Mad Hedge Bitcoin Letter
May 31, 2022
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(FOSSIL FUEL FIRMS TO THE RESCUE)
(BTC), (XOM), (MRO)
Mad Hedge Bitcoin Letter
May 31, 2022
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(FOSSIL FUEL FIRMS TO THE RESCUE)
(BTC), (XOM), (MRO)
The next real long-term inflection point in the development of Bitcoin is the question about energy or bitcoin infrastructure.
I can’t help but notice the elongating list of crypto mining companies and energy producers collaborating and the knock-on effects will follow through.
This is highly likely a long-term benefit for the price and stability of bitcoin.
Like many things in corporate America, everything gets professionalized, specialized, corporatized, and if they are lucky, financialized as a product and resold to investors.
The usual result is a higher-priced last-mile product and in this case, it would be the price of one Bitcoin.
In 2021, ExxonMobil reported annual revenue of more than $285 billion with global daily production and is also working with a bitcoin mining company in North Dakota to turn otherwise wasted gas into energy for mining operations.
In August 2021, Exxon was already selling some gas to miners.
ConocoPhillips is also supplying gas to bitcoin miners.
Marathon Oil, a multi-billion-dollar oil company based in Houston, also powers co-located bitcoin mining operations with its gas.
American companies aren’t the only ones making headlines for their bitcoin-and-oil deals though.
Russian oil giant Gazprom has been planning and building its own bitcoin mining venture on its oil drilling sites since late 2020.
Bitcoin mining as an industry gains mainstream legitimacy as more traditional energy companies work with bitcoin miners.
Historically, bitcoin mining hasn’t been developed with institutional money and is mainly mom and pop outfits.
That also means it’s less efficient and less dynamic but has room to grow.
Just a few years ago, the concept of heavyweight names inking contracts with mining companies would be impossible.
Bitcoin mining is an energy infrastructure.
A future where every major oil producer is also a bitcoin miner — or at least operates a bitcoin mining arm — is an idea that has longevity and could become reality soon.
Particularly for the oil and gas industry, bitcoin miners continue to make inroads with more reported deals between these two industries.
The achievements that these partnerships represent would jump-start the crypto winter that has engulfed the crypto industry with many altcoins getting flipped into the dumpster.
The top fossil fuel producers, even if it seems like they are ridiculed by the climate change brigade every second, are incredibly powerful companies and if energy and bitcoin energy infrastructure are inextricably linked, it means bitcoin has staying power.
As many have noticed, fossil fuel companies are masters at milking an industry as they initiate buybacks and dividends in the face of “Putin’s” hyperinflation.
If Bitcoin energy infrastructure is embedded into the industry of the likes of Exxon and company, I believe the price of Bitcoin will be an outsized winner even if the price of oil goes to $200 first.
The overspill of profits could finally find its way into a new business of developing more efficient mining systems and embedding itself as the bulwark of crypto coin creation.
That will mean that fossil fuel companies will be able to throw more capital at developing Bitcoin’s infrastructure as a new standalone business as oil, at some point, retraces from its highs.
Global Market Comments
June 18, 2021
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(JUNE 16 BIWEEKLY STRATEGY WEBINAR Q&A),
(MS), (XOM), (FXI), (MSFT), (AMZN), (FB), (GOOGL), FCX), (CAT),
(GLD), (DIS), (GME), (AMC), (UBER), (LYFT), (TLT), (VIX)
Below please find subscribers’ Q&A for the June 16 Mad Hedge Fund Trader Global Strategy Webinar broadcast from Lake Tahoe, NV.
Q: Does Copper (FCX) look like a buy now or wait for it to drop?
