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Tag Archive for: (UUP)

MHFTR

The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead

Diary, Newsletter, Research

Talking to hedge fund managers, financial advisors, and portfolio managers around the country de-risking seems to be the name of the game. It’s like they expect a category five hurricane to hit the markets tomorrow.

Even my friend, hedge fund legend David Tepper, says that the stock market is fairly valued and that he is cutting back his equity exposure. However, he is hanging onto his position in Micron Technology (MU), which he believes is deeply oversold. Will the last person to leave Dodge please turn out the lights?

You can expect a real hurricane, Florence, to impact the coming economic data. The usual pattern is for GDP growth to take an initial hit when the big storms hit, and then make back more as reconstruction and government spending kicks in. The scary thing is that there are three more hurricanes on the way.

The big event of the week was Apple’s (AAPL) roll out of its new product line, which will beat the daylights out of competitors. Think better and more expensive across the board, with the top iPhone now costing an eye-popping $1,499.

If you are Life Alert, the private company that sells safety devices to seniors, Apple just ate your lunch. Welcome to the cutthroat world of technology investing.

The drama at CBS (CBS) played out with the departure of CEO Les Moonves. He basically generated virtually all the profits for the company for the past two decades. But in this modern age not keeping your zipper zipped carries a heavy price.

A happier departure was seen by Alibaba’s (BABA) Jack Ma, China’s richest man to focus on philanthropic activity.

Emerging markets (EEM) continued their relentless meltdown, only given a brief respite by profit taking in the U.S. dollar (UUP) on Friday.

A coming strike by the United Steelworkers may mark the onset of new wage demands by labor nationwide. In the meantime, the JOLTS report hit a new all-time high with 650,000 job openings.

For the final “screw you” of the week, Trump indicated he was going forward with tariffs on another $200 billion in Chinese imports. Consumer goods will dominate the new black list in the lead up to the Christmas shopping season. Beat the Grinch and shop early!

With the Mad Hedge Market Timing Index ranging from 50 to 78 last week the market keeps trying and failing to reach new all-time highs on small volume. Volatility (VIX) hit a one-month low.

Thank goodness I took profits on my iPath S&P 500 VIX Short Term Futures ETN (VXX) long. The January $40 call options have cratered from $3.60 to only $1.96. Still, there was enough price action to allow us to take nice profits on our bond short (TLT) and Microsoft (MSFT) long. Microsoft was the top-performing Dow stock last and we got in early!

Last week, the performance of the Mad Hedge Fund Trader Alert Service forged a new all-time high. September has given us a middling return of 2.42%. My 2018 year-to-date performance has clawed its way back up to 29.43% and my trailing one-year return stands at 41.35%.

My nine-year return appreciated to 305.90%. The average annualized Return stands at 34.65%. The more narrowly focused Mad Hedge Technology Fund Trade Alert performance is annualizing now at an impressive 29.41%. I hope you all feel like you’re getting your money’s worth.

This coming week is pretty flaccid in terms of economic data releases.

On Monday, September 17, at 8:30 AM, we learn the August Empire State Manufacturing Survey.

On Tuesday, September 18, at 10:00 AM, the National Association of Homebuilders Home Price Index is released. August Home Sales is out at 10:00 AM EST.

On Wednesday September 19, at 8:30 AM, the August Housing Starts is published.

Thursday, September 20 leads with the Weekly Jobless Claims at 8:30 AM EST, which dropped 1,000 last week to 204,000.

On Friday, September 21, at 8:30 AM, we learn August Retail Sales. The Baker Hughes Rig Count is announced at 1:00 PM EST. Last week saw a gain of 7.

As for me, the harvest season in nearby Napa Valley is now in full swing, so I’ll be making the rounds picking up my various wine club memberships. Screaming Eagle check, Duckhorn check, Chalk Hill check.

Good luck and good trading.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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MHFTR

August 20, 2018

Diary, Newsletter, Summary

Global Market Comments
August 20, 2018
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:
(THE MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or
IS THE TRADE WAR ON OR OFF?),
(AAPL), (UUP), (EEM), (NFLX), (TSLA), (GOOGL), (SOYB),
(SOME SAGE ADVICE ABOUT ASSET ALLOCATION)

 

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MHFTR

The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or Is the Trade War on or Off?

