Mad Hedge Technology Letter
July 13, 2020
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(WILL A.I. SAVE US)
(TSLA), (AMZN), (FB)
Mad Hedge Technology Letter
July 13, 2020
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(WILL A.I. SAVE US)
(TSLA), (AMZN), (FB)
Anti-A.I. physicist Professor Stephen Hawking was a staunch supporter of preserving human interests against the future existential threat from machines and artificial intelligence (A.I.).
He was diagnosed with motor neuron disease, more commonly known as Lou Gehrig's disease, in 1963 at the age of 21 and sadly passed away March 14, 2018 at the age of 76.
Famed for his work on black holes, Professor Hawking represented the human quest to maintain its superiority against quickly advancing artificial acculturation.
His passing was a huge loss for mankind as his voice was a deterrent to A.I.'s relentless march to supremacy. He was one of the few who had the authority to opine on these issues.
Gone is a voice of reason.
Critics have argued that living with A.I. poses a red alert threat to privacy, security, and society as a whole. Unfortunately, those most credible and knowledgeable about A.I. are tech firms.
They have shown that policing themselves on this front is remarkably unproductive.
Mark Zuckerberg, CEO of Facebook (FB), has labeled naysayers as "irresponsible" and dismissed the threat. After failing to prevent Russian interference in the last election, he is exhibiting the same defensive posture translating into a de facto admission of guilt. His track record of shirking accountability is becoming a trend leading him to allow politicians to post untrue marketing material for the 2020 U.S. election.
Share prices will materially nosedive if A.I. is stonewalled and development stunted. Many CEOs who stake careers on doubling or tripling down on A.I. cannot see it die out. There is too much money to lose – even for Mark.
The world will see major improvements in the quality of life in the next 10 years. But there is another side to the coin which Zuckerberg and company refuse to delve into...the dark side of technology.
Tesla's (TSLA) CEO Elon Musk has shared his anxiety about robots flipping the script on humans. Elon acknowledges that A.I. and autonomous vehicles are important factors in the battle for new technology. The winner is yet to be determined as China has bet the ranch with unlimited resources from the help of Chairman Xi and state-sponsored institutions.
The quagmire with China has been squarely centered around the great race for technological supremacy.
A.I. is the ultimate X factor in this race and whoever can harness and develop the fastest will win.
Musk has hinted that robots and humans could merge into one species in the future. Is this the next point of competition among tech companies? The future is murky at best.
Hawking's premise that evolution has inbuilt greed can be found in the underpinnings of America's economic miracle.
Wall Street has bred a culture that is entirely self-serving regardless of the bigger system in which it finds itself, with one of the few winners of the coronavirus being the stock market.
Most of us are participating in this perpetual money game chase because our system treats it as a natural part of life. A.I. will help a select few do well in this paper chase to the detriment of the majority and even more so that the pandemic shed 50 million U.S. jobs with many of them to never come back.
Quarterly earnings performance is paramount for CEOs. Return value back to shareholders or face the sack in the morning. It's impossible to convince anyone that America's capitalist model is deteriorating since the ones who are set to gain are the exact people in power.
Wall Street has an insatiable hunger for cutting-edge technology from companies that sequentially beat earnings and raise guidance. Flourishing technology companies enrich the participants creating a Teflon-like resistance to downside market risk.
The issue with Stephen Hawking's work is that his timeframe was too far in the future. Professor Hawking was probably correct, but it will take 25 years to prove it.
The world is quickly changing as science fiction becomes reality.
People on Wall Street are a product of the system in place and earn a tremendous amount of money because they proficiently execute a specialized job. Traders are busy focusing on how to move ahead of the next guy.
Firms building autonomous cars are free to operate as is. Hyper-accelerating technology spurs on the development of A.I., machine learning, and enhanced algorithms. Record profits will topple, and investors will funnel investments back into an even narrower grouping of technology stocks after the weak hands are flushed out.
That is exactly what is happening with 6 tech companies dominating during the health crisis with everyone falling out of the race.
Professor Hawking said we need to explore our technological capabilities to the fullest in order to avoid extinction. In 2020, exploring these new capabilities still equals monetizing through the medium of products and services.
