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Tag Archive for: (QQQ)

Mad Hedge Fund Trader

2022 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 two comfortable seats facing each other 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 could navigate it.

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I am anything but Houdini, so I go 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.

 

 

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 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 better photos from the trip below, although there is only so much you can do from a moving train and an iPhone 12X pro.

Here is the bottom line which I have been warning you about for months. In 2022, you are going to have to work twice as hard to earn half as much money with double the volatility.

It’s not that I’ve turned bearish. The cause of the next bear market, a recession, is at best years off. However, we are entering the third year of the greatest bull market of all time. Expectations have to be toned down and brought back to earth. Markets will no longer be so strong that they forgive all mistakes, even mine.

2022 will be a trading year. Play it right, and you will make a fortune. Get lazy and complacent and you’ll be lucky to get out with your skin still attached.

If you think I spend too much time absorbing conspiracy theories or fake news from the Internet, let me give you a list of the challenges I see financial markets are facing in the coming year:

 

 

The Ten Key Variables for 2022

1) How soon will the Omicron wave peak?
2) Will the end of the Fed’s quantitative easing knock the wind out of the bond market?
3) Will the Russians invade the Ukraine or just bluster as usual?
4) How much of a market diversion will the US midterm elections present?
5) Will technology stocks continue to dominate, or will domestic recovery, and value stocks take over for good?
6) Can the commodities boom get a second wind?
7) How long will the bull market for the US dollar continue?
8) Will the real estate boom continue, or are we headed for a crash?
9) Has international trade been permanently impaired or will it recover?
10) Is oil seeing a dead cat bounce or is this a sustainable recovery?

 

 

 

The Thumbnail Portfolio

Equities – buy dips
Bonds – sell rallies
Foreign Currencies – stand aside
Commodities – buy dips
Precious Metals – stand aside
Energy – stand aside
Real Estate – buy dips
Bitcoin – Buy dips

 

 

1) The Economy 

What happens after a surprise variant takes Covid cases to new all-time highs, the Fed tightens, and inflation soars?

Covid cases go to zero, the Fed flip flops to an ease and inflation moderates to its historical norm of 3% annually.

It all adds up to a 5% US GDP growth in 2022, less than last year’s ballistic 7% rate, but still one of the hottest growth rates in history.

If Joe Biden’s build-back batter plan passes, even in diminished form, that could add another 1%.

Once the supply chain chaos resolves inflation will cool. But after everyone takes delivery of their over orders conditions could cool.

This sets up a Goldilocks economy that could go on for years: high growth, low inflation, and full employment. Help wanted signs will slowly start to disappear. A 3% handle on Headline Unemployment is within easy reach.

 

A Rocky Mountain Moose Family

 

2) Equities (SPX), (QQQ), (IWM) (AAPL), (XLF), (BAC)

The weak of heart may want to just index and take a one-year cruise around the world instead in 2022 (here's the link for Cunard).

So here is the perfect 2022 for stocks. A 10% dive in the first half, followed by a rip-roaring 20% rally in the second half. This will be the year when a big rainy-day fund, i.e., a mountain of cash to spend at market bottoms, will be worth its weight in gold.

That will enable us to load up with LEAPS at the bottom and go 100% invested every month in H2.

That should net us a 50% profit or better in 2022, or about half of what we made last year.

Why am I so cautious?

Because for the first time in seven years we are going to have to trade with a headwind of rising interest rates. However, I don’t think rates will rise enough to kill off the bull market, just give traders a serious scare.

The barbell strategy will keep working. When rates rise, financials, the cheapest sector in the market, will prosper. When they fall, Big Tech will take over, but not as much as last year.

The main support for the market right now is very simple. The investors who fell victim to capitulation selling that took place at the end of November never got back in. Shrinking volume figures prove that. Their efforts to get back in during the new year could take the S&P 500 as high as $5,000 in January.

After that the trading becomes treacherous. Patience is a virtue, and you should only continue new longs when the Volatility Index (VIX) tops $30. If that means doing nothing for months so be it.

We had four 10% corrections in 2021. 2022 will be the year of the 10% correction.

Energy, Big Tech, and financials will be the top-performing sectors of 2022. Big Tech saw a 20% decline in multiples in 2022 and will deliver another 30% rise in earnings in 2022, so they should remain at the core of any portfolio.

It will be a stock pickers market. But so was 2021, with 51% of S&P 500 performance coming from just two stocks, Tesla (TSLA) and Alphabet (GOOGL).

However, they are already so over-owned that they are prone to dead periods as long as eight months, as we saw last year. That makes a multipronged strategy essential.

 

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, and 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 are returning home by train because their religion forbade automobiles or airplanes.

The national debt ballooned to an eye-popping $30 trillion in 2021, a gain of an incredible $3 trillion and a post-World War II record. Yet, as long as global central banks are still flooding the money supply with trillions of dollars in liquidity, bonds will not fall in value too dramatically. I’m expecting a slow grind down in prices and up in yields.

The great bond short of 2021 never happened. Even though bonds delivered their worst returns in 19 years, they still remained nearly unchanged. That wasn’t good enough for the many hedge funds, which had to cover massive money-losing shorts into yearend.

