Global Market Comments
January 16, 2024
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or WHAT WILL KILL THIS MARKET)
(MSFT), (BA), (AMZN), (DAL), (V), (PANW), (CCJ), (TLT), (NVDA), (META), (TSLA), (GOOGL)
Global Market Comments
January 16, 2024
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or WHAT WILL KILL THIS MARKET)
(MSFT), (BA), (AMZN), (DAL), (V), (PANW), (CCJ), (TLT), (NVDA), (META), (TSLA), (GOOGL)
What if Goldilocks decided to hang around for a while? I’ve always been in favor of a long-term relationship.
It could be weeks. It could be months.
Certainly, the widely predicted New Year selloff has failed to materialize.
Failure to fall after the first week of 2024 has delivered a rally almost as ferocious as the one that launched in October. (NVDIA) up 15% in a week? Good thing I have a double position. Cameco (CCJ) up 25%? The market action was so positive that it rushed me into a rare 100% fully invested portfolio.
Which all begs the question of what WILL eventually kill this market. After all, nothing goes up forever.
It's very simple.
If the coming Fed interest rate cuts become so certain that companies start aggressively investing for the recovery NOW, there could be a problem. The headline Unemployment Rate never falls, inflation reaccelerates, and even the idea of interest rate cuts gets pushed off until 2025. That would thrust a dagger through the heart of the current rally post haste, which has been interest rate-driven from day one.
If there’s anyone who will save our bacon from this dire scenario, it is the legion of dour analysts out there who are perpetually behind the curve with their ultra-conservative earnings forecasts. That is scaring companies from expanding too quickly and is why every announcement delivers an upside surprise. That alone could provide enough of a drag on the economy to keep the Goldilocks scenario on track.
Watch Out Above!
If that is the case, then the ten positions I added last week to achieve a rare 100% invested portfolio should do pretty well, which has a strong technology bent. In the AI-dominated world, data is king. Let’s see who owns the data.
Microsoft (MSFT) – knows every keystroke you have executed since you bought your first PC in 1990.
Google (GOOGL) – knows every search you have performed since 2005 plus every YouTube video you have watched, even the X-rated ones (oops!).
Tesla (TSLA) – knows every function your car has performed since 2010 and has 12 videos of where you have been (double oops!).
Meta (META)– knows every keystroke you have performed on your social media accounts.
If all of this sounds scary, it should be. But it also means that while these stocks may be expensive relative to 2023 earnings, they are still in the bargain basement regarding 2024 and 2025 earnings. Buy everything on dips. Investors are adding to what they already own because it’s been working big time, including me.
On a completely different topic, Uranium is going nuclear again. Yellow cake, the fuel used by nuclear power plants, has seen prices up 45% since May. Before the Ukraine war, Russia produced 50% of the world’s nuclear fuel. Now it is banned due to sanctions. The US has announced the creation of a nuclear fuel stockpile.
Congress is about to vote on a ban on Russian fuel. France just announced the addition of 14 large nuclear plants. Oh, and it’s green.
Uranium prices endured a long nuclear winter starting with the Three Mile Island accident in 1979, followed by Chernobyl in 1986, and Fukushima in 2011. That time is now over, thanks to more advanced reactor designs and better risk control.
I used to collect Czech uranium glass, which emits a very low level of gamma radiation and glows in the dark under ultraviolet light. Time to collect some of Canadian uranium miner Cameco (CCJ) also … again.
So far in January, we are up +6.19% with a 100% invested position. My 2024 year-to-date performance is also at +6.19%. The S&P 500 (SPY) is down -0.07% so far in 2024. My trailing one-year return reached +67.65% versus +37.82% for the S&P 500.
That brings my 15-year total return to +682.82%. My average annualized return has exploded to +52.19%, another new high.
Some 63 of my 70 trades last year were profitable in 2023.
I am going into 2024 with longs in (MSFT), (BA), (AMZN), (DAL), (V), (PANW), (CCJ), (TLT), and a double long in (NVDA).
FAA Grounds the Boeing 737 Max….Again, after a huge chunk of the fuselage fell off on a passenger flight which made an emergency landing in Portland. Dozens of the troubled aircraft were grounded. The move affects about 171 planes worldwide. The 737 Max is by far Boeing’s most popular aircraft and its biggest source of revenue. United Airlines is the biggest operator of the type followed by Alaska. Use any major dips to buy (BA) stock, which is facing a golden age.
NVIDIA Ramps Up its Graphics Cards. Nvidia is playing up its strength in consumer GPUs for so-called “local” AI that can run on a PC or laptop from home or an office. The new chip can be used to generate images on Adobe Photoshop’s Firefly generator to remove backgrounds in video calls, or even make games that use AI to generate dialogue. Buy (NVDA) on dips, as I did this last week.
Energy Prices Collapse Again, with Texas tea diving 4% to $70 on Saudi price cuts. This is despite steady buying from the US government for the SPR. The kingdom is moving to shortcut cheating by lesser OPEC members, as it usually does. If you throw good news in the market and it fails to go up, you sell it. Avoid (USO), (XOM), and (OXY).
Natural Gas Goes Ballistic, up 50% in three weeks. The 2026 $8-9 LEAPS I recommended over Christmas have already doubled. Expansion of export facilities to China is the reason, for accommodating more demand. BUY (UNG) on dips.
Mortgage Demand Soars by 10% in the first week of the year, and the next leg in the bull market for residential housing begins anew. Applications to refinance a home loan jumped 19% from the previous week and were 30% higher than the same week one year ago.
Consumer Price Index Flies, coming in at 0.3% for December instead of the anticipated 0.2%, a 3.4% annual rate. Fed rate cuts just got pushed back from March to June, where they belong. Used car and apparel prices get the blame. Car insurance was up a shocking 20% YOY. Go figure.
Bitcoin ETF’s SEC Approved, after a ten-year wait, potentially marking a market top. The SEC is still warning about market risks, even if the ETF sellers don’t. During the last crypto spike, there was an absence of cheap quality growth stocks. Now there is an abundance. Bitcoin prospered when we had a cash surplus and asset shortage. Now we have the opposite.
Global EV and Hybrid Sales Jump by 31% in 2023, compared to only 10% for internal combustion driven cars. Global sales of fully electric and plug-in hybrid vehicles (PHEVs) rose 31% in 2023, down from 60% growth in 2022, according to market research firm Rho Motion. For 2024, there are forecasts of global EV sales growth of between 25% and 30%. That’s really quite amazing given the weak 2023 global economy.
Microsoft Tops Apple, as the world’s most valuable publicly traded company, with a $3 trillion market cap. A huge lead in AI and a growing storage presence with Azure are the reasons. I’m long (MSFT) lower down.
US Budget Deficit Tops $500 Billion in Q1, starting October 1, 2023. But the frenetic price action, up a mind-blowing $19 in 2 ½ months proves the government isn’t borrowing too much money, it isn’t borrowing enough! There is a severe bond shortage in the marketplace. Never argue with Mr. Market as he is always right. Buy the (TLT) on dips, as I have.
