• support@madhedgefundtrader.com
  • Member Login
Mad Hedge Fund Trader
  • Home
  • About
  • Store
  • Luncheons
  • Testimonials
  • Contact Us
  • Click to open the search input field Click to open the search input field Search
  • Menu Menu

Tag Archive for: (NVDA)

april@madhedgefundtrader.com

February 20, 2024

Diary, Newsletter, Summary

Global Market Comments
February 20, 2024
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:

(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or HOW THE CPI LIED),
(NVDA), (MSFT), (AMZN), (V), (PANW), (CCJ) (AAPL), (TSLA), (GOOGL), (MSFT), (AMZN), (META), (UBER), (UUP)

https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png 0 0 april@madhedgefundtrader.com https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png april@madhedgefundtrader.com2024-02-20 09:04:072024-02-20 10:40:34February 20, 2024
april@madhedgefundtrader.com

The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead or How the CPI Lied

Diary, Newsletter

It’s pretty obvious that when the Consumer Price Index was released last Tuesday, the data point was lying through its teeth. The 0.4% increase in the Core CPI brought the YOY gain to a heart-palpitating 3.9%, much higher than expected. The stock market thought it was telling God’s home truth by plunging 740 points at its low.

Interest rate sensitives, like bonds, utilities, real estate, precious metals, energy, and foreign currencies were particularly hard hit.

I have been in the financial markets quite a long time now and as a result, am pretty used to being told porky pies (lies in London’s East End). Take the CPI for example. The reported number came in at a sizzling 3.3% for January. That is enough to kill off any hopes of a Fed interest rate cut in 2024, thus the ensuing wreckage in the market.

However, back out a single number, the 6.0% rise in housing rental costs, and the inflation rate drops all the way to 2.0%, bang on the Fed’s long-term inflation target. In other words, interest rates should be cut RIGHT NOW!
That is clearly the view that the markets came around to on Wednesday, which saw the Dow Average recover 151 points.

Unfortunately, lying is a fact of life in the stock market at every conceivable level. But learn to tolerate it and you can make millions of dollars. That works for me. Like my old college statistics professor used to tell me: “Statistics are like a bikini bathing suit; what they reveal is fascinating, but what they conceal is essential.”

In fact, we may see the stock market bouncing back and forth like a ping pong ball between big technology and the interest rate sectors, depending on what the bond market is doing that day driving traders nuts. After all, it was YOU who wanted to be in show business!

In the meantime, complacency rules all. Cash flows into stocks are near all-time highs. Market strategists have been ratcheting up their yearend targets on a daily basis, even me (I’m now at SPX 6,000). The option put/call ratio is about as low as it gets, meaning there is a universal belief that stocks will continue to appreciate. That’s with the S&P 500 earnings multiple trading at a rich 20.5.

I would be remiss in my duties as a financial advisor if I did not also warn you that these are all market-topping signals, at least for the short term.

Double Yikes, and Heavens to Betsy!

Of course, all eyes will be on the Q4 NVIDIA earnings this week, out after the close on Wednesday and probably the most important data release of the year. Everything else this week is essentially meaningless.

If earnings come in anything less than perfect, up 100% YOY, it could trigger a long overdue correction in the stock market in general and (NVDA) in particular. On the other hand, earnings just might come in more than perfect.

I have been covering (NVDA) for more than a decade back when it was just a video game play and I describe it today as a monopoly on the world’s most valuable product. Their top-end H100 graphics cards are now selling for a breathtaking $30,000 each and Meta (META) just ordered 450,000 of these babies, partly so their competitors can’t get their hands on them. For those who don’t have a calculator that is a single order worth a mind-blowing $13.5 billion.

That is why the stock is up 224% in a year and 50X since the first Mad Hedge trade alert on the company went out at a split-adjusted $2.00. Those who think they can clone (NVDA) and their products overnight can dream on. Most employees have golden handcuffs in the form of vested options at the same $2.00 strike price or lower.

The Magnificent Seven are still cheap relative to the rest of the market. Their price-to-growth ratio (PEG Ratio) is still only half the rest of the market. The Mag Seven will see earnings grow 20% this year with a price-earnings multiple of 30X giving you a PEG of 1.5X. The Unmagnificent 493 are selling at a PEG ratio of 3.0X, meaning they are twice as expensive.

Just thought you’d like to know.

So far in February, we are up +3.42%. My 2024 year-to-date performance is also at -0.86%. The S&P 500 (SPY) is up +4.72% so far in 2024. My trailing one-year return reached +59.62% versus +24.57% for the S&P 500.

That brings my 15-year total return to +675.77%. My average annualized return has retreated to +51.32%.

Some 63 of my 70 trades last year were profitable in 2023.

I am maintaining a double long in, you guessed it, (NVDA). My longs in (MSFT), (AMZN), (V), (PANW), and (CCJ) all expired at their maximum potential profits with the February option expiration.

CPI Smacks Market, coming in at 0.3% in January instead of the expected 0.2%. The highflyers took the biggest hit. Bonds were destroyed, taking ten-year US Treasury yields up to 4.30%. Is the falling interest rate story dead, or just resting? Rising rents were the big villain here.

 

 

US Retail Sales Dive 0.8% in January, a shocking decline from the blowout in December. Consumers didn’t bite on those New Year Sales because they actually started in November. Winter storms as well as technical factors had distorted the data.

