Below please find subscribers’ Q&A for the April 26 Mad Hedge Fund Trader Global Strategy Webinar, broadcast from Las Vegas, NV.
Q: Would you start adding to The Russell 2000 (IWM) around here?
A: No, the Russell 2000 is the most sensitive to market action and the most sensitive to an economic downturn, which it seems we have already entered. And you don’t add positions one week into the downturn, you do it like 3-6 months into the downturn. So, I would not touch (IWM) right around here.
Q: Are you buying more First Republic Bank (FRC) down here?
A: No, at this point the stock is a no-go. It is a ripe takeover target for someone, and the risk is, the takeover price is lower than your cost. I don’t understand why First Republic is down this far—like 97% — and when I don't understand things, I stay away. I had never seen a bank go under before that didn’t have bad loans, nor has anyone else. A lot of people were asking if they should double up, we went from $16 to $6 in a day, and the firm answer is that I just don’t know. The fundamentals of the company by no means justify that discount, it must be discounting something terrible that we haven’t heard yet. So I’m going to stay away and look for better trades to do.
Q: I missed the Tesla (TSLA) trade on Friday, should I be looking to buy the dips down here?
A: Yes, I would. I put out a May $110-$120 vertical bull call debit spread on Tesla, which is now only 3 weeks to expiration. Remember, at Tesla’s growth rate, the company is now 12% larger than it was when it hit the $104 bottom in January. I should point out that once our trade alert went out, it literally triggered billions of dollars worth of market action and crushed volatility. It took the implied volatility on Tesla options down 10% on that one day. So, with implied volatility this low, I’m not sure you can get Tesla done at any price that makes sense—but if you can, I’m all for it. As for the short, we’re almost in max profit on our Tesla short position. It’s cratered about $35 since we put it on, so I wouldn’t be chasing that one.
Q: Is there a reason why Freeport McMoRan (FCX) is not progressing upwards?
A: Recession fears—the long-term case for copper is spectacular— I’m looking for $100 in (FCX) a couple years down the road. With the short term, all they see is recession and US government debt default, and as long as those two things are overhanging the market, all of the economically sensitive plays are going to go down. You’re not going to get gains, you’re going to get losses. If you want to know how the debt default is working out, you can write a letter to Kevin McCarthy in Washington DC and ask him what he’s going to do. The stock market doesn’t like it for sure, so I’m inclined to go back to 100% cash and duck that whole cluster.
Q: Can China survive without foreign investment?
A: Yes, with a much lower standard of living, and technology that is greatly lagging behind the US. The Chinese use all the foreign investment going on to upgrade their own technology—it's very common for a Chinese worker to work for an American company for a year and then walk across the street and work for their main Chinese competitor. That is a major means of technology transfer. Without that, they fall way behind, and they know it. You can’t copy your way to leadership, as Japan found out to their great expense in the 1990s. You can add that to the long list of reasons why China will never invade Taiwan. Not only have they cut off their food and energy supply, but also their technology supply.
Q: Would it be safe to deposit my money with Apple (APPL) who’s offering a 4.15% interest rate?
A: Yes, Apple has about $150 billion in cash on the balance sheet to back up any deposit runs. I imagine Apple financially is probably far safer than any small regional bank in the US. But, there are better things to do than Apple, and that’s the good old 90-day US T-bill. That bill never defaults; it’s offering 5.2% — it may even be a little bit higher after May 3 when the Federal Reserve raises interest rates by 25 basis points.
Q: Aren’t earnings coming in better than expected?
A: Yes they are, however, the earnings season was frontloaded with the best-performing sector in the market—i.e. the banks—which you were 100% long of until last week, and the weaker performers are next. That seems to be what the stock market is telling us with the selloff, and of course, the weaker performers are technology stocks. So that's why I piled on the shorts (especially in the Invesco QQQ Trust), that’s why I cut back position sizes, it’s time to take the money and run.
Q: How much longer do you plan to do this?
A: Well Warren Buffet is 92 and he seems to be doing just fine. Joe Biden plans to be President of the United States until he is 86. Work for these men is their lives and they will never quit. The same is true for me. If they can do that, I can certainly run Mad Hedge Fund Trader until I am 92, or for 21 more years. Besides, what else would I do? I’m terrible at golf, I hate pickleball, Bingo is boring and is usually rigged, and all the other stuff that people my age do doesn’t appeal in the least.