Tesla to Halt Production in Germany, thanks to soaring shipping costs in the Red Sea. Tesla has been selling Berlin-made Model Ys to China via the Suez Canal. Shipping costs have doubled to $5,000 per container since October.
My Ten-Year View
When we come out the other side of the recession, we will be perfectly poised to launch into my new American Golden Age or the next Roaring Twenties. The economy decarbonizing and technology hyper-accelerating, creating enormous investment opportunities. The Dow Average will rise by 800% to 240,000 or more in the coming decade. The new America will be far more efficient and profitable than the old.
Dow 240,000 here we come!
On Monday, January 15, markets are closed for Martin Luther King Day.
On Tuesday, January 16 at 8:30 AM EST, the New York Empire State Manufacturing Index will be released.
On Wednesday, January 17 at 2:00 PM, the Retail Sales are published.
On Thursday, January 18 at 8:30 AM, the Weekly Jobless Claims are announced. We also get the Building Permits for December.
On Friday, January 19 at 2:30 PM, the December University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment is published. At 2:00 PM, the Baker Hughes Rig Count is printed.
Uranium Glass
As for me, when you make millions of dollars for your clients, you get a lot of pretty interesting invitations. $5,000 cases of wine, lunches on superyachts, free tickets to the Olympics, and dates with movie stars (Hi, Cybil!).
So it was in that spirit that I made my way down to the beachside community of Oxnard, California just north of famed Malibu to meet long-term Mad Hedge follower, Richard Zeiler.
Richard is a man after my own heart, plowing his investment profits into vintage aircraft, specifically a 1929 Travel Air D-4-D.
At the height of the Roaring Twenties (which by the way we are now repeating), flappers danced the night away doing the Charleston and the bathtub gin flowed like water. Anything was possible, and the stock market soared.
In 1925, Clyde Cessna, Lloyd Stearman, and Walter Beech got together and founded the Travel Air Manufacturing Company in Wichita, Kansas. Their first order was to build ten biplanes to carry the US mail for $125,000.
The plane proved hugely successful, and Travel Air eventually manufactured 1,800 planes, making it the first large-scale general aviation plane built in the US. Then, in 1929, the stock market crashed, the Great Depression ensued, aircraft orders collapsed, and Travel Air disappeared in the waves of mergers and bankruptcies that followed.
A decade later, WWII broke out and Wichita produced the tens of thousands of the small planes used to train the pilots who won the war. They flew B-17 and B-25 bombers and P51 Mustangs, all of which I’ve flown myself. The name Travel Air was consigned to the history books.
Enter my friend Richard Zeiler. Richard started flying support missions during the Vietnam War and retired 20 years later as an Army Lieutenant Colonel. A successful investor, he was able to pursue his first love, restoring vintage aircraft.
Starting with a broken down 1929 Travel Air D4D wreck, he spent years begging, borrowing, and trading parts he found on the Internet and at air shows. Eventually, he bought 20 Travel Air airframes just to make one whole airplane, including the one used in the 1930 Academy Award-winning WWI movie “Hells Angels.”
By 2018, he returned it to pristine flying condition. The modernized plane has a 300 hp engine, carries 62 gallons of fuel, and can fly 550 miles in five hours, which is far longer than my own bladder range.
Richard then spent years attending air shows, producing movies, and even scattering the ashes of loved ones over the Pacific Ocean. He also made the 50-hour round trip to the annual air show in Oshkosh, Wisconsin. I have volunteered to copilot on a future trip.
Richard now claims over 5,000 hours flying tailwheel aircraft, probably more than anyone else in the world. Believe it or not, I am also one of the few living tailwheel-qualified pilots in the country left. Yes, antiques are flying antiques!
As for me, my flying career also goes back to the Vietnam era as well. As a war correspondent in Laos and Cambodia, I used to hold Swiss-made Pilatus Porter airplanes straight and level while my Air America pilot friend was looking for drop zones on the map, dodging bullets all the way.
I later obtained a proper British commercial pilot license over the bucolic English countryside, trained by a retired Battle of Britain Spitfire pilot. His favorite trick was to turn off the fuel and tell me that a German Messerschmidt had just shot out my engine and that I had to land immediately. He only turned the gas back on at 200 feet when my approach looked good. We did this more than 200 times.
By the time I moved back to the States and converted to a US commercial license, the FAA examiner was amazed at how well I could do emergency landings. Later, I added on additional licenses for instrument flying, night flying, and aerobatics.
Thanks to the largesse of Morgan Stanley during the 1980s, I had my own private twin-engine Cessna 421 in Europe for ten years at their expense where I clocked another 2,000 hours of flying time. That job had me landing on private golf courses so I could sell stocks to the Arab Prince owners. By 1990, I knew every landing strip in Europe and the Persian Gulf like the back of my hand.
So, when the first Gulf War broke out the following year, the US Marine Corps came calling at my London home. They asked if I wanted to serve my country and I answered, “Hell, yes!” So, they drafted me as a combat pilot to fly support missions in Saudi Arabia.
I only got shot down once and escaped with a crushed L5 disk. It turns out that I crash better than anyone else I know. That’s important because they don’t let you practice crashing in flight school. It’s too expensive.
My last few flying years have been more sedentary, flying as a volunteer spotter pilot in a Cessna-172 for Cal Fire during the state’s runaway wildfires. As long as you stay upwind, there’s no smoke. The problem is that these days, there is almost nowhere in California that isn’t smokey. By the way, there are 2,000 other pilots on the volunteer list.
Eventually, I flew over 50 prewar and vintage aircraft, everything from a 1932 De Havilland Tiger Moth to a Russian MiG 29 fighter.
It was a clear, balmy day when I was escorted to the Travel Air’s hanger at Oxnard Airport. I carefully prechecked the aircraft and rotated the prop to circulate oil through the engine before firing it up. That reduced the wear and tear on the moving parts.
As they teach you in flight school, better to be on the ground wishing you could fly than be in the air wishing you were on the ground!
I donned my leather flying helmet, plugged in my headphones, received a clearance from the tower, and was good to go. I put on max power and was airborne in less than 100 yards. How do you tell if a pilot is happy? He has engine oil all over his teeth. After all, these are open-cockpit planes.
I made for the Malibu coast and thought it would be fun to buzz the local surfers at wave top level. I got a lot of cheers in return from my fellow thrill seekers.
After a half hour of low flying over elegant sailboats and looking for whales, I flew over the cornfields and flower farms of remote Ventura County and returned to Oxnard. I haven’t flown in a biplane in a while and that second wing really put up some drag. So, I had to give a burst of power on short finals to make the numbers. A taxi back to the hangar and my work there was done.
There are old pilots and there are bold pilots, but there are no old, bold pilots. I can attest to that.
Richard’s goal is to establish a new Southern California aviation museum at Oxnard airport. He created a non-profit 501 (3)(c), the Travel Air Aircraft Company, Inc. to achieve that goal, which has a very responsible and well-known board of directors. He has already assembled three other 1929 and 1930 Travel Air biplanes as part of the display.