Weekly Jobless Claims Dropped to 212,000, an improvement of 8,000 from the previous week. Continuing claims rose to 1,895,000.
https://www.dol.gov/ui/data.pdf

Here are Dan Niles’ Tech Shorts, Apple (AAPL), (TSLA), and Alphabet (GOOGL). He is long Microsoft (MSFT), (AMZN), (META), and of course NVIDIA (NVDA). Sounds like a good call to me. Dan knows what he is doing.

Uber Announces First Ever Share Buy Back, some $7 billion. In the meantime, they have to cope with a driver strike. Buy (UBER) on dips.

$929 Billion in US Commercial Real Estate Loans are Due this Year or 20% of the total. Will there be widespread defaults or will borrowers get rescued by falling interest rates in the second half? Will they extend and pretend? Avoid regional banks like the plague, which lack the capital to cope with this. 

US Dollar (UUP) Hits Three Month High, on the hot CPI. You need a falling CPI to get a weak buck. The Euro plunged to $1.07, the British pound to $1.25, the Australian dollar to 65 cents, and the Japanese yen to ¥151.

NVIDIA Now Tops Amazon in Market Value, at $1.2 trillion now the fourth most valuable company in the US. It could eventually top Microsoft’s (MSFT) market cap as it is growing much faster. Those (NVDA) LEAPS are looking pretty good. The shares are up 50% so far in 2024. Buy (NVDA) on dips.

Biden to Ban Chinese EV Car Imports. The measures would apply to electric vehicles and parts originating from China, no matter where they are assembled, in a bid to prevent Chinese makers from moving cars and components into the United States through third countries such as Mexico. Chinese cars will never meet US safety standards. Try driving in China.

My Ten-Year View

When we come out the other side of the recession, we will be perfectly poised to launch into my new American Golden Age or the next Roaring Twenties. The economy decarbonizing and technology hyper accelerating, creating enormous investment opportunities. The Dow Average will rise by 800% to 240,000 or more in the coming decade. The new America will be far more efficient and profitable than the old.

Dow 240,000 here we come!

On Monday, February 19, the markets are closed for Presidents Day.

On Tuesday, February 20 no data of importance is released.

On Wednesday, February 21 at 2:00 PM EST, the Minutes from the previous Federal Open Market Committee meeting are published. NVIDIA earnings are released after the market closes.

On Thursday, February 22 at 8:30 AM EST, the Weekly Jobless Claims are announced. Existing Home Sales are Released.

On Friday, February 23 at 2:30 PM the Baker Hughes Rig Count is printed.

As for me, the first thing I did when I received a big performance bonus from Morgan Stanley in London in 1988 was to run out and buy my own airplane.

By the early 1980s, I’d been flying for over a decade. But it was always in someone else’s plane: a friend’s, the government’s, a rental. And Heaven help you if you broke it!

I researched the market endlessly, as I do with everything, and concluded that what I really needed was a six-passenger Cessna 340 pressurized twin turbo parked in Santa Barbara, CA. After all, the British pound had just enjoyed a surge against the US dollar so American planes were suddenly a bargain. It had a maximum range of 1,448 miles and therefore was perfect for flying around Europe.

The sensible thing to do would have been to hire a professional ferry company to fly it across the pond.  But what’s the fun in that? So, I decided to do it myself with a copilot I knew to keep me company. Even more challenging was that I only had three days to make the trip, as I had to be at my trading desk at Morgan Stanley on Monday morning.

The trip proved eventful from the first night. I was asleep in the back seat over Grand Junction, Colorado, when I was suddenly awoken by the plane veering sharply left. My co-pilot had fallen asleep, running the port wing tanks dry and shutting down the engine. He used the emergency boost pump to get it restarted. I spent the rest of the night in the co-pilot’s seat trading airplane stories.

The stops at Kansas City, MO, Koshokton, OH, and Bangor, ME proved uneventful. Then we refueled at Goose Bay, Labrador in Canada, held our breath, and took off for our first Atlantic leg.

Flying the Atlantic in 1988 is not the same as it is today. There were no navigational aids and GPS was still top secret. There were only a handful of landing strips left over from the WWII summer ferry route, and Greenland was still littered with Mustangs, B-17s, B24s, and DC-3s. Many of these planes were later salvaged when they became immensely valuable. The weather was notoriously bad. And a compass was useless, as we flew so close to the magnetic North Pole the needle would spin in circles.

But we did have NORAD, or America’s early warning system against a Russian missile attack.

The practice back then was to call a secret base somewhere in Northern Greenland called “Sob Story.” Why it was called that I can only guess, but I think it has something to do with a shortage of women. An Air Force technician would mark your position on the radar. Then you called him again two hours later and he gave you the heading you needed to get to Iceland. At no time did he tell you where HE was.

It was a pretty sketchy system, but it usually worked.

To keep from falling asleep the solo pilots ferrying aircraft all chatted on a frequency of 123.45 MHz. Suddenly, we heard a mayday call. A female pilot had taken the backseat out of a Cessna 152 and put in a fuel bladder to make the transatlantic range. The problem was that the pump from the bladder to the main fuel tank didn’t work. With eight pilots chipping in ideas, she finally fixed it. But it was a hair-raising hour. There is no air-sea rescue in the Arctic Ocean.

I decided to play it safe and pick up extra fuel in Godthab, Greenland. Godthab has your worst nightmare of an approach, called a DME Arc. You fly a specific radial from the landing strip, keeping your distance constant. Then at an exact angle, you turn sharply right and begin a decent. If you go one degree further, you crash into a 5,000-foot cliff. Needless to say, this place is fogged 365 days a year.

