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Tag Archive for: (QQQ)

april@madhedgefundtrader.com

The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or Waiting for the Missiles to Hit

Diary, Homepage Posts, Newsletter

When I was in Ukraine, the air raid sirens used to go off every night exactly at 2:00 AM.

The Russian goal was to deprive the civilian population of sleep and to make their lives miserable. It was also when the country was least able to defend itself.

mostbet mostbet giriş mostbet mostbet giriş mostbet mostbet giriş mostbet mostbet giriş mostbet mostbet giriş

You knew the missiles were on the way, it was just a question of whether your number was up. You could only hope to make it to the basement before they hit. It was not safe to go back to sleep until you heard the explosions nearby.

It is not a pleasant feeling.

Here we are in the United States in 2025, and there are missiles on the way, but they are economic ones. Ford Motors (F) has already started raising prices so they can spread them out over a longer period of time. Food and produce prices from Mexico will deliver the first price shocks, as they can go bad in a day. The first hint of this might be visible with the release of the Consumer Price Index at 8:30 AM EST on Tuesday, May 13. That’s when we learn if the inflationary surge is hitting now, or if we have to wait until June. But we know for sure it’s coming.

In fact, there is an onslaught of horrific economic data headed our way. Economic growth is slowing dramatically, prices are rising, international trade is grinding to a halt, and consumer confidence is already at all-time lows. We just don’t know yet if it is going to hit us or blow up the neighbors down the street.

The truly alarming thing about these developments is that the data from hell is going to hit just as the stock market is completing one of its most rapid rises in history, up 19.75% in a month. Stocks are now even more expensive than they were in February, with a price earnings multiple of 22X and earnings falling.

Is anyone ready for a February market crash repeat? You may be about to get it.

I have been through many bear markets since I started trading in 1965, a move down in the indexes of 20% or more. They can last 31 months (2002) and decline as much as 56% (2009). In 1987, we had a bear market in a day!

This one is number nine for me. And while no two bear markets are alike, they all share common characteristics. I have seen them caused by oil shocks, hyperinflation, financial engineering, the Dotcom Crash, the Great Financial Crisis, and the Pandemic. This is the first one caused by a trade war.

Spoiler alert! The monster is about to jump out of a closet at you at the end of the movie.

If you’re praying that the new trade deal with the UK is going to rescue your retirement funds, don’t hold your breath. It’s not a treaty; it is simply an agreement to agree sometime in the distant future. It’s not even a letter of intent. It’s nothing but a bunch of hot air.

In 2024, the U.S. actually ran a trade surplus, not a deficit, with the UK. The surplus was $11.9 billion. The U.S. exported $79.9 billion worth of goods to the U.K. and imported $68.1 billion, resulting in a surplus. 

Some $10.5 billion of US aircraft were sold to the UK in 2024, followed by $7 billion in machinery and nuclear reactors and $5.6 billion in pharmaceuticals. The deals announced last week were nothing new, just a reaffirmation of existing trade that has been going on for years.

In the meantime, the punitive 10% tariff against UK imports stands. That is nowhere near enough to move the needle for the $27.7 trillion US GDP. And this was the easy one. Why the US needs to negotiate a trade agreement with a country where it is already running a surplus is beyond me.

All of this has prompted me to run the first 100% short model portfolio in the 17-year history of the Mad Hedge Fund Trader. If the market moves sideways or up small, we will make our maximum profit by the June 20 option expiration in 28 trading days (Memorial Day is a Holiday). If the market crashes, which it can do at any time, we make the maximum profit immediately. That should take us to a 2025 year-to-date profit of over 43%.

Heads I win, tails you lose, I like it.

 

Current Capital at Risk

Risk On

NO POSITIONS                                                0.00%

 

Risk Off

(GLD) 5/$275-$285 call spread                  -10.00%

(GLD) 6/$275-$285 call spread                  -10.00%

(SPY) 6/$610-$620 call spread                   -10.00%

(MSTR) 6/$500-$510 put spread               -10.00%

(NVDA) 6/$140-$145 put spread                -10.00%

(AAPL) 6/$220-$230 put spread                -10.00%

(TSLA) 6/$370-$380 put spread                 -10.00%

(QQQ) 6/$540-$550 put spread                  -10.00%

(TLT) 6/$80-$83 call spread                       -10.00%

(SH) 6/$39-$41 call spread                          -10.00%

 

 

Total Net Position                                         -100.00%

Total Gross Position                                      100.00%

 

I love trade wars.

They shine brilliant spotlights on obscure, usually deeply hidden parts of the global economy, revealing almost impossible-to-find data points. And every single new data point enhances your understanding of the big picture.

My first real trade war was the 1973 Oil Shock. Saudi Arabia had cut off America’s oil supply because of our support for Israel in the Yom Kippur War. Huge lines formed at gas stations, and gasoline prices shot up from 25 cents a gallon to $3.00.

Ever the entrepreneur, I started a side business buying beat-up Volkswagen Beetles, the highest mileage car then available in the United States, driving them to Mexico, and getting them repainted and reupholstered in a day for $50. Then I resold them in LA for double the price. 

I remember on my last run, I was in a hurry to catch a physics class, so I left a little early. The US customs office learned about the car and asked me if I had any work done while in Mexico. I answered “No.” As he walked away, I saw that his pants were covered with fresh green paint, which had not yet dried.

I drove away as fast as my green Beetle could go.

In the old days, hedge funds reaped huge trading advantages chasing down obscure data points. When satellite data became available to the public in the 1990s, my fund leased satellite time to track the progress of the US wheat crop.

Several successful trades in the commodities markets followed, until others caught on. You already know that I closely track container ship traffic not only in Los Angeles, but ports around the world. This is easy now through many cheap apps available through Apple’s App Store..

