Global Market Comments
November 17, 2021
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(HOW TO HANDLE THE FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 19 OPTIONS EXPIRATION),
(GS), (MS), (BAC), (TLT), (ROM), (BRKB)
Global Market Comments
November 17, 2021
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(HOW TO HANDLE THE FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 19 OPTIONS EXPIRATION),
(GS), (MS), (BAC), (TLT), (ROM), (BRKB)
Happy and newly enriched followers of the Mad Hedge Fund Trader Alert Service have the good fortune to own a record ten deep-in-the-money options positions that expire on Friday, November 19 at the stock market close in two days.
I have to admit that I traded like a Wildman this month, pedal to the metal, and 100% invested. This will take our 2021 year-to-date performance to over 100% for the first time in our 14-year history. I like to think that is the end result of my 53 years of investment in researching trading strategies.
Sometimes, overconfidence works.
It is therefore time to explain to the newbies how to best maximize their profits.
These involve the:
(GS) 11/$330-$350 call spread 10.00%
(GS) 11/$385-$395 call spread 10.00%
(MS) 11/$85-$90 call spread 10.00%
(MS) 11/$95-$98 call spread 10.00%
(BAC) 11/$37-$40 call spread 10.00%
(BAC) 11/$43-$46 call spread 10.00%
(TLT) 11/$150-$153 put spread 10.00%
(ROM) 11/$105-$110 call spread 10.00%
(BRKB) 11/$275-$280 call spread 10.00%
(BRKB) 11/$277.50-$282.50 call spread 10.00%
Provided that we don’t have another 2,000-point move down in the market in the next two days, 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) November 19 $330-$350 vertical bull call spread, which I almost certainly will run into expiration. Your profit can be calculated as follows:
Profit: $20.00 expiration value - $16.50 cost = $3.50 net profit
(6 contracts X 100 contracts per option X $3.50 profit per options)
= $2,100 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 November 22 and the margin freed up.
Some firms charge you a modest $10 or $15 fee for performing this service.
If you don’t see the cash show up in your account on Monday, get on the blower immediately and make your broker find it.
Although the expiration process is now supposed to be fully automated, occasionally machines do make mistakes. Better to sort out any confusion before losses ensue.
If you want to wimp out and close the position before the expiration, it may be expensive to do so. You can probably unload them pennies below their maximum expiration value.
Keep in mind that the liquidity in the options market understandably disappears, and the spreads substantially widen, when a security has only hours, or minutes until expiration on Friday, November 19. So, if you plan to exit, do so well before the final expiration at the Friday market close.
This is known in the trade as the “expiration risk.”
One way or the other, I’m sure you’ll do OK, as long as I am looking over your shoulder, as I will be, always. Think of me as your trading guardian angel.
I am going to hang back and wait for good entry points before jumping back in. It’s all about keeping that “Buy low, sell high” thing going.
I’m looking to cherry-pick my new positions going into the next month end.
Take your winnings and go out and buy yourself a well-earned dinner. Just make sure it’s take-out. I want you to stick around.
Well done, and on to the next trade.
You Can’t Do Enough Research
Global Market Comments
November 15, 2021
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or PROFITING FROM INFLATION),
($INDU), (TLT), (TBT), (MS), (GS), (BAC), (BRKB), (TSLA)
Worried about inflation?
I’m not. That’s because I know how to trade inflation, which we had in spades during the 1970s when it reached a horrific 18% rate. Those who figured out the game early made fortunes. Those who didn’t got killed.
And what is the best protection against inflation? You own stocks and homes, as much as you can get your hands on.
That’s because in an inflationary environment, companies can raise their prices faster than the inflation rate, which they have been doing since the summer. That’s why we have just seen the best earnings quarter in recent memory and all-time high stock indexes.
Homes do well because there are still 85 million millennials chasing a housing stock that is easily short ten million homes and are given free money to chase prices upward.
I asked a local real estate agent when home prices would slow down and she answered, “it might slow down on Christmas eve and Christmas day, and after that, it will take off again.”
I think home prices will continue to rise for another decade, but not at this year’s ballistic rate.
