatility across equity and currency markets is low. The Volatility Index (VIX) at $12.46 compares with an average over five years of $21.5 and over the longer term of $19.9. Markets are heavily discounting good news and a disinflationary environment. It is not only stocks. There is also low volatility across currency markets. The DB index of foreign exchange volatility is at $6.3 versus an average of $7.6 over five years and $9.3 over the longer term. This will end in tears.

S&P Case Shiller Jumps to New All-Time High, with its National Home Price Index. The index rose by 1.29%, the fastest growth since April 2023. All 20 major metro cities were up last month and gained 6.5% YOY. Four cities are currently at all-time highs: San Diego, Los Angeles, Washington, D.C., and New York. Prices in San Diego saw the biggest gain, up 11.4% from February of 2023. Both Chicago and Detroit reported 8.9% annual increases. Portland, Oregon, saw the smallest gain in the index of just 2.2%. Unaffordability is the big story in the market right now. The sunbelt is seeing the most weakness, thanks to a post-pandemic construction boom.

Space X’s Starlink Tops 3 million Subscribers, and is rapidly moving towards a global WiFi network. I set up a dozen of these in Ukraine last October and even the Russians couldn’t hack them. It sets a global 200 Mb standard usable in most countries, even the remote Galapagos Islands in the Pacific. It’s only a VC investment now but could become Elon Musk’s next trillion-dollar company.

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, June 3, the ISM Manufacturing PMI is released.

On Tuesday, June 4 at 7:00 AM, the JOLTS Job Openings Report will be published.

On Wednesday, June 5 at 7:00 AM, the ISM Services PMI is published.

On Thursday, June 6 at 8:30 AM, the Weekly Jobless Claims are announced. We also get the Challenger Job Cuts Report.

On Friday, June 7 at 8:30 AM, the Nonfarm Payroll and headline Unemployment Rate are announced. At 2:00 PM the Baker Hughes Rig Count is printed.

As for me, when Anne Wojcicki founded 23andMe in 2007, I was not surprised. As a DNA sequencing pioneer at UCLA, I had been expecting it for 35 years. It just came 70 years sooner than I expected.

For a mere $99 back then they could analyze your DNA, learn your family history, and be apprised of your genetic medical risks. But there were also risks. Some early customers learned that their father wasn’t their real father, learned of unknown brothers and sisters, that they had over 100 brothers and sisters (gotta love that Berkeley water polo team!), and other dark family secrets.

So, when someone finally gave me a kit as a birthday present, I proceeded with some foreboding. My mother spent 40 years tracing our family back 1,000 years all the way back to the 1086 English Domesday Book (click here)

I thought it would be interesting to learn how much was actually fact and how much fiction. Suffice it to say that while many questions were answered, alarming new ones were raised.

It turns out that I am descended from a man who lived in Africa 275,000 years ago. I have 311 genes that came from a Neanderthal. I am descended from a woman who lived in the Caucuses 30,000 years ago, which became the foundation of the European race.

I am 13.7% French and German, 13.4% British and Irish, and 1.4% North African (the Moors occupied Sicily for 200 years). Oh, and I am 50% less likely to be a vegetarian (I grew up on a cattle ranch).

I am related to King Louis XVI of France, who was beheaded during the French Revolution, thus explaining my love of Bordeaux wines, women wearing vintage Channel dresses, and pate foie gras.

Although both my grandparents were Italian, making me 50% Italian, I learned there is no such thing as pure Italian. I come out only 40.7% Italian. That’s because a DNA test captures not only my Italian roots, plus everyone who has invaded Italy over the past 250,000 years, which is pretty much everyone.

The real question arose over my native American roots. I am one-sixteenth Cherokee Indian according to family lore, so my DNA reading should have come in at 6.25%. Instead, it showed only 3.25% and that launched a prolonged and determined search.

I discovered that my French ancestors in Carondelet, MO, now a suburb of Saint Louis, learned of rich farmland and easy pickings of gold in California and joined a wagon train headed there in 1866. The train was massacred in Kansas. The adults were all killed, and the young children were adopted into the tribe, including my great X 5 Grandfather Alf Carlat and his brother, then aged four and five.

