Followers of the Mad Hedge Fund Trader alert service have the good fortune to own deep-in-the-money options positions that expire on Friday, October 15, and I just want to explain to the newbies how to best maximize their profits.
These involve the:
(SPY) 10/$410-$420 call spread 10.00%
(GS) 10/$320-$330 call spread 10.00%
(JPM) 10/$130-$140 call spread 10.00%
(BLK) 10/$770-$790 call spread 10.00%
(MS) 10/$85-$90 call spread 10.00%
(BRKB) 10/$255-$265 call spread 10.00%
(C) 10/$62-$65 call spread 10.00%
Provided that we don’t have another 2,000-point move down in the market this week, these positions should expire at their maximum profit points.
So far, so good.
I’ll do the math for you on our deepest in-the-money position, the Goldman Sachs (GS) October 15 $320-$330 vertical bull call spread, which I most certainly will run into expiration. Your profit can be calculated as follows:
Profit: $10.00 expiration value - $8.50 cost = $1.50 net profit
(11 contracts X 100 contracts per option X $1.50 profit per options)
= $1,650 or 17.65% in 24 trading days.
Many of you have already emailed me asking what to do with these winning positions.
The answer is very simple. You take your left hand, grab your right wrist, pull it behind your neck, and pat yourself on the back for a job well done.
You don’t have to do anything.
Your broker (are they still called that?) will automatically use your long position to cover your short position, canceling out the total holdings.
The entire profit will be credited to your account on Monday morning, October 18 and the margin freed up.
Some firms charge you a modest $10 or $15 fee for performing this service.
If you don’t see the cash show up in your account on Monday, get on the blower immediately and find it.
Although the expiration process is now supposed to be fully automated, occasionally machines do make mistakes. Better to sort out any confusion before losses ensue.
If you want to wimp out and close the position before the expiration, it may be expensive to do so. You can probably unload them pennies below their maximum expiration value.
Keep in mind that the liquidity in the options market understandably disappears, and the spreads substantially widen, when a security has only hours, or minutes until expiration on Friday, October 15. So, if you plan to exit, do so well before the final expiration at the Friday market close.
This is known in the trade as the “expiration risk.”
One way or the other, I’m sure you’ll do OK, as long as I am looking over your shoulder, as I will be, always. Think of me as your trading guardian angel.
I am going to hang back and wait for good entry points before jumping back in. It’s all about keeping that “Buy low, sell high” thing going.
I’m looking to cherry-pick my new positions going into the next month-end.
Take your winnings and go out and buy yourself a well-earned dinner. Just make sure it’s take-out. I want you to stick around.
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/john-and-girls.png322345Mad Hedge Fund Traderhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMad Hedge Fund Trader2021-10-12 08:02:022021-10-12 11:31:04How to Handle the Friday, October 15 Options Expiration
(THE MAD HEDGE SUMMIT VIDEOS ARE UP),
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or HAPPY DAYS ARE HERE AGAIN),
(GS), (MS), (JPM), (BAC), (C), (BLK), (TLT), (BRKB), (SPY)
(THE MAD HEDGE SUMMIT VIDEOS ARE UP),
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or IT’S SHOPPING TIME),
(MS), (GS), (JPM), (BLK), (BRKB), (C), (TLT), (F), (CRPT)
All indications are that we have a total nightmare of a Christmas coming up this year. Santa Claus and his elves can’t get any parts, and the reindeer are short of hay.
There are now a record 70 large container ships from China parked off the coast of Long Beach, CA and nobody to unload them. If they could be unloaded, there are no trucks to move the cargo or drivers to drive them. It turns out that stores don’t have enough staff to sell the products either.
You see this in share prices that are traditionally strong going into the holidays which have lately taken a pasting, like UPS (UPS) and FedEx (FDX).
Perhaps the US economy is losing up to a third of its total output due to parts and labor shortages. This will take at least a year to sort out.
Then there is the issue of 10 million missing workers. Are they afraid of dying of Covid? Or have they decided it’s time for a career change and that working for a minimum wage of $7.25 an hour is no longer worth it? This may take a decade to sort out.
Covid could be masking fundamental changes to the American economy and society which won’t become obvious until well into the 2030s.
Those of us who analyze these things can’t wait for the outcome. The global economy has just undergone more change than at any time since WWII. But what exactly happened we may not know for years.
