Below please find subscribers’ Q&A for the January 24 Mad Hedge Fund Trader Global Strategy Webinar, broadcast from Silicon Valley, CA.
Q: Will you stop out of (TLT) if it breaches the $93 level?
A: Yes, and I'm actually hoping it will do that because that sets up some really great two-year LEAPS for the (TLT) going out long-term. It's trying to hold in here at the bottom. It's been in the $93 handle for several days now, so we'll just watch.
Q: There seems to be negativity all over the place, but markets continue upwards. What are the chances of a black swan this year, and what do you think it might be?
A: Well, there always is a possibility of a black swan. That's why we do risk control and risk management all the time because black swans are by definition unpredictable. The reason people are negative is that they don't own more stocks, and they keep going straight up, at least the tech ones do. Money managers always look dumber not owning a market that's going up than owning a market that's going down and losing money with everybody else. It's just the way investor psychology works.
Q: Do you expect small caps (IWM) to outperform the S&P 500 (SPY) this year?
A: Yes I do, but it'll be a second half of the year game. They really need the big drops in interest rates to get earnings moving.
Q: Would Boeing (BA) be good for a LEAPS?
A: Yes, it would, but I would go out to the maximum maturity, say two to two and a half years, and you may get a double on your money on that. Basically, there are only two airplane manufacturers in the world that have a monopoly (or a duopoly to be technically correct) and Boeing is one of them. So love them or hate them, you still have to buy their airplanes; look no further than Alaska Airlines (ALK) and United (UAL), which have had to cancel literally tens of thousands of flights because they don't have enough airplanes. They had to ground all their 737 maxes.
Q: With all the shooting going on in the Middle East, why isn't oil higher?
A: It's all about China (FXI). As long as China is in a recession which seems to be getting worse, oil demand falls. China is the world's largest importer of oil by a large margin. They're also taking all the natural gas that the US will produce, and that is a big drag on prices. That will end when China starts to recover, and we did get a major stimulus package out of the Chinese government this week.
Q: What about NVIDIA (NVDA)? It's gone up so much. I'm up 300% since my cost. Should I sell now and take profits or just run the long?
A: This whole group, which I now call the AI 5—Microsoft (MSFT), Google (GOOGL), Amazon (AMZN), NVIDIA (NVDA), and Meta (META) could drop 20% at any time and then go on to new highs, and that's exactly what happened in the fall. We had a 20% drop in everything and then it just shot off to the races. So as long as you can handle a 20% decline in these stocks, and if you're a long-term investor, then you should keep them. Because the risk is you'll take profits, generate a big tax bill, and then won't be able to get back in at the next low, and you'll end up missing the next $1,000 point move. If you're the trader of the century like me, you can do that. But for your average garden variety trading at-home investor, I would say keep what's winning—keep the AI 5.
Q: Thanks John,Igot a double on your (UNG) LEAPS that you put out over Christmas. It's since given back much of the gains. Do you see another big rally in (UNG) this year?
A: Yes, that was a 2-year LEAPS I put out. It doubled in 2 weeks, and I do see a bigger recovery in the second half of the year once the Chinese economy starts to recover. Their marginal first choice for new energy supplies is American natural gas; it's not oil from the Middle East. They're trying to clean up their atmosphere as much as we are, so look for another big demand spike for (UNG) later in the year.
Q: Why has the dollar (UUP) been so strong?
A: Rising interest rates. Currencies are all about interest rates and where the next interest rate move is going to be. Money always pours into the currency that has the next rise in interest rates. That's been the US dollar for all of this year so far.
Q: Will the election have an effect on the market?
A: Absolutely not. Nobody cares about the election. If you're an election junkie, you may stay glued to your TV. I'm not interested myself. I don't expect any changes in the economy to take place this year, and that's all investors and money managers really care about—is how they will do by the end of this year. So you're better off watching sports on ESPN is all I can tell you. Oh yes, and this is supposed to be a record year for disinformation about elections and candidates. Another reason to not bother with the election this year. Go watch the Jack Reacher series. At least there you can keep track of the body count.
