(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD or DID JAY POWELL BLOW IT?) and CHASING EARNEST HEMINGWAY),
($VIX), (INTC), (CCI), (TLT), (COPX), (BHP), (USO) (NVDA), (SLV), (FXY), (CAT), (IWM), (IBKR), (AMZN), (GLD), (BRK/B), (DE)
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or SEA CHANGE), (BB RATED BANKS LOANS), and (RESCUING THE USS POTOMAC),
(TLT), (JNK), (SLRN), (BRLN), (BKLN), (FFRHX), (WES), (CCI), (GLD), (DE), (BRK/B), (TSLA), (NVDA).
I believe there was a major sea change in the markets last week, which has taken the economy from inflation to deflation. All asset classes performed as they should, with some extreme moves. It is now time to focus on the 493 of the S&P 500 and let the Magnificent Seven take a long-needed rest.
Not only does this pave the way for a Fed interest rate cut in September, but several more to follow. This opens the floodgates for the (TLT) to rise above $100 by yearend, and maybe even to $110. Remember the old high for bonds is $166. Higher beta fixed-income plays will rise much more.
Stocks will keep rising but with different leadership from dozens of interest-sensitive sectors, including real estate, their suppliers, industrials, precious metals, financials, energy, and outright value plays long left in the doghouse. If you can’t grasp these new trends, your portfolio will be out to sea shortly. An S&P 500 of 6,000 looks like a pretty safe bet by yearend.
That brings to the fore investment in fixed-income securities. There are two ways to make money on a fixed income. Coupon interest rates are still at historically high levels. And as rates fall, fixed-income prices rise, opening the door to capital gains, which could reach 10%-20% in the coming year.
The fixed-income market at $100 trillion is double the size of the stock market. And there are many more bond listings than stock ones. So the number of possible investments is almost endless. I shall give you a brief overview of some of the more interesting subsectors.
US Government bonds – are the gold standard with a guaranteed return. But you pay for the extra security with lower rates; the current ten-year US Treasury bond yield is 4.20%, much lower than the present 90-day T-bill of 5.21%. The easiest way to buy these is through the (TLT). The 30-year government bond should be avoided as the extra 0.14% in yield doesn’t adequately compensate you for the extra 20 years of risk
Junk Bonds – Also known as “high yield” bonds have always been misnamed. The default rates never remotely approached the levels that justified their high yields, not even during the financial crisis, as my old friend former junk bond king Michael Milliken has amply proven. The (JNK) is currently yielding 6.59% and has the potential for larger capital gains than government bonds.
Master Limited Partnerships – These are partnerships granted generous tax benefits with the goal of producing oil. They issue annual Form K-1’s to include with your tax return. Dividends are deferred until the MLP’s investment reaches the end of its useful life, which can be decades. MLPs used to be a huge industry with dozens of listed companies.
When the price of oil went to negative numbers during the pandemic, most of them got wiped out. Because of this rocky past, there are a handful of large, well-capitalized MLPs with extremely high yields. One is Western Midstream Partners (WES) with a 9.20% yield. Energy Transfer Partners (ET) pay a 7.96% yield.
These yields will remain safe as long as oil prices are stable or rising, as I expect in a long-term global economic recovery. Take oil back to zero again in another pandemic and these returns will get turned on their head.
With the normalizing of interest rates, it's time to normalize investment strategies as well. That means bringing back the old 60/40 strategy where one half of the portfolio ensures the other, with a modern twist. You can put 60% of your assets in stocks, with half on technology and half on domestic cyclicals.
The other 40% should be allocated to some mix of the above fixed-income investments guaranteeing annual high returns. It is not a bad strategy for mature investors, especially if they would rather be on a golf course instead of spending all day in front of a screen picking bottoms and tops for stocks, like Millennials.
Here’s where to get a Safe 8.48% Yield, BB-rated bank loans, which will soar in value with even just one quarter-point rate cut. BB bank loans are very low risk, and they have a spread that’s about 290 basis points above the overnight Fed rate. How does one buy such an animal? The actual bank loans themselves are made by lending institutions to companies. These loans aren’t made accessible to individual investors who want to make a play for yield. Rather, large institutional investors snap them up and add them to their fixed-income portfolios. The top ticker symbols are (SLRN), (BRLN), (BKLN), and (FFRHX). Check them out.
