Below please find subscribers’ Q&A for the September 11 Mad Hedge Fund Trader Global Strategy Webinar, broadcast from Lake Tahoe Nevada.
Q: Will the Fed cut by 50 basis points at their next meeting?
A: The probability of that happening actually dropped by about half with the warm CPI report this morning with core CPI at 0.3%. That may have pushed the Fed from a 50% basis point rate cut back down to only 25%. I think if we only get 25%, the market will sell off. So that’s Wednesday next week. Mark that on your calendars—the market may well be on hold until then.
Q: Is $50/barrel oil (USO) coming by the end of this year?
A: No, but I think $60 is in the works. And that may be the bottom of this cycle because after that we expect an economic recovery, greater demand for oil, and rising prices in 2025. Until then, overproduction both in the US and in the Middle East is knocking prices down.
Q: Will the US dollar (UUP) continue its terrible performance through the end of the year?
A: Yes, and in fact, it may be for the next 10 years that the US dollar is weak—certainly 5—so any rally or dips you get in the currencies (FXA), (FXE), (FXC), and (FXB) I’d be buying with both hands.
Q: Where are you hiding at the moment?
A: 90-day T-bills, which are yielding 4.97%. You can buy and sell them any time you want, and the interest is only payable when you sell them.
Q: Is September 18th the selloff?
A: It depends on how much we do before then. Obviously, we’re making good progress today with the Dow ($INDU) down 700 points, so we shall see. However, the market is flip-flopping every other day, making it untradable—you can’t get any position and hold on to it long enough to make money, so it’s better just to stay out. There’s no law that says you have to be in the market every day of the year, and this is a day not to be in the market for sure.
Q: How will the presidential debate reaction affect the market?
A: There’s only one stock you have to follow for that and that’s the (DJT) SPAC, and that’s Trump’s own personal ETF, and it is down 13% today to a new all-time low. I believe that’s well below its IPO price, so anyone who’s touched that stock is losing money unless they got out at the top. That is a good signal.
Q: JP Morgan (JPM) stock had a steep pullback to $200/share—is it a buy here?
A: No, but we’re getting close. If we can get (JPM) close to its 200-day moving average at $188 on high volatility, that would be a fantastic buy, because (JPM) will benefit enormously from falling interest rates, and it is the world's quality banking play.
Q: Is it too soon on Berkshire Hathaway (BRK) and Tesla (TSLA)?
A: Yes on both. It’s too soon for anything right now. I wouldn’t touch anything before the interest rate cut unless you have a really special situation, and there are some out there.
Q: Do you think Nvidia (NVDA) could test $90 again?
A: It could very easily; it got within $10 of that last week. So, it just depends on how bad the news is and how scared people get in September.
Q: Is the end of carry trade affecting the market?
A: No, we had a big deleveraging there. Although people are going back in again now, it’s not enough to hurt the market.
Q: I heard Putin is threatening over raw materials. What do we get from Russia, and what stocks or ETFs would be impacted?
A: We get nothing from Russia anymore. We used to get a lot of commodities and oil from them, and that has ceased. Russia has essentially exited the global economy because of the sanctions and the war in Ukraine, so they can’t really hurt anyone at this point.
Q: What about Russia doing an end-run around with direct trade? BRICS block is going to make the dollar even more worthless in the future.
A:I don’t buy that at all. I’ve been covering sanctions for 50 years; they always work, but they always take a long time. You could always do black market trade through the back door, but the volumes are way down, and the profits are much less because people only buy sanctioned goods at big discounts. The oil that China is buying from Russia is something like a 30% discount to the market. They execute a high cost of doing business, and nobody wants to be in sanctions if they can possibly do avoid. That said, when the war ends, the sanctions may end. That could be some time next year when Russia completely runs out of tanks and airplanes.
Q: Should I buy Nvidia (NVDA) call options now?
A: It's not just a matter of Nvidia. It's what the general market is doing, and tech is doing. And tech is not doing that well—even on the up days. So I would hold off a bit on Nvidia.
Q: Why is Warren Buffet (BRK/B) unloading so much of his equity portfolio?