Q: Are there ETFs that mirror the rates of 90-day T-bills, or is it better just to buy direct through my broker?
A: It’s always better to buy T-bills directly because your ETF does not work for free. They’re taking out fees somewhere, even if you can’t see them, even if they’re not in the marketing material—nobody works for free; except the US government, it would seem. So buy directly from the US government. If you own the T-bills and your institution goes bankrupt, you can always get your T-bills back in a couple of days. If you own their ETF that mirrors the T-bill, that can become a complete loss and you’ll get tied up in bankruptcy proceedings that last three years (and you may or may not get your money back.) So T-bills directly are the gold standard, I would buy those if you’re looking for a cash alternative.
Q: What about Rivian (RIVN)?
A: It’s red meat in this kind of market—don’t touch it. If the entire car industry is rolling over, including Tesla, don’t expect Rivian to outperform in that situation. As for Amazon (AMZN), like all tech stocks, I’m going to wait for the current selloff to work its way for its system, but then it’s probably a great long term buy and a two-year LEAPS.
Q: What’s your estimate for S&P earnings?
A: I’m at $220 a share which today gives us a multiple of 18.73, which is the middle of the recent range. We may drop a point or two from there, but that’s close enough for the cigar.
Q: Won’t wider credit spreads hurt iShares iBoxx $ High Yield Corporate Bond ETF (HYG)?
A: Yes, for the short term, but you’re being compensated for that by the 8% yield; and you’re buying junk bonds not for where they are for the next month or two, but where they are for the end of the year, which would be at least 10$-15% higher than they are now, so your total “all in” return might be as much as 25%. Not bad.
Q: What’s your thought on the Salesforce (CRM) drop?
A: I’ll buy it in about 3 months, once the next tech washout is finished and they’re throwing these things out with the bathwater.
Q: Do you think iShares 20 Plus Year Treasury Bond ETF (TLT) will trade higher if the market collapses?
A: Yes it will; that is your classic flight to safety out of stocks into bonds. We haven’t seen it in quite a while because both of them have been moving up and down together.
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 or TECHNOLOGY LETTER, then WEBINARS, and all the webinars from the last 12 years are there in all their glory.
Good Luck and Stay Healthy.
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
Playing the Penny Slots in Las Vegas is Definitely NOT my Retirement
Vulture Fund investor Elliot Management is coming for Salesforce (CRM) and that could mean CEO Marc Benioff’s tenure there will soon be over.
Why?
Elliot’s primary strategy to lift the share price is to fire management and replace it with one of “their guys” to streamline the operation to profits.
Usually, an Elliot takeover is a swipe against how bad current management is and often with famously branded companies.
They just took a large position in Pinterest (PINS) and shares have done well since that investment.
Their track record bodes positive for the medium term of the share price.
Even if they are labeled as vulture fund investors, they usually turn out to be correct more often than not.
The reason I pinpoint Marc Benioff as someone that could be taken out to pasture is that he has been there for a long time and his ideas have most likely become stale.
His big investment in MuleSoft was a failure and he hasn’t moved the needle in the last few years. He even decided to retain a Co-CEO who he later fired and reinstalled himself as a solo CEO. Sounds like too much power in one person’s hands to me.
It’s hard for these types of tech magnets to leave the companies they created.
Therefore, Elliot usually invests enough that allows them to fight for board seats where they can influence who the future management will be.
We have seen this time and time again.
It has been a volatile stretch for CRM.
Earlier this month, the company said it was laying off 10% of its workforce and reducing its office space in certain markets.
Again, like with most tech companies, I believe 10% is just not enough, but they might as well fire the ones who are social justice warriors first.
Tech firms should use this time as a way to get as lean as possible and CRM could have easily cut 55% of staff.
However, they are worried about a worker revolt.
Many customers are also starting to pare down CRM services as they sense less business flowing through because of the most anticipated recession in history.
Salesforce had nearly 80,000 employees globally as of Oct. 31, up from more than 49,000 as of Jan. 31, 2020, according to company filings.
Salesforce's reported revenue for its fiscal third quarter ended Oct. 31 of $7.84 billion, up 14% from the prior year. That marked a sharp slowdown from 27% revenue growth in the same quarter a year earlier. The company also declined to issue guidance for its fiscal year 2024.