Instead, the Great Bond Crash will become a 2022 business. This time, bonds face the gale force headwinds of three promised interest rates hikes. The year-end government bond auctions were a complete disaster.

Fed borrowing continues to balloon out of control. It’s just a matter of time before the last billion dollars in government borrowing breaks the camel’s back.

That makes a bond short a core position in any balanced portfolio. Don’t get lazy. Make sure you only sell a rally lest we get trapped in a range, as we did for most of 2021.

 

A Visit to the 19th Century

 

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

For the first time in ages, I did no foreign exchange trades last year. That is a good thing because I was wrong about the direction of the dollar for the entire year.

Sometimes, passing on bad trades is more important than finding good ones.

I focused on exploding US debt and trade deficits undermining the greenback and igniting inflation. The market focused on delta and omicron variants heralding new recessions. The market won.

The market won’t stay wrong forever. Just as bond crash is temporarily in a holding pattern, so is a dollar collapse. When it does occur, it will happen in a hurry.

 

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

The global synchronized economic recovery now in play can mean only one thing, and that is sustainably higher commodity prices.

The twin Covid variants put commodities on hold in 2021 because of recession fears. So did the Chinese real estate slowdown, the world’s largest consumer of hard commodities.

The heady days of the 2011 commodity bubble top are now in play. Investors are already front running that move, loading the boat with Freeport McMoRan (FCX), US Steel (X), and BHP Group (BHP).

Now that this sector is convinced of an eventual weak US dollar and higher inflation, it is once more the apple of traders’ eyes.

China will still demand prodigious amounts of imported commodities once again, but not as much as in the past. Much of the country has seen its infrastructure build out, and it is turning from a heavy industrial to a service-based economy, like the US. Investors are keeping a sharp eye on India as the next major commodity consumer.

And here’s another big new driver. Each electric vehicle requires 200 pounds of copper and production is expected to rise from 1 million units a year to 25 million by 2030. Annual copper production will have to increase 11-fold in a decade to accommodate this increase, no easy task, or prices will have to ride.

The great thing about commodities is that it takes a decade to bring new supply online, unlike stocks and bonds, which can merely be created by an entry in an excel spreadsheet. As a result, they always run far higher than you can imagine.

Accumulate commodities on dips.

 

Snow Angel on the Continental Divide

 

6) Energy (DIG), (RIG), (USO), (DUG), (UNG), (USO), (XLE), (AMLP)

Energy may be the top-performing sector of 2022. But remember, you will be trading an asset class that is eventually on its way to zero.

However, you could have several doublings on the way to zero. This is one of those times.

The real tell here is that energy companies are drinking their own Kool-Aid. Instead of reinvesting profits back into their new exploration and development, as they have for the last century, they are paying out more in dividends.

There is the additional challenge in that the bulk of US investors, especially environmentally friendly ESG funds, are now banned from investing in legacy carbon-based stocks. That means permanently cheap valuations and shares prices for the energy industry.

Energy stocks are also massively under-owned, making them prone to rip-you-face-off short squeezes. Energy now counts for only 3% of the S&P 500. Twenty years ago it boasted a 15% weighting.

The gradual shut down of the industry makes the supply/demand situation more volatile. Therefore, we could top $100 a barrel for oil in 2022, dragging the stocks up kicking and screaming all the way.

Unless you are a seasoned, peripatetic, sleep-deprived trader, there are better fish to fry.

 

 

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 them, relics of previous precious metals booms. So, it is timely here to speak about the future of precious metals.

Fortunately, when a trade isn’t working, I avoid it. That certainly was the case with gold last year.

2021 was a terrible year for precious metals. With inflation soaring, stocks volatile, and interest rates going nowhere, gold had every reason to rise. Instead, it fell for almost all of the entire year.

Bitcoin stole gold’s thunder, sucking in all of the speculative interest in the financial system. Jewelry and industrial demand was just not enough to keep gold afloat.

This will not be a permanent thing. Chart formations are starting to look encouraging, and they certainly win the price for a big laggard rotation. So, buy gold on dips if you have a stick of courage on you.

Would You Believe This is a Blue State?

 

8) Real Estate (ITB), (LEN)

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 banks 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.

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.

There is no doubt a long-term bull market in real estate will continue for another decade, although from here prices will appreciate at a 5%-10% slower rate.

There is a generational structural shortage of supply with housing which won’t come back into balance until the 2030s.

There are only three numbers you need to know in the housing market for the next 20 years: there are 80 million baby boomers, 65 million Generation Xer’s who follow them, and 86 million in the generation after that, the Millennials.

The boomers have been unloading dwellings to the Gen Xers since prices peaked in 2007. But there are not enough of the latter, and three decades of falling real incomes mean that they only earn a fraction of what their parents made. That’s what caused the financial crisis.

If they have prospered, banks won’t lend to them. Brokers used to say that their market was all about “location, location, location.” Now it is “financing, financing, financing.” Imminent deregulation is about to deep-six that problem.

There is a happy ending to this story.

Millennials now aged 26-44 are now the dominant buyers in the market. They are transitioning from 30% to 70% of all new buyers of homes.