Better to complete your Christmas shopping early this year or you may end up with a piece of coal in your stocking (where do I find coal in California?). And don’t forget to do some shopping for your retirement portfolio as well. Valuations are the best they have been in a year and this bull market in stocks has another nine years to run.
In the meantime, after dumping all of my technology stocks, I’ll be betting my entire persona net worth buying financial ones. These should lead the markets for the next six months, or until bond yields hit 2.0%, whichever comes first. Bonds now yield 1.46%.
With interest rates rising sharply, economic growth continuing at record levels, and default rates plunging, we are just entering a new golden age of banking.
Powell sees Inflation lasting higher for longer. It was enough to kill off a nascent rally in the bond market. The Dollar Store is about to become the $2 Store. Shortages from China are the reason.
Treasury Yields hit a three-month high. You can blame the coming taper, deal on a deficit-financed infrastructure bill, and drained Fed accounts against a coming massive supply of bonds. I’m already running a massive bond short. Keep selling rallies in the (TLT), or buy (TBT).
China bans Crypto, triggering a 7% plunge in Bitcoin. Financial systems the government can’t control are forbidden in the Forbidden City. It’s all part of a flight out of a restricted Yuan into unrestricted crypto by wealthy Chinese. China used to account for 99% of all Bitcoin mining and now it is at zero. The business will flock to the US, Canada, and any other country with cheap electricity. It’s a short-term negative for crypto but a long-term positive. Buy Bitcoin and Ethereum on the dip.
Case Shiller shatters all records, rising an astronomical 18.7% in June, a new record. Home prices are now 41% higher than the last peak in 2006. Phoenix was up an eye-popping 29.3%, San Diego by 27.1%, and Seattle by 25.0%. What are they putting in the water in these cities? My belief is that the structural shortfall of housing continues for another decade.
New Home Sales jump by 1.5% in August to a seasonally adjusted 740,000 units. The south saw the biggest gains at 6.0%. Median New Home Prices jumped an amazing 20.1% to 390,000 YOY. The exodus from the city to the burbs continues unabated. Inventory is at 6.1 months.
Pending Home Sales rocket, in August by 8.1% on a signed contract basis compared to only 1.2% expected. That’s a seven-month high. The Midwest led the charge with a 10.4% gain. Rising inventories and continued low interest rates were a big help. The bidding wars are abating.
China Energy Shortage causes Apple and Tesla cutback and they are buying 70% of America’s coal production to meet the shortfall. Several key chip packaging and testing service providers supplying Intel, Nvidia, and Qualcomm also received notices to suspend production at their facilities in Jiangsu for several days. It’s Another Black Swan from the Middle Kingdom.
The First Trust Skybridge Crypto Industry & Digital Economy ETF (CRPT) launched on September 23. It will be kicked off by my longtime friend and Mad Hedge Summit speaker Anthony Scaramucci. Get on the crypto train before it leaves the station.
Ford (F) announced massive $11.4 Billion in US EV factories in Kentucky and Tennessee in partnership with South Korea’s SK Innovations, creating 11,000 jobs. It is one of the largest US industrial investments in recent memory. It is all part of a plan to completely reposition the company and invest $30 billion in EVs by 2025. A smart move, (F) finally read the writing on the wall. 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 modest +1.03% gain in September. That’s against a Dow Average that was down -5.65% for the month. My 2021 year-to-date performance soared to 80.30%. The Dow Average was up 12.18% so far in 2021.
Figuring that we are either at or close to a market bottom, and being a man of my convictions, I am 80% invested in financial stocks. Those include (MS), (GS), (JPM), (BLK), (BRKB), and (C). In for a penny, in for a pound. I am also 10% invested in the (SPY) and 10% long bonds (TLT).
I quick trip by the Volatility Index (VIX) to $29 and a rapid 45 basis point leap in ten-year US Treasury bond yields gave us the entry point for all of these positions.
That brings my 12-year total return to 502.85%, some 2.00 times the S&P 500 (SPX) over the same period. My 12-year average annualized return now stands at an unbelievable 42.49%, easily the highest in the industry.
My trailing one-year return popped back to positively eye-popping 112.44%. 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 44 million and rising quickly and deaths topping 701,000, which you can find here.
The coming week will be slow on the data front.
On Monday, October 4 at 10:00 AM, US Factory Orders for August are out.
On Tuesday, October 5 at 8:30 AM, the US Balance of Trade for August is announced. On Wednesday, October 6 at 8:15 AM, we get the Challenger Private Jobs Report for September.
