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Tag Archive for: (TSLA)

april@madhedgefundtrader.com

February 3, 2025

Diary, Newsletter, Summary

Global Market Comments
February 3, 2025
Fiat Lux

 

Featured Trade:

(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD or THE TRADE WAR BEGINS)
(SPY), ($COMPQ), (TSLA), (VST), (MSFT), (ADBE), (DELL), (NVDA)

https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png 0 0 april@madhedgefundtrader.com https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png april@madhedgefundtrader.com2025-02-03 09:04:292025-02-03 09:18:22February 3, 2025
april@madhedgefundtrader.com

The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or The Trade War Begins

Diary, Homepage Posts, Newsletter

As I write this, tariffs are coming into force and confusion reigns supreme at the borders. The worst-case scenario has arrived.

In the Marine Corp., they say that a missing 50-cent part can ground a $50 million dollar airplane. It turns out that many of the 50-cent parts are made in Canada and Mexico, which are now in trucks stuck in massive traffic jams at the border. The border is in no way set up for any change in the tariff regime.

Think of it as a mini Covid shock to the supply chain. The parts will eventually show up but will be more expensive.

This is not what traders wanted to hear. That great whooshing sound was the stock market giving up hard-fought gains for the day. Nervousness is running rampant.

With mass firing on the way throughout the government, it’s just a matter of time before the passport renewal process extends from weeks to years. I am telling friends and family to renew now before the process clogs up and shuts down. At the very least, fees are about to go up a lot, now at $130.

When I opened up my laptop on Sunday night and saw the NASDAQ ($COMPQ) down 900 points, I thought that a new war had broken out somewhere or another 9/11 event had taken place. That recovered to down only 400 by the New York opening. This is exactly the set up I had been waiting for since mid-December. I started piling in on longs in big tech stocks, turning my January performance from lackluster to robust in a matter of days.

And that’s the way it’s going to be in 2025. Maintain iron discipline and hold out for these rare sweet spots, then pile in. Never chase, that was last year’s game. We could be range trading for quite some time. Index players might be lucky to make anything by year-end, and might be better off parking their money in 90-Treasury bills, now yielding 4.2%.

By the end of the week, most of the losses were recovered, except for the big AI providers like (NVDA) and (AMD), which have had their own problems for the last seven months. The net is that it is potentially bad news for AI providers and great news for AI users, which is almost everybody.

I have heard from several clients that they spent the week trying to trip up the DeepSeek program and have come up with hilariously inaccurate answers. For example, DeepSeek didn’t know that my former USC classmate OJ Simpson died last year and thought he was a current NFL football player. And don’t ask who Winston was in 1984. Other examples about.

In the meantime, the big tech companies are all tinkering with DeepSeek, making changes and improvements. It is definitely a clever programming improvement, but it’s not going to destroy the world.

Whatever happened to Cold Fusion?

Remember that 1990’s meme that set stocks on fire? It was supposed to give us free electricity forever. Except that here I am 35 years later, and cold fusion is still 20-40 years into the future. It’s always 40 years in the future. The same thing happened with the 3D printing craze and the fax mania before that.

That’s what came to mind last December when I first heard that the Chinese app DeepSeek had delivered a revolutionary new AI program that was supposed to cut the need for high-end chips by 99%. I ignored it just like all of the other Chinese apps that come out on a daily basis.

Which leads me to the quandary of the day. Why the heck is Europe suddenly doing so well? The German stock market has outperformed the S&P 500 (SPY) by a large margin in recent months. Whenever I mention putting a dollar into any European country, my continental friends say I’m out of my mind and that they only want more American investment ideas. Is there something going on here?

My only thought is that the markets may be discounting an end to the Ukraine War this year. If so, some 10 million barrels a day of oil would be unleashed on the market, taking prices down to $30 a barrel. Ukraine would reclaim its position as the world’s largest agriculture exporter, collapsing prices for wheat and sunflower oil. And Europe will be able to pare back its recently increased defense spending.

You heard it here first.

By the way, the 9/11 reference brings to mind one of the most notorious short sales of all time. The day before the attack, a Swiss bank acting on behalf of an anonymous client bought several thousand short-dated put options on American Airlines (AA). After two American planes were deliberately crashed in a suicide attack, the trade made $200 million. The FBI set a trap to arrest those who came to collect. But they never showed. Eventually, the trades were unwound by the exchange. It’s all true.

We managed to attain a respectable +5.80% return in January. That is close to my average monthly return for all of 2024. The magic is still there.

That takes us to a year-to-date profit of +5.80% so far in 2025. My trailing one-year return stands at +85.34% as a bad trade a year ago fell off the one-year record. That takes my average annualized return to +49.96% and my performance since inception to +757.69%.

I used the Monday meltdown to start filing in positions in Nvidia (NVDA) and Vistra (VST). That is on top of my existing short strangle in Tesla (TSLA). The Mad Hedge Technology added a slew of long on Microsoft (MSFT), Adobe (ADBE), Dell (DELL), and (NVDA).

