I have been pounding on the table urging my readers to buy chip stocks.
Why?
Because chip stocks will carry the Nasdaq to higher highs.
Jump on the bandwagon while you can.
My thesis was validated when Micron stock (MU) jumped over 17% yesterday and is up over 20% for the week.
That type of stock appreciation isn’t as widely found in the tech sector anymore now that much of the tech sector is deadweight.
The sub-sector that isn’t dead weight is chips and specifically the AI chips which Micron is part of.
So when we talk about growth, you won’t hear stuff like earnings or revenue growing in the single digits.
We hear numbers more similar to revenue growing at 90% or 100% or even 300% in some cases.
The outperformance in growth is helping these stocks reach greater heights and this is just the beginning.
The commentary has been widespread that AI data spend on chips is going through the roof.
Micron’s management told us they raised guidance because of a more favorable pricing environment as well as robust demand for Micron's memory chips used in data centers to power artificial intelligence.
Executives now expect the market for high-bandwidth memory (HBM) chips used in AI data centers to increase to $25 billion in 2025, up from $5 billion this year — and heightened demand for its HBM chips to bring in multiple billions of dollars next year.
Micron is the first chipmaker to report quarterly results this earnings season and their stellar earnings bode well for the rest of its peers.
The company reported revenue of $7.75 billion — 93% higher than last year.
Micron distinguishes itself by partnering with, rather than competing against, industry superpower Nvidia (NVDA). Micron supplies memory chips for Nvidia’s hotly demanded GPUs.
The company is also set to benefit from a bill awaiting signature from President Joe Biden that would loosen environmental requirements for microchip projects funded by the CHIPS and Science Act. Micron is one of the biggest beneficiaries of CHIPS Act funding, and the Building Chips in America Act passed by the US House of Representatives Monday would allow it to access funding for its projects in Idaho and New York faster.
It is quite transparent that these companies cannot make enough chips in the short term and tech companies are throwing money at them to try to produce the supply that is required for the AI build-out.
Whatever you think of how many AI chips will be needed to deploy AI in full capacity - the real number will dwarf that.
The energy generation needed to power this new technology is so immense that it could even raise the temperature of the earth a few degrees from the sheer energy it will emit.
We are at the beginning of the AI revolution and the chips are currently the best way to play it.
I am bullish chip companies who produces AI chips.
https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png00april@madhedgefundtrader.comhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngapril@madhedgefundtrader.com2024-09-27 14:02:442024-09-27 14:52:18Chips Shine Through Again
Below please find subscribers’ Q&A for the September 25 Mad Hedge Fund Trader Global Strategy Webinar, broadcast from Lake Tahoe Nevada.
Q: The iShares 20+ Year Treasury Bond ETF (TLT) is not advancing like I had hoped. I’m not sure why the interest rate cuts have not impacted the 20-year maturity—is it too far out?
A: It’s not an issue of maturity; the fact is that the market has been discounting falling interest rates for six months, all the way back to March. It’s a classic “buy the rumor, sell the news” scenario. (TLT) rose $20 off the low this year, and once the rate cut actually happened, all the news was in. That is why I actually went short the TLT a couple of days ago, and that trade immediately started making money. Here’s the real problem: Fed futures are discounting 250 basis points in rate cuts by June of next year. If you don’t think we’re going to get 250 basis points in rate cuts, which is two 50 basis point rate cuts and five 25 basis point rate cuts, then the market is overbought for the short term and we’re selling short. That’s exactly what I did.
Q: Is it too late to buy Tesla (TSLA) and Nvidia (NVDA)?
A: No, it’s not, I think Tesla could hit $300 this year, and Nvidia could revisit $140. However, the more you wait, the more pain you have to take along the way. Nvidia did drop 40% off its high at one point this year, and Tesla dropped 80% off its high. The price of coming in late is pain, so be ready to take that pain or, even worse, to stop out.
Q: What is your take on Japan’s attempt to take over US Steel (X)?
