Mad Hedge Technology Letter
July 24, 2019
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(CIAO SILICON VALLEY),
(AAPL), (CRM), (MSFT), (FB), (AMZN), (GOOGL)
Mad Hedge Technology Letter
July 24, 2019
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(CIAO SILICON VALLEY),
(AAPL), (CRM), (MSFT), (FB), (AMZN), (GOOGL)
Bridgewater Associates Founder Ray Dalio carefully articulates an economic landscape in which the unrelenting chase for short-term tech profits finally catches up meaningfully with the gyrations of tech shares.
All of this could come home to roost and the early manifestations can be found in the housing migratory trends.
The robust housing demand, lack of housing supply, mixed with the avalanche of inquisitive tech money will propel these housing markets to new heights and this phenomenon is happening as we speak.
Salesforce Founder and CEO Marc Benioff has lamented that San Francisco, where ironically he is from, is a diabolical “train wreck” and urged fellow tech CEOs to “walk down the street” and see it with their own eyes to observe the numerous homeless encampments dotted around the city limits.
The leader of Salesforce doesn’t mince his words when he talks and beelines to the heart of the issues.
After relinquishing some of his CEO duties to newly anointed Co-CEO Keith Block, Benioff will have the operational time and a wealth of resources to get on top of the pulse of not only tech issues but bigger picture stuff and he now has a mouthpiece for it with Time Magazine which he and his wife recently bought.
In condemning large swaths of the beneficiaries of the Silicon Valley ethos, he has signaled that it won’t be smooth sailing forever.
In tech wonderland, and he urged companies to transform their business model if they are irresponsible with user data.
The tech lash could get messier this year because companies that go rogue with personal data will face a cringeworthy reckoning as the techlash fury seeps into government policy and the social stigma worsens.
I have walked around the streets of San Francisco myself.
Places around Powell Bart station close to the Tenderloin district are eyesores littered with used syringes that lay in the gutter.
South of Market Street isn’t a place I would want to barbecue on a terrace either.
Summing it up, the unlimited tech talent reservoir that Silicon Valley gorged on isn’t flowing anymore because people don’t want to live there now.
This tech talent, equipped with heart-tugging stories from siblings and anecdotes from classmates getting shafted by the San Francisco dream, has recently put the Bay Area in the rear-view mirror for many who would have stayed if it were 20 years ago.
This is exactly what Apple’s $1 billion investment into a new tech campus in Austin, Texas and Amazon adding 500 employees in Nashville, Tennessee are all about.
Apple also added numbers in San Diego, Atlanta, Culver City, and Boulder just to name a few.
Apple currently employs 90,000 people in 50 states and is in the works to create 20,000 more jobs in the US by 2023.
Most of these new jobs won’t be in Silicon Valley.
Since the tech talent isn’t giddy-upping into Silicon Valley anymore, tech firms must get off their saddle and go find them.
The tables have turned but that is what happens when the heart of western tech becomes unlivable to the average tech worker earning $150,000 per year.
Driving out young people who envision a long-term future elsewhere than the San Francisco Bay Area forces Silicon Valley to adapt to the new patterns revealing themselves.
Sacramento has experienced a dizzying rise of newcomers from the Bay Area itself.
Some are even commuting, making that 60-mile jaunt past Davis, but that will give way to entire tech operations moving to the state capitol.
Millennials are reaching that age of family formation and they are fleeing to places that are affordable and possible to become a new home buyer.
These are some of the practical issues that tech has failed to embrace and to maintain the furious pace of growth that investors' capricious expectations harbor.
Silicon Valley will have to become more practical adding a dash of empathy as well instead of just going by the raw and heartless data.
We aren’t robots yet, and much of the world still augurs to emotional decisions and disregards the empirical data.
But, instead of physical offices being planted in the Bay Area, the tech industry will heed way to the “spirit” of Silicon Valley with offices in far-flung places.
And remember that all of these new tech talent strongholds will need housing, and housing that an IT worker making $150,000 per year desires.
No wonder why San Jose real estate has dropped in the past year, people and their paychecks are on the way out.