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

Try beating that anywhere.

Technology Stocks Destroyed on News of China’s DeepSeek, an AI program that takes them a great leap forward. U.S. technology firms like Nvidia plunged, as Chinese startup DeepSeek sparked concerns over competitiveness in AI and America’s lead in the sector, triggering a global sell-off. DeepSeek launched a free, open-source large language model in late December, claiming it was developed in just two months at a cost of under $6 million. These developments have bolstered questions about the large amounts of money big tech companies have been investing in artificial intelligence models and data centers.

US Home Sales Hit 30-Year Low in 2024, the second year in a row of weak sales. High costs related to homeownership sapped sales again. The average rate for a 30-year fixed mortgage has hovered between 6% and 8% since late 2022. Avoid interest rate plays.

Nvidia Drops $600 Billion in Market Capitalization, the largest in stock market history. CEO Jensen Huang’s net worth dropped below $100 billion, while CEOs of the Mangiest Seven plunged by $67 Billion. I told you it was coming. Buy when the washout finishes. The bubble didn’t burst.

The Cruise Business is Rocketing, with Royal Caribbean (RCL) just running up its best five-week sales period in history. There is a two-year wait to order the enormous new ships, the biggest, 264,000-tonne Icon of the Seas, carries a mind-blowing 7,400 passengers. Buy (RCL) and (CCL)on dips.

US Consumer Confidence Dives amid renewed concerns about the labor market and inflation. The Conference Board said on Tuesday its consumer confidence index fell to 104.1 this month from an upwardly revised 109.5 in December. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast the index rising to 105.6 from the previously reported 104.7.

Fed Leaves Interest Rates Unchanged at 4.25%, tanking stocks. All interest rate plays will remain dead in the water. Will the pause be for six months or a year, or will the next Fed be a rate rise? Jay Powell is waiting for the impact of new government policies like all the rest of us. Buy financials on dips. The Fed's balance sheet continues to shrink and is down to $6.8 trillion, withdrawing liquidity from the system. All references to “progress” on inflation were dropped.

Coffee Prices Hit a New All-Time High at $3.60/pound for Arabica. Brazil, by far the world's largest producer, has few beans left to sell, and worries over its upcoming harvest persist. Dealers said 70%-80% of Brazil's current arabica harvest has been sold and new trades are slow. Brazil produces nearly half the world's arabica beans, a high-end variety typically used in roast and ground blends. This is yet another climate change play.

Waymo Self-Driving Taxis Expanding to Ten New Cities. After testing the Waymo Driver in multiple cities, the company says the technology is adapting successfully to new environments, leading to the expansion. In addition to ongoing trips to Truckee, Michigan's Upper Peninsula, Upstate New York, and Tokyo, the expansion includes testing in San Diego and Las Vegas, with more cities yet to be announced.

Tesla Bombs in 2024, with earnings at $25.5 billion last year versus $27.2 billion, or down 5.5%. Even a presidential friendship can’t boost earnings. Despite missing on every metric, the shares were only down $3 today. Tesla is more about belief in the future and today’s facts. But full self-driving will launch in the US in June after being stalled by the previous administration.  No guidance for sales in 2025. Energy storage was the big grower last year and will do well this year. Not the rose bed I was promised. My short position is looking good, but I’m maintaining my long-term target of $1,000.

US GDP Finishes 2024 at 2.3%, less than expected but still the strongest in the world. Household spending grew at a 4.2% pace, most since early 2023. Equipment spending fell at a 7.8% rate on the Boeing strike impact. What happens next is anyone’s guess.

Microsoft Blows Up on Cloud Guidance, on huge earnings disappointment, taking the stock down 6%. The company beat estimates on the top and bottom lines but fell short on estimates for its Intelligent Cloud business. Microsoft’s Commercial Cloud segment revenue, which includes cloud services sales, saw revenue of $40 billion, a 21% year-over-year increase but shy of Wall Street expectations of $41.1 billion. Microsoft's intelligent cloud business, which includes its Azure platform, saw revenue of $25.5 billion. Wall Street was expecting $25.8 billion. I’m buying the dip.

Weekly Jobless Claims Fall 16,000 to a seasonally adjusted 207,000 for the week ended Jan. 25, the Labor Department said on Thursday. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast 220,000 claims for the latest week.

Consumer Inflation Expectations Comes in Soft. The personal consumption expenditures price index increased 2.6% on a year-over-year basis in December, while core PCE was at 2.8%, both in line with expectations but well ahead of the Fed’s 2% target. Personal income climbed 0.4% as forecast, while spending rose 0.7%. Markets liked the number.

Apple is Catching a Bid on the assumption that diplomat Tim Cook can somehow avoid import duties from China. Even at a 100% tariff, it would probably add only $100 to the cost of an iPhone, which is made in China.