Q: Is it a good time to buy a home right now?
A: Yes, if you have cash. It is still too expensive to borrow money to buy a home with 30-year mortgages at 6.5% and 5/1 ARMs at 6% or even 5.5%, but if you have cash, it is a great time to buy a house because what is the next move? Interest rates go down. Suddenly everybody in the world can afford houses and they now want to buy your house. So very rapid price rises are coming for the housing market once the rates start to fall, which could be March, could be June, depending on how Jerome Powell feels that morning.
Q: With EV sales up 50% last year (TSLA), why has copper been so weak?
A: The old high price of copper was based on continuing 50% per year increases in EV sales for the indefinite future. In fact, we got a 50% increase last year and forecasts for 10% growth only this year, so that's a big part of it. Also, backing out the Chinese construction demand gives copper a huge hit. New construction in China is essentially at zero and will be at zero for quite some time because of the real estate crisis there. Some people in China are looking at prices on their homes down 80%, which sounds like a repeat of our 2008 financial crisis. So that is another major drag on copper.
Q: Is it a good time to “buy wrights”?
A: Absolutely yes. If you read today's newsletter, it tells you how to do a buy write, and you do “buy rights” on the most expensive stocks. For example, NVIDIA (NVDA) at $600 today—you can get $8 for the February $650 calls, which you sell short against your stock ownership at $600, or you can go out to March 15th and you can get $19 for the March $650 calls. That will reduce your average cost for the shares by $19, so actually (NVDA) is, in fact, one of the best stocks to do this in, because it has the highest implied volatility of any options, second to Tesla (TSLA), it turns out.
Q: How did you predict the S&P 500 so accurately last year? You got within a point, pretty amazing.
A: All I can say is 55 years of practice helps! And I am a bit of a contrarian person; so when everybody said the market was going to go down, I said, “How about new all-time highs?” But also the answer to all questions really is people are wildly underestimating the impact of technology and AI, which continues to surprise the upside and will keep doing so for the next decade. That is the driver of all asset prices everywhere right now, and people will figure that out in probably about 5 years.
Q: Crown Castle Inc. (CCI), is that a good one to watch, with renewed interest in REITS?
A: Absolutely yes, and it's also a great interest-rate play. It had a horrible selloff going into October and has since made back all of those losses. We actually had a LEAPS in (CCI), which is now making money.
To watch a replay of this webinar with all the charts, bells, whistles, and classic rock music, just log in to www.madhedgefundtrader.com, go to MY ACCOUNT, click on GLOBAL TRADING DISPATCH, then WEBINARS, and all the webinars from the last 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
BUY the United States Treasury Bond Fund (TLT) January 17, 2025 $95-98 at-the-money vertical Bull Call spread LEAPS at $1.25 or best
Opening Trade
1-23-2024
expiration date: January 17, 2025
Number of Contracts = 1 contract
An $8 selloff in the (TLT) is the best entry point we are going to get for this LEAPS. This is a gift from the Federal Reserve which has indicated it may cut interest rates 3-6 times this year.
While the chance of winning a real lottery is something like a million to one, this one is more like 10:1 in your favor. And the payoff is a double in a year. That is the probability that (TLT) shares will rise by only 1.28% over the next 12 months.
The logic behind this LEAPS is fairly simple.
After keeping interest rates too low for too long, and then raising them too far too fast, what does the Fed do next? It then lowers interest rates too far too fast. In other words, a mistake-prone Jay Powell will keep on making mistakes. That’s what you get with a Fed chair who only has a degree in political science.
The rate of interest rate rises has been the most rapid in history. Keep it up and a recession in 2024 is a sure thing.When recession hits, demand for money will dry up and interest rates will collapse. For that reason, the Fed has to start its interest-cutting cycle sooner than later.
Yields on ten-year US Treasury bonds that bottomed at 0.32% in 2020 and reached a peak of 5.08% in October 2023 will easily fall back down to 3.00% by the time this LEAPS matures. That will take the (TLT) at least back up to $120.
