With the Volatility Index back down to a bargain $18, I am getting deluged with emails from readers asking if it is time to start hedging portfolios one more time and buying the iPath S&P 500 VIX Short Term Futures ETN (VXX).
The answer is no yet, but soon, possibly very soon.
They are inquiring at absolutely the wrong time.
And here is the problem. When the (VIX) rises, it usually spikes straight up, and then right back down again. This time, it spiked, but has since hung around the $20 level all year rather than collapse back down.
That suggests that there is another leg up to go in volatility until it hits $40 or more before it takes a much-deserved break. That means the stock market has one more sharp selloff left before we hit bottom and bounce.
Markets can ignore trade wars, rising interest rates, the Ukraine War, and international political instability in Taiwan for a while, but not forever. When the time DOES come to pay the piper, prices and volatility will rocket.
Which all brings me to the subject at hand.
If you are new to the service and have no longs, you probably should skip this trade and just watch it as a learning experience.
This can also be a great hedge for any long positions we may want to add in the coming weeks, such as in “peace,” or technology plays.
As I never tire of telling people, no one ever complains when they buy fire insurance and their house doesn’t burn down.
If you are new to this service, don’t freak out. My daily research newsletters are not always about exploring the esoterica of options, or volatility trading.
I’ll let you know when I’m ready to pull the trigger with a Trade Alert.
I am always trying to get better prices.
If you are new to the (VIX) game, please read the educational piece below.
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/JohnThomas-Sept20-e1537393647191.png327224MHFTFhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMHFTF2023-01-18 12:04:512023-01-18 13:40:40Shopping for Fire Insurance During a Hurricane
Going against the market consensus has been working pretty well lately.
When the world prayed for a Santa Claus rally, I piled on the shorts. When traders expected a New Year January crash, I filled my boots with longs.
That’s how you earn an eye-popping 19.83% profit in a mere nine trading says, or 2.20% a day.
The other day, someone asked me how it is possible to get mind-blowing results like these. It’s very simple. Get insanely aggressive when everyone else is terrified, which I did on January 3. I also knew that with the Volatility Index (VIX) falling to $18, pickings would quickly get extremely thin. It was make money now, or never.
To quote my favorite market strategist, Yankees manager Yogi Berra, “No one goes to that restaurant anymore because it’s too crowded.”
My performance in January has so far tacked on a welcome +19.83%. Therefore, my 2023 year-to-date performance is also +19.83%, a spectacular new high. The S&P 500 (SPY) is up +3.78% so far in 2023.
It is the greatest outperformance on an index since Mad Hedge Fund Trader started 15 years ago. My trailing one-year return maintains a sky-high +103.30%.
That brings my 15-year total return to +617.03%, some 2.73 times the S&P 500 (SPX) over the same period and a new all-time high. My average annualized return has ratcheted up to +47.17%, easily the highest in the industry.
I took profits in my February bonds last week (TLT), taking advantage of a $5 pop in the market. All my remaining positions are profitable, including longs in (GOLD), (WPM), (TSLA), (BRK/B), and (TLT), with 30% in cash for a 10% net long position.
Since my New Year forecasts have worked out so well, I will repeat the high points just in case you were out playing golf or bailing out from a flood when they were published.
Buy Falling Interest Rate Plays, as I expect the yield on the ten-year US Treasury yield to fall from 3.50% to 2.50% by yearend. That means Hoovering up any kind of bond, like (TLT), (MUB), (JNK), and (HYG). Falling interest rates also shine a great spotlight on precious metals like (GLD), (SLV), (GOLD), and (WPM).
The US Dollar Will Continue to Fall. Commodities love this scenario, including (FCX), (BHP), and emerging markets (EEM).
Inflation Will Decline All Year and should go below 4% by the end of 2023. In fact, we have had real deflation for the past six months. Financials do well here, like (MS), (GS), (JPM), (BAC), (C), and (BRK/B).
Which creates another headache for you, if not an opportunity. We may have a situation where the main indexes, (SPY), (QQQ), and (IWM) go nowhere, while individual stocks and sectors skyrocket. That creates a chance to outperform benchmarks…and everyone else. There has been a lot of discussion among traders lately about the collapse of the Volatility Index ($VIX) to $18, a two-year low and what it means.
They are distressed because a ($VIX) this low greatly shrinks the availability of low risk/high return trading opportunities. A ($VIX) this low is basically shouting at you to “STAY AWAY!”
Does it mean that an explosion of volatility is following? Or are markets going to be exceptionally boring for the next six months?