What about impending rising interest rate, you may ask? They will rise but not enough to hurt either stocks or homes. The pandemic vastly accelerated technology, which we all know is the greatest price destroyer of all time. So, inflation will go up, but from zero to 3%-4%, not the 18% of yore.
And yes, prices are rising for the working classes, those least able to pay them. But the same minimum wage workers are getting the biggest pay hikes in history, up to 100% in some cases, more than offsetting inflation.
And while stocks and homes see rising inflation, bonds don’t. My feeling is that the bond market will stumble across it in the dark some nights and prices will crash. Bonds will keep ignoring inflation until they can’t. The bond vigilantes will then return with a vengeance and are doing their stretching exercises as we speak.
One of the odder things about the past week is that each of the three announcements heralding sharply higher inflation trigger sharp moves up in bonds when they were supposed to go down. That worked until Thursday when the worst 30-year Treasury bond auction since 1990 prompted a $5.00 selloff.
Another bizarre development is that call options are trading at greater premiums than put options, an exceedingly rare event. That means that the consensus for stocks is now almost universally up.
It also means that the at-the-money long-dated LEAPS call option spreads I have been pelting my Concierge members with have become massively profitable. Six months out you can earn eye-popping 100% returns, and 200% in some of the more volatile names, like (ROM) and (MSTR).
The bottom line is that goldilocks is moving in for the long term and might advance to senior citizenship on this watch.
That works for me, so I’m going on a long hike.
The $1.2 Trillion Infrastructure Budget Passes, adding another 6% in GDP growth for the next two years. Construction detours are about to break out all over the country, and the domestic recovery play is on fire. Lost along the way was $550 million in social spending. No increase in corporate taxes sets up a perfect storm for stocks the next several months. Stay fully invested as I begged you to do weeks ago.
The US Reopens, provided you have two Covid shots and a test within the last three days. Got to keep those pesky diseased foreigners out! Hotels, airlines, casinos, and cruise lines took off like a scalded chimp, taking the indexes to new all-time highs. Buy (ALK) and (LUV) on dips.
The Bitcoin Rally Continues, with new all-time highs for both (BITO) and (ETHE). Concerns about the monetary health of the US are rising ahead of a major debt ceiling fight in Congress in December.
Inflation Soars with a Red Hot 6.2% CPI Print in October, the highest in 31 years. Energy, rent, and car costs led the gains. Bitcoin (BITO) and Ethereum (ETHE) jumped to new all-time highs in response. This is only going to get better. You can now count on a Fed interest rate hike in June.
The Disappearing Worker Trend Continues, with a record 4.4 million quitting in September. Workers are taking advantage of the labor shortage to switch jobs for higher wages. This will get worse before it gets better. Good luck trying to hire anyone.
US Consumer Sentiment Hits Ten-Year Low, down from 71.7 to 68.6 in October, according to the University of Michigan. Inflation at a 30-year high 6.2% is starting to hit consumers hard.
Elon Musk Tesla Sales Top $5.1 billion, to pay off Uncle Sam. That must be one hell of a tax bill. At this rate, the market is rapidly running out of the sole seller. Buy (TSLA) 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!
My Mad Hedge Global Trading Dispatch saw a massive +8.95% gain in October, followed by a decent 4.42% so far in November. My 2021 year-to-date performance moved to a new high of 92.97%. The Dow Average is up 18.00% so far in 2021.
After the recent ballistic move in the market, we got a week of consolidation which brought some generalized bitching, moaning, and wining.
I am continuing to run my longs in. Those include (MS), (GS), (BAC), (BRKB), and a short in the (TLT). The (TLT) short brought some hair-raising moments when we got a $3.00 spike up in the wake of the red hot 6.2% CPI release. I knew it was a complete BS move and successfully stared it down, watching it all reverse the next day. I don’t do this very often.
All positions are now 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 4 trading days and capture all the accelerated time decay.
That brings my 12-year total return to 515.52%, some 2.00 times the S&P 500 (SPX) over the same period. My 12-year average annualized return has ratcheted up to 43.26%, easily the highest in the industry.
My trailing one-year return popped back to positively eye-popping 112.08%. 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 47 million and rising quickly and deaths topping 763,000, which you can find here.