A: Well, it’s entirely political. They definitely picked the wrong year to take a run at US steel because it’s headquartered in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and neither political party can win their election without winning Pennsylvania. Nippon Steel is now 3x larger than US Steel (I covered the company for ten years when I lived in Japan.) It’s the steel factor Jimmy Doolittle bombed in the Pearl Harbor movie. US Steel is using 140-year-old technology—Open Hearth Technology—which hasn’t been updated since the Great Depression. Nippon Steel, meanwhile, is promising to scrap all of that and bring the Steel Industry into the 21st Century. All great ideas for Nippon Steel and their shareholders, but not so great for Unions; all of these takeovers always result in massive layoffs of Union workers. So, that is the issue. That’s where a large part of the added value comes from.
Q: What are the chances that interest rates drop to zero?
A: Zero. I don’t think we’ll ever see 0% interest rates again because people now understand the massive damage that causes to the economy and to savers. So, on the next interest rate cycle, we’ll go down maybe to 2% if we get a recession, but probably not much more than that.
Q: Is it a good time to buy FedEx Corp (FDX)?
A: Yes, it probably is. If there was one rule of trading this year, you buy everything on top of these monster selloffs that are caused by weak guidance. We did it on Palo Alto Networks (PANW) earlier this year—people made a fortune on that. FedEx just did the same thing, so yes, I’m looking very carefully at FedEx calls, call spreads, and LEAPS two years out.
Q: I recently saw a recommendation to buy California Utility Company PG&E (PGE) because of recent revenue gains. Should I take a look?
A: Absolutely, you should. PG&E has gone bankrupt twice in the last 25 years, and the current new management seems to know what they’re doing. They borrowed $20 billion to underground all the long-distance power lines in the state so they won’t be liable for any of these gigantic wildfires that caused the last bankruptcy. Also, you kind of want to own utilities when interest rates are falling because utilities are among the biggest borrowers in the country.
Q: Is Global X Uranium ETF (URA) a good proxy for Cameco Corp (CCJ)?
A: Yes, another one is Consolidation Energy Corp. (CEG), but they’ve all had absolutely astronomical moves ever since the announcement came out that Microsoft was reopening the Three Mile Island nuclear power plant. So, wait for a dip, but the thing is just going up every day right now.
Q: Is it time to buy iShares 20+ Year Treasury Bond ETF (TLT) LEAPS?
A: No, LEAPS territory was last year or the beginning of this year when we were in the $80s (and we issued a ton of (TLT) LEAPS last year.) LEAPS are what you do at market bottoms, not at new all-time highs or two-year highs. Remember, if LEAPS don’t work, they can go to zero, and you want to avoid the zero outcome as much as possible.
Q: Should I look at Visa Inc (V)?
A: Yes, this is another one of those poor guidance situations leading to 20% selloffs. In Visa’s case, they’re being sued by the US government for antitrust because they own 47% of the credit card market. So, I would maybe wait a little bit more, let the market fully digest that, and then Visa’s probably a really strong buy because they’re still growing at 15% a year and minting money like crazy.
Q: Do you see gold going to $3,000 next year?
A: Absolutely, yes, unless it goes to $3,000 this year, which raises a better question: what happens when gold hits $3,000? It goes to 4$,500, because Chinese savers have no other place to put their money except gold. The real estate has crashed and isn’t coming back, they don’t trust their own banks or currency—there really is nowhere else for them to put their own money. They don’t even buy gold miners, they just buy the gold metal and coins. So I think we could see much higher highs than gold, and I’m sticking to my longs.
Q: Will silver continue to lag?
A: No. In fact, in the last couple of weeks, silver has done a big catch-up that is happening because recession fears are going away. Even the soft-landing fears are starting to vaporize—we may have no landing at all. The economy may just keep going, and silver is far more sensitive to the economy than gold is; and that is all silver positive. When we get to the metals, you’ll see how much silver has actually caught up. Silver is probably the better buy here because it tends to outperform gold by two to one.
Q: Do you think the Japanese will cross 100 yen to the dollar in the near future?
A: No, but I think it may cross 100 to the dollar in two years. You’re looking at a permanently weak US dollar from now on. As long as we’re cutting interest rates faster than anyone else, our currency will be the weakest. Japan’s rates are at zero, so they’re not going to cut interest rates at all, which is why we've had this enormous move in the Japanese yen.
Q: Can you give me some good renewable energy stocks and reasons why they are good buys?
A: Well, my favorite renewables are the Canadian Uranium stock Cameco Corporation (CCJ), First Solar (FSLR), which has been the leading industrial-scale solar producer for a long time, and NextEra Energy (NEE), which is very heavily dependent on producing electric power from renewables and also have a 3% dividend.
