Global Market Comments
February 26, 2024
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or WHO NEEDS RATE CUTS?
(NVDA), (TSLA), (BRK/B), (SPY), (AMZN), (UNG)
Global Market Comments
February 26, 2024
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or WHO NEEDS RATE CUTS?
(NVDA), (TSLA), (BRK/B), (SPY), (AMZN), (UNG)
People will be sitting around campfires trading stories about last week’s NVIDIA move for decades.
Analysts have been struggling to outdo each other in describing their earnings report that came out on Thursday. Here’s my favorite: The gain in the company’s market capitalization on that day, at $278 billion the largest in history, exceeded its TOTAL market capitalization at the pandemic bottom.
And here I deserve some bragging rights. Mad Hedge followers went into last week’s melt-up, UP TO THEIR EYEBALLS in (NVDA). They owned the stock, call options, and call spreads. The LEAPS alone delivered a 12X return, and some readers who customize their own strike prices (the $295-$300s) received a 50X return. It was almost everyone’s largest position.
It was easy for me to do the NVIDIA trade. When the company launched its first high-end graphics card in 1993, every computer geek out there flocked to them. I used to tear apart my company’s PCs, throw out the graphics cards they came with, and install NVIDIA cards. The performance improvement was remarkable, especially for advanced mathematical calculations.
The company is blessed. It went public at $12 a share just before the Dotcom Bust and the IPO window closed for years. Adjusted for 12:1 splits over the years and that drops the original IPO price to $1. A dollar invested in 1999 would be worth $750 at last week’s high. NVIDIA’s CEO, Jensen Huang, is now one of the richest men in the world solely through the ownership of his NVIDIA shares.
God Bless America!
Also last week, my inbox was jammed with inquiries on what company will become the next NVIDIA. And here is the bad news. There aren’t any 750:1 returns anywhere on the horizon. There are not even any 175:1 opportunities that we earned from Tesla (TSLA) over the years either where we also had heavy exposure.
And the reason is very simple. You are not going to get the entry points today with the Dow Average at 39,000 that you got in 2009 when it was at only 6,000, or when it was at a mere 600 when I joined Morgan Stanley in 1982. The last decent entry point for (NVDA) was the $100 pandemic low in April 2020.
Want to own the next (NVDA)? Try buying (NVDA), where an analyst raised his target to $1,420, up 80% from the Friday close. It’s just a matter of time before its market cap jumps from $2 trillion to $3 trillion, making it the largest company in the world. That’s what an airtight monopoly in the world’s most valuable product gets you.
Technology earnings are now exploding at such a rapid pace that it is time to consider the unthinkable: What if stocks don’t need interest rate cuts for the bull market to continue? After all, the companies seem to be doing just fine without any such assistance.
Why try to fix what isn’t broken?
In fact, these large cash flow companies would take a hit on their income statements as they are already net creditors to the financial system. Apple (AAPL) alone would lose $8 billion in annual income if interest rates went back to zero.
While that may be true for the Magnificent Seven or the AI Five, it is not true for the Unimagnificent 493. They actually need cheaper money for their stock prices to get going or even just to survive. That is especially true for all the falling interest rate plays, like bonds, utilities, real estate, precious metals, energy, and foreign currencies.
And don’t even talk to me about small caps, which depend on low interest rates for the breath of life.
It says a lot that Warren Buffet believes there is nothing left to buy in his annual letter to shareholders, an early Mad Hedge subscriber. His spectacular annual compounded returns of 19.8% a year, more than double that of the S&P 500 (SPY), are now a thing of the past.
The few targets left out there are few and far between and heavily picked over. (BRK/B) has also lost the advice of its principal mentor, Charlie Munger at the ripe old age of 99. Last year Berkshire acquired Dairy Queen and Berkshire Energy. But at $905 billion in assets under management, those will hardly move the needle. The 93-year-old Buffet has outperformed the S&P 500 by 141:1 since 1964.
Who says age is an impediment?