The coming week will be all about the inflation numbers.
On Monday, November 15 at 9:00 AM, the New York Empire State Manufacturing Index for November is released. WeWork reports.
On Tuesday, November 16 at 8:30 AM, US Retail Sales for October are printed. Home Depot (HD) and Walmart (WMT) report.
On Wednesday, November 17 at 8:30 AM, the Housing Starts and Building Permits for October are published. NVIDIA (NVDA) and Cisco Systems (CSCO) report.
On Thursday, November 18 at 8:30 AM, Weekly Jobless Claims are announced. The Philadelphia Fed Manufacturing Index is printed. Macy's (M) and Alibaba (BABA) report.
On Friday, November 19 at 2:00 PM, the Baker Hughes Oil Rig Count are disclosed.
As for me, I am sitting in the Centurion Lounge in San Francisco Airport waiting for a United flight to Las Vegas where I have to speak at an investment conference. I have time to kill so I will reach back into the deep dark year of 1968 in Sweden.
My trip to Europe was supposed to limit me to staying with a family friend, Pat, in Brighton, England for the summer. His family lived in impoverished council housing.
I remember that you had to put a ten pence coin into the hot water heater for a shower, which inevitably ran out when you were fully soaped up. The trick was to insert another ten pence without getting soap in your eyes.
After a week there, we decided the gravel beach and the games arcade on Brighton Pier were pretty boring, so we decided to hitchhike to Paris.
Once there, Pat met a beautiful English girl named Sandy, and they both took off for some obscure Greek island, the ultimate destination if you lived in a cold, foggy country.
That left me stranded in Paris.
So, I hitchhiked to Sweden to meet up with a girl I had run into while she was studying English in Brighton. It was a long trip north of Stockholm, but I eventually made it.
When I finally arrived, I was met at the front door by her boyfriend, a 6’6” Swedish weightlifter. That night found me bedding down in a birch forest in my sleeping bag to ward off the mosquitoes which hovered in clouds.
I started hitchhiking to Berlin, Germany the next day. I was picked up by Ronny Carlson in a beat-up white Volkswagen bug to make the all-night drive to Goteborg where I could catch the ferry to Denmark.
1968 was the year that Sweden switched from driving English style on the left to the right. There were signs every few miles with a big letter “H”, which stood for “hurger”, or right. The problem was that after 11:00 PM, everyone in the country was drunk and forgot what side of the road to drive on.
Two guys on a motorcycle driving at least 80 pulled out to pass a semi-truck on a curve and slammed head on to us, then were thrown under the wheels of the semi. The driver was killed instantly, and his passenger had both legs cut off at the knees.
As for me, our front left wheel was sheared off and we shot off the mountain road, rolled a few times, and was stopped by this enormous pine tree.
The motorcycle riders got the two spots in the only ambulance. A police car took me to a hospital in Goteborg and whenever we hit a bump in the road, bolts of pain shot across my chest and neck.
I woke up in the hospital the next day, with a compound fracture of my neck, a dislocated collar bone, and paralyzed from the waist down. The hospital called my mom after booking the call 16 hours in advance and told me I might never walk again. She later told me it was the worst day of her life.
Tall blonde Swedish nurses gave me sponge baths and delighted in teaching me to say Swedish swear words and then laughing uproariously when I made the attempt.
Sweden had a National Healthcare system then called Scandia, so it was all free.
Decades later, a Marine Corp post-traumatic stress psychiatrist told me that this is where I obtained my obsession with tall, blond women with foreign accents.
I thought everyone had that problem.
I ended up spending a month there. The TV was only in Swedish, and after an extensive search, they turned up only one book in English, Madame Bovary. I read it four times but still don’t get the ending.
The only problem was sleeping because I had to share my room with the guy who lost his legs in the accident. He screamed all night because they wouldn’t give him any morphine.
When I was released, Ronny picked me up and I ended up spending another week at his home, sailing off the Swedish west coast. Then I took off for Berlin to get a job since I was broke.
I ended up recovering completely. But to this day whenever I buy a new Brioni suit in Milan, they have to measure me twice because the numbers come out so odd. My bones never returned to their pre-accident position and my right arm is an inch longer than my left. The compound fracture still shows upon X-rays.