I am using the very conservative $95-$98 strike price in case bonds continue bouncing along a bottom before turning higher in a few months. If a double in a year is not enough for you, perhaps you should consider another line of business.
I am therefore buying the United States Treasury Bond Fund (TLT) January 17, 2025 $95-98 at-the-money vertical Bull Call spread LEAPS at $1.25 or best.
Don’t pay more than $1.80 or you’ll be chasing on a risk/reward basis.
I am going out to only a January 17, 2025 expiration because I think this trade will work fairly quickly. Please note that these options are illiquid, and it may take some work to get in or out. Executing these trades is more an art than a science.
Let’s say the United States Treasury Bond Fund (TLT) January 17, 2025 $95-98 at-the-money vertical Bull Call spread LEAPS are showing a bid/offer spread of $1.10-$1.50, which is typical. Enter an order for one contract at $1.10, another for $1.20, another for $1.30 and so on. Eventually, you will enter a price that gets filled immediately. That is the real price. Then enter an order for your full position at that real price.
A lot of people ask me about the appropriate size. Remember, if the (TLT) does NOT rise by 1.28% in 12 months, the value of your investment goes to zero. The way to play this is to buy LEAPS in ten different names. If one out of ten increases ten times, you break even. If two of ten work, you double your money, and if only three of ten work, you triple your money.
You never should have a position that is so big that you can’t sleep at night, or worse, need to call John Thomas asking if you should sell at a market bottom.
There is another way to cash in. Let’s say we get half of your double in the next three months, which from these low levels is entirely possible. Then you could earn half of the maximum potential profit in months. You can decide whether to keep the threefold return or go for the full five-bagger. It’s a nice problem to have.
Notice that the day-to-day volatility of LEAPS prices is minuscule since the time value is so great, usually sporting implied of less than 10%. This means that the day-to-day moves in your P&L will be small. It also means you can buy your position over the course of a month just entering new orders every day. I know this can be tedious but getting screwed by overpaying for a position is even more tedious.
Look at the math below and you will see that a 1.28% rise in (TLT) shares will generate a 100% profit with this position, such is the wonder of LEAPS. That gives you an implied leverage of 68:1 across the $95-$98 space.
Only use a limit order. DO NOT USE MARKET ORDERS UNDER ANY CIRCUMSTANCES. Just enter a limit order and work it.
This is a bet that the (TLT) will not fall below $98 by the January 17, 2025 option expiration in 12 months.
Here are the specific trades you need to execute this position:
Buy 1 January 2025 (TLT) $95 calls at………….………$5.00
Sell short 1 January 2025 (TLT) $98 calls at…….……$3.75
Net Cost:………………………….………..………….…...........$1.25 Potential Profit: $3.00 - $1.25 = $1.75
(1 X 100 X $1.75) = $175 or 140% in 12 months.
To see how to enter this trade in your online platform, please look at the order ticket below, which I pulled off of Interactive Brokers.
If you are uncertain on how to execute an options spread, please watch my training video on “How to Execute a Vertical Bull Call Debit Spread”by clicking here at
The best execution can be had by placing your bid for the entire spread in the middle market and waiting for the market to come to you. The difference between the bid and the offer on these deep-in-the-money spread trades can be enormous.
Don’t execute the legs individually or you will end up losing much of your profit. Spread pricing can be very volatile on expiration months farther out.
I don’t lose money in the market very often, but when I do, I really hate it. I also take each attack of red ink as a learning opportunity. Do this for 55 years and you get pretty good at it.
So what did I learn from my ill-timed double short in the S&P 500 last week? It turns out a lot.
The stock market was in the process of backing out six Fed rate cuts this year, which was never realistic, and returning to only three, which is much more realistic. The March tightening got pushed back at least until May.
You see this in the sectors that got hammered last week, big borrowers like airlines, cruise lines, and construction. Net creditors to the financial system, i.e. big tech rose almost every day. That lasted about two days.
It turns out that the Mad Hedge AI Market Timing Index led me astray. I already knew that it was not perfect, but I had to be reminded from time to time of a loss. After the timing index peaked at a six-month high of 78 on December 26, it plunged all the way down to 58 on January 17, the classic sign of a market that is rolling over and dying.
