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Mad Hedge Fund Trader

The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or Why History Rhymes

Diary, Newsletter

The 19th century humorist and writer, Mark Twain, said, “History never repeats itself, but it rhymes.” This is certainly one of those rhyming times.

Remember back in 2011 when the Dow hit a short-term peak at $12,300 in May of 2011? The Cassandras had a heyday. The bull market was over, stocks were imminently going to crash, and the next stop for the Dow was $3,000. Gold and bonds were the only safe places.

Those who drank the Kool-Aid missed the greatest investment opportunity of the century and are now driving for Uber cars to earn their crust of bread. Those who drank the Kool-Aid twice sold their homes as well ahead of the greatest real estate boom of all time.

Not that a correction wasn’t sorely needed, we needed to scare money out of what I call the “super liquidity” investments like Bitcoin, SPACS, and tech companies selling at 100 times sales with failing business models.

We also needed to put the fear of god into newbie day traders by teaching them that stocks go down as well as up. We’ve already made good progress on this front. With many of the “meme” stocks down by half or more since February, we are already making good progress on that front.

What will power the Dow to my now very prescient looking $40,000 target by yearend? The unwind of the 40-year-old bull market in bonds has barely just begun. Ten-year US Treasury bond yields ($TNX) have only appreciated from 0.32% to 1.68%, compared to 5.6% at the last 2007 peak. That means there are still many tens of trillions of dollars to shift out of bonds (TLT) and INTO STOCKS!

Once the current correction ends, money will pour back into the recent leaders, the economic cyclicals, including financials, commodities, industrials, and commodities.

Technology will stay in the penalty box for the foreseeable future until they become under-owned and cheap again. The good news here is that tech earnings are growing at such a prolific rate that the sector is losing two price earnings multiple points a month and will return to the bargain basement in the not-too-distant future.

The long term view here is that you want to rent growth, but own tech, which still has double the growth rate of everything else.

It all makes my 2021 $40,000 Dow Average target look like a piece of cake, and my 2030 goal of $120,000 positively conservative, cautious, and circumspect.

Notice that our 2,000 point-swan dive in the Dow last week lasted only three days, and then delivered the sharpest fall in the Volatility Index (VIX) in history, from $29 to $19 in only 24 hours. The writing is still on the wall. People want to BUY.

Inflation explodes, with the Consumer Price Index posting a ballistic 4.2% YOY rate, the fastest gain since 2009. The Fed believes this is a temporary surge, the markets not so much. Bonds take it on the nose. Keep selling rallies in the (TLT). We’re making a fortune here.

Volatility Index (VIX) soars to $29, almost doubling in a week. Call me when it tops $30. That’s the usual signal for a short-term stock market bottom. I’m relaxed because I’m going into this with 80% cash and have just made a huge fortune on bond shorts.

Value and cyclicals are still the Big Play. That was the message of the stock market on Friday’s wild day which saw an 11-basis point trading range in the ten-year US treasury bond. If you think the next big move in rates is up, then Cyclicals will roar, and techs will fade.

It’s all about buying what people are underweight and selling what they are overweight. I’m looking for cyclicals that have recently corrected. Stay tuned to this station.

US Inventories see solid gains as retailers load the boat for the biggest economic recovery of all time. March was up 1.3%. One of an endless series of data points pointing to the best business conditions in a century.

The Home Buying Frenzy continues, with the median price for a single-family home soaring by 16.2% to $319,200 in Q1, according to the National Association of Realtors. Record high prices are hitting all markets. The perfect upside storm continues.

Weekly Jobless Claims come in at 473,000, a new post-Covid low. Continuing claims fall to 3,655,000. The greatest economic recovery of all time continues.

Producer Prices leap in April, up 0.6% following a 1% gain in March. It is a natural follow-on from the hot CPI. The PPI tracks changes in production costs, and supply bottlenecks and shortages tied to the pandemic recovery have caused commodity prices to soar. Temporary or continuing, that is the big debate. Watch the bond market for clues.

Stanley Druckenmiller says Bonds are Toast, and The Dollar is Worse. I couldn’t agree more with my old friend and trading counterparty. Current Fed policies are now the most extreme in history and threaten the reserve status of the US dollar. Sell all rallies in the (TLT) and the (UUP).

My Ten Year View

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

My Mad Hedge Global Trading Dispatch profit reached 3.83% gain so far in May on the heels of a spectacular 15.67% profit in April. That leaves me 30% invested and 70% cash.

My 2021 year-to-date performance soared to 63.59%. The Dow Average is up 13.47% so far in 2021.

During the stock market meltdown, my hedges with shorts in the S&P 500 (SPY), NASDAQ (QQQ), and the United States Treasury Bond Fund (TLT) performed spectacularly well, leaving me up on the week. I managed to limit myself to only two stop losses, in Microsoft (MSFT) and Delta Airlines (DAL).

While everyone else was running around like chickens with their heads cut off, I was as relaxed as ever. Our worst case for May is that we will be only up single digits, instead of the double-digit gains of the past six months. That is not a bad “worst case” to have.