On Thursday, October 7 at 8:30 AM, Weekly Jobless Claims are announced.
On Friday, October 8 at 8:30 AM, we learn the September Nonfarm Payroll Report. At 2:00 PM, the Baker Hughes Oil Rig Count are disclosed.
As for me, in my many travels around the world, I never hesitate to visit places of historical interest. The London grave of Carl Marx, the Paris grave of Jim Morrison, the bridge of the cruiser of the USS San Francisco, which took a direct hit from an 18-inch Japanese shell, you name it.
After attending one of my global strategy luncheons in Charleston, South Carolina, where the Civil War began with the Confederates firing on Fort Sumter in 1861, I looked for something to do. Fort Sumter was a full day trip and there wasn’t much to see anyway.
So I pulled out my trusty iPhone to get some ideas. It only took me a second to decide. I attended Sunday church services at the Mother Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church, where 15 people were gunned down by a deranged white nationalist in 2014.
The church was built in 1891 by freed slaves and their children. The congregation dates back earlier to 1791. It has every bit a handmade touch with fine Victorian stained-glass windows.
The ushers stopped me at the door for 20 minutes where they suspiciously eyed me. Then they invited me in and sat me down next to the only other white person there, a Jewish woman from New York.
It was a working-class congregation and polyester suites and print dresses were the order of the day. Everyone was polite, if not respectful, and I sang the hymns with the air of a book in the pew in front of me.
The gospel singing was incredible, if not angelic. When I left, an usher thanked me for supporting their cause. Very moving. I praised them for their strength and tossed a $100 bill into the basket.
Charleston is a big wedding destination now, with young couples pouring in from all over the South to tie the knot. Saturday night on Market Street saw at least a dozen bachelor and hen parties going bar to bar and getting wasted, the women falling off their platform shoes.
The United States still has a lot of healing to go to recover from the recent years of turmoil. I thought this was one small step.
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/10/methodist.png426560Mad Hedge Fund Traderhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMad Hedge Fund Trader2021-10-04 12:02:552021-10-04 12:54:19The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or It’s Shopping Time
Global Market Comments September 27, 2021 Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(THE MAD HEDGE SUMMIT VIDEOS ARE UP)
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or THE YEAREND RALLY HAS BEGUN),
(DIS), (TLT), (SPY), (GS), (JPM), (BLK), (MS), (BRKB), (GOOG)
The calls started coming in as soon as the market closed.
More than a dozen subscribers called, emailed, and texted me on Thursday to say that they just had the best day in the market this year, and for some, their entire lives.
Holding fire until you saw the whites of their eyes worked. I used both visits to the (SPY) to $430 to load the boat with financial stocks, which then took off like a tribe of scalded chimps.
Mad Hedge made 5.6% on that day alone. One Concierge client reported a breathtaking $5.3 million profit after dumping a lot of his techs and piling into banks and brokers. Suffice it to say that I am very welcome in a well-to-do suburb of Seattle, Washington.
The washout was so dramatic and the recovery so rapid I think it is safe to say that our fall correction is over. We may get some small retracements and sideways chop from here. But the writing is on the wall. We are headed to new all-time highs in stocks by the end of 2022.
I received a lot of questions about how easily I was able to spot the bottom so easily. A Volatility Index (VIX) of $29 was a big help. So was the outflow of $34 billion from equity ETFs and mutual funds the previous week, the most in six months. And when the Mad Hedge Market Timing Index hits a rare low of 19, you don’t sit on your hands very long.
The $300 billion China Evergrande Group debt crisis gave us the crisis and the final flush we needed to establish a clear bottom.
Nothing else can stop this. New Covid cases are falling off a cliff, and childhood vaccinations out next month will accelerate this trend.
A massive infrastructure budget will pass in congress. It is almost irrelevant whether it’s a $3.5 trillion or $1.5 trillion. It will be more than can be spent in any reasonable amount of time.
In the meantime, the ultimate driver of share prices, the exponential growth of post covid corporate profits, continues unabated.
The wall of money keeps getting ever larger. The Fed reported that in Q2, Household Net Worth soared by $5.9 trillion is an incredible $141.7 trillion largely through the appreciation of stock and home prices. The Fed balance sheet has exploded from $4.1 trillion to $8.4 trillion in a mere 18 months.