So what did it do after that? A red-hot University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index hit an out-of-the-blue 2 1/2 year high, causing my own index to shoot up to 73. Ouch! Never underestimate the ability of the American consumer to spend money!
That triggered the mother of all short-covering rallies. It turns out that I am not the only one using an algorithm-driven market timing index these days, all of which drew the same conclusions on Wednesday and went short the (SPY). A January Friday options expiration added gasoline to the fire.
Fortunately, I had eight other long positions that will more than offset my short losses well before the February 16 option expiration in 20 trading days, such is the nature of my long/short strategy. But a hit is a hit, nonetheless.
It’s easy to get too aggressive and overconfident when you’ve had two back-to-back 80% plus years such as the case at the Mad Hedge Fund Trader. Occasionally, you have to get slapped in the face to dial it back down.
What is important here is to understand the broader message of what the market is trying to tell us. That artificial intelligence is worth far more than we understand. While the current market capitalization of the top AI leaders, (MSFT), (GOOGL), (TSLA), (META), and (NVDA) is now at $10 trillion, I bet that they will top $40 trillion in a decade. Markets are already discounting that target.
Once again that makes my own decade forecast of a Dow Average at 240,000 positively conservative.
And while NVIDIA now looks insanely expensive, with the doubling weighting I had gaining another 25% in 2024, it is in fact still the cheapest AI stock in the market. That’s because its earnings are growing far faster than its stock price….by a large margin.
It's definitely looking like a different market so far in 2024. We are going to have to work harder….and smarter.
So far in January, we are down -5.89%. My 2024 year-to-date performance is also at -5.89%.The S&P 500 (SPY) is up +1.14%so far in 2024. My trailing one-year return reached +xx% versus +xx%for the S&P 500.
That brings my 15-year total return to +670.74%. My average annualized return has retreated to +51.27%,another new high.
Some 63 of my 70 trades last year were profitable in 2023. In 2024 100% of my trades have been profitable.
After a round of profit-taking, I am maintaining longs in (MSFT), (AMZN), (V), (PANW), (CCJ), (TLT). I am regrettably short the (SPY).
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!
US Budget Funded for Two More Months, kicking the can down to March 8. Given byelections and their current death rate, Republicans may no longer have a majority by then. Those numbers include $1.59 trillion for fiscal year 2024, with $886 billion for defense spending and $704 billion in non-defense spending. Schumer and Johnson also agreed to a $69 billion side deal in adjustments that will go toward non-defense domestic spending. Not that markets care.
University of Michigan Consumer Index surged, up to 78.8 for January, its highest level since July 2021. Consumer sentiment has improved amid a drop in gasoline prices and solid stock market gains.
Building Permits Improve, at 1.50 million, up 1.9%.But the latest New Monthly Residential Construction report, released this morning jointly by the U.S. Census Bureau and the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, is 7.6% above the December 2022 rate of 1.357 million. Declining mortgage rates are translating into mixed improvements in home production.
Homebuilder Sentiment Jumps, by seven points to 44, the most in nearly a year. Lower mortgage rates boosted customer traffic, sales, and the demand outlook. The US is short 10 million homes which will take a decade to build. Buy (KEN), (PHM), and (KBH) on dips. US Retail Sales Come in Best in Three Months, up 0.6% in December, as analysts continue to underestimate the American consumer. Clothing, general merchandise, and e-commerce led gains. The “soft landing” is looking like a sure thing. Buy all major dips in stocks.
Weekly Jobless Claims plunged to 187,000, a 17-month low, underlining the “soft landing” scenario. Continuing claims stand at 1.80 million. Labor strength has persisted despite attempts by the Federal Reserve to slow the economy, and the jobs market in particular, through a series of interest rate hikes. Bonds and other interest rate plays sold off on the news. On Monday, January 22, nothing of note is announced.
On Tuesday, January 23 at 8:30 AM EST,the Richmond Fed Manufacturing Shipments Index is released.
