Mad Hedge Technology Letter
October 20, 2021
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(NETFLIX STILL ADDING VIEWERS)
(NFLX)
Mad Hedge Technology Letter
October 20, 2021
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(NETFLIX STILL ADDING VIEWERS)
(NFLX)
Netflix (NFLX) is reaching close to 1 billion TV fans globally with their content, and that can obviously generate a lot of virility for great pieces of content.
That being said, the content has to deliver. Yet that’s what Netflix has essentially done from the beginning, repeatedly offering world-class content that is consumed in nanoseconds.
If you think about the big picture, NFLX is at 213 million subscribers and that doesn’t make a dent compared to pay-TV households, ex-China.
But NFLX certainly believes they can match pay-TV households, and that aspiration signals plenty of room for growth.
Streaming is developing at a breathtaking pace, all kinds of devices and competitors helping that market grow, and it’s not just NFLX even though many of us live in a NFLX-centric world.
Then when I think about what’s out there in terms of competition — competition of content because NFLX doesn’t live in a vacuum.
Allowing to scale with this robust network and offering titles like Squid Game a chance to go viral really just signals overperformance for the NFLX business as a whole.
The most incredible part is the system that NFLX built from scratch that has turned into a highly distributed business model when it was NFLX’s Korean team two years ago that commissioned the hit show.
Just the synergy in that is great for NFLX, while really driving a narrative of a strong international audience that is digesting the Netflix content engine.
To that, I must give NFLX management credit for pushing hard into the content creation business and they have really made miracles happen up against the pandemic and all, but now with the team wrestling with the post-COVID, how do things move forward?
It all comes back to if NFLX can be that first choice in entertainment, then ultimately, that's what's driving that secular growth from linear to streaming entertainment and specifically NFLX’s platform.
The NFLX team recognized something that nobody else did and created an environment for that creator to make a great show.
They pretty much found the best content creators, handed them boatloads of cash, and said go make something kickass and they did.
Hollywood has been notorious for not only selling out but for micromanaging content creators and suffocating the creation process.
Clearly, when creative artists are not given the freedom to create, it negatively impacts the end-product, and that’s a pivotal reason linear television and Hollywood are now chasing NFLX.
NFLX is now the King of content going viral and going viral is really hard to predict, but it's super powerful when it happens, and they deliver the goods to be able to deliver that much viewing when viewers storm NFLX’s platform to consumer adjacent content that turns into binge-watching.
And you have people talk about it in ravenous terms that you can spoof it on Saturday Night Live because it's so in the zeitgeist.
Few companies in the world can accomplish that.
Now it’s not only Korea’s Squid Game, but NFLX is churning out the viral hits like with La Casa de Papel from Spain, with Lupin from France, with the film Blood Red Sky from Germany, from Sex Education in the U.K., where the stories of the world can increasingly come from anywhere in the world.
NFLX has systemized a way to build great hits.
Non-English content viewing has grown three times since NFLX started in 2008 making content.
Installing new storytellers into the world from everywhere in the world is supercharging the business model and that’s why we are experiencing a massive melt-up in NFLX shares.
Global Market Comments
August 27, 2021
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(AUGUST 25 BIWEEKLY STRATEGY WEBINAR Q&A),
(ROM), (EEM), (FXI), (DIS), (AMZN), (NFLX), (CHPT), (TLT), (TBT), (AAPL),
(GOOG), (WPM), (GOLD), (NEM), (GDX), (X), (SLV), (FCX), (BA), (HOOD), (USO)
Below please find subscribers’ Q&A for the August 25 Mad Hedge Fund Trader Global Strategy Webinar broadcast from The Atlantis Casino Hotel in Reno, NV.
Q: How does a 2X ProShares Ultra Technology ETF (ROM) February 2022 vertical bull call spread on the ROM look? Would you do $110-$115 or $115-$120?
