Below, please find subscribers’ Q&A for the December 11 Mad Hedge Fund Trader Global Strategy Webinar, broadcast from Lake Tahoe, Nevada.
Q: I was assigned options—called away on both my short-call positions in BlackRock (BLK) and Bank of America (BAC).
A: What you do there is call your broker and exercise your long to cover your short; that should get you 100% of the profit 10 days ahead of expiration, and that is the best way to get out of that position. If you get hit with the dividend, then you're at break-even on the total trade. The way to get around this is you have 10 positions, including several non-dividend paying positions, so you don't have a call-away risk. You really only have about a 1 in 100 chance to get called away, so it's worth doing. If the worst case is you break even, the best case is you make 15% or 20% on the position in a month. That is worth doing.
Q: What do you think of the situation in Syria?
A: We don't know. For us, it's a huge win because it eliminates the last Russian position in the Middle East. They have lost Egypt, Syria, Iraq, and at one point Algeria—so they have no more positions in the Middle East. They lose all their air bases, military bases, and naval bases in Syria, and they also lose their only warm water port in the Mediterranean. It happened because they couldn't afford to draw troops away from Ukraine to help support Syria. Given the choice between Syria and Ukraine, they'll pick Ukraine. It is another argument for the US to maintain support for Ukraine.
The trouble is in the Middle East, whenever you get a chance, you often end up getting somebody else that's worse. Did we just trade one terrorist for another one? We'll have to wait and see. Fortunately, this war didn't cost us any money. It cost Russia a lot. We had no troops in Syria and no weapons commitments, so we got off easily on this one. It’s probably the most important foreign policy achievement of the last four years.
In the meantime, we're destroying all their weapons stockpiles, just in case the new people coming in are bad guys. We'd rather not wait until after they identify themselves as bad guys—we might as well destroy all the weapons now while nobody is defending them. So, as I speak, we're destroying weapons stockpiles for its ships and rocket facilities. Also, this is a huge loss for Iran because they lose easy sea access to Gaza. They used to just truck weapons to the coast in Lebanon, put them on a boat, and send them to Gaza. Now, they have to go all the way around Africa to supply Gaza. So basically it's a huge win for us, and I'll write more about that in the Monday letter.
Q: Do the spread positions need to be actively closed out to achieve profits?
A: No, they don't. You don't have to touch them. That's the beauty of these positions. All ten I expect to expire in the money at maximum profit point, and on the following Monday morning opening, you will find that the margin is freed up, the cash profit is credited to your account, and you're in a 100% cash position. So don't do anything, even if your broker will tell you to individually buy and sell the individual legs and wipe out your profit. I sent out a research piece on this today about how to handle when calls are called away.
Q: I sold BlackRock (BLK) last week because Schwab called and warned me I could owe $6,000 due to the dividend. They did not suggest I close my long position.
A: Again, it goes back to how to handle option call-aways. The only reason they call you is to eliminate any liability for Charles Schwab because, in the past, people would get options called away, they'd say my broker never told me, and they sued the broker. So, the reason they emailed you and called you with warnings is to avoid liability for themselves. In actual fact, only 1 out of 100 different options actually get called away. It's done randomly by a computer, and you're far better off holding the position. And then, if you do get called away, use your long to exercise your short. It's a perfectly hedged position, so you have no actual outright risk. The only real risk is if you don't check your email every day and you don't know you've been called away, so you don't call your broker to exercise your long to cover your short.
Q: Do you envision other countries trending towards more tariffs? How would that affect global growth?
A: Any time we raise a tariff on another country, they're going to raise by an equal amount, and it becomes a perfect growth destruction machine. That's why every economic agency in the world is predicting lower growth for next year.
Q: Why are stocks so expensive? Can the high prices be an impediment for new investors to participate or not?
A: It's obviously not an impediment because we're at an all-time high, and we keep going to new all-time highs. Most investors, not just a few, are still underweight stocks, and they're chasing the market. I predicted this would happen all year basically, and now it's happening, and we're 100% invested in making a fortune. So that's what happens when you make big predictions far into the future, and they happen.
Q: What do you think about meme stocks like GameStop (GME)?
A: Don't bother with the meme stocks like GameStop when the good stuff like Tesla (TSLA), Meta (META), and Amazon (AMZN) are going up like a rocket. Why buy the garbage when the high-quality stuff is doing well? And, of course, most of the people buying that stuff, the meme stocks, are kids who don't know what the good stuff is, but they'll find out someday.
Q: If you like Japanese cars, what do you think of Korean cars and, therefore, those companies’ stocks?