Diary, Newsletter, Research

Is the trade war on or off? Trillions of dollars in cash flow and investment depend on the answer to the question.

Traders and investors can be forgiven for being confused. It was only a week ago that a doubling of duties on Turkish imports were threatened because of an American pastor locked up there two years ago, triggering a stock meltdown.

Then, on Wednesday night presidential economic advisor Larry Kudlow hinted that he would meet with a Chinese trade delegation, prompting a 400-point Dow melt-up. Please note that except for Apple (AAPL), technology stocks did not participate in the rally one iota.

In the meantime, Apple continued its relentless march to my $220 target for $2018, so you might think about taking some money off the table. The market capitalization now stands at a staggering $1.05 trillion, the largest in the world.

It vindicates my call that at any time the administration could suddenly declare victory in the trade war, prompting a major stock market rally, regardless of the outcome.

So what happens next. Expect the trade talks to fail, or not happen at all. Market meltdowns will be followed by melt-up, then meltdowns again. Certainly, that's what the soybean (SOYB) market believes, that new canary in the coal mine for our global trade wars. It barely moved this week.

Hey, if trading were easy it would pay the federal minimum wage rate of $7.25 an hour, so quit your complaining!

As if trade wars were the only thing to worry about these days.

There is a mass protest underway at Alphabet (GOOGL) over the company's proposal to re-enter the China market. No one wants to assist the Middle Kingdom's harsh censorship regime, and some 1,000 employees have already signed a petition to this effect.

Emerging markets (EEM) continue to get pounded by trade wars and a strong U.S. dollar (UUP), which has the effect of increasing their companies' local currency debt.

Elon Musk continues his slow motion public nervous breakdown, cutting Tesla's stock at the knees down to $305. I hope you all took my advice last week to unload the stock at $380.

Netflix (NFLX) shares are undergoing a serious pullback now that it is in between upgrade launches, and the trade wars and strong dollar eat into international subscriber growth, about 80% of the total. Don't forget to buy this dip.

With the Mad Hedge Market Timing Index stuck dead on 50, I am not inclined to reach for trades here. A reading of 50 gives you the perfect "do nothing" indicator.

As is always the case when I return from vacation my first few trades are a rude awakening. August is now showing a modest return of 0.23%. My 2018 year-to-date performance has clawed its way up to 25.03% and my nine-year return appreciated to 302.61%. The Averaged Annualized Return stands at 34.91%. The more narrowly focused Mad Hedge Technology Fund Trade Alert performance is annualizing now at an impressive 32.24%.

This coming week housing statistics will give the most important insights on the state of the economy.

On Monday, August 20, there will be nothing of note to report. It will just be another boring summer day.

On Tuesday, August 21, same thing.

On Wednesday, August 22 at 9:15 AM, we learn July Existing Home Sales. Will the rot continue? Weekly EIA Petroleum Inventory Statistics are out at 10:30 AM. The Fed Minutes from the meeting six weeks ago are out at 2:00 PM EST.

Thursday, August 23 leads with the Weekly Jobless Claims at 8:30 AM EST, which saw a fall of 12,000 last week to 212,000. Also announced are July New Home Sales. The two-day Jackson Hole Symposium of central bankers starts in the morning.

On Friday, August 24 at 8:30 AM EST, we get July Durable Goods. Then the Baker Hughes Rig Count is announced at 1:00 PM EST.

As for me, it is back to school week for me, so I will be making the rounds with the new teachers at two schools. I have to confess that at my age I have trouble distinguishing between the students and the teachers.

Finally, a sad farewell to Aretha Franklin, the Queen of soul, who provided me with a half century of listening pleasure. When I was young, I couldn't afford to go see her, and when I got old I didn't have the time. Isn't life lived backward?

Good luck and good trading.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

UP, DOWN, UP, DOWN!

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MHFTR

The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or Coming Home to Trouble

Diary, Newsletter, Research

Ho Hum. Another week, another financial crisis. And why did I rush back from the bucolic mountain pastures of Zermatt? To come back to the smoke-laden skies from the Northern California forest fires? It all must be an early sign of dementia.

Trump's foreign policy now seems crystal clear; to destroy the economies of all our allies. That's what he accomplished with NATO member Turkey today by doubling tariffs, triggering an instant 20% devaluation of the Turkish Lira. Turkey has been at war with Russia for 600 years.

Most Turkish companies have their debts in U.S. dollars or Euros (FXE), so you can write them off. That puts European banks at risk of another crisis, which could quickly turn global in nature. The flip side of this move was to take the U.S. dollar (UUP) to a new high for the year, thus crushing our own exporters even further.

Did our stock market care? Well. Actually yes, taking the Dow Average down 300 points. Will it care more than today? Probably not. All we are seeing is profit taking in some of the most overbought high fliers.

That is, unless, you are a soybean farmer, who saw prices collapse yet again. I watch bean prices closely these days, as it is an indicator of the market's expectation of intensifying trade wars.

After four decades of efforts to develop the Chinese markets, those efforts are going up in flames. And that business is not coming back now that the U.S. has proved itself an unreliable partner. As anyone in business will tell you, you only get to offend a customer once.

Markets generally believe that the U.S. trade war against the rest of the world is nothing more than a negotiating ploy. If that is not the case and they go on and on, you can move up the next recession and bear market by a year, like to tomorrow.

Perhaps the most important news of the week was the July Consumer Price Index leaping to 2.9%, a decade high. This is on the heels of the 2.7% pop in Average Hourly Earnings that came with the July Nonfarm Payroll Report.

Yes, ladies and gentlemen, this is called inflation. And while bonds normally get destroyed by such a data point, fixed income markets instead decided to focus on the strong U.S. dollar.

That was enough to entice me to sell short the U.S. Treasury bonds (TLT) for the first time in three months. With the Fed raising interest rates on September 25 by 25 basis points, what could go wrong?

Tesla (TSLA) sucked a lot of the air out of the room this week with its mooted buyout at $420 a share. I think it will happen. There is a global capital glut right now, with trillions of dollars of capital looking for a home. Ownership of Tesla would be a great hedge for Saudi Arabia against falling oil prices, which already owns 4% of the company. And guess who the world's largest per capita buyer of Tesla's is? Norway, which has a $1 trillion sovereign wealth fund of its own. The proposed $82 billion price tag for Tesla would look like pennies on the dollar.

Tip toeing back into the market with two cautious positions has boosted my August performance to 1.32%. My 2018 year-to-date performance has clawed its way up to 26.14% and my nine-year return appreciated to 302.61%. The Averaged Annualized Return stands at 34.91%. The more narrowly focused Mad Hedge Technology Fund Trade Alert performance is annualizing now at an impressive 32.24%.

This coming week will be a very boring week on the data front.

On Monday, August 13, there will be nothing of note to report. It will just be another boring summer day.

On Tuesday, August 14, at 6:00 AM EST, we get the weekly NFIB Small Business Optimism Report.

On Wednesday, August 15, at 9:15 AM, we learn July Industrial Production.

Thursday, August 16, leads with the Weekly Jobless Claims at 8:30 AM EST, which saw a fall of 13,000 last week to 222,000. Also announced are July Housing Starts. At 4:30 PM, we learn the July Money Supply, which we might have to start paying attention to, now that inflation is on the rise.

On Friday, August 17, at 10:00 AM EST, we get Leading Economic Indicators. Then the Baker Hughes Rig Count is announced at 1:00 PM EST.

As for me, I will be stuck indoors this weekend and the government has warned me not to go outside unless absolutely necessary because the air quality is so bad. Maybe I can sneak out to Costco at some point to replenish my empty refrigerator.

Good luck and good trading.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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MHFTR

July 2, 2018

Diary, Newsletter

Global Market Comments
July 2, 2018
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:
(THE MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, OR THE FUTURE IS HAPPENING FAST),
(HOG), (TLT), (ROM), (MU), (NVDA), (LRCX),
(SPY), (AMZN), (NFLX), (EEM), (UUP), (WBA),
(THE WORST TRADE IN HISTORY), (AAPL)

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MHFTR

The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or The Future is Happening Fast

Diary, Newsletter, Research

I feel like I'm living life in fast forward these days.

First we got a slap across the face with a wet mackerel on Monday with a 328 plunge in the Dow Average on yet another trade war escalation.

Harley Davidson (HOG) said it was moving a factory out of the country to bypass new European duties imposed in response to ours. If Harley is doing this you can bet there are 10,000 other companies thinking about it.

And even though robust economic growth should assure us that we remain in a new bear market for bonds, traders think otherwise. A 10-year Treasury bond (TLT) yield at 2.81% says that we're already in the next recession, we just don't know it yet.

As always happens with the ebb and flow of the trade war, technology got hammered. My favorite early retirement vehicle, the ProShares Ultra Technology 2X ETF (ROM), plunged some 11.19% to an even $100. Chip stocks such as Micron Technology (MU) and Lam Research (LRCX) get particularly hurt as China buys 80% of their processors from the U.S.

In the meantime, Tesla (TSLA) continues its phoenixlike rise from the ashes yet again, burning the shorts for the umpteenth time. The shares are now taking another run at a new all-time high. You would think people would learn but they don't. Einstein's definition of insanity is repeating the same thing over and over again and expecting a different result.

While bearish analysts predicted the imminent demise of the company, I saw a steady stream of trucks delivering new Tesla 3s from the Fremont factory while driving back from Los Angeles last weekend. Nothing beats on-the-ground research.

I'm sorry, but there is definite disconnect from reality with this company. The most hated company in America has produced the fifth best performing stock in over the past eight years, up more than 2,000%. I guess that's what happens when you disrupt big oil, Detroit, the U.S. dealer network, and the entire advertising industry all at the same time.

Interestingly, we caught three of the five best performers early on, including Tesla, NVIDIA (NVDA), and Netflix (NFLX).

Emerging markets (EEM) continue their death spiral, pummeled by the twin threats of trade wars and a soaring dollar (UUP). Most big emerging companies have their debt in dollars.

Sometimes you have to forget what you know to make money, and that has certainly been the case for me with emerging countries, where I spent a large part of my life.

The future is happening fast. Amazon (AMZN) single-handedly demolished the drug sector when it announced its takeover of online pharmacy company PillPack. The traditional brick-and-mortar retail pharmacy sector lost $9 billion in market capitalization just on the announcement. Walgreens (WBA) alone dropped a gut churning 10%.

If anyone can slash America's bloated health care bill it is Jeff Bezos. Just ask any former bookseller or toy maker.

And for a final middle finger salute to investors, the president said he wants to withdraw from the World Trade Organization, which the U.S. itself created after WWII. That means the United Nations is next on the chopping block.

America is rapidly becoming rogue nation No. 1, the next failed state. And failed states don't have great stock markets. Just check out the Somalia Stock Exchange.

They net of all of this is that the rest of the global economy is rolling over like the Bismarck, while the U.S. remains a sole beacon of strength. That's not good when half of S&P 500 earnings come from abroad.

However, that strength is based on a temporary one-time-only stimulus from massive deficit spending and corporate tax cuts that runs out of juice next year.

So keep tap dancing on the edge of the Grand Canyon. We'll miss you when you're gone. And before you ask, the best hedge in this kind of market is cash, which has huge option value that almost no one recognizes.

Despite all the chaos, uncertainty, and massive headline risk, I managed to tiptoe between the raindrops, keeping the Mad Hedge Fund Trader Alert Service performance just short of a new all-time high.

I closed out the month of June at a healthy 4.45%, my 2018 year-to-date performance rose to 24.82% and my 8 1/2-year return catapulted to 301.29%. The Averaged Annualized Return stands at 35.10%. The more narrowly focused Mad Hedge Technology Fund Trade Alert performance is annualizing now at an impressive 38.69%.

This coming holiday shortened week will be all about the jobs, jobs, jobs. Also, the Fed will raise interest rates by 25 basis points on Wednesday to an overnight rate of 2.00%.

On Monday, July 2, at 9:45 AM, the May PMI Manufacturing Index is out.

On Tuesday, July 3, at 10:00 AM, the May Factory Orders are published.

On Wednesday, July 4, U.S. markets are closed for Independence Day. I will be watching the fireworks display over New York's Hudson River from the top of a Midtown Manhattan skyscraper.

Thursday, July 5, sees a huge bunching up of data thanks to the Fourth of July. It leads with the ADP Employment Report for private sector jobs at 8:15 AM EST. The Weekly Jobless Claims follow at 8:30 AM EST, which saw a rise of 9,000 last week to 227,000. Also announced is the all-important 25 basis point interest rate rise from the Federal Reserve and the FOMC Minutes at 2:00 PM, a reading of what was discussed at the last Fed meeting.

On Friday, July 6 at 8:30 AM EST, we get the June Nonfarm Payroll Report. Then the Baker Hughes Rig Count is announced at 1:00 PM EST. I will be sipping a glass of champagne as I board the Queen Mary 2 at the Brooklyn Cruise Terminal. I look forward to all those who signed up for my Seminar at Sea.

As for me, I will be hurriedly packing for the 2018 Mad Hedge European Tour.

Unfortunately, traveling in the grand style of the 19th century Belle Epoque involves bringing 200 pounds of luggage.

Now where are those darn black dress socks? And why am I missing a stud for my formal shirt?

Good Luck and Good Trading.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Time to Get Off the Merry-Go-Round

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MHFTR

Italy's Big Wake-Up Call

Diary, Newsletter, Research

Those planning a European vacation this summer just received a big gift from the people of Italy.

Since April, the Euro (FXE) has fallen by 10%. That $1,000 Florence hotel suite now costs only $900. Mille grazie!

You can blame the political instability on the Home of Caesar, which has not had a functioning government since March. The big fear is that the extreme left would form a coalition government with the extreme right that could lead to its departure from the European Community and the Euro. Think of it as Bernie Sanders joining Donald Trump!

In fact, Italy has had 61 different governments since WWII. It changes administrations like I change luxury cars, about once a year. Welcome to European debt crisis part 27.

I can't remember the last time markets cared about what happened in Europe. It was probably the first Greek debt crisis in 2011. This month, 10-year Italian bond yields have rocketed from 1% to 3%. But they care today, big time.

Given the reaction of the global financial markets, you could have been forgiven for thinking that the world had just ended.

U.S. Treasury Bond yields (TLT) saw their biggest plunge in years, off 15 basis points to 2.75%. The Dow Average ($INDU) collapsed by $500 to $24,250, with interest sensitive banks such J.P. Morgan Chase (JPM) and Bank of America (BAC) delivering the worst performance of the day.

Even oil prices collapsed for an entirely separate set of reasons - so far, the best performing commodity of 2018. The price of Texas Tea pared 10% in a week.

Saudi Arabia looks like it is about to abandon the wildly successful OPEC production quotas that have been boosting oil prices for the past year, and there are concerns that Iran will withdraw from the nuclear non-proliferation treaty. The geopolitical premium is back with a vengeance.

So, if the Italian developments are a canard why are we REALLY going down?

You're not going to like the answer.

It turns out that rising inflation, interest rates, oil and commodity prices, the U.S. dollar, U.S. national debt, budget deficits, and stagnant wage growth are a TERRIBLE backdrop for risk in general and stocks specifically. And this is all happening with the major indexes at the top end of recent ranges.

In other words, it was an accident waiting to happen.

Traders are extremely nervous, global uncertainty is high, the seasonals are awful, and Washington is s ticking time bomb. If you were wondering why I was issuing so few Trade Alerts in May these are the reasons.

This all confirms my expectation that markets will remain in increasingly narrow trading ranges for the next six months until the mid-term congressional elections.

Which is creating opportunities.

If you hated bonds at a 3.12% yield from two weeks ago, you absolutely have to despise them at 2.75% today. That's why I added outright bond put options today to my model trading portfolio.

Stocks are still wildly overvalued for the short term, so I'll keep my short position there. As for oil (USO), gold (GLD), and the currencies, I don't want to touch them here.

So watch for those coming Trade Alerts. I'm not dead yet, just resting.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Waiting for My Shot

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MHFTR

May 22, 2018

Diary, Newsletter

Global Market Comments
May 22, 2018
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:
(DON'T MISS THE MAY 23 GLOBAL STRATEGY WEBINAR),
(CHINA'S BIG TRADE WIN),
(SPY), (TLT), (UUP), (USO), (GLD), (SOYB),
(HOW TO USE YOUR CELL PHONE ABROAD)

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MHFTR

China's Big Trade Win

Diary, Newsletter, Research

My phone started ringing on Sunday afternoon as soon as the futures markets opened in Asia. The U.S. had reached agreement with China on trade and the Dow futures were up 200 points.

Had the next leg of the bull market begun? ?Was it time to buy?

I asked what were the specifics of the deal. There weren't any. I asked about generalities. Those were absent as well.

All they knew was that the U.S. was suspending threatened tariff increases in exchange for a vague Chinese promise to buy more U.S. exports over the long term.

It was in effect a big Chinese win. The development allows the Middle Kingdom to do nothing but stall for time until the next U.S. administration comes to power regardless of which party wins. The Chinese think in terms of centuries, so waiting three more years for a better negotiating backdrop is no big deal.

It vindicates my own call on how the Chinese trade war would play out. After a lot of threats and saber rattling, the administration would achieve nothing, declare victory, and go home.

Traders should NOT be buying this pop in stock prices on pain of death. All that will happen is that stocks will trade back up to the top of the recent range, and then stall out once again as we slide back into slow summer trading. In fact, all we have accomplished is to revisit last week's high in stocks.

Stocks (SPY) weren't buying this trade agreement for two seconds, nor were bonds (TLT), foreign exchange (UUP), gold (GLD), or energy (USO). Not even the agricultural markets were believing it. Soybeans (SOYB), the commodity most affected by the China trade, were up a measly 2.45%. If markets really believed something substantial was afoot they would be limit up three days in a row. I've seen this happen.

It was obvious that little was accomplished when you saw the endless parade of administration officials praising the deals merits. My half century of trading experience has taught me when someone is working so hard to sell you a bridge, you look the other way.

And here is the problem. Beyond cutting-edge technology, there's nothing that China HAS to buy from the U.S. China's largest imports are in energy and foodstuffs, both globally traded commodities.

The oil and gas coming out of America looks pretty much like the Saudi Arabian and Russian kind. U.S. energy infrastructure is already groaning at the seams as it approaches 11 million barrels a day.

To double that from current levels just to fill the trade gap with China would require a multi-decade effort financed with trillions of dollars in private capital just to produce more oil with prices at a three-year high. In other words, it isn't going to happen.

The same is true with agriculture. I doubt there is a single farmer in the country willing to risk his own money to increase production on the back of the China deal. Rainfall is a much bigger concern.

In the end, stocks will eventually rise to new highs by the end of the year, just not right now. And they will do so on the back of the prodigious earnings growth of U.S. companies, which has been expanding at a breakneck pace for nearly a decade.

It is notable that the only major index that hit new highs today was the small cap Russell 2000 (IWM) where the constituent companies essentially do NO trade with China.

To believe otherwise would be giving the cock the credit for the sun rising, which happens every morning like clockwork.

 

 

 

 

 

It Worked Again!

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MHFTR

April 16, 2018

Diary, Newsletter

Global Market Comments
April 16, 2018
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:
(THE MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or THE WEEK THAT NOTHING HAPPENED),
(TLT), (GLD), (SPY), (QQQ), (USO), (UUP),
(VXX), (GOOGL), (JPM), (AAPL),
(HOW TO HANDLE THE FRIDAY, APRIL 20 OPTIONS EXPIRATION), (TLT), (VXX), (GOOGL), (JPM)

https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png 0 0 MHFTR https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png MHFTR2018-04-16 01:08:332018-04-16 01:08:33April 16, 2018
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