So far in July, we are up +2.17%. My 2024 year-to-date performance is at +22.19%.The S&P 500 (SPY) is up +17.40%so far in 2024. My trailing one-year return reached +37.07. That brings my 16-year total return to +698.82%.My average annualized return has recovered to +51.44%.
I used the blockbuster CPI Report last week to jump off my 100% cash position and piled on six new positions. Those included interest rate-sensitive longs in (CCI), (GLD), (DE), (BRK/B), and shorts in big tech leaders (TSLA) and (NVDA).
Some 63 of my 70 round trips were profitable in 2023. Some 35 of 44 trades have been profitable so far in 2024, and several of those losses were really break-even.
Nonfarm Payroll Report Comes in Weak for June at 206,000. The Headline Unemployment rate rose to a three-year high at 4.1%. All interest rate plays rocketed as a September interest rate comes back on the table. If the Fed doesn’t cut soon, we are going into recession. Buy (TLT) on dips.
Fed Governor Jay Powell Warns of Recession Risks if interest rate cuts don’t take place soon, spiking all markets. Powell is showing his cards for the next few Fed Meetings. Buy all interest rates plays like (TLT), (JNK), (NLY), and (CCI).
CPI comes in Negative. The writing is not only on the wall right now, it’s blasting us with great neon lights. That was the message this morning from the Consumer Price Index, which this morning delivered a gob-smacking 0.1% DECLINE in June. We are now in deflation and the YOY inflation rate is now down to only 3.0%. As a result, a Fed interest rate cut of 25 basis points is now a certainty in September and more will follow. All falling interest rate plays in the stock market are in play. Rising rate plays could be the trade for the rest of 2024.
PPI Rises 0.2%, with Wholesale Prices coming in as expected. The producer price index is now up 2.6% year over year. The inflation pictures goes back to mixed. Stocks rallied with big tech recovering about half of yesterday’s losses.
Consumer Sentiment at a Three-Year Low at 66.0%, down from 68.5 as the economic slide continues, according to the University of Michigan. It’s another pre-recession indicator.
Bank Earnings Beat and the stocks are rising in expectation of falling interest rates, with (JPM), (BAC), and (C) reporting. Wells Fargo (WFC) Bombed again. Buy banks on dips which have been on a tear all day.
Tesla Delays Robotaxi Day, past its original August 8 target to probably October, tanking the shares by 11%. The date propelled the massive 50% rally in the hares over the past month. Musk is always overly aggressive on his targets. Sell calls against existing (TSLA) stock positions.
Apple Expects 10% Rise in iPhone Shipments in 2024, after a bumpy 2023, counting on AI features to fuel demand for the iPhone 16. Apple is now the newly discovered AI stock. Buy (AAPL) on dips.
My Ten-Year View
When we come out the other side of the recession, we will be perfectly poised to launch into my new American Golden Age or the next Roaring Twenties. The economy decarbonizing and technology hyper accelerating, creating enormous investment opportunities. The Dow Average will rise by 800% to 240,000 or more in the coming decade. The new America will be far more efficient and profitable than the old.
Dow 240,000 here we come!
On Monday, July 15 at 9:30 AM EST, Feder Governor Jay Powell speaks. He has lately been leaning dovish. On Tuesday, July 16 at 9:30 AM, Retail Sales are published.
On Wednesday, July 17 at 9:30 AM, Building Permits are out.
On Thursday, July 18 at 8:30 AM, the Weekly Jobless Claims are announced.
On Friday, July 19 at 2:00 PM, the Baker Hughes Rig Count is printed.
As for me, I usually get a request to fund some charity about once a day. I ignore them because they usually enrich the fundraisers more than the potential beneficiaries. But one request seemed to hit all my soft spots at once.
Would I be interested in financing the refit of the USS Potomac (AG-25), Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s presidential yacht?
I had just sold my oil and gas business for an outrageous profit and had some free time on my hands so I said, “Hell Yes,” but only if I get to drive. The trick was to raise the necessary $5 million without it costing me any money.
To say that the Potomac had fallen on hard times was an understatement.