Instead of fighting this CRM – Elliot partnership, readers should just wait for a big dip to put money to work.
Granted, it could get messy if Benioff is jettisoned, but this is still an established brand that is a foundational software platform for many corporate companies including the big guns.
It certainly does look like an internal struggle will take place as CRM just added 3 new board members to combat Elliot.
Either way, Elliot seeks to install better management and wants a stronger company that will lead to a higher share price.
Whether entrenched executives fight this or not, once the ball gets rolling, it is mighty hard to stop.
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Automation is taking place at warp speed displacing employees from all walks of life.
Next could be you!
According to a recent report, the U.S. financial industry will depose of 200,000 workers in the next decade because of automating efficiencies.
Yes, humans are going the way of the dodo bird and banking will effectively become algorithms working for a handful of executives and engineers.
The x-factor in this equation is the $250 billion annually that banks spend on technological development in-house which is second highest after the traditional tech giants.
Welcome to the world of lower cost, shedding wage bills, and boosting performance rates.
We forget to realize that employee compensation eats up around 50% of bank expenses.
The 200,000 job trimmings would result in 10% of the U.S. banking sector getting axed.
The hyped-up “golden age of banking” should deliver extraordinary savings and premium services to the customer at no extra cost.
This iteration of mobile and online banking has delivered functionality that no generation of customers has ever seen.
Gutting bank jobs will naturally occur in the call centers first, because they are the low-hanging fruit for the automated chatbots.
A few years ago, chatbots were suboptimal, even spewing out arbitrary profanity, but they have slowly crawled up in performance metrics to the point where some customers are unaware they are communicating with an artificially engineered algorithm.
The wholesale integration of automating the back-office staff isn’t contained to the rudimentary part of the staff.
The front office will experience a 30% drop in numbers sullying the predated ideology that front office staff are irreplaceable heavy hitters.
The front-office staff has already felt the brunt of downsizing with purges carried out from 2022 representing a twelfth year of continuous decline.
Front-office traders and brokers are being rapidly replaced by software engineers as banks follow the wider trend of every company transitioning into a tech company.
The infusion of artificial intelligence will lower mortgage processing costs by 30% and the accumulation of hordes of data will advance the marketing effort into a potent, multi-pronged, hybrid cloud-based, and hyper-targeted strategy.
The last two human bank hiring waves are a distant memory.
The most recent spike came in the 7 years after the dot com crash of 2001 until the sub-prime crisis of 2008 adding around half a million jobs on top of the 1.5 million that existed then.
After the subsidies wear off from the pandemic, I do believe that the banking sector will quietly put in the call to trim even more.
The longest and most dramatic rise in human bankers was from 1935 to 1985, a 50-year boom that delivered over 1.2 million bankers to the U.S. workforce.
This type of human hiring will likely never be seen again in the U.S. financial industry.
And if you thought that this phenomenon was limited to the U.S., think again, Europe is by far the biggest culprit by already laying off 100,000 employees in 2022.
Even Europe’s banking jewel Credit Suisse is on the brink of collapsing and in need of a bailout.
Don’t tell your kid to get into banking, because they will most likely be feeding on scraps at that point.
An interesting tech stock that integrates financial payments is Square (SQ) which has given back its entire pandemic performance.
As US interest rates are expected to peak and go down in 2023, I recommend dollar cost average into this stock at bargain basement prices.
THE LAST STAGE OF HUMAN-FACING BANK SERVICES IS NOW!
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Dealing with the Cloud works, and for every relevant tech company, this division serves as the pipeline to the CEO position.
If this isn’t the case for a tech company, then there’s something egregiously wrong with them!
Take Andy Jassy - he is the mastermind behind Amazon’s (AMZN) lucrative cloud computing division and was the man who succeeded company founder Jeff Bezos.
He was rewarded this important position based on his performance in the cloud and faces a daunting proposition of following Bezos as CEO.
Bezos incorporated Amazon almost 30 years ago.
Jassy developed a highly profitable and market-leading business, Amazon Web Services, that runs data centers serving a wide range of corporate computing needs.
Cloud 101
If you've been living under a rock the past few years, the cloud phenomenon hasn't passed you by and you still have time to cash in.
You want to hitch your wagon to cloud-based investments in any way, shape, or form.
