Global Market Comments
June 22, 2020
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, OR THE FED RIDES AGAIN),
(TLT), (SPY), (TSLA), (IBB), (AMGN), (GILD), (ILMN)
Global Market Comments
June 22, 2020
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, OR THE FED RIDES AGAIN),
(TLT), (SPY), (TSLA), (IBB), (AMGN), (GILD), (ILMN)
The free Fed put was tested once again last week, and once again it held. It seems that the line in the sand is $300 for the (SPY), and if that doesn’t hold, $270 will do. At least, for a month.
How long this game will last is anyone’s guess. $14 trillion is a lot of money to throw at the problem. But then so are US Covid-19 deaths approaching 1,000 a day. Who knows what Jay Powell has up his sleeve? Probably quite a lot.
A large chunk of the US economy has gone missing and is never coming back, especially the portion represented by small companies. Whether stock investors will notice this will be the big bet for the remainder of 2020. My bet is they will if the spread of the epidemic can’t be stopped. I give it a 50/50 chance.
If the worst-case scenario happens, get ready to load the boat of LEAPS once again, for we have a Roaring Twenties and second American Golden Age ahead of us, if you can live to see it. We are one wonder drug discovery away from that starting tomorrow morning at 9:00 AM.
We got encouraging news last week with the commonplace steroid dexamethasone, which reduces deaths by 30%. Publishing the Mad Hedge Biotechnology & Health Care Letter, I can tell you there are hundreds more drugs like this under rapid development. Click here.
There is no doubt that biotech stocks (IBB) are breaking out to the upside. Take a look at the ten largest components of the iShares NASDAQ Biotechnology ETF and you’ll see they all have virtually the same chart (click here), stocks like Amgen (AMGN), Gilead Sciences (GILD), and Illumina (ILMN)
The trillions of dollars pouring into Covid-19 research is a big driver. In the meantime, past headaches have magically gone away, like the threat of a nationalization and drug price controls. No one feels like regulating drug companies in this environment. Almost all impediments to research have been tossed away. Relative to the rest of the superheated stock market, biotech shares are still cheap.
The Fed is to starting to buy individual bonds, in another unprecedented expansion of quantitative easing. They are clearly worried about exploding Corona cases, as I am. US Treasury bonds (TLT) dove two points on the news as this may represent a diversion of Fed buying from that market. Stocks soared 1,000 points.
The big message is more QE to come. Another election play? It is called “QE Infinity” for a reason. It’s a great level to trade against. I hope you loaded up on tech LEAPS at the bottom, as I begged you to do.
The Fed balance sheet soars, from $4 trillion to $7 trillion this year, says Fed governor Jay Powell. It is the fastest debt blow up in history. That’s $18,750 per taxpayer in four months. It could be $10 trillion by yearend. If you received less than this stimulus money, you got screwed. This always ends in stagflation….high inflation and slow growth, like we saw after the Vietnam War. Your grandkids are going to have to take side jobs driving for Uber to pay off this bill.
Reopening states see corona cases explode, tossing the “V” shaped economic recovery out the window. Some 25 states are seeing a rapid rise in new cases. Is this the second wave or an extension of the first? The green shoots have been squashed. Stocks won’t like it. The free pass is over.
Stocks pop on miracle steroid drug that reduces Covid-19 death rates. Dexamethasone is the drug in question, normally used for arthritis treatments. It’s just in time as Beijing is closing down schools again in the wake of a second wave.
A US dollar crash is a sure thing, says my old Morgan Stanley colleague, Steven Roach. I couldn’t agree more. Steve is expecting a 35% swan dive for Uncle Buck. A negative savings rate combined with a retreat from Globalization is a toxic combo. A 1970s type stagflation could ensue.
Weekly Jobless Claims are still sky-high, at 1.51 million, far above estimates. The Dow gave up 300 points at the opening, then quickly clawed it back. Walk down Main Street these days and they are still filled with empty storefronts. Many companies are simply running out of money, unable to wait for a recovery. In the meantime, Corona cases are hitting new records every day. Florida cases are off the charts. Things will get worse before they get better.
Retail Sales posted record pop, up 17.7% in May. You are going to see a lot of these record data points because we are coming off a near-zero base. It will actually take years to get to January business levels. I’m sorry, but the higher the free Fed put drives the stock market, the worse the long-term outlook for the economy is going to be.
Homebuilder Confidence is off the charts, with Sales Expectations jumping 22 points to 68. It’s a positive perfect storm, with record-low 2.90% 30-year fixed rate mortgage, Fed buying of mortgage securities and a massive Millennial tailwind that I have been calling for years. A sudden Corona-driven urban flight is sending customers into the arms of suburban builders. Get into Lennar Homes (LEN), KB Homes (KBH), and Pulte Homes (PHM) on dips if you can.
Tesla (TSLA) to open the second US factory this year, somewhere in the southwest as demand overwhelms supply for electric vehicles, exacerbated by the two-month Corona shutdown. The tax break bidding war has already begun, with Texas and Oklahoma slugging it out. The factory comes with 5,000 jobs. Tesla got its first factory for free, giving stock to Toyota for $10 a share. It was the best investment Toyota ever made.
The Mad Hedge June 4 Traders & Investors Summit recording is up. For those who missed it, I have posted all 9:15 hours of recordings of every speaker. This is a collection of some of the best traders and investors I have stumbled across over the past five decades. To find it, please click here.
When we come out on the other side of this, we will be perfectly poised to launch into my new American Golden Age, or the next Roaring Twenties. With interest rates still at zero, oil cheap, there will be no reason not to. The Dow Average will rise by 400% or more in the coming decade.
My Global Trading Dispatch performance nicely recouped the pasting we took last week, taking in a nice 7%, bringing June in at +1.21%. With the June options expiration, we managed to cash in on the accelerated time decay in seven positions for Global Trading Dispatch and another three for the Mad Hedge Technology Letter. My eleven-year performance stands at a new all-time high of 367.44%.
That takes my 2020 YTD return up to a more robust +11.53%. This compares to a loss for the Dow Average of -9.2%, up from -37% on March 23. My trailing one-year return popped back up to 51.92%. My eleven-year average annualized profit recovered to +34.99%.
The only numbers that count for the market are the number of US Coronavirus cases and deaths, which you can find here. On the economic front, some low-grade inflation numbers are published.
On Monday, June 22 at 11:00 AM EST, the May Existing Home Sales are out.
On Tuesday, June 23 at 11:00 AM EST, May New Home Sales are published.
On Wednesday, June 24, at 8:15 AM EST, the National Home Price Index is printed. At 10:30 AM EST, the EIA Cushing Crude Oil Stocks are published.
On Thursday, June 25 at 8:30 AM EST, Weekly Jobless Claims are announced. Also out it the final figure for Q1 GDP.
On Friday, June 26, at 10:00 AM EST, the Baker Hughes Rig Count is out. At 11:00, we get the University of Michigan Inflation Expectations.
As for me, I’ll spend the weekend modernizing my camping equipment, some pieces of which are WWII surplus, or are at least 50 years old. Since all of the Boy Scout summer camps for the year have been cancelled, such a Philmont and Catalina Island, I’m creating my own.
We’re going on a 50-mile hike around California’s High Sierra Desolation Wilderness, a part of Northern California my family has been fishing at for a hundred years.
We’ll be trekking on the Pacific Crest Trail featured in the film Wild. I’ll try to regale you with pictures on my return and wild fish stories.
It’s easier said than done, for there is a national camping boom going on. It can be difficult to get simple things, like maps, without an August delivery date. Some of my WWII stuff may have to suffice after all.
Stay healthy.
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader









Global Market Comments
June 18, 2020
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(TESTING TESLA’S SELF DRIVING TECHNOLOGY),
(TSLA)
(TESTIMONIAL)

I knew I was on the right track when the salesman told me that the customer who just preceded me for a Tesla Model X 90D SUV was the Golden Bay Warriors star basketball player, Steph Currie.
Well, if it’s good enough for Steph, then it’s good enough for me.
Last week, I received a call from Elon Musk’s office to test the company’s self-driving technology embedded in their new vehicles for readers of the Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader.
I did, and prepare to have your mind blown!
I was driving at 80 MPH on CA-24, a windy eight-lane freeway that snakes its way through the East San Francisco Bay Area mountains. Suddenly the salesman reached over a flicked a lever on the left side of the driving column.
The car took over!
There it was, winding and turning along every curve, perfectly centered in the lane. As much as I hated to admit it, the car drove better than I ever could. It does especially well at night or in fog, a valuable asset for senior citizens whose night vision is fading fast.
All that was required was for me to touch the steering wheel every two minutes to prove that I was not sleeping.
The cars do especially well in rush hour driving, as it is adept at stop and go traffic. You can just sit there and work on your laptop, read a book, or watch a movie on the built in 4G WIFI HD TV.
When we returned to the garage, the car really showed off. When we passed a parking space, another button was pushed, and we perfectly backed 90 degrees into a parking space, measuring and calculating all the way.
The range is 290 miles, which I can recharge at home at night from a standard 220-volt socket in my garage in seven hours. When driving to Lake Tahoe, I can stop half way at get a full charge in 30 minutes. The new chargers operate at a blazing 400 miles per hour.
The chassis can rise as high as eight inches off the ground so it can function as a true SUV.
The “ludicrous mode,” a $10,000 option, takes you from 0 to 60 mph in 2.9 seconds. However, even a standard Tesla can accelerate so fast that it will make the average passenger carsick.
Here’s the buzzkill.
Tesla absolutely charges through the nose for extras.
The 22-inch wheels, the third row of seats to get you to seven passengers, the premium sound, the leather seats, and the self-driving software can easily run you $30,000-$40,000.
A $750 tow hitch will accommodate a ski or back rack. There is a $1,000 delivery charge, even if you pick it up at the Fremont factory.
It’s easy to see how you can jump from an $84,990 base price to a total cost of $162,500, including taxes, for the ultra-luxury Performance model, as I did.
My company will be purchasing the car under Section 179 of the International Revenue Code. The car qualifies because it weighs over 6,000 pounds and is therefore a truck under the new tax law.
This allows me to deduct the entire $162,500 cost of the vehicle upfront, plus the maintenance and insurance costs for the entire life of the car. However, I will have to maintain a mileage log as a hedge against any future IRS audits.
Ironically, Section 179 was enacted as a subsidy for consumer purchases of the eight mile per gallon Hummer, which was originally built by AM General and owned by General Motors (GM).
After several attempts to sell, the division failed, production was permanently shut down. However, the tax subsidies live on for any like designed vehicle.
It looks like I’ll have to buy two Teslas this year.
As for “drop dead’ curb appeal, nothing beats the Model X. Buy the stock on every 20% dip. My original cost is $16.50 a share and it topped $1,000 last week.
It’s another way of saying “buy the shares and you get the car for free.”


Global Market Comments
June 16, 2020
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(THE IDIOT’S GUIDE TO INVESTING),
(TSLA), (BYND), (JPM)
(TESTIMONIAL)

Global Market Comments
June 15, 2020
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or WAITING FOR MY SUGAR CUBE),
(SPY), (INDU), (UUP), (GLD), (TLT), (HTZ), (TSLA)