This is all bullish for equities as the leading companies associated with A.I. to reap the benefits.
And let me remind you that technology is still the least regulated industry on the planet even with all the recent hoopla.
It is having its cake and eating it too. Hence, technology is starting to cross over into other industries demonstrating the powerful footprint tech has extracted in economics and the stock market.
The only solution is keeping companies accountable by a function of law or creating a third-party task force to regulate A.I., but as many can see, global governance is failing miserably already with keeping global citizens safe from the health crisis.
In 2020, the thought of overseeing robots sounds crazy.
...The future will be here sooner than you think.
Global Market Comments
July 8, 2020
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(TRADING THE BLUE WAVE STOCK MARKET),
(FB), (AAPL), (MSFT), (AMZN), (ADBE), (SQ), (PYPL), (CRM), (SGEN), (REGN), (ILMN) (FEYE), (PANW), (AMD), (MU), (NVDA), (TSLA), (LEN), (PHM), (KBH), (XOM), (CVX), (XOM), (RTN), (NOC), (LMT), (KOL), (X), (GE)
At this point, it is possible that the president may lose the November election.
He is 14 points behind Democratic candidate Joe Biden in the polls. The odds at the London betting polls have him losing by a similar amount. My old employer The Economist magazine in London gives him a 10% chance of winning using a mix of economic and polling data.
And this assumes the election is held today. The fact is that the president is digging himself into a deeper hole every day, taking the wrong side of every issue confronting the country today. He seems to be refighting the Civil War….and taking the Confederate side when even the State of Mississippi is taking its symbol off its flag.
So, what will the post-Trump world look like? Will taxes go through the roof? Will the market crash? Is it time to go 100% cash, change our names, and move to a country with no US extradition treaty?
I don’t think so. In fact, with stocks soaring to meteoric new highs every day, the market expects that a Biden administration will be great news for stocks, perhaps the best ever.
Taxes will certainly go up. Favorable tax treatment of the energy, real estate, and private equity funds will get axed. Carried interest will finally become history. Marginal tax rate on net income over $1 billion could get hiked to the Roosevelt levels of 80-90%.
Biden has already announced an increase in the corporate tax rate from 21% to 28%. That will cut earnings for the S&P 500 by $9 a share. But the stock market is not the economy, with S&P earnings only accounting for 10% of US GDP.
And the $9 companies lose in taxes they will make back and more from new government spending, which isn’t slowing down any time soon. Some 14,000 American bridges need to be rebuilt. The Interstate Highway System is a shambles. High-speed broadband needs to go rural. The electrification of the US needs to accelerate to accommodate the millions of electric cars headed our way.
I believe that eventually, 51 million Americans will lose their jobs as a result of the pandemic. Perhaps a third of those are never coming back because the future has been so accelerated. That will leave the broader U-6 Unemployment rate stuck in double digits for years, maybe for decades.
So, we’re going to need some kind of Roosevelt style programs like the Works Progress Administration (WPA) and the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) who built much of the monolithic infrastructure that we all enjoy today.
At least 300,000 educated workers could immediately be put to work in contact tracing. Millions more could be employed in national infrastructure programs. One thing is certain. A new administration won’t stop massive government spending, it will simply redirect it.
And let's face it. A Biden win would bring a big expansion of Obamacare. With the best healthcare technology in the world, private industry has done the world’s worst job controlling the pandemic.
Countries with well-run national healthcare systems like Australia, New Zealand, Japan, and Singapore have almost wiped out the disease. This is why I am avoiding the healthcare sector for the foreseeable future.
Who are the big winners of all this? Big tech (FB), (AAPL), (MSFT), (AMZN), medium tech (ADBE), fintech (SQ), (PYPL), the cloud (CRM), and biotech (SGEN), (REGN), and (ILMN).
Cybersecurity will always be in demand (FEYE), (PANW). The global chip shortage will continue to worsen (AMD), (MU), (NVDA).
And Tesla (TSLA)? What can I say? It is already up nearly 100-fold from my initial $16.50 recommendation in 2010, and I’ve bought three Tesla’s (two S’s and an X).
