Call me a nerd, but instead of spending my Sundays watching football, I pour over data analyzing the monetary aggregates. That?s a tough thing to say for someone whose dad was a lineman on the University of Southern California?s legendary 1947 junior varsity football team.
This is so I can gain insights into the future performance of assets classes. What I am seeing these days is not just unusual, it?s bizarre. Call it a double reverse, a Hail Mary, and a Statue of Liberty all combined into one.
You can clearly see the impact of QE2 at the end of 2010 on the chart below, which caused the monetary base to explode and triggered a six month love fest for all risk assets. Hard asset prices, like energy, commodities, the grains, and precious metals did especially well, leading to fears of resurging inflation. This prompted the European Central Bank to commit a massive policy blunder by raising interest rates twice. The US dollar (UUP) was weak for much of this time.
When quantitative easing ended in June of that year, not only did the base stop growing, it started shrinking. Hard assets rolled over like the Bismarck, and gold peaked in August. No surprise that when you take away the fuel, the fire goes out. And guess what else happened? The dollar began an uptrend that continues unabated.
So what happens next? Given the continuing strength of the economic data, I think that the prospects of a taper have been greatly diminished. Not only has it been taken off the back burner, the flame has been extinguished and the pot put back into the cupboard.
Needless to say, if this trend continues it will have an inflationary impact on the global economy as a whole, and ?RISK ON? assets specifically. It?s simply a question of supply and demand. Print a lot more dollars and you create a supply shortage of other assets, forcing bidders to pay up.
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/11/Football-Team-CA-Junior-Varsity-1947.jpg298514Mad Hedge Fund Traderhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMad Hedge Fund Trader2013-11-22 01:03:182013-11-22 01:03:18Watch Those Monetary Aggregates!
Featured Trade: (CASHING IN ON OBAMACARE), (XLV), (GILD), (AET), (WPT), (THE FLASH CRASH RISK IS RISING), (SPX), ($INDU), (TESTIMONIAL)
Health Care Select Sector SPDR (XLV)
Gilead Sciences Inc. (GILD)
Aetna Inc. (AET)
World Point Terminals, LP (WPT)
S&P 500 Index (SPX)
Dow Jones Industrial Average ($INDU)
Not a day, an hour, or a minute goes by without the media blasting at me about how terrible Obamacare is. I wondered, how terrible can it be? There?s got to be a trade in there somewhere.
After intensively researching several industries I concluded that the investment opportunities created by the president?s signature legislative accomplishment are absolutely massive. The health care industry is about to get 30 million new customers with government guaranteed payments. Ten?s of millions more are being driven into the arms of the private health insurers as well. It?s almost the same gravy train that the defense industry has been living off of for the past 75 years.
The stock market has been screaming as much at us all year. Take a look at the Health Care Select Sector SPDR ETF (XLV), which has been rocketing for the past three years. Its ascent accelerated on October 1, when Obamacare officially kicked in.
You will also find the same windfall is showering upon the health insurance industry. The shares of the second largest company in the country, WellPoint (WLP) have soared by 68% this year, while the fourth biggest (AET) is up an impressive 40%.
The speeches claiming that Obamacare is a failure were written in September, before the program ever started. Not, September, 2013, but September, 1936, when Republicans fought tooth and nail against Social Security. The speeches are almost identical, word for word. I?m not kidding!
In fact, insurance exchanges are one of the oldest forms of commerce, dating back to London in the 1600?s. Lloyds of London has been around since 1871, and makes a profit in most years.
It will take Obamacare a decade to become fully operational and actuarially sound. After that it should cost the government almost nothing, just a few hundred million dollars a year for administration of the exchanges. Americans are the smartest people in the world, so there is no reason for this not to work, except political ones. In fact, ours should be better than those in Europe and Asia.
The political obstacles will fade as well. Hillary Clinton is the overwhelming front-runner for the 2016 presidential election. If elected, the earliest Republicans could repeal Obamacare would be 2025. There will probably be a liberal majority on the Supreme Court by then as well. With a 12-year track record, it is unlikely that any political party will try to repeal government-sponsored health insurance at that stage.
The stock market is also telling you that Obamacare is here to stay. Believe in the wisdom of crowds. They are usually right.
This is why the shares of entire health care and insurance industries are melting up now. This is why I want to buy into the industry now.