That brings my 11-year total return to 486.14%, some 2.00 times the S&P 500 (SPX) over the same period. My 11-year average annualized return now stands at an unbelievable 42.45%, easily the highest in the industry.

My trailing one-year return exploded to positively eye-popping 127.09%. I truly have to pinch myself when I see numbers like this. I bet many of you are making the biggest money of your long lives.

We need to keep an eye on the number of US Coronavirus cases at 33 million and deaths topping 586,000, which you can find here.

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

On Monday, May 17, at 9:45 AM, the New York Empire State Manufacturing Index for May will be out

On Tuesday, May 18, at 10:00 AM, the Housing Starts for April are announced.

On Wednesday, May 19 at 2:00 PM, Minutes from the last Federal Reserve FOMC Meeting are published.

On Thursday, May 20 at 8:30 AM, the Weekly Jobless Claims are published.

On Friday, May 21 at 10:00 AM, Existing Homes Sales for April are announced. At 2:00 PM, we learn the Baker-Hughes Rig Count.

As for me, we had a big 4.7 earthquake at Lake Tahoe last week. The healthy live trees vibrated and swayed. But all of the brittle dead trees killed by pine beetles during the draught snapped at the base and fell over.

Those blocked all the fire roads, so every emergency and public service organization on the lake was called up and sent up into the mountains with chain saws. That included me, a member of Lake Tahoe Search and Rescue.

I hiked up to 9,000 feet with a 50-pound load and went to work. We cut these enormous 100-foot conifers into one-foot rounds and then rolled them off the road. Everyone else on the job was under 40.

After a day of heavy lifting, I hiked down the mountain and collapsed into bed.  I slept for 12 hours, which is why the Monday letter was late. They say 70 is the new 40. I am the proof of that.

So can 100 be the new 60? One can only hope.

How was your weekend?

Stay healthy.

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

 

 

20 Year Chart of Ten Year US Treasury Yields

 

 

 

 

https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/jtfootlog.jpg 484 433 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2021-05-17 10:02:372021-05-17 10:22:00The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or Why History Rhymes
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

May 14, 2021

Tech Letter

Mad Hedge Technology Letter
May 14, 2021
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:

(THE GOLDEN ERA OF CYBERSECURITY SPEND)
(PANW), (FTNT), (CRWD), (AMZN), (GOOGL), (ORCL), (MSFT), (IBM)

https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png 0 0 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2021-05-14 15:04:292021-05-14 19:57:25May 14, 2021
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

The Golden Era of Cybersecurity Spend

Tech Letter

The tech sector and the U.S. government are poised to engage in a more transactional relationship than ever before after the cybersecurity attack on Colonial Pipeline and the U.S. President’s executive order that followed it.  

This doesn’t mean just servicing an email account, but this will incorporate broad-based networking cloud infrastructure from the top-down and the bits in between.

Technology is just getting too good, too fast, and applicable to the point that it allows nefarious actors to wield it in a way that could damage and permanently set back sovereign nations and global business.

Don’t get me wrong, this was already in the works, and U.S. President Joe Biden has signaled his intent to ramp up the IT spent, but this cyberattack that is causing gas hoarding in parts of South Eastern United States is just the event to really kick this initiative into overdrive.

Colonial Pipeline paid the almost $5 million ransom payment that will encourage similar type of behavior in the long-term.

The Cyberattack also means that the relationship between U.S. tech and government could swerve from net negative of a relentless anti-monopoly narrative to one in which big tech will be anointed as the saviors to the foreign cyber-criminals and paid handsomely to defend the operations of private and state U.S. business.

The latter sounds much better to Silicon Valley than the former and the bigwigs in Silicon Valley might ostensibly push this marketing dynamic of internet protection to save their bacon and get the regulatory heat off their back.

Polarizing figures such as U.S. Senator Elizabeth Warren have made it a point to bash big tech whenever she sees fit which is more often than not.

CEOs like Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg have tried a disingenuous approach of blaming China’s marginal data privacy policies as a way to protect its Instagram business and prevent growth monster TikTok, a Chinese app, from cannibalizing its cash cow business.

The origin of the Colonial Attack is purportedly to be Russian which would offer more fuel to the fire and create a ready-made reason for U.S. government to pour incremental billions into Silicon Valley and its array of almost multi-trillion dollar heavy hitters while protecting their business moat.

This event also means Tesla is toast in China. 

Officials in China banned Tesla vehicles from military bases and housing compounds amid concerns that potentially sensitive data from its onboard cameras could be collected and stored on Tesla servers.

Once the data privacy genie is out of the bottle, it’s hard to contain the fallout and Tesla will need to adopt a whack-a-mole strategy in China which often proves futile in the long-term.

The United States faces persistent and increasingly sophisticated malicious cyber campaigns that threaten the public sector, the private sector, and ultimately the American people’s security and privacy. 

This is all just the beginning, a little taste of what’s on the menu.

Collaborating with U.S tech companies to improve its efforts to identify, deter, protect against, detect, and respond to these actions and actors is now a must. 

The Federal Government must also carefully examine what occurred during any major cyber incident and apply lessons learned.