I executed the arc perfectly, keeping a threatening mountain on my left while landing. The clouds mercifully parted at 1,000 feet and I landed. When I climbed out of the plane to clear Danish customs (yes, it’s theirs), I noticed a metallic scraping sound. The runway was covered with aircraft parts. I looked around and there were at least a dozen crashed airplanes along the runway. I realized then that the weather here was so dire that pilots would rather crash their planes than attempt a second go.

When I took off from Godthab, I was low enough to see the many things that Greenland is famous for polar bears, walruses, and natives paddling in deerskin kayaks. It was all fascinating.

I called into Sob Story a second time for my heading, did some rapid calculations, and thought “damn”. We didn’t have enough fuel to make Iceland. The wind had shifted from a 70 MPH tailwind to a 70 MPH headwind, not unusual in Greenland. I slowed down the plane and configured it for maximum range.

I put out my own mayday call saying we might have to ditch, and Reykjavik Control said they would send out an orange bedecked Westland Super Lynch rescue helicopter to follow me in. I spotted it 50 miles out. I completed a five-hour flight and had 15 minutes of fuel left, kissing the ground after landing.

I went over to Air Sea Rescue to thank them for a job well done and asked them what the survival rate for ditching in the North Atlantic was. They replied that even with a bright orange survival suit on, which I had, it was only about 50%.

Prestwick, Scotland was uneventful, just rain as usual. The hilarious thing about flying the full length of England was that when I reported my position, the accents changed every 20 miles. I put the plane down at my home base of Leavesden and parked the Cessna next to a Mustang owned by rock star Randy Newman.

I asked my ferry pilot if ferrying planes across the Atlantic was always so exciting. He dryly answered “Yes.” He told me in a normal year about 10% of the planes go missing.

I raced home, changed clothes, and strode into Morgan Stanley’s office in my pin-stripped suit right on time. I didn’t say a word about what I just accomplished.

The word slowly leaked out and at lunch, the team gathered around to congratulate me and listen to some war stories.

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

 

Flying the Atlantic in 1988

 

Looking for a Place to Land in Greenland

 

Landing on a Postage Stamp in Godthab Greenland

 

On the Ground in Greenland

 

No Such a Great Landing

 

Flying Low Across Greenland

 

Gassing Up in Iceland

 

Almost Home at Prestwick

 

Back to London in 1988

 

 

 

 

 

https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/flying-1988-scaled.jpg 1543 2560 april@madhedgefundtrader.com https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png april@madhedgefundtrader.com2024-02-20 09:02:342024-02-20 10:40:04The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead or How the CPI Lied
april@madhedgefundtrader.com

February 12, 2024

Tech Letter

Mad Hedge Technology Letter
February 12, 2024
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:

(THE AI WAR STOCK)
(PLTR), (SMCI), (NVDA)

https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png 0 0 april@madhedgefundtrader.com https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png april@madhedgefundtrader.com2024-02-12 14:04:342024-02-12 16:18:15February 12, 2024
april@madhedgefundtrader.com

The AI War Stock

Tech Letter

Palantir’s (PLTR) performance in the US is nothing short of extraordinary, and some would even say scintillating.

I’ll tell you why.

The numbers on the screen make you giggle like the 70% year-on-year growth in Q4.

It’s almost inconceivable to do what they did and I am referring to signing that many contracts given the way the product is.

We are witnessing a convergence of Palantir’s software products becoming easier to use which is leading to an augmentation of its capabilities, both driven by developments in AI, and large language models.

The heightened demand and ability to meet that demand is something Palantir’s management calls “with a pilot.”

This new piloting approach is what they call boot camp.

They did over 500 boot camps last year.

Palantir’s management travels around the country now convincing CEOs, CTOs, CFOs, and really, whoever has $1 million to buy the software and transform their enterprise by harnessing everything achieved in AI since inception and putting the best people on it.

Palantir then coaches these best employees on how to run data at a boot camp for 10 hours per day until they know it like the back of their hand.

One unique part of Palantir’s business model is their principle of making it known that they are proud of their work on the war front. They are proud to support the US.

Specifically, they are proud to support the US military.

However, this has rubbed some the wrong way like the Europeans who refuse to do much business with PLTR.

PLTR has been unable to make inroads across the Atlantic. 

Yet PLTR is proud to have carved out a pivotally crucial role not only in Ukraine, but management is proud that after October 7, within weeks, Palantir is on the ground, and is involved in operationally crucial roles on the software side in Israel.

I know of no other software company in the world that is at the focal point of Ukraine and Israel and it is important for investors to know this before they decide to invest in the company.

This tech company boards the most talented, interesting, and performance-based people in the world.

Some of the numbers that can’t just be ignored are the 55% growth in customer count year-over-year.

This is the early days of generative AI in software products and for Palantir to describe the rocket fuel growth they are experiencing backs up the AI narrative.

For better or worse, the sector is relying on the AI pixie dust to carry the rest of the tech market.

As soon as the market gets wind that AI-based growth isn’t supercharging balance sheets, the tech sector will pull back.

Therefore, it’s highly positive for technology momentum to see stocks like PLTR and chip stocks like Super Micro Computer (SMCI) hit a home run in earnings.

Sadly, Nvidia (NVDA) can’t just carry the load for the entire sector and there needs to be some alternative leadership from other tech stocks connected to the AI story.

PLTR has tripled in the past 365 days and I don’t believe that type of stock performance can continue in the short-term.

