Global Market Comments
November 28, 2022
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or LOOKING FOR BIG FOOT),
(NVDA), (VIX), (TLT), (TSLA), (XOM),
(OXY), (TSLA), (SPY), (MA), (V), (AXP)
Global Market Comments
November 28, 2022
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or LOOKING FOR BIG FOOT),
(NVDA), (VIX), (TLT), (TSLA), (XOM),
(OXY), (TSLA), (SPY), (MA), (V), (AXP)
On October 14, investors finally achieved the portfolios they long desired, not only individuals but institutional ones as well. They got rid of stocks and bonds that had been hobbling them all year and built their cash positions to decade highs.
What happened the next day?
Stocks and bonds went straight up for six weeks. Cash became trash.
For October 14 was the day that the stock market discounted the worst-case economic scenario for 2023, no matter how bad it may get. And it probably won’t get very bad. That’s barring a black swan-type event, like a brand-new global pandemic.
If you think your job can be frustrating, how about mine? If you run with the dumb crowd, the uninformed crowd, the loser crowd, you get your just desserts.
Fortunately, I saw these moves coming a mile off and loaded the boat. I’ve actually made more money on the parabolic move in bonds than some of the enormous moves in stocks. NVIDIA (NVDA) up 50%?
My performance in November has so far tacked on another robust +7.05%. My 2022 year-to-date performance ballooned to +82.42%, a spectacular new high. The S&P 500 (SPY) is down -16.85% so far in 2022.
It is the greatest outperformance on an index since Mad Hedge Fund Trader started 14 years ago. My trailing one-year return maintains a sky-high +94.61%.
That brings my 14-year total return to +594.98%, some 2.60 times the S&P 500 (SPX) over the same period and a new all-time high. My average annualized return has ratcheted up to +45.76%, easily the highest in the industry.
I am going into the month-end surge with a fairly aggressive 40% long, (TLT), (TSLA), 40% short (XOM), (OXY), (TSLA), (SPY), with 20% crash for a totally market-neutral position. We’ve just had a heck of a run, and prices could well stall not far from here for the short term. The post-election rally happened, as predicted in this space.
Like Big Foot, the Yeti, and the Loch Ness Monster, the Fed pivot may soon actually make an appearance. I’m talking months, not years. That’s when our August central bank flips from the most severe tightening of interest rates in history, to a neutral, or one can only pray, an easing stance. This is what the 15% rally in stocks over the last six weeks has been all about.
And here is another old-time worn market nostrum. If investors sense that something is going to happen, they discount it fast, very fast.
Of course, there will be several false starts, denied rumors, and false flags, as there always are. After all, this is my 11th bear market. These will create sudden panic attacks, market selloffs, and Volatility Index (VIX) runs to $30 which are the license to print money for the Mad Hedge Fund Trader. Wait for the market to tell you when to trade. Ignoring it can prove expensive.
As we say here in the west, go off the reservation and you can get a lot of arrows stuck in your back.
How is this even remotely possible with the money supply only at $21.4 trillion, down 2% YOY? That’s a buzz cut from the +30% rate from a year ago.
The answer is that the money is out there, just hiding in different unrecognizable forms. Much of the $4 trillion in pandemic stimulus payments have yet to be spent. Inflation has added $2 trillion in new corporate profits through higher sales prices. Similarly, there is also another $1.5 trillion in pay increases bubbling through the system, also inspired by inflation.
You see this is booming credit card spending, much to the joy of Master Card (MA), Visa (V), and American Express (AXP) and their share price surges we have recently seen.
As I keep telling my Concierge customers on the phone, there is no playbook anymore. All the old ones have been rendered useless by the pandemic. To succeed and make windfall profits like me, you basically have to make it up as you go along.
The Fed Favors the Slowing of Rate Hikes, making a December increase of only 50 basis points a sure thing, according to minutes released on Wednesday for the prior meeting. Housing especially is taking a big hit. All interest rate plays, like bonds, rallied strongly.
Equities See Monster Inflows, some $23 billion in 35 weeks according to the Bank of America (BAC) flow of funds survey. There have been huge cash flows out of Europe looking for a stronger dollar, fleeing WWIII, and collapsing home currencies. The big chase is on. Time to go short? I am. It could be a big bull trap.
Leading Economic Indicators Dive, off 0.8% in October, double the decline expected and the weakest since the pandemic low in April 2020. There has only been one positive number in this data series in 2022. You have to go back to the financial crisis to find numbers this bad.
S&P Global Manufacturing PMI Takes a Hit in November, down to 47.6 from an estimate of 50. Services fell from 48 to 46.1. It’s another coincident recession indicator.
Existing Home Sales Plunge 5.9% in October to an annualized rate of 4.43 million units. It is the slowest sales pace in 11 years. It's not as bad as expected but is still down a horrific 28.4% YOY. Inventory fell to just 1.22 million units, only a 3.3-month supply, supporting prices in a major way. In fact, prices are still rising, up 6.6% annually to $379,100. Housing accounts for about 20% of the US economy, so here is your recession threat right here.
New Home Sales Come in Hot at 632,000, a real shocker with the 30-year fixed at 7.4%. Low-ball seller financing incentives must be a factor where they buy down rates to lower levels. Free upgrades, like those cherry wood cabinets, bonus rooms, and marble kitchen counters, also help. Prices are still up 15% YOY and inventories rose to a once unbelievable 8.9 months.