The museum’s goal is to provide education, job training, restoration, maintenance, sightseeing rides, film production, and special events. All donations are tax-deductible. To make a donation, please email the president of the museum, my friend Richard Conrad at rconrad6110@gmail.com
Who knows, you might even get a ride in a nearly 100-year-old aircraft as part of a donation.
To watch the video of my joyride, please click here.
Where I Go My Kids Go
Good Luck and Good Trading,
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
Global Market Comments
December 4, 2023
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
Featured Trade:
(The Mad Hedge December Traders & Investors Summit is ON!)
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or GOLDILOCKS IS BACK!),
(TLT), (FCX), (CAT), (JNK), (HYG), (NLY), (GM), (MSFT), (NLY), (BRK/B), (CCJ), (GOOGL), (SNOW), (XOM), (CRM)
After too long of an absence, Goldilocks has moved back in once again. She arrived with Santa Claus too, a month ahead of schedule.
Can life get any better than that, Goldilocks and Santa Claus?
Santa confused Thanksgiving with Christmas this year. I saw it coming a mile off, and it’s not because my failing eyesight has suddenly improved.
Since October 26, Mad Hedge followers have earned an impressive 25%. We are on track to top an 86.5% profit for 2023, the best in the 15-year history of the service.
Concierge members who own our substantial LEAPS portfolio, now at 33 names, are up much more.
I hate to boast but let me take my victory lap. I earned it.
Stocks and bonds should continue rising but at a much slower rate. More likely is the diversification of the rally from Big Tech and big bonds (TLT) to medium tech, commodities (FCX), industrials (CAT), junk bonds (JNK), (HYG), and REITS (NLY).
Buy everything on dips.
And here are your assumptions. Collapsing energy prices will lead the inflation rate down to the Fed’s well-publicized 2% inflation rate target in the coming months. Accelerating technology and AI will reign in this year’s runaway wage increases, if not reverse them.
The UAW’s 25% salary increase over four years will only hasten the demise of General Motors (GM), as well as their own. Interest rates have to take a swan dive, supercharging all risk assets.
Goldilocks is not moving in for a fling, but a long-term relationship. Your retirement funds will love it.
Last spring, with 75 feet of snow over the winter, the rivers pouring out of the High Sierras were at record levels. That brought the solo hobbyist gold miners out in force.
It is widely believed that the 1849 gold rush extracted only 10% of the gold in the mountains and the remaining 90% is still up there. Heavy rainfalls like we received last winter flushed out some of the rest.
Rounding a turn in the river, I spotted a group of modern-day 49ers equipped with shoulder-high waders and inner tubes floating pumps and sluice boxes. So I parked the car and waded out in the freezing, fast-running water to get an update on this market.
One man proudly showed off a one-ounce gold nugget that he had found only that morning worth about $1,800. Nuggets are worth more than spot gold because they attract a collector’s market.
A record eight-ounce nugget was discovered in a river near Merced the week earlier. This year, the state government in Sacramento issued a record number of gold mining licenses.
I explained to my newfound friend that he should hang on to his gold because it would be worth a lot more the following year. Inflation was falling and that would eventually induce the Federal Reserve to cut interest rates sharply.
That meant less interest rate competition for gold and silver, which yielded nothing taking prices upward. Personally, I think this gold could hit $3,000 an ounce and silver $50 an ounce in 2025.
In addition, there was a constant bid from Russia, China, and North Korea looking to dodge financial sanctions. Money managers are also picking up the yellow metal as a hedge against any unanticipated volatility in 2024.
My friend looked at me quizzically, wondering if perhaps I was some kind of nutjob who had waded out mid-river to rob him of his prized nugget.
I’ll do anything to gain a trading edge, even freezing off my cajones.
It was a tough week for 90- and 100-year-olds with the passing of Charlie Munger, Henry Kissinger, and Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O’Connor. I had the privilege of knowing all three.
I was in the White House Press Room one day when the press secretary James Brady asked if any of the press could ride a horse. Sheepishly, I was the only one to raise a hand.
I was ordered to pick up my riding boots and report to the White House Stables on 17th Street. I had no idea why. Back then, even the press didn’t ask some questions.
When I arrived, I understood why. Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O’Connor was already there kitted out ready to ride. It turns out that the justice from Arizona rode weekly with Ronald Reagan. This week, an international crisis prevented the president from doing so. I was the fill-in escort.
We talked about growing up in the Colorado Desert, and pre-air conditioning, as we enjoyed a peaceful ride along the Potomac River. A security detail kept a safe distance.
A lot of history is being in the right place at the right time.
The clock is ticking.
November closed out at +15.54%. My 2023 year-to-date performance is still at an eye-popping +81.71%. The S&P 500 (SPY) is up +19.73% so far in 2023. My trailing one-year return reached +80.80% versus +18.19% for the S&P 500.
That brings my 15-year total return to +678.90%. My average annualized return has exploded to +52.26%, another new high, some 2.48 times the S&P 500 over the same period.
I am 90% fully invested, with longs in (MSFT), (NLY), (BRK/B), (CCJ), (GOOGL), (SNOW), (CAT), and (XOM). I have one short in the (TLT). I took profits on (CRM) on Friday.
Some 56 of my 61 trades this year have been profitable this year.
My Ten-Year View
When we come out the other side of the recession, we will be perfectly poised to launch into my new American Golden Age or the next Roaring Twenties. The economy decarbonizing and technology hyper-accelerating, creating enormous investment opportunities. The Dow Average will rise by 800% to 240,000 or more in the coming decade. The new America will be far more efficient and profitable than the old.
Dow 240,000 here we come!
On Monday, December 4, at 8:30 AM EST, the US Factory Orders are out.
On Tuesday, December 5 at 2:30 PM, the JOLTS Job Openings Report is released.
On Wednesday, December 6 at 8:30 AM, the ADP Private Employment Report is published.
On Thursday, December 7 at 8:30 AM, the Weekly Jobless Claims are announced.
On Friday, December 8 at 2:00 PM the Baker Hughes Rig Count is printed and at 2:30 PM, the November Nonfarm Payroll Report is published.
As for me, back in the early 1980s, when I was starting up Morgan Stanley’s international equity trading desk, my wife Kyoko was still a driven Japanese career woman.
Taking advantage of her near-perfect English, she landed a prestige job as the head of sales at New York’s Waldorf Astoria Hotel.
Every morning we set off on our different ways, me to Morgan Stanley’s HQ in the old General Motors Building on Avenue of the Americas and 47th street and she to the Waldorf at Park and 34th.
One day, she came home and told me this little old lady living in the Waldorf Towers needed an escort to walk her dog in the evenings once a week. Back in those days, the crime rate in New York was sky-high, and only the brave or the reckless ventured outside after dark.
I said “Sure” “What was her name?”
Jean MacArthur.
I said THE Jean MacArthur?
She answered “Yes.”
Jean MacArthur was the widow of General Douglas MacArthur, the WWII legend. He fought off the Japanese in the Philippines in 1941 and retreated to Australia in a dramatic night PT Boat escape.