When the Indian Wars ended in the 1880s, all captives were returned. Alf was taken in by a missionary and sent to an eastern seminary to become a minister. He then returned to the Cherokees to convert them to Christianity.  By then, Alf was in his late twenties so he married a Cherokee woman, baptized her, and gave her the name of Minto, as was the practice of the day.

After a great effort, my mother found a picture of Alf & Minto Carlat taken shortly after. You can see that Alf is wearing a tie pin with the letter “C” for his last name Carlat. We puzzled over the picture for decades. Was Minto French or Cherokee? You can decide for yourself.

Then 23andMe delivered the answer. Aha! She was both French and Cherokee, descended from a mountain man who roamed the western wilderness in the 1840s. That is what diluted my own Cherokee DNA from 6.50% to 3.25%. And thus, the mystery was solved.

The story has a happy ending. During the 1904 World’s Fair in St. Louis (of Meet Me in St. Louis fame), Alf, then 46, placed an ad in the newspaper looking for anyone missing a brother from the 1866 Kansas massacre. He ran the ad for three months and on the very last day, his brother answered and the two were reunited, both families in tow.

Today, getting your DNA analyzed starts from $119, but with a much larger database, it is far more thorough. To do so, click here.

My DNA Has Gotten Around

 

It All Started in East Africa

 

1880 Alf & Minto Carlat, Great X 5 Grandparents

The Long-Lost Brother

 

Good Luck and Good Trading,

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

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/alf-minto.jpg 252 293 april@madhedgefundtrader.com https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png april@madhedgefundtrader.com2024-06-03 09:02:142024-06-03 11:56:52The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or Welcome to the Mallard Market
april@madhedgefundtrader.com

May 31, 2024

Diary, Newsletter, Summary

Global Market Comments
May 31, 2024
Fiat Lux

 

Featured Trade:

(The Mad June traders & Investors Summit is ON!)
(MAY 29 BIWEEKLY STRATEGY WEBINAR Q&A),
(TSLA), (AMZN), (META), (NFLX), (GLD), (SLV), (NVDA), (MSFT), (GOOG), (DELL), (MSFT), (TLT), (BRK/B), (PYPL), (BABA), (DD), (XOM), (OXY)

https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png 0 0 april@madhedgefundtrader.com https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png april@madhedgefundtrader.com2024-05-31 09:06:412024-05-31 12:06:32May 31, 2024
april@madhedgefundtrader.com

May 29 Biweekly Strategy Webinar Q&A

Diary, Newsletter

Below please find subscribers’ Q&A for the May 29 Mad Hedge Fund Trader Global Strategy Webinar, broadcast from Incline Village, NV.

Q: Since Elon Musk is raising tons of money for his AI startup called xAI, will this impact Tesla’s (TSLA) stock price?

A: Yes, it's a very positive move for Tesla because anytime Elon Musk raises money anywhere in his network, it takes the need off of him to sell Tesla shares for cash. And I think his xAI will be the next trillion-dollar company, and SpaceX is in front of it as another trillion-dollar company. Those stocks, he can sell any time and raise a lot of money, but the other two are still private companies. We can't buy them yet unless we buy some of the public vehicles offered by venture capitalists like Ron Baron who has heavy positions in both Tesla and SpaceX. So, no direct plays yet on these companies, but no doubt when they become incredibly valuable, he'll take them all public and become the richest man in the world two or three times over. So yes, that is a positive.

Q: Where do you think (TLT) will be in the next few months?

A: In a narrow trading range. I think we're basically in a $86 to $91 trading range, and we'll go nowhere until we get clarification on Fed interest rate cuts. At the rate the economy is slowing, we may get one in September, and even if the Fed doesn't cut, the rest of the world will, including Japan, Europe, Great Britain, and so on. So we may get our interest rates dragged down here by foreign countries that all have much weaker economies than the US.

Q: Should I keep buying big tech stocks after Nvidia's (NVDA) blowout earnings?

A: Well, if you recall back in the ancient times of April, Nvidia had a 20% sell-off, and most of the tech stocks were down at least 10%. So, I would wait for the next 20% sell-off of Nvidia not only to buy Nvidia but all other big tech stocks as well, because it basically is a big tech story and will continue for the rest of the year like that. So we're really looking to buy dips among the big tech winners, and those would include Amazon (AMZN), Meta (META), Microsoft (MSFT), and so on.

