Mad Hedge Technology Letter
February 19, 2021
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(ARE TECH STOCKS IRRATIONAL?)
(TSLA), (PYPL), (BIG TECH)
Mad Hedge Technology Letter
February 19, 2021
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(ARE TECH STOCKS IRRATIONAL?)
(TSLA), (PYPL), (BIG TECH)
It’s no joke – we are in the nosebleed section with tech stocks here.
But that doesn’t mean there is no more room to run.
Euphoria can continue until it doesn’t, and that’s where we are right now in the Nasdaq as we close in on 14,000 points.
If we take a minute to understand the different opinions out there, overall, people think tech isn’t cheap right now and rightly so.
Out of all assets, bitcoin and U.S. tech stocks are considered in bubble territory right now.
A survey contributed by market professionals in late January found that 89% of professionals believe we are in a bubble.
In the bubble, bitcoin is the posterchild of bubble activity.
The next so-called bubble poster child is big cap U.S. tech stocks.
Hard not to say no when the likes of fintech giants PayPal (PYPL) are up 25% YTD.
Another name that has seen insatiable appreciation in underlying shares is electric vehicle (EV) maker Tesla (TSLA) peaking at $880 and consolidating back to $790 today.
Tesla, meanwhile, also saw a massive climb in its share price in 2020 and that has extended into the new year.
CEO Elon Musk was crowned the world’s richest person.
The stock is up more than 700% year over year.
It is not exactly certain what might take down these robust names.
The number of tailwinds is still plentiful.
Loose monetary situations supportive of bubbles will stick around with the public health situation lingering for longer than first anticipated.
The health dilemma is highly likely to spill over into 2022 at this point.
More investors say the rollout of vaccines deployment is failing (41%) than those who said it’s been better than expected (22%).
Only half of those surveyed see normality returning by December.
Then checking in with the latest from a big American investment bank validated these survey numbers with massive in-flow of equity capital.
Brokers have been busy and rightly so as equities have been frontpage news lately with speculative mania reaching fever pitch.
A record net 25% of investors surveyed by the American investment bank this month are taking higher-than-normal risks.
Cash levels slumped to the lowest since 2013, while optimism on cyclical risk assets rose to the highest since 2011.
The yields out there have never been lower and bearing more risk is required to produce the same number of gains.
Unrivaled optimism has been percolating with 84% of fund managers expecting global corporate profits to improve over the next 12 months.
For the first time in a year, investors say companies should focus on spending rather than improving their balance sheets.
We are in the midst of going from balance sheet protection to really letting it loose with capital spending and the synergies that surround it.
Easy money and upcoming health solutions are fueling tech investors into reflation trades of all stripes but mostly trading that is hypertargeting towards the best of tech.
Even if a mini correction presented itself, the mentality of “buy the dip” has strengthened since last March and it will really take a mega black swan event to topple this momentum.
In short, the tech narrative is strengthening with not only the gold standard of tech monopolizing even more revenue, but the second tier is gaining ground in terms of percentage appreciation as well.
The secular trends that buttress tech have also fortified over the pandemic and no government, big or small, has proven a match for proper regulating big tech.
Global Market Comments
February 19, 2021
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(FEBRUARY 17 BIWEEKLY STRATEGY WEBINAR Q&A),
(USO), (XLE), (AMZN), (SPY), (RIOT), (T), (ZM), (ROKU), (TSLA), (NVDA) (TMQ) (TLRY), (ACB), (KO), (XLF), (AAPL) (REMX), (GLD), (SLV), (CPER)
Below please find subscribers’ Q&A for the February 17 Mad Hedge Fund Trader Global Strategy Webinar broadcast from frozen Incline Village, NV.
Q: Are we buying gold on dips?
A: Not yet. As long as you have a ballistic move in bitcoin going on, you don't want to touch gold. Eventually gold does get dragged up by the global bull market in commodities, but silver is more preferable since it moves up at twice the rate of gold in bull markets.
Q: Is it time to buy Amazon (AMZN) LEAPS?
A: Yes, I am looking for a move to $5,000 a share in Amazon with the onset of enormous GDP figures. Exploding consumer spending may be what breaks Amazon out of its current six-month range. I would do something like a two-year LEAP with the $3,600-$3,700 in Amazon. Be cautious and stay near the money. You should get like a 400% or 500% return on that LEAP at expiration, or sooner.