Incremental improvements will not offer the security Americans need; instead, the Federal Government needs to make bold changes and significant investments in order to defend the vital institutions that underpin the American way of life. 

It’s the authorities’ job and to offer resources to protect and secure its computer systems, whether they are cloud-based, on-premise, or hybrid. 

The scope of protection and security must include systems that process data (information technology (IT)) and those that run the vital machinery that ensures our safety (operational technology (OT)).

Contracts will be signed with IT and OT service providers to conduct an array of day-to-day functions on Federal Information Systems.  These service providers, including cloud service providers, have unique access to and insight into cyber threat and incident information on Federal Information Systems. 

Increasing the sharing of information about such threats, incidents, and risks, and enabling more effective defense of agencies’ systems and of information collected, processed, and maintained by or for the Government are necessary steps to accelerating incident deterrence, prevention, and response efforts.

The executive order signed by Biden shows that within 60 days, the Director of the Office of Management and Budget will hash out “language for contracting with IT and OT service providers and recommend updates.”

The U.S. must take decisive steps to modernize its approach to cybersecurity and must increase the Federal Government’s visibility into threats while protecting privacy and civil liberties.

Money will be spent to accelerate movement to secure cloud services, including Software as a Service (SaaS), Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS), and Platform as a Service (PaaS); centralize and streamline access to cybersecurity data to drive analytics for identifying and managing cybersecurity risks; and invest in both technology and personnel to match these modernization goals.

Prioritizing money spent on addressing “critical software” will translate into huge paydays to many cloud providers and not just the big guys.

Most recently, The Central Intelligence Agency awarded its long-awaited Commercial Cloud Enterprise, or C2E, contract to five companies—Amazon Web Services (AMZN), Microsoft (MSFT), Google (GOOGL), Oracle (ORCL), and IBM (IBM).

No doubt they will be vying for more government procurement contracts since they already have one hand in the honey jar.

At a lower level, readers should consider buying cybersecurity companies Fortinet (FTNT), Palo Alto Networks, Inc. (PANW), and CrowdStrike Holdings, Inc. (CRWD), but these smaller names come with more volatility.

This event really anoints the impending future as the golden era of IT cybersecurity spend and it will never go back to what it once was.

Paying for IT protection is here for the long haul and this goes for private companies and public institutions.  

Nearly 80% of senior IT and IT security leaders believe their organizations lack sufficient protection against cyberattacks despite increased IT security investments made in 2020 to deal with distributed IT and work-from-home challenges, according to a new IDG Research Services survey commissioned by Insight Enterprises.

There will be a huge boom in IT cybersecurity spend because CEOs don’t want to be the idiot that allowed cybercriminals to hijack their whole business.

That’s the fastest way to end a management career.

Last time I checked, it’s a hard slog up the corporate ladder to land a prime CEO gig and it’s not getting any easier.

cybersecurity

 

 

https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png 0 0 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2021-05-14 15:02:252021-05-21 00:04:48The Golden Era of Cybersecurity Spend
Douglas Davenport

May 14, 2021

Diary, Newsletter, Summary
    • Global Market Comments
      May 14, 2021
      Fiat Lux

      Featured Trade:
      (MAY 12 BIWEEKLY STRATEGY WEBINAR Q&A),
      (FCX), (QQQ), (JWN), (DAL), (MSFT), (PLTR), (V), (MA), (AXP), (UUP), (FXA), (SPWR), (FSLR), (TSLA), (ARKK), (CLX), (NIO), (EPEV), (SOX), (VIX), (USO), (XLE)

       

https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png 0 0 Douglas Davenport https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Douglas Davenport2021-05-14 08:04:142021-05-13 19:28:46May 14, 2021
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

May 10, 2021

Diary, Newsletter, Summary
  • Global Market Comments
    May 10, 2021
    Fiat Lux

    Featured Trade:

    (MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or THE SUSHI HITS THE FAN),
    (SPY), (TLT), (TBT), (V), (UNP), (DAL), (MSFT), (GS), (JPM), (FCX)

  • https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png 0 0 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2021-05-10 09:04:362021-05-10 12:00:59May 10, 2021
    Mad Hedge Fund Trader

    The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or the Sushi Hits the Fan

    Diary, Newsletter

    During my senior year in High School, I had the good fortune to date the daughter of Richard Knerr, the founder of Wham-O, the inventor of Hula Hoops, Silly Putty, Super Balls, Frisbee’s, and Slip & Slides (click here).

    At six feet, she was the tallest girl in the school, and at 6’4” I was an obvious choice.

    After the senior prom and wearing my tux, I took her to the Los Angeles opening night of the new musical Hair. In the second act, the entire cast dropped their clothes onto the stage and stood there stark naked. The audience was stunned, shocked, embarrassed, and even gob-smacked.

    Those were the reactions I saw on Friday, when the April Nonfarm Payroll Report was released showing a gain of only 266,000 jobs. A million had been expected.

    So, how does that work? Red hot ADP private jobs and a year low in Weekly Jobless Claims, but a horrific monthly Payroll report?

    They say economic data can be “noisy”. This time it was positively cacophonous. The fact is that these data points were never created to handle times like this, the most disruptive in history.