A: He thinks the market is expensive, and he has thought it has been expensive for years and he's been unloading stocks for years. He has something like $250 billion in cash now so he can buy whole companies in the next recession. Whether he'll live long enough to see that recession is another question, but his replacement staff is already at work and running the fund, so Berkshire will continue running on autopilot even after he’s gone.
Q: Is IBM an AI play?
A: (IBM) wants to think that it’s an AI play. They haven’t disclosed enough to the public to make the stock a real AI investment, so I would say it probably is, but we don’t know enough at this point, and there are probably too many other candidates to buy in the meantime.
Q: How do I invest in green energy stocks, and do you have any names for me?
A: Well here’s one right here and that’s the Canadian uranium producer Cameco (CCJ). There is a nuclear renaissance going on. China just announced an increase in their plants under construction from 100 to 115. You have the new modular technology ready to take off in the US, and it uses uranium alloys, or uranium aggregates, so it’s impossible for a plant to go supercritical. You also have other countries reactivating nuclear plants that have been closed, and California even delayed its Diablo Canyon shutdown by 5 years. So Nuclear is back in play, and we have an absolute bottom in the stock here and it just dropped 37%, in case you needed any more temptation. So this would be a very attractive alternative energy play for the long term right here.
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, select your subscription (GLOBAL TRADING DISPATCH, TECHNOLOGY LETTER, or Jacquie's Post), then click on 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
One of my Concierge clients holds a weekly staff meeting. Each employee is told his family is being held hostage and can only be rescued if they recommend the top-performing stock for the coming week. Then everyone throws in their two cents worth.
Last week, for the first time in the company’s history, no one could come up with a single name, even if it meant sacrificing their family (nobody was really sacrificed).
That speaks volumes.
In fact, until last week, every asset class in the market was discounting an imminent recession: Commodities(COPX), energy (USO), real estate (ARE), and the US dollar (UUP). Reliable recession hideouts like bonds (TLT), fixed income (JNK), and gold (GLD) caught an endless bid. Only the stock market (SPY), (NASD) wasn’t reading from the same music sheet.
Well, stocks finally got the memo, delivering the worst week in 2 ½ years. Suddenly, the glass has gone from half full to half empty. Permabears have suddenly morphed from complete idiots to maybe having something to say. Here it is only September 9 and the Month from Hell is already living up to its awful reputation. Is the stock market the slow learner in the bunch?
I came back from Europe in August rested, refreshed, invigorated, and in a near state of panic. The last 11% rally in the (SPY) made absolutely no sense to me whatsoever. Either the September jobs data would come in hot, canceling the Fed’s expected interest rate cut. Or, the data would come in cold, proving that the Fed waited too long to cut rates and inviting a recession, causing stocks to tank.
It would have been one of the worst self-inflicted wounds and own goals of all time.
What was especially dangerous was that we were going into the worth trading month of the year, September, with the (SPY) showing a crystal-clear double top on the charts.
It was a perfect lose/lose situation.
Seasonals are important, especially this month. This is because most mutual funds run an annual year that ends on September 30. To window dress their books and those glossy marketing brochures, they sell all their losers (think energy) in September and use the cash to buy more of their winners in October. (NVDA) yes, (XOM) not so much. This creates a swing in the indexes every year of 10%-20%.
To learn more about the seasonals, read tomorrow’s letter in detail, IF YOU SELL IN MAY AND GO AWAY, WHAT TO DO IN SEPTEMBER?
So I did what I usually do when the market refuses to give me marching orders. I let all my positions expire with the August 16 options expiration, took back the cash, and then sat on my hands. Suddenly, a 100% cash position was looking like a stroke of genius. It cleared the cobwebs, moved the fog away from my eyes, and took the monkey off my back all in one fell swoop.
And you know what? After surveying my big hedge fund clients, I learned they were doing exactly the same thing.
Let me pass on another piece of interesting intel. All of the many algorithms the hedge fund industry follows are bunching up around two specific bottoms for the stock market in coming months: September 18, the Fed rate cut day, and October 22, two weeks before the presidential election.
With any luck, other classic “BUY” signals will kick in at the same time with the Mad Hedge Market Timing Index below 20 by then and the Volatility Index ($VIX) over $30. It could be the best entry point of the year.