A: I would do nothing here at $112.50 because we’ve just gone up 10 points in a week. I’d wait for some kind of pullback, even just $5 or $10 points, and then I would do the $110-$115. I’m leaning towards more conservative LEAPS these days—bets that the market goes sideways to up small rather than going ballistic, which it has done for the last 18 months. Think at-the-money strikes, not deep out-of-the-money on your LEAPS from here on for the rest of this economic cycle. The potential profits are still enormous. The only problem with (ROM) is that the longest maturities on the options are only six months.
Q: How do you recommend entering your long-term portfolio?
A: I would use the one-third rule: you put on ⅓ now, ⅓ higher or lower later on, and ⅓ higher or lower again. That way you get a good average price. Long term, everything goes up until we hit the next recession, which is probably several years off.
Q: I keep reading that the Delta variant is a market risk, but I don’t think that investors will look through this. Is Delta already priced into the shares?
A: Yes, what is not priced into the shares is the end of Delta, the end of the pandemic—and that will lead to my “everything” rally that I’ve been talking about for a month now. And we have already seen the beginning of that, especially with the price action this week. So yes, Delta in: dead market; Delta out: roaring market.
Q: Do you think there will eventually be a rotation into emerging markets (EEM), or has the virus battered these markets too much to even consider it?
A: Sometime in our future—not yet—the emerging markets will be our core holding. And the trigger for that will be the collapse of the dollar, which is hitting an interim high right now. When the greenback rolls over and dies, you can expect emerging markets, especially China, to take off like a rocket. That’s going to be our next big trade. I don't know if it will be this year or next year but it’s coming, so start doing your emerging market research now, and keep reading my newsletter.
Q: Is the coming tax hike a problem for the stock market?
A: No, I don’t think so. First off, I don’t think they’re going to do a tax bill this year; they don’t want anything to interfere with the 2022 election, so it may be next year’s business. Also, any new taxes are going to be overwhelmingly focused on billionaires, carried interest, offshoring, and large corporations. The middle class, people who make less than $400,000 a year, will not see any tax hike at all, possibly even getting some tax cuts via restored SALT deductions. So, I don't really see it affecting the stock market at all.
Q: What do you think about Chinese stocks (FXI)?
A: Long-term they’re okay, short term possibly more downside. Interestingly, the bigger risk may not be China itself and how the government is beating up its own tech companies, but the SEC. It has indicated they don’t really like these offshore vehicles that have been listed on the New York Stock Exchange, and they may move to ban them. I’m not rushing into China right now, only because there are just so many better opportunities in the US stock market for the time being. I may go back in the future—it’s a case where I’d rather buy them on the way up than trying to catch a falling knife on China right now.
Q: Do you expect any market impact from the Jackson Hole meeting?
A: Yes, whatever J Powell says, even if he says nothing, will have a market impact. And it will have a bigger impact on the bond market than it will on the stock market, which is down a full point this morning. So yes, but not yet. I imagine we’ll hear something very soon.
Q: September and October tend to be volatile; do you see us having a 5% or 10% pullback in those months?
A: I don’t see any more than 5%, with the hyper liquidity that we have in the system now. There just aren’t any events out there that could trigger a pullback of 10%—no geopolitical events, and the economy will be getting stronger, not worse. So yes, an “everything rally” doesn’t give you many long side entry points, so I just don’t see 10% happening.
Q: What about a Walt Disney (DIS) January 2022 $180-$220 LEAPS?
A: I would do the $180-$200. I think you can afford to be tighter on your spread there, take some more risk because I think it’s just going to go nuts to the upside once we get a drop in COVID cases. By the way, Disney parks are only operating at 70% capacity, so if you go back up to 100% that's a near 50% increase in profits for the company. And it’s not just Disney, but Netflix (NFLX), Amazon (AMZN), and everybody else that’s about to have the greatest number of blockbuster movies released of all time. They’re holding back their big-ticket movies for the end of the pandemic when people can go back into theaters. We’ll start seeing those movies come out in the last quarter of this year, and I’m particularly looking forward to the next James Bond movie, a man after my own heart.
