We get a deeper view into the current state of the tech market with the tech behemoths reporting this week.
I don’t expect a Netflix shocker, but the market doesn’t need one for tech stocks to trend lower.
Alphabet, Microsoft, Meta, Amazon, and Apple earnings are on deck at a time when $30 billion of outflows were sucked out of the equity market in the past 2 weeks.
As the falling knife dips lower, many traders are looking out for a decent counter-trend rally, I am too, but you better sell the rip as well. So we stay in a no man’s land of individual stock picking at a time when the garden variety of blasé indexing is now dead.
Another paradigm shift that needs to be addressed is the death of the FAANGs.
The writing has been on the wall for quite some time with Meta or Facebook signaling to the outside world that its business model is broken and news of today of Apple’s factory in Kunshan, China ordered for covid closure is a bad omen for Apple earnings.
At a broader level, Head of the IMF Kristalina Georgieva today suggested sovereign debt defaults are coming down the pipeline which means the IMF will most likely construct a rescue deal that ends in understanding why the national debt mattered.
The world continues this sovereign crisis in all emerging corners of the world from Sri Lanka and Turkey because when the US Fed raises rates, it raises rates on the whole world.
Georgieva also said that Ukraine needs $5 billion per month for the Ukraine economy to survive and that economy is already down more than 50% year to date.
The continuing of debt plugging around the world doesn’t necessarily breed confidence in tech stocks as this industry is heavily reliant on globalization working and cheap rates.
Many sovereigns are starting to freak out about the debt dilemma as we see Japan’s yen forge ahead to 130 to $1 USD.
It appears that we are getting a temporary reprieve in oil and fertilizer stocks because China is so locked down that demand destruction will improve the balance of supply and demand.
Clearly, many of these external factors are unsustainable, and yet they are deeply affecting the Nasdaq index.
The rise in interest rates will have many unintended consequences and the one that matters most for us is delivering higher financing costs to the tech sector.
Without the globalization tailwinds, investors must ditch the double and triple standards of before and solely focus on the fundamentals of a tech firm.
What a thought!
Now that tech firms are accountable for their own performance, we will finally see who can punch above their weight.
Specifically, issues in dire need of netting out are the cloud, enterprise, and the state of the American consumer.
FAANG + Microsoft have lost more than $2.1 trillion in combined market value between them since December, representing nearly half of the S&P 500’s $4.4trn loss over the same period.
This has left five of the six in bear market territory with falls of more than 20%, with Apple the sole exception.
I am expecting strong numbers from Microsoft and Apple as part of branching out in the tech story, where software, semiconductors, cyber security, and product-driven names such as Apple are on the winners’ side of the ongoing digital transformation.
Yet, I believe Microsoft and Apple will use this as a convenient time to guide weak which won’t help the stock prices.
It appears as many of the strong tech performances have been met with giant selloffs and management is acutely aware of that.
Before, liquidity was what mattered and now that has tremendously reversed and the quality of earnings matters more than ever at this point.
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(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or WATCH OUT FOR THE RECESSION WARNINGS) (TLT), (TSLA), (FB), (CRSP), (TDOC), (GILD), (EDIT), (SQ), (INDU), (NVDA), (GS)
The drumbeat of a coming recession is getting louder and louder.
There is no doubt that the traditional signals of a slowing economy are already flashing yellow, if not bright red.
Rocketing interest rates are the most obvious one, with ten-year US Treasury bonds yield soaring from 1.33% to 2.71% in a mere four months. This is why investors pulled a gut-punching $87 billion out of bond funds in Q1.
If the Fed continues with a quarter point rise at every meeting for the rest of the year, we might escape this cycle without a recession. If the Fed ramps up to a half point rate at every meeting as was discussed last week a recession becomes a sure thing.
Imminent positive real yields for the first time in a decade also threaten to draw money out of stocks and into bonds.
I happen to be in the non-recessionary camp and the reason is very simple. Companies are making too much damn money. This is especially true for technology companies, which account for some 75% of the profits made in the US. If anything, their profits are accelerating, although at a lower rate than seen in 2021.
Certainly, the tech companies themselves aren’t buying the recession scenario. They are hiring and investing as if the economic boom will continue forever. Tesla alone has completed two new factories in the past month, in Berlin, Germany and Austin, Texas, each capable of producing a half million vehicles a year. Tesla’s existing factories are all expanding capacity.