A: I don't like them. When you take your Tesla in for a service, sometimes you get a KIA in return. Ouch. You can literally hear every bolt rattle as you drive down the freeway, and you leave behind a trail of parts; the quality difference is enormous.
Q: How do you determine the limit price on spread trades?
A: I don't like making less than a 5% profit in a month. It's just not worth the risk. So let's say if I do a trade alert at $9.00, I'll create a spread of, say, $9.00, $9.10, $9.20, $9.30, $9.40, and that's it. We tell people to not pay more than $9.40. Before we told people not to do that, they used to buy at market, and they would end up paying $10.00 for a $10.00 spread, and it is absolutely not worth it. That is the reason we do that.
Q: Ihave trouble getting your recommended price.
A: When we put out a trade alert, and 6,000 people are trying to do it at once, you'll never get the recommended price. You may get it at the close because a lot of the high-frequency traders that pile into these positions and pay the maximum price have to be out of that position by the end of the day, so they often dump their positions at the close. And if you just leave your limit order in there, it'll get filled. If it doesn't get filled at the close, it will get filled at the opening the next morning. So that's why I'm telling people on every alert now to put in a spread, put in good-until-cancelled orders, and most of the time, you'll get some or all of those orders done. That is a good way to make money; if you don't believe me, just go to our testimonials page (click here), where hundreds of people have sent in recommendations on their experience.
Q: What do you think about crypto here (BITO)?
A: I wouldn't touch it with a 10-foot pole. The time to get involved in crypto was when it was at $6,000 two years ago, not at $100,000 now. And when the quality is trading and rising up almost every day, why bother with crypto? You'd never know if your custodian is going to steal your position. And by the way, if anyone knows an attorney expert at recovering stolen crypto, please send me their name because I have a few clients who took someone else's advice, invested in crypto, and had their accounts completely wiped out.
Q: Should I bet big on oil stocks (USO) because of the possible deregulation starting in 2025?
A: Absolutely not. “Drill, baby, drill” means oil glut—lower oil prices, which is terrible for oil companies, so you shouldn't touch them. The only plus for oil under the new administration is they'll probably refill the Strategic Petroleum Reserve in Texas and Louisiana from the current 425 million barrels to 700 million barrels by buying on the open market and enriching the oil companies.
Q: Would you sell long-term holds in pharma stocks?
A: No. If it's a long-term hold, your holding will survive the new administration. They'll probably go back up starting from a year going into the next election unless they find ways to deal with the current administration. But if you're in the vaccine business and the head of Health and Human Services is a lifetime anti-vaxxer, that is not going to be good for business, no matter how you cut it, sorry.
Q: Why is Walgreens (WBA) doing so poorly?
A: Terrible management and too late getting into online commerce. The service there is terrible. Every time I go to Walgreens to get a prescription filled, there's a line a mile long. It seems to be a dying company. Someone actually is making a takeover offer for the company today, so I would stand aside on that.
Q: Is Tesla (TSLA) risky?
A: Any stock that's tripled in four months is risky. But the rule of thumb with Tesla is that it always goes up more than you expect and then down more than you expect. Here is where high risk means high reward. My $1,000 target is now looking pretty good.
Q: If you're receiving Global Trading Dispatch, do you get the stock option service?
A: Yes, every trade alert we send out gives you the choice of a stock, an ETF, or an option to buy to take advantage of that alert.
Q: The EV stock Lucid (LCID) just got an analyst upgrade, but the chart looks terrible. Should I buy this cheap stock?
A: Absolutely not. Never confuse “gone down a lot" with “cheap.” Lucid only exists because it's supported by the Saudi royal family. They own about 75% of the company. They have no chance of ever competing with Tesla. Period. End of story.
Q: I have LEAPS on Google (GOOG), Amazon (AMZN), and Microsoft (MSFT). They expire in January, February, and March.
A: I would keep all of those—those are all good stocks. I expect them to keep rising at least until January 20th. After that, the Trump administration may announce antitrust actions against all three of these companies, but you'll probably have most of your profit by then. So from here on, if I had longs in all of these companies, I would definitely run them over the holidays because you'll probably get another pop sometime in January.
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, 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 Good Trading.
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
For years, I have been predicting that a new Golden Age was setting up for America, a repeat of the Roaring Twenties. The response I received was that I was a permabull, a nut job, or a conman simply trying to sell more newsletters.
Now some strategists are finally starting to agree with me. They too are recognizing that a ganging up of three generations of investment preferences will combine to drive markets higher during the 2020s, much higher.
