Global Market Comments
September 28, 2018
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(WHAT WILL TRIGGER THE NEXT BEAR MARKET?)
(JPM), (SNE), (TLT), (ELD), (AMZN),
(WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 17, 2018, HOUSTON
GLOBAL STRATEGY LUNCHEON)

Global Market Comments
September 28, 2018
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(WHAT WILL TRIGGER THE NEXT BEAR MARKET?)
(JPM), (SNE), (TLT), (ELD), (AMZN),
(WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 17, 2018, HOUSTON
GLOBAL STRATEGY LUNCHEON)

To paraphrase Leo Tolstoy in Anna Karenina, all bull markets are alike; each bear market takes place for its own particular reasons.
Now that the wreckage of the past financial crises is firmly in our rearview mirror, it is time for us to start pondering the causes of the next one. I’ll give you a hint: It will all boil down to excessive debt…again.
Global quantitative easing has been going on for a decade now, keeping interest rates far too low for too long. The unintended consequences will be legion, and the day of atonement may be a lot closer than you think.
The 1991 bear market was prompted by the Savings & Loan Crisis, where too many unsophisticated financial institutions in a newly unregulated world dreadfully mismatched asset and liabilities.
Every time I drive by a former Home Savings and Loan branch, with its unmistakable quilt decorations and accents, I remember those frightful days. Back then, when I looked at buying a home in San Francisco, the seller burst into tears when the price I offered would have generated a negative equity bill due for him.
The 2000 Dotcom crash can easily be explained by the monstrous amounts of debt provided to stock speculators. The 2008 crash was produced by massive, unregulated, and largely unknown lending to the housing sector through complex derivatives that virtually no one understood, especially the buyers.
So, here we are in 2018 nearly a decade out of the last crisis. Potential disasters are lurking everywhere under the surface while blinder constrained investors blithely power ahead. Once they metastasize, they rapidly feed into each other, creating a domino effect. They always do.
Emerging Market Debt
Lacking domestic capital markets with any real depth, companies in emerging economies prefer to borrow in U.S. dollars. When the dollar is weak that’s great because it means liabilities on the balance sheet shrink when brought back into the home currency. When the greenback is strong, the opposite happens. Dollar debt can grow so large that it can wipe out a company’s total equity.
This is already happening in a major way in Turkey, where the lira has plunged 50% in the past year, effectively doubling their debt. And once it starts, a global contagion kicks in as all emerging companies become suspect. This is not a small problem. Emerging market debt has rocketed from 55% to 105% of GDP since 2008.
The Rise of Junk Borrowers
In recent years there has been a massive expansion in borrowing by marginal credits. This is taking place because fixed income investors are willing to accept a large increase in the amount of risk for only a small marginal rise in interest rates.
There is now $1.4 trillion in low grade BBB bonds outstanding, with one-third of this one downgrade away from junk. There has also been a dramatic rise in “covenant lite” issuance, which minimizes the rights of bond holders in the event of default. When the next round of trouble arrives, you can expect this market to shut down completely, as it did in 2008.
Student Loans
These have been the sharpest rising form of borrowing over the past decade, doubling to $1.5 trillion. Some 10% are now in default. This acts as a major drag on the economy as heavily indebted students don’t borrow, buy homes or cars, or really participate in the economy in any way, banned by lowly FICO scores. This is why millennials in general have been slow to enter the housing market for the first time.
Shadow Banking
Would you like to know today’s equivalent of subprime the lending that took the financial system down in 2008? That would be shadow banking, or off the books, unreported lending by hedge funds, private equity funds, and mortgage companies. Again, this is all in pursuit of high interest rates in a low interest rate world.
Yes, liars’ loans are back, just not to the extent we saw 10 years ago…yet. I’m waiting for my cleaning lady to get offered a great refi package again, just as she was in the run-up to the last crisis. How many of these loans are out there? No one has any idea, especially the Fed. As a result, nearly 50% of all mortgage lending is now from unregulated nonbank sources.
The Outlier
Remember when Sony (SNE) was almost put out of business by a hack attack from North Korea? What if they had done this to JP Morgan (JPM)? That would have created a chain reaction of defaults throughout the financial system that would have been impossible to stop. When this happened in 2008, it took the Fed three months to reopen markets such as commercial paper. If big bankers need a reason to lie awake at night, this is it.
I’m not saying that markets can’t go higher before they go lower. In fact, I dove back into Amazon (AMZN) only this morning.
However, as an Australian farmer told me on my last trip down under, “Be careful when you cross the field, mate. Deadly snakes abound.” Add up all the above and it will turn into a giant headache for investors everywhere.