He then led a brilliant island-hopping campaign, turning the Japanese at Guadalcanal and New Guinea. My dad was part of that operation, as were the fathers of many of my Australian clients. That led all the way to Tokyo Bay where MacArthur accepted the Japanese in 1945 on the deck of the battleship USS Missouri.
The MacArthur then moved into the Tokyo embassy where the general ran Japan as a personal fiefdom for seven years, a residence I know well. That’s when Jean, who was 18 years the general’s junior, developed a fondness for the Japanese people.
When the Korean War began in 1950, MacArthur took charge. His landing at Inchon Harbor broke the back of the invasion and was one of the most brilliant tactical moves in military history. When MacArthur was recalled by President Truman in 1952, he had not been home for 13 years.
So it was with some trepidation that I was introduced by my wife to Mrs. MacArthur in the lobby of the Waldorf Astoria. On the way out, we passed a large portrait of the general who seemed to disapprovingly stare down at me taking out his wife, so I was on my best behavior.
To some extent, I had spent my entire life preparing for this job.
I had stayed at the MacArthur Suite at the Manila Hotel where they had lived before the war. I knew Australia well. And I had just spent a decade living in Japan. By chance, I had also read the brilliant biography of MacArthur by William Manchester, American Caesar, which had only just come out.
I also competed in karate at the national level in Japan for ten years, which qualified me as a bodyguard. In other words, I was the perfect after-dark escort for Midtown Manhattan in the early eighties.
She insisted I call her “Jean”; she was one of the most gregarious women I have ever run into. She was grey-haired, petite, and made you feel like you were the most important person she had ever run into.
She talked a lot about “Doug” and I learned several personal anecdotes that never made it into the history books.
“Doug” was a staunch conservative who was nominated for president by the Republican party in 1944. But he pushed policies in Japan that would have qualified him as a raging liberal.
It was the Japanese that begged MacArthur to ban the army and the navy in the new constitution for they feared a return of the military after MacArthur left. Women gained the right to vote on the insistence of the English tutor for Emperor Hirohito’s children, an American Quaker woman. He was very pro-union in Japan. He also pushed through land reform that broke up the big estates and handed out land to the small farmers.
It was a vast understatement to say that I got more out of these walks than she did. While making our rounds, we ran into other celebrities who lived in the neighborhood who all knew Jean, such as Henry Kissinger, Ginger Rogers, and the UN Secretary-General.
Morgan Stanley eventually promoted me and transferred me to London to run the trading operations there, so my prolonged free history lesson came to an end.
Jean MacArthur stayed in the public eye and was a frequent commencement speaker at West Point where “Doug” had been a student and later the superintendent. Jean died in 2000 at the age of 101.
I sent a bouquet of lilies to the funeral.
Kyoko passed away in 2002.
In 2014, Chinas Anbang Insurance Group bought the Waldorf Astoria for $1.95 billion, making it the most expensive hotel ever sold. Most of the rooms were converted to condominiums and sold to Chinese looking to hide assets abroad.
The portrait of Douglas MacArthur is gone too. During the Korean War, he threatened to drop atomic bombs on China’s major coastal cities.
Good Luck and Good Trading,
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
Global Market Comments
November 27, 2023
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or MELT UP),
(MSFT), (NLY), (BRK/B), (CCJ), (CRM), (GOOGL), (SNOW), (CAT), (XOM), (TLT)
If you think the market performance for the past month has been spectacular, you have seen nothing yet. We have two major positive catalysts that are about to hit stock prices.
On December 10, we will see a lower-than-expected Consumer Price Index, driving yet another stake through the heart of inflation. On December 13, we will also be greeted with a Federal Reserve decision to keep interest rates unchanged, as they will do over the next several meetings.
“Higher for shorter” is about to become the new market mantra.
That will give the market the shot in the arm it needs to reach my $4,800 yearend target, which was precisely the goal I laid out on January 1. Caution has been thrown to the wind and hedging downside risks has become a distant memory. One of the fastest market melt-ups in 100 years will do that. Complacency is the order of the day.
Equity-oriented mutual funds have seen $43 billion in inflows so far in November. Commodity Trading Funds, or CTA’s, have seen a breathtaking $60 billion piled into long equity strategies.
Hedge funds flipped from short to long and now have the most aggressively bullish positions in 22 years, mostly in big tech. All of this has taken the Volatility Index (VIX) down to a subterranean $12 handle. Bears are suddenly lonely….and afraid.
Yes, 55 years of practice makes this easy.
On October 28, it turns out that we reached a decade-high peak in bond investment when Treasuries were flirting with new highs in yields. With perfect rear-view mirror hindsight that’s when many investors cut stock holdings to the bone. They will spend the next several months desperately trying to get back in.
Oh yes, and Company buybacks are about to surge as companies race to pick up their own stocks before the yearend deadline. Apple is the top buyback stock followed by Alphabet (GOOGL) and Microsoft (MSFT). Heard these names before?
And while big tech is starting to look expensive, they are cheap when you factor in the trillions of dollars in profits that are headed their way over the next decade.
That’s what always happens.
What could pee on my victory parade? Ten-year US treasury bonds revisiting a 5.08% yield, crude oil popping back up to $100 a barrel, oil another new blacking swan alighting out of the blue, like a Chinese invasion of Taiwan, or Russia retaking the Baltic states. That’s all.
Avoid these and stocks will continue to rise, as will your retirement funds.
The Magnificent Seven will continue to lead, as will big financials, which are still at bargain-basement levels. Energy and commodities are already posting January sale prices, discounting a 2024 recession that isn’t going to happen. This is fertile LEAPS territory.
Weekly Jobless Claims Drop 24,000, to 209,000 in one of the sharpest declines this year. It makes last week’s jump look like an anomaly.
Consumer Inflation Expectations Rise, to 3.2%, a 12-year high. They are counting on a 4.5% in 2024. They are now looking at gasoline prices. There’s your mismatch. Any decline in inflation will be viewed as a shocker and drive share prices to new all-time highs.
US Gasoline Prices Hit Three-Year Low, on recession fears and replacement concerns by EVs. Energy stocks are tracing the downside tic for tic, pulling down all other commodities. Don’t buy this dip.
Pending Home Sales Plunge to 13-Year Low, down 4.1% in October, on a signed contracts basis. Sales were down 14.6% year over year. The median price of an existing home sold in October was $391,800, an increase of 3.4% from October 2022. These are the last poor sales numbers before the collapse in interest rates. At the end of October, there were 1.15 million homes for sale, down 5.7% from a year earlier. This is about half as many homes as were available for sale pre-Covid. At the current sales pace, that represents a 3.6-month supply. A six-month supply is considered a balanced market between buyer and seller.
Monster Pay Hikes Will Lead to Strong Japanese Yen, with whiskey maker Suntory offering 7% pay hikes. The prospect of falling US interest rates adds fuel to the fire. Buy (FXY) on dips.
Starship Two Blows Up, two minutes or 92 miles after launch. The test fire of the 33-engine spacecraft was considered a success. The massive 397-foot tall, 30-foot-wide rocket, the largest ever built, is crucial for the NASA moon launch in 2025 and the SpaceX Mars trip further down the road.