When Roosevelt entered the White House in 1932, he inherited the presidential yacht of Herbert Hoover, the USS Sequoia. But the Sequoia was entirely made of wood, which Roosevelt had a lifelong fear of. When he was a young child, he nearly perished when a wooden ship caught fire and sank, he was passed to a lifeboat by a devoted nanny.
Roosevelt settled on the 165-foot USS Electra, launched from the Manitowoc Shipyard in Wisconsin, whose lines he greatly admired. The government had ordered 34 of these cutters to fight rum runners across the Great Lakes during Prohibition. Deliveries began just as the ban on alcohol ended.
Some $60,000 was poured into the ship to bring it up to presidential standards and it was made wheelchair accessible with an elevator, which FDR operated himself with ropes. The ship became the “floating White House,” and numerous political deals were hammered out on its decks. Some noted guests included King George VI of England, Queen Elizabeth, and Winston Churchill.
During WWII Roosevelt hosted his weekly “fireside chats” on the ship’s short-wave radio. The concern was that the Germans would attempt to block transmissions if the broadcast came from the White House.
After Roosevelt’s death, the Potomac was decommissioned and sold off by Harry Truman, who favored the much more substantial 243-foot USS Williamsburg. The Potomac became a Dept of Fisheries enforcement boat until 1960 and then was used as a ferry to Puerto Rico until 1962.
An attempt was made to sail it through the Panama Canal to the 1962 World’s Fair in Seattle, but it broke down on the way in Long Beach, CA. In 1964 Elvis Presley bought the Potomac so it could be auctioned off to raise money for St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital. It sold for $65,000. It then disappeared from maritime registration in 1970. At one point, there was an attempt to turn it into a floating disco.
In 1980, a US Coast Guard cutter spotted a suspicious radar return 20 miles off the coast of San Francisco. It turned out to be the Potomac loaded to the gunnels with bales of illicit marijuana from Mexico. The Coast Guard seized the ship and towed it to the Treasure Island naval base under the Bay Bridge. By now, the 50-year-old ship was leaking badly. The marijuana bales soaked up the seawater and the ship became so heavy it sank at its moorings.
Then a long rescue effort began. Not wanting to get blamed for the sinking of a presidential yacht on its watch, the Navy raised the Potomac at its own expense, about $10 million, putting its heavy lift crane to use. It was then sold to the City of Oakland, CA for a paltry $15,000.
The troubled ship was placed on a barge and floated upriver to Stockton, CA, which had a large but underutilized unionized maritime repair business. The government subsidies started raining down from the skies and a down to the rivets restoration began. Two rebuilt WWII tugboat engines replaced the old, exhausted ones. A nationwide search was launched to recover artifacts from FDR’s time on the ship. The Potomac returned to the seas in 1993.
I came on the scene in 2007 when the ship was due for a second refit. The foundation that now owned the ship needed $5 million. So, I did a deal with National Public Radio for free advertising in exchange for a few hundred dinner cruise tickets. NPR then held a contest to auction off tickets and kept the cash (what was the name of FDR’s dog? Fala!).
I also negotiated landing rights at the Pier One San Francisco Ferry Terminal, which involved negotiating with a half dozen unions, unheard of in San Francisco maritime circles. Every cruise sold out over two years, selling 2,500 tickets. To keep everyone well-lubricated, I became the largest Bay Area buyer of wine for those years. I still have a free T-shirt from every winery in Napa Valley.
It turned out to be the most successful fundraiser in the history of NPR and the Potomac. We easily got the $5 million and then some. The ship received a new coat of white paint, new rigging, modern navigation gear, and more period artifacts. I obtained my captain’s license and learned how to command a former Coast Guard cutter.
It was a win-win-win.
I was trained by a retired US Navy nuclear submarine commander, who was a real expert at navigating a now thin-hulled 73-year-old ship in San Francisco’s crowded bay waters. We were only licensed to cruise up to the Golden Gate Bridge and not beyond, as the ship was so old.
The inaugural cruise was the social event of the year in San Francisco with everyone wearing period Depression-era dress. It was attended by FDR’s grandson, James Roosevelt III, a Bay area attorney who was a dead ringer for his grandfather. I mercilessly grilled him for unpublished historical anecdotes. A handful of still-living Roosevelt cabinet members also came, as well as many WWII veterans.