Followers of the Mad Hedge Trade Alert service know that I am already long these names up the wazoo, and is why I am up 26% in 2020. It’s simply a matter of all pre-pandemic trends hyper-accelerating, which we were already tapped into.
If you have to add a purely domestic sector, a gigantic Millennial tailwind will keep homebuilders bubbling for years like (LEN), (PHM), and (KBH).
And while you won’t find me as a player here, retail will recover. The sector has not prospered during the current administration, thanks to a trade war with China and the pandemic.
And the losers? There is a classification of “Trump” stocks you don’t want to be anywhere near. Energy will do terribly (XOM), (CVX), (XOM), with Texas tea possibly revisiting negative numbers. If you take away the tax breaks, energy hasn’t really made money in decades.
Defense stocks (RTN), (NOC), (LMT) will take a big hit from budget cutbacks and fewer wars. Coal (KOL) will finally get shut down for good, probably sold to China in bankruptcy proceedings. Industrials will continue to lag (X), (GE), with no more free handouts from the government and no technology advantage.
So if Biden wins, you don’t need to slit your wrists, hang yourself from the showerhead, or cease investing completely. Just take your stock market winnings and go out and get drunk instead.
Mad Hedge Technology Letter
July 1, 2020
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(HOW THE “SPLINTERNET” IS TAKING OVER)
(TIKTOK), (FB), (GOOGL), (TWTR), (AMZN)
The balkanization of the internet is spiking in the short-term, knocking off the value of multiple Fortune 500 companies in one fell swoop.
In technology terms, this is frequently referred to as “splinternet.”
A quick explanation for the novices can be summed up by saying the splinternet is the fragmenting of the Internet, causing it to divide due to powerful forces such as technology, commerce, politics, nationalism, religion, and interests.
What investors are seeing now is a hard fork of the global tech game into a multi-pronged world of conflicting tech assets sparring for their own digital territory.
The epicenter of balkanization is now heart and center in West Asia polarizing the Indian and Chinese tech economy after a skirmish along the shared border.
This is fast becoming a winner-take-all affair.
India had to do something after 20 dead Indian soldiers felled by the Chinese Army stoked a wave of national outcry against regional rival China.
The backlash was swift with the Indian government banning 59 premium apps developed by China citing “national security and defense.”
The ban includes the short-form video platform TikTok, which counts India as its biggest overseas market.
TikTok was projected to easily breeze past 300 million Indian users by the end of 2020 and was clearly hardest hit out of all the apps.
India is the second biggest base of global internet users with nearly half of its 1.3 billion population online.
The government rolled out the typical national security playbook saying that the stockpiling of local Indian data in Chinese servers undermines national security.
The ruling will impact roughly one in three smartphone users in India. TikTok, Club Factory, and UC Browser and other apps in aggregate tally more than 500 million monthly active users in May 2020.
Highlighting the magnitude of this purge - 27 of these 59 apps were among the top 1,000 Android apps in India last month.
China dove headfirst into the Indian market with their smartphones, apps, and an array of hardware equipment. Now, that is all on hold and looks like a terrible mistake.
Chinese smartphone makers command more than 80% of the smartphone market in India, which is the world’s second largest.
One of the reasons Apple (AAPL) could never make any headway in China is because they were constantly undercut by predatory Chinese phone makers with stolen technology.
TikTok is also being eyed-up for bans in Europe and the United States recently as it constantly curries to Beijing’s every whim by banning content unfavorable to the Chinese communist party and rerouting data back to servers in China.
I am surprised it hasn’t happened yet with an abundant phalanx of Chinese hawks in the conservative administration.
To be fair, China has rolled out the same playbook before when the state spews out nationalist narratives triggering local furor that resulted in bashing Japanese-made cars or shuttering Korean supermarket.
Chinese tech is clearly the main loser for their government’s “distract its own people at all costs” campaign to shield themselves from the epic contagion of the lingering pandemic.
What does this mean for American tech?
For one, India will strengthen ties with the U.S., being the biggest democracy in Asia, meaning a massive foreign policy loss and loss of face for the Chinese communist regime.
The resulting losses for Chinese tech will usher in a new generation of local Indian tech with Silicon Valley being the next in line playing the role of a wingman.
Even though the U.S. avoided the carnage from this round of balkanization, the situation in Europe is tenuous, to say the least.
Fault lines will compound the problem of a multinational tech revenue machine and the relationship with France is on the verge of becoming fractious.
I believe if the relationship worsens with the Europeans - France, Germany, and Britain could ban big tech companies like Facebook (FB), Twitter (TWTR), Google (GOOGL).
This would be a massive blow to not only revenue streams but also global prestige for American tech.
The U.S. is still licking its wounds after the EU announced a travel ban on American tourists who hoped to re-enter the Schengen Zone on its reopening on July 1st.
Not only do Silicon Valley leaders see a murky future outside its borders, but digital territories are also getting carved out as we speak domestically.
Amazon (AMZN)-owned Twitch and Twitter have clamped down on U.S. President Donald Trump’s account.
This could quickly spiral into a left-versus-right war in which there are competing apps for different political beliefs and for every subgenre of apps.
This would effectively mean a balkanization of tech assets within U.S. borders and division is the last thing Silicon Valley wants.
Silicon Valley wants products sold to the largest addressable market possible.
The balkanization of the internet is now turning into an equally high risk as the antitrust and regulatory issues.
The issues keep piling up, but nothing has been able to topple big tech yet as they lead the broader market out of the pandemic.
The key point to understand is that these are growing risks until they blow up in front of your eyes and become the next black swan like Covid-19.
Let’s hope that never happens.
Mad Hedge Technology Letter
June 15, 2020
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(DON’T TAKE YOUR EYES OFF BIG TECH SHARES),
(GOOGL), (AAPL), (MSFT), (NFLX), (FB), (AMZN), (IBM), (CSCO)
There is literally no possible scenario in a post-second-wave lockdown where the 7 tech stocks of Facebook, Google, Apple, Microsoft, Netflix, Facebook, and Amazon don’t shoot the lights out unless the world ceases to exist.
25,891 – that is the number of new coronavirus cases registered in the U.S. on June 13th, 2020 which is about in line with the recent near-term peaks of total daily U.S. coronavirus cases.
Why is this important?
Traders are calculating whether a “second wave” will possibly rear its ugly head to crush the frothy momentum in tech stocks.
That is where we are at now in the tech market.
Tech stocks could possibly ride another magnificent ride up in share appreciation if the reopening of the economy can kick into second gear.
Skeptics are sounding the alarms that this is not even the “second wave” and we still in the latter half of the first wave.
Consensus has it that this could be just a head fake.
The jitters are real with recent dive in tech shares.
The five biggest tech companies burned more than $269 billion in value last Thursday - the worst day for U.S. stocks since March and the 25th worst day in stock market history.
Nasdaq stocks ended the day largely 5% in the red with Microsoft shedding $80 billion in market cap in just one day.
Larger drops were led by IBM who lost 9% and Cisco who lost 8%.
It was a dreadful day at the office, to say the least.
We are teetering on a knife's edge and the tension is running high in the White House with Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin already announcing that the U.S. can’t afford another lockdown.
It’s not up to him in the end, it’s about how consumers will assess the confronted health risks.
Tech will undoubtedly be dragged down with the rest on the next lockdown sparing few survivors.
The housing market might actually go down as well as the initial push to the suburbs will dissipate and fresh forbearances will explode higher.
Consumers might not even have the cash to pay for their monthly Apple phone service or internet bill if the worst-case scenario manifests itself.
The health scare has already dented new software purchases by small and medium businesses (SMBs) and tech companies in industries such as travel, retail, and hospitality; online ad spending by the likes of automakers and online travel agencies; and smartphone, automotive and industrial chip purchases.
Small business has held off on reducing their tech software spending too much on the expectation that macro conditions will perform a V-shaped recovery.
Numerous tech firms have cited “demand stabilization,” but it’s not guaranteed to last if we revert to another lockdown.
If a lockdown happens again, it will be another referendum on Fed’s enormous liquidity impulses versus the drop in real earnings or flat out losses to tech business models.