On Wednesday, January 24 at 2:00 PM, the S&P Global Flash PMI is published.
On Thursday, January 25 at 8:30 AM, the Weekly Jobless Claims are announced. We also get the Q4 US GDP first read.
On Friday, January 26 at 2:30 PM, the December Core PCE Index is published. At 2:00 PM, the Baker Hughes Rig Count is printed.
As for me, I recall my last trip around the world in 2018. I took the trip because I feared climate change would soon make visits to the equator impossible because of intolerable temperatures and the breakdown of civilization. As it turned out, the global pandemic began six months later, making such travel out of the question for two years.
I beat Phileas Fogg by 55 days, who needed 88 days to complete his trip around the world to settle a gentleman’s bet. But then he had to rely on elephants, sailing ships, and steam engines to complete his epic voyage or at least the one imagined by Jules Verne.
I actually took a much longer route, using a mix of Boeings and Airbuses to fly 80 hours over 40,000 miles on 18 flights through 12 countries in only 33 days. Incredibly, our baggage made it all the way, rather than see its contents sold on the black markets of Manila, New Delhi, or Cairo.
It was a trip around the world for the ages, made even more challenging by dragging my 13 and 15-year-old girls along with me. I have always considered my most valuable asset to be the trips I took to Europe, Africa, and Asia in 1968. The comparisons I can make today some 55 years later are nothing less than awe-inspiring.
I wanted to give the same gift to them.
It began with a 12 ½ hour flight from San Francisco to Auckland, New Zealand. Straight out of the airport I rented a left-hand drive Land Rover and drove three hours to high in the steam-covered mountains of Rarotonga where we were dinner guests of a Māori tribe. To earn my dinner of pork and vegetables cooked underground I had to dance the haka, a Māori war dance.
The Haka
Of course, with kids in tow, a natural stop was the Hobbit Village of Hobbiton 1½ hours outside of Auckland. I figured the owners of the idyllic sheep farm were earning at least $25 million a year showing tourists the movie set.
In all, I put 1,000 miles on the car in four days, even crossing New Zealand’s highest mountain range on a dirt road. The thick forests were so primeval my daughter expected to see a dinosaur around every curve. We reached our southernmost point at Mt. Ruapehu, a volcano used as the inspiration for Mt. Doom in Peter Jackson’s Lord of the Rings.
The focus of the Australia leg was ten strategy lectures which I presented around the country. I was mobbed at every stop, with turnout double what I expected. The Mad Hedge Fund Trader and the Mad Hedge Technology Letter picked up 100 new subscribers in the Land Down Under in five days.
Maybe it was something I said?
My kids’ only requirements were to feed real kangaroos and koala bears, which we duly accomplished on a freezing cold morning outside Melbourne. We also managed to squeeze in a tour of the incredible Sydney Opera House in between lectures, dashing here and there in Uber cabs.
I hosted five Mad HedgeGlobal Strategy Luncheons for existing customers in five days. The highlight was in Perth, where eight professional traders and I enjoyed a raucous, drunken meal. They had all done well off my advice, so I was popular, to say the least. Someone picked up the tab without me even noticing.
After that, it was a brief ten-hour flight to Manila in the Philippines, with a brief changeover in Hong Kong, where massive protest demonstrations were underway. Ever the history buff, I booked myself into General Douglas MacArthur’s suite at the historic Manila Hotel. The last time I was here I interviewed President Ferdinand Marcos and his lovely wife Imelda. After lunch with my enthusiastic Philippine staff, I was on my way to the airport.
I took Malaysian Airlines to New Delhi, India, which has lost two planes over the last five years and where the crew was definitely on edge. I asked why a second plane was lost somewhere over the South Indian Ocean and the universal response was that the pilot had gone insane. Security was so tight that they confiscated a bottle of Jamieson Irish Whiskey that I had just bought in duty-free.
India turned out to be a dystopian nightmare. If climate change continues this is your preview. With temperatures up to 120 degrees in 100% humidity people here dying of heat stroke by the hundreds. Elephants had to be hosed down to keep them alive. It was so hot you couldn’t stray from the air conditioning for more than an hour. The national radio warned us to stay indoors.