The last earnings beat was met with yet another impressive 20% rise in the stock price.

Investors will need to be patient and wait for the stock to pull back otherwise chasing usually ends in tears.

I would advise readers to not chase and wait for big drops in individuals' names to put money to work.

 

 

 

https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png 0 0 april@madhedgefundtrader.com https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png april@madhedgefundtrader.com2024-02-12 14:02:332024-02-12 16:32:06The AI War Stock
april@madhedgefundtrader.com

February 12, 2024

Diary, Newsletter, Summary

Global Market Comments
February 12, 2024
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:

(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or RAISING MY YEAREND TARGET TO (SPX) $6,000)
(AAPL), (GOOGL), (META) (MSFT), (AMZN), (V), (PANW), (CCJ), (ARM), (USO), (XOM), (OXY), (INDA), (INDY), (FXI), (BABA), (NVDA), (TSA), (RCL)

https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png 0 0 april@madhedgefundtrader.com https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png april@madhedgefundtrader.com2024-02-12 09:04:222024-02-12 11:12:05February 12, 2024
april@madhedgefundtrader.com

The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or Raising my Yearend Target to (SPX) $6,000

Diary, Newsletter

When I announced my year-end target for the S&P 500 on the first of January, I knew it was cautious. That provided for only a 15% gain for 2024. Yet here we are a mere six weeks into the New Year, and we only have 10.4% to go.

That is with the six lead stocks, which account for 30% of the entire stock market capitalization, seeing earnings grow up to 300% annually. With that kind of growth, even $6,000 is looking overly conservative, even allowing for no multiple expansion whatsoever.

The top six stocks are over 11% YTD, while half of all S&P 500 stocks are down. A few friends of mine who are still alive and have been in the market for as long as I have never seen a market this concentrated. They are amazed, befuddled, and aghast, as am I.

And if you do want to buy big tech, you’re going to have to compete with the big tech companies themselves to do so. The buyback machine continues full speed ahead, with Apple (AAPL) Hoovering up $20.5 billion of its own shares, Alphabet (GOOGL) $16.1 billion, Meta (META) 6.3 billion, and Microsoft (MSFT) $4 billion.

I am a firm believer that markets will do whatever they have to do to screw the most people. So far this year it has done an admirable job doing just that, going up in a straight line with everyone underinvested and with $8 trillion on the sideline.

This is how markets will continue screwing most people. It keeps going up a little bit more. The NVIDIA earnings announcement due out on February 21 could be the ideal turning point.

Then the market suffers a ferocious correction, maybe 10% in a short period. Traders panic and dump all their positions. Then the (SPX) turns around at about $4,800 on a dime and then rockets all the way up to $6,000, frustrating investors once again.

I just thought you’d like to know.

I am usually cautious about ultra bears, but I picked up an interesting view last week about how long it may take the Chinese economy to recover.

During the US house bust from 2007 to 2012, the United States had 3 million excess unwanted homes weighing on the market like a dead weight, or about a seven-month oversupply. That was enough excess to cause the Great Recession, a 52% crash in the S&P 500, and the demise of thousands of American companies, including Lehman Brothers and Bear Stearns.

Today, China has a staggering 50 million excess homes in a population only four times larger than ours. That is a 15-year oversupply for the market. That means China could suffer a decade and a half of subpar growth and lagging stock markets. Don’t touch Chinese stocks even though they offer attractive single-digit multiples.

Why do you care? Because China is the world’s largest consumer and importer of most commodities, food, and energy. The stocks that specialize in these areas could be facing a long-term drag from the Middle Kingdom unless it is offset somewhere else.

The Chinese are only now discovering that the principal driver of their economic growth for the past 30 years has been US investment. President Xi has managed to scare that away with a hostile attitude towards America and saber-rattling over Taiwan. Last year for the first time the US imported more from Mexico than from China, where many companies have re-shored.

Wonder why crude oil (USO), (XOM), (OXY) is at $68 a barrel when the US economy is growing at a 3.1% rate? This is the reason. It is also a strong argument in favor of investing in India, which I discussed last week. Buy the (INDA) and the (INDY), not the (FXI) or (BABA).

In the meantime, you’ve got to love ARM Holdings PLC, whose earnings announcement triggered a heroic 56% one-day move up in the stock. They execute sub-designs for almost every AI chip out there. That’s what a 3% float in the stock gets you. Anyone who has any doubts about the durability of the AI story should take a look at what happened to (ARM) last week.

So far in February, we are up +1.78%. My 2024 year-to-date performance is also at -2.50%. The S&P 500 (SPY) is up +5.03% so far in 2024. My trailing one-year return reached +60.44% versus +33.13% for the S&P 500.

That brings my 16-year total return to +674.13%. My average annualized return has retreated to +51.20%.

Some 63 of my 70 trades last year were profitable in 2023.

I am maintaining longs in (MSFT), (AMZN), (V), (PANW), and (CCJ).

Reheating is Becoming an Issue, with a strong US economy and record-low unemployment rate possibly prompting the Fed to delay interest rate cuts. The stock market has been running on steroids on the expectation of imminent cuts. This is a new market risk and could unleash a thunderstorm on our parade.

CPI Revised Down, in December, from 0.3% to 0.2%. The deflationary economy is back! Stocks loved it, with the S&P 500 catapulting to $5,000. That’s why I revised my yearend target up to $6,000.

Early Retirements are Soaring, thanks to a stock market at new all-time highs. Baby boomers can now afford to “take this job and shove it.”