So far in February, we are up +5.92%. My 2024 year-to-date performance is also at +1.64%. The S&P 500 (SPY) is up +6.50% so far in 2024. My trailing one-year return reached +57.73% versus +38.67% for the S&P 500.
That brings my 15-year total return to +678.27%. My average annualized return has recovered to +51.19%, another new high.
Some 63 of my 70 trades last year were profitable in 2023.
I used the ballistic move-in (NVDA) to take profits in my double long there. I am maintaining a single long (AMZN) and am 90% in cash given the elevated level of the markets.
NVIDIA Announces Blowout Earnings, with AI reaching the “tipping point” according to the CEO Jensen Huang. Revenues came in at a spectacular $22.1 billion versus an expected $20.6 billion off the backing of exploding data center demand, up 33%. Earnings were up 22% QOQ and 225% YOY. The shares exploded $100 in the aftermarket at one point, up 15.6%. Forward guidance was ramped up too. Buy NVDA on dips. At a PE multiple of 18X, it is the cheapest AI stock out there.
Mad Hedge Clocks Biggest One Day Gain in 16 Years, with a double weighting in NVIDIA (NVDA), up +6.072%. If you like that the Mad Hedge Technology Letter is doing even better, up +13% YTD. And we are still early days into the tech melt-up, which could go on for another decade. Our YOY gain is up +59.62%. The harder I work, the luckier I get.
Existing Home Sales Jumped 3% YOY, boosted by lower mortgage interest rates in November and December. Inventories of homes for sale in January increased to 1.01 million units, up 3.1% from January 2023, but still at a low 3-month supply. The median existing home price for all housing types in January was $379,100, up 5.1% from a year earlier and an all-time high for the month of January.
Weekly Jobless Claims Dropped to a one-month low, down 12,000 to 201,000. No recession here. California and Kentucky saw the largest declines.
China Bans Stock Selling, by institutional investors at market openings and closes when liquidity is the greatest. It’s part of the government’s most forceful attempt yet to prop up the nation’s $8.6 trillion stock market. It’s another sign of a weakening China. When restrictions are placed on markets, capital flees. Whoever thought of this one must have a hole in their head. Avoid (FXI).
California demolishes Solar Providers, cutting the price the utility PG&E has to pay for home power providers by 75%. Solar companies like SunPower (SPWR), are down 89% since last year. Avoid solar providers for now, which was always a low value-added business.
Amazon (AMZN) is getting added to the Dow Average, opening it up to massive index buying. Retailer Walgreens Boots Alliance (WBA) is getting bumped. Since 1896, the blue-chip index has made few changes to its 30-stock lineup, having altered its constituents about 60 times in its 128-year history. Buy (AMZN) on dips.
US Stocks now account for 70% of Global Stock Market Capitalization, thanks to the ballistic moves in big tech. This level represents the largest country weighting since I helped create this index way back in 1986. It also now has the lowest exposure to non-US stocks. Money is pouring into the US from all corners of the world, the planet's most successful economy.
Natural Gas Hits (UNG) Three Year Low, at $1.63MM BTU, and down an eye-popping 50% in a month. Warm weather, high inventories, and overproduction due to cheap capital are the price killers. An LNG train broke down, cutting export demand. If you didn’t get out on the double in December you’re toast. Avoid (UNG).
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, February 26, the New Home Sales are announced.
On Tuesday, February 27 at 8:30 AM EST, the Durable Goods are released. The S&P Case Shiller for December is announced.
On Wednesday, February 28 at 2:00 PM, the Q2 GDP second read is published.
On Thursday, February 29 at 8:30 AM, the Weekly Jobless Claims are announced. We also get the Core Consumer Price Expectations.
On Friday, March 1 at 2:30 PM, the December ISM Manufacturing PMI is published. At 2:00 PM the Baker Hughes Rig Count is printed.
As for me, the telephone call went out amongst the family with lightning speed, and this was back in 1962 when long-distance cost a fortune. President Dwight D. Eisenhower was going to visit my grandfather’s cactus garden in Indio the next day, said to be the largest in the country, and family members were invited.