Q: What's your view on Tesla (TSLA)?
A: It looks tired—lower lows, lower highs. We’re in a short-term downtrend that could last several months. I’m holding off on buying Tesla until we find a bottom. I just have one $150 out-of-the-money call spread that expires in 20 days, and that’s it. We paired our position way back on Tesla. Wait for the market to come to you, if you can get Tesla under $700, that's a great time to buy LEAPS on Tesla.
Q: Are you still bearish on energy (XLE)?
A: Short term no, long term yes. You’re trying to catch a rally in a long-term bear market. Some people can do that, some people can’t. It’s the next buggy whip industry, the next American Leather, which completely vaporized.
Q: What about the calls for $100 oil (USO)?
A: Yes, after the markets went up $10 dollars in a day you always see calls for $100 oil. If the energy crisis in Texas shows us anything, it’s that we have to move away from oil as an energy source much faster than we thought because its distribution and production system freeze.
Q: Are you expecting a short-term correction (SPY)?
A: Yes but no more than 4%; there is still too much cash on the sidelines.
Q: Have airline leisure stocks run too far?
A: No, they are coming off of much lower lows so they can go to much higher highs. Almost all restrictions should be gone in six months—I’m trying to time my Australia trips and I think in six months may get to the point where, if you show proof of vaccination and submit to a 3 day test, they will let you into the country. But in six months you won’t be able to get an airline or hotel reservation.
Q: What about the AT&T (T) yield play and 5G play?
A: Yes, I still like AT&T and you should probably buy it about here. All these legacy telecom companies are going to have big moves once 5G accelerates allowing a vast expansion of streaming and other high-end services.
Q: Is CRISPR (CRSP) a good LEAP candidate?
A: Yes, and you can do something like the $200-$210 two years out because it’ll almost certainly get taken over before then.
Q: What’s a good LEAP for Tesla?
A: Wait for it to drop to $700 first and then buy something like the $900-$1000 two years out.
Q: What do you think of Apple?
A: Apple (AAPL) is taking a rest waiting for the 5G rollout to reaccelerate. Our target for Apple this year is $200.
Q: Do we sell in May and go away?
A: I would just go away and keep all your longs. The trouble is, trying to be ultra-smart and time all this stuff in a runaway bull market, you find it a lot harder to get in when you come back; you go “oh my gosh these things are up so much,” you don’t buy anything, and then it doubles. I’ve seen that a lot in the past, New York in 1971, Tokyo in 1987, Dotcom stocks in 1985, add US stocks in 2015.
Q: What do you think of Riot (RIOT) stock?
A: Wouldn't touch it with a ten-foot pole. If I didn’t want to buy bitcoin at $1, I'm not going to want to buy it at $51,000. Go elsewhere for your bitcoin advice, except you’ll hear the same thing: it will go up because it’s gone up. You should use it as a risk indicator. That’s essentially what all bitcoin analysts will tell you because there's nothing to analyze. There are no earnings, there's not even any physical presence anywhere to analyze, no customer support. If you can get seven 10 baggers like we did last year, with Zoom (ZM), Roku (ROKU), Tesla (TSLA), and Nvidia (NVDA) —why bother with cryptocurrencies?
Q: What are your thoughts on travel?
A: My take is that leisure travel is returning in mass but that the business travelers will shy away; and that will be true for this year but probably not next year. I think business travel will come back once it’s 100% safe and once all the companies are making money again and can afford travel.
Q: Is Trilogy Metals Inc. (TMQ) a good buy? It has Copper, Zinc, and some exposure to Gold and Silver.
A: Yes, it is a buy. Most commodity prices should double from these levels; and probably the smartest ones to buy are the ones that haven't moved yet—gold and silver, but silver especially. The world will come roaring back and it needs every possible metal it can get its hands on.
Q: What do you think of the cannabis stocks (TLRY), (ACB)?
A: That is one of several small bubbles in the markets that I don't want to touch at all. How hard is it to grow a weed? Barriers to entry are zero. Massive competition from the black market, as about 30% of the cannabis demand is still going to your local drug dealer who doesn’t have to pay taxes, whereas you get double taxed with a pot company—35% retail sales taxes and then taxes on the profits on top of that. So no thank you, Mary Jane.