A: I would buy ⅓ now, ⅓ lower down, ⅓ lower down still. Worst case we get down to $30 in Freeport McMoRan (FCX) from $37 today. A new internal combustion engine requires 40 lbs. of copper for wiring, but new EVs require 200 lbs. per car, and the number of EV cars is about to go from 700,000 last year to 25 million in 10 years. So, you can do the math here. It's basically 24.3 million times 200 lbs., or 1.215 billion tons, and that's the annual increase in demand for copper over the next 10 years. There aren’t enough mines in the world to accommodate that, so the price has to go up. However, (FCX) has gone up 12 times from its 2020 low and was overdue for a major rest. So short term it's a sell, long term it's a double. That's why I put the LEAPS out on it.
Q: Lumber prices are dropping fast, should I bet the ranch that it’ll drop big?
A: No, I think the big drop has happened; we’re down 40% from the highs, the next move is probably up. And that is a commodity that will remain more or less permanently in short supply due to the structural impediments put into the lumber market by the Trump administration. They greatly increased import duties from Canada and all those Canadian mills shut down as a result. It’s going to take a long time to bring those back up to speed and get us the wood we need to build houses. Another interesting thing you’re seeing in the bay area for housing is people switching over to aluminum and steel for framing because it’s cheaper, and of course in an earthquake-prone fire zone, you’d much rather have steel or aluminum for framing than wood.
Q: I didn’t catch the (FCX) LEAP, can you reiterate?
A: With prices at today's level, you can buy the 35 calls in (FCX), sell short the 40 calls, and get nearly a 177% return by January 2022. That's an absolute screamer of a LEAPS.
Q: How do you see the working from home environment in the near future after Morgan Stanley (MS) asked everyone to return?
A: Well that’s just Morgan Stanley and that’s in New York. They have their own unique reasons to be in New York, mostly so they can meet and shake down all their customers in Manhattan—no offense to Morgan Stanley, but I used to work there. For the rest of the country, those in remote places already, a lot of companies prefer that people keep working from home because they are happier, more productive, and it’s cheaper. Who can beat that? That’s why a lot of these productivity gains from the pandemic are permanent.
Q: Is there a recording of the previous webinar?
A: Yes, all of the webinars for the last 13 years are on the website and can be accessed through your account.
Q: What makes Microsoft (MSFT) a perfect-looking chart?
A: Constant higher lows and higher highs. They also have a fabulous business which is trading relatively cheaply to the rest of tech and the rest of the main market. Of course, they were a huge pandemic winner with all the people rushing out to buy PCs and using Microsoft operating software. I expect those gains to improve. The new game now is the “wide moat” strategy, which is buying companies that have near monopolies and can’t be assailed by other companies trying to break into their businesses. The wide moat businesses are of course Microsoft (MSFT), Amazon (AMZN), Facebook (FB) and Alphabet (GOOGL). That's the new investment philosophy; that's why money has been pouring back into the FANGs for a month now.
Q: Do you have any concerns about Facebook’s (FB) advertising ability, given the recent reduction of tracking capabilities of IOS 4.5 users?
A: Well first of all, IOS 4.5 users, the Apple operating system, are only 15% of the market in desktops and 24% of mobile phones. Second, every time one of these roadblocks appears, Facebook finds a way around it, and they end up taking in even more advertising revenue. That’s been the 15-year trend and I'm sticking to it.
Q: Is Caterpillar (CAT) a LEAP candidate right now?
A: Not yet, but we’re getting there. Like many of these domestic recovery plays, it is up 200% from the March lows where we recommended it. The best time to do LEAPS is after these big capitulation selloffs, and all we’ve really seen in most sectors this year is a slow grind down because there's just too much money sitting under the market trying to get into these stocks. Let’s see if (CAT) drops to the 50-day moving average at $185 and then ask me again.
Q: If you have the (FCX) LEAPS, should you keep them?
A: I would keep them since I'm looking for the stock to double from here over the next year. If you have the existing $45-$50 LEAPS, I would expect that to expire at its max profit point in January. But you may need to take a little pain in the interim until it turns.
Q: Should I bet the ranch on meme stocks like (AMC) and GameStop GME)?
A: Absolutely not, I’m amazed you haven't lost everything already.