Beats me. I’ll wait for the market to tell me, as I always do.
Consumer Price Index Falls 0.1% in December, continuing a trend that started in June. Stocks popped and bonds rallied. YOY inflation has fallen to 6.5%. “RISK ON” continues. Now we have to wait another month to get a new inflation number. The economy has now seen de facto deflation for six months. Gas prices led the decline, now 9.4%. We might get away with only a 0.25% interest rate hike at the February 1 Fed meeting.
Bond Default Risk Rises, as well as a government shutdown, as radicals gain control of the House. This is the group that lost the most seats in the November election. Bonds are the only asset class not performing today, and paper with summer maturities is trading at deep discounts. It certainly casts a shadow over my 50% long bond position. However, I don’t expect it to last more than a month and my longest bond maturity is in February.
The US Consumer is in Good Shape, according to JP Morgan’s Jamie Diamond. Spending is now 10% greater than pre covid, and balance sheets are healthy. No sign of an impending deep recession here.
Boeing Deliveries Soar from 340 to 480 in 2022, and 479 new orders. A sudden aircraft shortage couldn’t have happened to a nicer bunch of people. The 737 MAX has shaken off all its design problems after two crashes four years ago. Cost-cutting here can be fatal. Europe’s Airbus is still tops, with 663 deliveries last year. Don’t chase the stock up here, up 79% from the October lows, but buy (BA) on dips.
Small Business Optimism Hits Six-Month Low to from 91.9 to 89.8, adding to the onslaught of negative sentiment indicators, so says the National Federation of Independent Business (NFIB).
Copper Prices Set to Soar Further with the post-Covid reopening of China, according to research firm Alliance Bernstein. After a three-year shutdown, there is massive pent-up demand. Copper prices are at seven-month highs. Keep buying (FCX) on dips.
Australian Metals Exports Soar, as the new supercycle in commodities gains steam. Shipments topped $9 billion in November, 20% higher than the most optimistic forecasts. Keep buying copper (FCX), aluminium (AA), iron ore (BHP), gold (GLD) and silver (SLV) on dips.
My Ten-Year View
When we come out the other side of the recession, we will be perfectly poised to launch into my new American Golden Age, or the next Roaring Twenties. The economy decarbonizing and technology hyper-accelerating, creating enormous investment opportunities. The Dow Average will rise by 800% to 240,000 or more in the coming decade. The new America will be far more efficient and profitable than the old. Dow 240,000 here we come!
On Monday, January 16, markets are closed for Martin Luther King Day.
On Tuesday, January 17 at 8:30 AM EST, the New York Empire State Manufacturing Index is out
On Wednesday, January 18 at 11:00 AM, the Producer Price Index is announced, giving us another inflation read.
On Thursday, January 19 at 8:30 AM, the Weekly Jobless Claims are announced. US Housing Starts and Building Permits are printed.
On Friday, January 20 at 7:00 AM, the Existing Home Sales are disclosed. At 2:00, the Baker Hughes Oil Rig Count is out.
As for me, the University of Southern California has a student jobs board that is positively legendary. It is where the actor John Wayne picked up a gig working as a stagehand for John Ford which eventually made him a movie star.
As a beneficiary of a federal work/study program in 1970, I was entitled to pick any job I wanted for the princely sum of $1.00 an hour, then the minimum wage. I noticed that the Biology Department was looking for a lab assistant to identify and sort Arctic plankton.
I thought, “What the heck is Arctic plankton?” I decided to apply to find out.
I was hired by a Japanese woman professor whose name I long ago forgot. She had figured out that Russians were far ahead of the US in Arctic plankton research, thus creating a “plankton gap.” “Gaps” were a big deal during the Cold War, so that made her a layup to obtain a generous grant from the Defense Department to close the “plankton gap.”
It turns out that I was the only one who applied for the job, as postwar anti-Japanese sentiment then was still high on the West Coast. I was given my own lab bench and a microscope and told to get to work.
It turns out that there is a vast ecosystem of plankton under 20 feet of ice in the Arctic consisting of thousands of animal and plant varieties. The whole system is powered by sunlight that filters through the ice. The thinner the ice, such as at the edge of the Arctic ice sheet, the more plankton. In no time, I became adept at identifying copepods, euphasia, and calanus hyperboreaus, which all feed on diatoms.
We discovered that there was enough plankton in the Arctic to feed the entire human race if a food shortage ever arose, then a major concern. There was plenty of plant material and protein there. Just add a little flavoring and you had an endless food supply.