In Old Delhi, the kids were besieged by child beggars pawing them for food and there were mountains of trash everywhere. In the Taj Mahal, my older daughter passed out and we had to dump our remaining drinking water on her to cool her down and bring her back to life. We spent the rest of the day sightseeing indoors at the most heavily air-conditioned shops. The hand-woven Persian carpet should arrive any day now.
If global temperatures rise by just a few more degrees you’re going to lose a billion people in India very soon.
On the way to Abu Dhabi were flew directly over the tanker war at the Straits of Hormuz, one of my old flight paths during my Morgan Stanley days. It was too dusty to see any action there. We got a much better view of Sinai and the Red Sea, which, I told the kids, Moses parted 5,000 years ago (they’ve seen Charlton Heston in The Ten Commandments many times).
Upon landing at Cairo, Egypt’s ever-vigilant military intelligence service immediately picked me up. Apparently, I was still in their system dating back to my coverage of Henry Kissinger’s shuttle diplomacy for The Economist in 1976. That was all a long time ago. Having two kids with me meant I was not there to cause trouble, so they were very friendly. They even gave us a free ride to the downtown Nile Hilton.
After India, Cairo, and the Sahara Desert were downright pleasant, a dry and comfortable 100 degrees. We did the standard circuit, the pyramids, and the Sphynx followed by a camel ride into the desert.
If you are the least bit claustrophobic don’t even think about crawling into the center of the Great Pyramid on your hands and knees as we did. I was sore for two days. We spent the evening on a Nile dinner cruise, looking for alligators, entertained by an unusually talented belly dancer.
The next stage involved a one-day race to Greece, where we circled the Acropolis in all its glory, and then argued with a Greek taxi driver on how to get back to the airport. We ended up taking an efficient airport train, a remnant of the 2000 Athens Olympics. If impoverished and bankrupt Athens has such a great airport train, why doesn’t New York or San Francisco?
It was a quick hop across the Adriatic to Venice, Italy, where we caught an always exciting speed boat from the Marco Polo to our Airbnb near St. Mark’s Square. We ran through the ancient cathedral and the Palace of the Doges, admiring the massive canvases, the medieval weaponry, and of course, the dungeon.
One of the high points of the trip was a performance of Vivaldi’s Four Seasons in the very church it was composed for. A ferocious thunderstorm hit, flooding the plaza outside and causing the lead violinist’s string to break, halting the concert (rapid humidity change I guess).
When we got home with soggy feet, the Carabinieri had cordoned off our block with police tape because a big chunk of our 400-year-old roof had fallen into the street. It taxed my Italian to the max to get into our apartment that night. The Airbnb host asked me not to mention this in my review (I didn’t).
The next day brought a circuitous trip to Budapest via Brussels. Budapest was a charm, a former capital of the Austria-Hungarian Empire, and the architecture to prove it. The last time I was here 55 years ago the Russian Army was running the place and it was grim, oppressive, and dirty.
Today, it is a thriving hot spot for Europe’s young, with bars and nightclubs everywhere. Dinners dropped from $150 in Venice to $30. We topped the night with a Danube dinner cruise with a folk dancing troupe. I’m told you can live there like a king for $1,000 a month.
Visiting the Golden Age in Budapest
The next morning we drew closer to our final destination of Switzerland. A four-hour train ride brought us to my summer chalet in Zermatt and some much-needed rest. At the end of a long valley and lacking any cars, Zermatt is one of those places where you can just give the kids 50 Swiss francs and tell them to get lost. I spent mornings hiking up from the valley floor and afternoons getting caught up on the markets and my writing.
There’s nothing like recharging my batteries in the clean mountain air of the Alps. The forecast was rain every day for two weeks, but it never showed. As a result, I ended up hiking ten miles a day to the point where my legs were made of lead by the end.
The only downer was watching helicopters pick up the bodies of two climbers who fell near the top of the Matterhorn. As temperatures rise rapidly the ice holding the mountain together is melting, leading to a rising tide of fatal accidents.