How high are we talking? How about a Dow Average of 240,000 by 2035, up another 515% from here? That is a 40-fold gain from the March 2009 bottom.
It’s all about demographics, which are creating an epic structural shortage of stocks. I’m talking about the 80 million Baby Boomers, 65 million from Generation X, and now 85 million Millennials. Add the three generations together and you end up with a staggering 230 million investors chasing stocks, the most in history, perhaps by a factor of two.
Oh, and by the way, the number of shares out there to buy is actually shrinking, thanks to a record $1 trillion or more in corporate stock buybacks for the past decade.
I’m not talking pie-in-the-sky stuff here. Such ballistic moves have happened many times in history. And I am not talking about the 17th-century tulip bubble. They have happened in my lifetime. From August 1982 until April 2000, the Dow Average rose, you guessed it, exactly 20 times, from 600 to 12,000, when the Dotcom bubble popped.
What have the Millennials been buying? I know many, like my kids, their friends, and the many new Millennials who have recently been subscribing to the Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader. Yes, it seems you can learn new tricks from an old dog. But they are a different kind of investor.
Like all of us, they buy companies they know, work for, and are comfortable with. During my dad’s generation that meant loading your portfolio with US Steel (X), IBM (IBM), and General Motors (GM).
For my generation, that meant buying Microsoft (MSFT), Intel (INTC), and Dell Computer (DELL).
For Millennials that means focusing on NVIDIA (NVDA), Netflix (NFLX), Amazon (AMZN), Meta (META), and Alphabet (GOOGL). Oh, and they like Bitcoin too (BITO).
That’s why the Magnificent Seven account for all of the past year’s monster gains.
There is another gale force tailwind pushing stocks up. The enormous profits created by artificial intelligence are essentially replacing the Federal Reserve as an unlimited source of liquidity. If you missed the quantitative easing and the free money of the 2010s, you get another pass at the brass ring. But you have heard me talk about this before so I won’t bore you.
There is one catch to this hyper-bullish scenario. Somewhere on the way to the next market apex at Dow 240,000, we need to squeeze in a recession. Bear markets in stocks historically precede recessions by an average of seven months. But for the time being, it looks like smooth sailing.
When I get a better read on precise dates and market levels, you’ll be the first to know.
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/john-thomas-snow.jpg285259april@madhedgefundtrader.comhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngapril@madhedgefundtrader.com2024-03-06 09:02:172024-03-06 10:09:22Why the Dow is Going to 240,000
Below please find subscribers’ Q&A for the December 15 Mad Hedge Fund Trader Global Strategy Webinar broadcast from the safety of Silicon Valley.
Q: With interest rates going up, would it make sense to short heavily indebted companies as a class?
A: Yes it does; those would be old-line industrials and auto companies with very heavy debts. Technology companies essentially have no debt unless they’re startups. So yeah, that’s a good idea; unless of course inflation is peaking right now, which it may be if you solve these supply chain problems, and it becomes evident that retailers overordered to beat the supply chain problems and now have a ton of excess inventory they can’t meet—then the inflation plays will crash. So, not a low-risk environment right now. No matter where you look, you’re screwed if you do, you’re screwed if you don't. So that is an issue to keep in mind.
Q: What do you think of Freeport McMoRan (FCX) short-term?
A: Short term, (FCX) only sees the Chinese (FXI) real estate crisis, which is getting worse before it gets better and could bring a complete halt to all known construction in China. The government is forcing the real estate companies there to run at losses in order to bring the bottom part of their society into the middle class with houses in third and fourth-tier cities. Long term, as annual electric car production goes from a million cars a year to 25 million cars a year and each car needs 200 lbs. of copper, we have to triple world production practically overnight to accommodate that. That can’t happen, therefore that means much higher prices. If you’re willing to take some pain, picking up freeport McMoRan in the low $30s has to be the trade of the century.
Q: Do you see a Christmas rally or a bigger correction?
A: Rally first. Once we get the Fed out of the way today, we could get our Christmas rally resumed and go to new highs by the end of the year. But, January is starting to look a little bit scary with all the unknowns going forward and massive long positions. January could be okay as hedge funds put positions back on in tech that they’re dumping right now. If they don’t show up…Houston, we might have a problem.
Q: Thoughts on the iShares 20 Plus Year Treasury Bond ETF (TLT) Dec 2022 $150-$155 vertical bear put spread?
A: Since I'm in low-risk mode, I would go up $5 or $10 points and not be greedy. Not being greedy is going to be one of the principal themes of 2022 therefore I’m recommending that people do the $160-$165 or even the $165-$170, which still gives you a 30% return in a year, and I think next year this will be seen as a fabulous return.