And I still have this obsession with tall, blond women with foreign accents.
Go figure.
Stay Healthy,
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
Brighton 1968
Ronny Carlson in Sweden
Global Market Comments
November 8, 2021
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or A PERFECT UPSIDE STORM),
(GOOGL), (MSFT), (GS), (MS), (BRKB), (ROM), (TLT), (TBT)
(BITO), (ETHE)
Welcome to the perfect storm.
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
1968
2019
Global Market Comments
November 5, 2021
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(NOVEMBER 3 BIWEEKLY STRATEGY WEBINAR Q&A),
(BRKB), (COIN), (IWM), (GOOGL), (MSFT), (MS), (GS), (JPM),
(BABA), (BIDU), (JD), (ROM), (PYPL), (FXE), (FXA), (FXB), (CRSP), (TSLA), (FXI), (BITO), (ETHE), (TLT), (TBT), (BITO), (CGW)
Below please find subscribers’ Q&A for the November 3 Mad Hedge Fund Trader Global Strategy Webinar broadcast from the safety of Silicon
Valley.
Q: Have you considered buying Coinbase (COIN)?
A: Yes, we actually recommended it as part of our Bitcoin service in the early days back in July. It’s gone up 62% since then, right along with the Bitcoin move itself. So yeah, buy (COIN) on dips—and there will be dips because it will be at least triple the volatility of the main market. And be sure to dollar cost average.
Q: Do you think the breakout in small caps (IWM) will hold and, if so, should we focus on small-c growth?
A: Yes it will hold, but no I would focus on the big cap barbells, which will lead this rally for the next 6 months. And there you’re talking about the best of tech which is Google (GOOGL) and Microsoft (MSFT), and the best of financials which is Morgan Stanley (MS), Goldman Sachs (GS), and JP Morgan (JPM).
Q: Why not time the webinar for after the FOMC? What will be the market reaction?
A: Well, first of all, we already know what they’re going to say—it’s been heavily leaked in the last week. The market reaction will be initially a potential sharp down move that lasts a few minutes or hours, and then we start a grind up for the next two months. So that's why I wanted to be 80% leverage long going into this. Second, we have broadcast this webinar at the same time for the last 13 years and if we change the time we will lose half our customers.
Q: Why do you always do debit spreads?
A: They’re easier for beginners to understand. That’s the only reason. If you’re sophisticated enough to do a credit spread, the results will be the same but the liquidity will be slightly better, and you can also apply that credit to meet your margin requirements. We have a lot of basic beginners signing up for our service in addition to seasoned pros and I always encourage people to do what they're most comfortable with.
Q: Are you still comfortable with the Morgan Stanley (MS) and Berkshire Hathaway (BRKB) positions?
A: I expect both to go up 10-20% by March, so that’s pretty comfortable. By the way, if you have extremely deep in the money call spreads on Goldman Sachs or Morgan, consider taking profits on those and rolling your strikes up. If you have like the $360-$380 vertical bull call spread in Goldman Sachs, realize that gain and roll up to the $420-$430 March position in Goldman Sachs—that will give you another 100% profit by March. With the $360-$ 380s, you have like 97% of the profit already in the price, there’s no leverage left and no point in continuing, you can only go down.
Q: What should I do with my China position?
A: Sell all your positions in China, realize all the losses now so you can offset those with all the huge profits on all your other positions this year. There I’m talking about Ali Baba (BABA), Baidu (BIDU), and (JD), which have been absolutely hammered anywhere from down 50% to down 70%. And do it now before everyone else does it for the same reasons.
Q: Thoughts on Paypal (PYPL) lately?
A: The stock is out of favor as money is moving out of PayPal into newer fintech stocks. The move down is totally unjustified and screaming long term buy here, but for the short-term investors are going to raid the piggy bank, sell the PayPal, and go into the newer apps. This has been my biggest money-losing trade personally this year because PayPal long-term has a great story.
Q: Will earnings fall off next year due to prior year comparisons or supply chain?
