Featured Trade:
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or THE TOP FIVE TECHNOLOGY STOCKS OF 2023),
(RIVN), (ROM), (ARKK), (PANW), (CRM), (FXE), (FXY), (FXA), (LEN), (KBH), (DHI), (TLT), (UUP), (META), (TSLA), (BA), (JNK), (HYG), (BRKB), (USO)
The year 2022 has been driven by rising interest rates, a strong dollar, a weak economy, a bear market in stocks.
A massive reversal is about to take place. 2023 will gain the benefit of gale force macroeconomic tailwinds for the right stocks.
So far this year, Mad Hedge earned an astounding 77.20% profit cashing in on this year’s trends. We could earn the same return taking advantage of next year’s trends.
If you want to ride along on my coattails next year, that is fine with me. But it requires you to take a leap of faith.
I refer you to the motto of Britain’s Special Air Service: “Qui audet adipiscitur,” or “Who dares wins.”
For it only makes sense that the worst stocks of 2022 will be the best performers of 2023.
I have no doubt that tech stocks will bottom out sometime in 2023. Those who get in early will build some of the largest fortunes of this century. Those who miss the boat will spend their retirement years working at Taco Bell.
The reasons are very simple.
*Ultra-high interest rates will force a mild recession in early 2023. Then suddenly, inflation will plummet. We know this has already started because the largest element in the inflation calculation is housing costs, which are in free fall.
*The Fed will panic and deliver 2023 the sharpest DECLINE in interest rates in American history.
*Plunging interest rates will bring a crash in the US dollar.
*Foreign currencies like the Euro (FXE), the Japanese Yen (FXY), and the Australian dollar (FXA) will soar.
*And guess who gets the bulk of their earnings from abroad, sometimes up to two-thirds? The technology industry.
Kaching!
If you think I’m out of my mind, just look at the top performers of the historic stock market rally last week.
All the interest rate-sensitive sectors caught on fire. Technology stocks took off like a scalded cat, with Cathie Woods’ Ark Innovation Fund (ARKK) up an astounding 14% in a single day.
Bank shares soared. Homebuilders (LEN), (KBH), (DHI) caught a strong bid for the first time in ages. Junk bonds went bid only. US Treasury Bonds had their best day in 20 years (TLT), while the greenback (UUP) had its worst.
The bottom line here is so clear that I’ll write it on a wall for you. Falling interest rates will be the primary driver of stock prices for 2023 and 2024.
Of course, there is a better way to play this than buying the first technology index you stumble across.
So, let me boil this strategy down to just five names, close your eyes, and buy them.
Rivian (RIVN)– ($34) - Rivian is widely believed to be the next Tesla (TSLA). Some 25% owned by its largest customer, Amazon (AMZN), Rivian produces three types of EVs: the R1T pickup truck, the R1S SUV, and Amazon's EDV (electric delivery van). Its R1 vehicles start at under $70,000 and can travel more than 300 miles on a single charge. To learn more about Rivian, please click here.
To say that Rivian is the hot car of the day would be a vast understatement. New cars are trading for double list on the grey market. Owners complain of getting mobbed with gawkers whenever they hit the beach or the ski slopes. The buzz has led to an outstanding order book of an impressive 98,000, or four years of current production. The obvious cool factor allows enormous pricing power.
And here is the key to buying Rivian at this time. At 25,000, it is right at the mass production point where Tesla shares went ballistic all those years ago. And it already has an 80% decline in the price, in the rear-view mirror.
In 2024, Rivian plans to open its second plant in Georgia. After it fully expands its Illinois plant, it expects its annual production capacity to reach 600,000 vehicles.
Inflation Reduction Act passed this summer greatly accelerated rollout of the entire EV industry, which created a $7,500 per vehicle tax credit on top of state benefits.
Yes, this company offers venture capital-type risks. But it offers venture capital-type returns as well, up 10X-50X from here.