Q: Do you think Warren Buffet is still the leading thought contributor to personal finance, or is he outdated?
A: Berkshire Hathaway is up 10% this year, and the Dow is up only 2.8%, so I would say he’s still pretty well in touch with the markets; and he has very heavy weightings in Coca Cola (KO), Financials (XLF), and Apple (AAPL), as well as some energy stocks. Good discipline and good strategy never go out of style.
Q: Is the Texas energy disaster going to set the US’ way on renewable energy faster?
A: Yes, it does force people to consider the move into alternative energy sources much faster, especially when the old energy sources go to zero and then have whole states lose their power sources. Look how the governor of Texas is blaming frozen windmills, which only account for 7% of the Texas energy supply. What a joke! I’ll lend him my hairdryer and they’ll work. Notice the propensity to immediately blame others for their own mistakes. That is terrible leadership. Texas is going to turn blue.
Q: Is climate change overhyped in the US stock market?
A: Absolutely yes, that’s why I haven’t been buying any of these. They tend to be smaller companies, and ever since Biden got the lead in the primaries and the polls last spring this whole sector, and ESG investing in general, has been on an absolute tear and is wildly expensive. I call these feel-good stocks; people buy them because they make them feel good but very few of these actually make real money. I prefer to stick to the real money plays of which there are more than enough around.
Q: Do you like rare earth such as the Van Eck Vectors Rare Earth/Strategic Metals ETF (REMX)?
A: I do like rare earths. You need them for practically anything electronic. China's been withholding supplies again, which they like to do from time to time just to rattle our cage because we need them for all our weapons systems. But this is also prone to bubbles, so be careful when you buy it that you’re not paying up too much. By the way, the (REMX) ETF was brought out at the absolute peak of the last rare earth bubble, which we covered extensively 11 years ago. We got people in at the very bottom of rare earth, and things went up ten times. Then we got everybody out and people said I was being bearish too soon, so I never got invited to conferences again. After that, it went down for eight straight years.
Q: Don’t you think frozen windmills and solar speak for more reliance on oil than less? Biden administration limits on oil will drive up prices.
A: You’re right on the second part; creating shortage of supply will cause price increases. But frozen windmills are a result of lack of capital investment and planning. It turns out all of the windmills in the northern part of the US have electric heaters, so they don’t freeze because it gets colder up there. They didn’t do that in Texas to save money, and now they have lost about 7% of the total Texas energy supply. So bad management was the issue there. Penny-wise and pound-foolish.
Q: Are commodities in general in play? What is the best ETF for commodities?
A: The trouble with commodities is there is no one big catch all commodity ETF. However, you can expect one soon; as things peak or have big runs, they tend to generate new ETFs like new children because the demand is there. In the commodities world, there are lots of individual 1x and 2x ETFs like the gold ETF (GLD), the silver (SLV), the copper (CPER), and so on. But there isn’t one good basket I’ve found. You can always create your own by buying small amounts of each of the leading companies, which is probably the best thing to do.
Q: What is the best property value right now?
A: That would be Mississippi; they have the lowest housing prices in the United States. Unfortunately, low cost of living, low tax states also have the worst education systems, which doesn’t matter of course if you don't have kids. In the end, you get what you pay for. It’s OK if you don’t mind dealing with stupid people every day, which I do. I can always tell when I’m dealing with customer support in the deep south because literacy falls off a cliff.
Q: Should we get a 10% correction soon?
A: Probably not; the last 10% correction needed a presidential election to scare the daylights out of you, and there's nothing like that on the horizon now. Maybe we’ll get another 5% correction on a game stop type incident, but there's just too many people trying to get into the stock market now. People who were selling last March/April are the same people who are buying now.
Q: Is there a bright future for hydrogen?
A: No, electricity is infinitely scalable, and hydrogen isn’t. It’s about as scalable as gasoline because you have to move it around in big tankers, keep it at 434.5 degrees Fahrenheit below zero, which is very expensive and has an unfortunate tendency to blow up. So, I never bought into the hydrogen thesis, except for local use of fleets where everyone gets all their hydrogen from a central facility.
Q: What will be the best performing sector in the next 1-3 months?
A: Your bond short and your financials. It’s the same trade. And it’s the one sector that no one asked about today.
Q: Do you think bitcoin is a bubble poised to pop at some point?