I was born in the middle of a pandemic.
It was polio, and in the early 1950s, it was claiming 150,000 kids a year just in the US. You know polio. You’ve seen the pictures of the kids with withered legs or living in iron lungs, the ventilators of their day.
My mom contracted polio in the 1930s and spent a year in quarantine. They didn’t understand then that the virus was in the drinking water.
She lost the use of her legs for a time. My grandfather’s cure was to take her hiking in the High Sierras every weekend to rebuild her muscles. During WWII, he had to buy gas coupons on the black market to make the round trip from LA to Yosemite.
It worked well enough for mom to earn a scholarship to USC where she met my dad, a varsity football player. By the time I came along, Jonas Salk discovered a vaccine, which was infused into a sugar cube and given to me at the Santa Anita Racetrack along with tens of thousands of others. It was one of the big events of American history.
Some 70 years later, I am maintaining the family tradition, forcing my kids out on backpacks a couple of times a week, they're moaning and complaining all the way.
It looks like the first wave of the Corona pandemic isn’t even over yet. That’s why the Dow Average managed to puke out some 10% in days.
So, here is the conundrum: How much can we take the market down in the face of the greatest monetary and fiscal stimulus in history. Some $9 trillion has already been spent and there is at least another $5 trillion behind it.
My bet is a few more thousand points down to 24,000 but not much more than that. If this turns into a rout and a retest of the lows, the Fed will simply turn on the presses and print more money. After all, the marching orders from the top are to keep stocks high into the election, whatever the cost.
One of the reasons we are seeing such wild swings in the market is that the market itself doesn’t know what it’s worth. That’s because this is the most artificially manipulated market in history, thanks to the government stimulus, 20 times what we saw in 2008-2009.
Stocks can’t figure out if they are worthless, or worth infinity, and we are wildly whipsawing back and forth between two extremes.
Take that stimulus away and the Dow Average would be worth 14,000 or less. Stimulus will go away someday, and when it goes away, there will be a big hit to the market. It’s anyone’s guess as to timing. Ask the Covid-19 virus.
We have seen countless market gurus being wrong about this market, many of whom are old friends of mine. That’s because they, like I, see the long-term damage being wrought to the economy. Recovering 80% of what we lost will be easy. The last 20% will be a struggle.
That alone amounts to one of the worst recessions we have ever seen. This is going to be a loooong recovery. Some forecasters don’t expect US GDP to recover to the 2019 level of $21.43 trillion until 2025.
In the meantime, the national debt is soaring, now at $26 trillion, and will soon become a major drag on the economy. The budget deficit alone this year is now pegged at an eye-popping $3 trillion, the largest in history.
The S&P 500 turned positive on the year for a whole day. It’s been an amazing move, the largest in history in the shortest time, some 47% in ten weeks. NASDAQ hit my year-end target of $10,000, then immediately gave back 10%.
The problem now is that stocks are still the most overbought in history and risk is the highest since January. Much trading is now dominated by newly minted day traders chasing bankrupt stocks like Hertz (HTZ) with their $1,200 stimulus check. Far and away, the better trade is to sell short bonds. After that, buy gold (GLD) and sell short the US Dollar (UUP).
Stocks then dove 7.4% on second wave fears as US cases top 2 million and deaths exceeded 114,000. Jay Powell says he won’t raise interest rates until 2023 at the earliest. The “reopening” stocks of airlines, hotels, and cruise lines are leading the downturn from crazy overbought levels.
Houston may have to close down again, in the wake of soaring Corona cases after a too early reopening. Other cities will follow. Cases in Arizona are also hitting new highs. It’s not what the market wanted to hear.
Weekly Jobless Claims hit 1.54 million, at a falling rate, but still at horrendous absolute levels. That’s better than last week’s 1.9 million. Some 20.9 million are still receiving state unemployment benefits, or 13.1% or the total workforce. These numbers certainly don’t justify a stock market near an all-time high.
The Fed expects Unemployment to remain stubbornly high, not falling to 9.3% by yearend. I think that’s highly optimistic. Some 20% of the 43 million lost jobs are never coming back, giving you an embedded U-6 rate of over 10%. It is easier and faster to fire people than to hire them back.
Election Poll numbers are starting to affect the market. Polls showing Trump 10%-14% points behind Joe Biden in the November presidential election opened stocks down 400 points on Monday. The betting polls in London are confirming these numbers.
The Republican leadership is jumping ship. A Biden win will bring higher corporate taxes, balanced budgets, less liquidity for the stock market, fewer Tweets, and clipped wings for the top 1%. Is this a trigger for the next market correction? We’ll find out in five months. When will stocks notice that?
Bond King Jeffrey Gundlach absolutely hates stocks, predicting we could take out the March lows. He believes the monster rally in big tech is unsustainable. The better trades are to sell short the US dollar (UUP) and to buy gold (GLD). I agree with much of this, but Geoff’s calls can take 6-12 months to come true, so don’t hold your breath, or bet the ranch.
Tesla hit a new all-time high, as I expected, ticking at $1,220. An 11% price cut is boosting sales and market share, while (GM) and (F) are dying. The Model Y, which looks like the love child of a Model X and Tesla 3, is expected to be their biggest seller ever. This is one bubble stock that IS worth chasing. Buy (TSLA) dips up to $2,500. No kidding!
New Zealand became the first Corona-free country, with zero cases, so it can be done. An island country with all international flights grounded, aggressive social distancing restrictions, and an ambitious contract tracing, the land of kiwis had everything going for it. Most importantly, they had the right leadership that listened to scientists, which the worst-hit countries of Sweden, Brazil, and the US are sadly lacking.
The Mad Hedge June 4 Traders & Investors Summit recording is up. For those who missed it, I have posted all 9:15 hours of recordings of every speaker. This is a collection of some of the best traders and investors I have stumbled across over the past five decades. To find it please click here.
When we come out on the other side of this, we will be perfectly poised to launch into my new American Golden Age, or the next Roaring Twenties. With interest rates still at zero, oil at a cheap $34 a barrel, there will be no reason not to. The Dow Average will rise by 400% or more in the coming decade.
My Global Trading Dispatch performance took it on the nose last week. I got stopped out of my shorts at the market top, then took a hit on my bonds shorts. My 11-year performance stands at 360.61%.
That takes my 2020 YTD return up to a more modest +4.70%. This compares to a loss for the Dow Average of -12.2%, up from -37%. My trailing one-year return retreated to 44.88%. My eleven-year average annualized profit backed off to +34.34%.
The only numbers that count for the market are the number of US Coronavirus cases and deaths, which you can find here.
On Monday, June 15 at 12:00 PM EST, the June New York State Manufacturing Index is out.
On Tuesday, June 16 at 12:30 PM EST, US Retail Sales for May are released.
On Wednesday, June 17 at 8:15 AM EST, Housing Starts for May are announced.
At 10:30 AM EST, the EIA Cushing Crude Oil Stocks are published.
On Thursday, June 18 at 8:30 AM EST, Weekly Jobless Claims are announced.
On Friday, June 19 at 2:00 PM EST, the Baker Hughes Rig Count is out.
As for me, I am waiting for my sugar cube.
In the meantime, I will spend the weekend carefully researching the recreational vehicle market. If everything goes perfectly, a Covid-19 vaccine will be not available to the general public for at least two years.
Until then, my travel will be limited to the distance I can drive. Travel while social distancing with my own three-man “quaranteam” will be the only safe way to go.
When the New York Times highlights it, as they did this weekend, it’s got to be a major new thing.
Stay healthy.
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader












Mad Hedge Technology Letter
June 12, 2020
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(TESLA’S EXPANDING LEAD IN EVS),
(TSLA)

As Tesla (TSLA) pushes above and beyond $1,000, let’s remind readers why this tech stock is so brilliant and why it outperforms even amid a backdrop of haters that taint the stock on a daily basis.
No doubt that Tesla has benefited from the “re-open trade” with risk-on sentiment mesmerizing equity markets amid positive data points that reignited Tesla with vehicle sales in China.
Then there is the rampant speculation taking place buoyed by the Fed pouring trillions into the capital markets.
The outcome is tech stocks leading the way with many reaching all-time highs.
Specifically, for Tesla, a sanguine optimism is coalescing around the popularity of Teslas in China.
Tesla seems to have triumphed over the pandemic with a momentous “snapback” in demand for Model 3s in China.
Tesla delivered 11,000 Model 3 vehicles to Chinese customers in May, which is 7,000 more Teslas sold in China than April.
The telltale signs are there hinting this is the beginning of a voracious ramp-up in Tesla sales not only in China but throughout the Asian regions, including Southeast Asia.
The bumper sales seen in Tesla’s China numbers coincide with the building of their monster battery factory in Shanghai, coined Giga 3.
The news in China dovetails nicely with Tesla’s commitment to deliver more than half a million vehicles this year, which has raised some eyebrows on Wall Street.
One persisting issue remains – margins.
Musk has slashed prices on Models S, X, and 3, decreasing the marginal profit on these models ahead of the Model Y cannibalizing them.
Tesla’s bestselling car Model Y avoided a price cut.
Some of the premium add-ons have been upped in price to compensate price cuts such as Full Self Driving (FSD) increasing by $1,000 to penalize customers who desire more personalization.
An unfortunate headwind caused by the pandemic is that Tesla ended Q1 with bloated inventory because the supply chain was crippled by a delivery bottleneck and factory stoppages.
When Tesla drops prices, it harms legacy car companies far more because it raises the competition bar in EVs creating an environment where it will be awfully hard for legacy car companies to ever outdo Tesla with an inferior product.
For example, GM burns through $7,000 per Chevy Bolt sold at a time when the industry is forced to go all-electric as the pandemic effectively pulls forward EV demand to today.
Tesla’s headstart on the traditional car circuit is giving them ample time to turn the screws on them hoping a few of them drop like flies before they can ever get close to becoming competitive.
Eventually, gas guzzlers will be banned by governments and EVs will be universal.
Tesla is in a golden position to produce the optimal EV while tirelessly working to make them cost-effective for buyers in a lower income bracket.
I believe that Tesla will mix and match premium and basic models to cater to every price point so that every buyer will gravitate towards Tesla.
Musk keeps pushing the envelope with new divisions as well.
He continues his vision uninterrupted by proclaiming that the company's Nevada factory would likely produce the new semi-truck's battery and powertrain, with the remaining work done in other locations around the country.
“It's time to go all out and bring the Tesla Semi to volume production," Musk said.
The semi-truck is planned to price at around $150,000 for the 300-mile model and around $180,000 for the longer 500-mile model.
This division could grow into a $3-5 billion revenue driver in the next few years.
This is yet another example of Musk staying one step ahead of the traditional carmakers.
To understand more about the Tesla semi-truck, click here.
Another project Musk is working on is the Blade Runner influenced cyber-truck.
The cyber-truck is a consumer truck that Musk is working on that he tested out with TV comedian Jay Leno.
To watch that clip, click here.
The future has never looked brighter for Musk and Tesla as the demand of the future has repurposed itself to today and only Musk can deliver on such high expectations.
Do not day trade this stock because the volatility will blow investors up. This is a buy and hold long term story.

Global Market Comments
June 5, 2020
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(JUNE 3 BIWEEKLY STRATEGY WEBINAR Q&A),
(FB), (M), (UAL), (LVS) , (WYNN), (MS), (SPX), (TBT), (TLT), (AAPL), (FB), (MSFT), (SDS), (SPX), (AMZN) (LEN), (KBI), (PHM), (TSLA)

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