Ark Innovation Fund (ARKK) – ($40) – Cathie Woods’ high-tech fund was the proverbial red-headed stepchild of this bear market. It fell a gut-punching 80% from the 2021 top until last week. Just to get back to its old high, likely over the next five years, it has to rise by 400%. Its largest holdings are a real rollcall of the severely abused, Tesla (TSLA), Roku (ROKU), Exact Sciences (EXAS), Intellia (INTL), and Teladoc Health (TDOC), which Woods actively trades. But they are also a valuable insight into the future, EVs, CRISPR technology, robotic surgery, and molecular diagnostics. To learn more about the Ark Innovation Fund, please click here.
ProShares Ultra Technology ETF (ROM) – ($27) – This is a 2X long technology ETF that gives you an extremely aggressive position across the tech sector. It has 19% of its holdings in Apple (AAPL), 16% in Microsoft (MSFT), 10% in Alphabet (GOOGL) and Google (GOOG), at 3.5% in NVIDIA (NVDA), and 120 other smaller names. (ROM) shares are down a breathtaking 67% just in the past year. To learn more about the (ROM), please click here.
Palo Alto Networks (PANW) - $165 – Hacking is one of the fastest-growing sectors in technology, it is recession-proof and immune to the economic cycle. As a result, spending on the defense against hacking is absolutely exploding. Palo Alto Networks, Inc. is an American multinational cybersecurity company with headquarters in Santa Clara, California. Its core products are a platform that includes advanced firewalls and cloud-based offerings that extend those firewalls to cover other aspects of security. I have already earned a tenfold return over the past decade and expect to make another 10X in the coming years. You won’t find any dips in this stock as too many people are trying to get into it. To learn more about the Palo Alto Networks, please click here.
Salesforce (CRM) - $157 – The baby of tech genius Mark Benioff, this company is the dominant player in customer relationship management. If you want to do any business in the cloud, and almost all big companies do, you are up to your eyeballs in customer relationship management. Salesforce is the largest San Francisco-based cloud-oriented software company with virtually all of the Fortune 500 as its customer list. It provides customer relationship management software and applications focused on sales, customer service, marketing automation, analytics, and application development. Salesforce shares have been the target of a haymaker, down 55% in a year. To learn more about Salesforce, please click here.
You know what? I can do better than this.
I can create customized options LEAPS for you that will deliver a tenfold return on whatever performance these ultra-high beta stocks deliver. If the shares of one of my picks rise by 100%, you will make 1,000%.
This is an investment strategy that will enable you to retire early, real early. Tired of punching a time clock or logging into the next Zoom meeting on time?
Those will become a distant memory if you pursue my Mad Hedge Investment strategy for 2023.
As a result, my November month-to-date performance went off to the races, already achieving a hot +2.20%.
That leaves me with a very rare 100% cash position. With midterm election results out on Wednesday and the next report on the Consumer Price Index on Thursday, that sounds like a prudent place to be.
My 2022 year-to-date performance ballooned to +77.57%, a new high. The Dow Average is down -11.85% so far in 2022.
It is the greatest outperformance on an index since Mad Hedge Fund Trader started 14 years ago. My trailing one-year return maintains a sky-high +75.53%.
That brings my 14-year total return to +590.13%, some 2.86 times the S&P 500 (SPX) over the same period and a new all-time high. My average annualized return has ratcheted up to +49.51%, easily the highest in the industry.
Bonds Clock Best Day in Years, taking the ten-year US Treasury bond fund up $3.64. All low interest rate plays had monster days. Junk bond ETFs (JNK) and (HYG) were up two points. 30-year fixed rate mortgages dropped 60 basis points to 6.60%, the biggest drop in history. Long bonds will be THE big trade of 2023.
US Dollar has Worst Day in 20 Years, driven by plunging interest rates. Big tech, which gets a major share from overseas sales, rocketed. Apple alone was up $12. Cathy Wood’s Ark Innovation Fund (ARKK) was up an incredible 14%. It vindicates my view that tech will turn when interest rates and the dollar fall.
Oil Companies (USO) Book Record $200 Million Profit this year, using the Ukraine War to double your cost of gasoline. If we have a recession next year, or the war ends, energy share prices should be peaking around here. Even if they don’t, the risk-reward here is terrible. It means we will have to pay a much higher price to decarbonize the economy at a later date.