Q: Do you think Exxon-Mobile (XOM) could rise 30% from here?
A: Yes, if we get a 30% rise in oil. We are in a medium-term countertrend rally in oil which will eventually burn out and take us to new lows. Trade against the trend at your own peril.
Q: Disneyland (DIS) in Paris is set to open. Is Disneyland a buy here?
A: Yes, we’re getting simultaneous openings of Disneyland’s worldwide. I’ve been to all of them. So yes, that will be a huge shot in the arm. Their streaming business is also going from strength to strength.
Q: How long will the China (FXI) slowdown last?
A: Not long, the slowdown now is a reaction to the superheated growth they had last year once their epidemic ended. We should get normalized growth in China at around 6% a year, and I expect China to rally once that happens.
Q: Have you changed your outlook on inflation, real or imagined?
A: I don’t think we’re going to have inflation; I buy the Fed's argument that any hot inflation numbers are temporary because we’re coming off of a one-on-one comparisons from when the economy was closed and the prices of many things went to zero. If you look at that inflation number, it had trouble written all over it. Some one third of the increase was from rental cars. One of the hottest components was used cars. You’re not going to get 100% year on year increases next year in rental or used cars.
Q: When you issue a trade alert, it’s always in the form of a call spread like the Microsoft (MSFT) $340-$370 vertical bull call spread. What are the pros and cons of doing this trade on the put side, like shorting a vertical bear put spread?
A: It’s six of one, half a dozen of the other. There are algorithms that arbitrage between the two positions that make sure that they’re never out of line by more than a few cents. I put out call spreads because they’re easier for beginners to understand. People get buying something and watching it go up. They don’t get borrowing something, selling it short, and buying it back cheaper.
Q: Will gold (GLD) prices go up?
A: Yes, when inflation goes up for real.
Q: What is the future of the gig economy? How will that affect Uber (UBER) and Lyft (LYFT)?
A: I like both, because they just got a big exemption from California on part time workers, and that is very positive for their business models.
Q: Do you think the government doesn’t want to cancel student debt because it will unleash inflation?
A: It’s the exact opposite. The government wants to forgive student debt because it will unleash inflation. If you add 10 million new consumers to the economy, that is very positive. As long as former students have tons of debt, horrible credit ratings, and are unable to buy homes or get credit cards, they are shut out of the economy. They can’t participate in the main economy by buying homes, shopping, or getting credit. The fact that the US has so many college grads is why businesses succeed here and fail in every other country. That should be encouraged.
Q: Where is the United States US Treasury Bond Fund (TLT) headed?
A: Short term up, long term down.
Q: Options premiums are not melting away much today; I hope they start decaying after the Fed announcement.
A: In these elevated volatility periods—believe it or not, the (VIX) is still elevated compared to its historic levels—they hang on all the way to the very last day, before expiration, before they really melt the time value on options. It really does pay to run these into expiration now. When the VIX was down at like $9-$10, that was not the case.
Q: I bought a short term expiration going long the (TLT) to hedge my position; was this smart?
A: Yes, but only if you are a professional short-term trader. If you are in front of your screen all day and are able to catch these short term moves in (TLT), that is smart. My experience is that most individual investors don’t have the experience to do that, don’t want to sit in front of a screen all day, and would rather be playing golf. Such hedging strategies end up costing them money. Also, remember that half of the moves these days are at the opening; they’re overnight gap openings and you can’t catch that intraday trading—it’s not possible. So over time, the people who take the most risk make the most money. And that means the people who don’t hedge make the most money. But you have to be able to take the pain to do that. So that’s my philosophy talk on risk taking.
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, click on GLOBAL TRADING DISPATCH, then WEBINARS, and all the webinars from the last ten years are there in all their glory.