In the 2025 stock market, we have all had to become our own mini hedge fund managers. For a start, more money has been made on the short side than the long side, at least the few who participated in instruments like my many vertical bear put debit spreads in (NVDA), (SPY), (TSLA), (MSTR), and the (TLT). There were also nicely profitable plays in the (SH), the (SDS), and the many volatility plays out there, such as the (SVXY).

It's all been enough to help me achieve a welcome 32% profit this year. Those who took my advice to sit out 2025 and bought 90-day US Treasury bills yielding 4.2% are also profitable this year. Any positive return this year is a great accomplishment.

A whole new cottage industry that has gone viral on the internet, offering up more obscure data points about the economy than we could ever consume. We all know that forward-looking soft sentiment data is the worst ever recorded. Credit card balances held by low-income consumers are at all-time highs. But McDonald’s (MCD) and Taco Bell sales have been falling, while those at Domino's Pizza are rising.

What the heck is that supposed to mean?

Although this may sound arcane and deep in the weeds, the 2 year – 10 year spread recently turned positive and is now at 0.47%. That means the yield on two-year Treasury notes is higher than the yield on ten-year Treasury bonds. This has NEVER happened without a following recession. If you were looking for hard data, this is hard data.

Gold is the only asset class absent from volatility this year. That alone says a lot.

There are more than the usual number of binoculars focusing on the Port of Los Angeles these days (click here for the link). Traffic is now down a stunning 25% on the week. That means a supply chain disaster is imminent.

You learn in the Marine Corps that a 50-cent part can ground a $60 million aircraft. How much extra will you pay to get that 50-cent part to get the plane flying? $1.00, $10? $100? Certainly $1 million for a military aircraft in time of war.

This is the basis for some of the exponential inflation forecasts and supply chain disruptions on the scale last seen during the pandemic. Once started, inflation takes off like a rocket with merchants trying to outraise each other and it can take years to get under control, as we saw with the last pandemic.

By the way, I still wake up at 2:00 AM every morning expecting incoming missiles, even though I have been out of Ukraine for 18 months. It turns out that post-traumatic stress gets worse when you get older. Fortunately, my bedroom is now in the basement.

 

The Lucky One (it was a dud)

 

 

The Not So Lucky Ones

 

My May performance has reached +3.08%. That takes us to a year-to-date profit of +31.48% so far in 2025. My trailing one-year return stands at a record +90.95%. That takes my average annualized return to +50.84% and my performance since inception to +783.37%, a new all-time high.

It has been another wild week in the market. I took profits in longs in (MSTR) and (NVDA). I stopped out of a short in (SPY) for a small loss. I added a new long in (GLD) and (TLT), new shorts in (QQQ), (AAPL), and (TSLA). After the tremendous run we have just seen, I am moving towards a 100% short portfolio.

Some 63 of my 70 round trips in 2023, or 90%, were profitable. Some 74 of 94 trades were profitable in 2024, and several of those losses were really break-even. That is a success rate of +78.72%.

Try beating that anywhere.

The Stock Market is Headed for New Lows, even if the China tariffs drop from 145% to only 50%, says hedge fund guru and old friend Paul Tudor Jones. Trump’s rollout of the highest levies on imports in a century shocked the world last month, triggering extreme volatility on Wall Street. You have Trump, who’s locked in on tariffs. You have the Fed, which is locked in on not cutting rates. That’s not good for the stock market. We are the losers.

Fed Leaves Interest Rates Unchanged, at 4.25%-4.50%, supported by a consistently rising inflation rate. Stocks tanked and bonds rallied. In case you were wondering, the Fed ALWAYS prioritizes fighting inflation over unemployment because its mandate is to protect the value of the US dollar. It’s written into the 1913 law creating the Federal Reserve System. Don’t expect ANY rate cuts until year-end.

Apple Tanks on Falling Search Revenues. I bet you don’t get many short recommendations for Apple, but here’s a nice one. The implications for Apple were disastrous when a senior officer testified that artificial intelligence was demolishing their traditional search business. Of course, Alphabet (GOOGL) shares were trashed, down 7%. But Apple took a 5% hit as well because it earns an eye-popping $50 billion a year from its IOS operating system, referring all searches to Google. Apple shares have been trading rather feebly this month. While the S&P 500 rocketed 15%, (AAPL) managed to eak out an unimpressive 20% gain, while shares like Palantir (PLTR) doubled.

Bitcoin Recovers $100,000, for the first time since early February, bolstered by a dial down of the trade war in a sign that perhaps Trump is backing off his trade war. Overbought for now, sell Bitcoin rallies.

Nearly All US Exports are in Free Fall, reaching most ports across the U.S. and nearly all export market products as the trade impact of Trump’s tariffs worsens. Agriculture exports to China have been the hardest hit.

Oil Production has Peaked, thanks to the collapse in prices triggered by recession fears. Saudi Arabia is playing a market share game, and increasing production is another factor. Avoid all energy plays like the plague. We’re headed for $30 a barrel.

Warren Buffett Retires, handing over day-to-day management of Berkshire Hathaway (BRK/B) to Greg Abel. It’s a personal blow as Warren was one of the first subscribers to Mad Hedge Fund Trader. No one could ever match his investment performance, not even Warren himself, as stocks are so much more expensive now. Even if (BRK/B) shares dropped 99% from today, it would still be the top-performing S&P 500 stock since 1965. Listening to his annual shareholder summit, he’s still all there at age 94. I want to be Warren Buffett when I grow up.

Is Tesla the Next Boeing? By cutting production costs by 17% last year, has Musk also made the cars unsafe? That’s what happened to Boeing (BA), which prioritized raising dividends and share buybacks over quality and safety to the point where its aircraft started falling out of the sky. This year, (TSLA) shares have been matching (BA) downside one for one.

Jeff Bezos to Sell $4.7 Billion of Amazon Stock by May 2026. Time to free up some spending money. Jeff sold $13.4 billion worth of shares in 2024. Some of the money will go to finance his Blue Origin rocket hobby. Bezos still owns 9.56% of the $2 trillion company.