As we approached the Golden Gate Bridge, some poor soul jumped off and the Coast Guard asked us to perform search and rescue until they could get a ship on station. Nobody was ever found. It certainly made for an eventful first cruise.
Of the original 34 cutters constructed, only four remain. The other three make up the Circle Line tour boats that sail around Manhattan several times a day.
Last summer, I boarded the Potomac for the first time in 14 years for a pleasant afternoon cruise with some guests from Australia. Some of the older crew recognized me and saluted. In the cabin, I noticed a brass urn oddly out of place. It contained the ashes of the sub-commander who had trained me all those years ago.
Good Luck and Good Trading,
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/John-Thomas-and-friends.png8401110april@madhedgefundtrader.comhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngapril@madhedgefundtrader.com2024-07-15 09:02:572024-07-15 12:26:34The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or Sea Change
Below please find subscribers’ Q&A for the July 10 Mad Hedge Fund Trader Global Strategy Webinar, broadcast from Incline Village NV.
Q: Is the Fed waiting too long to cut interest rates?
A: Yes, they are. We are on a recession track if the Fed doesn’t move soon. In other words, the light at the end of the tunnel isn’t daylight—it’s an oncoming train. So, I think a September rate cut is a certainty. They want to see tomorrow’s data and make sure it’s cool. They need several months of really cool inflation data to justify the first rate cut and we probably are going to get that, so next update is tomorrow with the latest CPI number is crucial. Everybody’s sitting on their hands until then.
Q: When will NVIDIA (NVDA) hit a $4 trillion market valuation?
A: By the end of the year. We’re currently at $3.3 trillion, so another $700 billion is nothing for NVIDIA—you could do that in a day if you really wanted to. But give it until the end of the year, just to be conservative. The fact is, they have a global monopoly on the highest-priced product that everybody in the world has to buy or go out of business. It’s not a bad place to be—it’s kind of like where John D. Rockefeller was in the oil industry around 1900.
Q: What do you think about copper (COPX)? Should I maintain my longs?
A: Yes, all we need is further proof of falling interest rates and the entire commodities/precious metals sectors will take off like a rocket. So just sit with your positions. I put out a piece yesterday on copper. All that shines is not Copper, and it’s not dead it’s just resting, like the proverbial John Cleese parrot.
Q: Do you think a 10% stock market correction is likely before the election?
A: No, the most we’ve been able to get this year is 4% or 5% pullbacks, but not much more. We have a world with a cash glut that is underinvested in the face of a global monetary easing. Investors have been net sellers of stocks all of last year, so we were ripe for a meltup, which has, in fact, happened every day so far in July. So no, my S&P 500 target of 6,000 for the end of the year is starting to look too conservative given the moves that we’ve made lately. I’m very positive about that.
Q: Is the real estate market about to crash?
A: Well, the Florida housing collapse that is being driven by the insurance industry feeing that state. Insurance companies don’t like the hurricane risk going forward, which can cost tens of billions of dollars per event. Nobody there can get insurance anymore unless they pay outrageous amounts of money. Some people are only buying fire insurance to save money and skipping the storm insurance and rolling the dice, hoping the storms hit somewhere else in Florida. The fact is, you can’t get a home mortgage without insurance. Banks aren't willing to take the environmental risk of a house without insurance. No insurance means no bank loans, which means the market shrinks to a cash-only market. And there is a cash-only market in Florida, but it’s not at the $500,000 level, it’s more at the $50 million level. So that is a problem unique to Florida. Could it spread to other areas? Yes. Texas is having another energy crisis, as it has twice every year, ever since the power system was privatized there. No reserves for emergencies, no contingency, nothing that costs money basically. And then California definitely has a wildfire problem, although we’ve been getting off pretty light last year and this year. But the insurance companies don’t think like that. They are the classic 20/20 hindsight type companies.
Q: What’s the impact of the election on the market?
A: Zero. But it will defer buying until after the election. So if you have a 50/50 split on polls, uncertainty is at a maximum. People don’t like investing in uncertainty, they like sure things. After the election, you can expect a massive melt-up in the market no matter who wins because the uncertainty will be gone, and tech stocks will lead once again.