The easiest way to participate is through Health Care Select Sector SPDR (XLV), a basket of companies in the health care industry with a 1.71% dividend yield. Please note that a basket of stocks is going to deliver half the volatility of single stocks.
Therefore, we have to be more aggressive with the positioning to make any money, picking strikes that are closer to the money. Johnson and Johnson (JJ) is the largest holding in this fund, with a 12.8% weighting, while Gilead Sciences (GILD) is the fourth, with a 5.1% share. For a list of the largest components of this ETF, please click here https://www.spdrs.com/product/fund.seam?ticker=XLV .
As soon as the current correction ends, I?ll shoot out a Trade Alert to you as fast as the speed of light.
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/11/Doctor-Girl.jpg301452Mad Hedge Fund Traderhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMad Hedge Fund Trader2013-11-21 11:49:382013-11-21 11:49:38Cashing In On Obamacare
Those who lived through the cataclysmic ?flash crash? that occurred precisely at 2:45 pm EST on May 6, 2010, have been dreading a replay ever since. Their worst nightmares may soon be realized.
That is when the Dow Index (INDU) dropped a gob smacking 650 points in minutes, wiping out nearly $1 trillion in market capitalization. On that day, some ETF?s saw intraday declines of an eye popping 75% before recovering. A flurry of litigation ensued where many sought to break trades as much as 99% down from the last indication, some successfully.
The true reasons for the crash are still a matter of contentious debate. Many see a smoking gun in the hands of the high frequency traders who account for so much of the daily trading volume. But I happen to know that many of these guys pulled the plugs on their machines and went flat as soon as the big move started.
I think that it was the obvious result of too many people following similar models in markets with declining liquidity. The ease of instant execution through the Internet was another contributing factor. It also could be a symptom of no growth economies and lost decades in the stock market. The increasing short-term orientation of many money managers also played a hand.
Mathematicians who follow chaos theory and ?long tail events? known as ?black swans? argue that the flash crash was not only inevitable, it was predictable. They are also saying that the next one could be far worse.
Since then we have suffered several mini flash crashes. These include the recent $200 collapse in gold, a $5 plunge in silver, a five-cent gyration in the Euro, and a ten-cent gap in the Swiss franc. Notice that these ?flash? events only happen on the downside, and that we don?t have flash melt ups.
In many respects, traders and portfolio managers dodged a bullet on that fateful day. What if it had happened going into the close? Then assets would have been marked to market less $1 trillion, and the Asian openings that followed hours later would have been horrific. This could have triggered a series of rolling flash crashes around the world from time zone to time zone that would have caused several trillion more in losses. Those losses eventually did happen, but they were spread over several more months at a liquidation rate that could be absorbed by the markets.
Regulators claim that they have reduced the risks of a flash crash through the enforcement of daily trading limits across a broader range of financial instruments. I am not so sure. During a real panic, preventing people from unloading risk is almost an impossible feat. I know because I have lived through many of them.
In the meantime, the S&P 500 continues its inexorable rise well above the exact point at which the last flash crash started, at 1,160. We are now 55% above that last flash point. Avoid, like the plague, shorting leveraged naked puts on anything. It is the best way to wipe out your entire equity that I know of.
Like me, you are probably too old to start life over again with a job at McDonald?s, and they probably would take you anyway.
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/11/You-Tube.jpg396507Mad Hedge Fund Traderhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMad Hedge Fund Trader2013-11-21 11:45:492013-11-21 11:45:49The Flash Crash Risk is Rising
I sit here painfully typing this letter, as my fingertips have been worn down to bloody stumps. I have been pounding out the Trade Alerts since the month started, sending out 37, and the month is only half over. That works out to a 3.3636 Trade Alerts a day!
I have been so busy that I literally haven?t had time to eat, living entirely on black coffee, and losing three pounds since November 1. Maybe I should go into the weight loss business. I hear it?s more profitable than this financial stuff.
Not only have I worked myself to the bone, my staff is rapidly wearing out as well. Everyone is taking a well-earned rest this weekend, melting a few ice cubes along the way.
Still, you don?t get market melt ups like this very often in life. You have to strike while the iron is hot, make hay while the sun shines, and carpe diem. Usually I warn investors that if they ?invest in haste, they will repent at leisure.? In this market it?s the opposite. Invest at leisure, repent with haste.