    When the data are useless, all you have to do is take a walk down Main Street. There are “Help Wanted” signs at virtually every business.

    The data dissonance created a wild day in the markets on Friday. Bonds soared, causing ten-year yields to dive to 1.48%. Then they rallied all the way back up to 1.58%.

    That was seen as the end of the two-month long rally in bonds, so stock took off like a rocket. Essentially everything went up, both cyclicals, banks, AND tech.

    All those bond shorts you have been nursing since March? They are about to explode to the upside. The next leg down in the year-old bear market in bonds is about to begin.

    And what about that 266,000-payroll report? If you didn’t get a million jobs print in April, then you’ll almost certainly get it in May. Stocks could well keep rally until then. That’s how traders are seeing it.

    Just another reason to buy.

    By the way, I learned one of the great untold business stories from Richard Knerr. When the Hula Hoop was first launched in 1957, sales went ballistic. Some 25 million were sold in the first four months.

    The Hula Hoop was made of a plastic tube stapled together with an oak cork made in England. Since demand seemed infinite, Wham-O ordered 50 million corks. Then the republican party claimed the toy was a communist conspiracy to destroy the youth of America as the swiveling of hips was deemed obscene. This was at the tail end of the McCarthy period.

    Sales of Hula Hoops collapsed.

    They cancelled the order for 50 million oak corks, which were thrown overboard mid-Atlantic. They are still floating out there somewhere today. Wham-O almost went bankrupt from the experience but was eventually saved by the Frisbee.

    Richard Knerr died in 2008 at the age of 82. Wham-O was taken over by Mattel in 1995. For his obituary, please click here.

    April Nonfarm Payroll Report is a huge disappointment, at 266,000 when up to one million was expected. April’s hiring boom goes bust. March was revised down massively, from 916,000 to 770,000. The headline Unemployment Rate rose to 6.1%. It was one of the most confusing reports in recent memory. Bonds rocketed, interest rates crashed, and tech stocks took off like a scalded chimp. Inflation expectations have been shattered. Leisure & Hospitality kicked in at 331,000. But Professional & Business Services collapsed by 111,000. The two million businesses that went under last year aren’t hiring. Much of the return to work has been by people who already have jobs.

    Weekly Jobless Claims
    plunged to 488,000, one of the sharpest drops on record at 100,000. Go down any Main Street today and instead of a sea of plywood, it is plastered with “Help Wanted” signs. Productivity is soaring, while average labor costs are actually falling.

    ADP Private Employment Report soars, up by 742,000 in April, the biggest gain since September. It makes the coming Friday Nonfarm Payroll Report look outstanding. The jobs market is booming, but competition for the top jobs is also fierce.

    Europe’s Q1 GDP
    falls by 0.6%. That’s better than expected, but disastrous when compared to America’s spectacular 6.4% print. Blame the bumbled slow-motion vaccine rollout. European governments wasted time negotiating on price like it was just another government program, while the US poured billions into vaccine makers, no questions asked. European vaccines, like Astra Zeneca’s, were flawed. It’s amazing that a big government continent can’t perform a big government task, even when millions of lives depend on it.

    US Factory Orders
    gain, up 1.1% in March, providing more evidence that stimulus is working. Most economists are expecting double-digit growth in Q2. Driving up to Lake Tahoe, the number of trucks on the road has doubled in the last month.

    Personal Income
    Explodes, up 21.1% in March, the most since 1945 according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis. What the heck happened in 1945? $1,400 stimulus checks are clearly burning holes in the pockets of consumers. Expect all numbers to hit lifetime highs in the coming months. The sun, moon, and stars are all lining up and standard of living is soaring.

    Chicago PMI
    rockets to a 40-year high, up to 72.1 versus an expected 65. It seems everyone is already trying to buy what I am trying to buy. My bet is that the stock market is wildly underestimating the coming onslaught of economic numbers and will go to new highs once it figures out the game.

    Lumber Prices
    are becoming a big deal, soaring 70% in two months and a staggering 340% in a year, igniting inflation fears. It’s only a tiny fraction of our tiny spending but is adding $36,000 to the cost of a new home. Someone in four homes sold today are newly built, the highest ratio ever. Punitive Trump lumber tariffs against Canada years ago shut down a lot of production and now that we need it, it isn’t there.

    IBM brings out the 2-Nanometer Chip, taking semiconductor technology to the next evolutionary level. Any smaller and electrons will be too big to squeeze through the gates. The current battle is over 7 nm technology. It promises to bring much faster computing at a lower price and will act as a temporary bridge to lightening quantum computing.

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

    My Mad Hedge Global Trading Dispatch profit reached 2.38% gain during the first week of May on the heels of a spectacular 15.67% profit in April.

    I took profits in my long in Goldman Sachs (GS) and my short in the United States Treasury Bond Fund (TLT). I then plowed the cash into a new June short position in the (TLT) and a new short in the S&P 500 (SPY). That gave me a heart attack on my bond shorts when bond prices soared and then an immediate rebirth when they collapsed two points in the afternoon.

    That leaves me 100% invested, as I have been for the last six months.