A: No, if anything, earnings are accelerating because supply chain problems mean you can charge customers whatever you want and therefore increase margins, which is why the stock market is going up.
Q: Long term, what would your wrong strikes be?
A: I would say don’t get greedy. I’m doing the ProShares Ultra Technology (ROM) $120-$125 call spread for May expiration—the longest expiration they offer. That gives you about 100% return in 6 months; 100% is good enough for me because then I’ll do the same thing again in May and get another 100%. What’s 100% x 100%? It’s 400% because you’re reinvesting a much larger capital base the second time around. If a 100% profit in six months is not enough for you then you are in the wrong line of business.
Q: Do you think Ethereum (ETHE) has long-term potential upside?
A: Yes, is a 10X move enough? We just had a major new high in Ethereum because they made moves to limit the production of new Ethereum. Ethereum is the superior technology because its architecture avoids the code repeats that Bitcoin does and therefore only uses a third of the electricity to create. But Bitcoin is attracting the big institutional cash flows because they have an early mover advantage. By the way, how much electricity does crypto mining consume? The entire consumption of Washington state in a year, so it’s a big deal.
Q: What should I do about Crisper Therapeutics (CRSP)?
Crispr Therapeutics (CRSP) is my other disaster for this year because ignored the move up to $170—we’re now back into the $90’s again. So, I have 2023 LEAPS on that; I’m going to keep them, I’ve already suffered the damage, but the next time it goes up to $170 I’m selling! Once burned, twice forewarned. And part of the problem with the whole biotech sector is we are now in the back end of the pandemic and anything healthcare-related will get hit, except for the vaccine stocks like Pfizer (PFE) which are still making billions and billions of dollars.
Q: I bought Baidu (BIDU) and Alibaba (BABA) years ago at a much lower price and I'm still up quite a lot; what should I do?
A: If you have the big cushion, I would keep them and look for #1 recovery in the Chinese economy next year and #2 for the government to back off from their idiotic anticapitalism strategy because it’s costing them so much money.
Q: Is Robinhood (HOOD) a good LEAP candidate?
A: Only on a really big dip, and then you want to go out two years. With a stock that’s volatile as hell like Robinhood and could drop by half on no notice, so you only buy the big dips. It’s not a slowly grinding upward stock like Goldman Sachs (GS) and Morgan Stanley (MS) where you can add LEAPS now because you know it’s going to keep grinding up.
Q: How can Morgan Stanley go up when the chief strategist is bearish?
A: Their customers aren't listening to their chief strategist—they’re buying. And the volume of the stock, which is where Morgan Stanley makes money, is going through the roof, they’re making record profits there. And I've got Morgan Stanley stock coming out of my ears in LEAPS and so forth.
Q: What are 5 stocks you would buy right now?
A: Easy: Google (GOOGL), Microsoft (MSFT), Morgan Stanley (MS), Goldman Sachs (GS), and JP Morgan (JPM). Buy whatever is down that day. They’re all going up.
Q: Too late to buy Tesla (TSLA) calls?
A: Yes, it is. Tesla has a long history of 40% corrections; we had one that ended in May, and then it doubled (and then some). So yeah, too late to buy the calls here. Go back and read my research from May which said buy the stock and you get a car for free—and that worked again, except this time, you can get three free Tesla’s. A lot of subscribers have sent me pictures of their Teslas they got for free on my advice; I’m probably the largest salesman for Tesla for the last 10 years and all I got out of it was a free Powerwall (the red one)..
Q: How much higher do you think semiconductor companies will go?
A: Higher but it’s impossible to quantify. You’re getting very speculative short-term buying in there. So, I think it continues to the rest of the year, but with chips, you never know.
Q: Would you be buying Crispr Therapeutics (CRSP) at these levels?
A: Yes, but I would either just buy the stock and not be dependent on the calendar or buy a 2 ½ year LEAP and get an easy double on that.
Q: What about the currencies?
A: I don’t see much action in the currencies as long as the US is raising interest rates. I think the Euro (FXE), the Aussie (FXA), and the British pound (FXB) will be dead for the time being. Nobody wants to sell them but nobody wants to buy them either when you’re looking at a potential short term rise in the dollar from rising interest rates.