A: Yes, but who knows where that is; bubble tops are impossible to predict, especially when there are no valuation metrics. Bottoms can be measured with valuation metrics, but tops can’t because greed is an immeasurable quantity. However, it will certainly pop when they suddenly decide to increase the total outstanding number of bitcoins, which may seem unlikely now but is inevitable.
Good Luck and Stay Healthy.
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
Global Market Comments
February 17, 2021
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(HOW TO HANDLE THE FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 19 OPTIONS EXPIRATION),
(TSLA), (MS), (BA), (BLK), (GS), (AMD), (KO), (BAC), (NFLX), (AMZN), (AAPL), (INTU), (QCOM), (CRWD), (AZN), (GILD)
Followers of the Mad Hedge Fund Trader Alert Services have the good fortune to own no less than 16 deep in-the-money options positions, all of which are profitable. All but one of these expire in two trading days on Friday, February 19, and I just want to explain to the newbies how to best maximize their profits.
It was time to be aggressive. I was aggressive beyond the pale.
These involve the:
Global Trading Dispatch
Mad Hedge Technology Letter
Mad Hedge Biotech & Healthcare Letter
Provided that we don’t have a huge selloff in the markets or monster rallies in bonds, all 15 of these positions will expire at their maximum profit point.
So far, so good.
I’ll do the math for you on our oldest and least liquid position, the Tesla February 19 $650-$700 vertical bull call spread, which I initiated on January 25, 2021 and will definitely run into expiration. At the Friday high, Tesla shares were at a lowly $816, some $53 lower than the $869.70 that prevailed when I strapped on this trade.
Provided that Tesla doesn’t trade below $700 in two days, we will capture the maximum potential profit in the trade. That’s why I love call spreads. They pay you even when you are wrong on the direction of the stock. All of the money we made was due to time decay and the decline in volatility in Tesla stock.
Your profit can be calculated as follows:
Profit: $50.00 expiration value - $44.00 cost = $6.00 net profit
(4 contracts X 100 contracts per option X $6.00 profit per options)
= $2,400 or 20% in 18 trading days.
Many of you have already emailed me asking what to do with these winning positions.
The answer is very simple. You take your left hand, grab your right wrist, pull it behind your neck, and pat yourself on the back for a job well done.
You don’t have to do anything.
Your broker (are they still called that?) will automatically use your long position to cover your short position, canceling out the total holdings.
The entire profit will be credited to your account on Monday morning February 22 and the margin freed up.
Some firms charge you a modest $10 or $15 fee for performing this service.
If you don’t see the cash show up in your account on Monday, get on the blower immediately and find it.
Although the expiration process is now supposed to be fully automated, occasionally machines do make mistakes. Better to sort out any confusion before losses ensue.
If you want to wimp out and close the position before the expiration, it may be expensive to do so. You can probably unload them pennies below their maximum expiration value.
Keep in mind that the liquidity in the options market understandably disappears, and the spreads substantially widen, when security has only hours, or minutes until expiration on Friday, February 19. So, if you plan to exit, do so well before the final expiration at the Friday market close.
This is known in the trade as the “expiration risk.”
If for some reason, your short position in your spread gets “called away,” don’t worry. Just call your broker and instruct them to exercise your long option position to cover your short option position. That gets you out of your position a few days early at your maximum profit point.
If your broker tells you to sell your remaining long and cover your short separately in the market, don’t. That makes money for your broker, but not you. Do what I say, and then fire your broker and close your account because they are giving you terrible advice. I’ve seen this happen many times among my followers.
One way or the other, I’m sure you’ll do OK, as long as I am looking over your shoulder, as I will be, always. Think of me as your trading guardian angel.
I am going to hang back and wait for good entry points before jumping back in. It’s all about keeping that “Buy low, sell high” thing going.
I’m looking to cherry-pick my new positions going into the next month-end.
Take your winnings and go out and buy yourself a well-earned dinner. Just make sure it’s take-out. I want you to stick around.
Well done, and on to the next trade.
Mad Hedge Technology Letter
February 10, 2021
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(THE CORPORATIZATION OF BITCOIN)
(TSLA), (BTC)
Bitcoin (BTC) is going corporate and that is great for the digital currency and the stock market.
That is the big takeaway from Tesla (TSLA) investing $1.5 billion into the cryptocurrency and announcing that Tesla lovers will be able to buy the car with the digital gold.