Mad Hedge Technology Letter
July 22, 2019
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(DOES ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE WORK FOR YOU?),
(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.
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.
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.
Defective Amazon (AMZN) Alexa recently produced unexplained laughter because of a mistaken command to start laughing. Despite avoiding calamity, these small events show the magnitude of potential chaos capable of haywire A.I. functions. If one day a user attempts to order a box of tissues and Alexa burns down the house, who is liable?
Tesla's (TSLA) CEO Elon Musk has shared his anxiety about robots flipping the script on humans. Musk 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 Chairman Xi.
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.
Bill Gates noted that robots should be taxed like humans.
This reflects the bubble in which the ultra-elite reside.
This comment implies that humans and robots are at the same level. It shows a severe lack of empathy for the 40% of working Americans who will be replaced by machines over the next 10 years.
The West is comprised of a deeply hierarchical system of winners and losers. 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.
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 more people do well in this paper chase to the detriment of the majority.
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 in the greatest bull market of all time.
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 Professor Hawking's work is that his timeframe is 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.
The year 2020 will signal the real beginning of A.I. in tangible form when autonomous fleets flood main streets and is another step in the direction of human's overreliance on machines.
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.
Professor Hawking said we need to explore our technological capabilities to the fullest in order to avoid extinction.
In 2019, 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. have a red carpet laid out in front of them.
And let me remind you that technology is still the least regulated industry on the planet even if sentiment has pivoted this year.
The only solution is keeping companies accountable by a function of law or creating a third-party task force to regulate A.I.
In 2019, the thought of overseeing robots sounds crazy.
However, by 2020, it might be as normal as uncontrollable laughter from your smart home device.
Mad Hedge Technology Letter
July 10, 2019
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(THE LOPSIDED WORLD OF TECH)
(FB), (GOOGL)
Is it unfair?
No, technology is afforded higher multiples than other industries and it’s completely justified.
Don’t allow anyone to convince you that tech companies are expensive because there are plausible reasons why they are expensive and will get even more expensive.
Technology sits on its perch as the single best investment opportunity of not only our lifetime but our children’s lifetime as well.
Huge capital investment is pouring into this glorious opportunity from gleaming offices on Wall Street to Sand Hill Road venture capitalists and even the Saudi Royal Family.
What is money not going into?
If you drive around the urban and suburban roads of America, it’s obvious that not much is going into new infrastructure.
America hasn’t even built a new airport for the past 30 years which CEO of JP Morgan loves to remind his followers of.
The sad truth is that capital is spilling over into the technology sector.
Eclipsing anything that you might believe, technology provides the optimal vehicle to innovate and evolve while offering a platform to incite a surge in performance and profitability.
The agent that is being harnessed to innovate and evolve is the software that is being programmed up to help a slew of other sectors.
Even if a sector hasn’t been touched by the tentacles of software innovation, they rarely stay virgin for long.
Much of the incubator stage capital is funnelled into considerable expenditures on research and development by technology companies, but also the capital is the catalyst to a reactionary tale of steroidal growth fueled by a pipeline of innovative products, services, and unique features.
These products and services are then spread through and delivered to ancillary arteries that serve the subset of the broader economy.
The result is a massive tsunami in incremental productivity when high grade software supercharges every business that implements and integrates the software inside the confines of their business structure.
The supercharge effect of software rapidly forces companies to either evolve fast or go extinct, meaning that whole industries are transformed overnight when they get a whiff of what is happening with their competitor.
Computers and hardware used to take up entire warehouses - they were oversized, bloated, and tended to perform poorly at first.
The evolution of hardware has delivered shiny, modern pocket-sized devices packed with potency.
CEOs are able to manage companies of 10,000 employees just on a screen the size of a wallet all harnessed by, you got it - software.
Even more unbelievable is that the concept of technology must outdo itself, upgrading with every iteration in an increasingly short amount of time, or be cannibalized by a competitor in a blink of an eye.
In the survival of the fittest, the tech industry is the alpha male industry of the American economy.
Nobody understands in what form or shape it will manifest itself in just down the road but it will be the 800-pound gorilla in the room.
Even though software is the fulcrum of the tech industry today, it doesn’t mean it will always be that way.
Trends diverge quickly and you can even ask a semiconductor executive facing a bout of weakness stemming from geopolitical one-upmanship.
Semiconductor companies have been dragged into the middle of a hegemonic battle between the two most dominant economies in the world and revenues will degenerate short term.
Key semi products will not be relinquished because the artificial intelligence that complements these high-grade chips will be the crucial element that determines who runs the world once 5G networks are erected.
Taking away the building blocks that facilitates the artificial intelligence will make it more difficult to produce the finished product.
Handheld devices are another product that has been sidelined for the time being because the global market is currently saturated by smartphones and tablets.
Software has been a key theme for the Mad Hedge Technology Letter and there are no signs of abatement for the foreseeable future.
The truth is that the world will not function without software as we know it and the omnipresence of software stems from the need to automate everything from healthcare devices down to autonomous vehicles.
Even better, software can withhold devastating economic capitulation as many of these companies have bought in to the software miracle and is a fixed part of their model that can’t be replaced.
Just the bare bones type of model badly needs sufficient IT functions to survive.
Then consider that cybersecurity is more and more a part of management’s plan to protect the digital fort from the back to front.
Software requires minimal infrastructure and is difficult to protect via patents or copyright to any effective degree signaling that if software isn’t perpetually improving, they are at risk of being disrupted.
The low barriers of entry consequently mean grassroots start-ups with innovative, game-changing products can appear with a wave of a wand.
After-sales support of the software is becoming a critical part of revenue as software is becoming more complex and requires granular consultation to apply the full range of capabilities demanded of it.
Software as a service (SaaS) is the new payment model that has also poured gas onto the revenue flames.
Software programs used to be purchased once for a fixed price.
The exchange of tender resulted in the consumer obtaining CDs that they inserted into a personal computer hard drive then installed on the desktop.
The technology industry shaped up and realized it could not only extract a one-time fee for software services but accrue an annual fee with the promise of timely and prompt upgrades via the cloud.
A win-win situation unfolded.
In some cases, this has allowed the same companies to make 500% more from the same product and deliver higher performance through enhanced functionality by deploying frequent updates.
And yes, the trade war is stealing some of the tech industries mojo, but software stocks will be most insulated.
The long-term trends are still intact and investors must understand these stocks have had incredible run-ups the past few years, not to mention a great first half of 2019 that saw most software stock rise over 30%.
Investors should be patient and advantageous entry points will be served on a platter but also differentiate between good and bad software stocks.
Mad Hedge Technology Letter
July 8, 2019
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(YOUR UNCONSCIOUS FUTURE)
(FB), (GOOGL)
This might be one of the most important newsletters you will ever read.
Economies are mainly defined by seismic revolutions, for example, the industrial revolution that cut down simple, archaic jobs to machinery.
As we are on the verge of shuttering the technological revolution that brought us a party bag of treats like the internet, search engines, smartphones and the personal computer, we must brace ourselves for what is next.
Industry 4.0 is the concept of dazzling smart factories augmented by machines connected to a cloud network and software that processes the operations within the system.
The productivity enhancement will boost performance as machines will be able to visualize and surgically solve problems by applying the software that powers it.
Data exchange in manufacturing technologies which include cyber-physical systems (CPS), the Internet of things (IoT), the Industrial Internet of Things (IIOT), and cognitive computing are concepts that will define Industry 4.0.
As income inequality rears its ugly head and becomes center to what politicians run campaigns on, the world must brace for yet another tsunami of unrivaled job loss on levels that we have never seen before.
The social upheaval that economic chaos will create and offer investors monumental investment opportunities.
One of the manifestations of technological evolution is the optimization of business processes through automation, meaning less people are involved in the value creation process.
The global population is on the verge of mushrooming from 7.7 billion people in 2019 to 10.9 billion in 2100.
If you think overpopulation and sharing the world’s resources are a problem in 2019, then wait until 2050 when more people are squeezed out of revenue windfalls.