Q: What stable coins are the right answer for cryptocurrency?
A: The US dollar stable coin, but for price appreciation, you’re really looking at Bitcoin and Ethereum. Stable coins are stable, they don’t move; you want stuff that’s going to go up 5, 10, or 20 times over the next 10 years like Bitcoin (BITO) and Ethereum (ETHE). That is my crypto answer.
Q: What should I do about the iShares 20 Plus Year Treasury Bond ETF (TLT) $135-$140 put spread expiring in January?
A: If we get another run down to the $141 level that we saw last month, I would come out of all short treasury positions because you’re starting to run into time decay problems with the January expirations. And in case we remain in a range for some reason, I would be taking profits at the bottom end of the range. It was my mistake that I didn’t grab those profits when we hit $141 last time. So don’t let profits grow hair on them, they tend to disappear. We lost six months on this trade due to the delta virus and the mini-recession it brought us.
Q: Will there be accelerated tech selling in December because of the new tax rates?
A: What new tax rates? There has been no new tax bill passed and even if there were, I think people wouldn’t tax sell this year because the profits are enormous. They would rather do any selling in January at higher prices and then defer payment of those taxes by 18 months. I don’t think there will be any tax issues this year at all.
Q: What’s your return on solar power investments?
A: My break-even was four years because our local utility, PG&E, went bankrupt and the only way they're getting out of bankruptcy is raising electricity prices by 10% a year. It turns out that as a result of global warming, the panels have operated at a higher efficiency as well, so we’re getting a lot more power output than originally expected. Now I get free electricity for the remaining 20-year life of the panels which is great because with two Tesla’s and all-electric heating and air conditioning I use a lot of juice. My monthly bill is a sight to behold. I also power the 20 surrounding houses and for that PG&E pays me $1,800 a month.
Q: Do you see China (FXI) invading Taiwan as a potential threat to the market?
A: China will never invade Taiwan. They own many of the companies they're already in, they de facto control Taiwan government from a distance; they would not risk the international consequences of an actual invasion. And we have the US seventh fleet there to stop exactly that. So, they can make all the noise they want but nothing will come of it. I’ve been watching this for 50 years and nothing has ever happened.
Q: Would you buy ProShares Ultrashort 20+ Treasury ETF (TBT) here?
A: Absolutely, with both hands, all I can get.
Q: Can you recommend any water ETF opportunity?
A: Yes there is one I wrote a piece on last month. It’s the Claymore S&P Global Water Index ETF (CGW).
Q: How long can you hold the (TBT) before time decay hurts?
A: It doesn’t hurt, the cost of the TBT is two times the 10-year rate. So that would be 3%, plus 1% a year for management fees, and that’s your slippage on the TBT in a year right now—it’s 4%. Remember if you’re short the bond market, you have to pay the coupon when you’re short. Double the bond market and you have to pay double the coupon.
Q: Is the ProShares Bitcoin Strategy ETF (BITO) a good alternative to buying bitcoin?
A: I would say yes because I’ve been watching the tracking on that very carefully and it’s pretty damn close. Plus there’s a lot of liquidity there, so yeah, buy the (BITO) ETF on dips and dollar cost average.
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
Global Market Comments
October 18, 2021
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or THE GOOD NEWS IS HERE)
(GS), (MS), (JPM), (BAC), (C), (BLK), (TLT), (BRKB), (SPY)
Here’s the good news.
You know those pesky seasonals that have been a drag of the market for the past five months? You know, that sell in May and go away thing?
It’s about to end, vanish, and vaporize.
We are only ten trading days away from when seasonals turn hugely positive on November 1.
On top of that, the pandemic is rapidly receding, the economy reaccelerating, and workers are returning to the workforce. The action Biden took with the west coast ports should unlock the logjam there. It all sounds like a Goldilocks scenario.
The ports issue has nothing to do with the pandemic. The truth is that with 6% GDP growth, the US economy is growing faster than it has ever done before. That means we are buying a lot more stuff, more than our antiquated infrastructure can handle. Unlock the ports, and growth could accelerate even further.