NVIDIA (NVDA) Beats, with a profit triple, but that stock sells off 6% on the news. It was a classic buy the rumor, sell the news move. Future earnings increases will not be as big. Keep "buy (NVDA) on dips" as a must-own.
Famed Short Seller Jim Chanos shut down after a massive short in Tesla shares blew up. His funds under management have plunged from $6 billion to $200 million since (TSLA) went public. Chanos had a few big wins, notably Enron in 2001. But he was also seen as a hedge against other long positions.
So far in November, we are up +12.62%. My 2023 year-to-date performance is still at an eye-popping +78.79%. The S&P 500 (SPY) is up +19.73% so far in 2023. My trailing one-year return reached +81.00% versus +18.91% for the S&P 500.
That brings my 15-year total return to +675.98%. My average annualized return has exploded to +48.57%, another new high, some 2.49 times the S&P 500 over the same period.
I am 100% fully invested, with longs in (MSFT), (NLY), (BRK/B), (CCJ), (CRM), (GOOGL), (SNOW), (CAT), and (XOM). I have one short in the (TLT).
Some 66 of my 61 trades this year have been profitable.
My Ten-Year View
When we come out the other side of the recession, we will be perfectly poised to launch into my new American Golden Age or the next Roaring Twenties. The economy decarbonizing and technology hyper-accelerating, creating enormous investment opportunities. The Dow Average will rise by 800% to 240,000 or more in the coming decade. The new America will be far more efficient and profitable than the old.
Dow 240,000 here we come!
On Monday, November 27, at 8:30 AM EST, the New Home Sales are out.
On Tuesday, November 28 at 2:30 PM, the S&P National Home Price Index is released.
On Wednesday, November 29 at 8:30 AM, the Q2 GDP Growth Rate is published.
On Thursday, November 30 at 8:30 AM, the Weekly Jobless Claims are announced.
On Friday, December 1 at 2:30 PM, the October ISM Manufacturing Index is published. At 2:00 PM the Baker Hughes Rig Count is printed.
As for me, When I landed in Tokyo in 1974, there were very few foreigners in the country. The WWII occupation forces had left, but the international business community had yet to arrive. You met a lot of guys who used to work for Douglas MacArthur.
There was only one way to stay more than 90 days on the standard tourist visa. That was to get another visa to study “Japanese culture.” There were only two choices: flower arranging or karate.
Since this was at the height of Bruce Lee’s career, I went for karate.
It was not an easy choice.
World War II was not that distant, and there were still hundreds of army veterans missing limbs begging for money under railroad overpasses. Some back then were still fighting on remote Pacific islands.
Many in the karate community believed that the art was a national secret and should never be taught to foreigners. So those who entered this tight-knit community paid the price and had the daylights beaten out of them. I was one of those.
To this day, I am missing five of my original teeth. There is nothing like taking a kick to the mouth and watching your front teeth fly across the dojo, skittering on the teak floor.
We trained three hours a day, five days a week. It involved punching a bloody hardwood makiwara at least 200 times. The beginners were paired with black belts who thoroughly worked us over. Then the entire class met up at a nearby public bath to soak in a piping hot ofuro. You always hurt.
During the dead of winter, we ran five miles around the Imperial Palace in our karate gi’s barefoot in freezing temperatures daily. Then we were hosed down with cold water and trained for three hours.
During this time, I was infused with the spirit of bushido, the thousand-year-old Japanese warrior code. I learned self-discipline, stamina, and concentration. In the end, karate is a form of meditation.
Knowing you’re indestructible and unassailable is not such a bad thing, especially when you’re traveling in some of the harsher parts of the world. When muggers in bad neighborhoods see me late at night, they cross the street to avoid me. I am not a guy to mess with. Utter fearlessness is a great asset to possess.
The highlight of the annual training schedule was the All-Japan Karate Championship held in the prestigious Budokan, headquarters of all Japanese martial arts near the ghostly Yasukuni Jinja, Japan’s National Cemetery. By my last year in Japan, I had my black belt, and my instructor, Higaona Sensei, urged me to enter.
Because I had such a long reach, incredibly, I made it to the finals. I was matched with a very tough-looking six-footer who was fighting for Japan’s national prestige, as no foreigner had ever won the contest.
I punched, he kicked, fist met foot, and foot won. My left wrist was broken. My opponent knew what happened and graciously let me fight on one hand for another minute to save face. Then he knocked me out on points.
The crowds roared.
It’s all part of a full life.
Losing the All-Japan National Karate Championship
1974 Higaona Sensei
Stay Healthy,
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
Global Market Comments
November 13, 2023
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or THE YEAREND RALLY CONTINUES!)
(TSLA), (F), (MSFT), (NLY), (BRK/B), (TLT), (CCJ), (CRM)
Last week saw the best week for stocks in two years. As I expected, big tech led the charge and will continue to do so well into next year. Bonds (TLT) stabilized.
It looks like Mad Hedge followers will get to ring the cash register one more time in 2023!
However, we face a couple of speed bumps this coming week. On Tuesday, we get the Consumer Price Index which will tell us if inflation is well and truly dead….or not. On Wednesday, we get the Producer Price Index. And then on Friday, the US government shuts down for lack of funding.
Oops!
There have been some 92 government shutdowns in the last 50 years. Since then, the Dow Average has rocketed by 60 times.
So, I am not worried about the long-term effect on your retirement portfolio. When voters see the gravy train from Washington cut off, not to mention Social Security checks, military pay, and air traffic controller salaries, Congressmen can suddenly become very agreeable.
The short term is another story.
If House recalcitrance triggers a 500 or 1,000-point swan dive in stocks, you want to pile into the big tech leaders I have been begging you to buy for the past three weeks and fill your boots. And while 2023 was a hell of a year to make money in stocks (Mad Hedge has made only 73% so far in 2023, a three-year low), 2024 is looking much, much better.
Think falling inflation, stabilizing wages, fading interest rates, recovering profits, expanding price earnings multiples, and soaring stocks and bonds. The traditional 60/40 portfolio will come back with a vengeance.
I caught up with my old friend Ron Barron the other day, who I talked into buying Tesla shares in 2014. He got in late, at about $100 a share, or 25 times my own original split-adjusted $2.50 cost. But when you’re running big money as Ron, you can’t afford to buy the kind of wild insane risks that buying Tesla in 2010 entailed.
I can.
Ron is now the largest outside shareholder in both Tesla (TSLA) and SpaceX. Tesla is so far ahead of the competition that he expects to hold the shares for the rest of his life. Ford Motors (F) now loses $36,000 for each EV it sells, while Tesla earns a profit of $8,000, down from $15,000 a year ago.
Ford spends $7 billion to build a new factory which generates a miniscule $15 million, or 0.2%. Tesla earns 114% profit on every $7 billion factory it builds.
It's no contest.
During the 1950s, Detroit went all out to earn short-term profits by outsourcing its supply chain. Virtually every one of those third-party companies went bankrupt, irreparably harming their business models. Tesla makes virtually all of its parts in-house, including the Panasonic batteries.