I spent much of my childhood in the 1950s and 1960s helping grandpa look for rare cactus in California’s lower Colorado Desert, where General Patton trained before invading Africa. That involved a lot of digging out a GM pickup truck from deep sand in the remorseless heat. SUVs hadn’t been invented yet, and a Willys Jeep (click here) was the only four-wheel drive then available in the US.
I have met nine of the last 13 presidents, but Eisenhower was my favorite. He certainly made an impression on me as a ten-year-old boy, who I remember as a kindly old man.
I walked with Eisenhower and my grandfather plant by plant, me giving him the Latin name for its genus and species and citing unique characteristics and uses by the Indians. The former president showed great interest and in two hours we covered the entire garden. I still make my kids learn the Latin names of plants.
Eisenhower lived on a remote farm at the famous Gettysburg, PA battlefield given to him by a grateful nation. But the winters there were harsh, so he often visited the Palm Springs mansion of TV Guide publisher Walter Annenberg, a major campaign donor.
Eisenhower was a one-of-a-kind brilliant man that America always came up with when it needed them the most. He learned the ropes serving as Douglas MacArthur’s Chief of Staff during the 1930’s. Franklin Roosevelt picked him out of 100 possible generals to head the Allied invasion of Europe, even though he had no combat experience.
After the war, both the Democratic and Republican parties recruited him as a candidate for the 1952 election. The latter prevailed, and “Ike” served two terms, defeating the governor of Illinois Adlai Stevenson twice. During his time, he ended the Korean War, started the battle over civil rights at Little Rock, began the Interstate Highway System, and admitted Hawaii as the 50th state.
As my dad was very senior in the Republican Party in Southern California during the 1950s, I got to meet many of the bigwigs of the day. New York prosecutor Thomas Dewy ran for president twice, against Roosevelt and Truman, and was a cold fish and aloof. Barry Goldwater was friends with everyone and a decorated bomber pilot during the war.
Richard Nixon would do anything to get ahead, and it was said that even his friends despised him. He let the Vietnam War drag out five years too long when it was clear we were leaving. Some 21 guys I went to high school with died in Vietnam during this time. I missed Kennedy and Johnson. Wrong party and they died too soon. Ford was a decent man and I even went to church with him once, but the Nixon pardon ended his political future.
Peanut farmer Carter was characterized as an idealistic wimp. But the last time I checked, the Navy didn’t hire wimps as nuclear submarine commanders. He did offer to appoint me Deputy Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for International Affairs, but I turned him down because I thought the $15,000 salary was too low. There were not a lot of Japanese-speaking experts on the Japanese steel industry around in those days. Biggest mistake I ever made.
Ronald Reagan’s economic policies drove me nuts and led to today’s giant deficits, which was a big deal if you worked for The Economist. But he always had a clever dirty joke at hand which he delivered to great effect….always off camera. The tough guy Reagan you saw on TV was all acting. His big accomplishment was not to drop the ball when it was handed to him to end the Cold War.
I saw quite a lot of George Bush, Sr. whom I met with my Medal of Honor Uncle Mitch Paige at WWII anniversaries, who was a gentleman and fellow pilot. Clinton was definitely a “good old boy” from Arkansas, a glad-hander, and an incredible campaigner, but he was also a Rhodes Scholar. His networking skills were incredible. George Bush, Jr. I missed as he never came to California. And 22 years later we are still fighting in the Middle East.
Obama was a very smart man and his wife Michelle even smarter. Stocks went up 400% on his watch and Mad Hedge Fund Trader prospered mightily. But I thought a black president of the United States was 50 years early. How wrong was I. Trump I already knew too much about from when I was a New York banker.
As for Biden, I have no opinion. I never met the man. He lives on the other side of the country. When I covered the Senate for The Economist, he was a junior member.
Still, it’s pretty amazing that I met 10 out of the last 14 presidents. That’s 20% of all the presidents since George Washington. I bet only a handful of people have done that, and the rest all live in Washington DC. And I’m a nobody, just an ordinary guy.