The Great Millennial Migration to the suburbs and Middle America has just begun. Thanks to Zoom, many are never returning to the cities. So has the migration from the coast to the American heartland. 

That’s why Boise, Idaho was the top-performing real estate market in 2021, followed by Phoenix, Arizona. Personally, I like Reno, Nevada, where Apple, Google, Amazon, and Tesla are building factories as fast as they can. 

As a result, the price of single-family homes should rocket during the 2020s, as they did during the 1970s and the 1990s when similar demographic forces were at play.

This will happen in the context of a coming labor shortfall, soaring wages, and rising standards of living.

Rising rents are accelerating this trend. Renters now pay 35% of their gross income, compared to only 18% for owners, and less, when multiple deductions and tax subsidies are taken into account. Rents are now rising faster than home prices.

Remember, too, that the US will not have built any new houses in large numbers in 13 years. The 50% of small home builders that went under during the crash aren’t building new homes today.

We are still operating at only a half of the peak rate. Thanks to the Great Recession, the construction of five million new homes has gone missing in action.

That makes a home purchase now particularly attractive for the long term, to live in, and not to speculate with.

You will boast to your grandchildren how little you paid for your house, as my grandparents once did to me ($3,000 for a four-bedroom brownstone in Brooklyn in 1922), or I do to my kids ($180,000 for a two-bedroom Upper East Side Manhattan high rise with a great view of the Empire State Building in 1983).

That means the major homebuilders like Lennar (LEN), Pulte Homes (PHM), and KB Homes (KBH) are a buy on the dip.

Quite honestly, of all the asset classes mentioned in this report, purchasing your abode is probably the single best investment you can make now. It’s also a great inflation play.

If you borrow at a 3.0% 30-year fixed rate, and the long-term inflation rate is 3%, then, over time, you will get your house for free.

How hard is that to figure out? That math degree from UCLA is certainly earning its keep.

 

Crossing the Bridge to Home Sweet Home

 

9) Bitcoin

It’s not often that new asset classes are made out of whole cloth. That is what happened with Bitcoin, which, in 2021, became a core holding of many big institutional investors.

But get used to the volatility. After doubling in three months, Bitcoin gave up all its gains by year-end. You have to either trade Bitcoin like a demon or keep your positions so small you can sleep at night.

By the way, right now is a good place to establish a new position in Bitcoin.

 

10) Postscript

We have pulled into the station at Truckee in the midst of a howling blizzard.

My loyal staff has made the ten-mile trek from my beachfront 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 resting 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 50 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 around the next bend 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 and iPhone 13 Pro, 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 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.

Good luck and good trading in 2022!

John Thomas
The Mad Hedge Fund Trader

 

 

The Omens Are Good for 2022!

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Mad Hedge Fund Trader

January 5, 2022

Tech Letter

Mad Hedge Technology Letter
January 5, 2022
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:

(10 REASONS WHY THE DIGITAL ECONOMY IS THRIVING)
(QQQ)

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Mad Hedge Fund Trader

10 Reasons Why Digital Economy is Thriving

Tech Letter

The outlier out there is inexorably linked with technology because, since early 2020, we have experienced a renaissance in efficiency and productivity, largely driven by our weaponization of technology that strongly feeds into the overall economy.

This drove the United States economy to higher growth rates in 2021, and the market isn’t expecting close to 6% of US economic growth in 2022 after the Build Back Better bill was thrown in the dustbin by the Senate.

The truth is that America has never been better at creating quality growth, and that largely flies in the face of mercantilist economies who build inefficient ghost cities or spew out pollution to register growth.

There has never been a better time to be employed in the United States, and the pandemic brought on a revelation of newly formed companies offering highly specialized services in droves.

If you travel abroad, many countries have in fact lost services in aggregate and have largely not replaced because many emerging cities don’t have the spirit of entrepreneurship, access to robust digital infrastructure, or access to cheap capital like in the US.

Although working remotely is not entirely unique to the United States, the U.S. has integrated this phenomenon into the social fabric of daily work life better than almost any other country.

Japanese workers are still required for in-person office time to use the office fax machine and Europe has made inroads to working remotely but workers often don’t push back on their bosses because of the nominal lack of jobs on the European continent.

Here is a list and explanation of the new type of economy we are thriving in in 2022 and the present synergies that could lead the US economy to surprise to the upside for the foreseeable future.

  1. Increased Efficiency and Productivity

Technology has always been a catalyst for efficiency.

Adopting modern technology like the cloud, mobile devices, big data, and analytics help businesses achieve higher levels of efficiency and productivity.

Supplementing these platforms is the ability to sprinkle in AI to supercharge the performance by harnessing data to make predictive decisions in real-time.

  1. Optimal Resource Management

Firms need to maximize their resources for optimal growth, from capital and labor to suppliers and inventory.

Cloud computing has been adopted widely to support resource sharing across different departments within organizations from an IT standpoint.

The internet of things (IoT) is helping businesses track their resources in near real-time, offering greater visibility into how they are being used and where improvement is needed.

  1. Added Resiliency and Agility

Technology is an enabler for business agility. Companies can leverage new technologies like IoT and blockchain to develop highly resilient business ecosystems.