Global Market Comments
September 24, 2018
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(THE MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or IT’S FED WEEK),
(SPY), (XLI), (XLV), (XLP), (XLY), (HD), (LOW), (GS), (MS), (TLT),
(UUP), (FXE), (FCX), (EEM), (VIX), (VXX), (UPS), (TGT)
(TEN TIPS FOR SURVIVING A DAY OFF WITH ME)

20/20 hindsight is a wonderful thing, especially when all of your predictions come true.
In February, I announced that markets would trade in broad ranges until the run-up to the midterm elections. That is what has happened to a tee, with the decisive upside breakout taking place last week. From here on. You’re trying to buy dips for a year-end run-up to higher highs.
For many months I was the sole voice in the darkness crying out that the bull market was still alive, it was just resting. Now quality laggards are taking the lead, such as in Industrials (XLI), Health Care (XLV), Consumer Staples (XLP), and Consumer Discretionary (XLY).
Home Depot (HD), which I recommended a month ago has taken off for the races, as has competitor Lowes (LOW), thanks to a twin hurricane boost. Even the long dead banks have recently showed a pulse (MS), (GS).
Technology stocks are taking a long-needed rest after a torrid two-and-a-half-year run. But they’ll be back. They always come back.
It’s not only stocks that have broken out of ranges, so has the bond market (TLT), the U.S. dollar (UUP), and foreign currencies (FXE). Will commodity companies like Freeport-McMoRan (FCX) and emerging markets (EEM) be the last to pick themselves off the mat, or do they really need to see the end of the trade wars first?
Markets are essentially acting like the trade war is over and we won. Why would traders believe this? That’s what a Volatility Index touching $11 tells you and is why I have been telling them to avoid buying it all week. Because the president told them so.
Another not insignificant positive is that multinationals have been slow to repatriate foreign funds, so there is a lot more still abroad to buy back their own stocks.
Weekly jobless claims hit another half century low at 201,000. Major U.S. companies such as UPS (UPS) and Target (TGT) are planning record levels of Christmas hiring. By the way, this is what economic peaks look like.
The Senate passes a mini spending bill that keeps the government from shutting down until December 7. The budget deficit keeps on soaring, but apparently, I am the only one who cares. Live through a debt crisis like we had during the early 1980s and you’d feel the same way.
The data for housing continues to be terrible, and we saw our first increase in inventories in three years.
Finally, with people camping out overnight and lines around the block, Apple’s CEO Tim Cook opens the doors to the Palo Alto, CA, store at 9:00 AM sharp on Friday to three new phones. But did the stock peak at $230, as it has in past release cycles?
Last week, the performance of the Mad Hedge Fund Trader Alert Service forged a new all-time high and then gave it up on one bad trade. September is now unchanged at -0.32%. My 2018 year-to-date performance has retreated to 26.69%, and my trailing one-year return stands at 38.23%.
My nine-year return appreciated to 303.16%. The average annualized Return stands at 34.32%. I hope you all feel like you’re getting your money’s worth.
This coming week is all about the Fed, plus a plethora of housing data.
On Monday, September 24, at 10:30 AM, we learn the August Dallas Fed Manufacturing Survey.
On Tuesday, September 25, at 9:00 AM, the new S&P Corelogic Case-Shiller National Home Price Index for July, a three-month lagging indicator.
On Wednesday September 26, at 10:00 AM, the August New Home Sales is published. At 2:00 the Fed Open Market Committee announced its decision to raise interest rates by 25 basis points.
Thursday, September 27 leads with the Weekly Jobless Claims at 8:30 AM EST, which dropped 3,000 last week to 201,000, a new 43-year low. At the same time an update on Q2 GDP is published.
On Friday, September 28, at 9:45 AM, we learn the August Chicago Purchasing Managers Index. The Baker Hughes Rig Count is announced at 1:00 PM EST.
As for me,
Good luck and good trading.








Global Market Comments
September 21, 2018
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(SEPTEMBER 19 BIWEEKLY STRATEGY WEBINAR Q&A),
(SPY), (VIX), (VXX), (GS), (BABA), (BIDU), (TLT), (TBT),
(TSLA), (NVDA), (MU), (XLP), (AAPL), (EEM),
(MONDAY, OCTOBER 15, 2018, ATLANTA, GA,
GLOBAL STRATEGY LUNCHEON)