Tesla is learning 100 million miles of data per day from its fleet of 6 million cars. No one else has anything close to this. In 18 months, (TSLA) will have the world’s largest computing ability, which Elon Musk refers to as “Dojo” (karate school in Japanese), which Morgan Stanley estimates will add $500 million to the value of the company.
There are 1.5 billion internal combustion engines in the world that need to be replaced. The present replacement rate is only 80 million cars a year and only 10% of these are EVs. Eventually, 100% will be EVs. Detroit carmakers don’t want to sell EVs because they require no service whereas local dealers make all their money. EVs require no service beyond changing tires every two years,
And while President Biden recently suggested that the UAW targets Tesla for unionization, they don’t have a chance. Tesla workers are by far the highest-paid auto workers in the world with the best benefits. They also own stock, many at my own $2.50 adjusted share cost. Elon was sitting pretty during the recent 46-day UAW nationwide walkout.
Buying Tesla today does not mean you are investing in the achievements of the past, which are formidable. It means that you are buying the new Cybertruck which is rolling out now and offers a new platform with many new technological leaps forward.
More importantly, you are betting on the new $25,000 Model 2 due out in 2025, where Tesla plans to build 5 million a year. Then the EV competition will well and truly be gone.
That makes my $1,000 a share target then $10,000 look extremely modest.
Don’t kid yourself. Tesla can still add to the 35.6% decline it has suffered since July 17. We could go as low as $150, a 50% hickey. This is the most volatile major stock in the market. It always goes down more than you think. But if we do, you want to take a second mortgage out on your home and put it all into Tesla. It’s going up 67 times from there.
I just thought you’d like to know.
So far in November, we are up +7.32%. My 2023 year-to-date performance is still at an eye-popping +73.49%. The S&P 500 (SPY) is up +7.89% so far in 2023. My trailing one-year return reached +74.44% versus +15.78% for the S&P 500.
That brings my 15-year total return to +670.78%. My average annualized return has rocketed to a new all-time high at +51.26%, another new high, some 2.58 times the S&P 500 over the same period.
Some 57 of my 62 trades this year have been profitable.
I went pedal to the metal last week, taking profits on my last three November positions in (TLT), (BRK/B), and (NVDA) that maxed out profits and piling in new December longs in (MSFT), (NLY), (BRK/B), (TLT), (CCJ), (CRM). That’s how you hit new all-time highs every day.
Berkshire Hathaway Knocks it Out of the Park, with a 41% gain in operating earnings from companies like BNSF Railroad, Geico, and Precision Castparts. But Warren Buffet was noted more for what he didn’t own than what he did. He unloaded $5 billion worth of global stocks in Q3, taking his cash position up to a record $157 billion. He can now earn a staggering $8.6 billion in interest in the coming year. He explains that stocks never really got cheap this year and high rates were just too attractive. Keep buying (BRK/B) on dips.
China EV Maker BYD is Building its First European Car Factory, in a clear threat to European car makers. They picked Hungary, one of the lowest-waged countries on the continent. BYD (BYDFF) which I recommended back in 2012 after visiting the factory in China is now the largest EV maker there knocking out 250,000 units this year. Is Tesla worried?
Investors Poured $5 Billion into Bond ETFs in October. Institutional investors were happy with the 5.0% yield last month and if they rose, they would simply buy more. It’s another sign that the bottom for all fixed-income prices is at hand. Buy (TLT), (JNK), and (NLY).
China Lends $1.34 Trillion for Belt and Road Initiative, from 2000 to 2001 to dominate Asian and African infrastructure. Good luck getting it back and good luck foreclosing. In the meantime, China suffered its first-ever deficit in foreign direct investment as the West de-risks from the Middle Kingdom.
Oil Hits a four-month low at $75 a Barrel, down 4% as the shine comes off the energy sector. The Gaza boost is gone. Fears of a global economic slowdown are mounting. China’s exports have fallen for six consecutive months, the world’s largest importer. Biden is back in the oil business, provided a floor bid from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve at $79.
Most 2023 Stock Gains Happened in 8 Days, up some 14% since January 1. If you are a day trader, you most likely missed all of this. This is despite stocks going up 113 days versus 102 down days. Making matters more difficult is that only seven stocks accounted for most of the increase. Talk about a narrow market!
A Soft Landing is Now More Likely, says Bank of America CEO Moynihan. Inflation is falling and could lead to Fed interest rate cuts in H2 2024. Stocks and bonds will love it.
NVIDIA is Designing Dumbed Down Chips for China, to bypass government sanctions. It’s an opportunity to recover some lost market share. Keep buying (NVDA) on dips, up 20% in two weeks. It has an impassable moat.
Weekly Jobless Claims dropped from 3,000 to 217,000. It’s still unusually low. Hiring slowed in October as the economy slowed.
My Ten-Year View
When we come out the other side of the recession, we will be perfectly poised to launch into my new American Golden Age or the next Roaring Twenties. The economy decarbonizing and technology hyper-accelerating, creating enormous investment opportunities. The Dow Average will rise by 800% to 240,000 or more in the coming decade. The new America will be far more efficient and profitable than the old.
Dow 240,000 here we come!
On Monday, November 13, bond markets are closed for Veterans Day. I will be leading the local parade wearing my new Medal from the Ukraine Army.
On Tuesday, November 14 at 2:30 PM EST, the Core Inflation Rate is released.
On Wednesday, November 15 at 8:30 AM, the Producer Price Index is published.
On Thursday, November 16 at 8:30 AM, the Weekly Jobless Claims are announced.
On Friday, November 17 at 2:30 PM the US Building Permits are published. At 2:00 PM the Baker Hughes Rig Count is printed.
As for me, few Americans know that 80% of all US air strikes during the Vietnam War originated in Thailand. At their peak in 1969, more US troops were serving in Thailand than in South Vietnam itself.
I was one of those troops.
When I reported to my handlers at the Ubon Airbase in northern Thailand for my next mission, they had nothing for me. They were waiting for the enemy to make their next move before launching a counteroffensive. They told me to take a week off.
The entertainment options in northern Thailand in those days were somewhat limited. Phuket and the pristine beaches of southern Thailand where people vacation today were then overrun by cutthroat pirates preying on boat people who would kill you for your boots.
Life was cheap in Asia in those days, especially your life. Any trip there would be a one-way ticket.
There were the fleshpots of Bangkok and Chang Mai. But I would likely contract some dreadful disease there. I wasn’t really into drugs, figuring whatever my future was, it required a brain. Besides, some people’s idea of a good time there was throwing a hand grenade into a crowded disco. So, I, ever the history buff, decided to go look for The Bridge Over the River Kwai.
Men of my generation knew the movie well, about a company of British soldiers who were the prisoners of bestial Japanese. At the end of the movie, all the key characters die as the bridge is blown up.
I wasn’t expecting much, maybe some interesting wreckage. I knew that the truth in Hollywood was just a starting point. After that, they did whatever they had to do to make a buck.