It just makes you think about the possibilities.
Really.
Good Luck and Good Trading,
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
It’s Been a Long Road
“In the last 40 years, our record at predicting where we would use military force next is perfect. We’ve never once gotten it right,” said former Secretary of Defense Robert Gates.
Global Market Comments
February 23, 2024
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(FEBRUARY 21 BIWEEKLY STRATEGY WEBINAR Q&A),
(FXI), (SMCI), (PANW), (TSLA), (NVDA), (XLF),
(CCI), (XOM), (FANG), (AMD), (HD), (LOW)
Below please find subscribers’ Q&A for the February 21 Mad Hedge Fund Trader Global Strategy Webinar, broadcast from Silicon Valley, CA.
Q: What do you think of the comments of Ray Dalio and Jamie Dimon of an imminent war with Russia and China?
A: I think the chances of that are almost zero. You’re talking about Russia with a $1 trillion economy going to war against a combined GDP of the US and Europe of $50 trillion. Even Switzerland is sending tanks to Ukraine now. Our military is so dominant compared to any other country in the world, that it would be an instant wipeout. Russia and China know that, so they can threaten all they want but will take no action. That really has been the course since the end of WWII; talk is cheap. However, it is not a zero risk—a person like Ray Dalio, especially, always has to consider the 1% risk (Jamie Dimon less so.) I don’t worry about that at all; a lot of that is media hype. Newspapers have to fill their space every day of the year, even when nothing is happening.
Q: What about Russia putting nuclear weapons in space?
A: The US actually looked at doing this in the 60s and 70s when I was with the Atomic Energy Commission, and this is the problem: Uranium weighs four times that of lead, and it’s very hard to get any serious weight into space. And Russia has never been able to actually hit anything it aims at, so other than destroying a bunch of nearby Starlink satellites, it wouldn’t really accomplish much. Plus, we do have a treaty with Russia not to put nuclear weapons in space—not that agreements between the US and Russia are particularly trustworthy these days.
Q: Would you sell naked Nvidia (NVDA) puts right now?
A: Dan, somehow you got into my personal trading account and looked at all my positions! You know, I never advise people to sell naked puts unless they're happy to own the stock at that level. That means, first of all, you cannot leverage at all—the way people go bust on short put strategies is they sell far more puts than they have the money to support the cash buy if they have to do it. But I can tell you, I looked at the numbers this morning: if you sell short an Nvidia put now at 600 you can get about $10 for it. And, if Nvidia goes below 600 by option expiration day, you own Nvidia stock at a cost of $590. And I'm happy to own Nvidia at $590 because I think it could be worth $1,000 by yearend. There may be better ways to use your money with Nvidia at $600, like doing an at-the-money LEAPS which will get you a 100% return in a year even on no move. If you want to go, say, $40 out of the money or $50, like a 650-$650 Nvidia LEAPS, then you're looking at it with a 150% return in a year. So that is the better way to do it, it just depends on how aggressive you want to be and how eager you are to go back to work at Taco Bell if you lose all your money.
Q: What would you do with Super Micro Computer Inc. (SMCI) right now?
A: I would sell it, but then I would’ve sold it on the first 23x move. (SMCI) is a no-touch right now—I think they have a 3% float in their shares, and that’s what’s causing the spectacular market volatility.
Q: Will continued weakness in China (FXI) bring down the US markets?
A: No. We have very few investors from China in the US stock market. They really have no impact on our market. And the fundamentals couldn't be more different. You know, the US economy is in great shape right now (and getting better, I might add), while China continues to go down the toilet and is saber-rattling and warmongering. So, it's not good for stock prices for sure. You could put that at the bottom of the list of worries.
Q: Will Tesla (TSLA) ever turn around?
A: Well what you don’t know if you don't follow the company on a daily basis like I do, is that Tesla is continuously cutting costs, and increasing performance, and that will lead to greater sales and greater profits. But when that happens, I have no idea. I think the Tesla 2 coming out next year—the $25,000 EV could be a big turning point for the company. And of course, Tesla stock may front-run that by six months. So eventually, Tesla will come back.