Hard to believe that Bitcoin has come so far so fast, but with governments doing their best to cultivate fiscal distrust along with a pandemic driving the entire global business world to the internet, Bitcoin is well placed to reap the benefits just like digital cloud companies.
The big question is what is next for the computer gold?
This could open the floodgates for the likes of Apple, Microsoft, Facebook, Google, and Amazon to join the bitcoin party by making their own investments into the industry.
This could come in the form of just dipping their toe by holding bitcoin reserves or buying a fintech company that facilitates the operations of it.
Have you noticed that as of late, fintech companies like PayPal and Square have broken out to the upside representing a proxy of bitcoin exuberance?
No doubt some of the established tech titans are taking note of Elon Musk’s plunge into the digital unknown, but it does send the message the next leg up in tech development is via bitcoin and the synergies surrounding it.
Apple was the one that, out of thin air, brought us the iPod and iPhone which spawned a million copycats from China and a tsunami of capital that came along with it.
It’s undeniable that bitcoin is picking up traction with recent news in October 2020 that Square invested $50 million into Bitcoin.
That was about 1% of the company’s total assets at the end of Q2 2020.
That move came after the Cash app had offered the ability to buy Bitcoin for several years.
2020 also saw more traditional veteran investors like Stanley Druckenmiller and Paul Tudor Jones become Bitcoin promoters.
Long-term investment analysts have determined that today, bitcoin gives corporations a foothold into the future while operating in the real world.
Asset preservation is also another phenomenon where many insiders believe that the value of the dollar is in slow decline which could hurt U.S. corporation’s ability to compete globally.
Bitcoin bulls believe more institutional investments will lead to more stability and naturally, increased value and I agree that is exactly what is happening no matter if Warren Buffet and his sort go on air to proclaim the asset is snake oil.
It’s getting to the point where large companies cannot deny the potential upside to bitcoin because of fear of missing out.
They do not want to be the new Blackberry to the Apple’s iPhone.
Then is the brute fact that the aforementioned tech giants have the resources to take the jump.
Ark Investments sees Bitcoin growing to $70,000 per coin if US companies put 1% into it, and $400,000 a coin if companies put 10% into the cryptocurrency.
If bitcoin finally becomes convertible globally, US companies will be tearing their hair out because they missed the chance to get in at a cheaper price.
What I just said would be absolutely bonkers in the financial world before the pandemic, but that shows how much the narrative has moved along and there are even more outlandish analysts who believe the likes of Apple and Amazon should move 50% of total assets into bitcoin.
Apple does have Apple Pay which they could integrate with the digital currency much like Square and PayPal have done.
If Tesla invested 1% of total assets into bitcoin and if a solid case nudging other companies to outdo this 1% and go to 2-3% comes to realization even if it’s a speculative bet on the future appreciation of the asset, it could be a moneymaker.
A company like Apple currently has $207 billion and so the pieces are on the board to make a bold move if they are willing to do so.
If we stand back and look at the bigger picture, US companies will undoubtedly lead the digital currency revolution for the next 25 years.
Europe is too regulated for their companies to jump in and Chinese authorities will stop companies like Alibaba hoping to operate in a currency that isn’t the Renminbi.
Like US companies created the cloud, internet, personal computer, and so on, they are on the cusp of making the bitcoin industry their own.
Another strong aspect I love is that Elon Musk clearly felt comfortable with the bitcoin’s foundational security, infrastructure and mechanisms in place in 2021 to facilitate this deal.
I am convinced that he had his best developers go into the meat and bones of the technology to find any structural flaws or lack of them.
Remember that bitcoin has been dogged by security breaches and hackers.
There is so much to love about this move and long term, bitcoin will hit $100,000.
Global Market Comments
February 5, 2021
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(FEBRUARY 3 BIWEEKLY STRATEGY WEBINAR Q&A),
(MRNA), (PFE), (JNJ), (AMZN), (SLV), (GME), (GLD), (CLDR), (SNOW), (NVDA), (X), (FCX),
(AAPL), (TSLA), (FEYE), (PANW), (SWI), (WYNN), (MGM), (LVS)
Below please find subscribers’ Q&A for the February 3 Mad Hedge Fund Trader Global Strategy Webinar broadcast from Incline Village, NV.
Q: Is there a big difference between COVID-19 vaccines?
A: The best vaccine is the one you can get. It’s better than being dead. But there are important differences. The Pfizer (PFE) and Moderna (MRNA) vaccines are RNA vaccines, they’re very safe, and getting similar results. But the evidence shows that about 15% of Moderna recipients are coming down with flu-like symptoms on their second shot. Nobody knows why, as the two are almost biochemically identical. AstraZeneca is a killed virus type vaccine, which means if they have a manufacturing error, you end up giving the disease to people by accident, as with the original polio vaccine. So that's the less safe vaccine. So far, that one has only been used in Europe and Australia, as it is made in England. There isn’t enough data about the John & Johnson (JNJ) single-shot vaccine.
Q: Is Moderna (MRNA) a long term buy?
A: The trouble with all the vaccine plays is that we’re heading for a global vaccine glut in about 4 months when we’ll have something like 12 companies around the world making them. The rush for everyone to get a vaccination as soon as possible is leading to inevitable overproduction and falling stock prices. Moderna is already a 12 bagger for us. I’m not really looking to overstay my welcome, so to speak. Time to cash in and say, “Thank you very much, Mr. Market.” There will be another cycle down the road for (MRNA) as its technology is used to cure cancer, but not yet.
Q: Would you recommend a silver (SLV) LEAP?
A: Yes, silver was run up 35% for a day by the GameStop (GME) crowd and crashed the next day, which was to be expected because there are no short positions in silver. Everything was just hedged to look like there were short positions because the big banks had huge open short options positions that were public and hedges in the futures and silver bars that were private. The (GME) people only saw the public short positions. Long term, I would go for a $30-$32 vertical call spread expiring in 2023. Go out 2 years, and I think you could get silver at $50. So, a good LEAP might get you a 1000% return in two years. Those are the kinds of trades I like to do.
Q: What do you think of Amazon now that Jeff Bezos is retiring?
A: Buy the daylights out of it. That was the great unknown overhanging the stock for years, Jeff’s potential retirement. Now it's no longer unknown, you want to buy (AMZN). Even before the retirement, I was targeting $5,000 a share in two years. Now we have everybody under the sun raising their targets to $5,000 or more— we even had one upgrade today to $5,200. There are at least half a dozen businesses that Amazon can expand into, like healthcare, which will be multibillion-dollar earners. And then if you break it up because of antitrust, it doubles in value again, so that's a screaming buy here. We have flatlined for six months, so this could be a trigger for a long-term breakout.
Q: Is there anything else left after GameStop? Another short play?
A: Well, this was the worst short squeeze in 25 years, and everyone else covered their other shorts because they don't want to get wiped out like the one Melvin Capital. There were only around a dozen potential single-digit heavily shorted stocks out there, and those are mostly gone. So, the GameStop crowd will have to roll up their sleeves and do some hard work finding stocks the old fashion way—by doing research. I’m guessing that GameStop was a one-hit-wonder; we probably won’t be surprised again. At the same time, you should never underestimate the stupidity of other investors.
Q: What do you think of the cloud plays like Cloudera and Snowflake?
A: I love cloud plays and there will be more coming. The entire US economy is moving on to the cloud. But everyone else loves them too. Snowflake (SNOW) doubled on its first day, and Cloudera (CLDR) doubled over the last three months, so they're incredibly expensive and high risk. But you can't argue with their business models going forward—the cloud is here to stay.
Q: Would you buy LEAPS in financials?
A: Absolutely yes; go out two years for your maturity and 30% on your strike prices, you will get a ten bagger on the trade. If I’m wrong, it only goes to zero.
Q: Is US Steel (X) a buy?
A: Yes. They are being dragged up by the global commodity boom triggered by the global synchronized recovery. (X) took a hit today because they just priced a $700 million secondary share issue which the flippers dumped like a hot potato. If given the choice, I’d rather do a copper play with Freeport McMoRan (FCX) which is seeing much more buying from China. I bought it on Monday.
Q: Any chance you can include one-, three-, and five-year price targets?
A: No chance whatsoever. I’ve never heard of a fund manager that could do that and be right. Stocks are just too imprecise an instrument with all the emotion that’s involved. But for the better stocks, you can with confidence predict at least a double. And by the way, all my predictions for the last 13 years have been way, way on the low side, so I tend to be conservative. Like, remember when Amazon was at $10? I said it would go to $20. Boy was I right!