 

 

NVIDIA Enters New Custom Chip Market, potentially adding another $30 billion in revenues. The dominant global designer and supplier of AI chips aim to capture a portion of an exploding market for custom AI chips and to protect itself from the growing number of companies interested in finding alternatives to its products. Buy (NVDA) on dips.

Morgan Stanley Upgrades NVIDIA to an $800 Target. An exceptional supply-demand imbalance in the artificial intelligence-chip sector, as well as a massive shift in spending toward emerging technology, is likely to persist over the near term. Buy (NVDA) on dips.

ARM Holdings (ARM) Soars by 41%, off a spectacular forecast-based demand for designed-up AI chips. UK-based Arm makes money through royalties, when companies pay for access to build Arm-compatible chips, usually amounting to a small percentage of the final chip price. Arm said its customers shipped 7.7 billion Arm chips during the September quarter.

Tesla (TSLA) Looking to Cut Jobs, and reduce costs, as is the rest of Silicon Valley. The move could mark the bottom of the stock. Elon Musk is the master job cutter, axing 80% of the Twitter staff on takeover.

Meta (META) Gains $196 Billion in Market Cap in One Day, off the back of record sales, tripled earnings, and reduced costs.

Construction Spending Gains, up 0.9% in December, the best since October. Watch the industry reaccelerate as interest rates fall.

Royal Caribbean Beats, with record bookings in an industry I have recently become intensely interested in. (RCL) is grabbing market share from land-based vacations, as Millennials are finally discovering cheap cruise vacations, where it is often cheaper than to stay in a motel with all you can eat. Only a few cruises were lost to the Red Sea War. (RCL) just launched Icon of the Seas, the world’s largest cruise ship.

My Ten-Year View

When we come out the other side of the recession, we will be perfectly poised to launch into my new American Golden Age or the next Roaring Twenties. The economy decarbonizing and technology hyper accelerating, creating enormous investment opportunities. The Dow Average will rise by 800% to 240,000 or more in the coming decade. The new America will be far more efficient and profitable than the old.

Dow 240,000 here we come!

On Monday, February 12, the US Consumer Inflation Expectations are announced.

On Tuesday, February 13 at 8:30 AM EST, the Core Inflation Rate will be released.

On Wednesday, February 14 at 2:00 PM, the Producer Price Index is published. The Federal Reserve announces its interest rate decision.

On Thursday, February 15 at 8:30 AM, the Weekly Jobless Claims are announced. We also get Retail Sales.

On Friday, February 16 at 2:30 PM, the January Building Permits are published, along with the University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment. At 2:00 PM the Baker Hughes Rig Count is printed.

As for me, it was in 1986 when the call went out at the London office of Morgan Stanley for someone to undertake an unusual task. They needed someone who knew the Middle East well, spoke some Arabic, was comfortable in the desert, and was a good rider.

The higher-ups had obtained an impossible-to-get invitation from the Kuwaiti Royal family to take part in a camel caravan into the Dibdibah Desert. It was the social event of the year.

More importantly, the event was to be attended by the head of the Kuwait Investment Authority, who ran over $100 billion in assets. Kuwait had immense oil revenues, but almost no people, so the bulk of their oil revenues were invested in western stock markets. An investment of goodwill here could pay off big time down the road.

The problem was that the US had just launched air strikes against Libya, destroying the dictator, Muammar Gaddafi’s royal palace, our response to the bombing of a disco in West Berlin frequented by US soldiers. Terrorist attacks were imminently expected throughout Europe.

Of course, I was the only one who volunteered.

My managing director didn’t want me to go, as they couldn’t afford to lose me. I explained that in reviewing the range of risks I had taken in my life, this one didn’t even register. The following week found myself in a first-class seat on Kuwait Airways headed for a Middle East in turmoil.

A limo picked me up at the Kuwait Hilton, just across the street from the US embassy, where I occupied the presidential suite. We headed west into the desert.

In an hour, I came across the most amazing sight - a collection of large tents accompanied by about 100 camels. Everyone was wearing traditional Arab dress with a ceremonial dagger. I had been riding horses all my life, camels not so much. So, I asked for the gentlest camel they had.

The camel wranglers gave me a tall female, which was more docile and obedient than the males. Imagine that! Getting on a camel is weird, as you mount them while they are sitting down. My camel had no problem lifting my 180 pounds.

They were beautiful animals, highly groomed, and in the pink of health. Some were worth millions of dollars. A handler asked me if I had ever drunk fresh camel milk, and I answered no. They didn’t offer it at Safeway. He picked up a metal bowl, cleaned it out with his hand, and milked a nearby camel.

He then handed me the bowl with a big smile across his face. There were definitely green flecks of manure floating on the top, but I drank it anyway. I had to, lest my host would lose face. At least it was white. It was body temperature warm and much richer than cow’s milk.

The motion of a camel is completely different from a horse. You ride back and forth in a rocking motion. I hoped the trip was short, as this ride had repetitive motion injuries written all over it. I was using muscles I had never used before. Hit your camel with a stick and they take off at 40 miles per hour.

I learned that a camel is a super animal ideally suited for the desert. It can ride 100 miles a day, and 150 miles in emergencies, according to TE Lawrence, who made the epic 600-mile trek to Aquaba in only four weeks in the height of summer. It can live 15 days without water, converting the fat in its hump.

In ten miles, we reached our destination. The tents went up, clouds of dust rose, the camels were corralled, and the cooking began for an epic feast that night.