    My 2021 year-to-date performance soared to 62.14%. The Dow Average is up 14.45% so far in 2021.

    That brings my 11-year total return to 484.89%, some 2.00 times the S&P 500 (SPX) over the same period. My 11-year average annualized return now stands at an unbelievable 42.45%, easily the highest in the industry.

    My trailing one-year return exploded to positively eye-popping 127.09%. I truly have to pinch myself when I see numbers like this. I bet many of you are making the biggest money of your long lives.

    We need to keep an eye on the number of US Coronavirus cases at 32.7 million and deaths topping 581,000, which you can find here. New cases are in free fall, with only 12 here in Washoe County Nevada out of a population of 500,000. We could approach zero by the summer.

    The coming week will be weak on the data front.

    On Monday, May 10, at 9:45 AM, the April ISM New York Index is out. Roblox (RBLX) and BioNTech (BNTX) report earnings.

    On Tuesday, May 11, at 10:00 AM, the NFIB Small Business Optimism Index for April is released. Palantir reports results (PLTR).

    On Wednesday, May 12 at 2:00 PM, the US Core Inflation Rate for April is published. Softbank (SFTBY) reports results.

    On Thursday, May 13 at 8:30 AM, the Weekly Jobless Claims are published. Walt Disney (DIS), Airbnb (ABNB), and Alibaba (BABA) report results.

    On Friday, May 14 at 8:30 AM, Retail Sales for April are indicated. At 2:00 PM, we learn the Baker-Hughes Rig Count.

    As for me, I’ve found a new series on Amazon Prime called Yellowstone. It is definitely NOT PG-rated, nor is it for the faint of heart. But it does remind me of my own cowboy days.

    When General Custer was slaugherted during his last stand in Montana at the Little Big Horn in 1876, my ancestors spotted a great buying opportunity. They used the ensuing panic to pick up 50,000 acres near the Wyoming border for ten cents an acre.

    Growing up as the oldest of seven kids, my parents never missed an opportunity to farm me out with relatives. That’s how I ended up with my cousins near Broadus, Montana for the summer of 1967.

    When I got off the Greyhound bus in nearby Sheridan, I went into a bar to call my uncle. The bartender asked his name and when I told him “Carlat”  he gave me a strange look.

    It turned out that My uncle killed someone in a gunfight in the street out front a few months earlier, which was later ruled self-defense. It was the last public gunfight seen in the state, and my uncle hadn’t been seen in town since.

    I was later picked up in a beat-up Ford truck and driven for two hours down a dirt road to a log cabin. There was no electricity, just kerosene lanterns and a propane-powered refrigerator.

    Welcome to the 19th century!

    I was hired on as a cowboy, lived in a bunkhouse with the rest of the ranch hands, and was paid the princely sum of a dollar an hour. I became popular by reading the other cowboys' newspapers and their mail since they were all illiterate. Every three days, we slaughtered a cow to feed everyone on the ranch. I ate steak for breakfast, lunch, and dinner.

    On weekends, my cousins and I searched for Indian arrowheads on horseback, which we found by the shoebox full. Occasionally, we got lucky finding an old rusted Winchester or Colt revolver just lying out on the range, a remnant of the famous battle 90 years before. I carried my own six-shooter to help reduce the local rattlesnake population.

    I really learned the meaning of work and had callouses on my hands in no time. I had to rescue cows trapped in the mud (stick a burr under their tail), round up lost ones, and saw miles of fence posts. When it came time to artificially inseminate the cows with superior semen from Scotland, it was my job to hold them still. It was all heady stuff for a 16-year-old.

    The highlight of the summer was participating in the Sheridan Rodeo. With my uncle, one of the largest cattle owners in the area, I had my pick of events. So, I ended up racing a chariot made from an old oil drum, team roping (I had to pull the cow down to the ground), and riding a Brahma bull. I still have a scar on my left elbow from where a bull slashed me, the horn pigment clearly visible.

    I hated to leave when I had to go home and back to school. But I did hear that the winter in Montana is pretty tough.

    It was later discovered that the entire 50,000 acres was sitting on a giant coal seam 50 feet thick. You just knocked off the topsoil and backed up the truck. My cousins became millionaires. They built a modern four-bedroom house closer to town with every amenity, even a big screen TV. My cousin built a massive vintage car collection.

    During the 2000s, their well water was poisoned by a neighbor’s fracking for natural gas, and water had to be hauled in by truck at great expense. In the end, my cousin was killed when the engine of the classic car he was restoring fell on top of him when the rafter above him snapped.

    It all did give me a window into a lifestyle that was then fading fast. It’s an experience I’ll never forget.

    Stay healthy.

