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Mad Hedge Fund Trader

October 3, 2022

Diary, Newsletter, Summary

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)

https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png 0 0 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2022-10-03 10:04:292022-10-03 12:12:31October 3, 2022
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or Bet the Ranch Time is Approaching

Diary, Newsletter, Research

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

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/sr-71.jpg 372 542 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2022-10-03 10:02:322022-10-03 12:10:42The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or Bet the Ranch Time is Approaching
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

September 23, 2022

Diary, Newsletter, Summary

Global Market Comments
September 23, 2022
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:

(SEPTEMBER 21 BIWEEKLY STRATEGY WEBINAR Q&A),
(SPY), (INTC), (NVDA), (AMD), (MU) (TBT), (TLT), (AMGN),
(VIX), (CHPT), (TSLA), (GS), (BAC), (MS), (JPM), (USO), (TLT)

https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png 0 0 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2022-09-23 11:04:542022-09-23 11:36:33September 23, 2022
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

September 21 Biweekly Strategy Webinar Q&A

Diary, Newsletter, Research

Below please find subscribers’ Q&A for the September 21 Mad Hedge Fund Trader Global Strategy Webinar broadcast from Silicon Valley in California.

Q: What would cause you to look for a lower bottom than $330 on the (SPY)?

A: Nuclear war with Russia would certainly do the trick—they’re now threatening to use tactical nuclear weapons in Ukraine—and higher-than-expected interest rates. If we get another 75 basis points after this one today, then I think you’re looking at new lows, but we won’t find that out until November 2. So, the market may just bounce along the bottom here for a while until it sees what the Fed is going to do, not on this rate hike but the next one after that. Other than that, a few dramatically worse earnings from corporations would also allow us to test a lower low.

Q: Is it time to nibble on Nvidia Corporation (NVDA)?

A: Nvidia is one of the most volatile stocks in the market. You don’t want to go into it until you’re absolutely sure the bottom is in. If that means you miss the first 10% of the following move up, that’s fine because when this thing moves, you get a double or triple out of it. I would wait for the indecision in the market to resolve itself before you get too aggressive on the most volatile stocks in the market. The same is true for the rest of the semiconductor sector.

Q: What does a final capitulation look like?

A: The Volatility Index (VIX) ever $40. We’ve had a high of VIX at $37 so far this year. If really get over $40, that would be a new high for the year. That would signal people that are throwing in the towel, giving up the market, selling everything—of course that is always the best time to buy.

Q: How do we get LEAPS guidance?

A: We send our LEAPS recommendations first to our concierge members—we only have a small number of those—and then after that, they go out to all subscribers to the Mad Hedge Global Trading Dispatch. Everyone gets exposure to the LEAPS. By the way, with LEAPS, you can take up to a month to execute a position. What I do is literally buy 1 contract a day, so I get a nice average over the period of a month when the market is most likely bottoming.

Q: Do you see Intel Corporation (INTC) as a good candidate for a Taiwan invasion hedge?

A: Well, first of all, China’s not going to invade Taiwan. I’ve been waiting for this for 70 years and it’s not going to happen. Also, Intel’s new management has yet to prove itself. You have a salesman running the company; I never like companies run by a salesman. I’d prefer to have an engineer run an engineering company. The court is still out on Intel and whether they can turn that company around or not; so, I would much rather buy the market leaders, Nvidia (NVDA), Advanced Micro Devices (AMD), and Micron Technology (MU) in the semiconductor space.

Q: You talked dollar/cost averaging before. Should we pause on averaging in?

A: No, that's why I say buy one contract a day and put it in order to buy at the bid side of the market. That way, any sudden swoosh down in the market and you’ll get filled. The spreads on these LEAPS are quite wide, so you want to try to buy as close to the middle or bottom end of the spread, and putting in single contract orders over a month, of course, will do that to you.

Q: Does that mean it’s time to sell the ProShares UltraShort 20+ year Treasury Yield (TBT)?

A: I would say yes; (TBT) hit $30.30 yesterday, which is a new multi-year high. I would be taking profits on that because on the next turnaround in bonds, you could get a very rapid move in (TBT) from $30 back down to $20. I’d rather have you keep that profit than try to squeeze the last dollar out of it. Remember, the (TBT) has a negative cost of carry now of 8% a year and that is a big nut to cover.

Q; Market outlook for mid-2023?

A: We could hit my $4,800 target by mid-2023; that is up 28% from here.

Q: Can we buy LEAPS on Amgen (AMGN)?

A: Absolutely yes, you can. Go for the highest listed strike prices on the call side with the longest possible maturity. I would do the January 17, 2025 $350-$360 vertical bull call spread which you can buy now for $1.00. That gives two years and four months to get a tenfold return. That’s enough time for a full-bore recession to happen and then a recovery where markets take off like a rocket.  The call spread you bought for $1.00 becomes worth $10.00.

Q: Is there a long position on the beneficiary of government plans to build EV charging stations?