OPEC Plus Considering a 500,000 Barrels a Day Increase at their coming December meeting, which Saudi Arabia vehemently denied. The comments came out just as West Texas intermediate was barreling in on a new nine-month low. Saudi Arabia can talk all they want, but it’s tough to beat a coming recession, which every other hard asset class and commodity is now confirming.
Disney Axes Chairman, dumping Bob Chapek and bringing back Bob Iger from retirement. Losing $1.5 billion on the Disney Plus streaming service and losing its special tax status from the State of Florida has its costs. (DIS) is also not a stock to buy if we are going into recession. Avoid (DIS), despite the 10% move today. Let’s first see if Iger can cut costs.
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. With the economy decarbonizing and technology hyper accelerating, there will be no reason not to. The Dow Average will rise by 800% to 240,000 or more in the coming decade. The America coming out the other side will be far more efficient and profitable than the old. Dow 240,000 here we come!
On Monday, November 28 at 8:00 AM EST, the Dallas Fed Manufacturing Index for November is out.
On Tuesday, November 29 at 8:30 AM, the S&P Case Shiller National Home Price Index is released.
On Wednesday, November 30 at 8:30 AM, the ADP Private Employment Report for November is published. We also get a number on Q3 US GDP.
On Thursday, December 1 at 8:30 AM, the Weekly Jobless Claims are announced. US Personal Income and Spending for October is also out.
On Friday, December 2 at 8:30 AM, the Nonfarm Payroll Report for November is disclosed. At 2:00, the Baker Hughes Oil Rig Count is out.
As for me, by the 1980s, my mother was getting on in years. Fluent in Russian, she managed the CIA’s academic journal library from Silicon Valley, putting everything on microfilm.
That meant managing a team that translated over 1,000 monthly publications on topics as obscure as Artic plankton, deep space phenomenon, and advanced mathematics. She often called me to ascertain the value of some of her findings.
But her arthritis was getting to her, and all those trips to Washington DC were wearing her out. So I offered Mom a job. Write the Thomas family history, no matter how long it took. She worked on it for the rest of her life.
Dad’s side of the family was easy. He was traced to a small village called Monreale above the Sicilian port city of Palermo famed for its Byzantine church. Employing a local priest, she traced birth and death certificates going all the way back to an orphanage in 1820. It is likely he was a direct illegitimate descendant of Lord Nelson of Trafalgar.
Grandpa fled to the United States when his brother joined the Mafia in 1915. The most interesting thing she learned was that his first job in New York was working for Orville Wright at Wright Aero Engines (click here). That explains my family’s century-long fascination with aviation.
Grandpa became a tailer gunner on a biplane in WWI. My dad was a tail gunner on a B-17 flying out of Guadalcanal in WWII. As for me, you’ve all heard of plenty of my own flying stories, and there are many more to come.
My Mom’s side of the family was an entirely different story.
Her ancestors first arrived to found Boston, Massachusetts in 1630 during the second Pilgrim wave on a ship called the Pied Cow, steered by a Captain Ashley (click here).
I am a direct descendant of two of the Pilgrims executed for witchcraft in the Salem Witch Trials of 1692, Sarah Good and Sarah Osborne, where children’s dreams were accepted as evidence (click here). They were later acquitted.
When the Revolutionary War broke out in 1776, the original Captain John Thomas, who I am named after, served as George Washington’s quartermaster at Valley Forge responsible for supplying food to the Continental Army during the winter.
By the time Mom completed her research, she discovered 17 ancestors who fought in the War for Independence and she became the West Coast head of the Daughters of the American Revolution. It seems the government still owes us money from that event.
Fast forward to 1820 with the sailing of the whaling ship Essex from Nantucket, Massachusetts, the basis for Herman Melville’s 1851 novel Moby Dick. Our ancestor, a young sailor named Owen Coffin signed on for the two-year voyage, and his name “Coffin” appears in Moby Dick seven times.
In the South Pacific 2,000 miles west of South America, they harpooned a gigantic sperm whale. Enraged, the whale turned around and rammed the ship, sinking it. The men escaped to whaleboats. And here is where they made the fatal navigational errors that are taught in many survival courses today.
Captain Pollard could easily have just ridden the westward currents where they would have ended up in the Marquesas’ Islands in a few weeks. But these islands were known to be inhabited by cannibals, which the crew greatly feared. They also might have landed in the Pitcairn islands, where the mutineers from Captain Bligh’s HMS Bounty still lived. So the boats rowed east, exhausting the men.
At day 88, the men were starving and on the edge of death, so they drew lots to see who should live. Owen Coffin drew the black lot and was immediately shot and devoured. The next day, the men were rescued by the HMS Indian within sight of the coast of Chile, and returned to Nantucket by the USS Constellation.
Another Thomas ancestor, Lawson Thomas, was on the second whaleboat that was never seen again and presumed lost at sea. For more details about this incredible story, please click here.
When Captain Pollard died in 1870, the neighbors discovered a vast cache of stockpiled food in the attic. He had never recovered from his extended starvation.
Mom eventually traced the family to a French weaver 1,000 years ago. Our name is mentioned in England’s Domesday Book, a listing of all the land ownership in the country published in 1086 (click here). Mom died in 2018 at the age of 88, a very well-educated person.
There are many more stories to tell about my family’s storied past, and I will in future chapters. This week, being Thanksgiving, I thought it appropriate to mention our Pilgrim connection.