Wells Fargo Gets Hit with $1 Billion Fine for its many regulatory transgressions over the last decade. Looting of customer accounts with bogus fees has been a recurring problem. Use any selloffs to buy (WFC) on dips.
Berkshire Hathaway's 20% Profit Increase YOY and buys back another $1 billion worth of stock. However, they did take a $10 billion loss on stocks in Q3 during the market meltdown. Keep buying (BRKB) stock and LEAPS on dips.
$1.5 trillion in Homeowners Equity Lost Since May, thanks to interest rates at 20-year high and a shrinking money supply. Since July, the median home price has dropped by $11,560. The average borrower has lost $30,000 in equity. It’s not a great time to rent either as prices there are soaring. Residential housing could remain weak for another 12-24 months, compared to the six-year drawdown we had from 2006.
Boeing Orders Rise in October, but deliveries fall. The company is finally out of the penalty box, up 40% since October 1. Don’t buy (BA) up here.
The Red Wave Fails to Show, with control of congress still too close to call. Republican House control has shrunk from an expected 60 seats six months ago to maybe two today. Donald Trump threw the election for his party, picking unelectable extremist candidates and campaigning where he wasn’t wanted. A pro-life Supreme Court brought out millions of women voters across the country. If the Republicans can’t win with inflation at 8.7%, they are toast in 2024 when it drops back down to 2%.
Market Dives 646 Points on Democratic Win, with technology stocks taking the biggest hit. The red wave no-show was a black swan traders were not looking for. Energy was the worst performing sector because they aren’t getting the air cover they paid for with a red wave. The result was much as I expected, which is why I went into November 8 with a rare 100% cash position waiting to buy the next low. It turns out that rights are more important than prices.
Elon Musk Sells More Tesla Shares and Warns of a Twitter Bankruptcy, some $3.9 billion worth, bringing this year’s total to $36 billion. Musk is raising money to head off a bankruptcy of Twitter now that major advertisers are fleeing en masse. This certainly is a distress sale. If Musk was looking to build a real business, re-tweeting fringe conspiracy theories was the worst thing he could have done. Endorsing the Republican party will cost him half of his customers. Is this Musk’s Waterloo, or his Dien Bien Phu?
Facebook to Lay Off 11,000, about 13% of its total employees. Zuckerberg admits the error of pushing the company into the metaverse too far too fast. With the stock down 77%, there are not a lot of happy campers at One Hacker Way. Avoid (META) for now, but it may be a 2023 play when we get closer to a new final product.
FTX Becomes an Epic Bankruptcy, with $9.5 billion missing from its balance sheet, in one of the biggest blowups of the crypto age. Losses are expected to reach $50-$60 billion, with the bankruptcy of 130 affiliated companies. It is also a potential Dept of Justice target. All affiliated tokens and coins have gone to zero. So, placing your money with a fresh-faced kid in the Bahamas wearing baggy shorts and with no financial background was not such a great idea after all. It’s amazing how many serious people were sucked in on this one. At least Sam Bankman-Fried said he was sorry.
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. With the economy decarbonizing and technology hyper-accelerating, there will be no reason not to. The Dow Average will rise by 800% to 240,000 or more in the coming decade. The America coming out the other side will be far more efficient and profitable than the old. Dow 240,000 here we come!
On Monday, November 14 at 8:00 AM, the Consumer Inflation Expectations for October are released.
On Tuesday, November 15 at 8:30 AM, the Producer Price Index for October is released.
On Wednesday, November 16 at 8:30 AM, Retail Sales for October are published.
On Thursday, November 17 at 8:30 AM, Weekly Jobless Claims are announced. Housing Starts and Permits for October are also out.
On Friday, November 18 at 10:00 AM, the Housing Starts for October are printed. At 2:00 the Baker Hughes Oil Rig Count is out.
As for me, I am often told that I am the most interesting man people ever met, sometimes daily. I had the good fortune to know someone far more interesting than myself.
When I was 14, I decided to start earning merit badges if I was ever going to become an Eagle Scout. I decided to start with an easy one, Reading Merit Badge, where you only had to read four books and write one review.
I was directed to Kent Cullers, a high school kid who had been blind since birth. During the late 1940s, the medical community thought it would be a great idea to give newborns pure oxygen. It was months before it was discovered that the procedure caused the clouding of corneas and total blindness. Kent was one of these kids.