Amazon leads the cloud industry it created.
It still maintains more than 30% of the cloud market. Microsoft would need to gain a lot of ground to even come close to this jewel of a business.
Amazon relies on AWS to underpin the rest of its businesses and that is why AWS contributes most of Amazon's total operating income.
Total revenue for just the AWS division would operate as a healthy stand-alone tech company if need be.
The future is about the cloud.
These days, the average investor probably hears about the cloud a dozen times a day.
If you work in Silicon Valley, you can quadruple that figure.
So, before we get deep into the weeds with this letter on cloud services, cloud fundamentals, cloud plays, and cloud Trade Alerts, let's get into the basics of what the cloud actually is.
Think of this as a cloud primer.
It's important to understand the cloud, both its strengths and limitations.
Giant companies that have it figured out, such as Salesforce (CRM) and Zscaler (ZS), are some of the fastest-growing companies in the world.
Understand the cloud and you will readily identify its bottlenecks and bulges that can lead to extreme investment opportunities. And that is where I come in.
Cloud storage refers to the online space where you can store data. It resides across multiple remote servers housed inside massive data centers all over the country, some as large as football fields, often in rural areas where land, labor, and electricity are cheap.
They are built using virtualization technology, which means that storage space spans across many different servers and multiple locations. If this sounds crazy, remember that the original Department of Defense packet-switching design was intended to make the system atomic bomb-proof.
As a user, you can access any single server at any one time anywhere in the world. These servers are owned, maintained, and operated by giant third-party companies such as Amazon, Microsoft, and Alphabet (GOOGL), which may or may not charge a fee for using them.
The most important features of cloud storage are:
1) It is a service provided by an external provider.
2) All data is stored outside your computer residing inside an in-house network.
3) A simple Internet connection will allow you to access your data at anytime from anywhere.
4) Because of all these features, sharing data with others is vastly easier, and you can even work with multiple people online at the same time, making it the perfect, collaborative vehicle for our globalized world.
Once you start using the cloud to store a company's data, the benefits are many.
No Maintenance
Many companies, regardless of their size, prefer to store data inside in-house servers and data centers.
However, these require constant 24-hour-a-day maintenance, so the company has to employ a large in-house IT staff to manage them - a costly proposition.
Thanks to cloud storage, businesses can save costs on maintenance since their servers are now the headache of third-party providers.
Instead, they can focus resources on the core aspects of their business where they can add the most value, without worrying about managing IT staff of prima donnas.
Greater Flexibility
Today's employees want to have a better work/life balance and this goal can be best achieved by letting them working remotely which effectively happened because of the public health situation. Increasingly, workers are bending their jobs to fit their lifestyles, and that is certainly the case here at Mad Hedge Fund Trader.
How else can I send off a Trade Alert while hanging from the face of a Swiss Alp?
Cloud storage services, such as Google Drive, offer exactly this kind of flexibility for employees.
With data stored online, it's easy for employees to log into a cloud portal, work on the data they need to, and then log off when they're done. This way a single project can be worked on by a global team, the work handed off from time zone to time zone until it's done.
It also makes them work more efficiently, saving money for penny-pinching entrepreneurs.
Better Collaboration and Communication
In today's business environment, it's common practice for employees to collaborate and communicate with co-workers located around the world.
For example, they may have to work on the same client proposal together or provide feedback on training documents. Cloud-based tools from DocuSign, Dropbox, and Google Drive make collaboration and document management a piece of cake.
These products, which all offer free entry-level versions, allow users to access the latest versions of any document so they can stay on top of real-time changes which can help businesses to better manage workflow, regardless of geographical location.
Data Protection
Another important reason to move to the cloud is for better protection of your data, especially in the event of a natural disaster. Hurricane Sandy wreaked havoc on local data centers in New York City, forcing many websites to shut down their operations for days.
And we haven’t talked about the ransomware attacks by Eastern Europeans on energy company Colonial Pipeline and meat producer JBS Foods.
The cloud simply routes traffic around problem areas as if, yes, they have just been destroyed by a nuclear attack.
It's best to move data to the cloud, to avoid such disruptions because there your data will be stored in multiple locations.
This redundancy makes it so that even if one area is affected, your operations don't have to capitulate, and data remains accessible no matter what happens. It's a system called deduplication.
Lower Overhead
The cloud can save businesses a lot of money.
By outsourcing data storage to cloud providers, businesses save on capital and maintenance costs, money that in turn can be used to expand the business. Setting up an in-house data center requires tens of thousands of dollars in investment, and that's not to mention the maintenance costs it carries.
Plus, considering the security, reduced lag, up-time and controlled environments that providers such as Amazon's AWS have, creating an in-house data center seems about as contemporary as a buggy whip, a corset, or a Model T.
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Below please find subscribers’ Q&A for the December 14 Mad Hedge Fund Trader Global Strategy Webinar broadcast from Silicon Valley in California.
Q: Is it time to short the S&P 500 (SPY), or go into cash?
A: I vote for cash. Number 1. We’ve just had a tremendous run in the market. The 200-day moving average at $405 is proving to be massive resistance, and you could get a bunch of profit-taking in January on all the positions people bought up in October. They’ve made a ton of money on that, and they may be deferring to profit-taking, hoping for the Santa Clause rally to continue and to take advantage of all that time decay over the holidays—so, high risk. Risk-reward right now is terrible, so I don’t want to do anything. I’m 100% cash, and I’ll stay that way until the New Year unless something exceptional happens in the markets—you never know what might happen. And I watch markets 24/7, vacation or not because it's in my blood.
Q: What about Financials?
A: Wait until the next dip and then go for call spreads which deliver max profits in sideways markets. JP Morgan (JPM), Bank of America (BAC), Citigroup (C) and you might take a look at Wells Fargo (WFC) next time around, but they always seem to be getting into trouble.
Q: What do we do about interest rates here?
A: Look for the 10-year Treasury bond (TLT) yield to drop to about 2.50% in 2023, about the first half of 2023—maybe by June or so. We did just have a round of profit-taking, but we’re adding on dips.
Q: What do you think about the US sending patriot batteries to Ukraine?
A: The problem is the MIM-104 Patriot SAM system is kind of old—about 41 years old—and it’s been outrun by the new technologies developed by the Ukraine war. Also, 1,000 drones at $1,000 each would be cheaper than 1 patriot missile for $4 million. Sending swarms of hundreds of super cheap drone bombs to attack targets has only been developed over the past six months and you only need one to get through to destroy the target for which the patriot would be useless. Patriot is really designed to shoot down incoming Russian intercontinental ballistic missiles with nuclear warheads with one hour of notice and highly predictable trajectories. We used them a lot in the Gulf War in 1991, and we gave many to Israel which used them to great effect when defending big cities. But they were only firing against slow WWII German-style V2 rockets which Saddam Hussein literally copied off of Wikipedia. If you want to see how effective the new drone strategy is, watch competitive drone racing (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HNRiMgNnuVE ), or robot wars (http://www.robotwars.tv ), or any of these other online programs where you have drones controlled by humans doing exactly what I’m talking about. Also, 1,000 drones at $1,000 each would be cheaper than 1 patriot missile for $ million.
Q: What’s your Rivian (RIVN) target by the January options expiration?
A: I have no idea, but Elon Musk has had the impact of destroying not only Tesla but the entire EV sector, so Rivian is a great company clearly being dragged down by Tesla. But also, a joint venture to make trucks in Europe was also put on hold with Mercedes. And of course, nobody wants to spend money ahead of a recession. Buy (RIVN) two-year LEAPS.
Q: Why is the US buying Natural Gas (UNG) in Massachusetts from Russia when we have so much already in this country?
A: The US does not have a national natural gas pipeline system, so you can have excesses in Texas where it’s produced meet shortages in Massachusetts where it’s consumed. Somebody found a loophole to get Russian gas into the US using offshore shell companies which I’m sure will be closed instantly once that delivery is made. Suffice it to say that the sanctions on Russia are tightening, are having a deeper effect and forcing them to pull out of Ukraine sooner than we expect. That may be the pivotal black swan of 2023—that Russia gives up on Ukraine, which would be a huge positive for all markets.
Q: When will we be using nuclear fusion?
A: I have been following nuclear fusion for 50 years, ever since I worked at the Nuclear Test Site in Nevada—it’s long been the holy grail for alternative energy. I talked to the teams every once in a while, since they live next door. The positive developments we saw in England last week are a big breakthrough, but you’re looking for at least 30 years until we get functional economic nuclear fusion power plants. So, we only have to stay alive for 30 more years (and keep climate change from killing us all off in the meantime) before we get carbon-free energy in an unlimited supply. Having said that, from the time they developed a functional commercial nuclear powerplant using Uranium in 1957 from the initial use of the atomic bomb in 1945, was only 12 years and that had to be equally as daunting. So, I may be wrong, and there may be other breakthroughs coming our way, but you don’t control 150 million degrees easily—that's what’s necessary with fusion. The amounts of power input required are also staggering, like all the power that San Francisco uses in a day, just to produce marginal bits of electricity. And the deuterium fuel needed (H2, or heavy hydrogen) in large quantities would not exactly be cheap either. But in 30 years every city should get its own min sun to provide unlimited electricity. So there’s your science lecture of the day, from a long-term fusion follower. For a more detailed explanation please click here at https://www.energy.gov/science/doe-explainsnuclear-fusion-reactions
Q: Is Tesla (TSLA) a buy here?
A: Absolutely, for the long term, but I would not be amazed to see $110 print first. Number one, there’s a major short play going on here too building huge amounts of buying power, and Number two, we’re flushing out a lot of long-term profit takers for tax loss selling as we go with the year-end to offset 2022 losses in other stocks. Buying Tesla at 27X earnings multiple, and next year’s 19X multiple when it was at 100X just a year ago is kind of unbelievable. An onslaught of new Tesla positives will hit the market in 2023. The new Cybertruck comes out and there is a two-year waiting list out the gate and deposits in hand for 100,000 vehicles. The company is generating such enormous cash flows that it is like to carry out $10 billion in share buybacks, especially with the price this low. There are no real competitors on the horizon, except for a handful with minimal production at big losses outside of China.
Q: Is the demise of FTX the end of crypto?
A: I would say yes, which is why we stopped producing our Bitcoin newsletter. It could take 30 years for this thing to recover. It’s another Japanese stock market type situation, where it literally takes three decades to recover, and by then new technologies will far surpass it. The confidence in anything crypto has been totally destroyed by the FTX scandal—it’s the final nail in the coffin. And there are better things to do—I’d rather be buying NVIDIA (NVDA) or Tesla (TSLA) than crypto. There are too many great trades after a bear market.
Q: Is Blackrock (BLK) in trouble?
A: Not in a million years, and I’d be buying it on any dip. They’re an incredibly well-run company, buy on dips. They have one gated REIT which thei disclosed well in advance that is drawing all the adverse publicity. In bear markets, traders always believe the worst.
Q: Why would you not sell Nvidia (NVDA)?
A: Well, we dumped all our tech stocks in January, so we did sell there. But I try not to go against long-term trends, and the long-term trends for Nvidia is a double or triple from here since they are the 8-pound gorilla in the high-end chip business.
Q: Why is cybersecurity (PANW), (CRWD) so unloved in this environment?
A: They are over-owned. When everybody owns something, you can have the greatest story in the world and it doesn’t go up because you need new buyers for things to go up, and the Cybersecurity story is pretty well known. That’s why it won’t go down either, people are not selling because they believe in the long-term story of cyber security—and quite correctly so, and I might add at the bottom of the ranges.
Q: Isn’t Warren Buffet’s age a worry regarding Berkshire Hathaway (BRKB)?
A: No, the replacement management team that has been there for 20 years, is generating great results. Warren is basically just the front-end mouthpiece for Berkshire Hathaway, just like I’m the front-end mouthpiece for the Mad Hedge Fund Trader and isn't really involved in day-to-day decisions. That’s how Berkshire was able to step up its technology exposure during the teens. When he goes, the stock might drop 5% from algorithm and uninformed sales, but no more.
Q: What do you think of the iShares 20 Plus Year Treasury Bond ETF (TLT) versus the ProShares UltraShort 20+ Year Treasury (TBT)?
A: Avoid the (TBT) because it’s a 2x—you have extra management fees, and extra dealing costs—it’s better just to buy (TLT) on a 2x margin than it is shorting the (TBT) which is already a 2x. I’m looking for $120-$130 in the (TLT) by mid-2023, which is also a great LEAPS candidate.
Q: Is the market rethinking technology multiples here which are IBIDTA based?