I have learned over the years that most Americans have history-making swashbuckling ancestors, but few bother to look.
I did.
Stay healthy,
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
Happy Thanksgiving from the Thomas Family
USS Essex
Global Market Comments
November 21, 2022
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or SLOWING TO STALL SPEED),
(SPY), (TLT), (SLV), (WPH), (MAT), (NVDA), (MS), (GS)
I got a call from my daughter the other day, who is a Computer Science major at the University of California at Santa Cruz. The university was on strike and shut down, so she suddenly had a lot of free time on her hands.
The Teaching Assistants were only getting $12 an hour, which is not enough to live on in the San Francisco Bay Area by a mile. Some one-third were living in their cars, which can get chilly on the Northern California coast in winter.
Fast food workers in California will get $22 an hour from January, thanks to a bill passed in the recent election. The TAs, most of whom are working on master’s degrees and PhD’s in all kinds of advanced esoteric subjects, are simply asking to bring their pay in line with Taco Bell.
The entire UC system is on strike, affecting ten campuses, 17,000 TAs and 200,000 students. I have noticed that the most liberal universities often have the most draconian employment policies. It’s legalized slave labor. I speak from experience as a past victim, as I was once an impoverished work-study student at UCLA earning $1.00 an hour experimenting with highly radioactive chemicals.
What was my tuition for four years at the best public university in the world? Just $3,000, and I didn’t even pay that, as I was on a full scholarship, something about rocket engines I built when I was a kid. Werner Von Braun liked them. The 800 Math SAT score probably helped a tiny bit too.
UCSC is the feeder university for Silicon Valley. Graduates in Computer Science earn $150,000 a year out the door and $200,000 with a Master's degree. PhDs get offered founders’ stock in the hottest Silicon Valley startups.
I hope the TAs get their raise.
My daughter was calling me to apologize for her poor trading performance this year. I thought, “My goodness, did she just lose her entire college fund in some crypto scam?”
“How much did you lose,” I asked.
She answered that she didn’t lose anything and in fact was up 59% this year. She knew my performance was topping 78%, and that some subscribers had made up to 1,000%.
But she missed the October low because she had a midterm and was late on my (TLT) LEAPS because she was on a field trip. She promised to pay closer attention so she could earn the money to pay for her PhD.
My kids never ask me for money. If they need it, they just go into the markets and get it themselves. But then this is a family that discussed implied volatilities, chaos theory, and the merits of the Black Scholes equation over dinner every night. That’s what it’s like to have a hedge fund manager for a dad. Any extra money I have I give away to kids not as lucky as mine.
Then we talked about the most important issue of the day, how to cook the turkey this week. Brine, or no brine, with or without a T-shirt, or deep fat fry? She cautioned me to take it out of the freezer three days early to thaw. I bought my turkey a month ago because I knew prices would rise, and they have done so mightily. In case I get in over my head, I can always call the Butterball Thanksgiving Turkey Emergency Hotline at 844-877-3436.
But that’s just me.
Whenever making money gets too easy, I get nervous.
There’s a 90% chance we saw the bottom in this bear market on October 14. But how we proceed from here is the tricky part. Too much now depends on a single monthly data point, namely the Consumer Price Index, and that is a tough game to play. The next one is out on December 13.
The truth is that even with overnight interest rates at 4.75%-5.00% , the economy is holding up far better than anyone imagined possible. Some sectors, like financials, are positively booming. And while housing is weak, we really have not seen any major price falls that could threaten a financial crisis. Consumers are in good shape with savings near record levels.
There isn’t going to be a hard landing. There isn’t even going to be a soft landing. In fact, we may not have a landing at all, with the economy continuing to motor along, albeit at a slower rate just above stall speed.
Which begs me to repeat that the next new trend in interest rates will be down, and that this will be the principal driver of all your investment decisions going forward. Bonds may make the initial move up, as last week’s trade alerts suggested. But I have no doubt that equities will have a big move in 2023 as well.
Producer Price Index Fades, up only 0.2%, half of what was expected. That’s a big decline from 8.4% to 8.0% YOY. It’s another bell ringing that inflation has topped. Stocks rallied 500 on the news.
Bonds Continue on a Tear, with the (TLT) up a breathtaking eight points from the October low. It could reach $120 in 2023. Keep buying (TLT) calls, call spreads, and LEAPS on dips.
FTX Keeps Getting Worse, as it is looking like it’s a Bernie Madoff X 10, or an Enron X 20. A new CEO has been appointed by the bankruptcy court, John Ray, the former liquidator of Enron and a distant relative of mine. This will spoil investment in most digital coins and tokens for good, which are now worthless, and coins unless they are guaranteed by JP Morgan (JPM) or Goldman Sachs (GS). FTX never had a CFO, and Sam Bankman-Fried is blaming it all on his girlfriend, not exactly what creditors want to hear. In any case, Bitcoin has been replaced by Taylor Swift tickets.
A Massive Silver Shortage is Developing, with demand up 16% in 2023 to 1.21 million ounces. With EV production increasing from 1.5 million to 20 million units a year within the decade, its share of the market will rise from 5% to 75%. Solar panel demand is also rising. Buy (SLV) and (WPM) on dips. My next LEAPS will be for silver on the next dip.