This will continue for another decade. Keep piling on those leveraged long-term LEAPS. Flat is the new down.
Enjoy.
Four to six Interest RatesRises by 2024 which may start as early as 2024, says Fed governor Jay Powell. The taper could start in November. Bonds rose slightly on the news, but the writing is now definitely on the wall. The Fed now expects a stratospheric 5.9% GDP for 2021 and 3.8% for 2022. Sell all rallies in the (TLT) and buy all financial stocks.
Bonds Crash, down -$3.43 points after Jay Powell’s super bearish comments from Wednesday soak in. The 50-day moving average has been smashed and the next target is the 200-day at $1344.59. Watch the 50-day rollover from here on. My final target is a 1.76% yield on the ten-year US Treasury bond by January.
Back up the Truck, it’s time to load up on stocks on the back of yesterday’s 985-point swan dive. You especially want domestic recovery ones that benefit from rising interest rates, like banks, brokers, fund managers, commodities, and steel. The taper may be only weeks away and will drive stocks to new highs by yearend. You wanted a dip to buy, so buy the dip. Don’t expect much from technology stocks for a while.
China’s Largest Real Estate Developer Goes Bust, China Evergrande Group, with $300 billion in debt. The move smashed risk markets globally, opening the Dow Average down 650. Bitcoin plunged 10%. Is this China’s Lehman moment, or just another day at the office? It does take them another step back towards real communism.
China Bans Crypto, triggering a 7% plunge in Bitcoin. Financial systems the government can’t control are forbidden in the Forbidden City. It’s all part of a flight out of a restricted Yuan into unrestricted crypto by wealthy Chinese. China used to account for 99% of all Bitcoin mining and now it is at zero. The business will flock to the US, Canada, and any other country with cheap electricity. It’s a short-term negative for crypto but a long term positive. Buy Bitcoin and Ethereum on the dip.
Pfizer Boosters for over 65 were approved by the FDA for immediate distribution. Those younger will have to wait. It turns out that the Pfizer effectiveness drops from 99% to 66% in eight months. That puts older recipients, like me, at risk. Under 12 kids to come in October. See you at Costco! Buy (PFE) on dips.
Pandemic Tops 1918 US Death Toll at 675,000, although on a per capita basis we are still only a third of the Spanish Flu. We are not even close to this ending yet. We need vaccinations for kids and booster shots for all to be dome with this, getting national immunity up to 90%.
Housing Starts for August up 3.9% with apartment buildings the big driver. Single family homes fell. Building Permits are up 6.0% and are a 50% increase from the summer lows.
Existing Home Sales Drop, by 2% in August to 5.88 million units annualized according to a signed contract basis. Only 1.29 million homes are for sale, a 2.6-month supply, down 13% YOY. The Median Price rose to an eye-popping $356,700, up 14.9% YOY. Million-dollar homes are up 40% YOY.
Google (GOOG) Buys $2.1 Billion in New York Office Space, which is why I love this company. You can forget about those end of New York City stories. Always follow the money, where companies are putting their money, and you will find great stock. Or so the chairman of JP Morgan Bank taught me 40 years ago. Buy (GOOG) on dips.
Weekly Jobless Claims Pop to 351,000 last week, up 16,000. Leading Economic Indicators jump in August, coming in at 0.9%. March saw the high for the year at 1.3%. Getting a lot of noisy and conflicting economic data points this week as delta works its way through the system. 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 robust +6.63% gain so far in September. My 2021 year-to-date performance soared to 85.20%. The Dow Average was up 13.60% so far in 2021. September 23 saw my biggest up day of the year, some 5.61%
I held fire until the Dow Average 1,000-point washout, then loaded the boat with financial stocks, writing the trade alerts as fast as I could. That leaves me 70% long financial stocks, 10% in cash, and 20% in short (TLT).
That brings my 12-year total return to 507.75%, some 2.00 times the S&P 500 (SPX) over the same period. My 12-year average annualized return now stands at an unbelievable 43.52%, easily the highest in the industry.
My trailing one-year return popped back to positively eye-popping 117.34%. 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 43 million and rising quickly and deaths topping 685,000, which you can find here.
The coming week will be slow on the data front.
On Monday, September 27 at 8:30 AM, Durable Goods are for August are reported.
On Tuesday, September 28 at 9:00 AM, The S&P Case Shiller National Home Price Index for July is published.
On Wednesday, September 29 at 10:00 AM, we get Pending Home Sales for August.