My Ten-Year View – A Reassessment

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


My Dow 240,000 target has been pushed back to 2035.

On Monday, February 3 at 8:30 AM EST, the ISM Manufacturing Index PMI is out.

On Tuesday, February 4 at 8:30 AM, the JOLTS Job Openings is released.

On Wednesday, February 5 at 8:30 AM, the ISM Survives PMI is printed.

On Thursday, February 6 at 8:30 AM, the Weekly Jobless Claims are disclosed.

On Friday, February 7 at 8:30 AM, Nonfarm Payroll Report for January is announced. At 2:00 PM the Baker Hughes Rig Count is printed.

As for me, the University of Southern California has a student jobs board that is positively legendary. It is where the actor John Wayne picked up a gig working as a stagehand for John Ford which eventually made him a movie star.

As a beneficiary of a federal work/study program in 1970, I was entitled to pick any job I wanted for the princely sum of $1.00 an hour, then the minimum wage. I noticed that the Biology Department was looking for a lab assistant to identify and sort Arctic plankton.

I thought, “What the heck is Arctic plankton?” I decided to apply to find out.

I was hired by a Japanese woman professor whose name I long ago forgot. She had figured out that Russians were far ahead of the US in Arctic plankton research, thus creating a “plankton gap.” “Gaps” were a big deal during the Cold War, so that made her a layup to obtain a generous grant from the Defense Department to close the “plankton gap.”

It turns out that I was the only one who applied for the job, as postwar anti-Japanese sentiment then was still high on the West Coast. I was given my own lab bench and a microscope and told to get to work.

It turns out that there is a vast ecosystem of plankton under 20 feet of ice in the Arctic consisting of thousands of animal and plant varieties. The whole system is powered by sunlight that filters through the ice. The thinner the ice, such as at the edge of the Arctic ice sheet, the more plankton. In no time, I became adept at identifying copepods, euphasia, and calanus hyperboreaus, which all feed on diatoms.

We discovered that there was enough plankton in the Arctic to feed the entire human race if a food shortage ever arose, then a major concern. There was plenty of plant material and protein there. Just add a little flavoring and you have an endless food supply.

The high point of the job came when my professor traveled to the North Pole, the first woman ever to do so. She was a guest of the US Navy, which was overseeing the collection hole in the ice. We were thinking the hole might be a foot wide. When she got there, she discovered it was in fact 50 feet wide. I thought this might be to keep it from freezing over, but thought nothing of it.

My freshman year passed. The following year, the USC jobs board delivered up a far more interesting job, picking up dead bodies for the Los Angeles Counter Coroner, Thomas Noguchi, the “Coroner to the Stars.” This was not long after Charles Manson was locked up, and his bodies were everywhere. The pay was better too, and I got to know the LA freeway system like the back of my hand.

It wasn’t until years later, when I had obtained a high security clearance from the Defense Department that I learned of the true military interest in plankton by both the US and the Soviet Union.

It turns out that the hole was not really for collecting plankton. Plankton was just the cover. It was there so a US submarine could surface, fire nuclear missiles at the Soviet Union, and then submarine again under the protection of the ice.

So, not only have you been reading the work of a stock market wizard these many years, you have also been in touch with one of the world’s leading experts on Artic plankton.

Live and learn.

1981 on Peleliu Island in the South Pacific

 

Stay Healthy,

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

 

 

 

https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/Young-john.png 530 658 april@madhedgefundtrader.com https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png april@madhedgefundtrader.com2025-02-03 09:02:162025-02-20 12:38:50The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or The Trade War Begins
april@madhedgefundtrader.com

January 30, 2025

Diary, Newsletter, Summary

Global Market Comments
January 31, 2025
Fiat Lux

 

Featured Trade:

(JANUARY 29 BIWEEKLY STRATEGY WEBINAR Q&A),
(META), (AMZN), (NVDA), (AMD)  (GS), (SPY), (TSLA), (SBUX), (CCJ), (ADBE), (LMT), (GD), (RTX), (NVDA)

https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png 0 0 april@madhedgefundtrader.com https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png april@madhedgefundtrader.com2025-01-31 09:04:542025-01-31 09:52:52January 30, 2025
april@madhedgefundtrader.com

January 29 Biweekly Strategy Webinar Q&A

Diary, Newsletter

Below please find subscribers’ Q&A for the January 29 Mad Hedge Fund Trader Global Strategy Webinar, broadcast from Salt Lake City, UT.

Q: Are AI stocks going to crash?

A: Some already have, and others haven’t. It’s really about single-stock-picking the chip area and the pure AI plays, which have been enormously overextended. If you boil it down to a single sentence, if you offer AI for free, AI users like (META) and (AMZN) do really well, while AI producers, like (NVDA) and (AMD) get crushed. I’ve been warning for months that these things were getting too high. The end result is that in two weeks the price earnings multiple for Nvidia has gone from 40 to 25. You know, at 25, it really is quite attractive. It'll be even more attractive at 20 or even 15 if we get that low. I'll show you where we hit that on the charts. Don't forget their earnings are still growing at tremendous rates—we'll talk about that in a second.