Q: What should I do with Nvidia (NVDA)?
A: I put out a report on this on Monday. You keep your long and write calls against them. And you can get quite a lot of money for just the August calls. I think the August $140 calls were selling for $3.50—they’re higher than that now, so you could even go out to August $145, and just keep doing that every month. If Nvidia takes off and you get taken out of your stock, you’re selling it essentially at $143.50. So that is an excellent trade—a lot of the big institutions are doing that now.
Q: Tesla's (TSLA) been on a big rally for the past month; do you expect it to continue?
A: I expect it to take a break, but the long-term uptrend is now back for good, for lots of different reasons. The immediate headline reason was because the Chinese government allowed the buying of Teslas for the first time—they are made in China after all. Second, they had a good earnings beat, so this caused a massive short-covering rally. The shorts got crushed by Tesla once again, as they have been consistently doing for the last 15 years, really. I saw a number of cumulative losses on short positions on Tesla stock since inception: $100 billion. Most of those losses were incurred by oil companies trying to put Tesla out of business.
Q: What do you call a substantial dip?
A: It’s different for every stock—for some it’s 2%, for others like Tesla or Nvidia it’s 20%. It depends on the volatility of the stock; you just have to look at the charts and make your own call.
Q: What do you think for the next earnings season?
A: It’ll be great for technology stocks and not so great for domestics as their businesses cool off.
Q: Is there anything Europe and American EV producers can do to compete against the Chinese at these lower prices?
A: Yes: keep quality high, therefore profits high, therefore profit margins high. That was the Japanese strategy in the US from the 1980s onwards, and it was hugely successful. You can cede the money-losing part—the low-end part of the market, to the Chinese. The quality of the Chinese EVs is terrible, they start to fall apart after four years, and I learned this from several Chinese EV drivers in Ecuador where they have a substantial market share already. But at $15,000 plus the shipping, you don’t make a lot of money in EVs.
Q: Is it a good time to buy put LEAPS on the ProShares UltraShort 20+ Year Treasury (TBT)?
A: Yes, especially if you’re willing to do an at-the-money and bet that the interest rates stay here or lower for the next year. You’d probably get a 100% return on that, but why bother? Because on the TBT itself, you have a much wider trading spread than the (TLT), therefore the dealing costs are higher. You might as well just go and do the long (TLT) LEAP instead.
Q: Chipotle Mexican Grill (CMG) stock has been really successful for the last five years, but it just dropped 20%, should I get in?
A: It’s a very low-margin business—I avoid those. There’s not a lot of meat in the burrito business. It doesn’t have the key elements of success. (Not just Chipotle, but with the whole industry.) It's not like you’re designing 96 stock microprocessors.
Q: Are AI stocks overhyped at this point?
A: Absolutely yes, but they can stay overhyped for another three or four years, so I think we're just at the beginning of a very long-term run. And the people who have been involved so far are making the biggest money in their lives.
To watch a replay of this webinar with all the charts, bells, whistles, and classic rock music, just log in to www.madhedgefundtrader.com , go to MY ACCOUNT, click on GLOBAL TRADING DISPATCH, then WEBINARS, and all the webinars from the last 12 years are there in all their glory.
Good Luck and Stay Healthy
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
At some point in 2024, we are going to need to SELL. Maybe there will be an economic slowdown, a surprise election outcome, or a flock of black swans. However, there is selling and then there is selling.
I have a new training video on how to execute a vertical bear put debit spread. You can watch the full 34-minute video by clicking here.
The last one was made seven years ago.
Since then, we have learned a lot from customer questions. The nature of the options markets has also changed. I recommend watching it on full screen so you can read all the numbers on my options trading platform.
I am normally a pretty positive person.
For me, the glass is always half full, not half empty, and it’s always darkest just before dawn. After all, over the past 100 years, markets have risen 80% of the time and that includes the Great Depression.
However, every now and then conditions arise where it is prudent to sell short or make a bet that a certain security will fall in price.
This could happen for myriad reasons. The economy could be slowing down. Companies might disappoint in earnings. “Sell in May, and go away?" It works….sometimes. Oh, and new pandemic variants can strike at any time.