On Thursday, September 30 at 8:30 AM, Weekly Jobless Claims are announced. The final report of the Q2 US GDP is disclosed.
On Friday, October 1 at 8:30 AM, we learn Personal Income and Spending for August. The September Nonfarm Payroll Report is not out for another week due to the first day of the month rule. At 2:00 PM, the Baker Hughes Oil Rig Count is disclosed.
As for me, when I first met Andrew Knight, the editor of The Economist magazine in London 45 years ago, he almost fell off his feet. Andrew was well known in the financial community because his father was a famous WWII Battle of Britain Spitfire pilot from New Zealand.
At 34, he had just been appointed the second youngest editor in the magazine’s 150-year history. I had been reporting from Tokyo for years, filing two stories a week about Japanese banking, finance, and politics.
The Economist shared an office in Tokyo with the Financial Times, and to pay the rent, I had to file an additional two stories a week for them as well. That’s where I saw my first fax machine, which then was as large as a washing machine even though the actual electronics would fit in a notebook. It cost $5,000.
The Economist was the greatest calling card to the establishment one could ever have. Any president, prime minister, CEO, central banker, or war criminal were suddenly available for a one-hour chat about the important affairs of the world.
Some of my biggest catches? Presidents Gerald Ford, Jimmy Carter, Ronald Reagan, George Bush, and Bill Clinton, China’s Zhou Enlai and Deng Xiaoping, Japan’s Emperor Hirohito, terrorist Yasir Arafat, and Teddy Roosevelt’s oldest daughter, Alice Roosevelt Longworth, the first woman to smoke cigarettes in the White House in 1805.
Andrew thought that the quality of my posts was so good that I had to be a retired banker at least 55 years old. We didn’t meet in person until I was invited to work the summer out of the magazine’s St. James Street office tower, just down the street from the palace of Prince Charles.
When he was introduced to a gangly 25-year-old instead, he thought it was a practical joke, which The Economist was famous for. As for me, I was impressed with Andrew’s ironed and creased blue jeans, an unheard-of concept in the Wild West.
The first unusual thing I noticed working in the office was that we were each handed a bottle of whisky, gin, and wine every Friday. That was to keep us in the office working and out of the pub next door, the former embassy of the Republic of Texas from pre-1845. There is still a big white star on the front door.
Andrew told me I had just saved the magazine.
After the first oil shock in 1972, a global recession ensued, and all magazine advertising was cancelled. But because of the shock, it was assumed that heavily oil-dependent Japan would go bankrupt. As a result, the country’s banks were forced to pay a ruinous 2% premium on all international borrowing. These were known as “Japan rates.”
To restore Japan’s reputation and credit rating, the government and the banks launched an advertising campaign unprecedented in modern times. At one point, Japan accounted for 80% of all business advertising worldwide. To attract these ads, the global media was screaming for more Japanese banking stories, and I was the only person in the world writing them.
Not only did I bail out The Economist, I ended up writing for over 50 business publications around the world in every English-speaking country. I was knocking out 60 stories a month, or about two a day. By 26, I became the highest-paid journalist in the Foreign Correspondents’ Club of Japan and a familiar figure in every bank head office in Tokyo.
The Economist was notorious for running practical jokes as real news every April Fool’s Day. In the late 1970s, an April 1 issue once did a full-page survey on a country off the west coast of India called San Serif.
It warned that if the West coast kept eroding, and the East coast continued silting up, the country would eventually run into India, creating serious geopolitical problems.
It wasn’t until someone figured out that the country, the prime minister, and every town on the map was named after a type font that the hoax was uncovered.
This was way back, in the pre-Microsoft Word era, when no one outside the London Typesetter’s Union knew what Times Roman, Calibri, or Mangal meant.
Andrew is now 82 and I haven’t seen him in yonks. My business editor, the brilliant Peter Martin, died of cancer in 2002 at a very young 54, and the magazine still awards an annual journalism scholarship in his name.
My boss at The Economist Intelligence Unit, which was modelled on Britain’s MI5 spy service, was Marjorie Deane, who was one of the first women to work in business journalism. She passed away in 2008 at 94. Today, her foundation awards an annual internship at the magazine.
When I stopped by the London office a few years ago, I asked if they still handed out the free alcohol on Fridays. A young writer ruefully told me, “No, they don’t do that anymore.”
Good Luck and Good Trading.