Q: What stocks are good to invest in now?

A: Watch the banks. Watch the financials. They’ve hardly sold off. I was begging for Goldman Sachs (GS) to tank. It didn't—we only got a $10 drop. It's just not letting people in, which means higher highs for all the banks and financials are coming. That has become the no-brainer one-way trade of 2025. You know, I had an enormous number of bank LEAPS expire in my personal account on the January 17 option expiration. I'm waiting to get back in now. So that is the play.

Q: What's happening with Starbucks (SBUX)? Are they investable?

A: Starbucks was a disaster area until the summer when they brought in new management, which has a fantastic track record. The stock has since gone up 30%. You're kind of late to get in on this one. I don't really follow the stock anyway. Selling cups of coffee is not a high-margin business. I'd rather stick with the Tesla’s (TSLA) and Nvidia’s (NVDA) of the world where the value added is very high

Q: What will happen with Bitcoin in the new administration?

A: It's the same with everything. Higher highs first, lower lows later. If you're a Bitcoin investor now at 100,000, the big question is what happens when Donald Trump leaves office in four years? Does it go back to 5,000? We really don't know so, why touch Bitcoin when you can get 10 to 1 returns on all these other great companies which make stuff that you can actually touch and feel? Plus, you can leverage up with the LEAPS, and no one's going to steal your account, which happens frequently with Bitcoin holdings.

Q: Do you think tariffs are a good idea for the economy?

A: No, tariffs shrink global trade, they shrink globalization. It's a race to see if we can make other countries more poor than they can make us. It's an economy-shrinking strategy. It was a major contributor to causing the Great Depression in the 1930’s. That's why we abandoned tariffs 80 years ago with the end of World War II. I mean, the last cause of the 1930’s tariffs was World War II. That was a major contributing factor. So do I like tariffs? No. It turns out it's a great defensive strategy. If someone's making a fortune off you, they tend not to blow you up. So I think that's a big mistake and I will be an anti-tariff person to my grave. There are special situations like Chinese EVs, for example, where they're using a huge cost advantage to flood the emerging markets with cheap EVs. If that happened to the US, it would crash the US economy. In that one case, I'm in favor of tariffs. By the way, their EVs are using technology they basically stole from Tesla.

Q: What are your thoughts on defense stocks? With so many wars occurring all over the world.

A: Don't touch defense stocks with a 10-foot poll if the government is in favor of cost-cutting, the largest cost after Social Security is defense. We had a defense budget of about $824 billion in 2024. We have a 2.8 million man military and that cutting there and running down our weapons stocks would mean that you don't want to buy Lockheed Martin (LMT), General Dynamics (GD), Raytheon (RTX), all the big suppliers of weapons to the Ukraine war, for example, which looks like it's going to get cut off completely. They cut off all humanitarian aid to Ukraine last week. And of course, I was personally involved in delivering some of that humanitarian aid to Ukraine in the recent past. Yeah, defense looks bad if people really get serious about cost-cutting.

Q: Do you see the Fed dropping interest rates later this year?

A: That is possible. I tend to think we don't go into recession this year. It's a next year or year after type of thing. But markets can discount recession in six months to a year in advance like they did in 2007 and 2008. I don't think we get any more interest rate cuts. We'll just have to see what policies the new government implements, and how inflationary they are. And if they are inflationary, interest rates are going up, not down. That is why everybody's sitting on their hands right now and doesn't know what to do. Uncertainty at an eight-year high. You know, the government often talks one game but does the opposite. So, there’s nothing to do but wait and see.

Q: Well, what happened to the US housing market in 2025?

A: Nothing, you know volumes are shrinking. The last two years were the lowest volume sales in housing market history since the numbers were collected, and higher interest rates for longer. It's just more bad news. You know, something like 40% of all of the sales now are all cash. Prices are still going up again on paper, but there's almost no trade happening at these higher prices. And of course, the Millennials have been almost completely shut out of the market—the largest generation in history by the way—because they don't have enough money. They can't earn enough money; especially when AI is wiping out all the entry-level jobs, as it has been doing for two years in Silicon Valley.

Q: Here's a good question. How much time do we need to spend researching a company before we make an investment there?

A: Well, not that much, really. You can spend an hour or two reading the annual report, browsing through the most recent financial statement, and doing some news searches and you'll have a better read than most individual investors are going to have on a single stock. Then you start to see trends on what makes a good company, what makes a bad company, and over time, you get a feel for a company—when to get in, when to get out. That's one way. Or you can listen to the Mad Hedge Fund Trader, who's been doing this for 55 years and watching the same stocks. You wonder why you always have the same stocks up here and it's because I've been following these guys for forever or more. So you really get a handle on when they're doing well and when they're doing awful.