Q: How long can the US economy go without a recession?

A: Five years. The way our economic cycle works is after a long period of growth, companies get overconfident, over-invest, create excessive capacity in the markets for everything, and that leads to a crash and a recession, deflation, and lower interest rates. So even if we don't get major moves in the (TLT) upside now, you always will over the long term get interest rates going back to 2 or 3% for the 10-year so it’s a great long-term hold. That is the economic cycle—that's what creates bear markets and it’s known as “Boom and Bust”. Long may it live because that’s where we traders earn our crust of bread. But this time may be different. We may go longer than 5 years because AI is still in its infancy, still rolling out, and the number of companies making actual profits in AI will go from 3 to 300 over the next five years.

Q: I'm looking to buy gold in an investment account (GLD). Would you do that now, if so, what would you recommend?

A: I would recommend GLD (SPDR Gold Trust) because the metals are still outperforming the miners, miners being held back by the inflation rates unique to the mining industry, which are much higher than the 3.3% for the general economy. And if you want to add a little more spice to your portfolio, buy some silver (SLV) because it is rising at three times the rate of gold thanks to Chinese speculation. You might buy some copper while you're at it too—it's moving almost as fast as gold is.

Q: Which big tech firm is next to issue a dividend?

A: That's an easy answer, it's Netflix (NFLX). But there's a more important question out here— Which is the next tech stock to issue a stock split? And guess what the answer is? Netflix again, which needs to declare both a dividend and a stock split. It's at an all-time high, has a very high share price, and over time, stocks that split deliver double the performance of the S&P 500. So, the mere announcement will suck in a lot of new retail investors as we just saw with Nvidia (NVDA), where we got a $250 move on the split announcement. So, watch your splits, and in fact, I'm going to be devoting a major piece of next Monday's newsletter to splits and how to play them.

Q: Why has the stock market been so strong this year when interest rates are high?

A: The answer to that is AI. We are still in the very early days of AI, and as I mentioned earlier, only three companies are making money from AI right now. That's Nvidia (NVDA), Microsoft (MSFT), and Google (GOOG). That number will increase as AI moves down the food chain and everybody starts using it, including you and me. I view the AI development as similar to 1995 when all of a sudden we got Netscape, a navigator that made the Internet available to the public, Dell Computers (DELL), and Microsoft (MSFT) software all at once hitting the market and creating the online economy essentially from scratch. Something of that magnitude is what the stock market is discounting now. Think of it in terms of the revolutionary new technologies of 1995, which means we have another 5 or 6 years to go, and that's why the stock market is so strong.

Q: Should I invest in Berkshire Hathaway (BRK/B), or do you think their magic will run out soon?

A: I don't think their magic will ever run out. Of course, the day that Warren Buffett dies it'll be down 10%, but then you'll want to buy it with both hands because Warren has already replaced himself with a first-class management team who is carrying on his strategy. Any selloffs in Berkshire you get this summer, go in there and buy the calls, the call spreads, the stock, the LEAPS, and the kitchen sink. Still a great long-term BUY, and I see $500 either late this year or next year in (BRK/B).

Q: I'm a member of IM Academy.

A: Oh my gosh. I would let your membership expire, except you're probably on auto-renewal, and the only way to stop your subscription is to call your credit card company and ask them to block the billings. That is the problem with these predatory financial newsletters, they're impossible to get out of, even when they promise refunds anytime.

Q: Are there any Chinese stocks you like now?

A: No, but the highest quality stock in China is Alibaba (BABA). It's basically a combination of Amazon and PayPal in China, but you still have a very high political risk investing in anything in China. The currency is very weak, so better fish to fry is my opinion. And I tend to avoid countries suffering from demographic implosions.

Q: Should we buy (TLT) now or wait?

A: I would wait until we get some upside momentum going and we complete a few more downside tests.

Q: What's the best place to put cash in the summer?

A: The answer is always good old 90-day US Treasury bills. They are still paying 5.25%.

Q: What are your thoughts on PayPal (PYPL)?

A: I'm avoiding that sector because of over-competition crushing profit margins; that has been a problem for a couple of years now. Don't confuse “gone down a lot” with cheap.