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/john-thomas-economist-e1664802946349.png285500Mad Hedge Fund Traderhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMad Hedge Fund Trader2021-09-27 09:02:112021-09-27 11:43:06The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or The Yearend Rally has Begun
Below please find subscribers’ Q&A for the September 8 Mad Hedge Fund TraderGlobal Strategy Webinar broadcast from the safety of Silicon Valley.
Q: Do you think we’ll see the under $130 in the United States Treasury Bond Fund (TLT) before January 2022?
A: I don’t think so; I think we could go below $140, maybe below $135. But $130 would be a brand new low in the move and would be a stretch. We basically lost 4 months on this trade due to the countertrend rally, which just ended. I would come out of your (TLT) $130-$135 vertical bear put spreads right here while they still have time value, but keep the $135-$ 140s, the $140-$145’s, and especially the $150-$155’s. The idea was that you just keep averaging up and up until the market turns, and then you make back any loss. We move into accelerated time decay on those deep out of the money put spreads in December, so I would take the money and then offset it with the gains you made in those positions.
Q: Does Palantir (PLTR) look like it’ll hit $100 by year-end?
A: No, the stock has been dead, and management has not been doing anything to promote it. We did get a move up to $45 but it failed. It’s still a great long-term idea as they are growing at 50% a year. Also, they did buy $50 million worth of gold bars as a hedge. But as a short-term trader, Palantir isn’t working. If you have an options position on that I would probably get out of it or roll it forward to 2023.
Q: PayPal (PYPL) is fluctuating up and down with Bitcoin. Do you like PayPal?
A: Absolutely, but it obviously is being dragged down by Bitcoin. It is a temporary down move caused by a one-time-only event in El Salvador. Buy the dip in PayPal. It is a leader in the whole move into a digital financial system.
Q: When is Freeport McMoRan (FCX) likely to move up?
A: As soon as we shift out of the tech trade into the domestic recovery trade, which could be in weeks or months at the latest. We’ll switch from one side of the barbell to the other.
Q: Where do you see Tesla (TSLA)?
A: It keeps going up, so my guess is we top $800 by the end of the year, and maybe $850. The big news here is that Tesla has gone into the chip business, making its own chips in-house which is easy for them to do in Silicon Valley. But it does make them the first global car maker that is also a chip maker, and therefore the stock deserves a higher premium. The stock went up $30 on the news and is great for all Tesla holders. I hope you have the 2023 LEAPS.
Q: Too late to buy Tesla LEAPS?
A: Unless you’re really deep in the money, with something like a $600-$650; but the return on that will only be about 50% in 2 years.
Q: The Biden administration just set a goal of 45% solar by the end of 2050. Which solar stock should I buy here?
A: The problem with solar is as soon as Biden started winning primaries, every solar stock took off like a rocket, figuring he’d win, which he did. All of them went up 6-fold or more as a result of that, then gave up one-third of their gains and are now moving sideways. So if you look at the charts, the classic one to buy here is the Invesco Solar ETF (TAN), a basked of the top solar companies. All of these peaked in February and have been doing sideways “time” corrections since then, which means they eventually want to go higher. The other two that have charts that look like they’re finally starting to break out to the upside are First Solar (FSLR) and SunPower (SPWR) after 8 months of consolidation.
Q: Why is the second half of September almost always bad? Is it due to institutional repositioning?
A: Not really, the cash comes into the market at certain times of the year, like end of the year, beginning of the year, and end of each quarter. September seems like the month where they kind of just run out of money. But there's actually also a historical reason for that. For most of American history, we had an agricultural economy. Farmers were more than half the population, and the period of maximum distress for farmers is September, where they put all the money into seed and fertilizer and labor into the field, but they haven't harvested it yet. So, traditionally, they always did a lot of borrowing in September, which caused a cash squeeze and interest rate spike, and a stock market panic as a result. So that's the history behind weak Septembers and Octobers. Once the farmers get the crops in and sell them, that resolves the cash squeeze, interest rates fall, and it’s straight up for stocks for the rest of the year most of the time.
Q: SPACs (Special Purpose Acquisition Companies) seem to be losing interest. Do you recommend any or stay away?
A: Stay away—they’re all rip-offs and are simply a means by which managers can increase their fees from 2% to 20%. That's what they did with virtually all of them. This will end in tears.
Q: What's your feeling about satellite internet phone service replacing current internet cell service in the future?