A: There is, but I'm not recommending EV charging stations because it’s a low value-added business. You buy electric power from the local utility, add 10 cents and resell it. The margins are small, the competition is heating up. There are much smarter ways to play EVs than the charging station. ChargePoint (CHPT) is certainly one of them, but it’s not a great investment idea. Look at how ChargePoint (CHPT) has performed over the last six months compared to Tesla (TSLA) and you see what I mean.

Q: Given the very poor investor sentiment, why don’t we get a testing of the lows and result in a (VIX) pop?

A: Absolutely yes—that is what everybody in the market is waiting for. And it could happen as soon as this afternoon. If it doesn’t happen this afternoon, allow for a little rally and then a meltdown on the next piece of bad news.

Q: I’m not able to get an email response from customer support.

A: Try emailing filomena@madhedgefundtrader.com. If that doesn’t work, you can try calling at (347) 480-1034. Filomena will always be happy to take care of you.

Q: What maturity of US Treasury securities would you buy now?

A: I would buy the 30-year. You’re getting close to a 4% yield on that—that is starting to look attractive to people who don’t want to work for a living picking stocks on a daily basis. We are about to see the rebirth of bond investing.

Q: What about banks?

A: Banks will be a screaming buy and a three-year double once recession fears end, which could be in a couple of months. We now have sharply rising interest rates, which banks love, but the bear market in stocks has killed off the IPO business, credit risk is rising, and of course, the Bitcoin business has gone to zero also. So, I would wait for fears of credit quality to end, and then you’ll get a double in the banks very quickly, and notice how they’re all flatlining at a bottom, they’re not actually going down anymore. 

Q: Which banks are good choices?

A: Goldman Sachs (GS) and Bank of America (BAC) are two great ones, along with Morgan Stanley (MS) and JP Morgan (JPM).

Q: Do you think the market will bottom by the midterms?

A: I do, I think we will bottom a few weeks before the midterms, or the day after. Sometimes that’s the way it goes, and then it will be off like a rocket for the rest of the year. If we can do this from a much lower level in the SPYs, so much the better. Remember, the next Fed meeting is six days before the election. Yikes!

Q: If OPEC cuts production (USO), won’t the supply/demand cause oil prices to start rising again, increasing inflation and people’s prices at the pump?

A: Yes, but OPEC needs the money. Not necessarily Saudi Arabia, but all the other members of OPEC are starved for cash, and that is always how these shortages end. The smaller members cheat on quotas and bust the price. That's clearly what’s driven us down $50 since the February high, small member cheating. And that will continue. It is a cartel with some serious internal conflicts that will never resolve.

Q: Does it cost $17,000 to mine a Bitcoin?

A: It did four months ago. My guess is it’s more expensive now because of the higher cost of electricity around the world. We may even be up to $20,000 cost, which is why it tends to hang around the $20,000 level on the low side. Below that, miners lose money and the supply dries up, just like you see in the gold market.

Q: Do you have an opinion on Real Estate Investment Trusts (REIT)?

A: Yes; credit risk is rising, as are the yields. In a real estate recession, you start to get more defaults on REITS, but the yields on them are very high; so if you are going to play, buy a basket to spread your risk.

Q: Would you buy ProShares UltraShort 20+ year Treasury Yield (TLT) calls spreads now?

A: Yes, but I would go farther in the money, like the mid $90s, because I don’t think we’ll get that low in this cycle. I would also go out another month; instead of a one-month call spread in the mid $90s, I would do a two-month maturity. You could probably take in about $2,000 on a $10,000 position in the mid $90s.

To watch a replay of this webinar with all the charts, bells, whistles, and classic rock music, just log in to www.madhedgefundtrader.com, go to MY ACCOUNT, click on GLOBAL TRADING DISPATCH, then WEBINARS, and all the webinars from the last 12 years are there in all their glory.

Good Luck and Stay Healthy,

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

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Back at Lake Tahoe

https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/01/John-Thomas-snow.png 622 472 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2022-09-23 11:02:472022-09-23 11:36:58September 21 Biweekly Strategy Webinar Q&A
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

September 9, 2022

Diary, Newsletter, Summary

Global Market Comments
September 9, 2022
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:

(SEPTEMBER 7 BIWEEKLY STRATEGY WEBINAR Q&A),
(MSFT), (NVDA), (RIVN), (AMZN), (POAHY), (SPWR), (FSLR), (CLSK), (FCX), (CCJ), (GOOG), (TLT), (TSLA)

https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png 0 0 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2022-09-09 10:04:102022-09-08 15:32:29September 9, 2022
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

September 7 Biweekly Strategy Webinar Q&A

Diary, Newsletter

Below please find subscribers’ Q&A for the September 7 Mad Hedge Fund Trader Global Strategy Webinar broadcast from Silicon Valley in California.

Q: Do you think a snapback rally has started? If so, should we increase the size of the September Microsoft (MSFT) spread?

A: Absolutely not. There is no money in 7-day-to-expiration trades. That's why you never see them from me. If you are going to do a position, we’re now looking at October, which has five weeks to run; and I'm waiting for a better entry point. One day does not make a bull market. We also have the volatility index at $25, which is not a good entry point either, so don’t double up on Microsoft here, and avoid 7-day options trades unless you want to be a day trader.