Good Luck and Stay Healthy
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trade
Global Market Comments
January 15, 2021
Fiat LuxFeatured Trade:
(BETTER BATTERIES HAVE BECOME BIG DISRUPTERS)
(TSLA), (XOM), (USO)
Global Market Comments
January 8, 2021
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(JANUARY 6 BIWEEKLY STRATEGY WEBINAR Q&A),
(TSLA), (SQM), (GLD), (SLV), (GOLD), (WPM), (TLT), (FCX), (IBB), (XOM), (UPS), (FDX), (ZM), (DOCU), (VZ), (T), (RTX), (UT), (NOC),
(FXE), (FXY), (FXA), (UUP)
Below please find subscribers’ Q&A for the January 6 Mad Hedge Fund Trader Global Strategy Webinar broadcast from Incline Village, NV.
Q: Any thoughts on lithium now that Tesla (TSLA) is doing so well?
A: Lithium stocks like Sociedad Qimica Y Minera (SQM) have been hot because of their Tesla connection. The added value in lithium mining is minimal. It basically depends on the amount of toxic waste you’re allowed to dump to maintain profit margins—nowhere close to added value compared to Tesla. However, in a bubble, you can't underestimate the possibility that money will pour into any sector massively at any time, and the entire electric car sector has just exploded. Many of these ETFs or SPACs have gone up 10 times, so who knows how far that will go. Long term I expect Tesla to wildly outperform any lithium play you can find for me. I’m working on a new research piece that raises my long-term target from $2,500 to $10,000, or 12.5X from here, Tesla becomes a Dow stock, and Elon Musk becomes the richest man in the world.
Q: Won’t rising interest rates hurt gold (GLD)? Or are inflation and a weak dollar more important?
A: You nailed it. As long as the rate rise is slow and doesn't get above 1.25% or 1.50% on the ten-year, gold will continue to rally for fears of inflation. Also, if you get Bitcoin topping out at any time, you will have huge amounts of money pour out of Bitcoin into the precious metals. We saw that happen for a day on Monday. So that is your play on precious metals. Silver (SLV) will do even better.
Q: What are your thoughts on TIPS (Treasury Inflation Protected Securities) as a hedge?
A: TIPS has been a huge disappointment over the years because the rate of rise in inflation has been so slow that the TIPS really didn’t give you much of a profit opportunity. The time to own TIPS is when you think that a very large increase in inflation is imminent. That is when TIPS really takes off like a rocket, which is probably a couple of years off.
Q: Will Freeport McMoRan (FCX) continue to do well in this environment?
A: Absolutely, yes. We are in a secular decade-long commodity bull market. Any dip you get in Freeport you should buy. The last peak in the previous cycle ten years ago was $50, so there's another potential double in (FCX). I know people have been playing the LEAPS in the calendars since it was $4 a share in March and they have made absolute fortunes in the last 9 months.
Q: Is it a good time to take out a bear put debit spread in Tesla?
A: Actually, if you go way out of the money, something like a $1,000-$900 vertical bear put spread, with the 76% implied volatility in the options market one week out, you probably will make some pretty decent money. I bet you could get $1,500 from that. However, everyone who has gone to short Tesla has had their head handed to them. So, it's a high risk, high return trade. Good thought, and I will actually run the numbers on that. However, the last time I went short on Tesla, I got slaughtered.
Q: Any thoughts on why biotech (IBB) has been so volatile lately?
A: Fears about what the Biden government will do to regulate the healthcare and biotech industry is a negative; however, we’re entering a golden age for biotech invention and innovation which is extremely positive. I bet the positives outweigh the negatives in the long term.
Q: Oil is now over $50; is it a good time to buy Exxon Mobil (XOM)?
A: Absolutely not. It was a good time to buy when it was at $30 dollars and oil was at negative $37 in the futures market. Now is when you want to start thinking about shorting (XOM) because I think any rally in energy is short term in nature. If you’re a fast trader then you probably can make money going long and then short. But most of you aren't fast traders, you’re long-term investors, and I would avoid it. By the way, it’s actually now illegal for a large part of institutional America to touch energy stocks because of the ESG investing trend, and also because it’s the next American leather. It’s the next former Dow stock that’s about to completely disappear. I believe in the all-electric grid by 2030 and oil doesn't fit anywhere in that, unless they get into the windmill business or something.