Q: Which oil companies are the best to invest in right now?

A: You can buy Exxon Mobil (XOM) for the high dividend and the sheer size of the company. My second is Occidental Petroleum (OXY), because Warren Buffett owns 25% of the company, has shrunk the float, and that has a result in magnifying any moves up in the stock. Also, I somewhat admire Warren Buffett's stock-picking ability. And of course, I’ve been following the California company OXY since 1970, back when it was run by Armand Hammer, a friend of Vladimir Lenin, so my connections with the company go back a very long time.

Q: Do you like DuPont (DD) for the three-way split?

A: I do, but DuPont has a major problem looming with lawsuits over the PFAS chemicals—those are the forever chemicals which are all over the country, all over the food supply, and cause cancer. So that could be sort of like a Johnson & Johnson-type liability problem with the talcum powder. So again…why look for trouble? Buying a stock facing that kind of liability could be another tobacco situation.

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, select your subscription (GLOBAL TRADING DISPATCH, TECHNOLOGY LETTER, or Jacquie's Post), then click on 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

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april@madhedgefundtrader.com

May 13, 2024

Diary, Newsletter, Summary

Global Market Comments
May 13, 2024
Fiat Lux

 

Featured Trade:

(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or THE GREAT AMERICAN GOLDEN AGE HAS ONLY JUST BEGUN and SWIMMING WITH THE SHARKS)
(AAPL), (NVDA), (META), (GLD), (GOLD), (SLV), (WPM), (MSFT), (NVDA), (TLT), (FCX), (FXI), (BRK/B)

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april@madhedgefundtrader.com

The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead or The Great American Golden Age has Only Just begun and Swimming with the Sharks

Diary, Newsletter

The Bull Market has Five More Years to Run, with S&P 500 growing earnings at 10% a year for the foreseeable future. Last year brought in $222 per share, 2024 will see $250, 2025 $270, and $300 for 2026. The Great American Golden Age has only just begun.

Profit margins will expand to all-time record highs. Falling interest rates and a weak dollar will boost exports to a recovering Europe and Japan. Inflation should hit the Fed’s 2% in 2025 as AI chatbots replace workers at a breakneck rate, cutting costs dramatically as they already have at some firms. The future is happening fast. Buy everything on dips, even bonds.

The stock market couldn’t even manage a 10% correction in April. We got a measly 6.10% instead. It’s all about the economy, stupid. Leftover massive Covid spending and the $280 billion CHIPS Act have created a tidal wave of cash surging through the system with much of it ending up in stocks.

The top eight tech companies (the Magnificent Seven plus Netflix (NFLX)) accounting for 30% of the entire market cap are only getting stronger. The (SPY) has a current price-earnings multiple of 20X with the Big 8 and 17X without them going forward. It’s not cheap but better than a poke in the eye with a sharp stick. 

Boring old high-yielding utilities will become a big play as the electric power grid has to triple in size to accommodate the voracious appetites of EV’s and AI. And as we have already seen in California and much of the country, utilities have no reservations about raising prices.

We are back to normal with interest rates, returning to pre-financial crisis levels. Certainly, a stock market at all-time highs is happy with rates. The real concern here is that the Fed DOES cut rates too fast to bail out the loan-dependent half of the economy and the US Treasury as well. That could trigger a melt-up in stocks that would make the last six months pale in comparison and make my own $6,000 target for the (SPX) look ridiculously conservative.

There is also a major generational change in demographics underway. Previous retiring generations, having experienced the Great Depression, hoarded savings and were a drag on the economy. The Baby Boomers are spending like there is no tomorrow because after going through COVID-19, there might not BE a tomorrow. The Boomers have thus turned into the greatest job creators of all time through their spending.

I’ve seen them everywhere in recent weeks in Florida, Cuba, Ecuador, the Galapagos Islands, Panama, and of course, San Francisco where a Big Mac Happy Meal costs $11. What they don’t spend is being passed on to Gen Xers and Millennials, creating a $75 trillion wealth transfer, the largest in history. A lot of this is going into stocks as well. Wonder where all that “meme stock” money is coming from?