What has been fascinating is how much money has been pouring into the interest rate plays I have been banging the table about for the last six months. When was the last time the stock market has been led by AT&T (T), Altria (MO), and Crown Castle International (CCI)? You might have to look behind the radiator to find some old, dusty research on these names.
So far in September, we are down by -1.21%.My 2024 year-to-date performance is at +33.49%.The S&P 500 (SPY) is up +13%so far in 2024. My trailing one-year return reached +51.89. That brings my 16-year total return to +710.12.My average annualized return has recovered to +51.63%.
I executed only one trade last week, covering a short in Tesla at cost. I am now maintaining a 100% cash position. I’ll text you next time I see a bargain in any market. Now there is none. There is no law dictating that you have to have a position every day of the year. Only your broker wants you to trade every day.
Some 63 of my 70 round trips, or 90%, were profitable in 2023. Some 47 of 66 trades have been profitable so far in 2024, and several of those losses were really break-even. That is a success rate of +72.24%.
Try beating that anywhere.
Nonfarm Payroll Report Fades at 142,000, but the Headline Unemployment Rate stays at 4.2%. More shocking is that the previous two months saw substantial downward revisions. The BLS cut July’s total by 25,000, while June fell to 118,000, a downward revision of 61,000. If the Fed doesn’t cut by 0.50% on September 18, the stock market will crash. Broadcom Beats and Stock Tanks driven by strong sales of its AI products and VMware software. But management’s guidance for the current quarter disappointed investors, sending shares of the chipmaker down nearly 7% in the after-market. This is too harsh of a reaction to an otherwise solid print. Buy (AVGO) on dips. ADP Employment Change Report Hits 3 ½-Year Low, up only 99,000 in August. Economists polled had forecast private employment would advance by 145,000 positions after a previously reported gain of 122,000.
Biden Blocks Nippon Steel Takeover of US Steel, no doubt to save the jobs these deals usually destroy. Good thing we got out of the (X) LEAPS a year ago at max profit. (X) dropped 20% on the news. Not a good time to concentrate on industry.
No Subpoenas Here Says NVIDIA, refuting rumors that it was the target of an antitrust action. Don’t believe everything you read on the internet. The Yield Curve has De-Inverted, meaning that short-term interest rates have fallen below long-term ones. Two-year interest rates at 3.72% are now 0.03% lower than ten-year ones at 3.75%. It’s a clear signal to the Fed that rates must be cut soon. Weekly Jobless Claims Drop 5,000 to 227,000. The weekly jobless claims report from the Labor Department on Thursday, the most timely data on the economy's health, also showed unemployment rolls shrinking to levels last seen in mid-June. It reduces the urgency for the Federal Reserve to deliver a 50-basis points interest rate cut this month.
US Oil Production Hits All-Time High. In August 2024, U.S. oil production hit a record 13.4 million barrels per day according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration. Big Oil has become more productive as horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing, which is also known as fracking, have seen technological breakthroughs. The fossil fuel industry benefits from tax incentives, such as the intangible drilling costs tax credit, that are built into the tax code. The intangible drilling costs tax break is expected to benefit oil and gas companies by $1.7 billion in 2025 and $9.7 billion through 2034
Crude Oil Now Down on the Year, after a precipitous weekend selloff. Blame a weak China, lost OPEC discipline, and overproduction by Iraq. The bearish Goldman Sachs commodities report was also a factor. Avoid the worst-performing asset class in the market. Eli Lilly is now a trillion-dollar stock, the first Biotech to do so. The drug giant is riding the wave of Mounjaro and Zepbound, its blockbuster injectable GLP-1 medications for weight loss. The drugs are also used to treat diabetes and cardiovascular disease. Eli Lilly’s shares have soared 65% this year.
Goldman Goes Big on Gold. Central banks in emerging market countries are continuing to buy gold — with purchases tripling since the middle of 2022 amid fears of U.S. financial sanctions and a mountain of sovereign debt. Goldman is taking a more selective approach to commodity investing as soft demand in China weighs on crude oil and copper prices. The investment bank has slashed its Brent oil outlook by $5 to a range of $70 to $85 per barrel and delayed its copper target of $12,000 per metric ton until after 2025.