Q: What about the $100,000 target for Bitcoin (BITO) by the end of the year?
A: That’s off the table thanks to the Fed tightening and Omicron triggering a massive “RISK OFF” and flight to safety move. Non-yielding instruments tend not to do well during periods of rising interest rates, so gold along with crypto is getting crushed.
Q: What will happen in the case of a black swan event in early 2022, like Russia invading Ukraine?
A: Market impact for that would be a bad couple of days, a buying opportunity, and then you’d want to pile into stocks. Every geopolitical event that’s happened in the last 20 years has been a buying opportunity for stocks. Of course, I would feel bad for the Ukrainians, but it’s kind of like Florida seceding from the US, then the US invading Florida to take it back, and the rest of the world not really caring. Plus, it doesn’t help that their heavily nationalist post-coup government has some fascist tendencies. However, we could get global economic sanctions against Russia like an import/export embargo, which would hurt them and destroy their economy.
Q: Will the European natural gas shortage continue?
A: Yes because the Europeans are at the mercy of the Russians, who have all the gas and none of the economy. Therefore, they can export as much or as little as they want, depending on how much political control they’re trying to exert in Europe.
Q: Apple Inc. (AAPL) price target?
A: Well, my price target for next year was $200; we could hit that by the end of the year if we get a rally after the Fed meeting.
Q: 33% of the population is in collection status with personal debt, credit cards, etc—is that a harbinger of a 2008 crash?
A: No, it is a harbinger of excess liquidity, interest rates being too low, and lenders being too lax. However, we aren’t at the level where it could wipe out the entire economy like with defaulting on a third of all housing market debt in 2008.
Q: What should I do with my call spreads for Amazon.com, Inc. (AMZN)?
A: Well, November would have been a great sell. Down here, I’d be inclined to hold onto the spreads you have, looking for a yearend rally and a new year rally. But remember, with all these short-dated plays risk is rising, so keep that in mind.
Q: What do you think of AT&T Inc (T)?
A: The whole sector has just been treated horrifically; I don’t want to try to catch a falling knife here even though AT&T pays a 10% dividend.
Q: What about quad witching day?
A: Expect a battle by big hedge funds trying to push single stocks options just above or below strike prices. It’s totally unpredictable because of the rise of front-month trading, which is now 80% of all options trading with the participation of algorithms.
Q: Is the Alibaba Group Holding Limited (BABA) $230-$250 LEAP in June 2023 worth keeping?
A: I would say yes, I think the Chinese will come to their senses by then, and all the Chinese tech plays will double, but there’s no guarantee. That is still a high-risk trade.
Q: Does the US have an opportunity to export petroleum products?
A: The answer is yes, we are already a net energy exporter thanks to fracking. But, it is a multi-year infrastructure build-out to add foreign export destinations like Europe, which hasn’t bought our petroleum since WWII. Right now, almost all of our exports are going to Asia. No easy fixes here.
Q: Is Tesla Inc (TSLA) a buy at 935 down 300 in change?
A: Not yet; 45% seems to be the magic number for Tesla correction. We had one this year. And Elon Musk hasn’t quit selling yet, although I suspect he’ll end his selling by the end of the year because he’ll have met all his tax obligations for the year. He has to sell these options before they expire and are rendered useless. So that is what’s happening with Tesla, Elon Musk selling. And can you blame him? He almost worked himself to death making that company, time to spend some money and have a good time, like me.
Q: What if your Chinese company gets delisted?
A: Try to get out before it is delisted. Otherwise, the domicile moves to Hong Kong and you’ll have to sell equivalent shares there. I don’t know what the details of that are going to be, but the Chinese companies are trying to force companies to delist from the US and list in Hong Kong so they have complete control over what's going on. Also, I never liked these New York listings anyway because the disclosures were terrible, with Cayman Island PO Boxes and so on…
Q: Is the ProShares UltraShort 20+ Year Treasury (TBT) a good long-term position to hold?
A: It is to an extent—only if you expect any big moves up in interest rates, which I kind of am. This is because the cost of carry for (TBT) is quite high; you have to pay double the 10-year US Treasury rates, which is double 1.45% or about 2.90%, and then another management fee of 1%, so you have kind of a 4% a year headwind on that because of cost. Remember, if you’re short a bond, you’re short a coupon; if you’re double short a bond you’re short twice the coupon and you have to pay that and they take it out of the share price. But, if you’re expecting bonds to go down more than 4%, you’ll cover that and then some and I think bonds could drop 10-20% this year.
Q: What’s the difference between GBTC and BITO?