Bitcoin has been on fire as well, doubling since August 1. The focus has been on the launch of the first crypto futures ETF, which may happen as early as today. All of the trade alerts we issued in this space have been total home runs. (Click here for our Bitcoin Letter).
As a result, Bitcoin is within striking range of hitting a new all-time high at $66,000. Break that, and we could see a melt-up straight to $100,000.
Want another reason to be bullish? The Millennial generation is about to inherit $68 trillion by 2030. Guess where that is going? Bitcoin and all other risk assets, as younger investors tend to be more aggressive.
So, what to do about all of this?
Keep doing more of what’s working. Buy financials and Bitcoin and sell short bonds. Wait for tech to bottom out at the next interest rate peak, then load the boat there once again.
Make as much money as you can now because 2022 could be a year of diminished expectations. Stocks might rise by only 15% compared to this year’s 30% torrid rate.
As for Bitcoin, that is a horse of a different color.
CPI Hits 5.4%, and was up 0.4% in September, a high for this cycle. This time, it was food and energy that took the lead. Used car prices, which went ballistic last month, showed a decline. Supply chain problems are wreaking havoc and those with inventory can charge whatever they want. The Fed thinks this is transitory, the bond market doesn’t. Sell rallies in the (TLT).
Weekly Jobless Claims Plunge to 293,000, a new post-pandemic low. With delta in retreat, higher wages are luring people back to work to deal with massive supply chain problems. This may be the beginning of the big drop in unemployment to pre-pandemic levels. Stocks will love it. Buy stocks on dips.
Big Banks Report Blowout Earnings and are firing on all cylinders. The best is yet to come. Interest rates are rising, default rates are falling, profit margins expanding, and the economy is growing at a record rate. Buy (JPM), BAC), and (C) on dips.
The Nonfarm Payroll Bombs in September, coming in at only 194,000. That follows a weak 235,000 in August. The headline Unemployment Rate dropped to a new post-pandemic low of 4.8%, down from a peak of 22%. It’s not a soggy economy that’s causing this, but a shortage of people to hire. Some 10 million workers have gone missing from the American economy, and many may never come back.
Bitcoin Soars to $61,000, a five-month high, putting the previous $66,000 high in range. With ten crypto ETFs waiting in the wings for SEC approval, a flood of money is about to hit the sector. Several countries are now considering the adoption of Bitcoin as a national currency after El Salvador’s move. Keep buying Bitcoin dips. Mad Hedge Bitcoin Letter followers are making a fortune.
Oil (USO) Tops $80, after OPEC limits production increases to 400,000 barrels a day, dragging on the stocks market. Prices are approaching levels that will restrain growth. Pandemic under-investment and distribution problems have triggered a short squeeze. There will be many spikes on the way to zero.
Fed Minutes Show Taper to Start in November, as discussed in the September meeting. They may start with $15 billion a month in fewer bond purchases. The inflation boogie man is getting bigger with the 5.4% print on Tuesday. Sell rallies in the (TLT)
JOLTS Comes in at 10.4 million indicating that the labor shortage is getting more severe. Millions are still staying home for fear of catching covid. There is also a massive skills disparity resulting from decades of under-investment in education.
IMF Cuts Global Growth Forecast to 5.9%. Supply chains, delta, inflation worries, and vaccine access are to blame.
US Dollar (UUP) Hits One-Year High on rising interest rates. This will continue for the foreseeable future. Stand aside from the (UUP) as this is a countertrend trade. We may be only 15 basis points away from an interim peak in rates at 1.76% for the ten-year.
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 heroic +8.91% gain so far in October. My 2021 year-to-date performance soared to 81.51%. The Dow Average was up 15.4% so far in 2021.
Figuring that we are either at, or close to a market bottom, and being a man of my convictions, I kept 90% invested in financial stocks all the wall until the October 15 options expirations. Those include (MS), (GS), (JPM), (BLK), (BRKB), (BAC), and (C).
The payday was big and more than covered earlier in the month stop-losses in (SPY) and (DIS). I quick trip by the Volatility Index (VIX) to $29, then back to $15 was a big help.