Q: Should we sell Nvidia (NVDA) stock for now?

A: No, I was telling people to cut positions the next time it ran to $150, which it did a few weeks ago. Now we're probably entering buy territory more than sell territory. Nvidia will come back. I just don't know where the bottom is for now, and it depends on your own investing style. If you're a five-year investor, you can forget about all this volatility, if you're a day trader, yeah, you probably should sell Nvidia now because you could buy it back $10 cheaper.

Q: Do you expect a new high after the Fed meeting?

A: No, I don't. I think we're stuck in a range for the S&P 500 for the next six months. After that, we may get a move. Depending on what effect government policies have on the economy.

Q: What about an alert for Adobe (ADBE)?

A: I didn't put out the alert to buy Adobe. The Adobe alert is part of the Mad Hedge Technology Letter service, and if you want to get purely tech trade alerts, go to the Mad Hedge website, go to the store, and you can see the technology letter is offered for sale up there. Here is the link: https://hi290.infusionsoft.app/app/orderForms/techletter

Q: ​​What is the right size of account for doing this kind of trading?

A: We literally have college students trading with $500 accounts. We have lots of individuals trading with $5,000 accounts—that way you can buy 10 $400 positions and still have some room. We only recommend you put 10% of your cash in any one trade. A lot of retired people will keep a large portion of their money in an index like the S&P 500 (SPY) and take 10% of their money and use it to do our trade alerts, which then adds an extra return to the index position. So, the answer is different for different people.

Q: Do I see a meaningful correction like 20% or 30% in the next six months?

A: No, I really don't, but that could be 2026 business. When we get a big correction, we get a recession. Again, it's dependent on government policies and we have no idea what those are right now. People can only guess. I'm not in the guessing business. I'm in the sure thing business.

Q: Can you explain how to complete the trade alerts you send out?

A: What all the professionals do is they put out a spread of orders. If I put out an order to buy something at $9.00, you put in a bid at $9.00, $9.10, $9.20, $9.30, and $9.40. By the close, some or all of those will get done. Often they all get done by the end of the day when the high-frequency traders have to dump their positions because they're not allowed to carry overnight positions. You make them good-until-canceled orders. So if you get a low opening the next morning, you'll get entirely filled at the $9.00 level, and this is what my clients in Australia do. They only do overnight good-until-cancelled orders since the market's open from 11:30 PM until 6:00 AM  in the morning, Australia time. They tend to make more money than any of my other clients because they only enter overnight GTC orders. So, people trying to outsmart the market on an intraday basis generally don't do very well.

Q: Should I sell the Cameco Corporation (CCJ) stock I bought on the nuclear trade?

A: No, I think (CCJ) recovers. I was looking at it yesterday. Elimination of the electricity trade is complete nonsense. I think the nuclear thing is real. It'll come back. And in fact, I bought Vistra Energy (VST) yesterday, so use this extreme sell-off to get into the nuclear trade if you missed it the first time around.

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, TECHNOLOGY LETTER, or JACQUIE'S POST, then WEBINARS, and all the webinars from the last 12 years are there in all their glory.

 

Good Luck and Good Trading,

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

 

 

 

 

 

 

https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/john-thomas-guard.png 932 578 april@madhedgefundtrader.com https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png april@madhedgefundtrader.com2025-01-31 09:02:132025-01-31 09:52:25January 29 Biweekly Strategy Webinar Q&A
april@madhedgefundtrader.com

January 27, 2025

Diary, Newsletter, Summary

Global Market Comments
January 27, 2025
Fiat Lux

 

Featured Trade:

(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or THE TRADE WAR BEGINS),
(SPY), (TLT), (TSLA), (NFLX)

https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png 0 0 april@madhedgefundtrader.com https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png april@madhedgefundtrader.com2025-01-27 09:04:292025-01-27 12:19:16January 27, 2025
april@madhedgefundtrader.com

January 24, 2025

Tech Letter

Mad Hedge Technology Letter
January 24, 2025
Fiat Lux

 

Featured Trade:

(HUMANOIDS TO THE RESCUE OR NOT)
(TSLA)

https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png 0 0 april@madhedgefundtrader.com https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png april@madhedgefundtrader.com2025-01-24 14:04:442025-01-24 13:46:56January 24, 2025
april@madhedgefundtrader.com

Humanoids To The Rescue Or Not

Tech Letter

Dr. Doom Nouriel Roubini needs to lay off the fear porn – I’m not taking the bait this time. Sorry Roubs!

Roubini is sounding the alarm bells on humanoid robots, but I think it is more of a case of fear-mongering than anything else.

After all, like most economists, Roubini isn’t a trader, he is an academic who sits behind the scenes and goes after those juicy sound bites that the media need to publish stories.

He wasn’t taking profits in great tech trades like when I captured profits on Netflix just the other day.