Q: Why is the euro going up even though their economy is in such terrible shape?
A: Europe has much lower interest rates than the US, and therefore, much less ability to cut interest rates than the US; it is the interest rate cuts that are driving currencies down, and we are the world’s greatest interest rates cutter right now. So, that is why you’re getting outperformance of the euro (FXE).
Q: Financials have moved up over the last two weeks; what’s your take on year-end and beyond? Should I buy Goldman Sachs (GS), JP Morgan (JPM) and Morgan Stanley (MS)?
A: Yes on all three. They’re all big beneficiaries of falling interest rates, improving economies, declining default rates, and rising stock markets. So, you have a triple play on all three of those. I’d be buying the dips on all financials.
Q: When will the sell volatility come back?
A: When you get the Volatility Index ($VIX) over $30. That seems to be the sweet spot for selling volatility. We are now at $15.
Q: If the US sharply increases tariffs, what will be the impact on the economy?
A: It would basically amount to a 20% price increase on everything you buy—from clothes to electronic parts to everything else—and the stock market would crash. Probably 90% of the non-food items Walmart (WMT) sells is from China. That’s why they call it the Chinese embassy. Tariffs are a tremendous restraint of trade and never, ever work, except for targeted items like cars or solar panels. For instance, I am in favor of a 100% tariff on Chinese cars to keep them from demolishing our own car industry as they are currently doing in Europe.
Q: Do we expect commodities like copper (FCX) and foodstuffs to go up as rates are cut?
A: I do. They’re big beneficiaries of falling rates, but more importantly, they’re even bigger beneficiaries of a stimulated Chinese economy, and that’s why we see these monster moves over the last two days.
Q: If you had to invest in one rideshare company, would it be Lyft (LYFT) or Uber (UBER)?
A: Uber—they have far superior management, they’ll be the first into robo-taxis, and they are constantly evolving their model, with Lyft always struggling to catch up.
Q: How will antitrust regulation affect the Magnificent Seven?
A: The bottom line is it will double the value of the Magnificent Seven. If these companies are broken up, the individual parts are worth far more than the whole companies, and we saw this when we broke up AT&T (T) 50 years ago, and the resulting seven companies within a year had a combined market value that vastly exceeded the original AT&T. I actually participated in that deal when I was at Morgan Stanley (since I am 6’4” I was asked to carry the ballots from one floor to another). Expect the same to happen with the Magnificent Seven. They will be worth double or triple more.
Q: If China has a falling population, how will a stimulus program help?
A: Well, it will fill in for the 600 million consumers who were never born as a result of the one-child policy. Not many others are talking about this besides me, but the fact is that the current economic weakness comes entirely from the one-child policy, and there is no way out of that, so they are going to have to keep stimulating again and again, much like the US did through the pandemic.
Q: If you can buy gold and silver on the UK market in sterling, does that make more sense for a UK resident?
A: Yes, it does, since your home currency is in sterling. You will actually get a double play or a “hockey stick effect” because not only is gold going up against the US dollar, but sterling (FXB) is going up against the US dollar, so you’ll get a multiplied effect relative to the pound. We used to play this all day long in Europe in the 1970s and 1980s, back when you had individual currencies to trade and the euro hadn’t been invented yet.
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, then WEBINARS, and all the webinars from the last 12 years are there in all their glory.
Good Luck and Good Trading
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
Oracle plans to increase their amount of AI data centers from its current 85 to 2,000.
That is the most important number to take away from an analysts meeting with Oracle management.
Readers should ride on the coattails of this AI data center firm as throw billions upon billion at increasing the amount of AI infrastructure.
Readers absolutely need to know that a great swath of tech is dead and not innovating - growth rates collapsing faster than the U.S. birth rate.
It is important to position yourself at the cutting edge of innovation and growth and that is precisely companies who are knee deep in AI data center infrastructure investments that includes chip companies that produce GPUs like Nvidia.
In fact, Nvidia supplies Oracle and most other tech companies with data center chips called graphics processing units (GPU).
Nvidia has experienced an eye-popping surge in its revenue over the past year, and GPU demand continues to outstrip supply.