My Ten-Year View – A Reassessment

We have to substantially downsize our expectations of equity returns in view of the election outcome. My new American Golden Age, or the next Roaring Twenties, is now looking at multiple gale-force headwinds. The economy will completely stop decarbonizing. Technology innovation will slow. Trade wars will exact a high price. Inflation will return. The Dow Average will rise by 600% to 240,000 or more in the coming decade. The new America will be far more efficient and profitable than the old. My Dow 240,000 target has been pushed back to 2035.

On Monday, May 12, at 8:30 AM EST, the WASDE Report is announced, the World Agriculture Supply and Demand Estimate.

On Tuesday, May 13, at 7:30 AM, the Consumer Price Index, a key inflation read, is released.

On Wednesday, May 14, at 9:30 AM, EIA Oil Stocks are disclosed. No move is expected in the face of a rising inflation rate. A press conference follows at 1:30.

On Thursday, May 15, at 8:30 AM, the Weekly Jobless Claims are disclosed. We also get the Producer Price Index and Retail Sales.

On Friday, May 16, at 7:30 AM, we get Housing Starts and Building Permits. At 1:00 PM, the Baker Hughes Rig Count is published.

As for me, one of the many benefits of being married to a British Airways senior stewardess is that you get to visit some pretty obscure parts of the world. In the 1970s, that meant going first class for free with an open bar, and sometimes in the cockpit jump seat.

To extend out 1977 honeymoon, Kyoko agreed to an extra round trip for BA from Hong Kong to Colombo in Sri Lanka. That left me on my own for a week in the former British crown colony of Ceylon.

I rented an antiquated left-hand drive stick shift Vauxhall and drove around the island nation counterclockwise. I only drove during the day in army convoys to avoid terrorist attacks from the Tamil Tigers. The scenery included endless verdant tea fields, pristine beaches, and wild elephants and monkeys.

My eventual destination was the 1,500-year-old Sigiriya Rock Fort in the middle of the island, which stood 600 feet above the surrounding jungle. I was nearly at the top when I thought I found a shortcut. I jumped over a wall and suddenly found myself up to my armpits in fresh bat shit.

That cut my visit short, and I headed for a nearby river to wash off. But the smell stayed with me for weeks.

Before Kyoko took off for Hong Kong in her Vickers Viscount, she asked me if she should bring anything back. I heard that McDonald’s has just opened a stand there, so I asked her to bring back two Big Macs.

She dutifully showed up in the hotel restaurant the following week with the telltale paper back in hand. I gave them to the waiter and asked him to heat them up. He returned shortly with the burgers on plates surrounded by some elaborate garnish. It was a real work of art.

Suddenly, every hand in the restaurant shot up. They all wanted to order the same this, even though the nearest stand was 2,494 miles away.

We continued our round-the-world honeymoon to a beach vacation in the Seychelles, where we just missed a coup d’état, a safari in Kenya, apartheid South Africa, London, San Francisco, and finally back to Tokyo. It was the honeymoon of a lifetime.

Kyoko passed away in 2020 from breast cancer at the age of 50, well before her time.

Sigiriya Rock Fort

 

Kyoko


Good Luck and Good Trading,

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

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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april@madhedgefundtrader.com

January 16, 2025

Diary, Newsletter, Summary

Global Market Comments
January 16, 2025
Fiat Lux

 

Featured Trades:

(WHY TECHNICAL ANALYSIS IS A DISASTER)
(SPY), (QQQ), (IWM), (VIX)
(TESTIMONIAL)

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april@madhedgefundtrader.com

Why Technical Analysis is a Disaster

Diary, Newsletter

At my Mad Hedge Miami Beach Luncheon, I heard an amazing piece of information from a guest.

Fidelity recently conducted a study to identify their best-performing clients.

They neatly fell into two groups: people who forgot they had an account at Fidelity and dead people.

It all underlines the futility of trading the markets without true professional guidance, something many aspire to but few actually accomplish.

Of the many thousands of online newsletters and trade mentoring services, I only know of three that actually make money for clients.

Those would be mine and two others, and I’m not talking about who the other two are.

It is an industry filled with professional marketers, charlatans, and conmen.

Let me point out a few harsh lessons learned from this most recent meltdown and the rip-your-face-off rally that followed.

The next five months are ones of historical seasonal market strength.

The big lesson learned this summer was the utter uselessness of technical analyses. Usually, these guys are right only 50% of the time. This year, they missed the boat entirely.

The biggest losers?

Algorithms, which used the decisive breakdown of the (SPY) in August to go heavily short.

If you did, you lost your shirt. The market just shed a couple more points, reversed, and then kept going, and going, and going.

This is why technical analysis is utterly useless as an investment strategy. How many hedge funds use a pure technical strategy and a stand-alone basis?

Absolutely none, as it doesn’t make any money.

At best, it is just one of 100 tools you need to trade the market effectively. The shorter the time frame, the more accurate it becomes.

On an intraday basis, technical analysis is actually quite useful.

Leave it for the kids.

This is why I advise portfolio managers and financial advisors to use technical analysis as a means of timing order executions, and nothing more.

Most professionals agree with me.

Technical analysis derives from humans’ preference for looking at pictures instead of engaging in abstract mental processes. A picture is worth 1,000 words, and probably a lot more.

This is why technical analysis appeals to so many young people entering the market for the first time.

Buy a book available for $5 on Amazon, and you can become a Master of the Universe.

Who can resist that?

The problem is that high-frequency traders also bought that same book from Amazon a long time ago and have designed algorithms to frustrate every move of the technical analyst.

Sorry to be the buzz kill, but that is my take on technical analysis.

I have a much better solution than forgetting you have a trading account, or dying.

Take Cunard’s round-the-world cruise.

I have been sailing with Cunard since the 1970s when the original Queen Elizabeth was still afloat.