Q: What is your target for the year-end S&P 500?

A: I’m still looking at 4,800. I think we could bottom sometime in the next few weeks—the worst case is the beginning of October—and then it’ll be straight up for the rest of the year. Once we go from discounting the next CPI, which is out on Tuesday the 13th, then we have sort of a no man's land and in October, we start discounting the midterm election, which at the moment is looking like a Democratic win on all fronts.

Q: Amazon (AMZN) has been losing money over the past 2 quarters due to fuel expenses. Is the solution investment in new electric delivery trucks?

A: Yes. In fact, Amazon owns 25% of Rivian (RIVN), and their initial order was to manufacture 100,000 all-electric delivery trucks for Amazon. That has always been the basis for investing in Rivian. It’s been a fantastic investment for Amazon as a stock so far, and when Amazon goes all electric you can bet they’ll power that largely with solar energy. Then they will be out of the energy business entirely; they’ll be producing their own energy and then consuming it, which is the most efficient way to use alternatives, cutting out about 10 different middlemen.

Q: Will the UK pound perform well with this new prime minister?

A: No, the pound is being driven down by rising US interest rates and the energy crisis in Europe, and in fact, I think no matter who the prime minister is, they’re going to have a really difficult time with the economy because of Brexit, which I believe over the long term will reduce British standards of living by half. I don’t know much about the new prime minister as she was in diapers when I was living in England, but it’s a terrible place to invest for the foreseeable future for all of those reasons.

Q: Is it time to buy Tesla (TESLA) for a trade?

A: Well you know me, I’m a perfectionist always trying to buy the bottom. I’m waiting for the market to throw up on its shoes, which it just hasn’t done this year. And I did make a killing on that last move down to $210. We then went up to $310. So, I'm sitting here, 100% cash, waiting to go 100% into Tesla again. It just seems to be a money-making machine for me, and the good news about the company just keeps coming every day.

Q: What strategy would you recommend for income?

A: I would go short dated. 2-year papers now paying 3.5%. I would not go long dated at all, that would be just throwing your money away. Locking in a 3.5% yield for 10 or 20 years would be a perfect money destruction machine. So, go to 2 years, which is essentially going to cash. At least you’ll get the 3.5% with no volatility.

Q: Prediction for the midterms?

A: I’m looking for a Democratic sweep. I analyzed all 33 Senate seats last night that are up for grabs and the Democrats could pick up 2 or even 3 seats. The weak candidates the Republican party has put forward in the most important states are performing very poorly in both fundraising and the polls.

Q: When do you think would be a good time to buy a house for your personal residence?

A: I would say the next time they start to cut interest rates in a couple of years. That is when housing takes off again. I was actually researching this just yesterday—the worst housing crisis we had in 100 years, you had a bear market for houses that only lasted 2 years. That was of course the 2008-2009 disaster driven by massive overbuilding of speculative housing. We haven't had that happen this time. And in fact, we’re short 10 million houses because the capacity cutbacks that happened in ‘08 and ‘09 never recovered. So, I’m kind of thinking, you don’t get crashes in real estate prices now, you get flatlines, and then they take off again because everybody in the world now has 2.75% interest rates and if they sell their house and move their cost-of-living doubles because their mortgage interest rate doubles. So we’re all kind of trapped in our houses now and can’t sell because the alternatives are so much more expensive. That takes enormous pressure off the real estate market, which leans in favor of the flat market thesis.

Q: Do you still love Nvidia (NVDA)?

A: I still love Nvidia. They’ll make up the China losses in no time. And by the way, guess who else uses Nvidia chips? The HIMARS missiles, where demand has suddenly rocketed from 3,000 to 14,000 missiles a year, which is more than the Chinese were ever going to use, and we’re using those up very rapidly by giving them to Ukraine. Every time one of those missiles gets fired uses a whole batch of Nvidia AI cards. So use this dip to load the boat, you’re looking at 20% of downside and maybe 300% of upside on Nvidia on a three-year view. NVIDIA is now down 58% from its high so averaging anywhere around here is fine.

Q: Can you suggest a hedge for the next 4-6 weeks?

A: The only hedge that works is cash. I’ve tried a million hedging strategies over the last 50 years, and the only thing you can rely on is cash. And by the way, cash actually pays you money now. You can earn 2% in interest or more if you’re going to deposit it with a broker.

Q: With electricity shortages already happening, what electricity infrastructure company would you be looking at for investing in the future of EVs?

A: I’ve been investing based on exploding electric power costs myself for the last 15 years. A lot of my plays like SunPower (SPWR) and First Solar (FSLR) have already had enormous moves. That said, I’d use any weakness in the market to buy those on dips because one thing we know for sure is that alternative electricity demand is going to be soaring over the next several years as oil and gas are phased down to zero. And of course, the whole sector got a huge push from Vladimir Putin, who’s massively bringing forward the shift to alternative because he’s using carbon-based energy as a weapon of war against us now.

Q: What’s a good entry point on Nvidia?