I caught my last flight home from Milan. Anything for one more great dinner in Italy, which I enjoyed in the Galleria. At the train station, I chatted with a troop of Italian Boy Scouts in blue uniforms headed for the Italian Alps. The city was packed with Chinese tour groups, and there was a one-month wait to buy tickets for Leonardo DaVinci’s The Last Supper. Another Airbnb made sure I stayed up all night listening to the city’s yellow trolleys trundle by.
Finally, an 11-hour flight brought me back to the City by the Bay. Thanks to two sleeping pills of indeterminate origin I went to sleep over England and woke up over Oregon, preparing for a landing. It seems that somewhere along the way I proposed marriage to the Arab woman sitting next to me, but I have no memory of that whatsoever. At least that’s what the head flight attendant thought.
I am now planning this summer’s trip. After the Queen Mary and the Orient Express should I climb the Matterhorn again? Or should I summit Mount Kilimanjaro in Africa first? No transatlantic trip should ever be wasted. And I have to get home in time to join a 50-mile hike with the Boy Scouts in New Mexico and then cart two kids off to college.
What a great problem to have.
Good Luck and Good Trading,
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/JOhn-thomas-mountain.png8121080april@madhedgefundtrader.comhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngapril@madhedgefundtrader.com2024-01-22 09:02:572024-01-22 12:59:41The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead or Learning from Your Losers
Remember me from the QE2? You don’t miss much, but I’m forwarding this AI story, in case you find it interesting. You are the best financial advisor I have ever found.
I know you’ve been a big believer in NVIDIA (NVDA) for years. When I read this, I really understand that (NVDA) is only going to get bigger. They and Microsoft (MSFT) MSFT are the two biggest investors in AI startups.
I hope you have a great 2024, thanks for all the hard work and great newsletters. |
It’s that time of year again, when finance ministers, central bank governors, hedge fund managers, and assorted rock stars hold their annual confab high in the Alps at Davos, Switzerland.
When I was a director of one of the largest banks in Switzerland, I found myself a frequent visitor to Davos. The conference is one of those things that you only want to do once. More than that is too boring.
In years gone by, we provided the loans to the Canton of Graubünden needed to build the lifts and gondolas in Davos to develop it into a world-class ski resort and watering hole for the wealthy.
Without that money, Davos would have remained a small mountain hamlet on the way to long-established St. Moritz, possibly not even warranting its own train station.
Instead of renting out hotel suites for $10,000 a day, the residents would be filling their days cutting hay, milking cows, and making goat cheese. Generous government subsidies would keep the village in the green.
Thanks to our largess, I received a lifetime ski lift ticket there which I still use on occasion.
My friend, the intrepid New York Times reporter, Andrew Ross Sorkin, tells me that the minimum cost to attend the exclusive World Economic Forum for membership and a single ticket is $71,000, and that’s for the cheap tickets.
That just gets you general admission. If you hail from an up-and-coming emerging market, like China, you get a break on the price.
To join some of the private discussion groups, you need to upgrade to a $156,000 package. More exclusive access can be had for “Strategic Partners” for prices ranging up to $696,000 after the latest price increase and Swiss franc revaluation.
That does not include the cost of travel, meals, and accommodation, which are stratospheric, now that the Swiss franc is more valuable than the US dollar (I remember when it was 3:1). $75 for a hamburger? No problem!
All of this just to rub shoulders with hedge fund manager Ray Dalio, European Central Bank governor Christine Lagarde, rock star Bono, and others of their ilk.
Certainly, you can gain many of the insights found in Davos by simply reading the Mad Hedge Fund Trader, at a much lower price. I can get more information from the high and the mighty by chatting over the phone for five minutes rather than engaging in a media scrum in the mountains.
Do you suppose they still have a Youth Hostel in Davos? I think I left my sunglasses there….55 years ago!
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/davos.jpg240320april@madhedgefundtrader.comhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngapril@madhedgefundtrader.com2024-01-19 09:02:102024-01-19 10:25:49A Cheaper Way to do Davos
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