It was a sight to behold. Elaborately decorated huge three-by-five wide bronze platers were brought overflowing with rice and vegetables, and every part of a sheep you can imagine, none of which was wasted. In the center was a cooked sheep’s head with the top of the skull removed so the brains were easily accessible. We all ate with our right hands.

I learned that I was the first foreigner ever invited to such an event, and the Arabs delighted in feeding me every part of the sheep, the eyes, the brains, the intestines, and the gristle. I pretended to love everything and laid back and thought of England. When they asked how it tasted I said it was great. I lied.

As the evening progressed, the Johnny Walker Red came out of hiding. Alcohol is illegal in Kuwait, and formal events are marked by copious amounts of elaborate fruit juices. I was told that someone with a royal connection had smuggled in an entire container of whiskey and I could drink all I wanted.

The next morning I was awoken by a bellowing camel and the worst headache in the world. I threw a rock at him to get him to shut up and he sauntered over and peed all over me.

The things I did for Morgan Stanley!

Four years later, Iraq invaded Kuwait. Some of my friends were kidnapped and held for ransom, while others were never heard from again.

The Kuwaiti government said they would pay for the war if we provided the troops, tanks, and planes. So they sold their entire $100 million investment portfolio and gave the money to the US.

Morgan Stanley got the mandate to handle the liquidation, earning the biggest commission in the firm’s history. No doubt, the salesman who got the order was considered a genius, earned a promotion, and was paid a huge bonus.

I spent the year as a Marine Corps captain, flying around assorted American generals and doing the odd special opp. I got shot down and still set off airport metal detectors. No bonus here. But at least I gained an insight and an experience into a medieval Bedouin lifestyle that is long gone.

They say success has many fathers. This is a classic example.

You can’t just ride out into the Kuwait desert anymore. It is still filled with mines planted by the Iraqis. There are almost no camels left in the Middle East, long ago replaced by trucks. When I was in Egypt in 2019, I rode a few mangy, pitiful animals held over for the tourists.

When I passed through my London Club last summer, the Naval and Military Club on St. James Square, whose portrait was right at the front entrance?  None other than that of Lawrence of Arabia.

It turns out we were members of the same club in more ways than one.

Stay healthy,

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

 

John Thomas of Arabia

 

Checking Out the Local Camel Milk

This One Will Do

 

Traffic in Arabia

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/02/John-Thomas-of-Arabia.png 974 752 april@madhedgefundtrader.com https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png april@madhedgefundtrader.com2024-02-12 09:02:392024-02-12 11:11:57The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or Raising my Yearend Target to (SPX) $6,000
april@madhedgefundtrader.com

February 9, 2024

Tech Letter

Mad Hedge Technology Letter
February 9, 2024
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:

(THE NEW HOT A.I. STOCK)
(SMCI), (NVDA)

https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png 0 0 april@madhedgefundtrader.com https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png april@madhedgefundtrader.com2024-02-09 14:04:412024-02-09 14:56:13February 9, 2024
april@madhedgefundtrader.com

The New Hot A.I. Stock

Tech Letter

Super Micro Computers (SMCI) could be a legitimate dark horse in this race to AI supremacy.

They are the meat of the whole operation.

This is an upstart company from California who really knows their stuff about computer infrastructure.

Although they are no Nvidia, they do pack a punch and its share price has exploded higher as the company has been buoyed by both excellent quarterly results and an even better forecast for the full year.

Institutional interest is also gaining steam as the stock continues to be bid up to higher highs.

It’s proving itself, along with Nvidia, to be one of the cleanest stock plays on the AI theme.

Shares of SMCI were languishing lower than $20 per share in 2019.

Fast forward to today and underlying shares are sitting pretty at $750 per share.

Nvidia and Supermicro are somewhat correlated.

Nvidia’s high-performance chips are essential for the AI revolution, they need cutting-edge data infrastructure and that’s how Supermicro’s slots in nicely.

SMCI takes an innovative, customized, and flexible approach to meet customers’ computing needs – which has made it the choice of heavyweight clients like Meta and Amazon. SMCI supplies in rapid time, and the uber-complicated tech behind these centers, which needs servers, networks, and cloud storage solutions to function.

The company also uses a liquid cooling technique to manage the temperature of its multi-rack servers in a more energy-efficient way.

By the end of September, research firm IDC estimated that Supermicro had become the fourth-biggest server provider in the world, ahead of Lenovo.

And, sure, Dell and Hewlett Packard Enterprise are the leaders, but their revenue growth has been falling while Supermicro’s is muscling up at a double-digit pace, making it a leader in the higher-priced and higher-margin AI server market.

In its latest earnings report, SMCI announced revenues of $3.66 billion, a 133% increase from the year-earlier period, and predicted sales of at least $14.3 billion in 2024.

Supermicro’s leadership will not stay inert.

They are partnering with Nvidia, AMD, and Intel – the three biggest AI chip suppliers – on next-generation AI designs. So its customers will likely include all the big AI spenders like Meta, Amazon, Apple, and Tesla.

SMCI is forecasted to bust out an EPS growth rate of 31% moving forward.

The key risk ahead is that Dell and maybe even Hewlett Packard Enterprise might compete again with Supermicro’s capability in data centers and put its operating margins under pressure.

That could undermine the company’s profit outlook, especially if overall demand growth for data centers wavers.

The stock is expensive even to the point where short-term technical indicators have shown the stock to be overbought for the past 3 weeks.