The high point of the job came when my professor traveled to the North Pole, the first woman ever to do so. She was a guest of the US Navy, which was overseeing the collection hole in the ice. We were thinking the hole might be a foot wide. When she got there, she discovered it was in fact 50 feet wide. I thought this might be to keep it from freezing over but thought nothing of it.
My freshman year passed. The following year, the USC jobs board delivered up a far more interesting job, picking up dead bodies for the Los Angeles Counter Coroner, Thomas Noguchi, the “Coroner to the Stars.” This was not long after Charles Manson was locked up, and his bodies were everywhere. The pay was better too, and I got to know the LA freeway system like the back of my hand.
It wasn’t until years later when I had obtained a high-security clearance from the Defense Department that I learned of the true military interest in plankton by both the US and the Soviet Union.
It turns out that the hole was not really for collecting plankton. Plankton was just the cover. It was there so a US submarine could surface, fire nuclear missiles at the Soviet Union, then submarine again under the protection of the ice.
So, not only have you been reading the work of a stock market wizard these many years, you have also been in touch with one of the world’s leading experts on Artic plankton.
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/10/john-thomas-peleliu-island-1975.png434628Mad Hedge Fund Traderhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMad Hedge Fund Trader2023-01-17 09:02:252023-01-17 14:36:18The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or Going Against the Consensus
Below please find the subscribers’ Q&A for the January 11 Mad Hedge Fund Trader Global Strategy Webinar broadcast from Silicon Valley in California.
Q: In your trade alert you expected that the (TLT) might go up as much as 30% this year. But in your latest newsletter, you mentioned that the chaos in the US House of Representatives would greatly raise the risk of a default on US government debt by the summer and certainly cast a shadow over your 50% long bond position. Is it still a good idea to hold on to the (TLT) ETF over the next 2-6 months?
A: It is. The extremists who now control the House are not interested in governing or passing laws but gaining clicks, raising money, and increasing speaker’s fees. It may have converted (TLT) from a straight-up trade to a flat-line trade. We will still make the maximum profit on call spreads and LEAPS but with greater risk. But even chaos in the House can’t head off a recession, which the bond market seems intent on pricing in by going up. However, if you depend on government payments for any reason, be it Social Security, a government salary, a tax refund, or a payment for a contract, expect delays. The housing market also ceases because closings can’t take place during government shutdowns. Also, 30% of my bond longs expire in four trading days, and the remainder on February 17.
Q: Is it wise to sell the 2X ProShares Ultra Technology ETF (ROM) now or keep holding?
A: I think the (ROM), NASDAQ, and technology stocks in general may make several runs at the lows over the next six months but won’t fall much from here. A recession is priced in. Once we get through this, you’re looking at doubles and triples for the best names. So, the risk/reward overwhelmingly favors holding on to a one-year view.
Q: would you buy Tesla (TSLA) here?
A: I would start scaling in. The bad news is about to dry up, like Twitter, the recession, the pandemic in China, and Elon Musk selling shares. Then we face an onslaught of good news, like the new Mexico factory announcement, the Cybertruck launch, solid state batteries, and annual production hitting 2 million. At this level, the shares are priced in multiple worst-case scenarios. It is selling at 10X 2025 earnings, half the market multiple. At the end of the day, Tesla has an unassailable 14-year start over the rest of the industry and is the only company in the world that makes money on EVs. There’s an easy 10X here on two-year LEAPS.
Q: I’m in the Freeport McMoRan (FCX) January 25 2-year LEAP approaching the upper end of the 42/45 range. If it crosses 45, do we close the position?
A: Sell half, take your profit. If you’re in the LEAP, my guess is you probably have a 500% profit here in only 3 months, which is not bad. And then you keep the remaining half because you’re then playing with the house's money, and Freeport has a shot of going all the way to $100 a share by the 2025 expiration, and that will get you your full 1,000% return on the position. It’s always nice to be in a position where it’s impossible to lose money on a trade, and that certainly is where you are now with your (FCX) LEAP and everybody else in the FCX LEAP in October also.
Q: As a member of the Florida Retirement System, I’m curious how Blackrock (BLK) and other firms are dealing with the Santos’ plan for their portfolios.
A: Having a state governor manage your portfolio and make your sector and stock picks is an absolutely terrible idea. I can’t imagine a worse possible outcome for your retirement funds. Florida is not the only state doing this—Louisiana and Texas are doing it too. The goal is to drive money out of alternative energy and back into the oil industry, and obviously, this is being financed by the oil industry, which is pissed off over their low multiples. Suffice it to say it’s not a good idea to move out of one of the fastest-growing industries in the market and move into an industry that’s going to zero in 10 years. If that’s their investment strategy, I wish they’d stick to politics and leave investing for true professionals to do.