That brings my 12-year total return to 511.06%, some 2.00 times the S&P 500 (SPX) over the same period. My 12-year average annualized return now stands at an unbelievable 43.19%, easily the highest in the industry.
My trailing one-year return popped back to positively eye-popping 119.57%. 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 45 million and rising quickly and deaths topping 725,000, which you can find here.
The coming week will be slow on the data front.
On Monday, October 18 at 8:15 AM, Industrial Production for September is published. Johnson & Johnson (JNJ) reports.
On Tuesday, October 19 at 8:00 AM, the Housing Starts for September are released. Netflix (NFLX) reports.
On Wednesday, October 20 at 7:30 AM, Crude Oil Stocks are announced. Tesla (TSLA) and IMB (IBM) report.
On Thursday, October 21 at 8:30 AM, Weekly Jobless Claims are announced. At 10:00 AM, Existing Home Sales for September are printed. Alaska Air (ALK) and Southwest Air (LUV) report.
On Friday, October 22 at 8:45 AM, the US Markit Flash Manufacturing and Services PMI is out. American Express (AXP) reports. At 2:00 PM, the Baker Hughes Oil Rig Count are disclosed.
As for me, I normally avoid the diplomatic circuit, as the few non-committal comments and soggy appetizers I get aren’t worth the investment of time.
But I jumped at the chance to celebrate the 70th anniversary of the founding of the People’s Republic of China with San Francisco consul general Gao Zhansheng.
Happy Birthday, China!
When I casually mention that I survived the Cultural Revolution from 1968 to 1976 and interviewed major political figures like Premier Deng Xiaoping, who launched the Middle Kingdom into the modern era, and his predecessor, Zhou Enlai, modern-day Chinese are enthralled.
It’s like going to a Fourth of July party and letting drop that I palled around with Thomas Jefferson and Benjamin Franklin.
Five minutes into the great hall, and I ran into my old friend Wen. She started out her career with the Chinese Intelligence Service and had made the jump to the Foreign Ministry, as all their best people did. Wen was passing through town with a visiting trade mission.
When I was touring China in the seventies as the guest of the Bank of China, Wen was assigned as my guide and translator, and we kept in touch over the years. I was assigned a bodyguard who doubled as the driver of a tank-like Russian sedan, a Volga.
The Cultural Revolution was on, and while the major cities were safe, we ran the risk of running into a renegade band of xenophobic Red Guards, with potentially fatal consequences.
By the time Wen married, China had already adopted its one-child policy. As much as she wanted more children, she understood the government’s need to adopt such a drastic policy. Without it, the population today would be 1.6 billion, not 1.2 billion, and all of the money that went into buying capital goods would have been spent on food imports instead.
The country would have stagnated at its 1980 per capita income of $100/year. There would have been no Chinese economic miracle. She was very proud of her one son, who was a software engineer at Microsoft (MSFT) in Beijing.
I asked if she recalled our first trip together and a dark cloud came over her face. We were touring a section of Fuzhou in southern China when three policemen marched up. They started shouting at Wen that we were in a restricted section of the city where foreigners were not allowed. They started mercilessly beating her with clubs.
I was about to intercede when my late wife, Kyoko, let go with a blood-curdling tirade in Japanese that froze them in their tracks. I saw from the fear in their faces that she had ignited their wartime fear of Japanese authority and the dreaded Kempeitai, or secret police, and they beat a hasty retreat.
To this day, I’m not exactly sure what Kyoko said. We took Wen back to our hotel room and bandaged her up, putting ice on the giant goose egg on her head. When I left, I gave her my paperback copy of HG Well’s A Short History of the World, which she treasured, as the book was then banned in China.
Wen mentioned that she was approaching the mandatory retirement age of 60, and soon would be leaving the Foreign Service. I suggested she move to San Francisco, which offered a thriving Chinese community.
She laughed. No matter how much prices had fallen, she could never afford anything here on a Chinese civil servant’s salary.
I asked Wen if she still had the book I gave her nearly five decades ago. She said it had become a treasured family heirloom and was being passed down through the generations.
As she smiled, I notice the faint scar on her eyebrow from that unpleasantness so long ago.
Good Luck and Good Trading
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
Kyoko and I in Beijing in 1977
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