In fact, the stock was sitting at $300 per share on January 18th and the parabolic trajectory has meant that the stock has more than doubled in the past few weeks.

Readers need to let this stock drop and any medium-sized pullback just be bought with two hands.

These types of premium AI stocks are hard to find optimal entry points which could mean a long wait time.

 

 

https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png 0 0 april@madhedgefundtrader.com https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png april@madhedgefundtrader.com2024-02-09 14:02:172024-02-09 14:56:08The New Hot A.I. Stock
april@madhedgefundtrader.com

February 5, 2024

Diary, Newsletter, Summary

Global Market Comments
February 5, 2024
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:

(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or WELCOME TO THE DOTCOM BUBBLE PART II),
(NVDA), (MSFT), (AMZN), (META), (GOOGLE), (FDX)

https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png 0 0 april@madhedgefundtrader.com https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png april@madhedgefundtrader.com2024-02-05 09:04:012024-02-05 11:44:35February 5, 2024
april@madhedgefundtrader.com

The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or Welcome to Dotcom Bubble Part II

Diary, Newsletter

I remember back in 1990 when I was first starting my hedge fund in London England, one of the very first. I hired two Ph.D.’s in Mathematics from Cambridge University, and we started inventing one the first purely quantitative approaches to the stock market. We were playing around with statistical probability arbitrage and Monte Carlo simulations, things like that.

One day, one of my guys said he needed to buy a software patch from a company in Los Angeles. I said “Sure" thinking we could pay up and overnight some floppy discs via a new company called Federal Express (FDX). He said no need, he could simply download them.

I said what?!

Andrew proceeded to connect to the Internet with our screechy landline modem and pay for the software with my American Express card. I watched in utter amazement as the time bar turned green and we got our patch.

I thought “Holly Smokes!”

I immediately realized that this technology was going to change the global economy beyond all recognition and send the stock market soaring. I also realized that I had to move my company out of our leafy West London neighborhood to the peach orchards of Silicon Valley as soon as possible to get in on the ground floor. I did this over a weekend care of, you guessed it, Federal Express. Thank goodness my guys were single.

I then called the Head of Research at Normura Securities in Tokyo and informed him of the incredible power of the Internet, and that in five years, Normura would distribute all of its research online, completely eliminating paper. He said I was out of my mind. I was wrong. In the end, it took Nomura ten years to move to online-only research, vastly improving the profitability of the company.

Over the last month, I have realized that we are seeing a repeat of that magical  1990 “aha” moment. We are only one year into Dotcom Bubble Part II, which has several more years to run. Remember when Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan warned of “irrational exuberance” in December 1996? Technology stocks rocketed for 3 ½ more years, wiping out several hedge funds on the short side along the way.

Think of it as 1997 again. Now, if I can only get my 1997 hair back!

Need any further convincing? Today, graphics card maker NVIDIA (NVDA) is selling at a forward multiple of 20X earnings. In 2000, this type of stock (Cisco Systems, Yahoo, Dell Computer) was selling for 100 times earnings. Add a 2X multiple expansion and a 5X multiple expansion and you get a 10X growth in the lead stock prices in coming years.

The net, net of all this is that the most expensive stocks in the market are not really expensive, but the cheapest. Overbought? Technically insane? Doubled in a year?

Buy em!

For AI, five will continue dominating the market for the foreseeable future. The top five AI stocks are showing an average 60% profit gain in Q1. The remaining S&P 494 are showing a 10% loss. It is a 1990s Dotcom Bubble repeat in miniature. These stocks have gained $5 trillion in market value in only three months, and there is more to come.

What are these companies doing right? They developed the greatest new income streams in history, while at the same time carrying out the most ferocious cost-cutting efforts. The effect on profits is astronomical. It’s like they spent the last 10-40 years preparing for this one moment. Look no further than Meta (META), which cut staff from 87,000 to 67,000, tripling net income to $14 billion, and doubling the share price.

It will be a recurring story.

On a completely different topic, hedge funds are pouring into India once again as the next China. It has the world’s best demographic curve, with an average age of only 20 years old, meaning that in 20 years it will have the most big spending consumers. It has the world’s fastest-growing Services PMI. It is also the most populous country in the world, topping 1.4 billion, exceeding China.

Apple (AAPL), Tesla (TSLA), and many other Western companies are looking to expand there. You always follow direct investment as the head of JP Morgan’s investment division once told me. Buy the (INDA) and the (INDY).

 

 

So far in February, we are up +2.04%. My 2024 year-to-date performance is also at -2.24%. The S&P 500 (SPY) is up +5.10% so far in 2024. My trailing one-year return reached +60.43% versus +20.48% for the S&P 500.

That brings my 16-year total return to +674.39%. My average annualized return has recovered to +51.21%.

Some 63 of my 70 trades last year were profitable in 2023.

I am maintaining longs in (MSFT), (AMZN), (V), (PANW), and (CCJ).

The Fed Turns Dovish, with all members expecting the next move to be a rate cut. It’s just a matter of how much, and how soon, but March was taken off the table. All bearish content from the Fed statement was removed. A classic “Buy the rumor, sell the news type of move. Look for a multi-week to one-month correction in tech, then a new rally.

US Treasury Borrowing to Hit $760 Billion in Q1, some $55 billion less than expected. Q2 then drops to only $202 billion. Bonds rallied on the good news. Buy (TLT) on dips.