It turned out that everyone in the troop already had Reading Merit Badge and that Kent had exhausted our supply of readers. Fresh meat was needed.
So, I rode my bicycle over to Kent’s house and started reading. It was all science fiction. America’s Space Program had ignited a science fiction boom and writers like Isaac Asimov, Jules Verne, Arthur C. Clark, and H.G. Welles were in huge demand. Star Trek came out the following year, in 1966. That was the year I became an Eagle Scout.
It only took a week for me to blow through the first four books. In the end, I read hundreds to Kent. Kent didn’t just listen to me read. He explained the implications of what I was reading (got to watch out for those non-carbon-based life forms).
Having listened to thousands of books on the subject, Kent gave me a first class education and I credit him with moving me towards a career in science. Kent is also the reason why I got an 800 SAT score in math.
When we got tired of reading, we played around with Kent’s radio. His dad was a physicist and had bought him a state-of-the-art high-powered short-wave radio. I always found Kent’s house from the 50-foot-tall radio antenna.
That led to another merit badge, one for Radio, where I had to transmit in Morse Code at five words a minute. Kent could do 50. On the badge below the Morse Code says “BSA.” In those days, when you made a new contact, you traded addresses and sent each other postcards.
Kent had postcards with colorful call signs from more than 100 countries plastered all over his wall. One of our regular correspondents was the president of the Palo Alto High School Radio Club, Steve Wozniak, who later went on to co-found Apple (AAPL) with Steve Jobs.
It was a sad day in 1999 when the US Navy retired Morse Code and replaced it with satellites. However, it is still used as beacon identifiers at US airfields.
Kent’s great ambition was to become an astronomer. I asked how he would become an astronomer when he couldn’t see anything. He responded that Galileo, the inventor of the telescope, was blind in his later years.
I replied, “good point”.
Kent went on to get a PhD in Physics from UC Berkely, no mean accomplishment. He lobbied heavily for the creation of SETI, or the Search for Extra Terrestrial Intelligence, once an arm of NASA. He became its first director in 1985 and worked there for 20 years.
In the 1987 movie Contact written by Carl Sagan and starring Jodie Foster, Kent’s character is played by Matthew McConaughey. The movie was filmed at the Very Large Array in western New Mexico. The algorithms Kent developed there are still in widespread use today.
Out here in the west aliens are a big deal, ever since that weather balloon crashed in Roswell, New Mexico in 1947. In fact, it was a spy balloon meant to overfly and photograph Russia, but it blew back on the US, thus its top secret status.
When people learn I used to work at Area 51, I am constantly asked if I have seen any spaceships. The road there, Nevada State Route 375, is called the Extra Terrestrial Highway. Who says we don’t have a sense of humor in Nevada?
After devoting his entire life to searching, Kent gave me the inside story on searching for aliens. We will never meet them but we will talk to them. That’s because the acceleration needed to get to a high enough speed to reach outer space would tear apart a human body. On the other hand, radio waves travel effortlessly at the speed of light.
Sadly, Kent passed away in 2021 at the age of 72. Kent, ever the optimist, had his body cryogenically frozen in Hawaii where he will remain until the technology evolves to wake him up. Minor planet 35056 Cullers is named in his honor.
There are no movies being made about my life…. yet. But there are a couple of scripts out there under development.
Watch this space.
Stay healthy,
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/boy-scouts.png625418Mad Hedge Fund Traderhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMad Hedge Fund Trader2022-11-14 10:02:212022-11-14 11:26:31The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or The Top Five Technology Stocks of 2023
Tech growth is a sub-sector that readers really need to stay away from right now.
It’s toxic for the time being.
We are still right in the middle of the Fed Funds rate hike cycle and the pounding has been relentless with former tech darlings breaking records for lower lows.
The poster child for the excesses in tech growth is Cathie Wood who is the CEO of ARK (ARKK) innovation funds.
She has completely ignored “market timing” and has used every brash sell-off to go big without doing much research.
This strategy has proven to be highly unsuccessful, as many of her top holdings like Tesla are again in free fall.