  1. Enhanced Digital Presence

Every company is turning into a digital company if they like it or not. This means having a well-designed website and being easy to navigate, active on social media platforms, and engaging with customers online. The end game here is being able to bypass retail and communicate directly with customers.

  1. Improved Customer Engagements

To overperform, businesses need to engage with their customers meaningfully.

Technology can help businesses do this by providing tools to understand their customer’s needs and wants. Data analytics and AI, for example, can be used to create customer profiles, which can then be used to provide personalized customer experiences.

  1. Increased Responsiveness To Business Needs

Top companies today deploy IT systems with built-in flexibility and scalability, which deliver instantaneous service when need be.  

These AI-based technologies can perform repeatable tasks, freeing employees to focus on more valuable work requiring human intelligence. Also, robotic chatbots can assist human employees in providing high-quality customer service.

  1. Cutting Edge Innovation

Today’s employees are technologically savvy, and they expect to use technology in their work.

New technologies like IoT and AI can help harness hidden knowledge within data and transform it into actionable business insights. Such insight-driven companies can make smarter decisions and identify new revenue streams.

  1. Shorter Time To Deliver A Product

Today’s market is full of innovative startups who are able to harness technology so well that they can deliver new products in days if not hours. Businesses need to be able to sense emerging threats and opportunities early on, and being able to bring products to market faster than the competition is crucial to staying ahead.

  1. Increased Revenue Opportunity

Businesses can use big data analytics to identify new market opportunities and potential customer segments. They can also use data-driven marketing techniques like predictive analytics to create targeted marketing campaigns.

  1. Increased Transparency and Visibility

To make informed and timely decisions, businesses need accurate and up-to-date information.

Digital technologies can offer a better understanding of the current realities of the industry and how that translates onto a balance sheet. This allows for better decision-making, more effective business processes, and a more robust overall company culture.

In a Yahoo Finance interview with hedge fund manager Jeffrey Gundlach, Gundlach espouses that he has benefited big by betting the ranch on the American economy up until now, and he pauses to say that emerging economies’ equities are cheap, and he likes to buy assets that are cheap.

But he fails to realize that these economies are cheap for a reason, and even if the quality of life has improved drastically in places like Central Europe and Southeast Asia in the past 30 years, it does not mean the foundations are there for a catch-up trade, let alone a tech catch up trade, that relies on momentum investing.

In fact, America has extended its lead as the place everyone wants to invest in, which is why sovereign wealth funds of all sorts have been looking to get into American single-family homes since the pandemic started.

I believe there is a nice surprise to the upside when it comes to tech stocks because companies are using the 10 different ways listed above to supercharge their business models.

Of course, this also depends on the Fed pulling back from its aggressiveness which isn’t guaranteed. 

digital

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Mad Hedge Fund Trader

October 8, 2021

Tech Letter

Mad Hedge Technology Letter
October 8, 2021
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:

(THE EASY WAY TO PLAY THE CLOUD)
(WCLD), (EMCLOUD), (QQQ)

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Mad Hedge Fund Trader

The Easy Way to Play the Cloud

Tech Letter

Overperformance is mainly about the art of taking complicated data and finding perfect solutions for it. Trading in technology stocks is no different.

Investing in software-based cloud stocks has been one of the seminal themes I have promulgated since the launch of the Mad Hedge Technology Letter way back in February 2018.

I hit the nail on the head and many of you have prospered from my early calls on AMD, Micron to growth stocks like Square, PayPal, and Roku. I’ve hit on many of the cutting-edge themes.

Well, if you STILL thought every tech letter until now has been useless, this is the one that should whet your appetite.

Instead of racking your brain to find the optimal cloud stock to invest in, I have a quick fix for you and your friends.

Invest in The WisdomTree Cloud Computing Fund (WCLD) which aims to track the price and yield performance, before fees and expenses, of the BVP Nasdaq Emerging Cloud Index (EMCLOUD).

What Is Cloud Computing?

The “cloud” refers to the aggregation of information online that can be accessed from anywhere, on any device remotely.

Yes, something like this does exist and we have been chronicling the development of the cloud since this tech letter’s launch.

The cloud was the concept powering the “shelter-at-home” trade.

Cloud companies provide on-demand services to a centralized pool of information technology (IT) resources via a network connection.

Even though cloud computing already touches a significant portion of our everyday lives, the adoption is on the verge of overwhelming the rest of the business world due to advancements in artificial intelligence and the Internet of Things (IoT) hyper-improving efficiencies.

The Cloud Software Advantage

Cloud computing has particularly transformed the software industry.

Over the last decade, cloud Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) businesses have dominated traditional software companies as the new industry standard for deploying and updating software. Cloud-based SaaS companies provide software applications and services via a network connection from a remote location, whereas traditional software is delivered and supported on-premise and often manually. I will give you a list of differences to several distinct fundamental advantages for cloud versus traditional software.

Product Advantages

Speed, Ease, and Low Cost of Implementation – cloud software is installed via a network connection; it doesn’t require the higher cost of on-premise infrastructure setup maintenance, and installation.

Efficient Software Updates – upgrades and support are deployed via a network connection, which shifts the burden of software maintenance from the client to the software provider.

Easily Scalable – deployment via a network connection allows cloud SaaS businesses to grow as their units increase, with the ability to expand services to more users or add product enhancements with ease. Client acquisition can happen 24/7 and cloud SaaS companies can easily expand into international markets.

Business Model Advantages

High Recurring Revenue – cloud SaaS companies enjoy a subscription-based revenue model with smaller and more frequent transactions, while traditional software businesses rely on a single, large, upfront transaction. This model can result in a more predictable, annuity-like revenue stream making it easy for CFOs to solve long-term financial solutions.

High Client Retention with Longer Revenue Periods – cloud software becomes embedded in client workflow, resulting in higher switching costs and client retention. Importantly, many clients prefer the pay-as-you-go transaction model, which can lead to longer periods of recurring revenue as upselling product enhancements does not require an additional sales cycle.

Lower Expenses – cloud SaaS companies can have lower R&D costs because they don’t need to support various types of networking infrastructure at each client location.

I believe the product and business model advantages of cloud SaaS companies have historically led to higher margins, growth, higher free cash flow, and efficiency characteristics as compared to non-cloud software companies.

How does the WCLD ETF select its indexed cloud companies?

Each company must satisfy critical criteria such as they must derive the majority of revenue from business-oriented software products, as determined by the following checklist.

+ Provided to customers through a cloud delivery model – e.g., hosted on remote and multi-tenant server architecture, accessed through a web browser or mobile device, or consumed as an application programming interface (API).

+ Provided to customers through a cloud economic model – e.g., as a subscription-based, volume-based, or transaction-based offering Annual revenue growth, of at least:

+ 15% in each of the last two years for new additions

+ 7% for current securities in at least one of the last two years

With ETF funds like WCLD, you're going to see a portfolio that's going to have a little bit more sort of explosive nature to it, names with a little more mojo, a little bit more chutzpah, because you're focusing on smaller names that have the possibility to go parabolic and gift you a 10-bagger precisely because they take advantage of the law of small numbers.

the cloud

 

 

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 Trader2021-10-08 14:02:112021-10-17 16:16:58The Easy Way to Play the Cloud
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

September 20, 2021

Diary, Newsletter, Summary

Global Market Comments
September 20, 2021
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:

(INTRODUCING THE MAD HEDGE BITCOIN PLATINUM SERVICE),
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or THE BATTLE OF THE 50-DAY),
(SPY), (TLT), (DIS), (BLOK), (MSTR), (QQQ), (EEM), (UUP)

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 Trader2021-09-20 10:06:212021-09-20 10:30:05September 20, 2021
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or The Battle of the 50-Day

Diary, Newsletter

The next long-term driver of financial markets will be rising interest rates.

It’s not a matter of if, but when. Is it this month, or next month? One way or the other it’s coming.

Which means you should be rearranging your portfolio right now big time.

In a rising interest rate regime seven big things will happen:

1) Bonds (TLT) will collapse.
2) Domestic recovery and commodity stocks (FCX) will soar.
3) Technology stocks (QQQ) will move sideways to down 10%
4) The US dollar (UUP) craters
5) Foreign stock markets (EEM) do better than American ones.
6) Bitcoin (BLOK), (MSTR) and other cryptocurrencies go through the roof.
7) Residential real estate keeps appreciate, but at a slower rate.

These trends will continue for six months, or until long-term interest rates hit an interim peak, such as at 2.00%.

The delta variant gave us a secondary recession. Its demise will give us a secondary recovery, and the same sectors will prosper as with the first. According to the Johns Hopkins University of Medicine, this is happening right now.

The only caution here is that long-term investors should probably keep their technology stocks. Once rates hit the next interest rate peak again, it will be off to the races for tech once again. In the long term, tech always comes back, and tech always wins.

Of course, the major event of the coming week will be the Federal Reserve’s Open Market Committee meeting where interest rates are decided and the press conference with Jay Powell that follows.

Interest rates won’t move. It’s the press conference that is crucial, where we gain insights into the taper. What’s different this time is that the European Central Bank has already begun their taper with an economy far weaker than ours. Will Jay take the cue?

Far and away, the most reliable indicator for “BUY” timing since the presidential election has been the 50-day moving average for the S&P 500. Increasing stock weightings there and you were golden.

The problem now is that we have not seen the index close below the 50-day for two consecutive days for a record 221 days. This has not happened for 31 years.

We all know the reasons: Record low-interest rates making cash trash, seven years of quantitative easing, and a global liquidity glut. Exploding equity in homes and stock portfolios helps too. Still, 31 years is a long time to be this bullish.

I saw all this coming a mile off.

Since the election, I have relentlessly pursued this market with a super aggressive 100% weighting. Then I started paring back risk in June. In July and August, I cut back further to the bone, running minuscule 20% long weightings against a few shorts.

And this is how you manage your risk control.

When markets are rigged in your favor and the lunch is free, you bet the ranch. When they aren’t, you cower on the sidelines and watch others take insane risks.

But who am I to know? I’ve only been doing this for 51 years, and 58 years if you count the (IBM) shares I bought with my paperboy earnings.

Antitrust Comes Home to Roost at Apple, sending the stock down $9 in two days. A judge ruled that Apple will no longer be allowed to prohibit developers from providing links or other communications that direct users away from Apple in-app purchasing. Apple typically takes a 15% to 30% cut of gross sales. It’s a slap on the wrist, as Apple’s main revenue stream is still from iPhones. The judge ruled in favor of Apple on nine of ten other issues. It creates massive new opportunities for hundreds of other Silicon Valley start-ups. Still, if you were looking for an excuse to take profits, this is it. Buy (AAPL) on dips.

Tesla to get EV Tax Credit Restored in a new overhaul of alternative energy subsidies. Both Tesla (TSLA) and General Motors (GM) lost their $7,500 per car subsidies when sales topped 200,000. GM will get an extra $5,000 discount for union-made cars. Tesla is ferociously non-union. Maybe this explains the 36% rally since May. It should help (TSLA) get reach its million-vehicle target for 2021 if it can get enough chips. Buy (TSLA) on dips.

China Inflation Hits 13 Year High, up 9.5% YOY. Soaring commodity and coal prices are the issue. Coal is up 57% YOY, reflecting an energy shortage during the covid economic rebound. It predicts a hot CPI for the US on Tuesday.

The Consumer Price Index rose by 5.3% YOY and up 0.3% in August. It was a seven-month low, with delta clearly a drag. Food and energy came in lighter than expected. Prices for used cars, air tickets, and insurance fell. Stocks loved it, rising triple digits, and bond prices halved losses. St next week’s FOMC we’ll see how Jay really feels.
House Looking at a Top 26.5% Corporate Tax Rate, well up from the current 21% but not as high as the 28% that was feared. Capital gains would rise from 20% to 25%. The goal is to raise $2.5 trillion to get the $3.5 trillion spending package into law. It’s all a trial balloon for what might be possible. Stocks loved it.

Amazon to Hire 125,000 and boost wages to $18 an hour. They are also paying $3,000 signing bonuses and taking pay up to $22.50 in prime areas like New York and California. It’s all part of a strategy to make (AMZN) the “best employer in the world”. Buy (AMZN) on dips as its dominance on online commerce grows.

China Destroys Casino Stocks, threatening to increase oversight of their Macao operations. The concern is that China will pull the gaming licenses of foreign companies when they come up for renewal in June. Buy (WYNN) and (LVS) on the dip.

Weekly Jobless Claims Come in at 332,000, a new post-pandemic low. The previous week was revised down even lower, to 312,000. The end of pandemic unemployment benefits is no doubt a factor, driving people off of their couches and back to the salt mines. Is this the light at the end of the tunnel?

Bitcoin Charts are Showing a Golden Cross, which usually presages upside breakouts in the cryptocurrency. A golden cross is where the 50-day moving average pierces the 200-day to the upside. This is crucial because technicals are more important in crypto than in any other financial instrument. In the meantime, (AMC) has started accepting Bitcoin for online movie ticket purchases. Buy (MSTR) on dips.

My Ten-Year View

When we come out the other side of the pandemic, we will be perfectly poised to launch into my new American Golden Age, or the next Roaring Twenties. With interest rates still at zero, oil cheap, there will be no reason not to. The Dow Average will rise by 800% to 240,000 or more in the coming decade. The American coming out the other side of the pandemic will be far more efficient and profitable than the old. Dow 240,000 here we come!

My Mad Hedge Global Trading Dispatch saw a modest +1.10% loss so far in September following a blockbuster 9.36% profit in August. My 2021 year-to-date performance soared to 77.47%. The Dow Average is up 13.02% so far in 2021.

That leaves me 70% in cash, 10% short in the (TLT), and 20% long in the (SPY) and (DIS). Both of our September option positions expired at max profits.

I’m keeping positions small as long as we are at extreme overbought conditions. However, a Volatility Index (VIX) above $20 shows there may be a light at the end of the tunnel.

That brings my 12-year total return to 500.02%, some 2.00 times the S&P 500 (SPX) over the same period. My 12-year average annualized return now stands at an unbelievable 42.86%, easily the highest in the industry.

My trailing one-year return popped back to positively eye-popping 109.26%. I truly have to pinch myself when I see numbers like this. I bet many of you are making the biggest money of your long lives.

We need to keep an eye on the number of US Coronavirus cases at 42 million and rising quickly and deaths topping 673,000, which you can find here.

The coming week will be all about the Fed meeting on Wednesday.

On Monday, September 20, at 11:00 AM, the NAHB National Housing Market Index for September is out.

On Tuesday, September 21 at 9:30 AM, Housing Starts for August are printed.

On Wednesday, September 22 at 11:00 AM, Existing Home Sales for August are announced. At 2:00 PM, the Fed interest rate decision is released and an important press conference about taper issues follows.

On Thursday, September 23 at 8:30 AM, Weekly Jobless Claims are announced.

On Friday, September 24 at 8:30 AM, we learn US Durable Goods for August. At 2:00 PM, the Baker Hughes Oil Rig Count is disclosed.

As for me, with the shocking re-emergence of Nazis on America's political scene, memories are flooding back to me of some of the most amazing experiences in my life.

I have been warning my long-term readers for years now that this story was coming. The right time is now here to write it.

I know the Nazis well.

During the civil rights movement of the 1960s, I frequently hitchhiked through the Deep South to learn what was actually happening.

It was not usual for me to catch a nighttime ride with a neo-Nazi on his way to a cross burning at a nearby Ku Klux Klan meeting, always with an uneducated blue-collar worker who needed a haircut.

In fact, being a card-carrying white kid, I was often invited to come along.

I had a stock answer: "No thanks, I'm going to another Klan meeting further down the road."

That opened my driver up to expound at length on his movement's bizarre philosophy.

What I heard was chilling.

During 1968 and 1969, I worked in West Berlin at the Sarotti Chocolate factory in order to perfect my German. On the first day at work, they let you eat all you want for free.

After that, you get so sick that you never wanted to touch the stuff again. Some 50 years later and I still can’t eat their chocolate with sweetened alcohol on the inside.

My co-worker there was named Jendro, who had been captured by the Russians at Stalingrad and was one of the 5% of prisoners who made it home alive in 1955. His stories were incredible and my problems pale in comparison.

Answering an ad on a local bulletin board, I found myself living with a Nazi family near the company's Tempelhof factory.

There was one thing about Nazis you needed to know during the 1960s: They loved Americans.

After all, it was we who saved them from certain annihilation by the teeming Bolshevik hoards from the east.

The American postwar occupation, while unpopular, was gentle by comparison. It turned out that everyone loved Hershey bars.

As a result, I got free room and board for two summers at the expense of having to listen to some very politically incorrect theories about race. I remember the hot homemade apple strudel like it was yesterday.

Let me tell you another thing about Nazis. Once a Nazi, always a Nazi. Just because they lost the war didn't mean they dropped their extreme beliefs.

Fast-forward 30 years, and I was a wealthy hedge fund manager with money to burn, looking for adventure with a history bent during the 1990s.

I was mountain climbing in the Bavarian Alps with a friend, not far from Garmisch-Partenkirchen, when I learned that Leni Riefenstahl lived nearby, then in her 90s.

Attending the USC film school with a young kid named Steven Spielberg decades earlier, I knew that Riefenstahl was a legend in the filmmaking community.

She produced such icons as Olympia, about the 1932 Berlin Olympics, and The Triumph of the Will, about the Nuremberg Nazi rallies. It is said that Donald Trump borrowed many of these techniques during his successful 2016 presidential run.

It was rumored that Riefenstahl was also the onetime girlfriend of Adolph Hitler.

I needed a ruse to meet her since surviving members of the Third Reich tend to be very private people, so I tracked down one of her black and white photos of Nubian warriors, which she took during her rehabilitation period in the 1960s.

It was my goal to get her to sign it.

Some well-placed intermediaries managed to pull off a meeting with the notoriously reclusive Riefenstahl, and I managed to score a half-hour tea.

I presented the African photograph and she seemed grateful that I was interested in her work. She signed it quickly with a flourish.

I then gently grilled her on what it was like to live in Germany in the 1930s. What I learned was fascinating.

But when I asked about her relationship with The Fuhrer, she flashed, "That is nothing but Zionist propaganda."

Spoken like a true Nazi.

The interview ended abruptly.

I took my signed photograph home, framed it, hung it on my office wall for a few years. Then I donated it to a silent auction at my kids' high school.

Nobody bid on it.

The photo ended up in storage at my home, and when it was time to make space, it went to Goodwill.

I obtained a nice high appraisal for the work of art and then took a generous tax deduction for the donation, of course.

It is now more than a half-century since my first contact with the Nazis, and all of the WWII veterans are gone. Talking about it to kids today, you might as well be discussing the Revolutionary war.

By the way, the torchlight parade we saw in Charlottesville, VA in 2017 was obviously lifted from The Triumph of the Will, except that they didn't use tiki poolside torches in Germany in the 1930s.

 

Leni Riefenstahl

 

Olympia

 

Former Paperboy

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/leni-riefenstahl.png 550 400 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2021-09-20 10:02:462021-09-20 10:30:20The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or The Battle of the 50-Day
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

August 27, 2021

Tech Letter

Mad Hedge Technology Letter
August 27, 2021
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:

(THE NEW NORMAL)
(QQQ)

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 Trader2021-08-27 15:04:492021-08-27 15:36:07August 27, 2021
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

The New Normal

Tech Letter

So now it’s gonna be 2 years — that’s right — the work from home world is here to stay!

And I’m not talking about just Asia being in the early innings of a disastrous delta variant explosion.

Many managers had 1 year baked into the pie, but have we come to terms with the expectations that this work from home thing is here to stay?

Ostensibly, companies will never be able to get workers to come back to the office, then after 2 years, we will be too far down this road to make a U-turn.

Then as the delta variant breathes down our neck, will this turn into year three or four and so on with all the different variants down the pipeline.

Just in the last few years, several European offices allow heat days in the summer which offer workers remote working possibilities when cities sound off official heat warnings.