Even with the media’s onslaught of vicious fearmongering campaigns, I do believe this is the time for long-term investors to scale into the best of tech such as Amazon, Apple, Google, Microsoft, Facebook, Netflix.
If you thought these 7 companies had anti-trust issues before, then look away.
We could gradually head into an economy where up to 40% of the public markets comprise of only 7 tech stocks which is at a mind-boggling 25% now.
Never waste a good crisis – tech is following through like no other sector!
Bonds don’t make money anymore and hiding out now means putting your life savings into these 7 premium tech stocks.
In the short-term, this is a good opportunity for a tactical bullish tech trade.
Global Market Comments
June 11, 2020
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(WHY TECHNICAL ANALYSIS DOESN’T WORK)
(FB), (AAPL), (AMZN), (GOOG), (MSFT), (VIX)
(TESTIMONIAL)
Santa Claus came early this year.
We have now rocketed all the back from -37% to a feeble 0% return for the Dow Average for 2018. By comparison, the Mad Hedge Fund Trader is up a nosebleed 8.5% during the same period.
If you had taken Cunard’s round-the-world cruise four months ago, as I recommended, you would be landing in New York about now, wondering what the big deal was. Indexes are nearly unchanged since you departed, with the Dow only 5.50% short of an all-time high.
This truly has been the Teflon market. Nothing will stick to it. Not, plague, not depression, not mass bankruptcies, not the worst economic data in history.
Go figure.
It makes you want to throw your hands up in despair and your empty beer can at the TV set. All this work and I’m delivered the perfectly wrong conclusions?
Let me point out a few harsh lessons learned from this most recent meltdown and the rip-your-face-off rally that followed.
Remember all those market gurus claiming stocks would rise every day for the rest of the year? They were wrong.
This is why almost every Trade Alert I shot out for the past two months has been from the “RISK ON” side, but only after cataclysmic market selloffs.
We have just moved from a “Buy in November” to a “Sell in May” posture.
The next six months are ones of historical seasonal market weakness. For the misty origins of this trend, read “If You Sell in May, What to Do in April?” On top of that, we have the uncertainty of the presidential election to deal with.
We go into this with big tech leaders, including Facebook (FB), Apple (AAPL), Amazon (AMZN), Google (GOOG), and Microsoft (MSFT), all at or close to all-time highs.
The other lesson learned this year was the utter uselessness of technical analyses. Usually, these guys are right only 50% of the time. This year, they missed the boat entirely. After perfectly buying the last top, they begged you to dump shares at the bottom.
When the S&P 500 (SPY) was meandering in a narrow nine-point range, and the Volatility Index (VIX) hugged the $11-$15 neighborhood, they said this would continue for the rest of the year.
It didn’t.
When the market finally broke down in February, cutting through imaginary support levels like a hot knife through butter ($26,000? $25,000? $24,500?), they said the market would plunge to $24,000, and possibly as low as $22,000.
It didn’t do that either.
If you believed their hogwash, you lost your shirt. The market just kept going, and going, and going down to $18,000.
This is why technical analysis is utterly useless as an investment strategy. How many hedge funds use a pure technical strategy? Absolutely none, as it doesn’t make any money on a stand-alone basis.
At best, it is just one of 100 tools you need to trade the market effectively. The shorter the time frame, the more accurate it becomes.
On an intraday basis, technical analysis is actually quite useful. But I doubt a few of you engage in this hopeless persuasion.
This is why I advise portfolio managers and financial advisors to use technical analysis as a means of timing order executions, and nothing more.
Most professionals agree with me.
Technical analysis derives from humans’ preference for looking at pictures instead of engaging in abstract mental processes. A picture is worth 1,000 words, and probably a lot more.
This is why technical analysis appeals to so many young people entering the market for the first time. Buy a book for $5 on Amazon and you can become a Master of the Universe.
Who can resist that?
The problem is that high-frequency traders also bought that same book from Amazon a long time ago and have designed algorithms to frustrate every move of the technical analyst.
Sorry to be the buzzkill, but that is my take on technical analysis.
Hope you enjoyed your cruise.
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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.
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