Q: Thanks for your advice. I have a ton of Nvidia (NVDA) and some Tesla (TSLA). Should I sell my Tesla and put it in Nvidia?
A: No, you should do the opposite. Buy low, sell high—it’s my revolutionary new stock trading system which I’m thinking of copywriting. Nvidia has had one of the biggest stock gains in history, and Tesla is down year-on-year. So, that is the trade, and that is what a lot of long-term investors are doing, is doing that swap.
Q: Can we do a LEAPS on Palo Alto Networks (PANW)?
A: Absolutely. Wait for this selloff to finish, then go in at the money one year out and you should get a 100% or a double on your return. And by the way, when I’m convinced that tech stocks have finished this selloff, I’ll be issuing a whole bunch of LEAPS trade alerts. I’ll do the numbers and do the heavy lifting for you.
Q: Can Ukraine win the war against Russia without US aid?
A: No, in fact, it needs aid from both the US and Europe. Right now, Europe is carrying 100% of the burden, as the US has stopped providing aid to Ukraine, thanks to the Republican-led House of Representatives. And Ukraine is now ceding cities to Russia because they don’t have the ammunition or the missiles to defend them. So, give as much ammo as we can. Otherwise, it’s just a matter of time before US soldiers get involved in a European war once again. How the Republicans see cutting off as in America’s benefit, I can’t imagine, nor do many Republicans. They must be reading different news sources. But I’m also prejudiced on this, having been shot by Russians in Ukraine in October. (Those injuries are all healed by the way thanks to a stem cell injection and I’m back to hiking as usual.)
Q: When you say buy on dips, do you have a rule of thumb on what percentage a stock has to drop in order to consider it a dip?
A: It’s different for every stock because every stock has a different volatility. “Buy on the dip” might be a 5% for Cleveland Cliffs but it might be 20% for Nvidia. It’s all over the map—you just have to look at the charts and judge where the next support level is, before considering risking your own money.
Q: What’s your favorite dividend stock?
A: Well my Number One favorite, of course, is Crown Castle International (CCI)—the cellphone tower REIT—and REITS of any kind are going to be very high-yield and very attractive. Just stay away from the commercial office REITS, which are having their own well-publicized problems. Beyond that, the only attractive high dividend stocks are in energy: you have Exxon Mobil (XOM) yielding 3.7% and Diamondback Energy with the lovely ticker symbol of (FANG) yielding 4.48%. On the oils, you get a shot for not only the dividend but a nice capital gain on any recovery in the oil market. So that could be an attractive play once we finish bombing the Houthis and wiping out all their Iran-supplied missiles.
Q: What happened to the Japanese yen rally?
A: Well as with all other foreign currencies, it died and went to Heaven, because of the delay in US interest rate cuts. As long as the US doesn't cut interest rates, it will continue to have the strongest currency in the world. And when we get to the currency charts, you'll see exactly how strong the dollar has been. That does make the currencies very attractive right around here.
Q: Will commercial real estate blow up the banks, and therefore the stock market?
A: No, first of all, for big banks (XLF), commercial real estate is only 5% of their loan portfolio and if they lose 20% of that, that’s only a 1% loss of their total loans year for them and that is totally acceptable by in their business model. Second, if interest rates fall, the commercial real estate problem goes away because they can refinance at lower rates than you get now. Third, as the economy recovers, demand for office space will also recover, though it may take 5 years to soak up all the excess inventory that we have right now. San Francisco has an empty office space rate of about 30%, which is higher than it’s ever been. That is why a lot of smart, long-term real estate money is buying up buildings in San Francisco— they're buying them up for pennies on the dollar, so that sounds like a great investment. I remember back in the early eighties, Morgan Stanley did exactly the same thing in Houston after an oil collapse. You know, they were giving away office buildings—paying you to take them away, literally—and Morgan Stanley set up an in-house partner fund (it was only open for the partners from Morgan Stanley to invest in) and we went in and bought 600 million dollar’s worth of cheap Houston real estate. I think we ended up getting a 10x return on that, but that's what being a Morgan Stanley partner is all about. That was about 45 years ago, and it’s what’s happening now in San Francisco.