A: I tell people to start scaling. A perfect scale would be, let’s say, if you want to put $100,000 into Nvidia, break it up into 10 $10,000 pieces, put in $10,000 today and $10,000 every day until you have a full position, and then you get a nice low average. This is what the companies themselves do when they’re buying their own stock—they just buy small pieces every day to minimize the market impact.

Q: How do you see the Euro?

A: Down 10% in another year, because Jay Powell is going to keep raising interest rates. And even if he doesn’t and the next rate rise is the last one, we’re still going to have interest rates 3.5% higher than everyone else in the world for at least 1 or 2 years, so you could easily get another 10% against all the currencies and maybe more. The outlook for foreign currencies: grim. Outlook for dollar: great.

Q: What about the Porsche (POAHY) IPO?

A: I always avoid IPOs because they get overhyped at the beginning, prices get too high, and then when the restrictive stock comes off, everybody dumps. So wait. I did that with Tesla. Tesla was overhyped—it had a $15 IPO price that went straight up to $30 on opening day. I waited for it to back off to the original IPO price and that’s when I went in and split-adjusted that price which today is $2.35.

Q: Wouldn’t it be good to pick up the speculator houses that aren’t really selling even 50% down with a 5% mortgage?

A: If you could get them 50% down, that would be great; but I don't think any place in the country has seen a 50% drawdown yet—maybe 5% or 10%. The markets that will have the biggest drops will be rural markets that saw the biggest increases, and I’m thinking specifically about Boise, Idaho, where prices doubled in two years, and then they’ll give up a major piece of that. That's where you’ll see the biggest declines the fastest. But, for your bigger quality markets like New York and San Francisco, they went down maybe 5% at worst, and then they go back up again. The only selling you have now is demographic selling, where people die, get married, have more kids and need to change houses for those reasons.

Q: On the electric power side, any thoughts about Clean Sparks (CLSK)?

A: I would be careful not to buy things just because they are “electrical”.  You have to be discriminating in your alternative power plays because a lot of these will never make money. In the case of (CLSK), they have yet to make any money and the stock is down 90%. They are in low-margin businesses. Buying electric power and reselling it for charging stations is not a high-margin business. You’re in competition with your local utilities and unless you have something special about your business model, like putting them in shopping malls like Tesla does, the added value there is not that great. I would look very carefully at their business plans and figure out if they’re actually going to make money doing this. Tesla has the perfect model— a giant 20,000 charging station network that only Tesla cars can use, and they’re making the cars that use the power and the panels that generate it and the batteries that store it. It’s a fully integrated vertical model. Remember, anything entering alternative anything now is competing against Tesla, which has a 15-year head start and a dominant market share. So, that is the issue there.

Q: What is the risk of a European crisis and how is that going to affect the US?

A: It is going to affect the US, and we don’t have to wait for a crisis—there's one happening now. I looked at the numbers this morning, and the average British household is looking at a $4,000 annual power bill this year against a per capita income of $47,000 pretax, and their taxes are much higher than ours. Moreover, this is for a country that is a net energy producer. It’s going to be double that cost in energy-consuming countries in eastern Europe and Germany. About ⅓ of all US exports go to Europe, so yes it will affect us but we’ll have to see how it plays out.

Q: What’s your forecast for profit margins for next year?

A: I’m looking for S&P 500 earnings of 10% for 2023. That may be one reason why stocks keep failing to break down.

Q: Would a price cap on oil prices raise the price of oil?

A: No, it’s having the opposite effect, making oil go down; and you’re seeing this at the free market price, which is the price at which Russia is selling their oil to China and India. That’s happening at a 20% discount to market, so all the Russian oil going to China now is happening at $12 below the current spot price for oil, which is around $82.

Q: How about Nuclear energy plays?

A: Yeah, we did put out one recommendation for Cameco (CCJ) in the spring. I’m still buying that on the dips. Germany resuscitated three nuclear power plants, California one, and Japan is doing the same. Of course, France is sitting pretty—they already have 75% of their electric power coming from nuclear. Who ever knew the French would outsmart the Germans? But betting your energy future on Russia was a terrible idea, and only happened because a lot of key German politicians were bribed by Russians. So yes, oil is dropping and you should expect it to continue.

Q: Did we just see the peak in interest rates for the year?

A: No, at a minimum we’re looking at 3.50% on the yield. We were 3.35% yesterday but could easily overshoot to 3.60% or 3.70% which is why I’m being a little cautious jumping in on the long side here.

Q: When is the time to do LEAPS on Freeport McMoRan (FCX)?

A: Soon. If we can double bottom at around $24, that would be great LEAP territory because I expect in 2 to 3 years this will be a $100 stock and a good LEAPS to do here. If we get down to $24, then you really want to look hard at doing something like a $30/$32, because then you could get like a 500% return on that maybe a year or two out. The leverage in LEAPS is astronomical as many of you discovered with my (TLT) put LEAPS last year. If you want more specific information about LEAPS, please sign up for my Concierge service.

Q: When will you send out LEAP recommendations?