The fall of Singapore was one of the great Allied disasters at the beginning of WWII. Japanese on bicycles chased Rolls Royce armored cars and tanks the length of the Thai Peninsula. Two British battleships, the Repulse and the Prince of Wales, were sunk due to the lack of air cover with a great loss of life. When the Japanese arrived at Singapore, the defending heavy guns were useless as they pointed out to sea.
Some 130,000 men surrendered, including those captured in Malaysia. There were also 686 American POWs, the survivors of US Navy ships sunk early in the war. Most were shipped north by train to work as slave labor on the Burma Railway.
The Japanese considered the line strategically essential for their invasion of Burma. By building a 258-mile railway connecting Bangkok and Rangoon they could skip a sea voyage of 2,000 miles in waters increasingly dominated by American submarines.
Some 12,000 Allied troops died of malaria, beriberi, cholera, dysentery, or starvation, along with 90,000 impressed Southeast Asian workers. That earned the line the fitting name: “Death Railway.”
The Burma Railway was one of the greatest engineering accomplishments in human history, ranking alongside the Pyramids of Egypt. It required the construction of 600 bridges and viaducts. It crossed countless rivers and climbed steep mountain ranges. The work was all done in 100-degree temperatures with high humidity in clouds of mosquitoes. And it was all done in 18 months.
One of those captured was my good friend James Clavell, who spent the war at Changi Prison, now the location of Singapore International Airport. Every time I land there, it gives me the creeps.
Clavell wrote up his experiences in the best-selling book and movie King Rat. He followed up with the Taipan series set in 19th-century Hong Kong. We lunched daily at the Foreign Correspondents Club of Japan when he researched another book, Shogun, which became a top TV series for NBC.
So I navigated the Thai railway system to find remote Kanchanaburi Province where the famous bridge was said to be located.
My initial surprise was that the bridge was still standing, not destroyed as it was in the film. It was not a bridge made of wood but concrete and steel trestles. Still, you could see the scars of Allied bombing on the foundations, who tried many times to destroy the bridge from the air.
That day, the Bridge Over the River Kwai was a quiet, tranquil, peaceful place. Farmers wearing traditional conical hats made of palm leaves and bamboo strips called “ngob’s,” crossed to bring topical fruits and vegetables to market. A few water buffalo loped across the narrow tracks. The river Kwai gurgled below.
Once a day, a train drove north towards remote locations near the Burmese border where a bloody rebellion by the indigenous Shan people was underway.
The wars seemed so far away.
The only memorial to the war was a decrepit turn-of-the-century English steam engine badly in need of repair. There were no tourists anywhere.
So I started walking.
After I crossed the bridge, it wasn’t long before I was deep in the jungle. The ghosts of the past were ever present, and I swear I heard voices. I walked a few hundred yards off the line and the detritus of the war was everywhere: abandoned tools, rusted-out helmets, and yes, human bones. I didn’t linger because the snakes here didn’t just bite and poison you, they swallowed you whole.
After the war, the Allies used Japanese prisoners to remove the dead for burial in a nearby cemetery, only identified by their dog tags. Most of the “coolies” or Southeast Asian workers were left where they fell.
Today, only 50 miles of the original Death Railway remain in use. The rest proved impossible to maintain, because of shoddy construction, and the encroaching jungle.
There has been talk over the years of rebuilding the Burma Railway and connecting the rest of Southeast Asia to India and Europe. But with Burma, today known as Myanmar, a pariah state, any progress is unlikely.
Maybe the Chinese will undertake it someday.
Every Christmas vacation, when my family has lots of free time, I sit the kids down to watch The Bridge Over the River Kwai. I just wanted to pass on some of my experiences, teach them a little history, and remember my old friend Clavell.
Good Luck and Good Trading
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
Walking the Bridge Over the River Kwai in 1976
Global Market Comments
November 3, 2023
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(NOVEMBER 1 BIWEEKLY STRATEGY WEBINAR Q&A),
(BRK/B), (TSLA), (LLY), (SNOW), (BIB), (BIB), (CCJ), (FXA), (FXB), (FXE), (EEM), (GLD), (SLV) (UNG), (LNG)
Below please find subscribers’ Q&A for the November 1 Mad Hedge Fund Trader Global Strategy Webinar, broadcast from Boca Raton.
Q: Earlier you said that the bull market should start from here—are you sticking to that argument?
A: Yes, there are all kinds of momentum and cash flow indicators that are flashing “buy right now.” The market timing index got down to 24—couldn’t break below 20. Hedge fund shorts: all-time highs. Quant shorts: all the time highs, creating a huge amount of buying power for the market. And, of course, the seasonals have turned positive. So yes, all of that is positive and if bonds can hold in here, then it’s off to the races.
Q: Do you have a year-end target for Berkshire Hathaway (BRK/B)?
A: Up. They have a lot of exposure to the falling interest rate trade such as its very heavy weighting in banks; and if interest rates go down, Berkshire goes up—it’s really very simple. You can’t come up with specific targets for individual stocks for year-end because of the news, and things can happen anytime. I love Berkshire; it's a very strong buy here.
Q: Tesla (TSLA) is not doing well; what's the update here?
A: It always moves more than you think, both on the upside and the downside. Last year, we thought it would drop 50%, it dropped 80%. Suffice it to say that, with the price war continuing and Tesla determined to wipe out the 200 other new entrants to the EV space, they’ll keep price cutting until they basically own that market. While that’s great for market share, it’s not great for short-term profits. Yes, Tesla could be going down more, but from here on, if you’re a long-term investor in Tesla, as you should be, you should be looking to add positions, not sell what you have and average down. Also, we’re getting close to Tesla LEAPS territory. Those have been huge winners over the years for us and I’ll be watching those closely.
Q: Any trade on the Japanese yen?
A: We broke 150 on the yen—that was like the make-or-break level. I’m looking at a final capitulation selloff on the yen, and then a decade-long BUY. The Bank of Japan is finally ending its “easy money” zero-interest-rate policy, which it’s had for 30 years, and that will give us a stronger yen when it happens, but not until then. So watch the yen carefully, it could double from here over the long term, especially if it’s the same time the US starts cutting its interest rates.
Q: What do you think about Eli Lilly (LLY)?
A: We love Eli Lilly; they’re making an absolute fortune on their weight loss drug, and they have other drugs in the pipeline being created by AI. This is really the golden age for biotech because you have AI finding cures for diseases, and then AI designing molecules to cure the diseases. It’s shortened the pipeline for new drugs from 5-10 years to 5-10 weeks. If you’re old and sick like me, this is all a godsend.
Q: Do you like Snowflake (SNOW)?
A: Absolutely, yes—killer company. Warren Buffet loves it too and has a big position; I’d be looking to buy SNOW on any dip.
Q: Would you do LEAPS on Netflix (NFLX)?
A: I would, but I would go out two years, and I would go at the money, not out of the money, Even then you’ll get a 100-200% return. You’ll get a lot even on just a 6-month call spread. These tech stocks with high volatility have enormous payoff 3-6 months out.
Q: Projection for iShares 20 Plus Year Treasury Bond ETF (TLT) in the next 6 months?
A: It’s up. We could hit $110, that would be my high, or up $25 points or so from here.