Q: Are you worried about Amazon (AMZN) with Jeff Bezos selling 8 billion dollars worth of stock?
A: Well, if you've made a couple of $100 billion you're allowed to spend $8 billion on yourself. And Amazon is one of the early leaders in AI technology, so I'm buying that on every dip. In fact, we had a long position in Amazon that just expired on Friday.
Q: Why is Home Depot Inc. (HD) stagnating?
A: Well that's easy: during the pandemic, everyone was stuck at home 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, so they wanted to fix stuff. With the end of the pandemic, that has ended and has slowed down business at both Home Depot and Lowes (LOW).
Q: Do you like Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) and would you buy it on a dip?
A: Absolutely, it’s all part of the same AI trade, as are all the other big chip stocks.
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, select your subscription (GLOBAL TRADING DISPATCH, TECHNOLOGY LETTER, or Jacquie's Post), 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
“If the yen goes to ¥150, what does Toyota do to Ford,” said Barry Sternlicht, CEO of the private equity firm, Starwood Capital.
Global Market Comments
February 22, 2024
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(HOW TO GAIN AN ADVANTAGE WITH PARALLEL TRADING),
(GM), (F), (TM), (NSANY), (DDAIF), BMW (BMWYY), (VWAPY),
(PALL), (GS), (EZA), (CAT), (CMI), (KMTUY),
(KODK), (SLV), (AAPL)
Global Market Comments
February 21, 2024
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(HOW FREE ENERGY WILL POWER THE COMING ROARING TWENTIES),
(SPWR), (TSLA)
With the price of Texas tea barely scratching $78 a barrel today it is time to revisit the doomed future of this ancient energy source.
With energy stocks now trading like they’re having a going out of business sale, you have to wonder if the sector will ever come back. The short answer is short-term yes, long term no.
A key part of my argument for a new Golden Age to take place during the current Roaring Twenties is that the price of energy is effectively going to zero.
It may not actually make it to zero. I’ll settle for down 90%-95%, which is good enough for me.
Take a look at the charts below.
The first one shows how the price of a watt of solar generated electricity has plunged by 99.03% since 1977, from $76.67 to $0.74.
Just in the past six years, retail prices for completed solar panels dropped by a staggering 80%. That is cheaper than electricity supplies generated by new natural gas plants
The potential price declines for natural gas from here are near zero. After all, it’s hard to improve on the near 100% burn rates you get with gas, and many producers are already losing money at current price levels of $1.61 per MM BTU.
Squeezing efficiencies out of our existing solar technology through improved software, production methods, chemistry, and design are nearly unlimited, are expected to drive solar costs by half down to 3 cents per kwh by 2035.
And here is the great shortcoming of all these wonderful predictions. Technology NEVER stays the same.
My own SunPower (SPWR) SPR A420 panels with their Maxeon solar cell technology deliver an efficiency of 20.1%, the best on the market available four years ago.
This means that they convert 22.5% of the solar energy they receive into electricity.
SunPower is now producing 25.1% efficiency panels in the lab. Another research lab in Germany, Fraunhofer, is getting 44.7%.
And my friends at the Defense Department tell me they have functioning solar cells delivering 70% efficiencies which they use in space. Whether they are economic and scalable is anyone’s guess.
(Warning: most cheap Chinese made solar cells have only lowly 15% efficiencies, so don’t be tricked by any great “deals”).
And this is how most long-term predictions fall short.
When I bought the system, I was warned the electricity production would fall 1% a year thanks to the natural degradation of the solar cells.
Instead, output has risen by 1% annually. Global warming is the only possibly explanation.
Not only do they assume that technology doesn’t change, they fail to account for dramatic improvements in other related fields.
EV technology is a classic example. Battery costs are currently falling off a cliff.