Oracle's data centers are unique because they are automated. Each one is operationally identical regardless of its size, and since they don't require human workers, it allows the company to build them quickly. Plus, Oracle's RDMA (random direct memory access) GPU networking technology allows data to flow from one point to another more quickly than traditional Ethernet networks.
Oracle has 85 data centers up and running with 77 more under construction as of the end of August.
Next year, Oracle intends to offer a cluster of 131,072 GPUs, which is a big step up from its largest clusters now, at around 32,000 GPUs. But there's another difference:
The new cluster will use Nvidia's latest Blackwell chips, which can perform AI inference at 30 times the pace of its flagship H100, which Oracle currently uses. Theoretically, it's going to allow developers to build the largest AI models in history.
In fact, Oracle spent $6.9 billion on data center infrastructure in 2024.
Oracle is going after the best technology in Nvidia’s Blackwell chip which is a solid reason to get interested in Oracle stock.
I don’t believe AI infrastructure spend will dissipate anytime soon and as the rest of the tech sub-sector growth falters, this one little area of AI will hold up the rest of tech.
This is why we are seeing extreme concentration of outperformance in just a handful of tech names and I don’t believe we will experience a scenario of spreading the wealth around to the less growth oriented subsectors.
In fact, I think the concentration will become even more outsized in a handful of names as a winner takes all mentality wins out in the tech sector.
We are just scratching the surface in what will become a massive explosion of AI data centers everywhere to satisfy the extreme demand of computing that it will require to pull this off.
Nothing indicates that this would be the wrong trend to follow and that assumption follows through to the astronomically high stock prices of the companies involved.
Oracle is one of these companies that readers should not dismiss.
It is at the heart of the AI infrastructure story that has legs.
https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png00april@madhedgefundtrader.comhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngapril@madhedgefundtrader.com2024-09-25 14:02:422024-09-25 15:16:03From 85 to 2,000 AI Data Centers
Global Market Comments
September 23, 2024 Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
Featured Trade:
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD or THE DOCTOR JEKYLL AND MR. HYDE MARKET),
(NVDA), (MSFT), (GLD), (NEM), (TSLA). (CCJ), (DHI), (TLT)
I have to tell you that every year I do this, calling the market gets easier and easier. That’s because when you go from year 62 to 63 in the market, you actually learn quite a lot.
What gets more frustrating every year is convincing people to execute my trades because they are increasingly out of consensus, as opposed to conventional wisdom, tradition-shattering, or downright Mad.
Nuclear stocks? Are you out of your mind? Haven’t you heard of Three Mile Island?
So, the Fed went with 50.
Initially, the stock reaction was “Oh my gosh, the free lunch is bigger than we thought!” By the close, this morphed to “Oh my gosh, the economy must be worse than we thought!” This opens the way to another possible 50 basis point rate cut in November, which happens to be the day after the presidential election. It only took 5 seconds for most investors to realize that they had way too much cash.
By acting so aggressively and out of character, Fed governor Jay Powell is admitting that he blundered, blew it, dropped the ball, and scored an own goal all at once by not lowering interest rates in July.
By doing his best impression of a deer frozen in the headlights in H1, all Powell got us were six more weeks of job losses, taking the headline Unemployment Rate up to 4.2%.
Don’t get too complacent though. Look at the chart below and you will see that when the Fed began an aggressive round of interest rate cuts in 2007, the market launched into a major crash of 57%.
Dow 42,000.
It may seem commonplace and ordinary for mere mortals to see this number. But for those of us who remember when it was only 600 back in 1982 (and predicted to immediately plunge to 300 by the late Joe Granville), we are now in the realm of science fiction.
However, in Q3 this year, the character of the bull market suddenly changed, from a Dr. Jekyll to a Mr. Hyde. The Magnificent Seven has shrunk to the Pitiful Seven, with long boring sideways-range trades. In the meantime, growth and interest rate-sensitive value stocks that I have been pounding the table about for six months have begun trading like red-hot must-own biotech IPOs.
The choice is very simple. Do I buy a stock that has a single-digit price-earnings multiple that is flying like a bat out of hell, or do I choose an incredibly expensive tech stock with a PE multiple of 27X or worse that is stagnating?
I know what I’m going to do with my money, which reached new all-time highs almost every day this month. I’ll go with the former all day long.
Don’t get me wrong. The Mag Seven aren’t going to stay out of favor for very long. It’s like holding a basketball underwater that keeps inflating. Their earnings are still growing at an explosive rate. Personally, I think Nvidia (NVDA) will hit $160 a share by early 2025.
If there is one common factor in all financial markets today, it is the vast underestimation of the potential of AI and the impact on stock prices, which keeps surreptitiously sneaking into our lives every day.
My Cameco (CCJ) trade alert came through in a week, immediately tacking on 10%. I have to tell you that reading my email, there is a lot of demand for positions that rise by 15% in a week. But that is better than the two-week wait for the Concierge clients who bought the 2026 $40-$42 LEAPS for only 75 cents. The consolation is that they will make a lot more money, potentially some 167% by expiration. The big money is always made with long-term trades.
I can honestly say that I put 54 years of work into this trade, dating back to when I started my work at the Atomic Energy Commission Nuclear Test Site in Nevada. While advanced nuclear power plant design and fuels (low enriched uranium oxide with an M5TM zirconium-based cladding) have been around for a long time, the industry had the kiss of death on it thanks to Three Mile Island (watch the movie China Syndrome), Chornobyl, and Fukushima.
It was going to take someone bold with deep pockets to restart this industry. Then out of the blue Microsoft (MSFT) announced the reopening of Three Mile Island, the site of the worst nuclear accident in US history in 1979.
Constellation Energy announced Friday that its Unit 1 reactor, which closed five years ago, is expected to be revived in 2028, dependent on Nuclear Regulatory Commission approval. Microsoft will purchase the carbon-free energy produced from it to power its data centers to support artificial intelligence.
Twelve U.S. nuclear power reactors have permanently closed since 2012, with the most recent being Indian Point 3 on April 30, 2021. Another seven U.S. reactor retirements have been announced through 2025, with a total generating capacity of 7,109 MW (equal to roughly 7% of U.S. nuclear capacity).
I have a feeling that all of these will get reopened, which cost about $4 billion each to build and can be bought now for pennies on the dollar. In the meantime, the world’s largest uranium supplier, Kazakhstan, is cutting supplies. Buy all nuclear plays in dips.
I have to tell you that this was one of those weeks that by making 6.74% it makes all the barbarically early mornings and exhausting late nights worth it. While all my friends are working on their golf swings or improving their bowling scores, I am scoring the Internet search for the next original investment theme. Every customer I have spoken to lately is having a great year.
So far in September, we are up by a spectacular +9.67%. My 2024 year-to-date performance is at +44.36%.The S&P 500 (SPY) is up +19.08%so far in 2024. My trailing one-year return reached +63.00%. That brings my 16-year total return to +720.99%.My average annualized return has recovered to +52.43%.
I front-ran the Fed move by adding positions in interest rate sensitives like (GLD), (NEM), and (TSLA). I added (CCJ) based on the arguments above. Once the Fed showed its hand, I added another interest rate sensitives with (DHI). I also added a short in (TLT).
My logic on (TLT) was very simple. I think it is safe to say that we won’t have any downside surprises in interest rates until the next Fed meeting on November 6. We don’t even get a Nonfarm Payroll Report until October 4.
In any case, the bond market has already fully priced in half of the 250 basis points worth of interest rate cuts now discounted by the June Fed futures markets. We have just witnessed a massive $20 rally off the (TLT) bottom. Upside surprises in prices from here should be nil.
If you couldn’t get into (TLT), you are not alone. As soon as the big hedge funds saw my trade alerts, they started hammering not only the options market but the underlying bond market as well with several large $100 million sales. That pushed the trade to near max profit almost immediately and made my trade alert impossible to execute.
At The Economist, they used to say that imitation is the sincerest form of flattery.
Some 63 of my 75 round trips, or 90%, were profitable in 2023. Some 57 of 75 trades have been profitable so far in 2024, and several of those losses were break-even. That is a success rate of +76%.
Try beating that anywhere.
FedEx Gets Crushed 10%, on disappointing earnings and guidance. Cost control is a big issue. Right now, investors are presented with the Dow Industrials at all-time highs and Transports barely positive for the year. Transports are up just 2.7% year to date, and a 13% drop in FedEx shares early Friday will likely drag it into the red for 2024. Buy (FDX) on dips, a great economic recovery play.
Existing Home Sales Drop 4.2%, in August to a seasonally adjusted annualized rate of 3.86 million units, according to the National Association of Realtors. There were 1.35 million units for sale at the end of August. That’s up 0.7% from July and up 22.7% year over year. median price of an existing home sold in August was $416,700, up 3.1% from August 2023, a new all-time high. Real estate should pick up once lower interest rates feed through.
Weekly Jobless Claims Hit 4 Month Low at 219,000. This flies in the face of yesterday’s 50 basis point rate cut by the Fed yesterday based on a weakening jobs market.
Alaska Airlines Takeover of Hawaiian Gets Approval, in a rare case of agreement from the government. The Feds have opposed the most concentration of industry. I think without the deal Hawaiian would have gone under. Expect prices to go and services to decline. Avoid the airlines.
Berkshire Hathaway Cash Approaches $300 Billion. Berkshire ended the second quarter with cash and equivalents (mostly Treasury bills) of $277 billion, up from $168 billion at year-end 2023, mostly due to heavy sales of Apple (AAPL). It highlights how much money is sitting on the sidelines waiting to come in on the next dip. It's also an indication that in the 75 years of Warren Buffet’s investing experience, stocks are expensive.
The Entire Energy Sector is About to Double, once the Chinese economy starts to recover. A recovering US economy powered by lower interest rates will also help. Everything from oil futures to master limited partnerships and stocks are on sale with the highest dividends in the market. It’s almost the only place Warren Buffet is buying.
Amazon Puts AI to Work, using it to plan new delivery routes which saves time and millions of gallons of gasoline. It’s a simple application with vast results. It all goes straight to the bottom line. AI is spreading throughout the economy far faster than most people realize. Buy (AMZN) on dips.
Foreign Direct Investment into China Collapses, down 31.5% in the first eight months of 2024 the Chinese Commerce Ministry said on Saturday. This could be a drag on the recovery of global commodity prices.
US Import Prices are in Free Fall, showing the biggest drop in eight months in August, driven by a broad decline in the costs of goods.
Ebbing price pressures give the Federal Reserve ample room to focus on the labor market which has slowed considerably from last year's robust job growth. Expectations of lower interest rates as well as slowing inflation results are making people feel better about the outlook for the economy.
Foreign Investors Pour $31 Billion into Emerging Markets in August. Fixed income funds ex-China accounted for $27.8 billion of inflows, with $1.4 billion funneled to Chinese debt, the data show. The net inflow to stocks stood at $1.7 billion despite a $1.5 billion outflow from Chinese equities. It’s all about falling US interest rates and a US dollar that is expected to be weak for years.
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 600% 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, September 23 at 8:30 AM EST, the S&P Global Flash PMI is out On Tuesday, September 24 at 6:00 AM, the S&P Case Shiller National Home Price Index is released.
On Wednesday, September 25 at 7:30 AM, New Home Sales are printed.
On Thursday, September 26 at 8:30 AM EST, the Weekly Jobless Claims are announced. We also get the final read on Q2 GDP.
On Friday, September 27 at 8:30 AM, we learn the Fed’s favorite inflation indicator, the Core PCE Price Index. At 2:00 PM EST, the 2:00 PM the Baker Hughes Rig Count is printed.
As for me, when the Cold War ended in 1992, the United States judiciously stepped in and bought the collapsing Soviet Union’s entire uranium and plutonium supply.
For good measure, my client George Soros provided a $50 million grant to hire every Soviet nuclear engineer. The fear then was that starving scientists would go to work for Libya, North Korea, or Pakistan, which all had active nuclear programs. They ended up here instead.
That provided the fuel to run all US nuclear power plants and warships for 20 years. That fuel has now run out and chances of a resupply from Russia are zero. The Department of Defense attempted to reopen our last plutonium factory in Amarillo, Texas, a legacy of the Johnson administration.
But the facilities were deemed too old and out of date, and it is cheaper to build a new factory from scratch anyway. What better place to do so than Los Alamos, which has the greatest concentration of nuclear expertise in the world?
Los Alamos is a funny sort of place. It sits at 7,320 feet on a mesa on the edge of an ancient volcano so if things go wrong, they won’t blow up the rest of the state. The homes are mid-century modern built when defense budgets were essentially unlimited. As a prime target in a nuclear war, there are said to be miles of secret underground tunnels hacked out of solid rock.
You need to bring a Geiger counter to garage sales because sometimes interesting items are work castaways. A friend almost bought a cool coffee table which turned out to be part of an old cyclotron. And for a town designing the instruments to bring on the possible end of the world, it seems to have an abnormal number of churches. They’re everywhere.
I have hundreds of stories from the old nuclear days passed down from those who worked for J. Robert Oppenheimer and General Leslie Groves, who ran the Manhattan Project in the early 1940s. They were young mathematicians, physicists, and engineers at the time, in their 20’s and 30’s, who later became my university professors. The A-bomb was the most important event of their lives.
Unfortunately, I couldn’t relay this precious unwritten history to anyone without a security clearance. So, it stayed buried with me for a half century, until now.
Some 1,200 engineers will be hired for the first phase of the new plutonium plant, which I got a chance to see. That will create challenges for a town of 13,000 where existing housing shortages already force interns and graduate students to live in tents. It gets cold at night and dropped to 13 degrees F when I was there.
I was allowed to visit the Trinity site at the White Sands Missile Test Range, the first visitor to do so in many years. This is where the first atomic bomb was exploded on July 16, 1945. The 20-kiloton explosion set off burglar alarms for 200 miles and was double to ten times the expected yield.
Enormous targets hundreds of yards away were thrown about like toys (they are still there). Half the scientists thought the bomb might ignite the atmosphere and destroy the world but they went ahead anyway because so much money had been spent, 3% of US GDP for four years. Of the original 100-foot tower, only a tiny stump of concrete is left (picture below).
With the other visitors, there was a carnival atmosphere as people worked so hard to get there. My Army escort never left me out of their sight. Some 78 years after the explosion, the background radiation was ten times normal, so I couldn’t stay more than an hour.
Needless to say, that makes uranium plays like Cameco (CCJ), NextGen Energy (NXE), Uranium Energy (UEC), and Energy Fuels (UUUU) great long-term plays, as prices will almost certainly rise and all of which look cheap. US government demand for uranium and yellow cake, its commercial byproduct, is going to be huge. Uranium is also being touted as a carbon-free energy source needed to replace oil.
At Ground Zero in 1945
What’s Left of a Trinity Target 200 Yards Out
Playing With My Geiger Counter
Atomic Bomb No.3 Which was Never Used in Tokyo
What’s Left from the Original Test
Stay Healthy,
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/ground-zero.png758584april@madhedgefundtrader.comhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngapril@madhedgefundtrader.com2024-09-23 09:02:102024-09-23 10:37:24The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or the Dr. Jekyll to a Mr. Hyde
No recession – highly bullish for technology stocks ($COMPQ) in the short term.
That is my hot take from Jerome Powell’s and the Fed’s surprise 50-point basis interest rate cut.
Tech stocks will overwhelmingly outperform the rest of the equity market because that is where the profits and earnings are.
I don’t see a situation for the ‘catch up’ trade, or if it does transpire, it will be very transitory in nature.
There is no other subsector that is about to overtake technology in terms of prestige or growth, and that is where I take comfort in believing that technology will harvest the lions’ share of the gains from the Central Bank’s interest rate cut.
The cut was a jumbo one, which means even better projections for tech share prices in the short run.
It is hard not to take a look-in back at the Magnificent 7 for another winter rally that should take the Nasdaq quite a bit higher from here.
That is why I executed a deep-in-the-money call spread on chip behemoth Nvidia (NVDA) this morning.
The tech-weighted Nasdaq index hit an all-time high in 2024 around July, with prices trading around 18,700 points, and we are around 5% from that high.
Any pullback in quality tech firms will be brought up, and I urge readers to enjoy the rally because of the unexpected jumbo hike, the rally is now pulled forward.
Highlighting the hawkish cut was the FOMC vote was 11-1, with Governor Michelle Bowman preferring a quarter-point move.
Powell pushed through a half-point move instead and ironically told reporters that the economy was great.
Unemployment numbers of around 4.2% were once considered full employment back in the day.
A half-point cut into a strong economy to pre-empt a recession is an interesting move.
It is clear they don’t want to get behind the curve after they badly botched inflation on the way up.
In most normal cases, tech stocks would rocket higher, and bond yields would sink, but the 10-year yield has gone the other way, signaling that this hawkish cut could ignite another bout of higher inflation at the long end of the yield curve.