His idea goes like this…

He thinks the big breakthrough right now is the evolution of humanoid robots that essentially follow individual workers on the factory floor, on a construction site, even a chef in a restaurant, or a housekeeper. It's terrifying, but it's happening in the next literally year or two.

For this level of transformation in one year, I believe the percentage chance of this coming to fruition is less than 2%.

My understanding of the humanoids is that the software will take 10 years to figure out the nuances.

Roubini — known as Dr. Doom for his bleak economic forecasts — said human jobs would be lost to humanoids.

Instead, an LLM (large language mode) learns about everything in the world, the entire internet follows your job, my job or anybody else's job in a few months, then learns everything that a construction worker, factory worker, or any other service worker can do, and then can replace them. And I think that it's going to be a revolution — it's going to affect blue-collar jobs like we've never, ever seen before.

The humanoid robot market could reach $7 trillion by 2050, Citi research recently found. Those robots — such as Tesla's (TSLA) Optimus — may be able to do everything from cleaning your home to folding your laundry. The robots could create job loss as routine tasks get automated.

There is a higher likelihood that this humanoid from Tesla will be used as staging to convince investors to buy more tech stocks.

Tech companies have a huge problem on their hands and there hasn’t been a lot of great brain activity to find a real solution.

Venture capitalists have been lamenting the lack of real innovation in tech products like Mark Andreessen and Peter Thiel.

The humanoid is here to get investors to buy more tech stocks in companies that aren’t innovating.

Tech companies are cutting staff to beat earnings and that isn’t a sign for top-notch growth.

Investors need to separate the fluff from reality.

The reality is that big tech companies still make enormous amounts of profit but have failed miserably in finding something new.

Apple CEO Tim Cook is still figuring out what next to do after selling the iPhone to Chinese people.

The humanoid operating on AI software might give tech stocks an extra 6-month cushion before investors pull the rug.

Enjoy the bull market while it lasts. I executed a bullish trade in Dell which is part of the AI story.

AI stocks will go higher and humanoid stocks will too – not because they will make money, but because investors still buy the hype. 

 

 

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april@madhedgefundtrader.com

January 21, 2025

Diary, Newsletter, Summary

Global Market Comments
January 21, 2025
Fiat Lux

 

Featured Trades:

(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD or NOW WE ENTER THE GREAT UNKNOWN),
(GS), (MS), (JPM), (C), (BAC) (TLT), (TSLA)

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april@madhedgefundtrader.com

The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or Now We are Entering the Great Unknown

Diary, Newsletter

I am writing this to you from Indian Rock Beach, Florida, an extended sand bar outside of Tampa on the west coast. Cabin cruisers pass by every five minutes. There is not much fishing though with rain and temperatures in the low 40s, the coldest of the year. leaving a lot of free time for indoor work. Every building is missing a chunk of wall or roof if not totally destroyed from the October hurricane Helena, including my own Airbnb. The last hurricane here took place in 1921.

Everywhere I look, hedge fund managers are derisking, cutting exposure, and laying on hedges. The reason is that no one has a handle on what is going to happen in financial markets in the short term. Do we go up, down, or nowhere? The rapid unwind of the post-election rally has put the fear of markets back in them once again.

There is also a rare shortage of news in the financial media. It’s as if someone is sucking all the oxygen out of the room.

We had about a week where the Mad Hedge Market Timing Index in the mid-twenties was enticing us back into the market. I was expecting a hot December Consumer Price Index to give us a nice selloff and the perfect entry point I had been waiting a month for, in line with all the economic warm data of the last three months.

But it was not to be. The CPI printed at a cool 2.9% YOY and the Dow Average opened up 700 points the next morning, the first step in a 1,700-point three-day rally. Half the December losses came back in a heartbeat.

So much for the great entry point.

All of my target stocks like (GS), (MS), (JPM), (C), and (BAC) went ballistic. I only managed to get into a long in Tesla (TSLA) because the implied volatility was a sky-high 70%. That way, the stock could take a surprise hit and I still would have a safety cushion large enough to eke out the maximum profit by the February 20 option expiration. What’s next? How about a $100 in-the-money bearish Tesla put spread, once the rally burns out?

I can’t remember a time when there was such a narrow field of attractive trading targets. Rising interest rates have killed off bonds, foreign currencies, precious metals, and real estate. A weak China has destroyed commodities and energy, with US overproduction contributing to the latter. Only financials look interesting for the short term and big tech for the long term.

At that point, financials are not exactly undiscovered investments, but they should have another three months of life in them. That’s when big tech should reclaim the leadership, when we get another surprise AI-driven earnings burst.

What does this get us in the major indexes? With so much of the stock market on life support, not much, maybe 10% at best. After that, who knows?

There is no point in looking for any more financial news today (Sunday), as there isn’t any with a holiday tomorrow. So I am headed out for a one-hour walk of the beach.

We managed to grind out a +2.07% return so far in January. That takes us to a year-to-date profit of +2.07% so far in 2025. My trailing one-year return stands at +75.92%. That takes my average annualized return to +49.99% and my performance since inception to +753.93%.