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

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/annualized-may10.png 484 864 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2021-05-10 09:02:262021-05-10 12:02:34The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or the Sushi Hits the Fan
    Mad Hedge Fund Trader

    April 30, 2021

    Diary, Newsletter, Summary

    Global Market Comments
    April 30, 2021
    Fiat Lux

    Featured Trade:

    (APRIL 28 BIWEEKLY STRATEGY WEBINAR Q&A),
    (PFE), (MRNA), (USO), (DAL), (TSLA), (CRSP), (ROM), (QQQ), (T), (NTLA),
     (EDIT), (FARO), (PYPL), (COPX), (FCX), (IWM), (GOOG), (MSFT), (AMZN)

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    Mad Hedge Fund Trader

    April 28 Biweekly Strategy Webinar Q&A

    Diary, Newsletter, Research

    Below please find subscribers’ Q&A for the April 28 Mad Hedge Fund Trader Global Strategy Webinar broadcast from Silicon Valley, CA.

    Q: There is talk of digital currencies being launched in the US. Is there any truth to that? How would that affect the dollar?

    A: There is no truth to that; there is not even any serious discussion of digital currency at the US Treasury. My theory has always been that once Bitcoin works and is made theft-proof, the government will take it over and make that the digital US dollar. So far, Bitcoin has existed regulation-free; in fact, the IRS is counting on a trillion dollars in capital gains being taxed going forward in helping to address the budget deficit.

    Q: If you have a choice, what’s the best vaccine to get?

    A: The best vaccine is the one you can get the fastest. I know you’re a little slow on the rollout in Canada. Go for Pfizer (PFE) if you’re able to choose. You should avoid Moderna (MRNA) because 15% of people getting second shots have one-day symptoms after the second shot. But basically, you don’t get to choose, only kids get to choose because only Pfizer has done trials on people under the age of 21. So, if you take your kids in, they will all get Pfizer for sure.

    Q: Should I buy Freeport McMoRan (FCX) here or wait for a bigger dip?

    A: Freeport has just had a 25% move up in a week. I wouldn’t touch that. We put out the trade alert when it was in the mid $30s, and it's essentially at its maximum profit point now. So, you don't need to chase—wait for a bigger dip or a long sideways move before you get in.

    Q: How do I trade copper if I don't do futures?

    A: Buy (FCX), the largest copper producer in the US, and they have call options and LEAPS. By the way, if we do get another $5 dip in Freeport, which we just had, I would really do something like the (FCX) $45-$50 2023 LEAP. You can get 5 times your money on that.

    Q: Time to buy oil stocks (USO) for the summer?

    A: No, the big driver of oil right now is the pandemic in India. They are one of the world's largest consumers—you find out that most poor countries are using oil right now as they can’t afford the more expensive alternative sources of power. And when your biggest customer is looking at a billion corona cases, that’s bad for business. Remember, when you trade oil, you’re trading against a long-term bear trend.

    Q: Would you buy Delta Airlines (DAL) at today’s prices?

    A: Yes, I’m probably going to go run the numbers on today's call spread; I actually have 20% of cash left that I could spend. So that looks like a good choice—summer will be incredible for the entire airline industry now that they have all staved off bankruptcy. Ticket prices are going to start rising sharply with an impending severe aircraft shortage.

    Q: What are your thoughts on the Buffet index which shows that stocks are more stretched vs GDP at any time vs 2000?

    A: The trouble with those indicators is that they never anticipated A) the Fed buying $120 billion a month in US Treasury bonds, B) the Fed promising to keep interest rates at zero for three years, and C) an enormous bounce back from a once-in-a-hundred-year pandemic. That's why not just the Buffet Index but virtually all technical indicators have been worthless this year because they have shown that the market has been overbought for the last six months. And if you paid attention to your indicators, you were either left behind or you went short and lost your shirt. So, at a certain point, you have to ignore your technical indicators and your charts and just buy the damn market. The people who use that philosophy (and know when to use it, and it’s not always) are up 56% on the year.

    Q: What trade categories are getting fantastic returns? It’s certainly not tech.

    A: Well, we actually rotated out of tech last September and went into banks, industrial plays, and domestic recovery plays. And you can see in the stocks I just showed you in our model portfolio which one we’re getting the numbers from. Certainly, it was not tech; tech has only performed for the last four weeks and we jumped right back in that one also with positions in Microsoft (MSFT). So yes, it’s a constantly changing game; we’re getting rotations almost daily right now between major groups of stocks. The only way to play this kind of market is to listen to someone who’s been practicing for 52 years.

    Q: I am 83 years old and have four grandchildren. I want to invest around $20,000 with each child. I was thinking of your bullish view on Tesla (TSLA) on a long-term investment. Do you agree?

    A: If those were my grandchildren, I would give them each $20,000 worth of the ProShares Ultra Technology Fund (ROM), the 2x long technology ETF. Unless tech drops 50% from here, that stock will keep increasing at twice the rate of the fastest-growing sector in the market. I did something similar with my kids about 20 years ago and as a result, their college and retirement funds for their kids have risen 20 times. So that’s what I would do; I would never bet everything on a single stock, I would go for a basket of high-tech stocks, or the Invesco QQQ NASDAQ Trust (QQQ) if you don’t want the leverage.

    Q: Do you like Amazon (AMZN) splitting?