Q: How can you say the next four years will be good for the stock market?
A: Well, $10 trillion in fiscal stimulus, $10 trillion in QE; stocks tend to like that. Oh, and technology exponentially accelerating on all fronts and far more broadly than what we saw in the 1990s. Also, there is a certain person who is no longer president, so add about 10-20% on top of all stock valuations. Companies can finally do long term planning again, after being unable to do so for four years because policies were anti-trade, anti-business, and flip-flopping every other day. So yes, I think that's enough to make the next 4 four years good; and actually, I think the next 8 years could be good—I'm predicting Dow 120,000 by 2030, if you recall.
Q: When do you expect the next 5% correction if there is one? February is always very volatile.
A: With an unlimited liquidity market like we have, it is really tough to see negatives of any kind. What kind of negatives are out there? The pandemic doesn’t stop—that's the main one. There’s another one people aren't talking about: the reason we got all these vaccines so fast is they took all regulation and threw it out the window. What if one of these vaccines kill off a million people? That would be pretty negative for the market. Interest rates could rocket faster than expected. But I’m always short there so that would be a moneymaker. But these are pretty out there possibilities, and that is why the market is not backing off, and when it does, it only gives us 5%.
Q: Is the Fed stimulating the economy too much?
A: The bond market says no with a ten-year yield of 1.10%, and the bond market is always the ultimate arbiter of when the stimulus ends. That’s because the Fed can’t directly control bond market interest rates, only overnight rates. But when we get bonds up to, say, a 3% yield (which is probably 2 or 3 years off), that’s when we’re getting too much stimulus, and we’ll probably take our foot off the pedal way before then. I know Janet Yellen and she agrees with me on this point. She’ll be throttling back well before we see a 3% yield in the Treasury market.
Q: Do you manage other people’s money?
A: No, because it costs a million dollars in legal fees to set up even a small fund these days. When I set up my hedge fund 30 years ago, there were no regulatory costs because no one knew what a hedge fund was; they all thought they were doing something illegal, so they didn't have to register for anything. That’s why it’s changed now.
Q: What is your target on NVIDIA (NVDA), and will it split?
A: It’s an easy double, with a global chip shortage running rampant. They make the best graphics cards in the world, bar none. These big tech companies tend not to split until they get share prices into the thousands, which is what Apple (AAPL) and what Tesla (TSLA) did three or four times.
Q: If we get 3.25% in bonds, is that going to hurt gold?
A: Yes, and that’s one of the reasons I bailed on my gold positions a couple of weeks ago. It effectively turned into a bond long. A sharp rise in interest rates is bad for gold because we all know that gold yields to zero.
Q: What about Fireye (FEYE)?
A: Yes, we also love Fireye in addition to Palo Alto Networks (PANW) because there is a near-monopoly—there are only about six players in the entire cybersecurity industry and hacking is getting worse by the day. Look at the Solar Winds (SWI) fiasco and the national Russian hack there.
Q: What about copper as a recovery play?
A: Well, I voted with my feet on Monday when I bought a position in Freeport McMoRan, after it just sold off 15%. I think (FCX) could double at some point in the coming economic recovery. So, copper is an absolute winner, and when having to choose between copper and steel, I’ll pick copper all day long.
Q: What do you recommend for gold (GLD)?
A: Gold is a trading range for the time being. Buy the dips, sell the rallies; you won’t get more than about 10% or 15% range on that. And there are just better fish to fry right now, like financials, which benefit from rising interest rates as opposed to being punished. Bitcoin is stealing gold’s thunder and the markets keep creating more Bitcoins.
Q: Should high-frequency trading be banned?
A: I don’t think it should be. It does create liquidity; the effect on the market is wildly overexaggerated. They’re basically trading for pennies or tenths of pennies, so they do provide buying on selloffs and selling at huge price spikes. They do have a positive effect and they’re probably only taking about $10 or $20 billion in profit a year out of the market.
Q: Should I buy Wynn Resorts (WYNN) here?
A: Buy the dips for sure; this is a major recovery play. We here in Nevada are expecting an absolute tidal wave of people to hit the casinos once the pandemic ends, and (WYNN), (MGM), and (LVS) would be a great play in those areas.
Good Luck and Stay Healthy.
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
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