A: Nothing, both are Bitcoin plays that are tracking reasonably well. I prefer to go with the miners—the Bitcoin providers, that’s a selling-shovels-to-the-gold-miners play. They tend to have more volatility than the underlying Bitcoin, so that’s why I’m in (BLOK) and (MSTR) when I’m in it.
Q: What’s the best way to buy Crypto?
A: If you really want to buy Crypto directly, the really easy way is to go through one of the top crypto brokerage houses, and we’ve recommended several of those. Coinbase (COIN) is the one I’m in. It literally takes you five minutes to set up an account and you can instantly buy Bitcoin linked to your bank account.
Q: What are the fees like for Coinbase?
A: The fees at (COIN) are exorbitant only if you’re buying $10 worth of Bitcoin. If you’re buying like $1 million worth, they’re much, much smaller. But I recommend you start at $10 and work your way up as I did, and sooner or later you’ll be buying million-dollar chunks of Bitcoin which then double in three months, which happened to me this year.
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 ten years are there in all their glory.
Good Luck and Stay Healthy.
John Thomas CEO & Publisher The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
In the investment business, you’re only as good as your last trade. If that is the case, that makes me a pretty worthless person in the wake of a record four stop-losses at the November 19 option expiration.
Days before, the market closed with all ten of our positions profitable. But the pandemic lockdown in Austria on Friday morning shattered those plans. Fears of a new Covid wave and another mini-recession send bonds soaring and interest rates crashing. That trashed financial stocks, where I had a heavy exposure.
If you work in the business long enough, you see a black swan on an options expiration day every five or ten years. This was our turn. As a result, we traded a double-digit gain for November for a moderate loss. That still leaves us with a heroic 80% gain for 2021 and 15 consecutive profitable months.
There is nothing to do but pick yourself up, dust yourself off, and go on to the next trade. I wouldn’t be surprised to see all of the Friday losses reversed in the coming weeks. Banks are still outrageously profitable and the cheapest sector in the market. If you have a six-month to one-year view, the action on Friday changed nothing.
You live by the sword, you die by the sword.
There was a lot going on Friday than just another Covid wave. November option expirations used to be a snore. But this year, brokerage firms have stampeded so many retail investors into the options markets where they make the most money that they have become major events.
Some 70% of all options trading now takes place in securities with less than two weeks to expiration. In the meantime, professional traders limit their personal accounts to long term LEAPS which are the subject of the Mad Hedge Concierge Service. Instead of rolling the dice for a 10% profit in a month, you get a very safe 100% return in a year.
Of course, while financials were getting wrecked, falling interest rates were acting as a steroid for tech stocks. (MSFT) and Google (GOOG) hit new highs for the year. Concierge members in my (ROM) LEAPS were rolling in clover.
The barbell strategy wins again!
Infrastructure Bill is signed on Monday, injecting another $1.2 trillion into the economy today. This assured the economy will keep booming through 2024. The bond market hates it, down $6.00 in three days. It adds another 3% to GDP over the next five years. Keep selling (TLT) on rallies.
Bitcoin Forks for the first some since 2017, making it much more competitive with Ethereum. It enables the lead crypto to use defi and third party apps. Miner Marathon (MARA) is raising a $500 million bond issue to buy Bitcoin. Keep buying (BITO) and (ETHE) on dips.
US Retail Sales roar, up 1.7% in October compared to 0.8% in September, far more than expected. Receipts for all items are rising. Higher wages are immediately translating into increased spending.
Builder Sentiment jumps, up 3 points to 83, according to the National Association of Homebuilders. A decade-long structural shortage of housing is a huge tailwind. Good luck hiring a contractor right now. The Midwest and the south are the leaders in demand.
Dollar hits 16-Month High, on the strength of yesterday’s red hot Retail Sales. It means higher interest rates soon, which is great for the buck. Currencies with the fastest rising interest rates are always the strongest.
NVIDIA kills it, with revenues up 50% YOY and earnings up 60%. It’s well on the way to becoming the next trillion-dollar company. It’s another Mad Hedge 20 bagger. Buy (NVDA) on dips.
Biden may try an SPR Release to cap gasoline prices. There are 741 barrels in the Strategic Petroleum Reserve, enough for 21 days of US consumption. It’s sitting there costing money, essentially a government subsidiary for the energy industry. Why have it if the US is now a net energy exporter? The concern has been enough to drop oil prices by 10%.
Rents for single-family homes are up 10.2% YOY, and will continue to rise. Miami has the highest rent inflation in the country, and the highest-priced homes are seeing the fastest increases.