When I bought the first Nissan Leaf offered for sale in California in 2010, the battery cost $833 per kilowatt. In 2012, I purchased a high-performance Tesla (TSLA) P85 Model S-1 at $353 per kilowatt.
When the Tesla 3 became available in 2017, the 60-watt battery will ran at $250 per kilowatt. Efficiencies gained through the economies of scale from the Sparks, Nevada Gigafactory took that under $100.
However, that is not the end of the story.
The car industry will start to move towards carbon fiber in five years, which has ten times the strength of steel at one-tenth the weight. The only issue now is mass production cost.
Some 67% of the weight of a Tesla S-1 is in the body, with the four motors at 13%, and the 1,200-pound lithium ion battery at 20%.
What happens when the body weight falls by 90%, to only 6.7% of total weight? The battery weight, and cost declines by two thirds. That cuts the effective cost of the battery to $66/kilowatt.
Add up all of this, and it is easy to see how energy costs can plunge by 90% or more. And it will happen must faster than you expect.
This has been the experience with memory costs, processor speeds, and hundreds of other digital technologies over the past 70 years. The cost of cotton yarn fell by 1,000 times during the 17th and 18th century, wiping out hundreds of existing industries but creating thousands more.
I could go on and on.
This is why the State of California has mandated to get 50% of its energy from alternative sources by 2030, and to ban the new sale internal combustion engines by 2035.
Some researchers believe a 100% target could be achieved. And it is doing this while closing its last remaining nuclear power plants at Diablo Canyon by 2030.
It already hit that target on several days this year when winter filled up all the dams, producing excess hydroelectric power.
As a result, the wholesale price of electricity fell to zero on those days. The grid was producing more power than could be consumed.
To say that free energy would be a game changer is a huge understatement.
The elimination of energy as a cost has enormous consequences for all companies. You can start with the energy intensive ones in transportation, steel, and aluminum, and work your way down the list.
My bet is that you won’t recognize the car industry in 10 years.
At a $66/kilowatt effective battery cost it will make absolutely no sense to build internal combustion engines in new cars.
Too bad Detroit is a decade behind in this technology.
Lose transportation, and you lose 50% of US oil consumption, or about 10 million barrels a day. Guess what that does to oil prices?
Goodbye Middle East. Go blow yourself up.
The profitability and efficiency of the entire economy will take a great leap forward, much like we saw with the mass industrialization that was first made possible by electricity during the 1920’s.
Share prices of all kinds will go ballistic.
Since energy costs will eventually fall effectively to near zero, that wipes out the present business model of the entire electric power, coal, oil, and gas industries, about 10% of US GDP.
Their business models will be reduced to trying to sell something that is free, like air.
Dow 250,000 anyone?
Goodbye Electric Power Bills
Getting Ready for the 2020’s
When asked about the urban legend that the vaults at Fort Knox are empty and that the Fed has no gold, former Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke responded, "I've been to the basement of the New York Fed. The gold is there. I've seen it."
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Because these cookies are strictly necessary to deliver the website, refuseing them will have impact how our site functions. You always can block or delete cookies by changing your browser settings and force blocking all cookies on this website. But this will always prompt you to accept/refuse cookies when revisiting our site.
We fully respect if you want to refuse cookies but to avoid asking you again and again kindly allow us to store a cookie for that. You are free to opt out any time or opt in for other cookies to get a better experience. If you refuse cookies we will remove all set cookies in our domain.
We provide you with a list of stored cookies on your computer in our domain so you can check what we stored. Due to security reasons we are not able to show or modify cookies from other domains. You can check these in your browser security settings.
These cookies collect information that is used either in aggregate form to help us understand how our website is being used or how effective our marketing campaigns are, or to help us customize our website and application for you in order to enhance your experience.
If you do not want that we track your visist to our site you can disable tracking in your browser here:
We also use different external services like Google Webfonts, Google Maps, and external Video providers. Since these providers may collect personal data like your IP address we allow you to block them here. Please be aware that this might heavily reduce the functionality and appearance of our site. Changes will take effect once you reload the page.
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