NVIDIA Sales Rise, but profits dip, taking the stock up 3%. Games sales dropped a heartbreaking 50% and crypto took a big hit. The company expects $6 billion in sales in Q4 and is still operating at an incredible 53.6% gross margin. The company is creating a new line of dumbed-down products to comply with China export bans. Keep buying (NVDA) on dips. We caught a 50% move in the past month.
Retail Sales Rise 1.3% in October, causing analysts to raise Q4 GDP forecasts. Rising prices are a major factor. Where is that darn recession?
Who Has the World’s Worst Inflation? Not the US, where price gains have been relatively muted. Venezuela leads with 21,912%, followed by Zimbabwe at 2019%, Lebanon at 1071%, Argentina at 194%, Turkey at 124%. Even Russia is at 25%. Who has the lowest? Japan at 1.0%, but their currency has just collapsed by 40%.
The 60/40 Portfolio is Back, after a 15-year hiatus. JP Morgan Chase says that keeping 60% of your money in stocks and 40% in bonds should deliver a 7.2% annual return. I believe the balanced portfolio return will be much higher, as everything will go up in 2023 and fixed income is now yielding 5% or better. 2022 saw the worst 60/40 return in 100 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. With the economy decarbonizing and technology hyper-accelerating, there will be no reason not to. The Dow Average will rise by 800% to 240,000 or more in the coming decade. The America coming out the other side will be far more efficient and profitable than the old. Dow 240,000 here we come!
On Monday, November 21 at 8:00 AM, the Chicago Fed National Activity Index for October is out.
On Tuesday, November 22 at 8:30 AM, the Richard Fed Manufacturing Index is released.
On Wednesday, November 23 at 8:30 AM, Durable Goods for October is published. At 11:00 AM, the FOMC minutes from the previous meeting are out. Weekly Jobless Claims are announced. New Homes Sales for October are out.
On Thursday, November 24, Markets are closed for Thanksgiving.
On Friday, November 25, stock markets close early at 1:00 PM. At 2:00 the Baker Hughes Oil Rig Count is out.
As for me, I have dated a lot of interesting women in my lifetime, but one who really stands out is Melody Knerr, the daughter of Richard Knerr, the founder of the famed novelty toy company Wham-O (click here). I dated her during my senior year in high school.
At six feet, she was the tallest girl in the school, and at 6’4” I was an obvious choice. After the senior prom and wearing my cheap rented tux, I took her to the Los Angeles opening night of the new musical Hair.
In the second act, the entire cast dropped their clothes onto the stage and stood there stark naked. The audience was stunned, shocked, embarrassed, and even gob-smacked. Fortunately, Melody never revealed the content of the play to her parents, or I would have been lynched.
In a recurring theme of my life, while Melody liked me, her mother liked me even more. That enabled me to learn the inside story of Wham-O, one of the great untold business stories of all time.
Richard Knerr started Wham-O in a South Pasadena garage in 1948. His first product was a slingshot, hence the company name, the sound you make when firing at a target. Business grew slowly, with Knerr trying and discarding several different toys.
Then in 1957, he borrowed an idea from an Australian bamboo exercise hoop, converted it to plastic, and called it the “Hula Hoop.” It instantly became the biggest toy fad of the 20th century, with Wham-O selling an eye-popping 25 million in just four months. By 1959, they had sold a staggering 100 million.
The Hula Hoop was an extremely simple toy to manufacture. You took a yard of cheap plastic tubing and stapled it together with an oak plug, and you were done. The markup was 1,000%. Knerr made tens of millions and bought a mansion in a Los Angeles suburb with a stuffed lion guarding his front door which he had shot in Africa.
The company made the decision to build another 50 million Hula Hoops. Then the bottom absolutely fell out of the Hula Hoop market. Midwestern ministers perceived a sexual connotation in the suggestive undulating motion to use it and decried it the work of the devil. Orders were cancelled en masse.
Whamo-O tried to stop their order for 50 million oak plugs, which were made in England, but to no avail. They had already shipped. So, to cut their losses Whamo-O ordered the entire shipment dumped overboard in the North Atlantic, where they still bob today. The company almost went bankrupt.
Knerr saved the company with another breakout toy, the Frisbee, a runaway success which is still sold today. Even Incline Village, Nevada has a Frisbee golf course. The US Army tested it as a potential flying hand grenade. That was followed by other monster hits like the Super Ball, the Slip N Slide, and the Slinky.
Richard Knerr sold his company to toy giant Mattel (MAT) for $80 million in 1994. He passed away in 2008 at the age of 82.
As for Melody, we lost touch over the years. The last I heard she was working at a dive bar in rural California. Apparently, I was the high point of her life. The last time I saw her I learned the harshest of all lessons, never go back and visit your old high school girlfriend. They never look that good again.
Stay healthy,
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
Hula Hoop Inventor Chuck Knerr
Mad Hedge Biotech and Healthcare Letter
November 8, 2022
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(A GROWTH STOCK POISED TO BREAK RECORDS)
(LLY), (JNJ), (NVDA), (MA), (PG), (NVO), (ABBV)
The stock market has been down in the past couple of months, and the outlook still does not look all that good, considering that the issues with inflation and economic crises are showing no signs of ending anytime soon.
However, as Berkshire Hathaway Vice Chairman Charlie Munger noted, long-term investors should not be too anxious over “when” the markets will recover.
Instead, he advised “to think about ‘what’ will happen versus ‘when’” as a far more efficient way to behave in these challenging times.