A: On a cataclysmic capitulation selloff day—that is the time to do them.

Q: If Tesla does attempt to raise more capital with new share issues, will that drive the price down?

A: Yes, that's usually what happens, but Elon Musk is a great market timer, and you can bet that he’ll wait for a massive run-up in the stock first before he does this. Every one of these capital races he’s done has been after a massive run-up in the stock and then it tends to cap the stock for 6 months after that. You can safely buy it now because Elon doesn’t think the stock has topped out yet, since he hasn’t announced any new secondary equity issues yet.

Q: What is the actual cause of the surge in natural gas prices?

A: The complete shutoff of natural gas flows from Russia to Europe, especially Germany, which used to get 55% of its total natural gas from Russia.

Q: What is your take on the current Ukraine situation?

A: Ukraine is winning—they’re doing it slowly. The US has quadrupled production of the HIMARS missiles, from 3,000 a year to 14,000 a year, and that has made all the difference in the world. Ukraine has been able to take the upper hand in this war because of literally just 16 vehicles we gave them to fire these missiles. My guess is it goes on for another year, there's a coup in Russia, Putin gets assassinated or deposed, giving us a new government in Russia, and Ukraine gets all its old territory back, joining NATO and the EC.

Q: Thoughts on Google (GOOGL)?

A: Good long-term hold but could be an antitrust target in the near future.

Q: Some say energy will be in critical shortage for many years. Why are you long-term bearish on energy/oil?

A: You have to separate the two; I’m long-term bullish on energy, which is why I built this massive solar system. But oil will be illegal within a decade—that you can count on. Demand will go to zero. It won’t be governments that do this, it’ll be the market. By the way, we’ve already gone to zero once before. If you look at the Spring of 2020, we had negative $37 in the futures market on oil. This is not some far-out thing—the zero prices will just come back. On the way to zero though, you will get several doubles, triples, and quadruples in the price. The smaller the market becomes, the more volatile the price becomes; oil is no exemption from that. That’s why Elon Musk says we need to increase our oil production for the short term to get ourselves on the way to zero—you have to do the transition. The problem is that nobody wants to make 30-year investments in a product that is going to be banned in eight years, hence the shortages.

Q: What's a flight-to-safety asset right now?

A: There are three: Cash, cash, and cash.
To watch a replay of this webinar with all the charts, bells, whistles, and classic rock music, just log in to www.madhedgefundtrader.com, go to MY ACCOUNT, click on GLOBAL TRADING DISPATCH, then WEBINARS, and all the webinars from the last 12 years are there in all their glory.

Good Luck and Stay Healthy,

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

 

Teslas are Great, but they are not Crash Proof

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Mad Hedge Fund Trader

September 6, 2022

Diary, Newsletter, Summary

Global Market Comments
September 6, 2022
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:

(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or WELCOME TO THE ROLLING RECESSION),
(AAPL), (NVDA), (TSLA), (USO), (BTC), (MSFT), (CRM), (V), (BA), (MSFT), (CRM), (DIS)

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Mad Hedge Fund Trader

The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or Welcome to the Rolling Recession

Diary, Newsletter, Research

The airline business is booming but homebuilders are in utter despair. Hotel rooms are seeing extortionate 56% YOY price increases, while residential real estate brokers are falling flat on their faces.

It’s a recession that’s here, there, and nowhere.

Welcome to the rolling recession.

If you are lucky enough to work in a handful of in-demand industries, times have never been better. If you aren’t, then it’s Armageddon.

Look at single industries one at a time, as the media tends to do, business conditions are the worst since the Great Depression and pessimism is rampant. Look at Tesla, where there is a one-year wait to get a Model X, and there is either a modest recession on the menu, or simply slowing growth at worst.

Notice that a lot of commentators are using the word “normally”. News Flash: nothing has been normal with this economy for three years.

Which leaves us with dueling yearend forecasts for the S&P 500. It will either be at 3,900, where it is now, or 4,800. A market that is unchanged, worst case, and up 20% best case sounds like a pretty good bet to me. The prospects for individual stocks, like Tesla (TSLA), Microsoft (MSFT), or NVIDIA (NVDA) are even better, with a chance of 20% of downside or 200% of upside.

I’ll sit back and wait for the market to tell me what to do. In the meantime, I am very happy to be up 60% on the year and 90% in cash.

An interesting thing is happening to big-cap tech stocks these days. They are starting to command bigger premiums both in the main market and in other technology stocks as well.

That is because investors are willing to pay up for the “safest” stocks. In effect, they have become the new investment insurance policy. Look no further than Apple (AAPL) which, after a modest 14% decline earlier this year, managed a heroic 30% gain. Steve Jobs’ creation now boasts a hefty 28X earnings multiple. Remember when it was only 9X?

Remember, the stock sells off on major iPhone general launches like we are getting this week, so I’d be careful that my “insurance policy” doesn’t come back and bite me in the ass.