Q: With Amazon buying 11 planes, should we be going short United Parcel Service (UPS) and FedEx (FDX)?
A: Absolutely not. The market is growing so fast as a result of an unprecedented economic recovery, it will grow enough to accommodate everyone. And we have already had huge performance in (UPS); we actually caught some of this in one of our trade alerts. So again, this is also a stay-at-home stock. These stocks benefited hugely when the entire US economy essentially went home to go to work.
Q: Should we keep our stay-at-home stocks like DocuSign (DOCU), Zoom (ZM), and UPS (UPS)?
A: They are way overdue for profit-taking and we will probably see some of that; but long term, staying at home is a permanent fixture of the US economy now. Up to 30% of the people who were sent to work at home are never coming back. They like it, and companies are cutting their salaries and increasing their profits. So, stay at home is overdone for the short term, but I think they’ll keep going long term. You do have Zoom up 10 times in a year from when we recommended it, it’s up 20 times from its bottom, DocuSign is up like 600%. So way overdone, in bubble-type territory for all of these things.
Q: Are telecom stocks like Verizon (VZ) and AT&T (T) safe here?
A: Actually they are; they will benefit from any increase in infrastructure spending. They do have the 5G trend as a massive tailwind, increasing the demand for their services. They’re moving into streaming, among other things, and they had very high dividends. AT&T has a monster 7% dividend, so if that's what you’re looking for, we’re kind of at the bottom of the range on (T), so I would get involved there.
Q: Should we sell all our defense stocks with the Biden administration capping the defense budget?
A: I probably would hold them for the long term—Biden won’t be president forever—but short term the action is just going to be elsewhere, and the stocks are already reflecting that. So, Raytheon (RTX), United Technologies (UT), and Northrop Grumman (NOC), all of those, you don’t really want to play here. Yes, they do have long term government contracts providing a guaranteed income stream, but the market is looking for more immediate profits, or profit growth like you have been getting in a lot of the domestic stocks. So, I expect a long sideways move in the defense sector for years. Time to become a pacifist.
Q: Is it safe to buy hotels like Marriott (MAR), Hyatt (H), and Hilton (HLT)?
A: Yes, unlike the airlines and cruise lines, which have massive amounts of debt, the hotels from a balance sheet point of view actually have come through this pretty well. I expect a decent recovery in the shares, probably a double. Remember you’re not going to see any return of business travel until at least 2022 or 2023, and that was the bread and butter for these big premium hotel chains. They will recover, but that will take a bit longer.
Q: How about online booking companies like Expedia (EXPE) and Booking Holdings Inc, owner of booking.com, Open Table, and Priceline (BKNG)?
A: Absolutely; these are all recovery stocks and being online companies, their overhead is minimal and easily adjustable. They essentially had to shut down when global travel stopped, but they don’t have massive debts like airlines and cruise lines. I actually have a research piece in the works telling you to buy the peripheral travel stocks like Expedia (EXPE), Booking Holdings (BKNG), Live Nation (LYV), Madison Square Garden (MSGE) and, indirectly, casinos (WYNN), (MGM) and Uber (UBER).
Q: What about Regeneron (REGN) long term?
A: They really need to invent a new drug to cure a new disease, or we have to cure COVID so all the non-COVID biotech stocks can get some attention. The problem for Regeneron is that when you cure a disease, you wipe out the market for that drug. That happened to Gilead Sciences (GILD) with hepatitis and it’s happening with Regeneron now with Remdesivir as the pandemic peaks out and goes away.
Q: What about Chinese stocks (FXI)?
A: Absolutely yes; I think China will outperform the US this year, especially now that the new Biden administration will no longer incite trade wars with China. And that is of course the biggest element of the emerging markets ETF (EEM).