Still, it?s all worth it when it?s working. Including both open and closed trades, the last 18 consecutive Trade Alerts have been profitable. I am rapidly closing in on an old record of 25 successful Trade Alerts, made earlier this year.
The Global Trading Dispatch service of the Mad Hedge Fund Trader is now up 56.4% in 2013. The November month to date record is now an enviable 11.92%.
The three-year return is an eye popping 111.43%, compared to a far more modest increase for the Dow Average during the same period of only 30%.
That brings my averaged annualized return up to 38.2%.
This has been the profit since my groundbreaking trade mentoring service was launched 35 months ago. These numbers place me at the absolute pinnacle of all hedge fund managers, where the year to date gains have been a far more pedestrian 3%. I predict the arrival of a lot more job seekers on Craig?s List in January.
I took profits on all of my extensive shorts in the Treasury bond market, taking advantage of the sudden back up in ten-year yields from 2.47% to 2.77%, the sharpest move of the year. I then reloaded on the first 9 basis point back up in yields
I then bet that the stock market would continue another tedious sideways correction going into the Thanksgiving holidays. I bought an in the money put spread on the S&P 500, and then bracketed the index through buying an in the money call spread. Both of these expired profitably on Friday.
I then took advantage of the weakness to add another long in the Industrials ETF (XLI), a rifle short at one of the best performing sectors of the market. I piled on more shorts in the Japanese yen (FXY), (YCS), believing that the Bank of Japan will have to accelerate its monetary easing program to deal with an economic slowdown. I also caught the China recovery play by going long the Australian dollar (FXA).
This is how the pros do it, and you can too, if you wish.
Carving out the 2013 trades alone, 74 out of 89 have made money, a success rate of 83%. It is a track record that most big hedge funds would kill for.
My esteemed colleague, Mad Day Trader Jim Parker, has also been coining it. He caught a spike up in the volatility index (VIX) by both lapels. He also was a major player on the short side in bonds, to the delight of his many followers.
The coming winter promises to deliver a harvest of new trading opportunities. The big driver will be a global synchronized recovery that promises to drive markets into the stratosphere in 2014. The Trade Alerts should be coming hot and heavy. Please join me on the gravy train.
Global Trading Dispatch, my highly innovative and successful trade-mentoring program, earned a net return for readers of 40.17% in 2011 and 14.87% in 2012. The service includes my Trade Alert Service and my daily newsletter, the Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader. You also get a real-time trading portfolio, an enormous trading idea database, and live biweekly strategy webinars. Upgrade to Mad Hedge Fund Trader PRO and you will also receive Jim Parker?s Mad Day Trader service.
To subscribe, please go to my website at www.madhedgefundtrader.com, find the ?Global Trading Dispatch? box on the right, and click on the lime green ?SUBSCRIBE NOW? button.
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/11/TA-Performance.jpg824577Mad Hedge Fund Traderhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMad Hedge Fund Trader2013-11-20 14:43:072013-11-20 14:43:07Mad Hedge Fund Trader Melts Up to 56.4% 2013 Performance
Featured Trade: (THE MARKET TAKES A BREAK), (SPY), (IWM), (FXY), (AAPL), (C), (TLT), (RINGING THE REGISTER WITH THE AUSSIE), (FXA), (EWA), (FXI), (THE MYSTERY OF THE BRASHER DOUBLOON)
SPDR S&P 500 (SPY)
iShares Russell 2000 (IWM)
CurrencyShares Japanese Yen Trust (FXY)
Apple Inc. (AAPL)
Citigroup, Inc. (C)
iShares 20+ Year Treasury Bond (TLT)
CurrencyShares Australian Dollar Trust (FXA)
iShares MSCI Australia (EWA)
iShares China Large-Cap (FXI)
I often use my own profit and loss statement as a leading market indicator. Whenever I am blessed with a windfall profit, it is frequently time to sell. On those rare occasions when I take a big hit, it is invariably time to buy.
This is one of those times.
Since November 1, the Trade Alert service of the Mad Hedge Fund Trader has earned a white-hot 12.12%, taking my year to date return up to 56.62%. The last 19 consecutive Trade Alerts have been profitable.
Performance bursts like this occur, not because I have suddenly gotten a lot smarter. If anything, my advanced age assures that I am headed in the opposite direction on that front. It is far more likely that upward spikes in my P&L happen because the market is getting overheated, at least for the short term.