Nonfarm Payroll Report Drops to 315,000 in August, a big decline, and the Headline Unemployment Rate jumps to 3.7%. The Labor Force Participation Rate increased to 62.4%. The “discouraged worker” U-6 unemployment rate jumped to 7.0%. Manufacturing gained 22,000. Stocks loved it, but it makes a 75-basis point in September a sure thing.

Jeremy Grantham Says the Stock Super Bubble Has Yet to Burst, for the seventh consecutive year. If I listened to him, I’d be driving an Uber cab by now, commuting between side jobs at Mcdonald's and Taco Bell. Grantham sees stocks, bonds, commodities, real estate, precious metals, crypto, and collectible Beanie Babies as all overvalued. Even a broken clock is right twice a day unless you’re in the Marine Corps, which uses 24-hour clocks.

Where are the Biggest Buyers on the Dip? Microsoft (MSFT), Salesforce (CRM), and Disney (DIS), followed by Visa (V), and Boeing (BA). Analysts see 20% of upside for (MSFT), 32% for (CRM), and 21% for (DIS). Sure, some of these have already seen big moves. But the smart money is buying Cadillacs at Volkswagen prices, which I have been advocating all year. Take the Powell-induced meltdown as a gift.

The Money Supply is Collapsing, down for four consecutive months. M2 is now only up less than 1% YOY. This usually presages a sharp decline in the inflation rate. With a doubling up of Quantitative Tightening this month, we could get a real shocker of a falling inflation rate on September 13. Online job offers are fading fast and used cars have suddenly become available. This could put in this year’s final bottom for stocks.

California Heads for a Heat Emergency This Weekend, with temperatures of 115 expected. Owners are urged to fully charge their electric cars in advance and thermostats have been moved up to 78 as the electric power grid faces an onslaught of air conditioning demand. The Golden State’s sole remaining Diablo Canyon nuclear power plant has seen its life extended five years to 2030. This time, the state has a new million more storage batteries to help.

Oil (USO) Dives to New 2022 Low on spreading China lockdowns. Take the world’s largest consumer offline and it has a big impact. More lows to come.

NVIDIA (NVDA) Guides Down in the face of new US export restrictions to China. The move will cost them $400 million in revenue. These are on the company’s highest-end A100 and H100 chips which China can’t copy. (AMD) received a similar ban. It seems that China was using them for military AI purposes. The shares took a 9% dive on the news. Cathie Wood’s Ark (ARKK) Funds dove in and bought the lows.

Weekly Jobless Claims Plunge to 232,000, down from 250,000 the previous week for the third consecutive week. No recession in these numbers.

First Solar (FSLR) Increases Output by 70%, thanks to a major tax subsidy push from the Biden Climate Bill. The stock is now up 116% in six weeks. We have been following this company for a decade and regularly fly over its gigantic Nevada solar array. Buy (FSLR) on dips.

Home Prices Retreat in June to an 18% YOY gain, according to the Case Shiller National Home Price Index. That’s down from a 19.9% rate in May. Tampa (35%), Miami (33%), and Dallas (28.2%) showed the biggest gains. Blame the usual suspects.

Tesla (TSLA) Needs $400 Billion to expand its vehicle output to Musk’s 20 million units a year target. One problem: there is currently not enough commodity production in the world to do this. That sets up a bright future for every commodity play out there, except oil.

Bitcoin
(BTC) is Headed Back to Cost, after breaking $20,000 on Friday. With the higher cost of electricity and mining bans, spreading the cost of making a new Bitcoin is now above $17,000. It doesn’t help that much of the new crypto infrastructure is falling to pieces.

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 prices and inflation now rapidly declining, 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!

With a very troublesome flip-flopping market, my August performance still posted a decent +5.13%.

My 2022 year-to-date performance ballooned to +59.96%, a new high. The Dow Average is down -13.20% 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 +71.90%.

That brings my 14-year total return to +572.52%, 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 +44.90%, easily the highest in the industry.

We need to keep an eye on the number of US Coronavirus cases at 94.7 million, up 300,000 in a week and deaths topping 1,047,000 and have only increased by 2,000 in the past week. You can find the data here.

On Monday, September 5 markets are closed for Labor Day.

On Tuesday, September 6 at 7:00 AM, the ISM Non-Manufacturing PMI for August is out.

On Wednesday, September 7 at 11:00 AM, the Fed Beige Book for July is published.

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

On Friday, September 9 at 2:00 the Baker Hughes Oil Rig Count is out.

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 again the US dollar so American planes were a bargain. It had a 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, CO 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, 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 Mustang’s, B-17’s, B24’s, and DC-3’s. Many of these planes were later salvaged when they became immensely valuable. The weather was notorious. 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 frequency 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 descent. 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 it to 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 half.

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 in, 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 a rock star.

I asked my pilot if ferrying planes across the Atlantic was also so exciting. He dryly answered “Yes.” He told me that 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.