I stopped out of my long position in (TLT) near cost. My January 2025 (TSLA) expired on Friday at its maximum profit point, soaring a torrid $50 in the two days going into expiration.

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

Try beating that anywhere.

My Ten-Year View – A Reassessment

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

Consumer Price Index Cools at 0.2%, or 3.2% YOY, the first drop in six months. Economists see the core gauge as a better indicator of the underlying inflation trend than the overall CPI which includes often-volatile food and energy costs. The headline measure rose 0.4% from the prior month, with over 40% of the advance due to energy.

Los Angeles Fires to Cost $270 Billion
, with only $30 billion covered by insurance. Inflation will rise as the cost of construction labor and materials soar. Tradesmen around the country are packing their trucks and heading west to snare work at double the normal rate. There is no trade here as the new home builders are not involved, who are set up to only build mass-produced tract homes. Yet another black swan for 2025.

$4 Trillion in Asset Management Disrupted by the Los Angeles Fires, with some relocating office space and supporting staff members who have lost their homes. The LA area is home to large industry players like Capital Group, TCW Group, hedge funds Oaktree Capital and Ares Management.


Bonds Hit 14-Month Lows at a 4.80% Yield
, as fixed income dumping continues across the board. “Higher Rates for longer” don’t fit in here anywhere. But there may be a BUY setting up for (TLT) at 5.0%.

The Trump Bump is Gone
, stock markets giving up all their post-election gains. Technology was especially hard hit, with lead stock NVIDIA down 15%. It seems that people finally examined the implications of what Trump was proposing for the stock market. Tax-deferred selling of the enormous profits run up under the Biden administration is a big factor.

Amazon is Getting Ready for Another Run.
Strong earnings and continuing excitement about artificial intelligence will help Amazon stock move back into the green. The e-commerce and cloud company to beat estimates when it reports its fourth-quarter results—analysts are expecting a profit of $1.48 a share on sales of $187.3 billion, according to data from FactSet. Buy (AMZN) on dips.

JP Morgan Announces Record Profits
, boosted by volatility tied to the US elections in November. Trading revenue at the firm rose 21% from a year earlier, jumping to $7.05 billion. Fixed income was the star, with revenue beating analysts’ estimates, while equities-trading revenue fell short. Buy (JPM) on dips.

Goldman Sachs Beats
. The firm’s fourth-quarter profits more than doubled to $4.1 billion, buoyed by strength in its investment bank, expansion of its asset management business, and a surprise $472 million gain from a balance sheet bet. Goldman ended 2024 as the best-performing stock among major US banks with a 48% advance. The bank is positioning itself for a long-awaited resurgence in deals after ditching major parts of a consumer foray.

Morgan Stanley Doubles Profits. Equities were the big winner, with revenue jumping 51% in the quarter and reaching an all-time high for the full year. In the wealth business, net new assets fell just shy of estimates even as revenue topped expectations.

SEC Sues Elon Musk
, alleging the billionaire violated securities law by acquiring Twitter shares at “artificially low prices.” In his purchases, Musk underpaid for Twitter shares by at least $150 million, the SEC says. Musk bought Twitter in 2022 for about $44 billion, later changing the name to X. Expect this case to get lost behind the radiator next week.

Fed Minutes are Turning Hawkish
, making an interest rate cut at the March 19 meeting unlikely. Inflation is stubbornly above target, the economy is growing at about 3% pace and the labor market is holding strong. Put it all together and it sounds like a perfect recipe for the Federal Reserve to raise interest rates or at least to stay put.

EIA Expects Weak Oil Prices for All of 2025
. Many analysts expect an oversupplied oil market this year after demand growth slowed sharply in 2024 in the top consuming nations: the U.S. and China. The EIA said it expects Brent crude oil prices to fall 8% to average $74 a barrel in 2025, then fall further to $66 a barrel in 2026.

Housing Starts were up 3.0% in December
, with single-family homes up only 3%, while multifamily saw a 59% rise. It should shift away from home sales crushed by 7.2% mortgage rates. You can write off real estate in 2025.

EV and Hybrid Sales Reach a Record 20% of US Vehicle Sales
in 2024 and now account for 10% of the total US fleet. And you wonder why oil prices are so low. That includes 1.9 million hybrid vehicles, including plug-in models, and 1.3 million all-electric models. Tesla continued to dominate sales of pure EVs but Cox Automotive estimated its annual sales fell and its market share dropped to about 49%.

SpaceX Starship Blows Up on test launch number seven
. The Federal Aviation Administration issued a warning to pilots of a “dangerous area for falling debris of rocket Starship,” according to a pilots’ notice. Looks like that Mars trip will be delayed.

On Monday, January 20, the markets are closed for Martin Luther King Day.

On Tuesday, January 21 at 8:30 AM EST, nothing of note takes place.