Below please find subscribers’ Q&A for the Mad Hedge Fund Trader September 19 Global Strategy Webinar with my guest and co-host Bill Davis of the Mad Day Trader.
As usual, every asset class long and short was covered. You are certainly an inquisitive lot, and keep those questions coming!
Q: Do you expect a correction in the near term?
A: Yes. In fact, we may even see it in October. Markets (SPY) have been in extreme, overbought territory for a month now, the macro background is terrible, trade wars are accelerating, and interest rates are rising sharply. The only thing holding the market up is the prospect of one more quarter of good earnings, which companies start reporting next month. So once that’s out of the way, be careful, because people are just hanging on to the last final quarter before they sell.
Q: I just got out of my cannabis stock, what should I do now?
A: Thank your lucky stars you got away with that—it was an awful trade and you made money on it anyway. Stay away in droves. After all, the cannabis industry is all about growing a weed and how hard is that? This means the barriers to entry are zero. In fact, I’m thinking of growing some in my own backyard. My tomatoes do well, so why not Mary Jane?
Q: The Volatility Index (VIX) is now at $11.79—should I buy?
A: No, the rule of thumb for the (VIX) is to wait for it to sit on a bottom for one to two weeks and let some time decay work itself out. You’ll see that in the ETF, the iPath S&P 500 VIX Short-Term Futures ETN (VXX). When it stops breaking to new lows, that means it’s ready for another bounce. I would wait.
Q: What do you think about banks here? Is it time to get in?
A: No, these are not promising charts. If anything, I’d say Goldman Sachs (GS) is getting ready to do a head and shoulders and go to new lows. I would stay away from financials unless I see more positive evidence. The industry is ripe for disruption from fintech, which has already started. That’s said, they are way overdue for a dead cat bounce. That’s a trade, not an investment.
Q: Would you short Alibaba (BABA) and Baidu (BIDU) here?
A: No. Shorting is what I would have done six months ago; now it’s far too late. If anything, I would be a buyer of those stocks here, based on the possibility that we will see progress or an end to the trade war in the next couple of months. If the trade wars continue, they will put the U.S. in recession next year, and then you don’t want to own stocks anywhere.
Q: Is Apple (AAPL) going to get hit by the trade wars?
A: So far, this has not been the case, but they are whistling past the graveyard right now—an obvious target in the trade wars from both sides. For instance, the U.S. could suddenly start applying a 25% import duty to iPhones from China, which would make your $1,000 phone a $1,250 phone. Similarly, the Chinese could hit it in China, restricting their manufacturing in one way or another. I’m being very cautious of Apple for this reason. The stock already has one $10 drop just because of this worry.
Q: Can the U.S. ban China from selling bonds?
A: No, they can’t. The global U.S. Treasury bond market (TLT) is international by nature—there is no way to stop the selling. It would take a state of war to reach the point where the Fed actually seizes China’s U.S. Treasury bond holdings. The last time that happened was when Iran seized the U.S. embassy in Tehran in 1979. Iran didn’t get its money back until the Iran Nuclear Deal in 2015. Before that you have to go back to WWII, when the U.S. seized all German and Japanese assets. They never got those back.
Q: What are your thoughts on the chip sector?
A: Stay away short-term because of the China trade war, but it’s a great buy on the long term. These stocks, like NVIDIA (NVDA) and Micron Technology (MU) have another double in them. The fundamentals are outrageously good.
Q: Is the market crazy, or what?
A: Yes, it is crazy, which is why I’m keeping 90% cash and 10% on the short side. But “Markets can remain irrational longer than you can stay liquid,” as my friend John Maynard Keynes used to say.
Q: What’s your take on the Consumer Staples sector (XLP)?
A: It will likely go up for the rest of the year, into the Christmas period; it’s a fairly safe sector. The uptrend will remain until it doesn’t.
Q: Should we buy TBT now?
A: No, the time to buy the ProShares Ultra Short 20+ Year Treasury ETF (TBT) was two months ago. Now is the time to sell and take profits. I don’t think 10-year U.S. Treasury yields (TLT) are going above 3.11% in this cycle, and we are now at 3.07%. Buy low and sell high, that’s how you make the money, not the opposite.
Q: Does this webinar get posted on the website?
A: Yes, but you have to log in to access it. Then hover your cursor over My Account and a drop-down menu magically appears. Click on Global Trading Dispatch, then the Webinars button, and the last nine years of webinars appear. Pick the webinar you want and click on the “PLAY” arrow. Just give us a couple of hours to get it up.
Q: Can Chinese companies use Southeast Asia as a conduit to export to the U.S.?
A: Yes. This is an old trick to bypass trade restrictions. For example, most of the Chinese steel coming into the U.S. is through third countries, like Singapore. Eventually they do get found out, at which point companies or imports from Vietnam will be identified as Chinese origin and get hit with the import duties anyway, but it could take a year or two for those illegal imports to get discovered. This has been going on ever since trade started.
Q: Will the currency crisis in Argentina and Turkey spread to a global contagion?
A: Yes, and this could be another cause of a global recession late next year. The canaries in the coal live there (EEM).
Q: Would you use the DOJ probe to buy into Tesla (TSLA)?
A: No, buy the car, not the stock as it is untradeable. This is in fact the third DOJ investigation Tesla has undergone since Trump came into office. The last one was over how they handled the $400 million they have in deposits for their 400,000 orders. It turns out it was all held in an escrow account. There are easier ways to make money. It’s a black swan a day with Tesla. This is what happens when you disrupt about half of the U.S. GDP all at once, including autos, the national dealer network, big oil, and advertising. All of these are among the largest campaign donors in the U.S.