So I think that it is time to take my foot off the accelerator, cut back and neutralize my model trading portfolio, and sit down and smell the turkey. In any case, with 43 Trade Alerts going out this month, I am running the risk of overtrading.
It is very impressive to see how fast the options markets are crushing implied volatility. This means the market doesn?t think much is going to happen over the next few weeks. The stock market has been up for the last seven weeks in a row, a rare event. Portfolio managers are bathing in once unimagined riches and have visions of bonus checks dancing in their eyes.
This is all a nice set up for 3%-4% Thanksgiving mini correction. The market is now wildly overbought on a short-term basis, and I can?t be the only one exhausted from the sheer volume and intensity of the recent market action.
That is why I knocked out two short positions today in the form of the SPDR S&P 500 (SPY) December, 2013 $183-$186 bear put spread and a the Russell 2000 iShares (IWM) December $113-$116 bear put spread. It?s not a huge bearish bet, just a modest one. And these both take advantage of the fact that market volatility will probably die a slow death going into the holidays.
I am going to hang on to my other long positions, since they are so far in the money that the safety cushion to my breakeven point is large.
Apple (AAPL) is moving into its peak earnings period. Citibank (C) is surfing the wave of money pouring into long neglected financials. Ditto for the Industrials ETF (XLI). The Japanese yen (FXY) will probably break to new lows for the year in coming weeks, so I am looking to add on any strength. Bonds (TLT) are trading like the life has been sucked out of them, so the short side is the correct posture there.
Whatever pause in the market action we get will be a brief one. Take a look at the chart below put together by my friends at Business Insider. Despite all the bubble talk by the clueless media, we are in fact still at the bottom of the range for the S&P 500 forward 12-month PE ratios for the past 15 years.
Assume that corporate earnings rise 10% a year for the next four years. Then assume that earnings multiples also rise by 10% a year, taking us back up to the 22 times found at the top of the 15 year multiple range. That gets the (SPX) up to 3,732 by the end of 2017, a near double from today?s 1,790.
Not only has 2013 been a great year, so will 2014, 2015, 2016, and 2017. We are in the midst of a new Golden Age of equity investment.
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/11/Bathtub-Girl-Money.jpg259575Mad Hedge Fund Traderhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMad Hedge Fund Trader2013-11-20 01:05:282013-11-20 01:05:28The Market Takes a Break
This is our 13th consecutive closing profitable position, and 19th consecutive profitable Trade Alert when you include our remaining open positions. I have only seven more winners to go before I break my old record of 25.
Since I strapped on this trade last week, the (FXA) has popped a full 1 ? points to the upside. It?s tough to say where these options are really trading, they are so illiquid and the spreads so wide. If you didn?t do the trade at all, just consider this part of your educational effort.
However, the Currency Shares Australian Dollar Trust December, 2013 $89-$91 bull call spread was marked at their maximum possible value of $2.00 by the market makers at last night?s close. So I am going to take the hint and close the position. At this price we have harvested 75% of the potential profit, and we still have a full month to run before the December 20 expiration.
Yes, I should have been more aggressive, moving the strikes closer to the money, farther out in expiration, and bigger in size. But it?s always easy to say that about your winners.
To close the position just put in a limit order for the entire spread at $1.95 and wait for the market to come to you, even if it is for a few days. It is impressive how much they are crushing volatility in the options markets in the run up to the Thanksgiving holidays, so you should eventually get done.
Then you can plow the money back into other trades, such as buying global stocks and commodities, and shorting bonds and the yen. You can also buy back the Aussie on the next two-point dip.
I still believe that we are in bull mode for the Aussie longer term, and that we should make it above par, or $1.00, next year. The recent reforms announced by China (FXI) last week certainly remove any doubt about the northward direction.
It all provides fresh rocket fuel for the global synchronized recovery in 2014, which I have been predicting since the summer. A parallel pop in Australian stocks (EWA) confirms this view. So if you aren?t in the options and own the (FXA) outright, I?d hang in there.
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/09/Kangaroo.jpg298403Mad Hedge Fund Traderhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMad Hedge Fund Trader2013-11-20 01:04:252013-11-20 01:04:25Ringing the Register with the Aussie
The Chinese government has announced the most revolutionary changes to its economy in nearly four decades. The implications for global stock markets are hugely positive, and until now, under appreciated. The Middle Kingdom?s state controlled media, never prone to hyperbole, are calling it ?a new historical starting point.?