The Nasdaq index gained 3%, showing that it can power through no matter what bonds are doing, and that has been the case since 2020.
The Japanese yen also shot higher from the 140 level to the 144 to the US dollar today.
A weaker trending yen is a highly bullish signal for the trajectory of U.S. tech stocks.
The committee expects the long-run neutral rate to be around 3%, a level that has drifted higher as the Fed has struggled to get inflation down to 2%.
Gross domestic product has been rising steadily, and the Atlanta Fed is tracking 3% growth in the third quarter based on continuing strength in consumer spending. Moreover, the Fed chose to cut even though most gauges indicate inflation well ahead of the central bank’s 2% target. The Fed’s preferred measure shows inflation running around 2.5%, well below its peak but still higher than policymakers would like.
The current jobless level is 4.2%, drifting higher over the past year, though still at a level that would be considered full employment.
A 50 basis point rate cut into an economy growing 3% per year will surely get GDP moving closer to 4%.
Think about it in terms of housing and all the buyers waiting on the sidelines waiting to get into the housing market.
Inflation is sure to come back again in the long term, but in the short term, this nudges 3% GDP to 4%, and that is highly bullish for tech stocks. This also should help unemployment stick close to the 4.2% in, which the Fed is worried about, which is a victory for equity markets.
https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png00april@madhedgefundtrader.comhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngapril@madhedgefundtrader.com2024-09-20 14:02:192024-09-20 15:41:25Tech Stocks Receive A Gift
The goalposts are narrowing with liquidity not making it out to the outer edge of the risk spectrum.
Bitcoin has had some weaknesses but the alternative currencies have really felt the guillotine drop.
When push comes to shove, the tide doesn’t lift all boats in eroding economic conditions.
Yes, we are about to start cutting rates, but that is because the economy is starting to stagnate and tech stocks have felt the full brunt of it.
Tech stocks have had a rough September and it was going to take a lot to move the needle with these lofty prices.
It was about time that investors took profits.
What has that meant for crypto?
It means a grim short-term outlook that the industry will need to endure.
11 U.S. spot bitcoin exchange-traded funds had their worst day in over four months after the report, as more than $287 million was collectively withdrawn from the ETFs.
The data was bad through the end of the week. On Friday, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported a cooldown in the labor market with August payrolls falling short of expectations.
Last week, Cryptocurrency exchange Coinbase wrapped up its worst week of the year. Bitcoin miner Marathon Digital tumbled 20%.
September is historically a difficult trading month for crypto assets, with bitcoin notching an average loss of 4.8%.
The total market cap of crypto is down close to 30% from its 2024 peak of $2.67 trillion and is now at $1.9 trillion. Altcoins like Solana’s token, XRP, and Cardano’s ADA all dropped more than 8% last week.
While it was a rough week for risky assets of all sorts, investors over-indexed in crypto stocks had it particularly bad.
Coinbase, stuck in a court battle with the SEC over whether the exchange engages in unregistered sales of securities, plummeted 20% to its lowest since February. MicroStrategy, the bitcoin collecting company founded by Michael Saylor, dropped 26% in the last two weeks.
The top Bitcoin mining companies all ended last week with double-digit declines, led by CleanSpark’s 24% plunge. Riot Platforms lost 17%.
As investors turn to what’s coming, one big area of focus is the Federal Reserve.
If the Fed does in fact lower rates, I do see crypto and tech stocks reflating.
However, some alternative crypto stocks might get left behind and I fear for an asset like ether which was once seen as the second-best crypto.
Ether’s price has fallen to the point that suggests it really isn’t that important to the crypto industry.
Bitcoin has stood out as the all-weather crypto asset that could benefit most during the easing cycle.
In truth, technology stocks delivered some type of mini miracle by performing well when rates turned higher.
There is definitely a good chance that initiating a lower rate cycle might add rocket fuel to tech stocks.
Remember that tech stocks are the only equities that have grown their earnings during the past few years.
Much of the recent success is also due to chip stock Nvidia which has led the charge for tech companies surging past other big tech companies as the most influential stock in the world.
As we shake out the good from the bad, I urge readers to get into the best of breed, in tech and not crypto, when risk is initiated again.
I also urge caution to anyone who likes to get into crypto that it is a high-risk asset that could get dumped one day if people need capital to pay for mortgages and food.
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