    A: I don’t think they’ll ever split. Jeff Bezos worked on Wall Street (with me at Morgan Stanley) and sees splits as nothing more than a paper shuffle, which it is. It’s more likely that he’ll break up the company into different segments because when they get to a $5 trillion market cap, it will just become too big to manage. Also, by breaking Amazon up into five companies—AWS, the store, healthcare, distribution, etc., —you’re getting a premium for those individual pieces, which would double the value of your existing holdings. So, if you hold Amazon stock, you want it to face an antitrust breakup because the flotation will double the value of your total holdings. That has happened several times in the past with other companies, like AT&T (T), which I also worked on.

    Q: When is Tesla going to move and why is it going up with earnings up 74%?

    A: Well, the stock moved up a healthy 46% going into the earnings; it’s a classic sell the news market. Most stocks are doing that this quarter and they did so last quarter as well. And Tesla also tends to move sideways for years and then have these explosive moves up. I think the next double or triple will come when they announce mass production of their solid-state batteries, which will be anywhere from 2 to 5 years off.

    Q: How can I renew my subscription?

    A: You can call customer support at 347-480-1034 or email support@madhedgefundtrader.com and I guarantee you someone will get back to you.

    Q: Top gene-editing stock after CRISPR Therapeutics (CRSP)?

    A: There are two of them: one is Intellia (NTLA); it’s actually done better than CRISPR lately. The second is Editas (EDIT) and you’ll find out that the same professionals, including the Nobel prize winner Jennifer Doudna here at Berkeley, rotate among all three of these, and the people who run them all know each other. They were all involved in the late 2000's fundamental research on CRISPR, and they’re all frenemies. So yes, it's a three-company industry, kind of like the cybersecurity industry.

    Q: What about PayPal (PYPL)?

    A: I would wait for the earnings since so many companies are selling off on their announcements. See if they sell off 3-5%, then you buy it for the next leg up. That is the game now.

    Q: Do you like any 3D printing stocks like Faro Technologies (FARO)?

    A: No, that’s too much of a niche area for me, I’m staying away. And that's becoming a commodity industry. When they were brand new years ago, they were red hot, now not so much.

    Q: Do you see the chip companies continuing their bull run for the next few months?

    A: I do. If anything, the chip shortage will get worse. Each EV uses about 100 chips, and they’re mostly the low-end $10 chips. Ford (F) said production of a million cars will be lost due to the chip shortage. Ford itself has 22,000 cars sitting in a lot that are fully assembled awaiting the chips. Tesla alone has $300 worth of chips just in its inverters, and there are two inverters in every car. So, when you go from production of 500,000 cars to a million in one year, that's literally billions of chips.

    Q: The airlines are packed; what are your thoughts?

    A: Yes, one of the best ways to invest is to invest in what you see. If you see airlines are packed, buy airline stocks. If you can’t hire anyone, you know the economy is booming.

    Q: What about the Russel 2000 (IWM)?

    A: We covered it; it looks like it wants to break out to new highs from here. By the way, there are only 1,500 stocks left in the Russell 2000 after the pandemic, mergers, and bankruptcies.

    Q: Are there other ways to play copper out there like (FCX)?

    A: Yes; one is the (COPX)— a pure copper futures ETF. However, be careful with pure metal ETFs of any kind because they have huge contangos and you could get a 50% move up in your commodity while your ETF goes down 50% over the same time. This happens all the time in oil and natural gas, and to a lesser degree in the metals, so be careful about that. Before you get into any of these alternative ETFs, look at the tracking history going back and I think you'll see you're much better off just buying (FCX).

    Q: How long do you typically hold onto your 2-year LEAPS? Based on my research, the time decay starts to accelerate after about 3 months to one year on LEAPS.

    A: Actually, with LEAPS, the reason I go out to two years is that the second year is almost free, there's almost no extra cost. And it gives you more breathing room for this thing to work. Usually, if I get my timing right, my LEAP stocks make big moves within the first three months; by then, the LEAP has doubled in value, and then you have to think about whether you should keep it or whether there are better LEAPS out there (which there almost always are). So, you sell it on a double, which only took a 30% move in the stock, or you may be committed to the company for the long term, like a Microsoft or an Amazon. And then you just run it through the expiration to get a 400% or 500% profit in two years. That is how you play the LEAP game.

    Q: Are these recorded?

    A: Yes, we record these and we post them on the website after about 2 hours. Just log into the site, go to “my account”, then select your subscription type (Global Trading Dispatch or Technology Letter), and “webinars” will be one of the button choices.

    Q: Can you also sell calls on LEAPS?

    A: Yes and the only place to do that is the US Treasury market (TLT). There you either want to be short calls far above the market, out two years, or you want to be long puts. And by the way, if you did something like a $120-$125 put spread out to January 2023, then you’re looking at making about a 400% gain. That is a bet that 20-year interest rates only go up a little bit more, to 2.00%. If you really want to bet the ranch, do something like a $120-$122 and you might get a 1000% return.

     

     

    Q: What is the best LEAP to trade for Microsoft (MSFT)?

    A: If you want to go out two years, I would do something like a June 2023 $290-$300 vertical bull call spread. There is an easy 67% profit in that one on only a 20% rise in the stock. I do front monthlies for the trade alert service, so we always have at least 10 or 20 trade alerts going out every month. And the one I currently have for is a deep in the money May $230-$240 vertical bull call spread which expires in 12 days.