Q: What do you think about cannabis stocks?
A: I’m a better user of the product than the stock. How about that? How hard is it to grow weed? At the end of the day, these are just pure marketing companies, and that value added is low. Plus, they have huge competition from the black market still selling ½ to ⅓ below market prices because they’re tax-free; the local taxes on these cannabis sales are enormous.
Q: Would you recommend selling a bear market rally when the S&P goes to 405?
A: The (QQQ) would be the better short, something like the $310-320 vertical bear put spread for February to bring in some free money. That’s what I'm planning to do if we get up that high, which we may not.
Q: How do you take advantage of a low CBOE Volatility Index (VIX)?
A: You don’t; there’s nothing to do here with the (VIX) at $22. My trades this year were not volatility trades—because we did them with low volatility, they were pure directional trades betting that the longs would go up and the shorts would go down and they all worked.
Q: Will Rivian (RIVN) survive?
A: Yes, they have two years of cash flow in the bank, and they’re boosting production. However, a high-growth, non-earning stock like Rivian is just out of favor right now. Will they come back into favor? Yes, probably in a year or so, but in the meantime, people are much happier buying Microsoft (MSFT) at a discount than Rivian.
Q: Do you ever buy butterfly spreads?
A: No, four-legged trades run up a lot of commissions, are hard to execute because you have 4 spreads, and have lower returns. They are also lower risk and for people who have no idea what the market is going to do. I don’t need the lower risk trades because I know what markets are going to do.
Q: Do you suggest any Microsoft (MSFT) LEAPS?
A: Yes, go out two years with LEAPS and go out about 50% on your strike prices. A 50% move here in Microsoft in two years is a complete no-brainer.
Q: With weakness in retail, rising inventories, and high consumer debt, will consumers dip into savings?
A: Yes they will, but that will predominantly happen at the bottom half of the economy—the part of the economy that has minimal to no savings. The upper half seems to be doing well—the middle class and of course, the wealthy— and are not cutting back their spending at all, which is why this seems to be a recession that may not actually show up. So, what can I say? The rich are doing great and everyone else is doing less than great, and stocks are reflecting that. Nothing new here.
Q: Would you hold off on tech LEAPS for a bigger selloff, or closer to April?
A: If we do get another big selloff and challenge the October lows, I’ll be pumping out those LEAPS as fast as I can write them; except then, a two-year LEAPS will have an April of 2025 expiration.
Q: I just signed up. What are the advantages of LEAPS?
A: A possible 10x return in 2 years with very low risk. I would suggest going to my website, logging in, and doing a search for LEAPS. There will be a piece there on how to execute a LEAPS, and the Concierge members can also find that piece by logging into their website.
Q: Best and worst sectors?
A: First half, already mentioned them. We like commodities, healthcare, financials, and Berkshire Hathaway (BRK/B) in the first half and tech in the second half.
Q: Have we reached a low in cryptocurrencies?
A: Probably not, and I’ll tell you why I’ve given up on cryptos: I may not live long enough to see the bottom in crypto. It has Tokyo written all over it, and it took Tokyo 30 years to resume a bull market after it crashed in 1990. We’re still at the scandal stage where it turns out that the majority of these trading platforms were stealing money from customers. This is not a great inspiration for investing in that sector. When you have the best quality growth stocks down 80-90%; why bother with something that may not exist or may never recover in your lifetime? I’m out of the crypto business, but there are a wealth of crypto research sources still online and I’m sure they’d be more than happy to give you an opinion.
Q: Why have defense stocks like Raytheon (RTX) and Lockheed Martin (LMT) been weak recently?
A: A couple of reasons. #1 Just outright profit taking into the end of the year in one of the best-performing sectors. #2 The end of the war in Ukraine may not be that far off, and if that happens that could trigger a major round of selling in defense. We did get the three-day ceasefire over the Russian Orthodox New Year, that’s a possible hint, so that may be another reason.
Q: Political outlook on 2024?
A: It’s too early to make any calls, anything could happen; but if we get a repeat of the November election outcome, you could have Democrats retake control of both houses of congress—that’s where the betting money is going right now.
Q: Would you bottom fish in the United States Natural Gas Fund (UNG)?
A: No, I would not—I am avoiding energy like the plague. Remember the all-time low for natural gas is $0.95 per MM BTU, so we still could have a long way to go.