And from the “Department of I Told You So”, notice that precious metals were on an absolute tear last week, with gold (GLD) up 4.78% and silver posting a gob-smacking 7.40%. The new demand that I was aware of but had no hard data on finally became public. Solar Panels are Driving Global Silver Demand in an unprecedented fashion. Global investment in solar PV manufacturing more than doubled last year to around $80 billion.

Miners are expanding their operations and ramping up production as prices for the precious metal climb to decade highs, sending gross revenues to the moon. Demand for silver from the makers of solar PV panels, particularly those in China, is forecast to increase by almost 170% by 2030, to roughly 273 million ounces—or about one-fifth of total silver demand.

That’s a lot of silver. Buy (SLV) and (WPM) on dips.

So far in May, we are up +4.14%. My 2024 year-to-date performance is at +18.75%, a new all-time high. The S&P 500 (SPY) is up +10.48% so far in 2024. My trailing one-year return reached +35.79% versus +30.58% for the S&P 500.

That brings my 16-year total return to +695.38%. My average annualized return has recovered to +51.83%.

I stopped out of short positions for small losses in (AAPL) and (NVDA) last week. I took profits on my long in (META). I am running my longs in (GLD) and (SLV) and my shorts in (MSFT) and (NVDA) into the Friday, May 17 options expiration. The only new position I added last week was a short in the (TLT).

Some 63 of my 70 round trips were profitable in 2023. Some 27 of 37 trades have been profitable so far in 2024.

Weekly Jobless Claims Hit a Nine Month High at 233,000, the bitter fruit of persistently high interest rates. New York City public school workers such as bus drivers are allowed to apply for benefits during winter and spring breaks, which tend to boost weekly claims numbers. Claims also picked up in California, Indiana, and Illinois.

Underwater Home Mortgages are Soaring, with the South taking the biggest hit. Roughly one in 37 homes are now considered seriously underwater in the US and that share is much higher across a swath of southern states. Nationally, 2.7% of homes carried loan balances at least 25% more than their market value in the first few months of the year. That’s up from 2.6% in the previous quarter. It’s another cost of high rates.

Online Retail Spending Up 7%, during the January-April period YOY. Cheaper items are seeing the fastest growth. Consumer discretionary spending has been in focus over the past several months, as sticky inflation has forced shoppers in various categories to trade down to more affordable products. It’s another sign of a modest slow, 1.6% growing economy.

Morgan Stanley (MS) Pushes Back Rate Cut Expectations to September. I couldn’t agree more. You see this in the $4 rally in bonds since last week. Sell short (TLT) for the very short term.

TikTok Sues the US Government, claiming its first amendment rights have been violated in a ban imposed on Congress. They will probably win. The national security threat posed by millions of dancing teenagers has never been showed. It’s just another talking point for technology-ignorant politicians egged on by Facebook (META) and other competitors. No one ever said the people in Silicon Valley were nice.

Social Security Trust Fund to Go Broke by 2035, according to US Treasury estimates. I knew they wouldn’t pay me after 55 years of contributions. Medicare is in less bad shape, not running out until 2036, a five-year extension. Retirees, the baby boomers, and exceeding new contributors, the Gen Xers. Expect your taxes to go up to fill the gap.

Berkshire Hathaway
Delivers Blockbuster Earnings in Q1, thanks to a $9 billion pop in (AAPL) stock last year. Buffet just cut his massive position by 13% and will cut more. Total 2023 profits came in at a mind-numbing $93 billion. The company — whose divisions include insurance, the BNSF railroad, an expansive power utility, Brooks running shoes, Dairy Queen and See’s delivered a sharp swing from its $22 billion loss in 2022 because of the bear market. Its vast insurance operations that include Geico car insurance and reinsurance reported $5.3 billion in after-tax earnings for 2023, thanks to steep premium increases which we have all felt. Sell (AAPL), buy (BRK/B).

Bond Investors are Making a Killing, with the US Treasury paying out $900 billion in interest in 2023. That’s double the annual cost of the past decade. Remember those coupons? That’s another reason for the Fed to cut rates soon, to lessen this backbreaking burden on the government. After being held hostage by zero-rate policies for almost two decades, US Treasuries are finally reverting to their traditional role in the economy. Bonds are becoming respectable again after a long winter. Buy (TLT) on dips.