Stay healthy,

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

 

No Such a Great Landing

 

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/john-thomas-family-london-scaled.jpg 1699 2560 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2022-09-06 11:02:332022-09-06 11:19:19The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or Welcome to the Rolling Recession
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

August 26, 2022

Diary, Newsletter, Summary

Global Market Comments
August 26, 2022
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:

(AUGUST 24 BIWEEKLY STRATEGY WEBINAR Q&A),
(UNG), (AAPL), (MU), (AMD), (NVDA),
 (META), (VIX), (MCD), (UBER)

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Mad Hedge Fund Trader

August 24 Biweekly Strategy Webinar Q&A

Diary, Newsletter

Below please find subscribers’ Q&A for the August 24 Mad Hedge Fund Trader Global Strategy Webinar broadcast from Silicon Valley in California.

Q: I’ve heard another speaker say that we are not heading for a Roaring Twenties; instead, we are heading for a Great Depression. Who is right?

A: There are many different possible comments to this. Number one, in the newsletter business, the easiest way to make money is to predict the Great Depression and panic people. Stock market Gurus have been predicting the next Great Depression for all of the 54 years that I have been in the financial markets. We’ve gone through a whole series of Dr. Doom's over this time. We had Nouriel Roubini, we had Henry Kaufman, and before that, there was Joe Granville who predicted Dow 300 when the Dow was at 600 and never gave up. The reason is very simple: the people making these dire forecasts are based in depressionary places. If you live in Puerto Rico, or Ukraine, or Europe, it’s easier to be depressed right now, because the economy is falling to pieces. If you live in Silicon Valley, like I do, and you see these incredible technologies delivering every day, it’s easy to be bullish about the future. So, that is another part of it. On top of that, we’ve just had a recession. And even during this last recession, earnings continued to grow at 5% for the main market, and 20-30% for individual technology companies. The market goes up 80% of the time so if you’re bullish, you’re right 80% of the time. In fact, that may increase going into the future because we just had six months of down days behind us.

Q: How do you know when to buy?

A: Well, I have about 100 different market indicators that I look at, but my favorite one is the Volatility Index (VIX). The (VIX) is the perfect contrary indicator because when fear is high the payoff for taking on risk is huge. The risk/reward swings overwhelmingly in your favor. The simplest indicators are usually the best ones. When (VIX) gets to $30—I don’t think I’ve ever lost money in my life adding on a new trade with (VIX) at $30. If I add positions with the (VIX) at under $30, the loss rate goes up; so, I’m inclined to only do trades when the (VIX) gets close to $30. If that means doing nothing for a month, that’s fine with me. If telling you to stay out of the market makes more money than getting you into the market, I’ll keep you out of the market. I’m not a broker so, I don’t get paid commission; I get paid to give you the highest annual returns so you’ll renew because I only get paid if you renew. Our renewal rate is about 80% these days, and the other 20% either die or retire.

Q: What about the Tesla (TSLA) 3:1 split?

A: In the short term I would stand back and do nothing because you often get a “buy the rumor sell the news” selloff in stocks after splits. Long term, Tesla is a strong buy; short term, we are up close to 60% in a couple of months. Betting that Tesla would rise going into this split was one of the most successful trades that I’ve ever done.

Q: Did you know Julian Robertson?

A: Yes, I did.   Julian was one of the first investors in my hedge fund, and then he was one of the first buyers of my Mad Hedge newsletter. He was also my first concierge client. He had one heck of a temper; if you didn’t know your stuff cold, he would just absolutely blow up at you. But he did tend to surround himself with geniuses. He drew on Morgan Stanley people a lot, so I knew a lot of the tiger cubs. But he certainly knew stocks, and he knew markets.

Q: What do we do on the SPDR S&P 500 ETF (SPY) position?

A: Just run it into expiration. As it is my only position, I don’t really have anything else to do and I don’t really see any explosive upside moves in markets this month. And then after that, we will be 10 days to expiration; so there may be enough profit there at that time.

Q: As a long-term investor, should I take Tesla profits now?

A: If you're really a long-term investor and sell now, you’ll miss the move to $10,000. However, if you’re a trader, you should take some profits now and look to buy and scale in down $50 and more down $100, and so on, depending on what the market does.

Q: What are your thoughts on Nvidia Corporation (NVDA) and semis?

A: When recession fears exist, you will have sharp downturns in the semis, because this is the most volatile sector in the market. However, in the long term in Nvidia you might be looking at a 20% of downside, and 200% of upside on a three-year view. It just depends on how much pain you want to take while keeping your long-term position.

Q: Why is September typically the worst month of the year for stocks?

A: You need to go back 120 years when farmers accounted for 50% of the US population. In the farming business, September/October is your maximum stress point, because you’ve put out all your money for seed, for water, for fertilizer, but you don’t get paid until you sell your crop in September/October. That creates a point of maximum stress—when farmers have to max out the loans from the banks, and that creates cascading stresses in the financial system.  That’s why almost every stock market crash happened in October. And of course, since that cycle started, it has become a self-fulfilling prophecy to this day. Even though only 2% of the population is in farming now, that selloff in September/October is still there. There’s no real current reason behind it.

Q: How do you find good spreads?

A: You find a good stock first, then a good chart, and then wait for the market to come to you with a high Volatility Index (VIX) with a good micro and macro tailwind. It’s that simple.

Q: Do you think healthcare will sell off once the recession fear is gone?