CEO of Tesla Elon Musk just sold $4 billion of stock to divert into his new company Twitter which lost a massive amount of advertising revenue when he took over.
Yesterday, crypto experienced an unbelievable meltdown when the 2nd largest exchange FTX once valued around $35 billion was and still is on the brink of bankruptcy.
The same day Wood bet the ranch on crypto exchange Coinbase (COIN) adding 420,949 shares of COIN to the current 7.7 million that ARK Investment Management currently holds.
Bitcoin is down 13% at the time of this writing, representing yet another giant flop for Wood.
Wood is performing highly risky moves at the peak of turmoil in an industry that many think is a Ponzi scheme.
Her exploits are so infamous that it now has an inverse ETF that tracks the opposite of what she decides and performance has been stellar.
That ETF, called AXS Short Innovation Daily ETF (SARK), has soared more than 111% since launching a year ago. That’s the second best performance among the nearly 450 ETFs that launched over the past year.
Wood’s second biggest position is ad tech firm Roku (ROKU) which has gone from $460 to $48 today.
SARK’s first-year performance is among the 20 best of all-time measured against funds that are still trading.
Wood’s poor performance represents the pitfalls of choosing an investment adviser when they are one-dimensional and unable to acknowledge initial mistakes.
Instead of adjusting a flawed strategy, she has used it as the impetus to double down on a bad strategy.
The best hedge fund managers know when they are wrong and quickly reverse course or cut their losses.
Wood’s failures are quickly dealt with by blaming others, routinely saying that others “don’t do their research.”
Wood’s propensity to hype up tech like there is no tomorrow is now directly working against her.
She views any and every selloff as a brilliant entry point while ignoring broader market fundamentals.
In short, the day Cathie Wood is bearish is the day to go big into tech shares, because there are likely no more incremental buyers willing to hold the bag.
Truth be told, the Nasdaq currently sits 35% down from its November 2021 peak a year on.
I would call that pretty good, considering we are deleveraging from the biggest man-made financial bubble that was ever created in financial markets.
The bubble has caused the US Federal government to shoulder more than $31 billion of government debt that needs to be serviced with constant interest payments.
The only reason why tech shares are down 35% is because every investor believes the US Central Bank will kick the can down the road and save corporate America when push comes to shove.
This is precisely why recent bear market rallies have been epic, and any scintilla of interest rate loosening talk is met with thunderous buying.
If investors were more scared of the Fed, tech shares would be down at least 60% by now.
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 Trader2022-11-09 15:02:522022-12-14 23:22:39Risky Business
Below please find subscribers’ Q&A for the October 5 Mad Hedge Fund Trader Global Strategy Webinar broadcast from Silicon Valley in California.
Q: Is the final low in, or could we retest yet again (SPY)?
A: We could retest yet again, but it’s very important to notice that the marginal new lows are very small. The low we had on Friday, the last day of September and Q3, was only 800 points lower than the low we had in June—you had to work 4 months just to get a new low of only 800 points. So I think that's the way it's going to go. If we do get new lows, it’ll be incremental new lows—we’re not crashing to 3,000 or anything like that.
Q: What do you think Tesla (TSLA) will bottom at in the short term?
A: $200 or $210. The Tesla deal is a disaster for Elon Musk. It will amount to a huge diversion of management time; he’s going to be facing regulatory hurdles, and even though he said we’re going ahead for the deal, a lot of people still don’t believe it because the financing for the deal may have vaporized in the massive increase in interest rates that has occurred since February. So, there are still a lot of non-believers in this deal. I’d rather have him making solar panels, electric cars and launching rockets, not getting into the social media morass and taking over a broken company. The shareholders clearly don’t like it either, taking the shares down $30 in two days. By the way, if you look at the charts, you notice that people were front-running the Twitter deal by dumping Tesla stock the day before. So yes, it kind of peed on our Tesla parade for the short term; long term it keeps going up and the bad news is in the price.
A: No, not the long-term ones, just the short-term ones.
Q: Is it possible that bonds are bottoming here, even if we expect further Fed rate rises?