Bearing that advice in mind, a particular biotechnology and healthcare stock stands out and is worth considering given its promising future: Eli Lilly (LLY).
Eli Lilly has grown at a fast pace and is considered among the most prominent pharmaceutical businesses in the world, ranking second behind Johnson & Johnson (JNJ).
At the moment, its market capitalization is at about $340 billion, making Eli Lilly more valuable than juggernaut Nvidia (NVDA) and other big names like Mastercard (MA) and Procter & Gamble (PG).
The most promising drug in Eli Lilly’s pipeline right now is Mounjaro, earlier known as tirzepatide, which recently received the green light from the Food and Drug Administration.
This once-a-week injection is an approved therapy that targets Type 2 diabetes. On top of that, Mounjaro can also be used as a potential weight loss drug.
While there are already existing diabetes drugs that double as weight loss treatments, mainly from Novo Nordisk (NVO), what makes Mounjaro distinct is the fact that it’s the first-ever unimolecular dual GIP/GLP-1 receptor agonist. In layman’s terms, this treatment could function in the same way as two completely different hormones that serve to control blood sugar levels.
Now, the question is: How significant an impact is Mounjaro on Eli Lilly?
Based on data from the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, about 2 in every 5 adults are classified as obese, while 1 in 11 adults suffer from severe obesity.
That’s a substantial market. More than that, the consequences of obesity are said to have ripple effects throughout the entire healthcare industry.
In fact, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimate the yearly medical costs in the United States due to obesity to be roughly $173 billion in 2019.
Following its approval, Mounjaro raked in $16 million in sales. Given its unique mechanism and the massive market it can target, Mounjaro is estimated to rake in $25 billion in peak revenue annually.
Moreover, this treatment could not only be a game changer for the company but also the entire healthcare community.
For context, Eli Lilly’s total revenue in 2021 from all its products combined was $28 billion. Needless to say, Mounjaro would put the company on track for some serious growth.
Looking at this weight loss and diabetes drug's trajectory and potential, Mounjaro can benefit Eli Lilly in the same way AbbVie (ABBV) maximized Humira. For years, Humira was hailed as the top-selling drug in the world.
While it’s set to lose its patent protection by 2023, there’s no doubt that this anti-inflammatory drug boosted the share price and bottom line of AbbVie.
Clearly, this is a business poised to become even more valuable soon. This means its current share price could be considered a bargain in the next few years.
How long it would take for Eli Lilly to make money off its pipeline remains a question mark. However, concentrating on “what” is most likely about to happen instead of “when” makes it easy to make a case for Eli Lilly being an excellent growth investment.
Mad Hedge Technology Letter
October 17, 2022
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(THE BIG TALK)
(SOXX), (CHINA), (NVDA), (MU), (LNG)
A lot of people haven’t talked about what’s going on in China. Other world events have lessened the focus in the East.
Yet people should be talking about China now.
Authoritarian China is a way bigger deal than what’s happening in the backwaters of Eastern Europe, and I’ll explain.
What on earth could overshadow all of that?
The US administration announced Chinese semiconductor bans, essentially blocking the transfer of intellectual property to China and forcing American executives to quit en masse or face the risk of losing US citizenship.
To say this is escalatory is an understatement.
Remember that previous US president Donald Trump forced the same interests to apply for special licenses, but never ramped up the tension to fever pitch and allowed business to advance.
The result is every American executive and engineer working in China’s semiconductor manufacturing industry resigning, paralyzing Chinese manufacturing overnight.
When combined with a global demand reduction, this is a heavy blow to the short-term prospects of American chip companies (SOXX) that have deep interests in China such as Applied Materials, Intel, Micron (MU), Nvidia (NVDA) and AMD.
US Commerce department also levied a bevy of restrictions on supplying US machinery that’s capable of making advanced semiconductors. It’s going after the types of memory chips and logic components that are at the heart of state-of-the art designs.
For companies with plants in China, including non-US firms, the rules will create additional hurdles and require government signoff.
South Korea’s SK Hynix Inc. is one of the world’s largest makers of memory chips and has facilities in China as part of a supply network that sends components around the world.
The biggest name to be added to the list ban is Yangtze Memory Technologies Co. The memory-chip maker is considered the most successful chip company in China wielding the best technology obviously thanks to American technology.
I found it interesting that at almost the same time, China instructed local resellers to stop selling liquid natural gas (LNG) to Europe as mounting proof China views Europe and America through the same lens.
The rapid escalation means the fragmenting of the United States economy and China will accelerate into the future resulting in the inevitable on-shoring of American chip factories back to the United States which we are already seeing.
Other industries will need to be on-shored back to United States and other friendly countries too.
In the short to mid-term, this means higher costs for the American chip companies as reinvesting into capital projects are a multi-billion dollar proposition.
Also, the pain of losing the large China market hurts badly for the stock and is damaging to the annual revenue outlook.
Expect many revenue downgrades coming down the pipeline.
Inflationary costs is another driver of revenue downgrades too as paying these specialists and keeping the lights on have gotten more expensive.
The chip companies won’t be able to substitute the China demand when we are on the verge of recessions in the United States and Europe.
Ultimately, the infamous boom-bust cycle for the chip stocks will get a more prolonged bust this time around as demand and supply are both painfully reduced.
The boom also will be larger because of coming from a lower cost basis.