On Wednesday, January 22 at 8:30 AM, the API Crude Oil Stocks are printed.

On Thursday, January 23 at 8:30 AM, the Weekly Jobless Claims are announced.
 
On Friday, January 24 at 8:30 AM, Existing Home Sales are published. At 2:00 PM the Baker Hughes Rig Count is printed.

As for me, back in the early 1980s, when I was starting up Morgan Stanley’s international equity trading desk, my wife Kyoko was still a driven Japanese career woman.

Taking advantage of her near-perfect English, she landed a prestige job as the head of sales at New York’s Waldorf Astoria Hotel.

Every morning, we set off on our different ways, me to Morgan Stanley’s HQ in the old General Motors Building on Avenue of the Americas and 47th street and she to the Waldorf at Park and 34th.

One day, she came home and told me there was this little old lady living in the Waldorf Towers who needed an escort to walk her dog in the evenings once a week. Back in those days, the crime rate in New York was sky-high and only the brave or the reckless ventured outside after dark.

I said, “Sure, what was her name?”

Jean MacArthur.

I said, "THE Jean MacArthur?"

She answered, “Yes.”

Jean MacArthur was the widow of General Douglas MacArthur, the WWII legend. He fought off the Japanese in the Philippines in 1941 and retreated to Australia in a dramatic night PT Boat escape.

He then led a brilliant island-hopping campaign, turning the Japanese at Guadalcanal and New Guinea. My dad was part of that operation, as were the fathers of many of my Australian clients. That led all the way to Tokyo Bay where MacArthur accepted the Japanese in 1945 on the deck of the battleship USS Missouri.

The MacArthurs then moved into the Tokyo embassy where the general ran Japan as a personal fiefdom for seven years, a residence I know well. That’s when Jean, who was 18 years the general’s junior, developed a fondness for the Japanese people.

When the Korean War began in 1950, MacArthur took charge. His landing at Inchon Harbor broke the back of the invasion and was one of the most brilliant tactical moves in military history. When MacArthur was recalled by President Truman in 1952, he had not been home for 13 years.

So it was with some trepidation that I was introduced by my wife to Mrs. MacArthur in the lobby of the Waldorf Astoria. On the way out, we passed a large portrait of the general who seemed to disapprovingly stare down at me taking out his wife, so I was on my best behavior.

To some extent, I had spent my entire life preparing for this job.

I had stayed at the MacArthur Suite at the Manila Hotel where they had lived before the war. I knew Australia well. And I had just spent a decade living in Japan. By chance, I had also read the brilliant biography of MacArthur by William Manchester, American Caesar, which had only just come out.

I also competed in karate at the national level in Japan for ten years, which qualified me as a bodyguard. In other words, I was the perfect after-dark escort for Midtown Manhattan in the early eighties.

She insisted I call her “Jean”; she was one of the most gregarious women I have ever run into. She was grey-haired, petite, and made you feel like you were the most important person she had ever run into.

She talked a lot about “Doug” and I learned several personal anecdotes that never made it to the history books.

“Doug” was a staunch conservative who was nominated for president by the Republican party in 1944. But he pushed policies in Japan that would have qualified him as a raging liberal.

It was the Japanese who begged MacArthur to ban the army and the navy in the new constitution for they feared a return of the military after MacArthur left. Women gained the right to vote on the insistence of the English tutor for Emperor Hirohito’s children, an American Quaker woman. He was very pro-union in Japan. He also pushed through land reform that broke up the big estates and handed out land to the small farmers.

It was a vast understatement to say that I got more out of these walks than she did. While making our rounds, we ran into other celebrities who lived in the neighborhood who all knew Jean, such as Henry Kissinger, Ginger Rogers, and the UN Secretary-General.

Morgan Stanley eventually promoted me and transferred me to London to run the trading operations there, so my prolonged free history lesson came to an end.

Jean MacArthur stayed in the public eye and was a frequent commencement speaker at West Point where “Doug” had been a student and later the superintendent. Jean died in 2000 at the age of 101.

I sent a bouquet of lilies to the funeral.

Kyoko passed away in 2002.

In 2014, China’s Anbang Insurance Group bought the Waldorf Astoria for $1.95 billion, making it the most expensive hotel ever sold. Most of the rooms were converted to condominiums and sold to Chinese looking to hide assets abroad.

The portrait of Douglas MacArthur is gone too. During the Korean War, he threatened to drop atomic bombs on China’s major coastal cities.

 

 

Good Luck and Good Trading,

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

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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april@madhedgefundtrader.com

January 17, 2025

Diary, Newsletter, Summary

Global Market Comments
January 17, 2025
Fiat Lux

 

Featured Trades:

(JANUARY 15 BIWEEKLY STRATEGY WEBINAR Q&A),
(GS), (MS), (JPM), (C), (BAC), (TSLA), (HOOD), (COIN), (NVDA), (MUB), (TLT), (JPM), (HD), (LOW), FXI)

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