A: It has already rethought the technology multiples because they have collapsed. They have dropped, in Tesla’s case 100X to 19X, which looks like a pretty serious piece of rethinking to me, so yes absolutely. Where is the final level? My theory always has been that when tech falls to a market multiple, which for the S&P 500 right now is 18.5X, that is your final bottom in tech multiples which means they may have more to go down. And what might really happen is you may have a situation where the market multiples start to rise again and get back up to the 20’s, tech falls, and they meet somewhere in the low 20s. That’s your final bottom for tech, and then you buy it to own for the next 10 years.
Q: When do you think the Fed will start lowering rates?
A: It will be a second-half affair. First of all, they have to raise rates by 50 basis points on Wednesday, then raise them again in February by 50 and again in March by 25, and then leave them alone for 3 months. Then we will have a recession, or dramatically lower inflation by then, or both. And then they’ll have room to start cutting, which sets a calendar of about June where they start several 75 basis point CUTS. Remember, markets discount things 6-9 months in advance, which is why we had that $20 rally in the (TLT) that started in February. There’s your calendar. So far, it’s working.
Q: Will you give a buy signal on Tesla (TSLA)?
A: More like a Hail Mary on Tesla, hoping that it’s the bottom. When you get these capitulation selloffs, which is what we’re getting on Tesla, there is absolutely no way of predicting where the final number is, because you’re dealing with human emotions here, which are totally unpredictable and are panicking. I’d rather wait, give the first 10% of the move to the next guy, and then play the new trend from there. But I think Tesla could be one of the top performers of 2023. Especially if you get down to like $110 or so, something unbelievable—you know, get Tesla to market multiple, that means it’s got to drop another $30 essentially, and in this environment, it could do that. It could keep going down every day for the rest of this year because a lot of these big reversals tend to happen at year ends. When you get the last Tesla bull out of there, that’s when it goes up. After that, it’s all short covering.
Q: Do you think it will be 50 or 75 basis points?
A: It’s a coin toss for whether it’s 50 or 75. Knowing Jay Powell as I do, I’d go for 50, but with harsh talk. I think he wants to shock us, wants to kill off this stock market rally, wants to kill off any hope you can get one more price rise through the system before we hit a recession. A 50 basis points would be a real shocker and, by the way, would also give us easily a 1000-point selloff, which we could then use to buy into for the new year.
Q: Could Tesla reach $600?
A: Yes, I think it could. Remember, the fundamental story for Tesla is still on track. They are still growing at a 40% rate, while the rest of Detroit is going nowhere. All of their leads are overwhelming, and the really telling aspect for the future of Tesla is that Apple gave up on its autonomous driving program. Every other car company in the world is going to come to the same decision, except for maybe Google. So yes, the bull case is absolutely there, you just have to wait for the current capitulation to flush out, and then it becomes a buy for years.
Q: Does the adoption of a digital currency impact the economy?
A: No, I think anything digital money is on hold for the foreseeable future as the FTX disaster unfolds.
Q: Do you like Salesforce (CRM)?
A: Yes, long-term. It’s also in a capitulation “catch a falling knife” stage. Wait for that to finish—better to buy it on the way up than on the way down is all I can say.
Q: Will there be any restrictions on copper mining (FCX)?
A: Not that I can think of—we’re looking at an enormous shortage of copper going forward and a future copper shock. Most of this is produced in emerging markets that have no environmental restrictions, which is why it happens there, like Chile. So yes, looking for new copper sources will be one of the big plays of this decade.
Q: Do you think the market will bottom in 2023?
A: Yes, if it hasn’t already.
To watch a replay of this webinar with all the charts, bells, whistles, and classic rock music, just log in to www.madhedgefundtrader.com, go to MY ACCOUNT, click on GLOBAL TRADING DISPATCH, then WEBINARS, and all the webinars from the last 12 years are there in all their glory.
Good Luck and Stay Healthy.
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
Featured Trade:
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or THE TOP FIVE TECHNOLOGY STOCKS OF 2023),
(RIVN), (ROM), (ARKK), (PANW), (CRM), (FXE), (FXY), (FXA), (LEN), (KBH), (DHI), (TLT), (UUP), (META), (TSLA), (BA), (JNK), (HYG), (BRKB), (USO)
https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png00Mad Hedge Fund Traderhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMad Hedge Fund Trader2022-11-14 10:04:422022-11-14 11:24:00November 14, 2022
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