A: Yes, the Fed only has control of overnight rates, and those are rising. In fact, overnight rates are now higher than 10-year rates, and could go much higher still—that's called inversion of the yield curve. We’re almost certainly getting another 150-basis point rise in overnight rates. 10-year bonds or 20-year bonds could well stay around this level, or maybe just a little bit lower. So yes, the bond short is gone. It worked great for us for 2.5 years, we caught a 43% decline in the TLT, but it’s game over. Time to find other trades, like buying stocks.
Q: Does Elon Musk have to sell more Tesla to buy more Twitter?
A: That is the big question being asked today because he already sold $16 billion worth of stock in Tesla to cover the Twitter purchase this year. With the debt markets having fundamentally changed in the last 6 months, the question is: does he have to raise more equity (i.e. sell more Tesla), or can he bring in other equity investors? Hopefully, if he does have to sell more Tesla, it’s not very much—it’s a $44 billion deal and he’s already put $16 billion into it, so maybe he raises another $6 billion to get up to a 50% control level, which the market can easily handle in a day or two. He’s handled all of his past Tesla share sales fairly easily, and he tends to do these at market tops when demand for the shares is overwhelming. Longer term, the much greater demand for selling Tesla shares will come from the equity raises he will need to do to build another six Tesla factories around the world. That could be anywhere from $400 billion to $800 billion, so that will be the much larger cash call, but those are years off at best.
Q: With so many big techs breaking down, how should we play the (ROM) (ProShares Ultra Technology ETF)?
A: From the long side is how you play it. But you really need these capitulation days, especially if you’re involved in 2X ETFs. There is a spectacular play setting up for the (ROM) because it’ll go from $24 (or whatever the final bottom is) to $100 in the next upcycle, so that is a great leverage play that you really want to get involved in.
Q: If I don’t have time to babysit my portfolio, am I better in LEAPS or physical stocks?
A: Well the LEAPS I’m putting out now have a 2 years 4 months expiration date, so you can literally just buy them and forget about them. On the other hand, if we don’t get an economic recovery in 2 years and 4 months, you’re better off buying stocks outright on 2:1 margin. You make less profit, but if we don’t get a recovery for 3, 4, 5 years, then you have no expiration problem with stocks, as opposed to with LEAPS. Now, there are ways to trade around your LEAPS, like financing the long and by shorting puts and getting in for zero, but that requires smaller positions because you have to maintain the margin for the short put side. So, if you want to play it safe, buy the stocks. You can even handle a lost decade with stocks, especially if their dividend pays. With LEAPS, you need a fairly immediate economic recovery, which we should get, especially if the Fed lowers interest rates next year, which it should.
Q: What is your view on the US dollar (UUP)?
A: The dollar seems close to peaking right around here. It will peak on the last day that the Fed raises interest rates, which could be on December 14th. In fact, they may not even wait until then. Depending on the inflation rate, they could only do a quarter or a half-point rate rise in December, thus giving the market their signal that way. Or not do it at all, and the sudden selloff that we had in the dollar, and the stabilization of bonds we had last week is telling you that’s on the table as a possibility. So, we saw really important moves for long-term trend considerations in the markets since last week.
Q: Time for Palantir (PLTR)?
A: No, because the CEO doesn’t give a damn about his stock, and the stock reacts accordingly. I gave up on Palantir for that reason.
Q: How do you see the Ukraine/Russia situation developing?
A: It drags on for another year, Russia keeps losing and throwing men into the meat grinder until Putin gets removed, which should happen next year at which point oil prices collapse. That may be why he blew up the Nordstream One pipeline, to tie the hands of a future Russian government.
Q: Is it safe to buy 30-day Treasury bills in November going into the next F1C meeting?
A: Yes, because they essentially have no risk—that’s basically a cash type investment. And if your broker goes bust you can just force them to hand over your Treasury bonds and not get tied up in any three-year bankruptcy proceeding. It’s an asset, not cash.
Q: Will it be time to buy LEAPS on the next market selloff?
A: Absolutely, yes.
Q: Do you believe Putin would use nukes?