Global Market Comments
September 17, 2018
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(THE MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD),
(AAPL), (CBS), (EEM), (BABA), (UUP), (MSFT), (VIX), (VXX), (TLT),
(TUESDAY, OCTOBER 16, 2018, MIAMI, FL, GLOBAL STRATEGY LUNCHEON)

Talking to hedge fund managers, financial advisors, and portfolio managers around the country de-risking seems to be the name of the game. It’s like they expect a category five hurricane to hit the markets tomorrow.
Even my friend, hedge fund legend David Tepper, says that the stock market is fairly valued and that he is cutting back his equity exposure. However, he is hanging onto his position in Micron Technology (MU), which he believes is deeply oversold. Will the last person to leave Dodge please turn out the lights?
You can expect a real hurricane, Florence, to impact the coming economic data. The usual pattern is for GDP growth to take an initial hit when the big storms hit, and then make back more as reconstruction and government spending kicks in. The scary thing is that there are three more hurricanes on the way.
The big event of the week was Apple’s (AAPL) roll out of its new product line, which will beat the daylights out of competitors. Think better and more expensive across the board, with the top iPhone now costing an eye-popping $1,499.
If you are Life Alert, the private company that sells safety devices to seniors, Apple just ate your lunch. Welcome to the cutthroat world of technology investing.
The drama at CBS (CBS) played out with the departure of CEO Les Moonves. He basically generated virtually all the profits for the company for the past two decades. But in this modern age not keeping your zipper zipped carries a heavy price.
A happier departure was seen by Alibaba’s (BABA) Jack Ma, China’s richest man to focus on philanthropic activity.
Emerging markets (EEM) continued their relentless meltdown, only given a brief respite by profit taking in the U.S. dollar (UUP) on Friday.
A coming strike by the United Steelworkers may mark the onset of new wage demands by labor nationwide. In the meantime, the JOLTS report hit a new all-time high with 650,000 job openings.
For the final “screw you” of the week, Trump indicated he was going forward with tariffs on another $200 billion in Chinese imports. Consumer goods will dominate the new black list in the lead up to the Christmas shopping season. Beat the Grinch and shop early!
With the Mad Hedge Market Timing Index ranging from 50 to 78 last week the market keeps trying and failing to reach new all-time highs on small volume. Volatility (VIX) hit a one-month low.
Thank goodness I took profits on my iPath S&P 500 VIX Short Term Futures ETN (VXX) long. The January $40 call options have cratered from $3.60 to only $1.96. Still, there was enough price action to allow us to take nice profits on our bond short (TLT) and Microsoft (MSFT) long. Microsoft was the top-performing Dow stock last and we got in early!
Last week, the performance of the Mad Hedge Fund Trader Alert Service forged a new all-time high. September has given us a middling return of 2.42%. My 2018 year-to-date performance has clawed its way back up to 29.43% and my trailing one-year return stands at 41.35%.
My nine-year return appreciated to 305.90%. The average annualized Return stands at 34.65%. The more narrowly focused Mad Hedge Technology Fund Trade Alert performance is annualizing now at an impressive 29.41%. I hope you all feel like you’re getting your money’s worth.
This coming week is pretty flaccid in terms of economic data releases.
On Monday, September 17, at 8:30 AM, we learn the August Empire State Manufacturing Survey.
On Tuesday, September 18, at 10:00 AM, the National Association of Homebuilders Home Price Index is released. August Home Sales is out at 10:00 AM EST.
On Wednesday September 19, at 8:30 AM, the August Housing Starts is published.
Thursday, September 20 leads with the Weekly Jobless Claims at 8:30 AM EST, which dropped 1,000 last week to 204,000.
On Friday, September 21, at 8:30 AM, we learn August Retail Sales. The Baker Hughes Rig Count is announced at 1:00 PM EST. Last week saw a gain of 7.
As for me, the harvest season in nearby Napa Valley is now in full swing, so I’ll be making the rounds picking up my various wine club memberships. Screaming Eagle check, Duckhorn check, Chalk Hill check.
Good luck and good trading.








Global Market Comments
September 11, 2018
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(A NOTE ON ASSIGNED OPTIONS,
OR OPTIONS CALLED AWAY), (MSFT),
(TEN MORE REASONS WHY BONDS WON’T CRASH),
(TLT), (TBT), (ELD), (MUB)

Global Market Comments
September 6, 2018
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(TUESDAY, OCTOBER 16, 2018, MIAMI, FL,
GLOBAL STRATEGY LUNCHEON),
(HOW THE RISK PARITY TRADERS ARE RUINING EVERYTHING!),
(VIX), (SPY), (TLT),
(TESTIMONIAL)

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