Weekly Jobless Claims drop to new post-pandemic low, to 268,000, just fractionally. There are 2 million continuing claims. The great resignation continues.
John Deere strike ends, with some of the best terms for workers in 40 years. It cost the company $2.5 billion. They get an immediate 10% raise and $7,500 bonus, larger out-year raises, and big performance bonuses. There is a lot of making up for 30 years of no real wage growth going on here. It points a loaded gun at the head of the “transitory” argument for inflation. Buy (DE) on dips.
My Ten-Year View
When we come out the other side of pandemic, we will be perfectly poised to launch into my new American Golden Age, or the next Roaring Twenties. With interest rates still at zero, oil cheap, there will be no reason not to. The Dow Average will rise by 800% to 240,000 or more in the coming decade. The American coming out the other side of the pandemic will be far more efficient and profitable than the old. Dow 240,000 here we come!
With the disastrous November options expiration, my November month-to-date performance plunged to -7.73%. My 2021 year-to-date performance took a haircut to 80.82%. The Dow Average is up 16.34% so far in 2021.
My entire portfolio expired on Friday, and I am 100% in cash. Of our ten positions, six made money and four lost. In addition, subscribers to the Mad Hedge Technology letter had another five winners, as tech stocks are still on a tear.
That brings my 12-year total return to 503.37%, some 2.00 times the S&P 500 (SPX) over the same period. My 12-year average annualized return has ratcheted up to 42.24%, easily the highest in the industry.
My trailing one-year return popped back to positively eye-popping 96.56%. I bet many of you are making the biggest money of your long lives.
We need to keep an eye on the number of US Coronavirus cases at 48 million and rising quickly and deaths topping 772,000, which you can find here at https://coronavirus.jhu.edu.
The coming week will be all about the inflation numbers.
On Monday, November 22 at 7:00 AM, Existing Homes Sales for October are released.
On Tuesday, November 23 at 6.45 AM, the Flash Manufacturing PMI is announced. On Wednesday, November 24 at 5:30 AM, US Q3 GDP second estimate is published. At 7:00 AM we get New Home Sales for October. Minutes from the last Fed meeting are printed at 2:00 PM.
On Thursday, November 25 markets are closed for Thanksgiving Day.
On Friday, November 26 at 2:00 PM, the Baker Hughes Oil Rig Count are disclosed.
As for me, when I was shopping for a Norwegian Fiord cruise for next summer, each stop was familiar to me because a close friend had blown up bridges in every one of them.
During the 1970s at the height of the Cold War, my late wife Kyoko flew a monthly round trip from Moscow to Tokyo as a British Airways stewardess. As she was checking out of her Moscow hotel, someone rushed at her and threw a bundled typed manuscript that hit her in the chest.
Seconds later a half dozen KGB agents dog-piled on top of her. It turned out that a dissident was trying to get Kyoko to smuggle a banned book to the West and she was arrested as a co-conspirator and bundled away to Lubyanka Prison.
I learned of this when the senior KGB agent for Japan contacted me, who had attended my wedding the year before. He said he could get her released, but only if I turned over a top-secret CIA analysis of the Russian oil industry.
At a loss for what to do, I went to the US Embassy to meet with ambassador Mike Mansfield, who as The Economist correspondent in Tokyo I knew well. He said he couldn’t help me as Kyoko was a Japanese national, but he knew someone who could. Then in walked William Colby, head of the CIA.
Colby was a legend in intelligence circles. After leading the French resistance with the OSS, he was parachuted into Norway with orders to disable the railway system. Hiding in the mountains during the day, he led a team of Norwegian freedom fighters who laid waste to the entire rail system from Tromso all the way down to Oslo. He thus bottled up 300,000 German troops, preventing them from retreating home to defend themselves from an allied invasion.
During the Vietnam war, Colby became notorious for running the Phoenix assassination program.
I asked Colby what to do about the Soviet request. He replied, “give it to them.” Taken aback, I asked how. He replied, “I’ll give you a copy.” Mansfield was my witness so I could never be arrested for being a turncoat. Copy in hand, I turned it over to my KGB friend, and Kyoko was released the next day and put on the next flight out of the country. She never took a Moscow flight again.
I learned that the report predicted that the Russian oil industry, its largest source of foreign exchange, was on the verge of collapse. Only massive investment in modern western drilling technology could save it. This prompted Russia to sign deals with American oil service companies worth hundreds of millions of dollars.
Ten years later, I ran into Colby at a Washington event, and I reminded him of the incident. He confided in me “You know that report was completely fake, don’t you?” I was stunned. The goal was to drive the Soviet Union to the bargaining table to dial down the Cold War. I was the unwitting middleman. It worked. That was Bill, always playing the long game.