Chinese stocks have rocketed since word of the broad ranging reforms leaked out last week, and appear to have much more to go. This brings to an end the 3 ? year Chinese growth recession, which saw GDP growth rates shrink from a white hot 13% annual rate, down to a more modest 7%. Until last week, Chinese capital markets were neglected, ignored, and left stranded on a back burner.
This is great news for all of us.
The sea of change promised by the events in the Middle Kingdom barely caught notice in the West, where investors were transfixed by the never ending rise of US equities and other risk assets. But my friends at the senior levels of the Chinese government have been gushing about the great things to come. They compare it to the 1978 revolution, when the ?Gang of Four? was thrown out, and Deng Xiaoping was named premier.
Some 35 years of wildly successful modernization, westernization, and capitalization followed. Chinese per capita incomes skyrocketed, from $100 to $6,000 today. The current round of liberalizations could eventually bring Chinese standards of living to American levels. Give it another 35 years.
Of course, reading the statement issued by the 370 senior party members of the third plenum of the 18th Central Committee, you get no clue of the brave new world they promise. These are always written in obscure code words whose meaning can only be deciphered by tracking nuances, changes, and references over decades. I have been doing this since the early seventies, when Mao Zedong was calling the shots, longer than most Chinese. It was a lot harder then, or am I simply getting wiser in my old age?
The goal of the reforms is to move China from its current emerging status towards middle class. The one child policy was abandoned, which has cut the country?s population growth by 400 million over the last 30 years. This should add back in 400 million in population growth over the next 35 years. Not to do so would risk labor shortages looming in the 2020?s, and the runaway wage inflation that invariably follows.
Internal passports that restricted population movements were abolished. Private property rights are receiving a boost. The economy will become more market oriented. The Chinese gulag that imprisoned tens of thousands was sent to the dustbin of history. The strengthening of the country?s social safety net will free up domestic Chinese savings, which now at 30%, are among the highest in the world. This will bring a surge in consumer spending.
Financial reforms are expected to follow soon. These include a more aggressive path towards a free float of the Chinese Yuan, known locally as the ?renminbi,? or ?people?s currency.? The breadth and depth of domestically traded debt instruments will be greatly expanded. You can expect far more active investment of the country?s nearly $4 trillion foreign exchange hoard abroad, especially in trophy assets in safe havens like the US and the UK. They are already soaking up commercial property loans by the billions here in the San Francisco Bay area.
This will accelerate the evolution of the Chinese economy from an export oriented consuming one to one that is more oriented towards domestic consumption. This is big.
The net net of all this will be to enhance the productivity and profitability of Chinese companies. That is what the Chinese stock markets have been screaming at us since last week.
The prospects for the world economy have been much improved by this second Chinese modernization. Rising Chinese standards of living will produce hundreds of millions of new consumers of American and European goods. Emerging markets (EEM), many of which are indirect China plays, do pretty well in the new paradigm as well. All in all, this should add many percentage points of growth to the world economy in coming decades.
It certainly makes my own forecast of a global synchronized recovery 2014 look good as well. As for stock markets everywhere, think higher, and for longer. ?RISK ON? is ?ON.?
The no brainer here is to buy the iShares FTSE China 25 Index Fund ETF (FXI), which has to rise by 63% just to match its 2007 high. The Chinese economy has more than doubled in size since then, making today?s (FXI) level relatively much cheaper. During this time, Chinese earnings multiples have gone from a huge premium to US ones to a large discount, making them a great rotation play.
If you want to sleep at night, buy the Hong Kong ETF (EWH), where accounting and disclosure standards are on par with those of England, a legacy from its colonial days. You can expect to Chinese Yuan ETF (CYB) to continue its northward market, as I have been predicting for the past four years.
You can also go into single stock plays, like China Mobile (CHL), the world?s largest phone company. Something tells me there are a lot of new customers and upgrades in its future.
Looks like there is going to be a lot more dim sum in my future.
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/11/Deng-Xiaoping.jpg372369Mad Hedge Fund Traderhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMad Hedge Fund Trader2013-11-19 13:00:022013-11-19 13:00:02CHINESE REFORMS WILL SEND US STOCKS SKYWARD - Update
https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png00Mad Hedge Fund Traderhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMad Hedge Fund Trader2013-11-19 01:05:582013-11-19 01:05:58November 19, 2013
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