Sitting here in Silicon Valley, I can tell you that the job market is as hot as ever. Those who have jobs, like my own kids, are besieged with multiple job offers. It seems the standard time to keep a job these days is a year, after which one takes the next upgrade, promotion, and batch of stock options.
But the stock market seems hell-bent on discounting a recession anyway. You see this in the most economically sensitive sectors of the market, banks, semiconductors, and transport, which have just clocked a miserable month. If I am right (I’m always right), and there is no recession, these will be the sectors that lead the recovery.
Until the market makes up its mind, the disciplined among us will have to while away our time constructing lists of companies to buy for the rebound. That’s when the next leg of the bull market resumes.
We find out when this happens on Wednesday when the next batch of inflation data is released, which is likely to be diabolical.
Quantitative Tightening to Start as Soon as May, according to Fed Governor Brainard. That means our central bank will start selling its vast $9 trillion in bond holding in two months, a huge market negative. Bonds tanked. The Fed only quit quantitative easing in March.
Tesla Blows Away Q1 Sales, shipping 310,000 vehicles, far above expectations. This is despite supply chain problems, soaring interest rates, and the Ukraine War. Sky-high gasoline prices helped a lot, which is driving buyers into Tesla showrooms in drives. All other competitors are falling farther behind, unable to obtain parts and commodities which Tesla locked up long ago. This puts Tesla well on its way to its 1.5 million production goal for this year. Keep buying (TSLA) on dips. My long-term target is $10,000 a share.
The Metaverse May be Worth $13 Trillion by 2030, says Citibank. The same is so for Web 3.0, which includes virtual worlds, like gaming and applications in virtual reality. Citi’s broad vision of the metaverse includes smart manufacturing technology, virtual advertising, online events like concerts, as well as digital forms of money such as cryptocurrencies like I’ll be looking for the best plays.
Biotech May Be Staging a Comeback, after spending a year in hell, taking some shares down 80%-90%. Investors are also nibbling at the sector as a recession and bear market plays, as these companies keep growing regardless of the economic cycle. Buy (CRSP), Teledoc (TDOC), Gilead Sciences (GILD), ad Editas Medicine (EDIT) on dips.
US Bonds Just Suffered their Worst Quarter in a Half Century, with yields rocketing from 1.33% to 2.71%, and Mad Hedge was triple short most of the way down. Bear LEAPS holders, which are many of you, made fortunes. We could stall around current levels until the Fed delivered both barrels of a shot gun, two back-to-back half point rate rises from the Fed.
30-Year Fixed Rate Mortgage Rates Top 5.00%, trashing the home builders. If you thought buying a home was tough, its worst now. So far, no impact on home prices.
US Dollar Hits New Two-Year High. It’s all about rising interest rates. Expect a stronger greenback to come before the turn. The coming QT will put a two-step turbocharger on the move.
German Battery Sales Soar By 67%, to residential buyers to cope with pending energy shortages. Germany already has 2.2 million solar installations out of a population of 83 million. It’s a very smart move as batteries powered by solar panels can remove you from the grid entirely, as I have amply proven with my own installation. It may be the permanent solution to over-dependence on Russian energy supplies.
Tesla Moving into Bitcoin Mining, in partnership with Blockstream and Block, formerly Square (SQ). Tesla will supply the electric power with its massive 3.8-megawatt solar array. That is the size of a large nuclear power plant. The mining facility is designed to be a proof of concept for 100% renewable energy bitcoin mining at scale. If Elon Musk likes Bitcoin maybe you should too.
The Bank of Japan Now Owns 7% of the Japanese Stocks Market. The central bank had to buy the shares after it had already bought all the bonds in the country to support the economy. So, what happens when the policy flips from QE to QT? How about unloading $371 billion worth of shares on the market. This would e a neat trick since so much of the country’s shares are locked up in corporate cross holdings. Methinks I’ll be steering clear of Japanese stocks for the foreseeable future.
My Ten-Year View
When we come out the other side of pandemic, we will be perfectly poised to launch into my new American Golden Age, or the next Roaring Twenties. With interest rates still historically cheap, oil peaking out soon, and technology hyper accelerating, there will be no reason not to. The Dow Average will rise by 800% to 240,000 or more in the coming decade. The America coming out the other side of the pandemic will be far more efficient and profitable than the old. Dow 240,000 here we come!