After Colby retired, he campaigned for nuclear disarmament and gun control. He died in a canoe accident in the lake near his Maryland home in 1996.
Stay Healthy.
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/santa-monica-1966.png744476Mad Hedge Fund Traderhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMad Hedge Fund Trader2021-11-22 10:02:402021-11-22 13:54:45The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or The Worst-Case Scenario
If there was ever any doubt that the market was going straight up for the rest of the year, it was dashed when the infrastructure budget passed on late Friday night with bipartisan support. Another $1.2 trillion will be dumped into the economy next year, adding 6% to GDP growth.
Of course, the stock market started sniffing out this possibility and resumed racing yet again to new all-time highs on September 30.
The latest round of earnings reports proved that corporate profit margins are exploding, along with profits. Demand is through the roof. It turned out that demand WASN’T lost, just deferred, as I vociferously begged followers to buy stocks at the April 2020 bottom.
Interest rates went down instead of up sharply on news of the Fed taper.
And the 10% correction that many expected never showed, forcing managers to chase the market so they can be seen as fully invested in the right names at yearend. That means buying more Alphabet (GOOGL), Microsoft (MSFT), Goldman Sachs (GS), and Morgan Stanley (MS) at whatever price so managers can look like the brilliant people that they really AREN’T.
There is no doubt that the economic data is turning from mixed to red hot.
We will see a Capital spending renaissance in 2022 as the economy shifts from manufacturing to service-driven, and services account for 80% of US GDP. It’s a perfect formula for an economy that is catching on fire.
As for the missing 5 million workers, I think what we are seeing is a 9/11 effect. That’s when people become aware of the transitory nature of life and ask themselves why they are working at a job they hate, some 80% of the labor force, especially at the minimum wage level. They retrain for better-paying, more meaningful professions, retire early, or otherwise go missing in action.
There is another category of missing workers: those who have made so much in the stock market and Bitcoin in the last 18 months they never have to work another day in their life. Are there 5 million of them? Maybe.
And how come everybody in the world knows that interest rates are rising except the bond market? The United States Treasury Bond Fund (TLT) has seen two, count them, two massive three-point RALLIES in the last ten days. The (TLT) may give all this back this week when we get hot inflation data.
It is a positioning issue and a classic “buy the rumor, sell the news” on interest rates. When the entire world is short bonds, they can only go UP. This means we are likely to see a $141-$151 (TLT) range in bonds for the next six months until we start to see actual interest rate RISES. The Fed Tapers! The Fed taper starts immediately and will accelerate in 2022 until it goes to zero by June. Stocks took off, while bonds dove a $1.50 as soon as they noticed that “transitory” was missing from the release. Will the first interest rate hike in four years be moved up to June? Or do we get a double rate hike in December 2022? That’s where we may see the real volatility, after the market close. Semiconductor growth stocks hit new all-time highs. Financials moving back to highs, as are big tech stocks.
Q3 GDP comes in at a weak 2.0%, down from a 6% rate in Q2, thanks to the ravages of the delta virus, now in the rearview mirror. What happens next? That 4% wasn’t lost, just deferred into 2022. The rip-roaring 6% growth rate returns. That’s why stocks are pushing up to new all-time highs right now. I’m looking for a 5% growth rate next year as government stimulus spending eventually fades.
Nonfarm Payroll Report explodes to the upside in October at 531,000. The Headline Unemployment Rate drops to 4.6%. Pandemic benefits have ended, and a wider vaccination rate encouraged workers it is safe to go back on the job. The back months were revised up 250,000. Manufacturing was up 60,000 and Leisure & Hospitality was up 164,000, The U-6 “discouraged worker” unemployment rate fell to 8.3%. And there is massive pent-up hiring is yet to come. The US could see full employment by the end of Q3 anticipating a 6% GDP growth rate. The markets loved it and the (SPY) is zeroing in my $475 yearend target.
Inflation is rampaging, according to the Department of Commerce, which saw a sizzling 4.4% rate in September. That’s the fastest rate in 30 years. Rising energy and wage costs are big issues. This is why Goldman Sachs has moved up its forecast for the first interest rate rise to July 2022.
US Consumer Spending bounces back, up 0.6% in September after a hot 1% move in August. Demand for services took the lead as shortages head off spending on goods, like cars.
Ethereum hits a new all-time high, ticking at $4,670 in response to the Fed’s immediate taper. Bitcoin is still consolidating its recent three-month doubling. Buy (BITO), (ETHE), and (BLOK) on dips.