However, I would highly doubt a bounce back of any chips stocks in the short-term unless broader market forces drag up stocks which could happen.
We will most likely experience strong bear market rallies met by thundering selloffs.
I would avoid any long term investments into chip companies now and just trade the bounces short-term.
Global Market Comments
October 3, 2022
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or BET THE RANCH TIME IS APPROACHING),
(SPY), (VIX), (UUP), (TSLA), (RIVN), (USO), (TLT), (FCX), (SPY), (NVDA), (BRKB)
September is notorious as the worst month of the year for the market. Boy, did it deliver, down a gut busting 9.7%!
As for the Mad Hedge Fund Trader, September was one of the best trading months of my 54-year career. But then I knew what was coming.
So did you.
With some of the greatest market volatility in market history, my September month-to-date performance exploded to exactly +9.72%.
I used last week’s extreme volatility and move to a Volatility Index (VIX) of $34 to add longs in Freeport McMoRan (FCX), S&P 500 (SPY), NVIDIA (NVDA), and Berkshire Hathaway (BRKB). I added shorts in the (SPY) and the (TLT). That takes me to 70% long, 20% short, and 10% cash. I am holding back my cash for any kind of rally to sell into.
My 2022 year-to-date performance ballooned to +69.68%, a new high. The Dow Average is down -23.44% so far in 2022. It is the greatest outperformance on an index since Mad Hedge Fund Trader started 14 years ago. My trailing one-year return maintains a sky high +80.08%.
That brings my 14-year total return to +582.24%, some 3.03 times the S&P 500 (SPX) over the same period and a new all-time high. My average annualized return has ratcheted up to +45.45%, easily the highest in the industry.
It was in May of 2020 when 34 of my clients became millionaires through buying TESLA at precisely the right time…
Well, the stars have aligned once again!!!!
In my TESLA free report, I list 10 reasons I’d tell my grandmother to mortgage her house and go all in.
Go to MADHEDGERADIO.com and download my “Tesla takes over the world” free report…that’s
madhedgeradio.com.
At the end of the month, the market was down six days in a row. That has only happened 20 times since 1950.
However, bet the ranch time is approaching. It’s time to start scaling in in a small way into your favorite long term names where the value is the greatest.
The Fed has taken away the free put that the stock market has enjoyed for the last 13 years. Now, it’s the bond market that has the free put. Hint: always own the market where the Fed is giving you free, unlimited downside protection.
People often ask what I do for a living. I always answer, “Talking people out of selling stocks at the bottom.” Here is the cycle I see repeating endlessly. They tell me they are long term investors. Then the markets take a sudden dive, like to (SPX) $3,300, a geopolitical event takes place, and the TV networks only run nonstop Armageddon gurus. They sell everything.
Then the market turns sharply, and they helplessly watch stocks soar. When they get frustrated enough, they buy, usually near a market top.
Sell low, buy high, they are perfect money destruction machines. And they wonder why they never make money in the stock market!
If any of this sounds familiar you have a problem and need to read more Mad Hedge newsletters. The people who ignore me I never hear from again. Those who follow me stick with me for decades.
Don’t make the mistake here of only looking at real GDP growth which, in recessions, is always negative. Nominal GDP is growing like a bat out of hell, 12% in 2021 and 8% in 2022. That’s 20% in two years, nothing to be sneezed at.
The problem is that all economic data has been rendered useless by the pandemic, even for legitimate and accomplished Wall Street analysts. The US economy was put through a massive restructuring practically overnight, the long-term consequences of which nobody will understand for years. Typical is the recently released Consumer Price Index, which said that real estate prices are rocketing, when in fact they are crashing.
A lot of people have asked me about the comments from my old friend, hedge fund legend Paul Tudor Jones, that the Dow Average would show a zero return for the next decade.
For Paul to be right, technological innovation would have to completely cease for the next decade. Sitting here in the middle of Silicon Valley, I can tell you that is absolutely not happening. In fact, I’m seeing the opposite. Innovation is accelerating at an exponential rate. For goodness sakes, Apple just brought out a satellite phone with its iPhone 14 pro for a $100 upgrade!
Remember, Paul got famous, and rich, from the trades he did 40 years ago with me, not because of anything he did recently. Paul has in fact been bearish for at least five years.
Still, we have a long way to go on earnings multiples. The trailing S&P 500 market multiple is now at 19. The historic low is at 15. Current earnings are $245 per (SPX) share. The 3,000 target the bears are shouting from the rooftops assumes that a severe recession takes earnings down to $200 a share ($3,000/$200 = 15X).
I don’t think earnings will get that bad. Big chunks of the economy are still growing nicely. Companies are commanding premium prices for practically everything. There is no unemployment because the jobs market is booming.
That suggests to me a final low in this market of $3,000-$3,300. That means you can buy 15%-20% deep in-the-money vertical bull call spreads RIGHT HERE and make a killing, as Mad Hedge has done all year.
Let me plant a thought in your mind.
After easing for too long, then tightening for too long, what does the Fed do next? It eases for too long….again. You definitely want to be long stocks when that happens, which will probably start some time next year.
Let me give you one more data point. The (SPY) has been down 7% or more in September only seven times since 1950. In six of the Octobers that followed, the market was up 8% or more.
Sounds like it’s time to bet the ranch to me.