Q: Will manufacturing jobs ever come back to the US?
A: Yes, when American workers are happy to work for $3/hour and dump unions, which is what they’re working for in China today. Better that America focuses on high added value creation like designing operating systems—new iPhones, computers, electric cars, and services like DocuSign, Zoom—new everything, and leave all the $3/hour work to the Chinese.
Q: What about long-term LEAPS?
A: The only thing I would do long term LEAPS in today would be gold (GOLD) and silver miners (WPM). They are just coming out of a 5-month correction and are looking to go to all-time highs.
Q: What about your long-term portfolio?
A: I should be doing my long-term portfolio update in 2 weeks, which is much deserved since we have had massive changes in the US economy and market since the last one 6 months ago.
Q: Do you have any suggestions for futures?
A: I suggest you go to your online broker and they will happily tell you how to do futures for free. We don’t do futures recommendations because only about 25% of our followers are in the futures market. What they do is take my trade alerts and use them for market timing in the futures market and these are the people who get 1,000% a year returns. Every year, we get several people who deliver those types of results.
Q: Will people go back to work in the office?
A: People mostly won’t go back to the office. The ones who do go back probably won't until the end of the summer, like August/September, when more than half the US population has the Covid-19 vaccination. By the way, getting a vaccine shot will become mandatory for working in an office, as it will in order to do anything going forward, including getting on any international flights.
Q: What is the best way to short the US dollar?
A: Buy the (FXE), the (FXY), the (FXA), or the (UUP) basket.
Q: Silver LEAP set up?
A: I would do something like a $32-$35 vertical bull call spread on options expiring in 2023, or as long as possible, and that increases the chance you’ll get a profit. You should be able to get a 500% profit on that LEAP if silver keeps going up.
Q: What about agricultural commodities?
A: Ah yes, I remember orange juice futures well, from Trading Places, where I also once made a killing myself. Something about frozen iguanas falling out of trees was the tip-off. We don’t cover the ags anymore, which I did for many years. They are basically going down 90% of the time because of the increasing profitability and efficiency of US farmers. Except for the rare weather disaster or an out of the blue crop disease, the ags are a loser’s game.
Q: Can we view these slides?
A: Yes, we load these up on the website within two hours. If you need help finding it just send an email or text to our ever loyal and faithful Filomena at support@madhedgefundtrader.com and she will direct you.
Q: Do you have concerns about Democrats regulating bitcoin?
A: Yes, I would say that is definitely a risk for Bitcoin. It is still a wild west right now and there are massive amounts of theft going on. It is a controlled market, with bitcoin miners able to increase the total number of points at any time on a whim.
Good Luck and Stay Healthy
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
Mad Hedge Technology Letter
November 4, 2020
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(WHICH JOBS ARE ON THE LINE NEXT?)
(CVX), (CRM), (ALL), (SCHW), (XOM), (RTN)
For every job created by Amazon during the pandemic, there are 10 jobs losses in the brick and mortar retail sector.
That is happening as we speak.
The next phase of job losses will move up the value chain and hit those precious $100,000 per year jobs precisely because the advancement of technology will allow management to seamlessly substitute these highly paid workers with a digital or automated solution.
The evidence is starting to follow through.
In the last few days, ExxonMobil, Chevron (CVX), Charles Schwab, and Raytheon have announced plans to cut thousands of white-collar jobs.
Wells Fargo, Goldman Sachs, Salesforce (CRM), Allstate (ALL) and CNN owner WarnerMedia have already announced a massive wave of firings too.
Corporate America's belt-tightening provides more evidence of the fragile and unforgiving nature of this pandemic.
Global consultant McKinsey & Company forecasts over 800 million global workers could be replaced by robots by 2030.
The most exposed jobs on the cutting block consist of artificial intelligence (AI), a subset of automation where machines learn to use judgment and logic to complete tasks.