A: No I don’t, because the radioactive cloud would fall back on him immediately. There are very few people who are both stock market experts and nuclear weapons experts; I happen to be one of those—probably the only one in the world in fact—because of my time spent with the atomic energy commission at the Nuclear Test Site in Nevada. The problem with bombing your next-door neighbor with nukes is that the nuclear fallout comes right back on you the next day. Most of Russia’s nukes don’t even work, they only have a handful that actually does, and if he does use one, I bet it would be a tiny one just to demonstrate that he has a working nuke—like just a one-megaton one as opposed to Hiroshima which was 20 kilotons. Or he could drop it in the Black Sea or do an above-ground test at their old nuclear test site that wouldn’t kill anyone, just to show that he has working nukes. I don’t think he will, because we would react in kind in twice the size.
Q: Time to buy ARK Innovation ETF (ARKK)?
A: You might start with a small starter position, just to get it into your portfolio so you remember to buy it on the next dip. Cathy Woods’s leverage in this fund is tremendous. You really want to own it at a market bottom, but picking the actual bottom is going to be tough. One way to achieve this is to just go out and buy Tesla—that way you don’t have to pay the management fee—or buy the top 5 holdings in ARK directly, which includes Roku (ROKU) among others. So yes, I’m watching it; I prefer buying things on the way up and missing the first 10% than to catch a falling knife, and boy has this thing been a falling knife this year.
Q: Do you like biotech here?
A: Absolutely; please subscribe to the Mad Hedge Biotech Letter for biotech recommendations plus LEAPS on biotech plays by clicking here.
Q: Energy is still the best sector now?
A: Yes, but for how long? You don’t want to be left standing when the music stops playing, and that is imminent in the oil industry. It will be illegal to sell gasoline cars in California after 2035, and gas makes up half the oil use in the US.
Q: Did you know that oil reserves (USO) are the lowest since 1984?
A: Yes, I think you may have read that in my newsletter, and that’s because of Biden’s efforts to reduce US gasoline prices through a million barrel per day release from the strategic petroleum reserves in Texas and Louisiana. If we are a net energy producer, why do we even have reserves? It’s an out-of-date holdover from the Cold War.
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
ARK Innovation ETF (ARKK) and its infamous CEO Cathie Wood was the poster boy for tech growth as the 10-year bull market in technology shifted into high gear.
That was then and this is now.
Oh, how one full year makes a world of difference in the tech universe.
ARKK is not touted anymore as the tech fund that could do no wrong.
We, as investors, cannot recreate the world we desire by a click of a button but must roll with the punches and embrace a paradigm shift into a new normal of economic uncertainty, stagnation, de-globalization, supply chain bottlenecks, weak emerging currencies, and most important, higher interest rates.
It just so happens that the best trade out there all along has been long the US dollar to the detriment of tech stocks. Tech usually does well when the US dollar is weak.
ARK’s underperformance is finally creating a change as Wood is relinquishing her role as portfolio at 3D Printing ETF (PRNT) and ARK Israel Innovative Technology ETF (IZRL).
Recent criticism has been fierce accusing the fund of being a one-woman show with much of the hopes and dreams pinned on Wood.
Much of this has to do with her earlier success in Tesla (TSLA) which I would like to give her credit for.
However, since then, she has ridden the coattails of popularity to become a tech growth evangelist no matter what conditions.
She has often cut a polarizing figure in the world of tech investing.
ARK’s centralization of management could prove to be their downfall.
The demotion for Wood won’t be taken lightly and this also could be a way to throw the next guy under the bus as tech stocks go from bad to worse.
There have been headscratchers lately.
ARKK bought more of Zoom Video Communications Inc. (ZM) last month and I find that more of a beggar’s belief than anything else.
A pandemic darling shouldn’t be confused with a small company with no competitive advantages against big tech.
Another bizarre decision was to buy Ginkgo Bioworks Holdings Inc. (DNA), which has fallen 69% this year. The company invests in early-stage biotech companies and has lost around $1.5 billion in the first half of 2022. The company in 2021 lost $1.8 billion as well, but Wood continues to pour capital into this start-up.
The Nasdaq is now rescinding the premium they used to generously deliver for loss-making companies but fast-growing companies.
Woods hypers herself up as investing in disruptive tech, but many of her companies aren’t that disruptive and she is not aware of market cycles or market timing.