My March month-to-date performance retreated to a modest 0.38%. My 2022 year-to-date performance ended at a chest-beating 27.23%. The Dow Average is down -4.20% so far in 2022. It is the greatest outperformance on an index since Mad Hedge Fund Trader started 14 years ago. My trailing one-year return maintains a sky-high 68.89%.
On the next capitulation selloff day, which might come with the April Q1 earnings reports, I’ll be adding long positions in technology, banks, and biotech. I am currently in a rare 100% cash position awaiting the next ideal entry point.
That brings my 13-year total return to 539.79%, some 2.10 times the S&P 500 (SPX) over the same period. My average annualized return has ratcheted up to 44.36%, easily the highest in the industry.
We need to keep an eye on the number of US Coronavirus cases at 80.3 million, up only 100,000 in a week and deaths topping 985,000 and have only increased by 2,000 in the past week. You can find the data here.Growth of the pandemic has virtually stopped, with new cases down 98% in two months.
On Monday, April 11 at 8:00 AM EST, Consumer InflationExpectations are released.
On Tuesday, April 12 at 8:30 AM, the Core Inflation Rate for March is announced.
On Wednesday, April 13 at 8:30 AM, the Producer Price Index for March is printed.
On Thursday, April 14 at 7:30 AM, the Weekly Jobless Claims are printed. We also get Retail Sales for March.
On Friday, April 8 at 8:30 AM, NY Empire State Manufacturing Index for March. At 2:00 PM, the Baker Hughes Oil Rig Count is out.
As for me, back in 2002, I flew to Iceland to do some research on the country’s national DNA sequencing program called deCode, which analyzed the genetic material of everyone in that tiny nation of 250,000. It was the boldest project yet in the field and had already led to several breakthrough discoveries.
Let me start by telling you the downside of visiting Iceland. In the country that has produced three Miss Universes over the last 50 years, suddenly you are the ugliest guy in the country. Because guess what? The men are beautiful as well, the decedents of Vikings who became stranded here after they cut down all the forests on the island for firewood, leaving nothing with which to build long boats. I said they were beautiful, not smart.
Still, just looking is free and highly rewarding.
While I was there, I thought it would be fun to trek across Iceland from North to South in the spirit of Shackleton, Scott, and Amundsen. I went alone because after all, how many people do you know who want to trek across Iceland? Besides, it was only 150 miles or ten days to cross. A piece of cake really.
Near the trailhead, the scenery could have been a scene from Lord of the Rings, with undulating green hills, craggy rock formations, and miniature Icelandic ponies galloping in herds. It was nature in its most raw and pristine form. It was all breathtaking.
Most of the central part of Iceland is covered by a gigantic glacier over which a rough trail is marked by stakes planted in the snow every hundred meters. The problem arises when fog or blizzards set in, obscuring the next stake, making it too easy to get lost. Then you risk walking into a fumarole, a vent from the volcano under the ice always covered by boiling water. About ten people a year die this way.
My strategy in avoiding this cruel fate was very simple. Walk 50 meters. If I could see the next stake, I proceeded. If I couldn’t, I pitched my tent and waited until the storm passed.
It worked.
Every 10 kilometers stood a stone rescue hut with a propane stove for adventurers caught out in storms. I thought they were for wimps but always camped nearby for the company.
I was 100 miles into my trek, approached my hut for the night, and opened the door to say hello to my new friends.
What I saw horrified me.
Inside was an entire German Girl Scout Troop spread out in their sleeping bags all with a particularly virulent case of the flu. In the middle was a girl lying on the floor soaking wet and shivering, who had fallen into a glacier fed river. She was clearly dying of hypothermia.
I was pissed and instantly went into Marine Corp Captain mode, barking out orders left and right. Fortunately, my German was still pretty good then, so I instructed every girl to get out of their sleeping bags and pile them on top of the freezing scout. I then told them to strip the girl of her wet clothes and reclothe her with dry replacements. They could have their bags back when she got warm. The great thing about Germans is that they are really good at following orders.
Next, I turned the stove burners up high to generate some heat. Then I rifled through backpacks and cooked up what food I could find, force-fed it into the scouts and emptied my bottle of aspirin. For the adult leader, a woman in her thirties who was practically unconscious, I parted with my emergency supply of Jack Daniels.
By the next morning, the frozen girl was warm, the rest were recovering, and the leader was conscious. They thanked me profusely. I told them I was an American “Adler Scout” (Eagle Scout) and was just doing my job.
One of the girls cautiously moved forward and presented me with a small doll dressed in a traditional German Dirndl which she said was her good luck charm. Since I was her good luck, I should have it. It was the girl who was freezing the death the day before.
Some 20 years later I look back fondly on that trip and would love to do it again.
Anyone want to go to Iceland?
Stay Healthy,
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/04/john-thomas-in-iceland.png506776Mad Hedge Fund Traderhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMad Hedge Fund Trader2022-04-11 12:02:132022-04-11 12:16:16The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or Watch Out for the Recession Warnings
The word “metaverse” is a popular word recently and it has to do with a world from science fiction.
It refers to a future version of the internet accessed through immersive technologies such as virtual-reality and augmented-reality headsets.
Metaverse could be a $13 trillion market by 2030 according to a prominent research firm.
The internet built around decentralized technologies and virtual worlds is a novel idea.
The definition of the metaverse need to go beyond sticking to virtual worlds, like gaming and applications in virtual reality.
A comprehensive vision of the metaverse includes smart manufacturing technology, virtual advertising, online events like concerts, as well as digital forms of money such as cryptocurrencies like bitcoin.
The metaverse could see 5 billion unique internet visitors by the end of the decade, funneling trillions of dollars in revenue in this next-generation of the internet.
This isn’t the only source labelling the metaverse and web3 a trillion-dollar opportunity. In research published in December, Goldman Sachs put a $12.5 trillion number on the space, in a bullish outlook that assumed one-third of the digital economy shifts into virtual worlds and then expands by 25%.
So far, the metaverse has been a cash guzzler with not much to show for it.
With a huge amount of money already flowing into companies addressing the space and not much revenue, companies face years of poor revenue showing.
This money has been used to create the infrastructure of the metaverse and there hasn’t been the same type of return one would expect from Google’s ad business.
Profits are supposedly years away which could lead to many investors waiting for it on the sidelines while the engineers get their act together.
For example, leading metaverse plays have performed poorly with Roblox (RBLX), a video game company that is a platform for building and experiencing virtual worlds tanking by 30% this year.
What are the Metaverse risks?
That it doesn’t stick because it’s only tolerable for a few minutes.
There’s definitely a real risk that the metaverse never goes from the “fake it until you make it” to the real killer app that every consumer is clamoring for.
Just take for instance the art of a business meeting.
One might argue that using VR for meetings is less enticing than familiar technologies such as Zoom.
Would you rather see a real version of someone on a video or a fake avatar of someone up close?
In its fourth-quarter earnings report Meta said its new metaverse business lost $10 billion and its user base shrank for the first time in its history.
The metaverse could turn out to be just hype and nothing more because the leaders of these companies building it are surrounded by yes men who tell them it’s a great idea.
Many analysts have mentioned that Meta’s version of the virtual now is “terrible.”
Many also chime in saying “it’s been tried many, many times over the past four decades and it's never worked."
Even if Meta does improve on the technology and it does become more advanced, it still could be mediocre.
Clearly, the internet in the form we have now is running out of juice for public trading companies.
The metaverse would give many companies a new chance to rejuvenate their revenue engines.
But I am not entirely convinced that it is a good idea.
If many can remember, we were already supposed to have self-driving cars 3 years ago and that never happened.
A lot of this failed technology has a tendency to just fall by the wayside never to be talked about again.
There is still a risk that metaverse is an utter failure and Meta is forced to look at something different to save their failing company.
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U.S. President Joe Biden signing a crypto executive order is more bark than bite.
It doesn’t mean that anything really will happen, especially in the short term.
Optics are quite important for the current American administration, and I believe this is another instance.
Throw the crypto fanatics a bone and hype it up like a transformational moment when it’s not.
If you live in a world of hard outcomes, then this isn’t one of them.
Granted, it’s a step in the right direction, but no meaningful legislation has been enacted yet and I highly doubt that anything concrete gets done before the next administration.
I won’t get into the business of hyping up this announcement of “establishing a framework” for the digital gold because it echoes the direction they were supposed to go with big tech.
Big tech was supposed to get regulated to the utmost, but nothing ever came of it.
The only tech firm that blew up was Meta or Facebook (FB), but that was more about self-inflicted wounds than anything else.
Big tech is largely unscathed from the historical behavior, and nothing has changed in terms of the handling of personal data and its integrity.
Turning a blind eye than rather dealing with issues has been sort of the consensus for anything really controversial with big business.