A: It’s in the future, but it may be 10 years off in the future. If it happens sooner, it’s because Elon Musk was able to deliver cheap rocket service. He already has 20,000 satellites in the sky for his own Starlink global cell phone service for internet access.
Q: How does one buy a Bitcoin stock?
A: Well first of all, I highly recommend you buy the Mad Hedge Bitcoin Letter, which you can get in our store. But there's also the Greyscale Bitcoin Trust (GBTC) which allows you to buy a Bitcoin proxy very easily. I’ll even honor the discounted $995 price for my Bitcoin Letter for another day by clicking here.
Q: Is Warren Buffet and his value philosophy something I should be following, or is he outdated?
A: I have to say, buying stocks cheap with high cash flow will never go out of style. Currently, Warren’s big holdings are domestic industrials, banks, and Apple. All of those look like they will do well moving forward. Buffet’s Berkshire Hathaway (BRKB) has a built-in barbell element to it and is the subject of one of our LEAPS recommendations which has already been hugely successful.
Q: Is Home Depot (HD) at $330 a bargain?
A: Well, we just had a selloff and it bounced hard, and now we’re waiting for the domestic post delta recovery. It's hard to imagine both Home Depot and Lowes not doing well in this scenario.
Q: What will happen to tech when interest rates rise?
A: My bet is they go sideways to down small until you get another peak in interest rates (the next peak will be at 1.76% in the ten year US Treasury bond, the 2021 high) and once you hit that, then tech will take off like a rocket again, and in the meantime, you play the domestics while interest rates are rising. That is the game and will continue to be the game for a couple of years.
Q: Should I buy IBM (IBM) on a turnaround story?
A: No, I've been waiting for IBM to turn around for 10 years. They just don’t seem to get it. What they do is whenever a division starts to make money, they sell it and get cash like they did with the PC division and this year with its infrastructure business called Kyndryl. So, they’re not leaving any growth for the actual IBM holders.
Q: Do you like Square (SQ) at $256?
A: Yes, and that would be a great 2023 LEAPS candidate. All of the digital settlement payment systems are going to do well in the Bitcoin future. They also own quite a lot of Bitcoin. They are leading the charge into a digitized financial system.
Q: What’s a good Ethereum ETF?
A: The Greyscale Ethereum Trust (ETHE) is just the ticket.
Q: So you avoid energy, meaning oil and gas?
A: Yes, alternative energy we like, but it’s had an enormous run already so after a 7-month time correction it’s probably safe to get into solar. Traditional oil and gas (USO) is in a long-term secular bear market that started 13 years ago and will eventually go to zero. Last year’s visit to negative futures prices is just a start. Since 2020, the energy market weighting has gone from 15% to 2%.
Q: Is Natural Gas the only rational core fuel for the grid?
A: No, natural gas (UNG) still produces carbon even though it’s only half the amount of oil. This all gets replaced by solar in the next ten years. That’s why I tell people to stay away from energy like the plague. Would you rather buy natural gas at $4.50/btu or get solar electricity for free? Those are basically going to be the choices in ten years.
Q: Who is the biggest Aluminum producer?
A: Alcoa (AA) which we are a buyer on dips. By the way, if we do have to build 200,000 miles of long-distance transmission lines to cover the electrification of the US energy supply, all of that has to be made of aluminum. You don't use copper for long distances, you use aluminum (aluminum for you Brits).
Q: Would you buy Uber (UBER) at $40 today?
A: Probably, yes; it had a nice 40% correction. However, you are buying into the battle over gig workers—whether they should be treated as full-time or part-time workers. That is going to be a continuing drag on the stock until they win.
Q: What do you think of meme stocks?
A: You're better off buying a lottery ticket. Even with a low payoff, you get a 1:10 chance of winning on a $1 lottery ticket. Meme stocks could double or go to zero with no warning whatsoever—there’s no logic to this market at all.
Q: What do you think of Uranium?
A: Three words come to mind: Chernobyl, Fukushima, and Three Mile Island. I think uranium's time has passed, even though China is building a hundred nuclear power plants. It’s just too expensive to compete against solar on a large scale and impossible to insure. If you still like Uranium though, the Uranium Royalty Corp. (UROY) has had a nice pop recently. But the issue is that nuclear technologies can’t keep up with solar and digital. And they blow up.
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
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 Trader2021-06-21 09:04:432021-06-21 12:01:35June 21, 2021
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