China Home Sales
Plunge by 47%, as the real estate crisis deepened, indicating that a recovery may be far off. But when it does bounce back, expect all commodities to hit record highs. Buy (FCX) on dips.

Biden Piles on the Foreign Tariffs, announcing new China tariffs aimed at the EV Industry that is currently decimating Europe. Europe is in danger of giving away its edge in cars to the Chinese and a proactive response would ensure American car manufacturers can stand up to the low-priced onslaught.

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, May 13, at 10:30 AM EST, the Consumer Inflation Expectations are announced.

On Tuesday, May 14 at 8:30 AM EST, Producer Price Index for April is released.

On Wednesday, May 15 at 8:30 AM EST, the Consumer Price Index is published

On Thursday, May 16 at 8:30 AM EST, the Weekly Jobless Claims are announced.

On Friday, May 17 at 8:30 AM the Monthly Options Expiration takes place at the close.

At 2:00 PM the Baker Hughes Rig Count is printed.

As for me, I will never forget the words from my underwater guide: “Stay where you are and the current will bring the sharks to you.”

Is that something we want, I queried in my fractured Spanish. “Don’t worry”, he answered, “The sharks are vegetarians.” Yes, but did anyone tell the sharks that they were vegetarians?

Sure enough, two six-foot-long hammerhead sharks hungrily swam by me within feet in the green murk, not even pausing to give me the time of day. They swam so close that one almost slapped me in the Face with his tailfin. I guess I wasn’t on the menu that day, not even as a special.

Fortunately, I brought a GoPro underwater video with me and filmed the whole thing. Otherwise, you wouldn’t believe me for a second (click here for the link.)

Such was the high point of my week in the Galapagos Islands last week, a remote archipelago of 13 volcanic islands some 600 miles west of Ecuador, 2 degrees South Latitude in the Pacific Ocean. Sitting in my beachfront house in San Cristobal, I worked all morning, knocking out some eight trade alerts on the week, and explored every afternoon.

It was bliss.

You scientists out there will already know the Galapagos Islands as the place where Charles Darwin landed in 1835 on the HMS Beagle and collected the data that led to the Theory of Evolution and the concept of the Survival of the Fittest. (It was all about black Finches, now known as Darwin’s finches, of which I saw hundreds).

Darwin was at first widely ridiculed, as are the creators of all new revolutionary advances. Critics highlighted his close relationship with monkeys. Now it’s required reading for all high school students. While I was there a reproduction of the Beagle sailed in from Holland to celebrate the 200th anniversary of Darwin’s discoveries….11 years early.

The Galapagos Islands are not an easy place to get to. It was a four-hour flight from Miami to Quito in Ecuador, the worlds third highest airport at 9,500 feet. A lot of transients get altitude sickness. Then an hour's flight to Guayaquil on the coast where the Ecuadorian drug trade is run and another hour to San Cristobal. When I tried to visit here in the 1970’s there was only one ship a week and no planes.

Galapagos connected to the outside world just last year when Space X’s Starlink service initiated a 200mb/sec service. With that, I can trade stocks as if I were in downtown Manhattan. This is true for virtually every remote location in the world now, the consequences of which we have yet to imagine. I set up a Starlink in Ukraine last October while under fire and the Russians never were able to jam it.

The Ecuadorian government has gone through great lengths to keep the Galapagos Islands a pristine eco-tourism destination and they have largely succeeded. I counted only one Cessna G5 jet at the airport. Incoming luggage is X-Rayed for foreign fruit and sniffed for drugs by German Shepherds. Residents are limited to a tiny southwestern sliver of San Cristobal island and the rest is a national park.

A friend charitably turned down a $20 million offer from the Four Seasons international hotel chain for his 120 acres of land there. There are not a lot of places in the world left where you can walk out of your front door to a deserted beach unscarred by footprints. Yet, it offers Ecuadorian prices, about one-third of those found in the US.

I think you should visit there.

 

 

 

HMS Beagle, kind of

 

55 Years of Trading and Finally my Own Beach!

 

Let the Current Bring the Sharks to You

 

Chillin with the Crew

 

My New Office

 

The View from Home

 

My New Neighbors

 

 

 

 

 

 

Good Luck and Good Trading,
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader

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