Q: Would you buy biotech here through the ProShares Ultra Nasdaq Biotechnology (BIB)?
A: Probably, yes. The long-term story is overwhelming, but it’s not a sector you want to own when the sentiment is terrible like it is now. I guess “buy the bad news” is the answer there.
Q: What did you learn from your dinner with General Mattis?
A: Quite a lot, but much of it is classified. When you get to my age, you can’t remember which parts are classified and which aren't. However, his grasp of the global scene is just incredible. There are very few people in the world I can go one on one with in geopolitics. Of course, I could fill in stuff he didn’t know, and he could fill in stuff for me, like: what is the current condition of our space weaponry? If I told you, you would be amazed, but then I would get arrested the next day, so I’ll say nothing. He really was one of the most aggressive generals in American history, was tremendously underrated by every administration, was fired by both Obama and Trump, and recently is doing the speaker circuit which is a lot of fun because there’s no question he doesn’t know the answer to! We actually agreed to do some joint speaking events sometime in the future.
Q: I have some two-year LEAPS now but I’m worried about adding too much. Could we get a final selloff in 2024?
A: The only way we could get another leg down in the market is number one if the Fed raises interest rates (right now, we’re positioned for a flat line and then a cut) or number two, another pandemic. You could also get some election-related chaos next year, but that usually doesn’t affect the market. But for those who are prone to being nervous, there are certainly a lot of reasons to be nervous next year.
Q: What iShares 20 Plus Year Treasury Bond ETF (TLT) level would we see with a 5.2% yield?
A: How about $79? That’s exactly why I picked that strike price. The $76-$79 vertical bill call spread in the (TLT) is a bet that we don’t go above 5.20% yield, and we only have 10 days to do it, so things are looking better and then we’ll see what’s available in the market once our current positions all expire at max profit.
Q: The first new nuclear power plant of 30 years went online in Georgia. Do you see more being built in the future?
A: It’s actually been 40 years since they’ve built a new plant, and it wasn’t a new plant, it was just an addition to an existing plant with another reactor added with an old design. I think there will be a lot more nuclear power plants built in the future, but they will be the new modular design, which is much safer, and doesn’t use uranium, by the way, but other radioactive elements. If you want to know more about this, look up NuScale (SMR). They have a bunch of videos on how their new designs work. That could be an interesting company going forward. The nuclear renaissance continues, and of course, China’s continuing to build 100 of the old-fashioned type nuclear power reactors, and that is driving global uranium demand.
Q: Would you hold Cameco Corp (CCJ) or sell?
A: I would keep it, I think it’s going up.
Q: How to trade the collapse of the dollar?
A: (FXA), (FXB), (FXE), and (EEM). Those are the quick and easy ways to do it. Also, you buy precious metals—gold (GLD) and silver (SLV) do really well on a weak dollar.
Q: Conclusion on the Ukraine war?
A: It will go on for years—it’s a war of attrition. About half of the entire Russian army has been destroyed as they’re working with inferior weapons. However, it’s going to be a matter of gaining yards or miles at best, over a long period of time. So, they will keep fighting as long as we keep supplying them with weapons, and that is overwhelmingly in our national interest. Plus, we’re getting a twofer; if we stop Russia from taking over Ukraine, we also stop China from invading Taiwan because they don’t want to be in for the same medicine.
Q: If more oil is released from the strategic petroleum reserve, what is our effect on security?
A: Zero because the US is a net energy producer. If our supplies were at risk, all we’d have to do is cut off our exports to China and tell them to find their oil elsewhere—and they’re obviously already trying to do that with the invasion of the South China Sea and all the little rocks out there. So, I am not worried. And also remember, every year as the US moves to more EVs and more alternatives, it is less and less reliant on oil. I would advise the administration to get rid of all of it next time we go above $100 a barrel. If you’re going to sell your oil, you might as well get a good price for it. If you look at the US economy over the last 30 years, the reliance of GDP on oil has been steadily falling.
Q: Are US exports of Cheniere Energy (LNG) helping to drive up prices here?
A: I would say yes, it’s got to have an impact on prices. We’re basically supplying Germany with all of its natural gas right now. We did that starting from scratch at the outset of the Ukraine war, and it’s been wildly successful. That avoided a Great Depression in Europe. Europe, by the way, is the largest customer for our exports. That was one of the arguments for us going into the United States Natural Gas (UNG) LEAPS in the first place.
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, select your subscription (GLOBAL TRADING DISPATCH, TECHNOLOGY LETTER, or Jacquie's Post), then click on WEBINARS, and all the webinars from the last 12 years are there in all their glory.
Good Luck and Stay Healthy,
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
2023 Krakow Poland
Legal Disclaimer
There is a very high degree of risk involved in trading. Past results are not indicative of future returns. MadHedgeFundTrader.com and all individuals affiliated with this site assume no responsibilities for your trading and investment results. The indicators, strategies, columns, articles and all other features are for educational purposes only and should not be construed as investment advice. Information for futures trading observations are obtained from sources believed to be reliable, but we do not warrant its completeness or accuracy, or warrant any results from the use of the information. Your use of the trading observations is entirely at your own risk and it is your sole responsibility to evaluate the accuracy, completeness and usefulness of the information. You must assess the risk of any trade with your broker and make your own independent decisions regarding any securities mentioned herein. Affiliates of MadHedgeFundTrader.com may have a position or effect transactions in the securities described herein (or options thereon) and/or otherwise employ trading strategies that may be consistent or inconsistent with the provided strategies.
This site uses cookies. By continuing to browse the site, you are agreeing to our use of cookies.
OKLearn moreWe may request cookies to be set on your device. We use cookies to let us know when you visit our websites, how you interact with us, to enrich your user experience, and to customize your relationship with our website.
Click on the different category headings to find out more. You can also change some of your preferences. Note that blocking some types of cookies may impact your experience on our websites and the services we are able to offer.
These cookies are strictly necessary to provide you with services available through our website and to use some of its features.
Because these cookies are strictly necessary to deliver the website, refuseing them will have impact how our site functions. You always can block or delete cookies by changing your browser settings and force blocking all cookies on this website. But this will always prompt you to accept/refuse cookies when revisiting our site.
We fully respect if you want to refuse cookies but to avoid asking you again and again kindly allow us to store a cookie for that. You are free to opt out any time or opt in for other cookies to get a better experience. If you refuse cookies we will remove all set cookies in our domain.
We provide you with a list of stored cookies on your computer in our domain so you can check what we stored. Due to security reasons we are not able to show or modify cookies from other domains. You can check these in your browser security settings.
These cookies collect information that is used either in aggregate form to help us understand how our website is being used or how effective our marketing campaigns are, or to help us customize our website and application for you in order to enhance your experience.
If you do not want that we track your visist to our site you can disable tracking in your browser here:
We also use different external services like Google Webfonts, Google Maps, and external Video providers. Since these providers may collect personal data like your IP address we allow you to block them here. Please be aware that this might heavily reduce the functionality and appearance of our site. Changes will take effect once you reload the page.
Google Webfont Settings:
Google Map Settings:
Vimeo and Youtube video embeds: