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Tag Archive for: ($VIX)

Mad Hedge Fund Trader

April 13, 2020

Diary, Newsletter, Summary

Global Market Comments
April 13, 2020
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:

(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD,
or THE BEAR MARKET RALLY IS OVER),
(INDU), (SPX), (TLT), (VIX, (VXX), (GLD), (JPM), (AMZN), (MSFT)

https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png 0 0 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2020-04-13 09:04:062020-04-13 09:25:30April 13, 2020
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or The Bear Market Rally is Over

Diary, Newsletter
the bear market rally is over

The Bear market rally is over, or at least that’s what Asian stock futures are screaming at us, and the shorts are piling back on….again. 

For the first time in 16 years, I did not have to get up at 6:00 AM to hide Easter eggs. It’s not because my kids don’t believe in the Easter Bunny anymore. They’ll believe in anything that delivers them a free chocolate bunny. It’s because I couldn’t get any eggs. Much of the country’s egg production is being diverted into vaccine production for testing, of which, along with antivirals, there are more than 300 worldwide.

Enough of the happy talk.

It was a classic bear market rally we saw over the past two weeks in every way, retracing 50% of the loss this year. Junk stocks, like hotels, airlines, and cruise lines led, while quality big tech lagged. That’s the exact opposite of what you want to see for a new bull market. 

At the Friday high, the Dow (IND) was down only 17% from the February all-time high at a two-decade 20X valuation high.

The US is now losing 2,000 citizens a day to the Coronavirus. That’s how many we lost at the peak of the Vietnam War in a month. We are suffering another 9/11 every day of the week. 

More than 16.8 million have lost jobs in three weeks, more than all those gained in six years. Of all American companies with fewer than 500 employees, 54% have closed! JP Morgan (JPM) has just cut its forecast for Q2 GDP from a 25% loss to an end of world 40% decline on an annualized bases.

New York is losing 800 people a day and is burying many of them in mass graves. Bread lines have formed in countless major cities. And you think 17% is enough for a discount for stocks, given that a near-total shutdown will continue for another five weeks? 

Are you out of your freaking mind?

Which leads me to believe that another retest in the lows is in the work, no matter how much government money is headed our way.

For a start, it will be three months before the Fed handouts show any meaningful impact on the economy. Second, we are due for a second wave of the virus in the fall, once the initial shelter-in-place ends. Markets will likely behave the same.

In the meantime, long term analysts of the global economic structure are going dizzy with possible permanent changes. I am in the process of writing a couple of pieces on this if I can only get away from the market long enough to do so. 

It seems like half the country has lost their jobs, while the other half are now working double time without pay, like myself.

The market was stunned by 6.1 million in Weekly Jobless Claims, taking the implied Unemployment Rate to over 14%, more than seen during the 2008-2009 Great Recession. One out of four Americans will lose their jobs or suffer a serious pay cut in the next two months. At this rate, we will top the Great Depression peak of 25 million in two weeks.

The Fed launched a second $2.3 trillion rescue program, this time lending to states, local municipalities, and buying oil industry junk bonds. More money was made available to small businesses. Jay Powell is redefining what it means to be a central bank, but no one is complaining. It was worth one 500-point rally in the Dow Average, which we have already given back. At this point, almost the entire country is living on welfare.

Stocks soared firefly on falling death rates. Chinese cases are falling after the border closed, Italy and Madrid are going flat, and San Francisco is looking good. There is still a massive, but extremely nervous bid under the market. I’m selling into this rally. We will continue to chop in a (SPX) $2180-$2800 range for the foreseeable future.

Trump says there’s a light at the end of the tunnel, but he doesn’t tell you that the light is an oncoming express train. At the very least, the number of deaths will rise at least tenfold from here. That’s how many we lost in the Korean War. It hasn’t even hit the unsheltered states in the Midwest yet.

Gold (GLD) is making a run another all-time highs, topping $1,700. Expect everyone’s favorite hedge to go ballistic. QE infinity and zero interest rates will eventually bring hyperinflation and render the US dollar worthless. Gold production is falling due to the virus. Anything else you need to know?

Mortgage defaults are up 18-fold. People can’t even get through to their banks to tell them they are not going to pay. This is the next financial crisis. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are going to go broke….again.

Can the US government spend money fast enough, given that it has been shrinking for three years? I’m not getting my check until September.  It’s not easy to spend $2 trillion in a hurry. I can’t even spend a billion in a hurry. It’s darn hard and I’ve tried. It suggests any recovery will be slower and lasts longer.

Here’s the bearish view on the economy, with Barclay’s Bank looking for an “L” shaped recovery, which means no recovery at all. I’m looking more for a square root type recovery, which means a sharp bounce back to a lower rate of growth. And there may be two “square roots” back to back.

Bond giant PIMCO predicts 30% GDP loss in Q2 on an annualized basis. Everyone staying home doing jigsaw puzzles isn’t doing much for our economic growth. This may end up becoming the most positive forecast out there.

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 at zero, oil at $20 a barrel, and many stocks down by three quarters, 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 had a tough week, destroying my performance back to positive numbers for the year. That is thanks to my piling on the shorts in a steadily rising market. This brings short term pain, but medium-term ecstasy. 

We are now down -3.99% in April, taking my 2020 YTD return down to -12.41%. That compares to an incredible loss for the Dow Average of -17% from the February top. My trailing one-year return sank to 30.02%. My ten-year average annualized profit was pared back to +33.51%. 

My short volatility positions (VXX) were hammered even in a rising market, which means no one believes the rally, including me.

I took nice profits on two very deep in-the-money, very short dated call spreads in Amazon (AMZN) and Microsoft (MSFT), the two safest companies in the entire market, betting that we don’t go to new lows in the next nine trading days. As the market rose, I continued to add to my short position with the 2X ProShares Ultra Short S&P 500 (SDS).

This week, we get the first look at Q1 earnings. All economic data points will be out of date and utterly meaningless this week. The only numbers that count for the market are the number of US Coronavirus cases and deaths, which you can find here.

On Monday, April 13 Citigroup (C) and JP Morgan (JPM) report earnings. 

On Tuesday, April 14 at 11:30 AM, the API Crude Oil Stocks are announced.

On Wednesday, April 15, at 2:00 PM, the New York State Manufacturing Index is released.

On Thursday, April 16 at 8:30 AM, Weekly Jobless Claims are announced. The number could top 6,000,000 again. At 7:30 AM, US Housing Starts for March are published.

On Friday, April 17 at 7:30 AM, the Baker Hughes Rig Count is released at 2:00 PM. Expect these figures to crash as well.

As for me, before the market carnage of the coming week ensues, I shall be sitting down with my kids and touring the National Gallery of Art in Washington DC. Many art museums have now opened up their collections online, for free. There is a special exhibition of “Degas at the Opera.” Please enjoy by clicking here.

Next to come will be the Louvre in Paris (click here), and the National Museum of the Marine Corps in Triangle, VA (click here). I have them tracing the dog tags I brought back from Guadalcanal. I bet some of my old weapons are in there.

Stay healthy.

John Thomas

CEO & Publisher

The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader

the bear market rally is over

 

the bear market rally is over

 

 

 

 

 

the bear market rally is over

Still Sheltering in Place

https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/john-gardening.png 429 308 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2020-04-13 09:02:582020-05-19 11:29:16The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or The Bear Market Rally is Over
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

April 6, 2020

Diary, Newsletter, Summary

Global Market Comments
April 6, 2020
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:

(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or MAD HEDGE GOES POSITIVE ON THE YEAR)
(INDU), (SPY), (VIX), (VXX), (AMZN), (MSFT), (BAC), (JPM)

https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png 0 0 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2020-04-06 09:04:042020-04-06 09:11:19April 6, 2020
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or Mad Hedge Goes Positive on the Year

Diary, Newsletter

There is no doubt that the Corona pandemic will be the WWII challenge of our generation. Since we are Americans, we will rise to the task. We all have our jobs to do, being it working as a front-line medical professional, or simply staying at home.

We will get through this.

I was standing in front of a Reno gun store yesterday waiting my turn to enter. Under Nevada’s strict shelter-in-place rules, only one person is allowed to enter a store at a time. I needed some ammo and black powder for my 1860 Army Colt revolver, which is hard to find in California.

I struck up a casual conversion about the pandemic with other waiting customers on a clear, brisk Nevada morning. A blue-collar worker with an AR-15 said he really wasn’t paying attention to it. A latino gang member with a heavily tattooed neck and fingers looking for a box of 9mm Glock shells confessed he hadn’t heard about it. A white nationalist with a heavily militarized SUV argued that the whole thing was a left-wing conspiracy meant to discredit Donald Trump.

Which can only mean one thing.

The worst days of the of the pandemic are ahead of us, as are the consequences for the stock market. Remember, 40% of the country don’t read newspapers or watch the news and are only barely aware of the seriousness of the disease.

The White House us currently forecasting 12 million cases and 250,000 deaths. That’s just an optimistic guess. Only one third of the country started their shutdowns early, one third were late, and the last third not at all. This means that the highest death rates will be in southern and midwestern states that are following the presidents advance and dismissing the pandemic out of hand, refusing to wear face masks.

So, we are really looking at a potential US 120 million cases and 2.4 million deaths. On that scale the food distribution system will start to break down for shear lack of workers. No one really knows how effective shelter-in-place will be, although the early data is encouraging. We are all living in one giant experimental petri dish right now.

And we will be the lucky country. Deaths in the Southern Hemisphere, which is just going into the winter, will be much higher.

Anytime I consider adding a long position, I first ask myself how it will stand up against a picture on the front page of the New York Times showing a pile of a thousand bodies outside a local hospital. I saw that sort of thing in Asia a half century ago. Markets will crash.

The game we are now in for the coming weeks is to trade an $18,000 to $22,000 range in the Dow Average. The sharp selloff in the Volatility Index (VIX) last week, which we caught with both hands, suggests that the next retest of the $18,000 low will be successful.

Further down the road, I’m not so sure. Any prediction beyond tomorrow in this environment is dubious at best. The world is moving on fast-forward now and the unbelievable is happening every day.

But here’s a shot. If the $18,000 to $22,000 range doesn’t hold, then we are moving to a $15,000 to $18,000 range. If that fails, then we are looking at $12,000 to $15,000 range. Then we will be looking at Great Depression levels of stock market sell-off, with a total corporate capitalization loss of an eye-popping $17 trillion.

The great challenge here is to buy your best stocks and LEAPs as low as possible before an unprecedented $6 trillion in federal stimulus that is coming our way. There will be the $2 trillion in jobs and corporate bailout money already passed, a $2 trillion infrastructure bill coming, and a second jobs and bailout bill that will be needed. On top of that, the Federal Reserve has committed to $8 trillion backstopping of the financial.

And here is the problem. Trump has spent the last three years shrinking the government. The pandemic is a very large government event. So, the Feds may simply not have enough bodies in place to spend, or to lend, all the money that has already been authorized.

That is your economic and market risk.

There is no doubt that the next month will be grim. The U-6 Unemployment Rate published on Friday was 8.9%, indicating the total number of jobless is already at 14.4 million. If the Fed is right and we soon hit 32%, total joblessness will soar to 52 million. During the Great Depression, that unemployment rate peaked at only 25%, throwing 20 million out of work. We could exceed those levels in the coming week!

Dr. Fauci predicts 200,000 US deaths. I think that’s a low number, given that 100 million Americans are still not sheltering-in-place. Corona is starting to take its toll on Wall Street, claiming the life of the Jeffries CFO, Peg Broadbent. Every state and city should prepare for a New York-style spike in cases.

The Fed is expecting 47 million unlucky individuals to lose jobs. This week, Macy’s (M) chopped 150,000, while Tillman Fertitta laid off 40,000 restaurant workers in place like Morton’s Steakhouse and the Bubba Gump Shrimp Company. Many more are to come. Weekly Jobless Claims have already exploded to 6.64 Million. That is three full recessions worth of job losses in two weeks.

The March Nonfarm Payroll Report was a disaster. Here is another number to put in your record book of awful numbers, the report showing 701,000 job losses in March. It’s the first negative number since 2010. Leisure & Hospitality fell by a staggering 459,000.

A second Corona wave might arrive in the fall, warns JP Morgan (JPM). We may not have visited the Volatility Index at $80 for the last time. I’m setting up more (VXX) shorts if we do revisit there. Sell all substantial stock market rallies.

It’s worse than you think. Brace yourself. Bank of America (BAC) has come out with the first GDP forecast I’ve seen that factors in a second wave of Coronavirus cases in the fall. It is not a pretty picture. They see every quarter of 2020 as coming in negative. These easily takes US GDP back to levels not seen since the Obama administration. The only consolation is that (BAC) has never been that great at forecasting the economy, basically leaving it to a bunch of kids. Here they are:

2020 Q1 -7%
2020 Q2 -30%
2020 Q3 -1%
2020 Q4 -30%

Oil rich countries will have to dump $225 billion in stocks, thanks to the collapse of oil to a once impossible $20 a barrel. An 80% plunge in national revenues is forcing asset sales at fire sale prices to avoid a brewing revolutions. They don’t retire former heads of states to golf clubs in the Middle East, they stand them up in front of a firing squads.

Oil Hit an 18-year low at $19.30 a barrel and it could get a lot worse. All of the world’s storage is full, so producers might have to PAY wholesalers to take Texas tea off their hands. Yes, negative oil prices are possible. Otherwise, producing wells will be permanently damaged with a total shutdown. Most of the industry has a negative net worth, save the majors. I told you to stay away!

China PMIs turn positive, coming in at 52 versus an expected 45 indicating a recovering economy. Watch the Middle Kingdom’s economic data more than usual. US PMIs are still in free fall. However, consumers still are staying at home. Their economy went first into the pandemic and will be the first out. There’s hope for us all the quarantine is working.

A $2 trillion infrastructure budget is in the works, and the Democrats will support it because the money won’t be spent until they get control of government in 2021. With most of the construction industry closed, the government’s cumbersome bidding process can’t even start until the summer.

You wonder how that last $2 trillion rescue package got done in five days? This will take us to Great Depression levels of bailout spending. The Fed balance sheet has exploded from $3.5 trillion to $5 trillion in weeks. I know 10,000 bridges that need to be fixed.

When we come out 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 at zero, oil at $20 a barrel, and many stocks down by three quarters, 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 had a spectacular week, blasting my performance back to positive numbers for the year. That is thanks to the ten-point collapse in the Volatility Index (VIX) on Thursday and Friday, which had a hugely positive effect on all our positions.

We are now up an amazing +11.02% for the first three days of April, taking my 2020 YTD return up to +2.60%. We are a mere 68 basis points short of an all-time high. That compares to an incredible loss for the Dow Average of -28.8%, with more to go. My trailing one-year return was recovered to 46.74%. My ten-year average annualized profit recovered to +34.85%. 

My short volatility positions (VXX) are almost back to cost. I used every rally in the Dow Average to increase my short positions in the (SPY) to almost obscene levels. Now we have time decay working big time in our favor. These will all come good well before their ten-month expiration.

I bought two very deep in-the-money, very short-dated call spreads in Amazon (AMZN) and Microsoft (MSFT), the two safest companies in the entire market, betting that we don’t go to new lows in the next nine trading days.

At the slightest sign of a break in the pandemic, the economy and shares should come roaring back. Right now, I have a 30% cash position.

All economic data points will be out of date and utterly meaningless this week. The only numbers that count for the market are the number of US Coronavirus cases and deaths, which you can find here at https://coronavirus.jhu.edu

On Monday, April 6 at 6:00 AM, the Consumer Inflation Expectations for March are out.

On Tuesday, April 7 at 9:00 AM, the US JOLTS Job Openings Report is published.

On Wednesday, April 8, at 2:00 PM, the Fed Minutes for the previous meeting six weeks ago are released.

On Thursday, April 9 at 8:30 AM, Weekly Jobless Claims are announced. The number could top 3,000,000 again.

On Friday, April 10 at 7:30 AM, the US Core Inflation is released. The Baker Hughes Rig Count follows at 2:00 PM. Expect these figures to crash as well.

As for me, I have temporarily moved back to Oakland to retrieve my printer. As I left, my Tahoe neighbors told me I was nuts to go back to a big city. I then drove across an almost totally vacated Golden State, emptied by a pandemic.

With my free time, I have planted a victory garden. I managed to obtain tomatoes, eggplants, chili peppers, strawberries, lettuce, and bell peppers from the nearest Home Depot (HD) garden center. In two weeks, I should have something new to eat.

Stay healthy.

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

pandemic

 

pandemic

 

pandemic

 

pandemic

 

 

 

 

 

Still Sheltering in Place

 

https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/april62020.png 539 627 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2020-04-06 09:02:082020-05-31 22:30:42The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or Mad Hedge Goes Positive on the Year
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

March 30, 2020

Diary, Newsletter, Summary

Global Market Comments
March 30, 2020
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:

(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or COPING WITH CORONA),
(INDU), (VIX), (VXX), (UAL), (WYNN), (CCL), (SSO), (SPXU)

https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png 0 0 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2020-03-30 09:04:322020-03-30 09:38:34March 30, 2020
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or Coping with Corona

Diary, Newsletter

I am sitting in my Lake Tahoe office watching a light snow blanket the surrounding High Sierras. There is a stiff north wind whipping up whitecaps on a cerulean blue lake.

Spring break normally packs the Diamond Peak ski resort at Incline Village, Nevada. This year, it is a ghost town. The resort is closed, the streets deserted and the hotels empty.

Driving up from San Francisco, I had to stop at a Tesla Supercharging station at Rocklin, California next to a huge shopping mall for a top-up to cross Donner Pass. It was bereft of shoppers, looking like everyone had been wiped out by an uncontrollable plague. Of a hundred stores only Subway, Chipotle Mexican Grill (CMG), and Target (TGT) were open. I could almost hear the rent and interest payments ticking on.

And economically, it has.

Let’s do some raw, back-of-the-envelop calculations. Congress has just passed the largest stimulus package in history, some $2 trillion. If Morgan Stanley is right and the US is about to lose 30% of its economic growth on an annualized basis, that means the GDP is about to drop from $21.4 trillion to $19.8 trillion. Get two quarters like this and we fall back to $18.2 trillion, or to the 2016 levels.

That means the government is already $1.2 trillion behind the curve in bridge spending to carry over the economy to the other side of the epidemic. It can come back with another rescue package. If it does, there is no guarantee the money will end up in the right place to have any real effect.

Yes, we have just lost three years of economic growth, and the stock market is reflecting the same.

Of course, there are silver linings behind the clouds. Some 90% of the demand in the economy hasn’t been destroyed, it has been deferred. Cruises not taken, restaurant meals not eaten, and vacations not taken are gone for good.

However, a lot of discretionary purchases, such as for home, car, and computer purchases have simply been delayed until the fall. That's why so many forecasts call for an exploding economy in the second half.

A lot more economic economy isn’t lost, it has simply been rearranged. There has been a vast migration of legacy businesses to online. Most workers in Silicon Valley have adjusted from one to two days of work at home to five or six. The background noise of kids crying, and pets barking during an online meeting has become a normal part of business life.

And let’s face it, a lot of people are being paid for doing nothing. Government employees are receiving paychecks even though their agencies have been closed. Teachers are paid in annual contracts. Those Social Security and pension payments keep coming like clockwork.

I have spent the last week talking to old friends in the scientific community. Realistically, the economy will be shut down until June. You can open it up earlier, but only at the cost of hundreds of thousands of lives. Without restrictions, mathematically, everyone in the United States will be infected with Coronavirus within two months causing 6 million deaths. That’s the worst-case scenario.

Only when the infection rate hits 53% do we start to acquire herd immunity. That happens when there’s greater than 50% chance that the next person the virus contacts is immune.

Also, the greater the number of recovered individuals, the more we can tap for serum to treat existing patients and increase immunity and survival rates. Some 98% of those infected recover and become immune and non-contagious within two weeks.

Shelter-in-place orders and social distancing will greatly reduce those numbers. That’s what China did, and they have had no growth in new cases for two weeks.

My bet is that the epidemic will peak first in the states that sheltered-in-place early, and then peak in the Midwest later. That sets up two big waves of the disease, one in the spring, and a second in the summer and fall. Every state will have its own New York crisis moment sooner or later.

The president has expressed an interest in reopening the economy on April 13. If the stock market (INDU) believes that, then it is in for new lows. There is no point in predicting a final bottom. Once the algorithms get going, they are unstoppable.

Big companies like United Airlines, Wynn Resorts (WYNN), and Carnival Cruise Lines (CCL), have seen a staggering 90% decline in sales. Yet the wage bills and interest payments mount daily. The cruel math points to disaster on an epic scale.

Face reality. There is no way the stock market can bottom before the number of cases peaks. Front run that at your peril. The consolation is that will likely happen by June. This will be the shortest, sharpest depression in history.

Global Corona cases topped 704,095, and deaths 33,509 (click here for the latest data). Why does the US have 52% more cases than China with one quarter the population? Because the federal government was asleep at the switch and then responded with a test that didn’t work for the first month. That blinded us to an epidemic that was already here in force.

A monster 3.28 million in Weekly Jobless Claims hit the market last week, five times the previous record. That’s normally the total number of jobs you lose in a full recession. This is the number of claims you get from an entire recession.

The number was probably higher as many state websites crashed, limiting applications. This rate of claims will probably increase for two more months. One can only guess what the unemployment rate is, probably over 5%. Next week will be worse. Over 50 million work in retail and most will lose their jobs.

Chicago clearing firm Ronin Capital went under, unable to meet their capital requirements. It was one of the CME’s principal clearings firm, and their problems are stemming from the (VIX) spike to $80 this week. I knew it was totally artificial.

The forced liquidation of their massive holdings probably accounted for the incredible 25-point drop in the (VIX) on Thursday and the last 500 points of the fall in Dow Average on Friday. It sounds terrible, but the loss of several brokerage firms like this often markets a market bottom. This is the second time in two years that (VIX)-related blow-ups roiled the markets. For more about the firm, visit https://www.ronin-capital.com

Internet traffic is up 30% on the week as a massive move to online commerce takes place. There is now a laptop shortage as the government outbids the private sector to get machines for first responders. Phishing attacks are at record highs. Don’t click on any links sent to you, especially from Apple, your credit card company, or the IRS.

The Fed expects a 30% Unemployment Rate in Q2, or so says James Bullard, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. The Great Depression only hit 25% unemployment.

The US Real Estate market is freezing up. If you’re trying to sell a house right now, you’re screwed. Closings are impossible because of the shutdown of notaries and title offices. Open houses are now virtual only. The hit to the US economy will be huge.

Tokyo 2020 Olympics were postponed a year, as the Japanese finally cave to the obvious. Canada and Australia had already withdrawn for Corona reasons. Tokyo is really unluckily with Olympics. They lost the 1940 games to the outbreak of WWII. It will be a big hit for the Japanese economy.

Online Hiring is exploding, up 44% in the past week, a decades-old trend that is now vastly accelerating. Entire school systems have moved online. We are all working now on Zoom, Skype, GoToMeeting, and Google Hangouts. Internet traffic has doubled in some neighborhoods, slowing speeds appreciably.

Target saw a staggering 50% growth in same store sales. Lines go around the block, hours are limited, and the police are on standby to maintain order. This has been one of our favorite retailers for years (click here for “Is Target the Next FANG?”). If they only had more toilet paper! Buy (TGT) on the meltdown.

Blackrock rated US stocks a “Strong Overweight.” The firm believes we won’t see a repeat of 2008. The fiscal and monetary response has been overwhelming. It’s just a matter of time before markets settle down, but not until well after new Corona cases peak. Buy (BLK) on the dip.

Oil falls again, back to $21. Not even all the stimulus in the world can save this structurally impaired industry. Ask John Hamm of Continental Resources (CLR), whose stock has just crashed from $36 to $4. He’s the guy who wrote the billion-dollar divorce check. Avoid the entire industry on pain of death.

When we come out 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 at zero, oil at $20 a barrel, and many stocks down by three quarters, 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 has had a descent week, pulling back by -8.22% in March, taking my 2020 YTD return down to -11.14%. That compares to an incredible loss for the Dow Average of -37% at the Monday low. My trailing one-year return was pared back to 30.88%. My ten-year average annualized profit recovered to +33.81%. 

My short volatility positions have held steady. I used the 3,600-point rally in the Dow Average to add enough short positions to hedge out my risk in my exiting short volatility positions (VXX). Now we have time decay working in our big time favor. These will all come good well before their ten month expiration.

At the slightest sign of a break in the pandemic, the economy and shares should come roaring back. Right now, I have a 60% cash position.

This is jobs week and it should be the most tumultuous in history.

On Monday, March 30 at 9:00 AM, the Pending Home Sales for February are released.

On Tuesday, March 31 at 8:00 AM, the S&P Case Shiller National Home Price Index for January is out and should still show a sharp upward trend.

On Wednesday, April 1, at 8:15 AM, the ADP Private Sector Jobs Index is announced.

On Thursday, April 2 at 7:30 AM, Weekly Jobless Claims are announced. The number could top 3,000,000 again.

On Friday, April 3 at 9:00 AM, the March Nonfarm Payroll is printed. The Baker Hughes Rig Count follows at 2:00 PM. Expect these figures to crash as well.

As for me, I am at Lake Tahoe to hide out from the Zombie Apocalypse with my stockpile of Chloroquine and Azithromycin. There are only 536 cases in Nevada, most of which are in Las Vegas, and has a lot more food (click here for the latest updates).

I am building a Corona-sanitizing Station at the front door made of paper towels and isopropyl or ethyl alcohol. It kills the virus on contact.

I hear they even have toilet paper in a few undisclosed places.

Shelter in place will work. Please stay healthy.

As a public service, I am posting “the entire DNA sequence of Covid-19” in its entirety, which I obtained from a lab in China. A scientist friend asked me to publicize it on my website to the widest possible audience. What better place than the Mad Hedge Fund Trader.

Typical of viruses, it is an incredible small genome, one hundred thousandth the size of our own with only 29,000 base pairs. There are only a handful of genes here compared to our 35,000. For the full code click here.

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

 

 

economy

 

economy

 

economy

 

economy

 

economy

 

https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png 0 0 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2020-03-30 09:02:192020-07-06 00:02:43The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or Coping with Corona
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

March 27, 2020

Diary, Newsletter, Summary

Global Market Comments
March 27, 2020
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:

(MARCH 25 BIWEEKLY STRATEGY WEBINAR Q&A),
(ROM), (BA), (VIX), (UPRO), (SSO), (UBER), (LYFT), (MDT),
(GLD), (GOLD), (NEM), (GDX), (UGL)

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Mad Hedge Fund Trader

March 25, 2020 - Biweekly Strategy Webinar Q&A

Diary, Newsletter, Summary

Below please find subscribers’ Q&A for the Mad Hedge Fund Trader March 25 Global Strategy Webinar broadcast from Silicon Valley, CA with my guest and co-host Bill Davis of the Mad Day Trader. Keep those questions coming!

Q: Since we flipped the off button on the economy, I don’t see how we can simply flip the on button and have a V-shaped recovery. It seems much more unlikely that it will get back to pre-recession levels.

A: Actually, all we really need is confidence. Confident people can go outside and not get sick. Once we start seeing a dramatic decline in the number of new cases, the shelter-in-place orders may be cancelled, and we can go outside and go back to work. It’s really that simple. So, we will get an initial V-shaped recovery probably in the third quarter, and after that, it will be a slower return spread over several quarters to get back to normal. Everybody wants to get back to normal and let's face it, there's an enormous amount of deferred consumption going on. I have hardly spent any money myself other than what I’ve spent online. All of those purchases get deferred, so in the recovery, there's going to be a massive binge of entertainment, shopping, and travel that is all being pent up now—that will get unleashed once the airlines start flying again and the shelter-in-place orders are cancelled. We’re not losing so much of this growth, we’re just deferring it. Obviously, some of the growth is gone permanently; you can forget about any kind of vacation in the next couple of months. I would say, the great majority of consumption in the US—and thus growth and thus stock appreciation—is just being deferred, not cancelled outright. 

Q: Other than the ProShares Ultra Technology ETF (ROM), do you have any other leveraged sectors coming into the recovery?

A: There is a 50/50 chance the Roaring 20s started 2 days ago, on Monday, March 23 at the afternoon lows. We may go back and test those lows one more time, which at this point is 3,700 points below here, but we are clocking 1,000 points a day. It doesn’t take much, like a bad non-farm payroll number, to go back and test those lows. The good news is out; they're not going to spend any more money other than the $10 trillion they're putting in now.

Q: Would you buy Boeing (BA) here? Is this the bottom?

A: The bottom was at $94 on Monday; we went up 100% in three days and now we’re at $180. Incredible moves, and a total lack of liquidity. One reason I haven't added any positions lately is that they have closed the New Yok Stock Exchange floor and its not clear that of I send out a trade alert, it could get done. We have gone totally online, so I just want to see what happens as a result of that. I don’t want to be putting out trade alerts that no one can get in or out of, heaven forbid.

Q: What do you mean by “The spike to $80 in the Volatility Index (VIX) was totally artificial?”

A: When you have a series of cascading shorts triggered by margin calls, that is artificial. I have seen this happen many times before, both on the upside and the downside. This happened twice in the (VIX) in the last two years. When you go from a (VIX) of $25 to $80 and back down to $39 in days, which is what we did, you know it was a one-time-only spike and we are not going to visit the $80 level again— at least not until the next financial crisis because those positions are gone and are never coming back. A (VIX) of $80 means we are going to have 1,000 point move in the Dow Average for the next 30 days.

Q: I bought some ProShares Ultra Pro ETF (UPRO) which is the 3x long the S&P 500 at $1,829. Do I take profits by selling calls or just hold longer?

A: I would just sell the whole position outright. The (UPRO) is so incredibly volatile that you are rewarded heavily for just coming out completely and then reopening fresh positions on these big meltdown days. We will probably be doing trade alerts on (UPRO) or its cousin, the 2x long ProShares Ultra S&P 500 (SSO) sometime in the near future.

Q: With 2-year LEAPs, would you go at the money or out of the money?

A: This is the golden opportunity to go way out of the money because the return goes from 100% to 500%, or even 1000% if you go, say, 30%-50% out of the money. A lot of these stocks are ripe for very quick 30% bouncebacks, especially the (ROM). So yes, you want to do out of the money 20% to 30%. It will easily recover those losses in weeks if you are picking the right stocks. Over a two-year view, a lot of these big tech stocks could double by the time your LEAP expires, and then you will get the full profit. The rule of thumb is: the farther out of the money you go, the bigger the profit is. But I wouldn’t go for more than a 1000% profit in 2 years; you don't want to get greedy, after all.

Q: You called the Dow to hit 15,000. Is that still possible? We got down to the 18 handle.

A: Yes, if the coronavirus data gets worse, which is certain, we could get another panic selloff. How will the market handle 100,000 US deaths, given the exponential rise in cases we are seeing? With cases doubling every three days that is entirely within range. So, I would say, there is a 50% chance we hit the bottom on Monday at 18,000, and 50% chance we go lower.

Q: Do you know anything about the coronavirus stocks like Regeneron (REGN)?

A: Actually, I do, it's covered by the Mad Hedge Biotech & Health Care Letter, click here for the link. If you get the Biotech Letter, you already know all about stocks like Regeneron. Regeneron literally has hundreds of drugs in testing right now to work as vaccines or antivirals, and some of them, like their arthritis drug, have already been proven to work. So, we just have to get through the accelerated trials and testing to unleash it on the market. But for anybody who has a drug, it's going to take a year to mass-produce enough to inoculate the entire country, let alone the world. So, don't make any big bets on getting a vaccine any time soon—it's a very long process. Even in normal times, some of these drugs take months to manufacture.

Q: Are there any ventilator stocks out there?

A: There are; a company called Medtronic (MDT), which the Mad Hedge Biotech & Healthcare Letter also covers. They are the largest ventilator company in the US. Their normal production is 100 machines a week. Now, they are increasing that to 500 a week as fast as they can, but it isn’t enough. We need about 100,000 ventilators. China is now selling ventilators to the US. Elon Musk from Tesla (TSLA) just bought 1,000 ventilators in China and had them shipped over to San Francisco at his own expense, and Virgin Atlantic just flew over a 747 full of ventilators and masks and other medical supplies from China. So yes, there are stocks out there to play these things, they have already had large moves. We liked them anyway, even before the pandemic, so those calls were quite good. And China thinks their epidemic is over, so they are happy to sell us all the medical supplies they can make.

Q: Why did 30-year mortgage rates just go up instead of down? I thought the Fed rate cuts were supposed to take them down; am I missing something?

A: In order to get 30-year mortgage rates down, you have to have buyers of 30-year loans, and right now there are buyers of nothing. The lending that is happening is from banks lending their own money, which is only a tiny percentage of the total loan market. When the Fed moves into the mortgage market, you will see those yields move to the 2% range. The other problem is how to get a loan if all the banks are closed. They are running skeletal staff now, and you can’t close on real estate deals because all the notaries and title offices are closed; so essentially the real estate industry is going to shut down right now and hopefully, we’ll finish that in a month.

Q: Do you think Uber (UBER) and Lyft (LYFT) will go bankrupt?

A: It is a possibility because one to one human contact inside a car is about the last situation you want to be in during a pandemic. Their traffic was down 25% according to a number I saw. It’s very heavily leveraged, very heavily indebted, and those are the companies that don’t survive long in this kind of crisis. So, I would say there is a chance they will go under. I never liked these companies anyway; they are under regulatory assault by everybody, depend on non-union drivers working for $5 an hour, and there are just too many other better things to do.

Q: Is this the end of corporate buybacks?

A: To some extent, yes. A future Congress may make it either illegal or highly tax corporate buybacks, in some fashion or another because twice in 12 years now, we have had companies load up on buying back their own stock, boosting CEO compensation to the hundreds of millions—if not billions—and then going broke and asking for government bailouts. Something will be done to address that. If you take buybacks out of the market (the last 10,000-point gain in the Dow were essentially all corporate buybacks), we may not see a 20X earnings multiple again for another generation. Individuals were net sellers of stock for those two years. We only reached those extreme highs because of buybacks, so you take those out of the equation and it's going to get a lot harder to get back to the super inflated share prices like we had in January.

Q: How long before an Italian bank collapses, and will they need a bailout?

A: I don’t think they will get a collapse; I think they will be bailed out inside Italy and won’t need all of Europe to do this. But the focus isn't on Europe right now, it's on the US.

 Q: Do you think this virus is really subsiding in China based on their past history of dishonest reporting?

A: Yes, that is a risk, and that's why people aren’t betting the ranch right now—just because China is reporting a flattening of cases. And China could be hit with a second wave if they relax their quarantine too soon.

Q: What's your opinion on how the Fed is doing and Steve Mnuchin in this crisis?

A: I think the Fed is doing everything they possibly can. I agree with all of their moves—this is an all-hands-on-deck moment where you have to do everything you can to get the economy going. Notice it’s Steve Mnuchin doing all the negotiating, not the president, because nobody will talk to him. For a start, he may be a Corona carrier among other things, and you’re not seeing a lot of social distancing in these press conferences they are holding. About which 50% of the information they give out is incorrect, and that's the 50% coming from Donald Trump.

Q: What do you think about no debt and no pension liability?

A: That’s why Tech has been leading the upside for the last 10 years and will lead for the next 10. You can really narrow the market down to a dozen stocks and just focus on those and forget about everything else. They have no net debt or net pension fund liabilities.

Q: Why have we not heard from Warren Buffet?

A: I'm sure negotiations are going on all over the place regarding obtaining massive stakes in large trophy companies that he likes, such as airlines and banks. So that will be one of the market bottom indicators that I mentioned a couple of days ago in my letter on “Ten Signs of a Market is Bottoming.”

Q: What’s the outlook for gold?

A: Up. We just had to get the financial crisis element out of this before we could go back into gold, so I would be looking to buy SPDR Gold Shares ETF (GLD), the gold miners like Barrick Gold (GOLD) and Newmont Mining (NEM), the Van Eck Vectors Gold Miners ETF (GDX), and the 2X long ProShares Gold ETF (UGL).

Q: Does the Fed backstop give you any confidence in the bond market?

A: Yes, it does. I think we finally may be getting to the natural level of the market, which is around an 80-basis point yield. Let’s see how long we can go without any 50-point gyrations.

Q: Do you foresee a depression?

A: We are in a depression now. We could hit a 20% unemployment rate. The worst we saw during the Great Depression was 25%. But it will be a very short and sharp one, not a 12-year slog like we saw during the 1930s.

Good Luck and Good Trading and stay healthy.

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

 

 

 

 

 

It’s Been a Tough Month

https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/john-thomas-3.png 391 522 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2020-03-27 06:02:112020-05-11 14:48:11March 25, 2020 - Biweekly Strategy Webinar Q&A
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

March 24, 2020

Diary, Newsletter, Summary

Global Market Comments
March 24, 2020
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:

(TEN SIGNS THE MARKET IS BOTTOMING),
(FXI), (BRK/A), (BA), (DAL), (SPX),
 (INDU), (UUP), (VIX), (VXX), (AAPL)

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Mad Hedge Fund Trader

Ten Signs the Market is Bottoming

Diary, Newsletter

I spent the morning calling some big hedge fund friends asking what they are looking for to indicate the market may be bottoming. I’ll give you a warning right now. None of the traditional fundamental or technical measures have any validity in this market.

Markets will need to see at least one, and maybe all of these before they launch into a sustainable recovery. The good news is that several have already happened and are flashing green.

1) Watch New Corona Cases in China

The pandemic started in China and it will end in China (FXI). The president of China, Xi Jinping, has already announced that the epidemic is over and that the country is returning to normal. The country is donating thousands of respirators and millions of masks to Europe and poor countries all over the world. China was able to enforce a quarantine far more severe than possible in the West, such as using the army to surround 60 million people for a month. So, the results in the Middle Kingdom may not be immediately transferable to the US.

If we do get an actual fall in the number of cases in China, that could indicate the end is near. To keep track, click here. 

2) Watch Corona Cases in Italy

Italy quarantined two weeks before California so we should get an earlier answer there. The numbers are reliable, but we don’t know the true extent of their quarantine. After all, this is Italy. Also, Italy has a much older population than the US (that Mediterranean diet keeps Italians alive forever), so they will naturally suffer a higher death rate. However, a decline in cases there will be proof that a western-style shelter-in-place order will work. To keep track, click here.

3) Watch Corona Cases in California

The Golden State was the first to quarantine ten days ago, so it will be the first American state to see cases top out. On Monday, we were at 1,733 cases and 27 deaths, or one in 1.5 million. However, it is a partial quarantine at best, with maybe half of the 20 million workforce staying home. When our cases top out, which should be the week of April 13, it could be an indication that the epidemic is flagging. To keep track, click here.

4) Watch Washington

Passage of a Corona Economic Recovery Bill could take place as early as Friday and could be worth $2 trillion. Add in the massive stimulus provided by the Federal Reserve, a large multiple of the 2008-2009 efforts, and $10 trillion is about to hit the economy. Warning: don’t be short an economy that is about to be hit with $10 trillion worth of stimulus.

5) Watch the Technicals.

Yes, technicals may be worthless now but someday in the future, they won’t be. The stock market has traded 20% below the 200-day moving average only four times in the last century. The Dow Average (INDU) was 32% below the 200-day moving average at the Monday low. The next rip-your-face off short-covering rally is imminent and may initially target that down 20% level at $21,496, or 18% above the Monday low.

6) Watch for the Big Buy

Value players are back in the market for the first time in six years, the last time the S&P 500 (SPX) traded at a discount to its historical 15.5X earnings multiple and are circling targets like hungry sharks. Watch for Warren Buffet of Berkshire Hathaway (BRK/A) to buy a large part of a trophy property, like a major bank or airline. He’s already stepped up his ownership in Delta Airlines (DAL). I’m sure he’s going over the books of Boeing (BA). Warren might even buy back his own stock at a discount to net asset value, down 31.4% in a month. Any move by Warren will signal confidence to the rest of the markets.

7) Watch the US Dollar

With US overnight interest rates having crashed by 1.5% in recent weeks, the US dollar (UUP) should be the weakest currency in the world. The greenback overnight became a zero-yielding currency. Instead, it has been the strongest, rocketing on a gigantic global flight to safety bid. When the foreign exchange rates return to rationality, the buck should weaken, as it has already started to do after last week’s super spike. A weak dollar will be good for American companies and their stocks.

8) Watch the (VIX)

We now know that the Volatility Index (VIX), (VXX) was artificially boosted last week by hundreds of short players covering positions with gigantic losses and going bust. Now that this is washed out, I expect volatility to decline for the rest of 2020. It has already fallen from $80 to $49 in days. This is a precursor to a strong stock market.

9) Watch the Absolute Value of the Market

There could be a magic number beyond which prices can’t fall anymore. That could be yesterday’s 18,000, 17,000, or 15,000. Some 80% of all US stocks are owned by long term holders who never sell, like pension funds, corporate crossholdings, or individuals who have owned them for decades and don’t want to pay the capital gains tax. When the ownership of that 20% is shifted to the 80%, the market runs out of sellers and stocks can’t fall anymore. That may have already happened. Similarly, a final capitulation selloff of market leaders, like Apple (AAPL) may also be a sign that the bear market is ending. (AAPL) is off 34.40% since February.

10) Watch John Thomas

I am watching all of the above 24/7. So rather than chase down all these data points every day, just watch for my next trade alert. I am confined to my home office for the duration, probably for months, so I have nothing else to do. No trips to Switzerland, the Taj Mahal, or the Great Pyramids of Egypt for me this year. It will just be nose to the grindstone.

Stay Healthy and we’ll back a killing on the back nine.

John Thomas

 

 

 

 

 

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