Stanford University doctoral candidate Michael Webb analyzed the data for 16,000 AI-related patents and more than 800 job descriptions and found that highly educated, well-paid workers will become more impacted by the spread of AI.
Bachelor’s degree holders would be exposed to AI over five times more than those with only a high school degree.
That’s because AI is especially superior at completing tasks that require planning, learning, reasoning, problem-solving, and predicting — most of which are skills required for white-collar jobs.
Other closely related jobs are in robotics and software and are likely to impact the physical and routine work of traditional blue-collar jobs.
This will sap the demand from everything from home buying and shopping to credit card defaults if a large swath of the U.S. population earns no income.
The rolling wave of white-collar layoffs is very impactful because this is the group that possesses the most purchasing power in the U.S. economy which is a consumption-driven economy.
Evidence is starting to pop up all over the board.
For instance, Charles Schwab (SCHW) said it would cut about 1,000 jobs following its takeover of TD Ameritrade.
Efficiencies, or the lack of it, have never been more magnified where companies are slashing redundant jobs upon mergers.
In the short term, white-collar workers have fared far better during the pandemic than blue-collar workers, who tend to be younger and have less education.
This is because white-collar workers have been able to operate from a home office where the bulk of blue-collar workers do not have that option.
But in the long term, technology through automation is also going to swallow up these higher-paid workers.
That is not to play down the trend of mass furloughs and layoffs in various industries, but technology and artificial intelligence will be deployed to cut high-paying jobs when it improves.
I believe that in 10 years or less, the technology will improve by leaps and bounds to the point where companies are able to install and scale it globally in an instant.
Those jobs will then go poof!
Nearly 40% of low-income workers lost their jobs in March and it is likely that the U.S. economy will never see that level of peak employment again.
Many people were rehired or found jobs elsewhere as the US economy reopened. After peaking at nearly 15% this spring, the unemployment rate has descended steadily, falling to 7.9% in September.
The mounting signs of white-collar job cuts cannot be ignored.
In another example, Allstate announced in late September that it would lay off 3,800 employees.
The insurance giant blamed the job cuts on the lack of driving during the pandemic and the refunds given to customers.
The pandemic resulted in fewer accidents, thus needing fewer claims people.
ExxonMobil (XOM) announced it will cut 1,900 jobs in the United States, mostly at its headquarters in Houston.
A broader reorganization by Exxon will slash 14,000 jobs by the end of 2022.
Energy companies have been disproportionately impacted because the demand shock has halved oil revenues.
This list goes on and on as Raytheon (RTN) disclosed it will lay off 4,000 contractors, mostly engineers, as well as 1,000 corporate employees.
And that's on top of Raytheon previously announcing plans to lay off 15,000 employees because of the downturn in the aviation industry.
Government, local and federal, has to confront a massive loss of revenues which will affect its ability to hire and maintain government workers.
Layoffs could rise among government workers because the pandemic has set off an epic budget crunch at states and local municipalities.
Eventually, whether it's 5 or 10 years down the line, the next set of solutions will inherently lead to the A word which every employee dreads – Automation.
Going 100% remote means face to face communication has slowed down to a crawl and management is less inclined to reward employees who “put on a good face” and for the sake of their own survival have turned to employees that perform well.
There will be an ultimate race to the bottom with spiraling wages and human workers unable to justify their place when competing with machines.
This inevitably leads into the world of analytics to management part of the staff for better or worse and many companies have gone from all to nothing in an instant.
I know this is a lot of information to process, but the ones getting on board with the new normal will thrive and the ones late to implement the necessary measures will flounder.
2020 has been a strange year, and get ready for new twists and turns in the last two months.
Each ensuing year will most likely get weirder because of the heavy introduction of automation into human lives.
Global Market Comments
September 18, 2020
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(SEPTEMBER 16 BIWEEKLY STRATEGY WEBINAR Q&A),
(INDU), (TSLA), (DIS), (NKLA),
(GM), (PYPL), (FXI), (XOM), (KCAC),
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