Capitulation Indicators are Starting to Flash. Cash levels at mutual funds are at all-time highs. The Bank of America Investors Survey shows the high number of managers expecting a recession since the 2020 pandemic low, the last great buying opportunity. Commercial hedgers are showing the largest short positions since 2020. And of course, my old favorite, the Volatility Index (VIX) hit $34.00 on Tuesday. The risks of NOT being invested are rising.
Bank of England Moves to Support a Crashing Pound (FXB), by flipping from a seller to a buyer in the long-dated bond market, thus dropping interest rates. The move is designed to offset the new Truss government’s plan to cut taxes and boost deficit spending. The BOE also indicated that interest rate hikes are coming. The bond vigilantes are back.
Here’s the Next Financial Crisis, massive unrealized losses in the bond market. The (TLT) alone has lost 43% in 2 ½ years. Apply that to a global $150 trillion bond market and it adds up to a lot of money. Anybody who used leverage is now gone. How many investors without swimsuits will be discovered when the tide goes out?
Will the Strong Dollar (UUP) Do the Fed’s Work, forestalling a 75-basis point rate rise? It will if the buck continues to appreciate at the current rate, up a record five cents against the British pound, taking it to a record low of $1.03. Such is the deflationary impact of weak foreign currencies, which are seriously eating into US multination earnings.
Weekly Jobless Claims Hit Five-Month Low at 195,000, far below expectations. If the Fed is waiting for the job market to roll over before it quits raising interest rates, it could be a long wait.
EV Sales to Hit New All-Time High in 2022, to 13% of global new vehicle sales, up from 9% last year. The IEA expects this figure to reach 50% by 2030. That works out to 6.6 million EVs in 2021, 9.5 million in 2022, and 36 million by 2030. Buy (TSLA), the world’s largest EV seller, and (RIVN), the fastest grower in percentage terms, on dips.
EVs Take 25% of China New Vehicle Sales, and Tesla’s Shanghai factory is a major participant. Tesla just double production there. Some 403,000 EVs were sold in China in May alone. China is also ramping up its own EV production, up 183% YOY. China is much more dependent on imported oil than other large nations, most of which goes to transportation. Global EV production is expected to soar from 8 to 60 million vehicles in five years and Tesla is the overwhelming leader. Buy (TSLA) on dips again.
Oil (USO) Hits New 2022 Low at $78 a Barrel, cheaper than pre–Ukraine War prices, thanks to exploding recession fears. Is Jay Powell the most effective weapon against Russia with his most rapid interest rate rises in history?
Consumer Sentiment Hits Record Low at 59.1 according to the University of Michigan. That’s worse than the pandemic low and the 2009 Great Recession low. It could be that politics has ruined this data source making everyone permanently negative about the future. Inflation at a 40-year high isn’t helping either, nor is the prospect of nuclear war.
Case Shiller Delivers a Shocking Fall, down from 18.7% to 16.1% in June. The other shoe is falling with the sharpest drop in this data series in history. Tampa was up (31.8%), Miami (31.7%), and Dallas (24.7%). Many more declines to come.
30-Year Fixed Rate Mortgage Hits 7.08%, up from 2.75% a year ago. You can kiss those retirement dreams goodbye. It has been the sharpest rise in mortgage rates in history. Real estate has just become an all-cash market. That screeching juddering sound you hear is the existing home market shutting down.
Pending Home Sales Drop, down 2.0% in August on a signed contract basis. Sales are down for the third month in a row and are off 24% YOY. Only the west gained. Mortgage interest rates are now at 20-year highs. Buyers catching recession fears are breaking contracts and walking away from deposits.
Stock Crash Wipes Out $9 Trillion in Personal Wealth, which is the fall in equity holdings and mutual funds as of the end of June. The drop has been from $42 to $33 trillion. The bad news: it’s still going down, putting a dent in consumer spending.
My Ten-Year View
When we come out the other side of pandemic and the recession, we will be perfectly poised to launch into my new American Golden Age, or the next Roaring Twenties. With oil in a sharp downtrend and technology hyper-accelerating, there will be no reason not to. The Dow Average will rise by 800% to 240,000 or more in the coming decade. The America coming out the other side will be far more efficient and profitable than the old. Dow 240,000 here we come!
On Monday, October 3 at 8:30 AM, the ISM Manufacturing PMI for September is released.
On Tuesday, October 4 at 7:00 AM, the JOLTS Report for private job openings for September is out.
On Wednesday, October 5 at 7:00 AM, ADP Private Employment Report for September is published.
On Thursday, October 6 at 8:30 AM, Weekly Jobless Claims are announced.
On Friday, October at 8.30 AM, the Nonfarm Payroll Report for September is disclosed. At 2:00 PM, the Baker Hughes Oil Rig Count is out.
As for me, while working for The Economist magazine in London, I was invited to interview some pretty amazing people: Margaret Thatcher, Ronald Reagan, Yasir Arafat, Zhou Enlai.
But one stands out as an all time favorite.
In 1982, I was working out of the magazine’s New York Bureau off on Third Avenue and 47th Street, just seven blocks from my home on Sutton Place, when a surprise call came in from the editor in London, Andrew Knight. International calls were very expensive then, so it had to be important.
Did anyone in the company happen to have a US top secret clearance?
I answer that it just so happened that I did, a holdover from my days at the the Nuclear Test Site in Nevada. “What’s the deal,” I asked?
A person they had been pursuing for decades had just retired and finally agreed to an interview, but only with someone who had clearance. Who was it? He couldn’t say now. I was ordered to fly to Los Angeles and await further instructions.