Q: Would you buy iShares China Large-Cap ETF (FXI) on a post-COVID breakout?
A: It looks like it’s already moved, so maybe kind of late on that. The problem is that in China, you don’t know what you are buying and the locals have a huge advantage in reading Beijing.
Q: What do you think about the Biden administration wanting to ban gas stoves?
A: That’s actually not a federal issue, it’s a state issue. California has already banned gas pipes for all new construction. It looks like New York will follow and that’s one-third of the US population. The goal is to replace them with electrical appliances which emit no carbon. I have a non-carbon house myself, I went down that path about 10 years ago, and it seems to be the only way to reduce carbon emissions—is to either price gasoline or oil out of the market, or to make it illegal, and they’re already making gasoline cars illegal, so gas and oil won’t be far behind. From 1900, we went from a hay powered economy to a gasoline-powered one in only 20 years so it should be doable.
Q: How can the push for all electric work well when we have so many shutdowns, much higher electricity cost, and cannot keep up with the demand already here?
A: Buy lots of copper for new local electric powerlines at the house level and buy lots of aluminum for the long-distance transmission lines. Global demand for both aluminum and copper has to triple to accommodate the grid buildout that is already planned. As far as hurricanes in Florida, there’s nothing you can do to stop those on a hundred-year view; I would move to higher ground, which is hard to do in Florida as the highest point in the state is only 345 feet and that’s a garbage dump.
Q: Can I get a copy of all these slides?
A: Yes, we post the PowerPoint on the website at www.madhedgefundtrader.com usually two hours after the production.
Q: Are you recommending buying precious metals right now (GLD), (GDX), (SLV), (and WPM) even after the upside breakout?
A: On upside breakouts, you buy the dips. A perfect dip would be a retest of the 200-day moving average. But we may not get that, since it seems to be everyone’s number-one choice right now. By the way, I haven’t been telling people to buy gold and LEAPS on all the gold plays since October—that’s where the big move has already been made.
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 or TECHNOLOGY LETTER, then WEBINARS, and all the webinars from the last 12 years are there in all their glory.
Good Luck and Stay Healthy,
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
“I think we don’t become our most honest and genuine until we are dead, and not until we have become dead for years. People ought to start dead and then they would become honest earlier,” said American writer and humorist Mark Twain.
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/Mark-Twain-quote-of-the-day-1-e1536351575219.jpg364250MHFTRhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMHFTR2023-01-13 09:00:112023-01-13 11:29:23January 13, 2023- Quote of the Day
I was reviewing the portfolio of a new Concierge member yesterday and was horrified by what I found. After following me for several years, his single stock picks were mostly mine and doing great. But he had WAY too many mutual funds.
How many mutual funds would you guess outperformed the stock market since the bull run started 14 years ago?
If you guessed 1,000, 100, or even 10, you would be dead wrong, and even off by miles. In actual fact, not a single mutual fund has beaten the market since 2009.
Remember all those expensive, slickly produced TV ads boasting market-beating ratings and top quartiles?
You know, the ones that show an incredibly good-looking but aging couple walking hand in hand into the sunset on a deserted beach?
They are all just so much bunk. The funds mentioned rarely quote performance beyond one or two short years.
Like my college math professor used to tell me, “Statistics are like a bikini bathing suit. What they reveal is fascinating, but what they conceal is essential.”
Recently, the New York Times studied the performance of 2,862 actively managed domestic stock mutual funds since 2009. It carried out a simple quantitative analysis, looking at how many managers stayed in the top performance quartile every year.
Their final conclusion: zero.
It gets worse.
It is very rare for a manager to stay in the top quartile for more than one year. All too often, last year’s hero is this year’s goat, usually because they made some extreme one-sided bets that turned out to be a flash in the pan.
The harsh lesson here is that investing with your foot on the gas pedal going 100 miles per hour and your eyes on the rear-view mirror is certain to get you into a fatal crash.
The Times did uncover two funds that stayed at the top for an impressive five years. They turned out to be small cap energy funds that took inordinate amounts of risk to achieve these numbers and have since lost most of their money.
I guess they didn’t read the Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader’s warning of a potential oil crash if we ever got a peace deal in Russia.
The reasons for the woeful underperformance are legion. Management fees are sky-high and grasping. Hidden costs are everywhere. Read the fine print in the prospectus, as I do, and you would be shocked, shocked like they had gambling in the casino.