This effectively means the global middle class will accelerate its demise as the job market will bifurcate into a narrow sliver of clear winners and mostly losers and not the muddied version of what we have now.
The first Industrial Revolution also delivered uncertainty that hung over the whole job market, but the world was diverse enough and had ample resources to absorb the negative impact.
The global overpopulation is connected to the economy in the sense that most babies will be born outside of developed industrial economies and the world will see a fiercer rush to gain access to jobs in places such as London, Frankfurt, New York, Tokyo, and Silicon Valley.
The net effect of A.I. could be debated all day, specifically whether the absolute progress made in the development of industry and the products that revolve around it outweigh the torrent of human suffering that it will cause to billions of people who are not employable in that job market.
With exponential computational power to apply A.I., existing behavior will change in society and new cultures will be created because of it.
Economic value will not correlate to the amount of people like it once was, countries like Japan have dived headfirst into automating as much as possible with the best in class technology in robotics.
The world which we know it in 2019 is in the last legs of a nostalgic phase with baby boomers clinging on to what they know growing up in the 1950s.
Soon, that will be eradicated and Millennials will pour what they know and the fallacies they support into the system that is supported by algorithms and machine learning as the first human generation to be technology natives.
We are on the cusp of transformative shifts in the world.
In the next 25 years, technology will start migrating into the chambers of neuroscience.
Technology has discovered that more than 99.99% of human behavior happens at an unconscious level and that the unconscious brain is 10 times faster than the conscious brain.
While at any point of time, the conscious brain can focus only on one task, the unconscious can easily execute infinitely more.
The aspects of human behavior that the rational world has pinpointed is the conscious mind which is an ill-suited representative of human behavior.
The mechanics of the unconscious brain is stuff out of science fiction in 2019 but that will slowly change.
Consciousness has no understanding of what is happening in one’s own unconscious.
Science will be required to squeeze out a mechanism to discern the type of data humans can produce to mold this future subset of technology.
Modern qualitative techniques must be developed to be able to extract data from this important pool of knowledge.
Corporations are at the forefront of this trend and tech power brokers such as Co-Founder and CEO of Facebook Mark Zuckerberg hopes to one day install a chip into consumers' brain so that consumers can access the global network from the brain.
A scary thought but a thought gaining traction, nonetheless.
Ideally, the morally attuned stakeholders carry out the process of benefitting humankind instead of enriching a select few.
That will also be a battle that will define the next generation.
Increased focus on the unconscious processes will cause headaches for companies and there will likely be a numerical cost placed on the data it generates after companies like Facebook (FB) and Google (GOOGL) ran wild with abusing free personal data for decades.
Monitoring and managing the unconscious processes of consumers and employees will be hard at first and then society must assess if this violates privacy or not.
Unconsciousness works best when humans are sleeping or resting.
How can companies capture data on how well someone is using her unconscious brain?
This will befuddle tech companies until there is a solution.
Paradigm shifting scientific discoveries and human innovations have emanated from unconscious processes of the human brain in the past.
We still understand little about how powerful this data could become.
The current emergence of AI will be rooted purely in consciousness and the data that revolves around it, but the problem is that this data isn’t entirely accurate.
In capturing absolutes about complicated topics with current machine learning techniques, it doesn’t synthesize the fact that many areas of the human world deal in many shades of grey.
That is why A.I. is not that good today.
The next big find is if a company doubles down on the unconscious processes and that leads to groundbreaking discoveries in the understanding of accurate human behavior and thought.
Global Market Comments
June 21, 2019
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(MONDAY, JULY 8 VENICE, ITALY STRATEGY LUNCHEON)
(PLAYING THE SHORT SIDE WITH VERTICAL BEAR PUT SPREADS), (TLT)
(WHY TECHNICAL ANALYSIS DOESN’T WORK)
(FB), (AAPL), (AMZN), (GOOG), (MSFT), (VIX)
Mad Hedge Technology Letter
June 21, 2019
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(THE REGULATION WARPATH TO LIBRA)
(FB)
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: