Global Market Comments
March 25, 2022
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(THE MAD HEDGE TRADERS & INVESTORS SUMMIT VIDEOS ARE UP!)
(MARCH 23 BIWEEKLY STRATEGY WEBINAR Q&A),
(QQQ), (TSLA), (BA), (DEER), (CAT),
(AAPL), (SLV), (FCX), (TLT), (TBT)
Global Market Comments
March 25, 2022
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(THE MAD HEDGE TRADERS & INVESTORS SUMMIT VIDEOS ARE UP!)
(MARCH 23 BIWEEKLY STRATEGY WEBINAR Q&A),
(QQQ), (TSLA), (BA), (DEER), (CAT),
(AAPL), (SLV), (FCX), (TLT), (TBT)
Below please find subscribers’ Q&A for the March 23 Mad Hedge Fund Trader Global Strategy Webinar broadcast from Silicon Valley.
Q: What is the best way to keep your money in cash?
A: That’s quite a complicated answer. If you leave cash in your brokerage account, they will give you nothing. If you move it to your bank account they will, again, give you nothing. But, if you keep the money in your brokerage account and then buy 2-year US Treasury bills, those are yielding 2.2% right now, and will probably be yielding over 3% in two years, so we’re actually being paid for cash for the first time in over ten years. And, as long as it’s in your brokerage account, you can then sell those Treasury bonds when you’re ready to go back into the market and buy your stock, same day, without having to perform any complicated wire transfers, which take a week to clear. Also, if your broker goes bankrupt and you hold Treasury bills, they are required by law to give you the Treasury bills. If you have your cash in a brokerage cash account, you lose all of it or at least the part above the SIPC-insured $250,000 per account. And believe me, I learned that the hard way when Bearings went bankrupt in the 1990s. People who had the Bearings securities lost everything, people who owned Treasury bills got their cashback in weeks.
Q: Is the pain over for growth stocks?
A: Probably yes, for the smaller ones; but they may flatline for a long time until a real earnings story returns for them. As for the banks, I think the pain is over and now it’s a question of just when we can get back in.
Q: Why did you initiate shorts on the Invesco QQQ Trust Series (QQQ) and SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (SPY) this week, instead of continuing with the iShares 20 Plus Year Treasury Bond ETF (TLT) shorts?
A: We are down 27 points in 10 weeks on the (TLT); that is the most in history. And every other country in the world is seeing the same thing. That is not shorting territory—you should have been shorting above $150 in the (TLT) when I was falling down on my knees and begging you to do so. Now it’s too late. If we get a 5-point rally, which we could get any time, that’s another story. It is so oversold that a bounce of some sort is inevitable. I’d rather be in cash going into that.
Q: Do you think Tesla (TSLA) has put in a bottom, or do you still see more downside? Is it time to buy?
A: The time to buy is not when it is up 50% in 3 weeks, which it has just done. The time to buy is when I sent out the last trade alert to buy it at $700. This was a complete layup as a long three weeks ago because I knew the German production was coming onstream very shortly; and that opens up a whole new continent, right when energy prices are going through the roof—the best-case scenario for Tesla. And the same is happening in the US—it’s a one-year wait now to get a new Model X in the US. In fact, I can sell my existing model X for the same price I paid for it 3 years ago, if I were happy to wait another year to get a replacement car.
Q: Will the Boeing (BA) crash in China damage the short-term prospects? And as a pilot, what do you think actually happened?
A: Boeing has been beat-up for so long that a mere crash in one of its safest planes isn’t going to do much. It could have been a maintenance issue in China, but the fact that there was no “mayday” call means only two or three possibilities. One is a bomb, which would explain there being no mayday call—the pilots were already dead when it went into freefall. Number two would be a complete structural failure, which is hard to believe because I’ve been flying Boeings my entire life, and these things are made out of steel girders—you can’t break them. And number three is a pilot suicide—there have been a couple of those over the years. The Malaysia flight that disappeared over the south Indian Ocean was almost certainly a pilot suicide, and there was another one in Germany and another in Japan about 20 years ago. So, if they come up with no answer, that's the answer. It’s not a Boeing issue, whatever it is.
Q: Is John Deer (DEER) or Caterpillar (CAT) a better trade right now?
A: It’s kind of six of one, half a dozen of the other. Caterpillar I’ve been following for 50 years, so I’m kind of partial to CAT, and Caterpillar has a much bigger international presence, but that could be a negative these days in a deglobalizing world.
Q: Apple (AAPL) has really caught fire past $170. Should I chase it here or wait until it’s too overbought?
A: I never liked chasing. Even a small dip, like we’re having today, is worth getting into. So always buy on the dips.
Q: Is Silver (SLV) still a good long-term play?
A: Yes, because we do expect EV production to ramp up as fast as they can possibly do it. Too bad the American companies don’t know how to make electric cars—they just haven’t been able to get their volumes up because of production problems that Tesla solved 12 years ago. So, long term, I think it will do better, but right now the risk-on move is definitely negative for the precious metals.
Q: How low will the iShares 20 Plus Year Treasury Bond ETF (TLT) go in April before the next Fed meeting?
A: I think we’re bottoming for the short term right around here. That’s why I had on that $127-$130 call spread in the (TLT) that I got stopped out of. And I may well end up being right, but with these call spreads, once you break your upper strike, the math goes against you dramatically. You go from like a 1-1 risk profile to like a 10-1 against you. So, you have to get out of those things when you break your upper strike, otherwise, you risk writing off the entire position with 100% loss. As long as Jay Powell keeps talking about successive half-point rate cuts, we will get lower lows, and my 2023 target for the TLT is $105, or about $20.00 points below here.
Q: Do you think we retest the bottoms?
A: Absolutely, yes; it just depends on where the test is successful—with a double bottom or with a retrace of half the recent moves. Keep in mind that stocks go up 80% of the time over the last 120 years, and that includes the Great Depression when they hardly went up at all for 10 years, so selling short is a professional’s game, and I wouldn’t attempt it unless you had somebody like me helping you. You're betting against the long-term trend with every short position. That said, if you’re quick you can make decent money. Most of the money we’ve made this year has been in short positions, both in stocks and in bonds.
Q: Where can we find this webinar?
A: The recording for this webinar will be posted on the website in about two hours. Just log into your account and you’ll find them all listed.
Q: When should I sell my tradable ProShares UltraShort 20+ Year Treasury ETF (TBT)?
A: You don’t have an options expiration to worry about, so I would just keep in until we hit $105 in the (TLT). If you do want to trade, I’d take a little bit off here and then try to re-buy it a couple of points lower, maybe 10% lower.
Q: What do you think of a Freeport McMoRan (FCX) $55-$60 vertical bull call spread?
A: The market has had such a massive move, that I’m reluctant to do out of the money call spreads from here unless we get a major dip. So, don’t reach for the marginal trade—that’s where you get your head handed to you.
Q: Will yield curve inversions matter this time and foretell a recession?
A: I think no, because corporate earnings are still growing, and by the summer, we probably will have a yield curve inversion.
Q: There seems to be some huge breakthrough in battery technology where batteries could be recharged within four minutes. I believe it’s the Chinese who have the tech, if so how will that impact on Tesla?
A: Every day of the year someone presents Tesla with a revolutionary new battery technology. It either doesn’t work, can’t be mass-produced, or is wildly uneconomical. So, I’ll confine my bet that Tesla will be able to eventually mass produce solid state batteries and get their 95% cost reduction that way.
To watch a replay of this webinar with all the charts, bells, whistles, and classic rock music, just log in to www.madhedgefundtrader.com, go to MY ACCOUNT, click on GLOBAL TRADING DISPATCH, then WEBINARS, and all the webinars from the last ten years are there in all their glory.
Good Luck and Stay Healthy.
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
Global Market Comments
March 21, 2022
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or FROM QE TO QT),
(SPY), (TLT), (TBT), (TSLA)
A client asked me today if, after the 5th worst start to a year since 1927, I thought the stock market had bottomed.
My response? One interest rate rise down, 12 to go, or 3.00% if we stick to the quarter-point pace.
And while the first seven rate rises have already been discounted by the futures market, the additional six we will get in 2023 haven’t.
We have just seen the best week for stocks in nearly two years, but don’t get your hopes up. We are in the process of weaning the markets off of 12 years of free money and we aren’t going to get away with a measly 15% correction.
And when I say markets, I don’t just mean stocks, but for bonds, commodities, foreign exchange, precious metals, energy, and real estate as well. No asset has actually had a real price for more than a decade.
So, how does all this end? You can count on several tradable rallies for the rest of the year, like the one we have just had. Big tech earnings are still racing ahead like a bat out of hell. By yearend, tech should be stupid cheap, cheap enough to take the indexes to new highs, even if they are marginal ones at best.
Eventually, the Fed will take rates high enough to assure a recession. That happens when yield curves are completely flat, i.e, when the two, ten, and 30-year yields are the same, which is about two years off.
That could happen sooner if inflation fails to abate and the Fed has to resort to successive half-point hikes to cool a superheated economy. Currently, Jay Powell doesn’t believe that will be necessary because he expects the inflation rate to drop to 4% by the end of 2022 as wage demands fade, supply chain problems sort themselves out, and the Ukraine war stalemates.
News flash: Fed governors have been known to be wrong.
Here’s an interesting tidbit. I renewed my pilot’s medical this week in case I get a midnight call from Washington DC. Don’t worry, I passed with flying colors, thanks to all my nighttime backpacking.
But you know what the flight surgeon told me? Every medical he had done in the last two weeks was for someone headed to Ukraine.
This could be a really interesting war.
The Fed Raises Interest Rates by a quarter point. The futures markets are already discounting seven rate hikes this year, but not the six in 2023. The Fed is so far behind the curve they may have to resort to half-point rises later this year if inflation doesn’t fade. According to that timetable, the yield curve will be completely flat by then, triggering the next recession.
China Crashes, on fears they may get dragged into the Ukraine war by Russia. Delisting threats from the SEC, a slowing economy, flight from growth tech stocks, and a new Covid outbreak aren’t helping either. Some $2.1 trillion in market cap has been lost since these stocks looked so great a year ago. Not a great place to be when a new iron curtain is descending. Right now, the US is the only safe place to be.
Bonds Collapse on happy talks about Russia/Ukraine talks, making my shorts look even better. Ten-year US Treasury yields hit a three-year high at 2.08% yield. It’s a resumption of a steep downtrend in bond prices that started in November. I used the war-induced rally to ramp up positions. But I don’t think we break $130 in the (TLT) for at least another month. Keep selling big rallies in the (TLT).
The Producer Price Index is Up a Hot 10% YOY, and 0.8% in February, largely driven by soaring energy prices. Food prices are up as Ukraine’s wheat, one-third of the world supply, disappears from the marketplace. It makes the Fed rate hike a sure thing.
Russia has $350 Billion of US stock for Sale at Market. That is the amount Russian oligarchs are thought to own in US hedge funds which the Justice Department is in the process of seizing. It’s part of $1 trillion in foreign assets overall, which include the Chelsea soccer team, several tens of billion worth of US real estate, and a $200 billion stake in Uber.
China has to Choose, whether to have Russia or the US as an ally. Will it be the sanctioned $1 trillion economy in free fall, or a booming $25 trillion economy? Certain the costs of going against the US have been made clear. I’ve been arguing vociferously to the Joint Chiefs from the beginning that standing up to Putin gets you a two for: it forces China to back off from aggressive moves towards Taiwan as well. Russia can stand sanction. Chinese would starve, as the bulk of its wealth over the last 30 years came from trade with the US.
Existing Home Sales Plunge by 7.2% to 6.02 million units in February. Soaring mortgage rates and rock bottom inventories are taking their toll. Many homes are gone only a week after listing.
Nickel Futures are Limit Down in London, off by 12%, indicating that the super spike in commodities prices triggered by the Ukraine war may be over. The price fell by $36,915 per metric tonne, well off the $100,000 high from weeks ago when Chinese speculators covered shorts generating massive losses.
Weekly Jobless Claims Come in at 214,000, a two-month low. The economy is recovering slowly and is on the verge of full employment.
My Ten-Year View
When we come out the other side of 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!
With near record volatility, my March month to date performance catapulted to a blistering 15.23%. My 2022 year-to-date performance ended at a chest beating 29.82%. The Dow Average is down -4.3% so far in 2022. It is the great outperformance on an index since Mad Hedge Fund Trader started 14 years ago.
My five March positions expired at their maximum potential profit with the options expiration on Friday. That leaves me 90% in cash and 10% in a single long bond position which is close to breaking even. Only the next capitulation selloff day I’ll be adding more long positions in technology.
That brings my 13-year total return to 542.38%, some 2.10 times the S&P 500 (SPX) over the same period. My average annualized return has ratcheted up to 44.88%, easily the highest in the industry.
We need to keep an eye on the number of US Coronavirus cases at 80 million and rising quickly and deaths topping 971,000, which you can find here. Growth of the pandemic has virtually stopped, with new cases down 96% in a month.
On Monday, March 21 at 7:30 AM EST, the Chicago Fed National Activity Index is out.
On Tuesday, March 22 at 12:30 PM, API Crude Oil Stocks are released.
On Wednesday, March 23 at 10:00 AM, New Home Sales for February are printed.
On Thursday, March 23 at 7:30 AM, Durable Goods Orders for February are published. Weekly Jobless Claims are out at 8:30.
On Friday, March 25 at 9:00 AM, Pending Home Sales for February are disclosed. At 2:00 PM, the Baker Hughes Oil Rig Count is out.
As for me, after telling you last week why I walked so funny, let me tell you the other reason.
In 1987, to celebrate obtaining my British commercial pilot’s license, I decided to fly a tiny single engine Grumman Tiger from London to Malta and back.
It turned out to be a one-way trip.
Flying over the many French medieval castles was divine. Flying the length of the Italian coast at 500 feet was fabulous, except for the engine failure over the American airbase at Naples.
But I was a US citizen, wore a New York Yankees baseball cap, and seemed an alright guy, so the Air Force fixed me up for free and sent me on my way. Fortunately, I spotted the heavy cable connecting Sicily with the mainland well in advance.
I had trouble finding Malta and was running low on fuel. So I tuned into a local radio station and homed in on that.
It was on the way home that the trouble started.
I stopped by Palermo in Sicily to see where my grandfather came from and to search for the caves where my great grandmother lived during the waning days of WWII. Little did I know that Palermo had the worst wind shear airport in Europe.
My next leg home took me over 200 miles of the Mediterranean to Sardinia.
I got about 50 feet into the air when a 70-knot gust of wind flipped me on my side perpendicular to the runway and aimed me right at an Alitalia passenger jet with 100 passengers awaiting takeoff. I managed to level the plane right before I hit the ground.
I heard the British pilot of the Alitalia jet say on the air “Well, that was interesting.”
Giant fire engines descended upon me, but I was fine, sitting on my cockpit, admiring the tree that had suddenly sprouted through my port wing.
Then the Carabinieri arrested me for endangering the lives of 100 tourists. Two days later the Ente Nazionale per l’Avizione Civile held a hearing and found me innocent, as the wind shear could not be foreseen. I think they really liked my hat, as most probably had distant relatives in New York City.
As for the plane, the wreckage was sent back to England by insurance syndicate Lloyds of London, where it was disassembled. Inside the starboard wing tank, they found a rag which the American mechanics in Naples had left by accident.
If I has continued my flight, the rag would have settled over my fuel intake valve, cut off my gas supply, and I would have crashed into the sea and disappeared forever. Ironically, it would have been close to where French author Antoine de St.-Exupery (The Little Prince) crashed his Lockheed P-38 Lightning in 1944.
In the end, The crash only cost me a disk in my back, which I had removed in London and led to my funny walk.
Sometimes, it is better to be lucky than smart.
Stay Healthy,
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
Antoine de St.-Exupery on the Old 50 Franc Note
Global Market Comments
March 17, 2022
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(WHY DOCTORS, PILOTS, AND ENGINEERS MAKE TERRIBLE TRADERS)
Global Market Comments
March 16, 2022
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(HOW TO HANDLE THE FRIDAY, MARCH 18 OPTIONS EXPIRATION),
(TLT), (TSLA)
Global Market Comments
March 14, 2022
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or RECESSION FEARS ARISE)
(TLT), (SPY), (VIX), (TSLA), (VXX)
I hate to be the bearer of bad news, but the US is now looking at the ugly face of recession. Both oil shocks of the last 50 years promptly delivered serious recessions and the third one could well do the same.
Q1 is now Looking Like a Write Off, as analysts rush to pare forecasts. Some are cutting predictions from 5% growth to zero, or even negative numbers. There will be no sustainable stock market rally until this situation reverses in H2. Keep selling those rallies.
There is no denying that oil at $132 is starting to seriously drag on the economy. Here in San Francisco, gasoline has topped $7.00 a gallon. The good news is that high prices will pay for the enormous losses big oil will take writing off hundreds of billions of Russian investments. It will also greatly accelerate the move to electric vehicles. No wonder Tesla (TSLA) is holding up so well.
We may duck the bullet this time because the number of barrels needed to produce a unit of GDP has dropped by half since over the past half-century, thanks to conservation, improved technology, and the advent of electric vehicles. That old Lincoln Continental that guzzled 8 miles a gallon now gets 27.
The big issue will be how long it will take Germany to replace Russian gas. The US can do it easily, but it will take years to build out the infrastructure and build the ships. The big Russian strategic mistake is that they launched their war in the spring, just when German gas needs decline dramatically.
A second Cold War, a third oil shock, and a hot shooting war are a lot for markets to take in in only three weeks. It all means lower share prices….for now. It makes my down 20% target look pretty good.
There is one other matter that may save our bacon. The real economy is still hot, and the world is running out of everything. Oil was going to $130 anyway, even without the war.
Food, housing, materials, commodities, aluminum, steel, lumber, you name it. All are in short supply. And you already own the things these commodities make, like your home, you already have a hedge and a great long-term play.
This is not what recessions are made out of.
The US Bans Russian Oil Imports, and the rush is on to see how fast we can replace German imports. It’s also looking like several hundred billion dollars of Russian investment in illiquid long-term investments will be trapped in the US, such as in real estate, joint ventures, and venture capital. I keep pinching myself to see this WWII replay unfold. The Mad Hedge Market Timing Index just hit a one-year low at 13. Defense stocks are soaring.
Commodity Prices are soaring anywhere Russia is a major supplier. Nickel prices are up 90% and oil hit $133 a barrel. It all throws gasoline on the inflation fire.
Gold breaks $2,000, a new 18-month high, on a massive flight to safety bid. Next stop could be $3,000.
Nickel Prices soar 250%, to $100,000 a metric tonne, with Russia as a major producer. Futures trading is halted on the London Metals Exchange. Who is the biggest user of nickel? China at 59% and the rest of Asia for a further 23%, mostly to produce stainless steel. More supply disruptions to come. US automakers are scrambling, the biggest end-users of stainless steel. Car prices are about to rocket accelerating the move to carbon fiber.
Europe to Cut Russian Gas Purchases by Two Thirds This Year, some 45% of their current gas supply. They will essentially bring their renewable targets forward by a decade, which is moving forward much faster than the US. Oil is just too unreliable to depend on. Some are untried on a mass scale, such as using wind and solar power to electrolyze water to make clean hydrogen. It’s great if they can pull it off.
CPI Inflation Data comes in at a Red Hot 7.9% YOY, a new cycle high and a new 40-year high, and 0.8% for the month of February. Wars are highly inflationary, especially when they come on top of already chronic supply shorts and supply chain disruptions. Bonds are getting crushed. Too bad I’m triple short.
Weekly Jobless Claims come in at 227,000, with Continuing Claims at 1,494,000. Hot jobs demand downplays the risk of the Ukraine war creating any real recession. Repatriation of jobs from abroad will accelerate.
Amazon Splits 20:1, mimicking NVIDIA’s and Tesla’s earlier moves. Although it should make no difference, such splits are always a positive, as more retail investors can buy Alphabet at $145 than $2,900. Option traders too. The split takes place in July
Rents Rise at fastest rate in 30 years. The index for rentals of primary residences as collected by the Bureau of Labor Statistics is now the highest since 1987. Rents accounted for 40% of the big jump in the CPI in February. Inflation will get worse before it gets better.
Russian Credit Default Swaps Hit 34% Yields, indicating an extremely high probability of default. Some $100 million in interest payments are due next week, but with virtually all bank accounts frozen and kicked out of SWIFT, they have no means to pay.
The largest holders of Russian debt, like Pimco, Voya, and Capital Group, are taking big hits this morning. Who knows, they might be a BUY here. After all, those defaulted Chinese railroad bonds paid off, pennies on the dollar and 100 years after issue. Are confederate state bonds next?
My Ten-Year View
When we come out the other side of 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!
With near-record volatility, my February month-to-date performance catapulted to a blistering 15.56%. My 2022 year-to-date performance ended at a chest-beating 30.15%. The Dow Average is down -7.6% so far in 2022. It is the great outperformance on an index since Mad Hedge Fund Trader started 14 years ago.
My only new trade this week was to use a $4.00 dive in the (TLT) to go from a single to a double long in the bond market. That leaves me 60% invested and 50% in cash, waiting for the next capitulation selloff. So, I am 3X short the (TLT), 2X long the (TLT), and 1X long Tesla.
That brings my 13-year total return to 538.24%, some 2.10 times the S&P 500 (SPX) over the same period. My average annualized return has ratcheted up to 44.54%, easily the highest in the industry. Five of six of these positions expire on March 18, in four days.
We need to keep an eye on the number of US Coronavirus cases that's close to 80 million and deaths of around 970,000, which you can find here. Growth of the pandemic has virtually stopped, with new cases down 96% in a month.
On Monday, March 14 at 7:00 AM EST, US Consumer Inflation Expectations for February are printed.
On Tuesday, March 15 at 7:30 AM, the Producer Price Index for February is released.
On Wednesday, March 16 at 10:00 AM, the Federal Reserve will announce the first interest rate rise in five years, almost certainly a quarter point.
On Thursday, March 17 at 7:30 AM, Weekly Jobless Claims are published. Housing Starts and Building Permits for February are published.
On Friday, March 18 at 7:00 AM, the Existing Home Sales for February are announced. At 2:00 PM, the Baker Hughes Oil Rig Count is out.
As for me, someone commented that I walk kind of funny the other day, and the memories flooded back.
In 1975, The Economist magazine in London heard rumors that a large part of the population was getting slaughtered in Cambodia. We expected this to happen after the fall of Vietnam, but not in the Land of the Khmers. So my editor, Peter Martin, sent me to check it out.
Hooking up with a right-wing guerrilla group financed by the CIA was the easy part. Humping 100 miles in 100-degree heat wasn’t.
We eventually came to a large village that was completely deserted. Then my guide said, “Over here.” He took me to a nearby cave containing the bodies of over 1,000 women, children, and old men that had been there for months.
I’ll never forget that smell.
With the evidence and plenty of pictures in hand, we started the trek back. Suddenly, there was a large explosion and the man 20 yards in front of me disappeared. He had stepped on a land mine. Then the machine gun fire opened up. It was an ambush.
I picked up an M-16 to return fire, but it was bent, bloody, and unusable. I picked up a second rifle and fired until it was empty. Then everything suddenly went black.
I woke up days chained to a palm tree, covered in shrapnel wounds, a prisoner of the Khmer Rouge. Maggots infested my wounds, but I remembered from my Tropical Diseases class at UCLA that I should leave them alone because they only eat dead flesh and would prevent gangrene. That class saved my life. Good thing I got an “A”.
I was given a bowl of rice a day to eat, which I had to gum because it was full of small pebbles and might break my teeth. Farmers loaded their crops with these so the greater weight could increase their income. I spent my time pulling shrapnel out of my legs with a crude pair of plyers.
Two weeks later, the American who set up the trip for me showed up with cases of claymore mines, rifles, ammunition, and antibiotics. My chains were cut and I began the long walk back to Thailand.
It’s nice to learn your true value.
Back in Bangkok, I saw a doctor who attended to the 50 caliber bullet that grazed my right hip. It was too old to sew up so he decided to clean it instead. “This won’t hurt a bit,” he said as he poured in hydrogen peroxide and scrubbed it with a stiff plastic brush.
It was the greatest pain of my life. Tears rolled down my face.
But you know what? The Economist got their story and the world found out about the Great Cambodian Genocide, where 3 million died. There is a museum in Phnom Penh devoted to it today.
So, if you want to know why I walk funny, be prepared for a long story. I still set off metal detectors.
Stay Healthy,
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
Global Market Comments
March 8, 2022
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(A NOTE ON OPTIONS CALLED AWAY)
(TLT), (TSLA)
Global Market Comments
March 7, 2022
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or THE WAR CONTINUES),
(SPY), (TLT), (TBT), (TSLA), (BRKB)
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