Some European cities usually deliver excess heat warnings if the mercury surpasses 95 degrees which is usually in June and July and the amount of these days are rising.  

Japan might have to start giving mudslide, typhoon, or torrential flooding remote work days if we really want to go deeper in the weeds.

This is just where nature stands today versus how we work from a computer.  

Many tech companies might see a 99% attrition rate if the managers move boldly and recall staff for in-person 5 days per week toiling and sharing the same oxygen within the same four walls as their coworkers.

One of the biggest takeaways from the pandemic after the initial uncertainty is the handoff of power back to labor which hasn’t happened in American capitalism for 50 years.

American capitalism has been crushing labor laws as long as I can remember from lacking of maternity and paternity leave to destroying unions and the list goes on.

If you’re a simple worker, you know you finally have options!

That is raising concerns among executives who have historically ruled with an iron fist and aren’t used to workers acquiring negotiating clout.

Remember in Europe, many companies require a 3-month resignation notice after 5 years of work instead of the quick 2 weeks in the U.S.

In France, it’s almost impossible to get yourself fired.

Return dates have been postponed repeatedly. Tech companies such as Amazon and Facebook have pushed them to early next year.

Lyft said it would call employees back to its San Francisco headquarters in February, about 23 months after the ride-sharing company first closed its offices.

Already, many employees are “bombarded” with messages from recruiters and friends, attempting to lure them elsewhere, and there are jobs galore!

10 million to be precise.

Managers want workers back in the office because they say there is a broader sense of connection and familiarity to the platform, to the culture of the organization—to me, this means they love controlling workers, period.

Many surveys have shown that productivity of working remotely is significantly higher than working in the office where introverted workers are bombarded with uncomfortable office politics and extroverted colleagues’ bravado. Not to mention that many companies like to have meetings to plan the next meeting and the hours of commuting that exhaust workers.

Even if 40% of workers are introverted, it would make sense to rollout a full remote workforce because the totality of the remote work is a net benefit over in-person work for the entire staff.

Perceptions of remote work have shifted as the pandemic spiraled out of control.

When professional services giant PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP surveyed employers across the U.S. in June 2020, 73% of respondents said they deemed remote work successful. By January 2021, when PwC released updated data, that figure rose to 83%. Now, more workers also say they want to stay at home full time. In new data released by PwC on Thursday, 41% of workers said they wished to remain fully remote, up from 29% in the January survey.

That doesn’t mean offices can’t have a once per quarter team bonding activity, but the verdict is clear, workers like waking up never to leave their house and get paid for that lifestyle.

The bigger deal now is workers are busy brainstorming how to upgrade or upsize their remote offices to become even more efficient.

They are even thinking how to upgrade their coffee and tea game, personally, I love my Made in Italy Bialetti stovetop espresso maker.

It hits the spot with high quality Arabica coffee beans.

On a personal level, if a company does commit to the in-person faux pas, I am in favor of only in-person every other month and the in-person portion should only be a maximum of 2 days per week that aren’t Monday or Friday.

That’s how little negotiating leverage managers and bosses have these days — I just don’t see how they can push the narrative more than that.

Also, if they want 5 days per week of in-person work, they will have to pay extra to get what they want and that’s not including the hike in salaries that have happened because of the recent inflationary pressures.

Ultimately, there is possibly no way to justify full in-person work in 2021 for a company that can function without it.

And think about it, any company searching to expand a workforce with 100% in-person work will be viewed as a company that has more red flags than a Chinese communist parade.

And I haven’t even talked about the disgust for people ditching their business casual clothing to work in their pajamas, then forcing them to clothe up again.

What a kick in the teeth!

There’s a whole host of reasons we haven’t even mentioned yet like young mothers who must consider a young child and proper child’s care or a worker who is tending to an elderly relative daily.

We can’t just sweep all this under the rug like we used to — these are real issues we must grapple with.  

What does this mean for the Nasdaq index that the Mad Hedge Technology Letter predominately follows?

It goes higher.

It means we are fully reliant on tech for longer and this will seep into the share prices.

A broad swath of companies will benefit from this, and the bigger will get bigger because of the network effect.

Another year of this will solidify tech ecosystems and digital infrastructure will become better and stickier.

Companies like Google, Apple, Microsoft will bask in the glory of being highly desirable companies with earning accelerated revenues while stationed at the avant-garde of the U.S. economy.

And in the winner-takes-all tech economy, everyone else is second.

remote work

THIS IS THE NEW NORMAL!

 

 

 

https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/08/new-normal.png 420 802 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2021-08-27 15:02:302021-08-31 03:01:08The New Normal
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

July 7, 2021

Diary, Newsletter, Summary

Global Market Comments
July 7, 2021
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:

(JUNE 30 BIWEEKLY STRATEGY WEBINAR Q&A),
(QQQ), (BRKB), (GOOG), (NVDA), (FB), (TSLA), (JPM), (BAC), (C), (GS), (MS),
(NASD), ((X), (FCX), (AMZN), (MSFT), (AAPL), (FCX)

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 Trader2021-07-07 09:04:142021-07-07 11:03:08July 7, 2021
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