I’ve lost count of how many Transatlantic voyages I have taken across the pond.

For a mere $16,669 you can spend 117 days circumnavigating the globe with Cunard from Southampton, England in their cheapest inside cabin (click here for the link.)

That includes all the food you can eat for four months.

On the way, you can visit such exotic destinations as Bora Bora, The Seychelles, Reunion, and Moorea.

Not a bad deal.

By the time you get home, you will probably earn enough in your investment account to pay for the entire trip.

Hope you enjoyed your cruise.

 

 

 

 

Correction? What Correction?

https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/John-Thomas-breakfast-e1537989272256.png 405 400 april@madhedgefundtrader.com https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png april@madhedgefundtrader.com2025-01-16 09:04:592025-02-20 12:40:37Why Technical Analysis is a Disaster
april@madhedgefundtrader.com

January 8, 2025

Diary, Newsletter, Summary

Global Market Comments
January 8, 2025
Fiat Lux

 

2025 Annual Asset Class Review
A Global Vision

FOR PAID SUBSCRIBERS ONLY

Featured Trades:

(SPY), (QQQ), (IWM), (GS), (MS), (JPM), (BAC), (C), (BLK),
(TLT), (TBT), (JNK), (PHB), (HYG), (MUB), (LQD), (FXE), (FXY), (FXB), (FXE), (FXA)
(FCX), (BHP), (RIO), (VALE), (DBA), (DIG), (USO), (DUG), (UNG), (USO),
(XLE), (LNG), (CCJ), (VST), (SMR), (GLD), (DGP), (SLV), (PPTL), (PALL),
(ITB), (LEN), (KBH), (PHM)
, (DHI)

https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png 0 0 april@madhedgefundtrader.com https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png april@madhedgefundtrader.com2025-01-08 09:02:472025-01-08 10:24:24January 8, 2025
april@madhedgefundtrader.com

2025 Annual Asset Class Review

Diary, Newsletter, Research

I am once again writing this report from a first-class sleeping cabin on Amtrak’s legendary California Zephyr.

By day, I have a comfortable seat next to a panoramic window. At night, they fold into two bunk beds, a single and a double. There is a shower, but only Houdini can navigate it.

I am anything but Houdini, so I foray downstairs to use the larger public hot showers. They are divine.

 

 

We are now pulling away from Chicago’s Union Station, leaving its hurried commuters, buskers, panhandlers, and majestic great halls behind. I love this building as a monument to American exceptionalism.

I am headed for Emeryville, California, just across the bay from San Francisco, some 2,121.6 miles away. That gives me only 56 hours to complete this report.

I tip my porter, Raymond, $100 in advance to make sure everything goes well during the long adventure and to keep me up to date with the onboard gossip.

The rolling and pitching of the car is causing my fingers to dance all over the keyboard. Microsoft’s Spellchecker can catch most of the mistakes, but not all of them.

 

Chicago’s Union Station

 

As both broadband and cell phone coverage are unavailable along most of the route, I have to rely on frenzied Internet searches during stops at major stations along the way, like Omaha, Salt Lake City, and Reno, to Google obscure data points and download the latest charts.

You know those cool maps in the Verizon stores that show the vast coverage of their cell phone networks? They are complete BS.

Who knew that 95% of America is off the grid? That explains so much about our country today.

I have posted many of my favorite photos from the trip below, although there is only so much you can do from a moving train and an iPhone 16 Pro.

 

 

 

Somewhere in Iowa

 

The Thumbnail Portfolio


Equities – buy dips, but sell rallies too
Bonds – avoid
Foreign Currencies – avoid
Commodities – avoid
Precious Metals – avoid
Energy – avoid
Real Estate – avoid

 

 

1) The Economy – Cooling

I expect a modest 2.0% real GDP growth with a 4.0% inflation rate, giving an unadjusted shrinkage of the economy of negative -2% for 2025. That is down from 0% in in 2024. This may sound discouraging, but believe me, this is the optimistic view. Some of my hedge fund buddies are expecting a zero return over the next four years.

Virtually all independent economists expect the new administration's economic policies will be a drag on both the US and global economies. Trade wars are bad for everyone. When your customers are impoverished, your own business turns south. This is a big deal, since the Magnificent Seven, which accounted for 70% of stock market gains last year, get 60% of their profits from abroad.

The ballooning National Debt is another concern. The last time Trump was in office, he added $10 trillion to the deficit through aggressive tax cuts and spending increases. If this time, he adds another $10-$15 trillion, the National Debt could reach $50 trillion by 2030.

There are two issues here. For a start, Trump will find it a lot harder and more expensive to fund a National Debt at $50 trillion than $20 trillion. Second, borrowing of this unprecedented magnitude, double US GDP, will send interest rates soaring, causing a recession.

The only question then is whether this will be a pandemic-style recession, which took stocks down 30% and recovered quickly, or a 2008 recession which demolished stocks by 52% and dragged on for years.

Hope for the best but expect the worst, unless you want to consider a future career as an Uber driver.

 

 

A Rocky Mountain Moose Family

 

2) Equities – (SPY), (QQQ), (IWM), (GS), (MS), (JPM), (BAC), (C), (BLK)


The outlook for stocks for 2025 is pretty simple. You are going to have to work twice as hard to make half the money you did last year with twice the volatility. You will not be able to be as nowhere near aggressive in 2025 as you were in 2024  It’s a dream scenario for somebody like me. For you, I’m not so sure.

It’s not that US companies aren't growing gangbusters. I expect 2% GDP growth, 15% profit growth, and 12% net margin growth in 2025. But let’s face reality. Stocks are the most expensive they have been in 17 years and we know what happened after 2008. Much of the stock market gain achieved last year was through hefty multiple expansions. This is not good.

Big tech companies might be able to deliver 20% gains and are still the lead sector for the market. Normally that should deliver you a 15%, or $800 gain in the S&P 500 (SPX). We might be able to capture this in the first half of 2025.

Financials will remain the sector with the best risk/reward, and I mean the broader definition of the term, including banks, brokers, money managers, and some small-cap regional banks. The reason is very simple. Their income statements will get juiced at both ends as revenues soar and costs plunge, thanks to deregulation.

No passage of new laws is required to achieve this, just a failure to enforce existing ones. The hint for this is a new SEC chair whose primary interest is promoting the Bitcoin bubble. Buy (GS), (MS), (JPM), (BAC), (C), and (BLK).

However, this is anything but a normal year. Uncertainty is at an eight-year high, thanks to an incoming administration. If the promised policies are delivered, inflation will soar and interest rates will rise, as they already have. We could lose half or all of our stock market gains by the end of 2025.

The big “tell” for this was the awful market performance in December, down 5%. The Dow Average was down ten days in a row for the first time in 70 years. Santa Claus was unceremoniously sent packing. People Are clearly nervous. But then they should be with a bull market that is approaching a decrepit five years in age.

There is a bullish scenario out there and that has Trump doing absolutely nothing in 2025, either because he is unwilling or unable to take action. After all, if the economy isn’t actually broken, why fix it? Better yet, if you own an economy it is better not to break it in the first place.

Nothing substantial can pass Congress with a minuscule one-seat majority in the House of Representatives. There will be no new presidential action through tariffs and only a few token, highly televised deportations, not enough to affect the labor market.

Stocks will not only hold, but they may add to the 15% first-half gains for the year. I give this scenario maybe a 50% probability.

The first indication this is happening is when the presidential characterization of the economy flips in a few months from the world’s worst to the world’s best with no actual change in the numbers. Trump will take all the credit.

You heard it here first.

 

 

Frozen Headwaters of the Colorado River

 

3) Bonds (TLT), (TBT), (JNK), (PHB), (HYG), (MUB), (LQD)

Amtrak needs to fill every seat in the dining car to get everyone fed on time, so you never know who you will share a table with for breakfast, lunch, or dinner.

There was the Vietnam Vet Phantom Jet Pilot who now refused to fly because he was treated so badly at airports. A young couple desperately eloping from Omaha could only afford seats as far as Salt Lake City. After they sat up all night, I paid for their breakfast.

A retired British couple was circumnavigating the entire US in a month on a “See America Pass.” Mennonites returned home by train because their religion forbade travel by automobiles or airplanes.

The big question to ask here after a 100-basis point rise in bond yields in only three months is whether the (TLT) has suffered enough. The short answer is no, not quite yet, but we’re getting close. Fear of Trump policies should eventually take ten-year US Treasury bond yields to 5.00%, and then we will be ready for a pause at a nine-month bottom. After that, it depends on how history unfolds.

If Trump gets everything he wants, inflation will soar, bonds will crash, and 5.00% will be just a pit stop on the way to 6.00%, 7.00%, and who knows what? On the other hand, if Trump gets nothing he says he wants, then both bonds stocks and bonds will rise, creating a Goldilocks scenario for all balanced portfolios and investors.

That also sets up a sweet spot for entry into (TLT) call spreads close to 5.00% yields. A politician campaigning on one policy, then doing the opposite once elected? Stranger things have happened. The black swans will live.

 

 

A Visit to the 19th Century

 

4) Foreign Currencies (FXE), (EUO), (FXC), (FXA), (YCS), (FXY), (CYB)

If your basic assumption for interest rates is that they stay flat or rise, then you have to love the US dollar. Currencies are all about expected interest rate differentials and money always pours into the highest-paying ones. Tariffs will add fat to the fire because any reduction in international trade automatically reduces American trade deficits and is therefore pro-dollar.

This means that you should avoid all foreign currency plays like the plague, including the Euro (FXE), Japanese yen (FXY), British Pound (FXB), Canadian dollar (FXE), and Australian dollar (FXA).

A strong greenback comes with pluses and minuses. It makes our exports expensive and less competitive and therefore creates another drag on the economy. It demolishes traditional weak dollar plays like emerging markets and precious metals. On the other hand, it attracts substantial foreign investments into US stocks and bonds, which has been continuing for the past decade.

Above all, be happy you are paid in US dollars. My foreign clients are getting crushed in an increasingly expensive world.

 

 

 

5) Commodities (FCX), (BHP), (RIO), (VALE), (DBA)

Look at the chart of any commodity stock and you see grim death. Freeport McMoRan (FCX), BHP (BHP), and Rio Tinto (RIO), they’re all the same. They’re all afflicted with the same disease, over-dependence on a robustly growing China, which isn’t growing robustly, if at all.

I firmly believe that this will continue until the current leadership by President Xi Zheng Ping ends. He has spent the last decade globally expanding Chinese interests, engaging in abusive trade practices, hacking, and attacking American allies like Taiwan and the Philippines.  You can only wave a red flag in front of the US before it comes back to bite you. A trade war with the US is now imminent.

This will happen sooner than later. The Chinese people don’t like being poor for very long. This is why I didn’t get sucked in on the Chinese long side in the fall, as many hedge funds did.

If China wants to go back to playing nice, as they did in the eighties and nineties, China should return to return to high growth and commodities will look like great “Buys” down here. If they don’t, American growth alone should eventually pull commodities up, as our economy is now growing at a long-term average gross unadjusted 6.00% rate. So the question is how long this takes.

It may pay to start nibbling on the best quality bombed-out names now, like those above.

 

 

Snow Angel on the Continental Divide

 

6) Energy (DIG), (USO), (DUG), (UNG), (USO), (XLE), (LNG), (CCJ), (VST), (SMR)

Energy was one of the worst-performing sectors in the market for the second year in a row and 2025 is looking no better. New supplies are surging, while demand remains stuck in the mud, with the US now producing an incredible 13.5 million barrels a day. OPEC is dead.

EVs now make up 10% of the US auto fleet, and much more in other countries, are making a big dent. Some 50% of all new car sales in China, the world’s largest market, are EVs. The number of barrels of oil needed to increase a unit of American GDP is plunging, as it has done for 25 years, through increased efficiencies. Remember your old Lincoln Continental that used to get eight miles per gallon? Now it gets 27.

Worse yet, a major black swan hovers over the sector. If the Ukraine War somehow ends, some ten million barrels a day of Russian oil will hit the market. Oil prices should plunge to $50 a barrel.

There are always exceptions to the rule, and energy plays not dependent on the price of oil would be a good one. So is natural gas, which will benefit from Cheniere Energy’s (LNG) third export terminal coming online, increasing exports to China. Ukraine cutting off Russian gas flowing to Europe will assure there is plenty of new demand.

But I prefer investing in sectors that have tailwinds and not headwinds. Better leave energy to the pros who have the inside information they need to make money here.

If someone is holding a gun to your head tell you that you MUST invest in energy, go for the new nuclear plays like (CCJ), (VST), and (SMR). We are only at the becoming of the small modular reactor trend, which could accelerate for decades.

 

 

 

7) Precious Metals (GLD), (DGP), (SLV), (PPTL), (PALL)

The train has added extra engines at Denver, so now we may begin the long laboring climb up the Eastern slope of the Rocky Mountains.

On a steep curve, we pass along an antiquated freight train of hopper cars filled with large boulders.

The porter tells me this train is welded to the tracks to create a windbreak. Once, a gust howled out of the pass so swiftly, that it blew a passenger train over on its side.

In the snow-filled canyons, we saw a family of three moose, a huge herd of elk, and another group of wild mustangs. The engineer informs us that a rare bald eagle is flying along the left side of the train. It’s a good omen for the coming year.

We also see countless abandoned 19th-century gold mines and the broken-down wooden trestles leading to huge piles of tailings, relics of previous precious metals booms. So, it is timely here to speak about the future of precious metals.

We certainly got a terrific run on precious metals in 2025, with gold at its highs up 33% and silver up 65%. The miners did even better. Even after the post-election selloff, it was still one of the best-performing asset classes of the year.

But the heat has definitely gone out of this trade. The prospect of higher interest rates for longer in 2025 has sent short-term traders elsewhere. That’s because the opportunity cost of owning precious metals is rising since they pay no interest rates or dividends. And let’s face it, there was definitely new competition for hot money from crypto, which doubled after the election.

The sector is not dead, it is resting. Central bank buying of the barbarous relic continues unabated, especially among sanctioned countries, like Russia and China. Gold is still the principal savings vehicle for many Chinese. They are not going to recover confidence in their own currency, banks, or government anytime soon. And there is still slow but steadily rising industrial demand from solar sectors.

Gold supply has also been falling for years, while costs are rising at least at double the headline inflation rate. So it’s just a matter of time before the supply/demand balance comes back in our favor. Where the final bottom is anyone’s guess as gold lacks the traditional valuation parameters of other asset classes, like dividends or interest paid. We’ll just have to wait for Mr. Market to tell us, who is always right.

Give (GLD), (SLV), (GDX), (GOLD), and (WPM) a rest for now but I’ll be back.

 

 

Crossing the Great Nevada Desert Near Area 51

 

8) Real Estate (ITB), (LEN), (KBH), (PHM), (DHI)

The majestic snow-covered Rocky Mountains are behind me. There is now a paucity of scenery, with the endless ocean of sagebrush and salt flats of Northern Nevada outside my window, so there is nothing else to do but write. 

My apologies in advance to readers in Wells, Elko, Battle Mountain, and Winnemucca, Nevada.

It is a route long traversed by roving bands of Indians, itinerant fur traders, the Pony Express, my own immigrant forebearers in wagon trains, the Transcontinental Railroad, the Lincoln Highway, and finally US Interstate 80, which was built for the 1960 Winter Olympics at Squaw Valley, California.

Passing by shantytowns and the forlorn communities of the high desert, I am prompted to comment on the state of the US real estate market.

Real estate was a nice earner for us in 2024 in the new homes sector. The election promptly demolished this trade with the prospect of higher interest rates for longer. Expect this unwelcome drag to continue in 2025.

I am not expecting a housing crash unless interest rates take off. More likely it will continue to grind sideways on low volume. That’s because the market has support from a structural shortage of 10 million homes in the US, the debris left over from the 2008 housing crash. That’s why there is still a Millennial living in your basement. Homebuilders now prioritize profit margins over market share.

I expect this sector to come back someday. New homebuilders have the advantage of offering free upgrades and discounted in-house financing. Avoid for now (DHI), (KBH), (TOL), and (PHM).

 

 

Crossing the Bridge to Home Sweet Home

9) Postscript

We have pulled into the station at Truckee amid a howling blizzard.

My loyal staff have made the ten-mile trek from my estate at Incline Village to welcome me to California with a couple of hot breakfast burritos and a chilled bottle of Dom Perignon Champagne, which has been cooling in a nearby snowbank. I am thankfully spared from taking my last meal with Amtrak.

 

After that, it was over legendary Donner Pass, and then all downhill from the Sierras, across the Central Valley, and into the Sacramento River Delta.

Well, that’s all for now. We’ve just passed what was left of the Pacific mothball fleet moored near the Benicia Bridge (2,000 ships down to six in 80 years). The pressure increase caused by a 7,200-foot descent from Donner Pass has crushed my plastic water bottle. Nice science experiment!

The Golden Gate Bridge and the soaring spire of Salesforce Tower are just coming into view across San Francisco Bay.

A storm has blown through, leaving the air crystal clear and the bay as flat as glass. It is time for me to unplug my MacBook Pro, iPad, and iPhone, pick up my various adapters, and pack up.

We arrive in Emeryville 45 minutes early. With any luck, I can squeeze in a ten-mile night hike up Grizzly Peak tonight and still get home in time to watch the ball drop in New York’s Times Square on TV.