US Stock Buy Backs hit record in Q3, topping a staggering $224 billion, and the best is yet to come as companies try to burn through 2021 repurchase budgets. And you wonder why the stock market is going up?
US Dollar hits one-year high on red hot jobs data, presaging higher interest rates. Everyone seems to know that rates are rising except the bond market.
My Ten-Year View
When we come out the other side of pandemic, we will be perfectly poised to launch into my new American Golden Age, or the next Roaring Twenties. With interest rates still at zero, oil cheap, there will be no reason not to. The Dow Average will rise by 800% to 240,000 or more in the coming decade. The American coming out the other side of the pandemic will be far more efficient and profitable than the old. Dow 240,000 here we come!
My Mad Hedge Global Trading Dispatch saw a massive +8.95% gain in October, followed by a decent 1.74% so far in November. My 2021 year-to-date performance maintained 90.30%. The Dow Average is up 16.7% so far in 2021.
After the recent ballistic move in the market, I am continuing to run my longs in Those include (MS), (GS), (BAC), (BRKB), and a short in the (TLT). All are approaching their maximum profit point and we have nothing left but time decay to capture. So, I am going to run these into the November 19 expiration in 9 trading days. It’s like having a rich uncle write you a check one a day.
That brings my 12-year total return to 512.85%, some 2.00 times the S&P 500 (SPX) over the same period. My 12-year average annualized return now stands at an unbelievable 43.04 easily the highest in the industry.
My trailing one-year return popped back to positively eye-popping 112.94%. I truly have to pinch myself when I see numbers like this. I bet many of you are making the biggest money of your long lives.
We need to keep an eye on the number of US Coronavirus cases at 46.5 million and rising quickly and approaching 755,000 deaths, which you can find here.
The coming week will be all about the inflation numbers.
On Monday, November 8 at 9:00 AM, US Consumer Inflation Expectations for October are out. PayPal reports.
On Tuesday, November 9 at 8:30 AM, the all-important Producer Price Index is published. DR Horton (DHI) reports. On Wednesday, November 10 at 8:30 AM, the Core Inflation Rate for October is printed. Walt Disney reports (DIS).
On Thursday, November 11 at 8:30 AM, Weekly Jobless Claims are announced.
On Friday, November 12 at 8:30 AM, the University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment is announced.
At 2:00 PM, the Baker Hughes Oil Rig Count is disclosed.
As for me, dentists find my mouth fascinating as it is like a tour of the world. I have gold inlays from Japan, cheap ceramic fillings from Britain’s National Health, and loads of American silver amalgam.
But my front teeth are the most interesting as they were knocked out in a riot in Paris in 1968.
France was on fire that year. Riots on the city’s South Bank near Sorbonne University were a daily occurrence. A dozen blue police buses packed with riot police were permanently parked in front of the Notre Dame Cathedral ready for a rapid response across the river.
President Charles de Gaulle was in hiding at a French airbase in Germany. Many compared chaos to the modern-day equivalent of the French Revolution.
So, of course, I had to go.
This was back when there were five French francs to the US dollar and you could live on a loaf of bread, a chunk of cheese, and a bottle of wine for a dollar a day. I was 16.
The Paris Metro cost one franc. To save money, I camped out every night in the Parc des Buttes Chaumont, which had nice bridges to sleep under. When it rained, I visited the Louvre, taking advantage of my free student access. I got to know every corner. The French are great at castles….and museums.
To wash I would jump in the Seine River every once in a while. But in those days, not many people in France took baths anyway.
I joined a massive protest one night which originally began over the right of men to visit the women’s dorms at night. Then the police attacked. Demonstrators came equipped with crowbars and shovels to dig up heavy cobblestones dating to the 17th century to throw at the police, who then threw them back.
I got hit squarely in the mouth with an airborne projectile. My front teeth went flying and I never found them. I managed to get temporary crowns which lasted me until I got home. I carry a scar across my mouth to this day.
I visited the Left Bank just before the pandemic hit in 2019. The streets were all paved with asphalt to make the cobblestones underneath inaccessible. I showed my kids the bridges I used to sleep under, but they were unimpressed.
But when I showed them the Mona Lisa at the Louvre, she was as enigmatic as ever.
Everyone should have at least one Paris in 1968 in their lifetime. I’ve had many and am richer for it.
Stay Healthy.
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/John-2019.png554518Mad Hedge Fund Traderhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMad Hedge Fund Trader2021-11-08 10:02:422021-11-08 13:52:08The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or A Perfect Upside Storm
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