Q: Are EV car charging companies like ChargePoint Holdings (CHPT) going to do as well as the car companies?
A: No. They’re low margin business, so it’s not a business model for me. I like high-profit margins, huge barriers to entry, and very wide moats, which pretty much characterizes everything I own. The big profits in EVs are going to be in the cars themselves. Charging the cars is a very capital-intensive, highly regulated, and low-margin business.
Q: Would a Fed taper cause a 10% pullback?
A: Absolutely not; in fact, I think a taper would make the market go up because Jay Powell has been talking it into the market all year. And that’s his goal, is to minimize the impact of a taper so when they finally do it, they say ho-hum and “okay you can take that risk out of the market.” That’s the way these things work.
Q: What is your yearend target for United States Treasury Bond Fund (TLT)?
A: $132. Call it bold, but I'm all about bold. I think the first stop will be at $144, then $138, then bombs away!
Q: What will it take for (TLT) to dip below $130?
A: Another year of hot economic growth, which Congress seems hell-bent on delivering us.
Q: What are your ProShares Ultra Short 20+ Year Treasury ETF (TBT) targets?
A: When we were at 1.76% on the 10-year bond, the (TBT) made it all the way back to 22 ½. Next year we go higher, probably to $25, maybe even $30.
Q: What’s your 10-year view on the (TBT)?
A: $200. That’s when you get interest rates back to 10% in 10 years on the 10-year bond. So yes, that’s a great long-term play.
Q: How long can we hold (TBT)?
A: As long as you want. Ten years would be a good time frame if you want to catch that $17 to $200 move. The (TBT) is an ETF, not an option, therefore it doesn’t expire.
Q: Are you working on an electrification stock list?
A: I am not, because it’s such a fragmented sector. It’s tough to really nail down specific stocks. I think it’s safe to say that the electric power grid is going to change beyond all recognition, but they won’t necessarily be in high margin companies, and I tend to prefer high-profit-margin, large-moat companies which nobody else can get into, like Apple (AAPL) or Google (GOOG).
Q: What about gas pipelines with high yields?
A: They have a high yield for a reason; because they’re very high risk. If you're going to a carbon-free economy, you don’t necessarily want to own pipelines whose main job is moving carbon; it’s another buggy whip-type industry I would avoid. I’ve seen people get wiped out by these things more times than I could count. If you remember Master Limited Partnerships, quite a few of them went bankrupt last year with the oil crash, so I would avoid that area. These tend to be very highly leveraged and poorly managed instruments.
Q: Best play on silver (SLV)?
A: Wheaton Precious Metals (WPM) is the highest leveraged silver play out there, and a great LEAPS candidate. Go out 2 years and triple your money.
Q: Geopolitical oil (USO) risks?
A: No, nobody cares about oil anymore—that’s why we’re giving up on Afghanistan. China is buying 80% of the Persian Gulf oil right now. We don’t really need it at all, so why have our military over there to protect China’s oil supply?
Q: What about Freeport McMoRan (FCX)?
A: I absolutely love it. Any big economic recovery can’t happen without copper, and you have a huge tailwind there from electric cars which need 200 pounds of copper each, as opposed to 20 pounds in conventional cars.
Q: I see AMC Entertainment Holdings (AMC) is up 20% today; should everyone be chasing this stock?
A: No, absolutely not. (AMC) and all the meme stocks aren’t investments, they’re gambling, and there are better ways to gamble.
Q: Should I buy the lumber dip?
A: Yes. I think the slowdown on housing is temporary because it will take 10 years for supply and demand in the housing market to come back into balance because of all the millennials entering the housing market for the first time. So, that would be a yes on lumber and all the other commodities out there that go into housing like copper, steel, and aluminum.
Q: Should I put money into Canadian Junior Gold Miners (GDX)?
A: No, I would rather go out and take a long nap first. These are just so high risk, and they often go bankrupt. The liquidity is terrible, and the dealing spreads are wide. I would stick with the bigger precious metal plays like Newmont Mining (NEM), Barrick Gold (GOLD), and Wheaton Precious Metals (WPM).
Q: Is Boeing (BA) a buy here?
A: Yes, we’re back at the bottom end of the trading range for the stock. It’s just a matter of time before they get things right, and the 737 Max orders are rolling in like crazy now that there’s an airplane shortage.
Q: What do you think about Robinhood (HOOD)?
A: I like it quite a lot; I got flushed out of my long position on Friday with a 10% down move. Of course, 90% of my stop losses end up expiring at their maximum profit points, but I have to do it to keep the volatility of the portfolio down. So yes, I’ll try to buy it again on the next dip. The trouble is it’s kind of a quasi-meme stock in its own right, hence the volatility; so I would say on the next 10% down day, you go into Robinhood, and I probably will too.
Q: How are the wildfires around Tahoe?
A: They’re terrible and there are three of them. I did a hike two days ago there, and out of a parking lot with 100 spaces, I was the only one there. It’s the only time I’d ever seen Tahoe deserted in August. With visibility of 500 yards, it's just terrible. Fortunately, I was able to hike without coughing my guts out—it’s not so thick that you can’t breathe.
Q: What do you think of US Steel (X)?
A: I like it, I think the whole industrial commodity complex rallies like crazy going into the end of the year.
Q: As a new member, where is the best place to start? It’s just kind of like drinking from a fire hose.
A: Wait for the trade alerts; they only happen at sweet spots and you may have to wait a few days or weeks to get one since we only like to enter them at good points. That’s the best place to enter new positions for the first time. In the meantime, keep reading all the research, because when these trade alerts do come out, they’re not surprises because I’m pumping out research on them every day, across multiple fronts. Be patient— we are running a 93% success rate, but only because we take our time on entering good trades. The services that guarantee a trade alert every day lose money hand over fist.
Q: If they do delist Chinese stocks, will US investors be left holding the bag?
A: Yes, and that will be the only reason they don’t delist them, that they don’t want to wipe out all current US investors.
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 (whichever applies to you), then select 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
Mad Hedge Technology Letter
July 28, 2021
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(THE REAL RULES OF TECH)
(MSFT), (FB), (GOOGL), (AAPL), (AMZN), (NFLX), (TSLA)
Northern Californian tech companies stopped innovating because of the monopolistic nature of current business models that nestle nicely in unfettered capitalism.
They only go by one principle these days – to crush anything remotely resembling competition and they are damn good at doing it.
This has been going on in Silicon Valley for years and the government has turned a blind eye since the beginning of it.
The end result is the absence of competition.
At a higher tech level, the strong get stronger by stockpiling cash and resources, all while taking advantage of historically low rates to finance their growth models.
Why does the U.S. government largely sit on the sidelines and act if nothing has really happened?
If I deploy the concept of Occam's razor to this situation, a philosophical rule that entities should not be multiplied unnecessarily which is interpreted as requiring that the simplest of competing theories be preferred, my bet is that most of U.S. Congress own stock portfolios, even if they are the index variety, and these portfolios are spearheaded by the likes of Apple (AAPL), Facebook (FB), Amazon (AMZN), Google (GOOGL), Microsoft (MSFT), Netflix (NFLX), and of course Tesla (TSLA).
This has come into the open frequently with members of Congress even front-running the March 2020 sell-off with their own portfolios like U.S. senator Kelly Loeffler from Georgia selling $20 million in stock after attending special intelligence briefings in the weeks building up to the coronavirus pandemic.
We definitely don’t get invites to those special intelligence briefings, but Loeffler getting off scot-free by mainly just playing down what she did proves the immunity that politicians accrue from their lofty positions.
It’s a direct conflict of interest, but that's not surprising for politics in 2021 and I would say it epitomizes the era we are in.
It’s also why Congress hasn’t acted on Silicon Valley’s excessive abuse of power, which is so glaringly blatant that excuses must be crafted just to make it seem they aren’t as bad as they are.
The government likes to jawbone to the public saying they will make competition a level playing field, but actions show they are doing the opposite.
Ultimately, Silicon Valley whispers in the ear of Congress and they listen.
Well, what now?
Tech has now turned mostly into a digital marketing lovefest harnessed around the smartphone and tablet with cheap shortcuts which is partly why the efficacy of the internet has dropped greatly.
The advent of 5G has also been a bust because these titans don’t feel the need to reinvest to make that killer 5G app when they don’t need to.
The truth is Silicon Valley couldn’t be more complacent in 2021.
They are the ultimate corporate entity and more monolithic than ever.
Smart CFO’s are continuing the gravy train by diving deep into stock buybacks to boost stock prices and the dividends are the extra kicker.
The iPhone maker repurchased $19 billion of stock in the first quarter, bringing the total for the past fourth quarters to $77 billion.
GOOGL repurchased a record $11.4 billion of stock in the first quarter, up from $8.5 billion a year earlier, and FB bought back $3.9 billion, triple the total a year ago.
Now, they even got the White House to do their dirty work.
Huawei, the Chinese telecom company, has been the punching bag for the White House’s tech war with China.
In remarks to reporters in March 2019, Chinese politician Guo Ping said, “The U.S. government has a loser’s attitude. They want to smear Huawei because they can’t compete with us.”
Let’s get this straight, U.S. tech was never behind China and still isn’t, but I do believe the U.S. should simply outcompete with Huawei because I know they can and have the capacity to do so.
China hasn’t done much with 5G as well aside from amassing the patents, but they haven’t made it quite practical to the Chinese public as a use case for consumer products.
Instead of competing, we have Facebook tapping the political back channels to encourage the U.S. government to ban TikTok, not because it threatens Facebook’s model but because Facebook is concerned about national security.
This is from the same Mark Zuckerberg that has been attempting to destroy Snapchat (SNAP) for years after SNAP’s CEO Evan Spiegel refused to sell it to Zuckerberg.
So why innovate? Why deploy capital into research and development when you can just nick a crown jewel and make it your own?
Exactly, so innovation does not happen and will not happen.
We, as consumers, have been thrust into the cluster of ever-degrading smartphone apps that offer less and less utility.
But ultimately, even if you hate Silicon Valley at a personal level, it is literally impossible to bet against them, because all this posturing behind the scenes does boost the share price and that’s what this technology letter is about.
As we are whipsawed into this muddling world of partially vaccinated economies, tech will consolidate after they deliver earnings only to prepare for the next leg up in shares.
Sure, this year’s growth and EPS estimates have been priced perfectly, but we will start to move onto next years’ bounty and these models have never been more profitable.
Don’t fight the trend.
Global Market Comments
July 21, 2021
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(AN INSIDER’S GUIDE TO THE NEXT DECADE OF TECH INVESTMENT),
(AMZN), (AAPL), (NFLX), (AMD), (INTC), (TSLA), (GOOG), (FB)
Mad Hedge Technology Letter
July 12, 2021
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(RIDE THE MOMENTUM)
(SHOP), (NFLX), (FB), (AMZN), (GOOGL), (NFLX), (AAPL), (MSFT)
Just as millions of people in the United States are sensing that life has returned to something that resembles normalcy, the Coronavirus’ delta variant has emerged as American technology stocks biggest upcoming inflection point.
This certainly ups the ante in the struggle to grapple with the pandemic and has wide-reaching consequences for your technology portfolio.
Fresh data from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention shows that more than half of all new cases in the U.S. were attributed to the delta variant, which is believed to be easily transmissible.
About 50% of Americans are fully unvaccinated meaning 50% are not, which could lead to hellacious autumn for the 175 million who are not.