I reach the ridge just in time to catch a spectacular pastel sunset over the Pacific Ocean. The omens are there. It is going to be another good year.

I’ll shoot you a Trade Alert whenever I see a window open at a sweet spot on any of the dozens of trades described above, which should be soon.

Good luck and good trading in 2025!

John Thomas
The Mad Hedge Fund Trader

 

The Omens Are Good for 2025!

https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/01/Zephyr.jpg 342 451 april@madhedgefundtrader.com https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png april@madhedgefundtrader.com2025-01-08 09:00:172025-02-20 12:40:412025 Annual Asset Class Review
april@madhedgefundtrader.com

November 6, 2024

Diary, Newsletter, Summary

Global Market Comments
November 6, 2024
Fiat Lux

 

Featured Trade:

(WHY TECHNICAL ANALYSIS DOESN’T WORK)
(SPY), (QQQ), (IWM), (VIX),
(TESTIMONIAL)

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Arthur Henry

Why Technical Analysis is a Disaster

Diary, Newsletter

I recently heard an amazing piece of information from a subscriber.

Fidelity recently conducted a study to identify their best-performing clients.

They neatly fell into two groups: people who forgot they had an account at Fidelity and dead people.

It all underlines the futility of trading the markets without true professional guidance such as you get here at Mad Hedge Fund Trader, something many aspire to, but few actually accomplish.

Of the many thousands of online newsletters and trade mentoring services, I only know of three that actually make money for clients.

Those would be mine and two others, and I’m not taking about who the other two are.

It is an industry filled with professional marketers, charlatans, and conmen. I recently figured out that industries that employ a lot of specific jargon attract conmen because it is so easy to convince people of your expertise. Those are the health supplement and financial industries.

Let me point out a few harsh lessons learned from this most recent meltdown.

We are now transitioning from a “Sell in May” to a “Buy in November” posture.

The next six months are ones of historical seasonal market strength (click here for the misty origins of this trend at “If You Sell in May, What To Do in April?”).

The big lesson learned this summer was the utter uselessness of technical analyses. Usually, these guys are right only 50% of the time. This year, they missed the boat entirely.

When the S&P 500 (SPY) was meandering in a narrow nine-point range, and the Volatility Index (VIX) hugged the $12 neighborhood, they said this would continue for the rest of the year.

It didn’t.

This is why technical analysis is utterly useless as an investment strategy. How many hedge funds use a pure technical strategy on a stand-alone basis?

Absolutely none, as it doesn’t make any money.

At best, it is just one of 100 tools you need to trade the market effectively. The shorter the time frame, the more accurate it becomes.

On an intraday basis, technical analysis is actually quite useful. But I doubt few of you engage in this hopeless persuasion. Most senior investors would rather spend their time on a golf course than be glued to a screen.

Leave it for the kids.

This is why I advise portfolio managers and financial advisors to use technical analysis as a means of timing order executions, and nothing more.

Most professionals agree with me. That’s why so much volume bunches up at the opening and the close every day, to get a nice average.

Technical analysis derives from humans’ preference for looking at pictures instead of engaging in abstract mental processes. A picture is worth 1,000 words, and probably a lot more.

This is why technical analysis appeals to so many young people entering the market for the first time.

Buy a book for $5 on Amazon, and you can become a Master of the Universe.

Who can resist that?

The problem is that high frequency traders also bought that same book from Amazon a long time ago and have designed algorithms to frustrate every move of the technical analyst.

Sorry to be the buzz kill, but that is my take on technical analysis.

I have a much better solution than forgetting you have a trading account or dying.

Take Cunard’s round-the-world cruise (click here for the link).

I have been sailing with Cunard since the 1970’s when the original Queen Elizabeth was still afloat.

I’ve lost count of how many Transatlantic voyages I have taken across the pond.

For a mere $19,999 you can spend 122 days circumnavigating the globe with Cunard from Southampton, England in their cheapest inside cabin.

That includes all the food you can eat for four months.

On the way you can visit such exotic destinations as Bora Bora, The Seychelles, Reunion, and Moorea.

Not a bad deal.

By the time you get home, you will probably earn enough in your investment account to pay for the entire trip.

Hope you enjoyed your cruise.

 

 

 

 

 

 

John in Owner's Suite

Correction? What Correction?

https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/11/map-e1510537233179.jpg 255 580 Arthur Henry https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Arthur Henry2024-11-06 09:04:402024-11-06 16:28:23Why Technical Analysis is a Disaster
april@madhedgefundtrader.com

September 2, 2024

Diary, Newsletter, Summary

Global Market Comments
September 2, 2024
Fiat Lux

 

Featured Trade:

( AUGUST 28 BIWEEKLY STRATEGY WEBINAR Q&A),
(SMCI), (QQQ), (CRWD), (NVDA), (TSLA), (GOLD), (BRK/B), (BAC), (AAPL)

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april@madhedgefundtrader.com

August 28 Biweekly Strategy Webinar Q&A

Diary, Newsletter

Below please find subscribers’ Q&A for the August 28 Mad Hedge Fund Trader Global Strategy Webinar, broadcast from Santa Barbara, CA.

Q: What is your opinion on Supermicro (SMCI)?

A: I can tell you that all fund managers have the same reaction as I do when they hear the words “accounting irregularities” ….run. So, if you haven’t, I would get out. If you’re looking to get in, there’s probably a great opportunity somewhere, but not here. Their product isn’t that high-tech, cooling racks for artificial intelligence servers. But it did have the letters “AI” attached, so it went up 50-fold. But Hindenburg is occasionally right on their research reports, although they’re wildly exaggerated to enhance their short positions. I would stay out of the way on that one for now.

Q: Are there any startup companies worth investing in on the public market right now?