Real talent is in short supply in the mutual fund industry, with all the real brains decamping to start their own 2%/20% hedge funds. The inside joke among hedge fund managers is that employment at a mutual fund is proof positive that you are a lousy manager.
Let’s go back to those glitzy TV ads, which cost millions to produce. If you are a mutual fund investor, you are paying for all of those too. They are made at the expense of a lower return on investment on your money.
And those sexy performance numbers? They benefit from a huge survivor bias. As soon as fund performance starts to tank, the managers close it, lest it pollutes the numbers of other funds in the same family.
The number of funds with good, honest 20-year records can almost be counted on one hand.
Now let me depress you even more.
An industry performance this poor underperforms random chance. That means chimpanzees throwing darts at the stock pages of the Wall Street Journal would generate a higher investment return than the entire mutual fund industry combined.
So much for all of those Harvard MBAs!
Are you ready to throw your empty beer can at the TV set yet?
If you think all of this stuff should be illegal, you are probably right. But since you watch TV, then you have probably been trained like a barking seal to oppose the regulation that would reign these people in.
This is what the attempt to kill the Dodd-Frank financial regulation bill was all about. The mutual fund industry complains bitterly that they are over-regulated and spend millions on lobbyists to get themselves off the hook. By the way, these expenses also come out of your fund performance.
These are all reasons why the Mad Hedge Fund Trader is able to generate such high-performance numbers year in and year out.
I am not charging you with any of my overhead. I am not jacking up your commissions. My annual trips on the Queen Mary II are totally at my expense. Nor am I selling your order flow to high frequency traders for a tidy sum, so they can front-run you. I don’t even sell your email address to another online marketer.
Being a small operation of 15 or so people, I’ll tell you what I don’t have. I lack an investment banking department telling me I have to recommend a stock so we can get the management of their next stock issue or a sweet M&A deal and reap huge fees.
I am absent from a trading desk telling me I have to move this block of stock before the prices drop and my bonus gets cut.
And I am completely missing a boss screaming at me that if I don’t get my orders up, my wife would have to become a prostitute to support our family (yes, some unsympathetic sales manager actually told me that once. I later heard he died of a heart attack at 36).
You just need to pay me a low, flat, annual fee, and I’m done. I don’t need any more. It’s up to you to search out the best deal you can get on executions.
Don’t even think about trying to give me your money to manage. I don’t want it. It is too late in life for me to be regulated.
This is why the overwhelming bulk of investors are better off investing in the cheapest Vanguard index fund they can find, diversifying holdings among a small number of major asset classes, and then rebalancing once a year (click here for my “Buy and Forget Portfolio” ).
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 Trader2023-01-12 09:02:242023-01-12 14:37:07Don’t Get Ripped Off by the Mutual Funds
I’m taking the plunge since your performance has been phenomenal.
I have been a subscriber for many years … mainly with my face pressed up against the window looking in and watching your performance figures rack up at a staggering pace.
I was busy running my business and could not dedicate the time needed to trade your recommendations in the timely manner required
As of January 1st, I took the plunge and retired, and am now trading full-time.
I just started doing options in earnest last week … prior to that I traded shares but was primarily focused on my business
With my focus on trading this year, I am going to religiously follow all that you do and take advantage of the resources that you offer.
Below is one of my trading accounts, the one dedicated to option trading, showing two recent positions put on … I am starting with small positions as I know I will make mistakes on order entry, etc. Come February I will ratchet it up to sizable option positions
I missed your (TSLA), (TLT), (WMP), and (GOOGL) plays, as the market moved before I could get the orders in, but I did buy (TSLA) and (TLT) shares. So far, so good!
In retirement, I spend time between Palm Beach and Chicago … if you are ever nearby happy to buy you dinner.
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There is a very high degree of risk involved in trading. Past results are not indicative of future returns. MadHedgeFundTrader.com and all individuals affiliated with this site assume no responsibilities for your trading and investment results. The indicators, strategies, columns, articles and all other features are for educational purposes only and should not be construed as investment advice. Information for futures trading observations are obtained from sources believed to be reliable, but we do not warrant its completeness or accuracy, or warrant any results from the use of the information. Your use of the trading observations is entirely at your own risk and it is your sole responsibility to evaluate the accuracy, completeness and usefulness of the information. You must assess the risk of any trade with your broker and make your own independent decisions regarding any securities mentioned herein. Affiliates of MadHedgeFundTrader.com may have a position or effect transactions in the securities described herein (or options thereon) and/or otherwise employ trading strategies that may be consistent or inconsistent with the provided strategies.
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