S&P Case Shiller National Home Price Index Falls, in November for the first time in nine months. Detroit reported the highest year-over-year gain among the 20 cities, with prices rising 8.2% in November, followed again by San Diego with an 8% increase. Seattle and San Francisco reported the largest monthly declines, falling 1.4% and 1.3%, respectively. This was back when mortgage rates were peaking at 8.0%.

Saudi Arabia Cuts Oil Production Targets, cratering prices and destroying the entire energy sector. Lack of demand, especially from China, is the reason. New US output is fuel on the fire. Production will be throttled back a million barrels to 12 million barrels a day as a long-term goal. It couldn’t happen to a nicer bunch of people.

Microsoft Beats estimates the steady growth of its Azure cloud business, but the shares dropped. Revenue in the second quarter, which ended Dec. 31, rose 18% to $62 billion, while profit was $2.93 a share, the company said in a statement Tuesday. Azure cloud-services sales gained 30%. Buy (MSFT) on dips.

Biden to Announce Massive Chip Subsidies, to head off a coming shortage driven by AI. The coming announcements are aimed at kick-starting the manufacturing of advanced semiconductors that power smartphones, artificial intelligence, and weapons systems. The $43.5 billion to be spent also has national security implications in moving semiconductor manufacturing from China back to the US. Buy all semiconductor plays. It’s free money for them.

It's the 16th Year Anniversary of the Mad Hedge Fund Trader, and what a long and winding road it has been. Going into the 2008 crash, several investors pulled out of a new hedge fund I was starting because of cash calls so I decided to go into the newsletter business instead. Thanks for your 16 years of your support. We now publish 24 newsletters a week and run summits every three months with a global staff of 15.

My Ten-Year View

When we come out the other side of any recession, we will be perfectly poised to launch into my new American Golden Age or the next Roaring Twenties. The economy decarbonizing and technology hyper accelerating, creating enormous investment opportunities. The Dow Average will rise by 800% to 240,000 or more in the coming decade. The new America will be far more efficient and profitable than the old.

Dow 240,000 here we come!

On Monday, February 5, at 8:30 AM EST, the ISM Services PMI is announced.

On Tuesday, February 6 at 8:30 AM, the Total Household Debt is released by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.

On Wednesday, February 7 at 2:00 PM, the US Imports and Exports are published. We also get the latest car data.

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

On Friday, February 9 at 2:00 PM the Baker Hughes Rig Count is printed.

As for me, I’ll never forget when my friend, Don Kagin, one of the world’s top dealers in rare coins, walked into my gym one day and announced that he made $1 million that morning.  I enquired “How is that, pray tell?”

He told me that he was an investor and technical consultant to a venture hoping to discover the long-lost USS Central America, which sunk in a storm off the Atlantic Coast in 1857, heavily laden with gold from the California gold fields. He just received an excited call that the wreck had been found in deep water off the US east coast.

I learned the other day that Don had scored another bonanza in the rare coins business. He had sold his 1787 Brasher Doubloon for $7.4 million. The price was slightly short of the $7.6 million that a 1933 American $20 gold eagle sold for in 2002.

The Brasher $15 doubloon has long been considered the rarest coin in the United States. Ephraim Brasher, a New York City neighbor of George Washington, was hired to mint the first dollar-denominated coins issued by the new republic. 

Treasury Secretary Alexander Hamilton was so impressed with his work that he appointed Brasher as the official American assayer. The coin is now so famous that it is featured in a Raymond Chandler novel where the tough private detective, Phillip Marlowe, attempts to recover the stolen coin. The book was made into a 1947 movie, “The Brasher Doubloon,” starring George Montgomery.

This is not the first time that Don has had a profitable experience with this numismatic treasure. He originally bought it in 1989 for under $1 million and has made several round trips since then. The real mystery is who bought it last? Don wouldn’t say, only hinting that it was a big New York hedge fund manager who adores the barbarous relic. He hopes the coin will eventually be placed in a public museum. In 2021, the Brasher Doubloon sold at auction for $9.36 million.

Mad Hedge followers should start paying more attention to gold which I believe just entered another decade-long bull market, thanks to falling US interest rates. You can’t go wrong buying LEAPS in the top two miners, Barrack Gold (GOLD) and Newmont Mining (NEM).

Who says the rich aren’t getting richer?

 

 

Good Luck and Good Trading,

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

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/02/luribus.png 550 686 april@madhedgefundtrader.com https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png april@madhedgefundtrader.com2024-02-05 09:02:542024-02-05 11:35:37The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or Welcome to Dotcom Bubble Part II
Page 28 of 67«‹2627282930›»

Legal Disclaimer

There is a very high degree of risk involved in trading. Past results are not indicative of future returns. MadHedgeFundTrader.com and all individuals affiliated with this site assume no responsibilities for your trading and investment results. The indicators, strategies, columns, articles and all other features are for educational purposes only and should not be construed as investment advice. Information for futures trading observations are obtained from sources believed to be reliable, but we do not warrant its completeness or accuracy, or warrant any results from the use of the information. Your use of the trading observations is entirely at your own risk and it is your sole responsibility to evaluate the accuracy, completeness and usefulness of the information. You must assess the risk of any trade with your broker and make your own independent decisions regarding any securities mentioned herein. Affiliates of MadHedgeFundTrader.com may have a position or effect transactions in the securities described herein (or options thereon) and/or otherwise employ trading strategies that may be consistent or inconsistent with the provided strategies.

Copyright © 2026. Mad Hedge Fund Trader. All Rights Reserved. support@madhedgefundtrader.com
Scroll to top