Other securities have long-term structural challenges, like the US Treasury bond market (TLT). Exploding deficits as far as the eye can see assure that government debt of every kind will be a perennial short for years to come.
Once you identify a short candidate, you can be an idiot and just buy put options on the security involved. Chances are that you will overpay and that accelerated time decay will eat up all your profits even if you are right and the security in question falls. All you are doing is making some options traders rich at your expense.
For outright put options to work, your stock has to fall IMMEDIATELY, like in a couple of days. If it doesn’t, then the sands of time run against you very quickly. Something like 80% of all options issued expires unexercised.
And then there’s the right way to play the short side, i.e., MY way. You go out and buy a deep-in-the-money vertical bear put debit spread.
This is a matched pair of positions in the options market that will be profitable when the underlying security goes down, sideways, or up small in price over a defined limited period of time. It is called a “debit spread” because you have to pay money to buy the position instead of receiving a cash credit.
It is the perfect position to have on board during bear markets. As my friend Louis Pasteur used to say, “Chance favors the prepared.”
I’ll provide an example of how this works with the United States Treasury Bond Fund (TLT) which we have been selling short nearly twice a month since the bond market peaked in July 2016.
On October 23, 2018, I sent out a Trade Alert that read like this:
Trade Alert - (TLT) - BUY
BUY the iShares Barclays 20+ Year Treasury Bond Fund (TLT) November 2018 $117-$120 in-the-money vertical BEAR PUT spread at $2.60 or best.
At the time, the (TLT) was trading at $114.64. To add the position, you had to execute the following positions:
Buy 37 November 2018 (TLT) $120 puts at…….………$5.70
Sell short 37 November 2018 (TLT) $117 puts at….….$3.10
Net Cost:…………………..…….………..………….…...........$2.60
Potential Profit: $3.00 - $2.60 = $0.40
(37 X 100 X $0.40) = $1,480 or 11.11% in 18 trading days.
Here’s the screenshot from my personal trading account:
This was a bet that the (TLT) would close at or below $117 by the November 16 options expiration day.
The maximum potential value of this position at expiration can be calculated as follows:
+$120 puts -$117 puts
+$3.00 profit
This means that if the (TLT) stays below $117, the position you bought for $2.60 will become worth $3.00 by November 16.
As it turned out that was a prescient call. By November 2, or only eight trading days later, the (TLT) had plunged to $112.28. The value of the iShares Barclays 20+ Year Treasury Bond Fund (TLT) November 2018 $117-$120 in-the-money vertical BEAR PUT spread had risen from $2.60 to $2.97.
With 92.5% of the maximum potential profit in hand (37 cents divided by 40 cents), the risk/reward was no longer favorable to carry the position for the remaining ten trading days just to make the last three cents.
I, therefore, sent out another Trade Alert that said the following:
Trade Alert - (TLT) – PROFITS
SELL the iShares Barclays 20+ Year Treasury Bond Fund (TLT)November 2018 $117-$120 in-the-money vertical BEAR PUT spread at $2.97 or best
In order to get out of this position you had to execute the following trades:
Sell 37 November 2018 (TLT) $120 puts at…………….......…$7.80
Buy to cover short 37 November 2018 (TLT) $117 puts at….$4.83
Net Proceeds:………………………….………..………….…..............$2.97
Profit: $2.97 - $2.60 = $0.37
(37 X 100 X $0.37) = $1,369 or 14.23% in 8 trading days.
Of course, the key to making money in vertical bear put spreads is market timing. To get the best and most rapid results you need to buy these at market tops.
If you’re useless at identifying market tops, don’t worry. That’s my job. I’m right about 90% of the time and send out a STOP LOSS Trade Alert very quickly when I’m wrong.
With a recession and bear market just ahead of us understanding the utility of the vertical bear put debit spread is essential. You’ll be the only guy making money in a falling market. The downside is that your friends will expect you, to pick up every dinner check.
But only if they know.
Understanding Bear Put Spreads is Crucial in Falling Markets
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/Playing-the-Short-Side-with-Vertical-Bear-Put-Debit-Spreads.jpg400400MHFTFhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMHFTF2024-07-05 09:02:122024-07-05 10:59:47Playing the Short Side with Vertical Bear Put Debit Spreads
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