A: It may not because it had a massive selloff across the entire industry when COVID went away. They've taken that COVID hit. That's a recession if you’re a healthcare company. Now COVID is essentially gone, so they haven’t got it left to lose. In the meantime, technology continues to hyper-accelerate in the healthcare area, just in time for old people like me.

Q: How would you invest $1 million in a retirement portfolio today?

A: Call me—that’s a longer conversation. Or better yet, sign up for the concierge service, and we can talk as long as you want.

Q: Any hope for Facebook (META)?

A: No, when you’re advertising that you’re going to lose money and that you’re not going to make money for five years, that’s bad for the stock. I’m sorry Mr. Zuckerberg, but you should have taken those financial markets classes instead of just doing the programming ones.

Q: Will Powell be dovish or hawkish in his speech?

A: I think he has to go hawkish because he needs to justify the next interest rate hike in September. That’s why I’m 90% cash. The market is set up here not to take disappointments on top of a 4,000-point rally in two months. It’s very sensitive to disappointment, so it’s a good time to be in cash. 

Q: What stocks go down the most if we get a 5-10% correction?

A: Semiconductors. Nvidia (NVDA), Advanced Micro Devices (AMD), Micron Technology (MU) are your high beta stocks. Having said that, those are the ones you want to buy at market bottoms. I’ve caught many doubles on Nvidia over the years just using that strategy. When you’ve had a horrible market, you want to go for the highest beta stocks out there, and those are the semis. Plus, semis have a long-term undercurrent of always making more money, always improving their products, always increasing market shares. So, you want to invest with tailwinds behind you all the time. 30 years ago, a new car needed ten chips. Now they need 100. That accelerates exponentially as the entire auto industry goes EV.

Q: What’s your opinion on Lithium companies?

A: You know, I haven’t really done much in this area because it is a basic commodity. The profit margins are minimal, there is no Lithium shortage in the world like there is an oil shortage. Plus, no one has a secret method of mining Lithium that is more profitable than another. No one has an advantage.

Q: Is there a logical maximum number of stocks to have in a share portfolio?

A: I keep mine at ten. You should be able to cover every good sector in the market with ten. When I talk to new concierge customers and review their portfolios, one of the most common mistakes is they own too many stocks – there can be 50, 100, 200 stocks, even several gold stocks. And you never want to own more than you can follow on a daily basis. It’s better to follow ten stocks very closely than 100 stocks just occasionally.

Q: How low do you think Apple (APPL) will go on this dip?

A: Minimum 10%, maybe 20%. Just depends on how weak the market will go in this correction.

Q: What was your defensive plan when you sold short Tesla puts?

A: If they got exercised against me and the Tesla shares were sold to me at my strike price, I was going to take the stock, then let the stock rally. If my long-term view for Tesla is $10,000, it’s not such a problem having a $500 put exercise against you—you just take the stock and run the stock. That was always the strategy. Never sell short more puts than you can take delivery of in the stock. Your broker won’t let you do it anyway to protect themselves.

Q: Do you think we could get a strong rally on the next CPI report?

A: Yes.  The report is due out on September 13. But some of a sharp drop in the CPI in the next report is already in the market, so don’t expect another 2,000-point stock market rally like we got last time. It’ll be a much lesser move and after that, we’ll need to see more data. We may get 1,000 points out of it, probably not much more. After that, the November midterm election becomes the dominant factor in the market.

Q: When is natural gas (UNG) going to roll over?

A: When the Ukraine War ends, and that day is getting closer and closer. I think it’ll be sometime in 2023. And if you get an end to the war (and the resumption of Russian supplies is not necessarily a sure thing) you’d get a move in natgas from $9 down to $2. So, that’s why I’m very cautiously avoiding energy plays right now. The big money has been made; next to happen is that the big money gets lost.

Q: What are your thoughts on Florida’s pension fund now banning ESG stocks? I live on Florida state pension fund payments.

A: You might start checking out other income opportunities, like becoming an Uber (UBER) driver or working at MacDonalds (MCD). What the Florida governor has done is ban the pension fund from the sector that is most likely to go up over the next ten years and restricted them to the sector (oil) which is most likely to go down. That is very bad for Florida’s pension fund and any other pension funds that follow them. And I’ve seen this happen before, where a pension fund gets politicized, and it’s 100% of the time a disaster. Governors aren't great market timers; politicians are terrible at making market calls. There are too many examples to name. ESG stocks were one of the top performing sectors of the market for 5 years until we got the pandemic crash. So, that is an awful idea (and one of the many reasons I don’t live in Florida besides hurricanes, humidity, alligators, and the Bermuda Triangle).

To watch a replay of this webinar with all the charts, bells, whistles, and classic rock music, just log in to www.madhedgefundtrader.com, go to MY ACCOUNT, click on GLOBAL TRADING DISPATCH or TECHNOLOGY LETTER, or BITCOIN LETTER, whichever applies to you, then select WEBINARS, and all the webinars from the last 12 years are there in all their glory.

Good Luck and Stay Healthy,

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

 

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