For the past year, she has proved that she is a specialist in being wrong.
ARKK needs to be careful of a meltdown instead of flashing the cash on pandemic darlings because they are cheap today.
There is a reason that many of these speculative tech firms are now cheap, it’s because they aren’t growing enough or making enough money. She still doesn’t understand that.
Expect more demotions for Wood as her pixie dust has run dry.
Buy the inverse of ARKK called AXS Short Innovation Daily ETF (SARK) after bear market rallies.
https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png00Mad Hedge Fund Traderhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMad Hedge Fund Trader2022-09-26 15:02:282022-09-29 00:10:17Darling to Demoted
CEO of Ark Invest and infamous creator of the ARK Innovation ETF (ARKK) Cathie Wood defiantly said that “innovation solves problems, and the world is facing many more problems today than two years ago. Innovation is key to real growth!”
She likes to keep on banging on about innovation being the panacea to the tech industry when the big tech titans are doing absolutely zilch regarding innovation.
Offering new personalized lock screen designs doesn’t move the needle, but that doesn’t mean that tech stocks ($COMPQ) will go down and shareholders will lose money.
Quite the opposite for the tech cash cow business models.
She later goes on to complain that “The Fed seems to be responding to COVID-related supply shocks spanning 15 months the same way that Volcker battled inflation that had been brewing and building for 15 years. I would not be surprised to see a significant policy pivot in the next three to six months.”
First, Fed Central Bank governor Jerome Powell is nowhere close to the Volker era which saw short-term U.S. interest rates raised to 20% in 1981.
Powell is the antithesis of former Fed chair Paul Volcker and that’s why these bear market rallies are strong and lasting.
Powell wants a “soft landing” – that’s his goal.
The Fed has continuously said they aren’t ready to pivot and by pivot, I mean going from raising rates to lowering rates.
Wood believes that raising rates does nothing to help supply side shocks and that the Fed should start to condition itself to soon lower rates.
The Fed deals solely participates in demand-side policies.
The Fed is on record saying they plan to raise Fed Funds rates to 4% by the end of 2023 and keep rates there for an extended period.
That timeline seems to clash with Wood’s idea of dropping rates in 3 months.
The reason Wood has little credibility is because she has been saying the economy is experiencing deflation every 2 weeks for the past 3 years.
She has the most to lose because her portfolio possesses speculative tech stocks that mostly execute unprofitable business models and need low rates to refinance their large debts just to survive.
She continued to say that the Fed should be looking at metrics like “gold and copper” which “are flagging the risk of deflation.”
It’s quite bizarre that gold would be selected as the leading indicator for monetary policy.
Last time I checked, people can’t eat or drink gold and gold doesn’t heat your shower or apartment, even if you can install golden toilets like Russian President Vladimir Putin. Consumers can’t drive gold either. Higher or lower gold prices don’t indicate that our discretionary budgets are crashing or bulging either.
She also says to completely ignore employment because it’s a “lagging indicator.” This last sentence is false as well as it seems she is confusing this with the unemployment rate being a lagging indicator.
Unfortunately for Wood, the Fed slowly raising rates means it will be longer until they lower them because rates are still highly accommodative.
The silver lining for Wood is that the Fed is more worried about breaking the stock market which could evaporate trillions of dollars in stock market wealth.
Bear market rallies are essential for a soft landing, and we are seeing them in full force.
The last thing investors need is a crashing stock market and impotent tech companies. Remember that Silicon Valley and the tech industry are still the drivers of the US economy.
The Fed will do what they need to do to engineer the result of a soft landing regardless of Cathie Wood.
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 Trader2022-09-12 15:02:022022-10-03 02:56:49Cathie Wood Urges Action
Legal Disclaimer
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.
We may request cookies to be set on your device. We use cookies to let us know when you visit our websites, how you interact with us, to enrich your user experience, and to customize your relationship with our website.
Click on the different category headings to find out more. You can also change some of your preferences. Note that blocking some types of cookies may impact your experience on our websites and the services we are able to offer.
Essential Website Cookies
These cookies are strictly necessary to provide you with services available through our website and to use some of its features.
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.
Google Analytics Cookies
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:
Other external services
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.