The tech market has sniffed this out.
Data suggesting this variant is three times as infectious as the original coronavirus strain is the catalyst for a massive rotation into premium big tech who boast glamorous balance sheets.
It is still unclear if this virus is actually deadlier or leads to more severe illness, but the health of Facebook, Google, Apple, Microsoft, and Amazon aren’t reliant on the outcome of the delta variant or at least relative to companies that have physical storefronts.
I believe the momentum in these names will continue in the short term as more countries prepare to carve up new movement restrictions and quasi lockdowns to combat the new variant.
The recent tech rotation has been inconspicuous but powerful and the who’s who of big tech are enjoying a stellar run in the past month with FB up 6%, GOOGL up 4.5%, AAPL up 13%, MSFT up 8%, and AMZN up 11%.
These premium tech stocks are acting almost like U.S. treasuries and are increasingly defined as a perceived flight to safety because of
the net high quality of the assets.
Whether there is another virus that kills another 4 million globally again, investors are confident that these prioritized tech stocks are immune to any meaningful weaknesses.
On a granular level, pullbacks are becoming highly rare and mini pullbacks are becoming the only practical entry points into these stocks.
Readers waiting for a 5% drop are still waiting.
Reading waiting for 10% drops risk never getting in when the going is good.
Fresh news of Japan banning spectators for the upcoming and badly organized Tokyo Olympics took down GOOGL and FB 2% intraday only for shares to make up half the losses in one afternoon.
The delta variant has strengthened the “buy the dip” philosophy that is deeply entrenched in these 5 tech names.
The strength of tech can be seen further down the totem pole in inferior names.
Shopify (SHOP), Canada’s ecommerce crown jewel, is another winner with shares up 19% in the past 30 days.
If this rotation continues, I can realistically expect dips or sideways price action in Uber (UBER), Lyft (LYFT), and Airbnb (ABNB) because their investment case weakens relative to the big 5 in a delta variant world.
Netflix (NFLX) is another one that will harvest the low-hanging fruit with strong near-term action resulting in a 9% gain in the past 30 days.
It’s highly likely that in more than several regions around the world, the delta variant will re-silo consumers and hamstring businesses.
Crushing any green shoots that the reopening is supposed to deliver isn’t an ideal runway to growth.
Epidemiologists are starting to come out of the woodwork with Hungarian virologist Ferenc Jakab saying Hungary will be lucky to “get away with August” when referring to a possible 4th wave.
This hasn’t been fully priced into the U.S. tech market and tech will enjoy a full-scale rotation if the 4th wave arrives in full force.
However, I don’t believe we are on the cusp of another $12+ trillion bailout for the delta like last time go around, which does cap momentum to the upside.
There will also be a lack of meme stock profit-taking and bitcoin profit-taking that can be rolled into the big tech safety trade.
Sensibly, this could be a short-term boost for emerging growth tech as well with the likes of DocuSign (DOCU), Zoom Video (ZM), and Teladoc (TDOC) benefiting from investors dusting off the 2020 playbook again.
I forgot to mention that U.S. treasuries falling to $1.36% is the primary reason why at the balance sheet level, growth tech will also get the benefit of the doubt in the short term.
This won’t just be a big 5 momentum encore, others will enjoy the fruits of labor.
Loss-making tech is inordinately reliant on rates being low to subsidize losses and as the 10-year rate has gone from 1.72% to 1.36%, it’s no surprise that growth tech looks like eye candy now too.
Big tech is certainly more durable and has the capacity to navigate around rising rates which is the deal-clincher for me.
I am inclined to get back into the market with any delta scare that cheapens tech before the next leg up.
The embarrassing loss in the judicial system against FB by the Feds is the cherry on top.
I am bullish tech in the short term.
Mad Hedge Technology Letter
July 9, 2021
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(BUYER BEWARE)
(DIDI), (PGJ), (FB), (AMZN), (GOOGL), (NFLX), (AAPL)
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