My Ten-Year View
When we come out the other side of the recession, we will be perfectly poised to launch into my new American Golden Age or the next Roaring Twenties. The economy decarbonizing and technology hyper accelerating, creating enormous investment opportunities. The Dow Average will rise by 600% to 240,000 or more in the coming decade. The new America will be far more efficient and profitable than the old.
Dow 240,000 here we come!
On Monday, September 9 at 3:00 PM EST, Consumer Inflation Expectations are out On Tuesday, September 10 at 6:00 AM, the NFIB Business Optimism Index is released.
On Wednesday, September 11 at 7:30 AM, the Core CPI is printed.
On Thursday, September 12 at 8:30 AM, the Weekly Jobless Claims are announced. We also get the Producer Price Index.
On Friday, September 13 at 8:30 AM, the University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment. At 2:00 PM the Baker Hughes Rig Count is printed.
As for me, I was having lunch at the Paris France casino in Las Vegas at Mon Ami Gabi, one of the top ten-grossing restaurants in the United States. My usual waiter, Pierre from Bordeaux, took care of me with his typical ebullient way, graciously letting me practice my rusty French.
As I finished an excellent, but calorie packed breakfast (eggs Benedict, caramelized bacon, hash browns, and a café au lait), I noticed an elderly couple sitting at the table next to me. Easily in their 80s, they were dressed to the nines and out on the town.
I told them I wanted to be like them when I grew up.
Then I asked when they first went to Paris, expecting a date sometime after WWII. The gentleman responded, “Seven years ago.”
And what brought them to France?
“My father is buried there. He’s at the American Military Cemetery at Colleville-sur-Mer along with 9,386 other Americans. He died on Omaha Beach on D-Day. I went for the D-Day 70th anniversary.” He also mentioned that he never met his dad, as he was killed in action weeks after he was born.
I reeled with the possibilities. First, I mentioned that I participated in the 40-year D-Day anniversary with my uncle, Medal of Honor winner Mitchell Paige, and met with President Ronald Reagan.
We joined the RAF fly-past in my own private plane and flew low over the invasion beaches at 200 feet, spotting the remaining bunkers and the rusted-out remains of the once floating pier. Pont du Hoc is a sight to behold from above, pockmarked with shell craters like the moon. When we landed at a nearby airport, I taxied over railroad tracks that were the launch site for the German V1 “buzzbomb” rockets.
D-Day was a close-run thing and was nearly lost. Only the determination of individual American soldiers saved the day. The US Navy helped too, bringing destroyers right to the shoreline to pummel the German defenses with their five-inch guns. Eventually, battleships working in concert with very lightweight Stinson L5 spotter planes made sure that anything the Germans brought to within 20 miles of the coast was destroyed.
Then the gentleman noticed the gold Marine Corps pin on my lapel and volunteered that he had been with the Third Marine Division in Vietnam. I replied that my father had been with the Third Marine Division during WWII at Bougainville and Guadalcanal and that I had been with the Third Marine Air Wing during Desert Storm.
I also informed him that I had led an expedition to Guadalcanal two years ago looking for some of the 400 Marines still missing in action. We found 30 dog tags and sent them to the Marine Historical Division at Quantico, Virginia for tracing. I proudly showed them my pictures.
When the stories came back it, turned out that many survivors were children now in their 80s who had never met their fathers because they were killed in action on Guadalcanal.
Small world.
I didn’t want to infringe any further on their fine morning out, so I excused myself. He said Semper Fi, the Marine Corps motto, thanked me for my service, and gave me a fist pump and a smile. I responded in kind and made my way home.
Oh and say “Hi” when you visit Mon Ami Gabi. Tell Pierre that John Thomas sent you and give him a big tip. It’s not easy for a Frenchman to cater to all these loud Americans.
Third Marine Air Wing
The D-Day Couple
The American Military Cemetery at Colleville-sur-Mer
Stay Healthy,
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/d-day-couple.png8201096april@madhedgefundtrader.comhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngapril@madhedgefundtrader.com2024-09-09 09:02:592024-09-09 11:16:00The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or September Lives Up to its Reputation
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD or DID JAY POWELL BLOW IT?) and CHASING EARNEST HEMINGWAY),
($VIX), (INTC), (CCI), (TLT), (COPX), (BHP), (USO) (NVDA), (SLV), (FXY), (CAT), (IWM), (IBKR), (AMZN), (GLD), (BRK/B), (DE)
Below please find subscribers’ Q&A for the July 24 Mad Hedge Fund Trader Global Strategy Webinar, broadcast from Zermatt, Switzerland.
Q: Does the entry of Kamala Harris into the presidential election have any effect on the stock market?
A: No. I know someone who did research on markets and elections going all the way back to 1792 and the long-term effect has been absolutely zero over the 232-year period. Actually, what happens is you have the two candidates very close to each other in the polls, so uncertainty is at a maximum. Markets hate uncertainty, so they’ll wait until the uncertainty goes away, which will probably be about two weeks before the election. You can expect a really hot 4th quarter in the market though, so get all your cash freed up so you can pour all your money into the market for the last quarter of the year.
Q: How do falling interest rates affect the US dollar (UUP) and the currencies?
A: Currencies (FXE), (FXC), (FXA), (FXB) are always driven by interest rates. Those with high interest rates like the US dollar, are strong; those with low interest rates like Japan, are weak. Japan has had zero rates for over 20 years now. When that reverses, those currencies reverse, ending up with a weak US dollar and a strong euro, pound, etc. These changes in direction for the currency markets only happen every few years, so that will be a reliable trade.
Q: Why is oil (USO) so cheap when the rest of the economy is so strong?
A: There are many reasons. One is that the amount of barrels of oils needed to produce a unit of GDP has been falling for 30 years. That's a function of engines becoming more efficient at using gasoline. Plus more people are switching out of gasoline into electric, and more people flying instead of driving. The “work at home” movement hasn’t helped oil demand either. It’s also the most subsidized industry in the US, and you always get overproduction leading to price crashes, which we now seem to be witnessing.
Q: I have Freeport McMoRan (FCX) as a long-term hold; why has it recently been so weak?
A: Well, the number one reason is China (FXI). China is the biggest consumer of copper in the world and their economy is dead in the water. You know, 4.5% or 4.7% is a long way from the 13% we used to get during the 2000s and when copper was absolutely on fire. Eventually, I expect industrial demand in the US to make up for the shortage of demand from China, but that isn’t happening right now. It isn’t just copper—all the industrial metals have been weak the last couple of months and that is the reason.
Q: Cameco Corporation (CCJ) has been down lately, even with seemingly good news out of Kazakhstan. Is this a good buy here at the 200-day?
A: I would say it is. It’s being dragged down by the rest of the industrial metals and the energy plays. If you watch carefully, the uranium stocks trade very closely with oil, and we have an oil glut, so it tends to drag down all the other energy forms with it, including uranium and natural gas. I love uranium demand long term; it's growing far faster than oil demand and that’s why I own (CCJ).
Q: Do you think falling interest rates will bail out the real estate market?
A: Absolutely, yes. 30-year fixed-rate mortgages hanging around the mid-sixes, you get a couple of rate cuts and we could be back into the fives and even the fours in no time. So yes, big impact on real estate, all the subsidiary plays, on home builders, on the entire economy.
Q: If the market reverses today or tomorrow, what are some of the best call options to put money into?
A: Caterpillar (CAT), Deer & Co. (DE), and you might even go $50 into the money on Nvidia (NVDA). Home builders I would love to get into as well. All of these things have had great runs, but these are just the 1st leg of moves that could go on for years. So yes, this is where the barbell portfolio works: half big tech, half domestic recovery plays.
Q: Are you stopping at Edelweiss for a frosty beer on your hike?
A: Absolutely, I go to Edelweiss every year and don’t mind climbing the 1,200 feet to get there. You certainly have an appetite when you get to the top. It has a fantastic view of the town and you can stay there overnight there as well.
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, select your subscription (GLOBAL TRADING DISPATCH, TECHNOLOGY LETTER, or Jacquie's Post), then click on WEBINARS, and all the webinars from the last 12 years are there in all their glory
Good Luck and Stay Healthy,
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
There was probably no more broken promise in the investment world over the last several years than that energy master limited partnerships (MLPs) would hold up even if the price of oil fell.
These guys were toll takers, it was said, and profited from the volume of crude pumped through their pipelines. The price of oil was somebody else’s problem.
In any case, double-digit yields would provide more than ample support in any kind of sell-off.
It didn’t quite work out like that.
Once the price of Texas tea (USO) began its plunge in 2014 from $107 to negative $37 at the pandemic low, any investment tarred with an oil connection got slaughtered.
It was the classic flash fire in the movie theater.
Bids for MLP’s vaporized.
Making matters worse is that many retail investors bought highly leveraged MLPs on margin, turning 10% yields into 20% ones. When the sushi hit the fan, it didn’t take long for those positions to go to zero.
Most of the leveraged plays went bankrupt or were unwound in a variety of creative ways with enormous losses.
I always find it a useful exercise to sift through the wreckage of past investment disasters. Not only are there valuable lessons to be learned, but sometimes great trades emerge.
I have been doing that lately in the energy sector, a hedge fund favorite these days, and guess what?
MLPs are back. And no, I’m not talking about the Maui Land and Pineapple Company (MLP) (yes, there is such a thing!).
But these are not your father’s MLPs.
Let me start with my investment thesis.
It is always better to invest in an asset class that has its crash behind it (energy) than ahead of it (the US dollar).
And let’s face it, the final bottom for oil this year at $68 is in.
We may bounce around a bottom for a while as recession fears prevail. But eventually, I expect a global synchronized economic recovery to take it sustainably higher, $100 a barrel or better.
And while I have never been a fan of OPEC, they are showing rare discipline in honoring the production quotas negotiated in November.
That eliminates much of the downside from MLPs and makes it one of the more attractive risk/reward trades out there.
Except that this time it’s different.
Thanks to hyper-accelerating technology (yes, there’s that term again), new wells employ a fraction of the labor of the old ones and are therefore more profitable.
That means they can function, and even prosper, with a much lower oil price.
The surviving MLPs are now a much better quality investment.
Balance sheet quality has improved as a result of deleveraging in the last 14-18 months, and the worst of the rating downgrade cycle is likely behind us.
Importantly, some $50 billion‒$60 billion of growth opportunities for MLPs are expected during FY2024-2025.
That makes the industry one of the great secular growth stories out there today.
As an old fracker myself, I can tell you that the potential of the revolutionary new technology has barely been scratched.
Thanks to technology that is improving by the day, Saudi Arabia’s worth of energy reserves remains to be exploited, potentially turning the US into an energy-exporting powerhouse as the world’s largest producer at 13 million barrels a day.
Industry experts expect MLP distributions to grow by 3%‒5% annually over the coming years. Few other industries can beat this.
That means avoiding upstream Exploration and Production companies; where there is still a ton of risk, and placing your bets on midstream companies that operate pipelines. And by midstream, I don’t just mean pipelines but also processing facilities for natural gas liquids and storage and terminal facilities.
You especially want to look at companies with high barriers to entry and attractive assets in high-growth and low-cost production regions. I’m all about big moats (see (NVDA)).
Companies with a sustainable cost advantage, operated by experienced management with proven geological are further pluses.
MLPs also stack up nicely as a diversifier for your overall portfolio.
Over longer time periods, MLPs have generated similar returns to equities, with similar to slightly higher levels of volatility.
Historically they have traded at lower yields than high-yield bonds, but currently, they are yielding 150 basis points more.
And now for the warning labels.
This is not a new story.
As you can see from the charts below, MLPs have been rallying hard since oil bottomed at the pandemic low in April 2020.
And if my oil forecast is wrong and we plumb new generational lows once again, investment in this sector will suffer.
Still, with yields in the 7%-10% range, a certain amount of pain is worth it.
Still interested?
Take a look at the Alerian MLP ETF (AMLP) (7.36%) and the Global X MLP Energy Infrastructure ETF (MLPX) (4.91%), Western Midstream Partners (WES) (9.20%), and Energy Transfer LP (ET) (7.96%).
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/Pipelines-e1487795183955.jpg266400The Mad Hedge Fund Traderhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngThe Mad Hedge Fund Trader2024-05-22 09:02:042024-05-22 12:36:59The Rebirth of the Master Limited Partnership
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