A: No, because new listings are always overhyped. They come in usually double their true value. This happened with Tesla (TSLA)—I think Tesla came out at $32, I waited for the 50% selloff and all the marketing hype to wear off and I bought it at $16, and of course, that's probably about 60 cents now on a split-adjusted basis. So, I don't play the IPO game. If an IPO really is hot, chances are your broker won’t give it to you anyway; he'll give it to his largest clients. That's probably not you. So, I don't get involved in that game, I look at the aftermath. And in hot markets, there is no aftermath, you just watch them go up. The answer to that is a firm no.

Q: Home prices just hit new all-time highs, according to the S&P Case-Shiller. How do the prices keep rising with high interest rates?

A: Because people expect interest rates to fall, and they are doing so dramatically. If you look at all the interest-sensitive sectors which I've been recommending for the last four months, they've all been on fire. So if the cost of your mortgage is about to drop by half, housing prices should double, and we are starting to see that double now.

Q: Should we buy a put on the (QQQ) based on Nvidia (NVDA) earnings?

A: Nobody knows what the Nvidia earnings are going to be, so if you're willing to make a bet on a coin toss, go ahead and do it. I don't make bets on coin tosses. I make bets when there's a 90% chance that I'm going win, and there are no 90% chance trades out there anywhere in any asset class right now. It's better to watch and wait for the next opportunity. If Nvidia sells off 10% on a weak guidance, then I would be in there with both hands buying, because Nvidia is still cheap relative to the rest of the sector and the rest and of the market. And if Nvidia goes up 20%, I might even sell it short. I have shorted Nvidia this year a couple of times this year, and made money both times, so that is the trade. But right here we're in the middle of the next likely range, so no trade there at all.

Q: Will CrowdStrike (CRWD) have a financial liability for the problem it created by crashing the world's travel computers?

A: Yes, and that will no doubt be the subject of litigation for the next 10 years, which I would rather not get involved in.

Q: The tech industry keeps cutting white-collar jobs, and they have been for some time. At which point does this subside, and won’t this crush employment in Silicon Valley?

A: Well, it’s already crushed employment by about 300,000 in Silicon Valley, but artificial intelligence is now starting to soak up those employees, and they certainly are soaking up the office space, which is why the smart money that is now pouring into San Francisco buying up office buildings for pennies on the dollar. They see an employment recovery. In the meantime, buy the Magnificent Seven stocks, because they’re creating profits by cutting the excess staff which they always used to keep.

Q: When you talk about Tesla (TSLA) losing ground in the EV market, do you see the company broadening out its technologies, and growing the company down other avenues?

A: Absolutely, yes. They have a very fast-growing solar panel business, an industrial-scale battery business, and of course, they're basically running the charging network for the entire United States and the entire world. They also have new batteries under development that have the potential to increase car ranges 20 times at zero cost. Elon always has at least a dozen or so other projects underway, many of which he keeps secret. What you have to keep track of is how many of these accrue to Tesla, and how many accrue earnings to his other companies, like SpaceX, Neuralink, and xAI. SpaceX is going gangbusters right now because guess what? They're planning an IPO in the near future and should get a big multiple. xAI just raised $6 billion in a VC round.

Q: How can Nvidia (NVDA) go higher tonight if it disappoints?

A: It won't. It will drop about 10%. I'm just saying you can go higher into next year on 50% earnings growth, but we may have to give back 10%, 20%, or in the case of August 5th, 40% before we can go forward.

Q: Whatever happened to the commercial real estate problem? How is that taken care of so tightly by private capital?

A: It's a play on falling interest rates. A lot of buildings were going for 10 cents on the dollar in Manhattan and in San Francisco, so these guys know bargains, and they're long-term players, and that's how they always make money in that business. I've been watching it for 50 years, and their market timing is excellent.

Q: What will the effects of de-dollarization mean to the long-term health of the stock market?

A: Nothing, because de-dollarization isn't going to happen. It's more or less an internet conspiracy theory. There's no serious move whatsoever to replace the US Dollar, and Bitcoin or crypto in general never got to more than 1% of the total value of US dollars out there, and plus it's had its problems. So I don't think de-dollarization is going to happen in my lifetime.

Q: Why is Warren Buffett (BRK/B) unloading shares in Apple (APPL) and Bank of America (BAC)?

A: He thinks the whole market is expensive, and I would agree with him. He likes having a lot of cash during recessions or during major market crashes, so he can swoop in and buy whole companies. So that is the answer. He's thought the market has been expensive for years now, but that doesn't seem to stop them from making money.

Q: Should we take profit on the LEAPS in Barrick Gold (GOLD) expiring in January?

A: Yes, you should take the profit here. You make maybe 20% or 30% and then wait for the next sell-off, and then go back into (GOLD), but add an extra year to the expiration date. Do a 2026 instead of a 2025, because we're getting kind of short on time on all the January 2025 expirations. So that would be the smart thing to do, is to take profits on all your January 25 LEAPS, raise cash, and go back in into an 18-month LEAP on the next sell-off, and I will be reminding you to do exactly that when it happens.

Q: Should we wait until after the election to invest?

A: No. The market will start running before the election, especially if the election outcome becomes more and more certain. So that kind of sets up an October bottom for the market, and maybe even a September one—who knows? We will just have to see how the polls go, even though they are usually wrong. So that's what I would do on that.

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, select your subscription (GLOBAL TRADING DISPATCH, TECHNOLOGY LETTER, or Jacquie's Post), then click on WEBINARS, and all the webinars from the last 12 years are there in all their glory

Good Luck and Good Trading,

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

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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april@madhedgefundtrader.com

March 8, 2024

Diary, Newsletter, Summary

Global Market Comments
March 8, 2024
Fiat Lux

 

Featured Trade:

(MARCH 6 BIWEEKLY STRATEGY WEBINAR Q&A),
(SPX), (QQQ), (PANW), (SNOW), (NVDA), (GLD), (GOLD), (NEM), (BA), (AMZN), (TLT), (AAPL), (COIN)

 

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