     

    Q: What is the best way to play Google (GOOG)?

    A: Go 20% out of the money and buy a January 2023 $2,900-$3,000 vertical bull call spread for $20—that should make about 400%. If you want more specific advice on LEAPS, we have an opening for the Mad Hedge Concierge Service so send an email to support@madhedgefundtrader.com with subject line “concierge,” and we will reach out to you.

    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 ten years are there in all their glory.

    Good Luck and Stay Healthy.

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

     

    I Think I See Another Winner

     

     

     

     

     

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    Mad Hedge Fund Trader

    April 28, 2021

    Tech Letter

    Mad Hedge Technology Letter
    April 28, 2021
    Fiat Lux

    Featured Trade:

    (ALPHABET IS A $3,000 STOCK)
    (GOOGL), (MSFT), (AMZN), (AAPL), (TSLA)

    https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png 0 0 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2021-04-28 16:04:522021-04-28 19:18:29April 28, 2021
    Mad Hedge Fund Trader

    Alphabet is a $3,000 Stock

    Tech Letter

    A company that did $182 billion of annual revenue last year expanding first quarter revenue at a 34% clip year-over-year is something that is hard to contemplate; but that is how big the big have gotten, and at the top of the heap is Alphabet (GOOGL).

    Expect similar type of earnings reports from Amazon (AMZN).

    The 4 tech firms of Alphabet (GOOGL), Apple (AAPL), Microsoft (MSFT) and Tesla (TSLA) were in perfect strategic position going into the public health crisis, and now we find ourselves almost at the climax of it, they are validating their current position in 2021 as companies that flourished through the pandemic and now find themselves with only green pastures in front of them.

    Google has said it operates in a “competitive market place” but I do not know anyone who uses an internet search service that isn’t named Google.

    It’s like trying to live in China without using Wechat, Alibaba, and Baidu.

    We are talking about services that perform like utilities.

    Just analyze consumers’ behavior during the onslaught of the public health crisis.

    Their first reaction was to delegate these important moments to Google Search.

    Billions of searches every day for “COVID” and related health information took place.

    At the same time, people started to job search on Google as million lost their jobs and these unemployed first reaction was to do a google search on unemployment benefits and where they could find a job.

    To help them, job seekers can now use Search quickly and easily find roles that do not require a college degree and Google is working together with the top employment websites to make the service even better.

    And if you thought the reach of Google stopped there, then what about when not searching for jobs or health solutions on Google search.

    Well, first, food delivery searches on Google, then, conveniently, since lockdowns pervaded the world, YouTube’s video streaming had its best year.

    Users continue to find all types of informational content, from educational videos to podcasts on YouTube.

    In fact, according to a recent study conducted by Ipsos, 77% of respondents say they used YouTube during 2020 to learn a new skill.

    YouTube Shorts, Google’s TikTok imitation service, continues to gain popularity with over 6.5 billion daily views as of March, up from 3.5 billion at the end of 2020.

    The financial metrics backed up the popularity in YouTube with YouTube advertising revenues of $6 billion, up 49%, driven by exceptional performance in direct response and ongoing strength in brand advertising.

    Network advertising revenues of $6.8 billion, up 30%, driven by AdMob and Ad Manager.

    What if you don’t have a device to watch YouTube or search on Google Search for jobs and food delivery?

    Easy answer, buy a Google device.

    Other revenues were $6.5 billion, up 46%, primarily driven by growth in Play and YouTube non-advertising revenues, followed by hardware, which benefited from the addition of Fitbit revenues. Google Services operating income was $19.5 billion, up 69%, and the operating margin was 38%.

    Google has you covered.

    Then what about the people who have jobs and need a cloud to store their files.

    Google’s Cloud segment, including GCP and Google Workspace, revenues were $4 billion for the first quarter, up 46%.

    GCP's revenue growth was again meaningfully above Cloud overall. Strong growth in Google Workspace revenues was driven by growth in both seats and average revenue per seat.

    Google has that covered as well and fusing their cloud operability with Google’s suite of services like Gmail has been reliable for many work from home workers.

    This company has covered all their bases and they were doing this before the public health crisis.

    Alphabet currently has $1.55 trillion of market cap, but this is easily a $2 trillion company on its way to $3 trillion with no headwinds in sight.

    I wouldn’t even call regulation that big of risk and obviously investors keep piling into this stock because they know that even if Google gets broken up, each individual part will be worth more unpacked as a single service because they are the best of breed already.  

    Microsoft and Alphabet are the two companies vying for the best and most powerful in the world.

    At, $1.97 trillion in market cap, Microsoft is more expensive than Google because even though they both earn over $40 billion in profits per year, Microsoft makes that on 27% less revenue than Alphabet which is why they have a higher premium.

    Microsoft is more efficient than Alphabet, but again, if Alphabet is broken up, watch for efficiency metrics to skyrocket as each individual business isn’t hindered by the bureaucracy that has turned into how Google operates.

    If Alphabet can inch up the margin story, they will be a $2 trillion company and $3,000 stock by the end of 2021.

    alphabet

     

    alphabet

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