Intrigued, I boarded the next flight to LA wondering what this was all about. What I remember about that flight is that sitting next to me in first class was the Hollywood director Oliver Stone, a Vietnam veteran who made the movie Platoon. When Stone learned I was from The Economist, he spent the entire six hours grilling me on every conspiracy theory under the sun, which I shot down one right after the other.
Once in LA, I checked into my favorite haunt, the Beverly Hills Hotel, requesting the suite that Marilyn Monroe used to live in. The call came in the middle of the night. Rent a four-wheel drive asap and head out to a remote ranch in the mountains 20 miles east of Santa Barbara. And who was I interviewing?
Kelly Johnson from Lockheed Aircraft (LMT).
Suddenly, everything became clear.
Kelly Johnson was a legend in the aviation community. He grew up on a farm in Michigan and obtained one of the first masters degrees in Aeronautical Engineering in 1933 at the University of Michigan.
He cold called Lockheed Aircraft in Los Angeles begging for a job, then on the verge of bankruptcy in the depths of the Great Depression. Lockheed hired him for $80 a month. What was one of his early projects? Assisting Amelia Earhart with customization of her Lockheed Electra for her coming around-the-world trip, from which she never returned.
Impressed with his performance, Lockheed assigned him to the company’s most secret project, the twin engine P-38 Lightning, the first American fighter to top 400 miles per hour. With counter rotating props, the plane was so advanced that it killed a quarter of the pilots who trained on it. But it allowed the US do dominate the air war in the Pacific early on.
Kelley’s next big job was the Lockheed Constellation (the “Connie” to us veterans), the plane that entered civil aviation after WWII. It was the first pressurized civilian plane that could fly over the weather and carried an astonishing 44 passengers. Howard Hughes bought 50 just off of the plans to found Trans World Airlines. Every airline eventually had to fly Connie’s or go out of business.
The Cold War was a golden age for Lockheed. Johnson created the famed “Skunkworks” at Edwards Air Force base in the Mojave Desert where America’s most secret aircraft were developed. He launched the C-130 Hercules, which I flew in Desert Storm, the F-104 Starfighter, and the high altitude U-2 spy plane.
The highlight of his career was the SR-71 Blackbird spy plane where every known technology was pushed to the limit. It could fly at Mach 3.0 at 100,000 feet. The Russians hated it because they couldn’t shoot it down. It was eventually put out of business by low earth satellites. The closest I ever got to the SR-71 was the National Air & Space Museum in Washington DC at Dulles airport where I spent an hour grilling a retired Blackbird pilot.
Johnson greeted me warmly and complimented me on my ability to find the place. I replied, “I’m an Eagle Scout.” He didn’t mind chatting as long as I accompanied him on his morning chores. No problem. We moved a herd of cattle from one field to another, milked a few cows, and fertilized the vegetables.
When I confessed to growing up on a ranch, he really opened up. It didn’t hurt that I was also an engineer and a scientist, so we spoke the same language. He proudly showed off his barn, probably the most technologically advanced one ever built. It looked like a Lockheed R&D lab with every imageable power tool. Clearly Kelley took work home on weekends.
Johnson recited one amazing story after the other. In 1943, the British had managed to construct two Whittle jet engines and asked Kelly to build the first jet fighter. The country that could build jet fighters first would win the war. It was the world’s most valuable machine.
Johnson clamped the engine down to a test bench and fired it up surrounded by fascinated engineers. The engine immediately sucked in a lab coat and blew up. Johnson got on the phone to England and said “Send the other one.”
The Royal Air Force placed their sole remaining jet engine on a plane which flew directly to Burbank airport. It arrived on a Sunday, so the scientist charged with the delivery took the day off and rode a taxi into Hollywood to sightsee.
There, the Los Angeles police arrested him for jaywalking. In the middle of WWII with no passport, no ID, a foreign accent, and no uniform, they hauled him straight off to jail.
It took two days for Lockheed to find him. Johnson eventually attached the jet engine to a P-51 Mustang, creating the P-80, and eventually the F-80 Shooting Star (Lockheed always uses astronomical names). Only four made it to England before the war ended. They were only allowed to fly over England because the Allies were afraid the Germans would shoot one down and gain the technology.
But the Germans did have one thing on their side. The Los Angeles Police Department delayed the development of America’s first jet fighter by two days.
Germany did eventually build 1,000 Messerschmitt Me 262 jet fighters, but too late. Over half were destroyed on the ground and the engines, made of steel and not the necessary titanium, only had a ten hour life.
That evening, I enjoyed a fabulous steak dinner from a freshly slaughtered steer before I made my way home. I even helped Kelly slaughter the animal, just like I used to do on our ranch in Montana. Steaks are always better when the meat is fresh and we picked the best cuts. I went back to the hotel and wrote a story for the ages.
It was never published.
One of the preconditions of the interview was to obtain prior clearance from the National Security Agency. They were horrified with what Johnson had told me. He had gotten so old he couldn’t remember what was declassified and what was still secret.
The NSC already knew me well from our previous encounters, but MI-6 showed up at The Economist office in London and seized all papers related to the interview. That certainly amused my editor.
Johnson died at age 80 in 1990. As for me, it was just another day in my unbelievable life.
Stay healthy,
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
SR-71 Blackbird
My Former Employer
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