I don’t believe the administration will lift a finger and plan to treat crypto as politicking even to please optics.
This will create a situation where they can straddle positions on both sides so they can claim innocence if something goes wrong with crypto or take the credit if crypto develops.
The reports will dish up buzz words like “historic” and “unprecedented.”
The order was finally signed Wednesday. It calls on federal agencies to take a unified approach to regulation and oversight of digital assets, according to a White House fact sheet.
A unified approach could also mean that nobody does anything together so we will need to see more substance out of Washington.
The Biden administration is calling on the Treasury to assess and develop policy recommendations on crypto.
Even if recommendations can be decided upon, it doesn’t mean that it will be net positive for Bitcoin’s price.
Last month, U.S. officials seized $3.6 billion worth of bitcoin — their biggest seizure of cryptocurrencies ever — related to the 2016 hack of crypto exchange Bitfinex.
Following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, authorities are now also concerned about the possible use of crypto in helping sanctioned Russian individuals and companies evade the restrictions.
There is illegal activity that the government wants to stamp out and writing the rules makes it easier to do that.
The Biden administration also wants to explore a digital version of the dollar which is copying the Chinese playbook.
Much of the policy is strategizing relative to what China and Russia are doing and he fell short of saying that the US will create a digital dollar.
Again, it’s more of the optics of saying the government need “urgency” on research and development of a potential digital dollar which doesn’t really mean anything.
The Federal Reserve last year began work on exploring the potential issuance of a digital dollar. The central bank released a long-awaited report detailing the pros and cons of such virtual money but didn’t take a position yet on whether it thinks the U.S. should issue one.
These announcements are a far cry from real policy moves.
It’s great that more resources will be thrown at the asset class but research and urgency don’t mean much in terms of hard victories.
Short-term, this Eastern European crisis has been a massive shot across the bow for Bitcoin fanatics because it has proven that during a possible nuclear war, nobody will buy Bitcoin.
After the dead cat bounce, there was another draconian sell-off this morning in Bitcoin with the asset down 7%, again, diving below $40,000.
The bad price action was created by the 7.9% CPI print and Bitcoin was supposed to be an inflation hedge, but the price action suggests it performs poorly as an inflation hedge.
The jury is out but Bitcoin has failed some major tests this year and it will be a hard slog for the rest of the year.
Sell the rallies until the backdrop and variables change for the better.
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“Staving off death is a thing that you have to work at…If living things don’t actively work to prevent it, they would eventually merge with their surroundings and cease to exist as autonomous beings. That is what happens when they die.”
This is a quote from Richard Dawkins, which Jeff Bezos wrote to Amazon (AMZN) shareholders in his farewell letter. Needless to say, death and decay seem to be at the forefront of his mind these days.
That’s why it comes as no surprise that the founder of Blue Origin and, of course, Amazon (as well as Elon Musk’s favorite punching bag) has launched a company comprising renowned scientists and globally respected executives to realize his dream of developing immortality technology.
The company, called Altos Labs, is basically an anti-aging venture. While many people would probably mock the idea, this seemingly impossible wild concept has notable names backing it.
Bezos is not the only investor putting his money on this project.
Russian billionaire Yuri Milner, whose wealth expanded thanks to his strategic funding of Facebook (FB), along with Russian email service Mail.ru (MLRYY) and Russian social networking site VK, is also part of the mission.
In fact, the company was officially conceived in Yuri’s house in Palo Alto in the Los Altos hills, leading to the name Altos Labs. (Given that “Los Altos” means “the heights” in Spanish, they probably used it as a double entendre for Altos Labs’ goals.)
In addition to Yuri and Bezos, there are several other backers of Altos Labs.
While they aren’t specifically named, the mere fact that the startup has generated the most funding of virtually any biotechnology business at $3 billion is quite telling of how much faith investors have on this project.
And they wouldn’t be wrong.
Its remarkable roster of executives includes experts from GlaxoSmithKline (GSK), Roche’s (RHHBY) Genentech, and the National Cancer Institute.
Altos Labs not only has wealthy backers and esteemed executives on its board, it also has Nobel Prize-winning scientists working on its goals.
The highest-profile scientist they have is Shinya Yamanaka, who received the Nobel Prize in 2012 for his stem cell research.
His work, which focuses on cell “reprogramming,” can reverse the development of cells towards that of stem cells. In a nutshell, Yamanaka is working on a “backward aging” technology.
Part of the board is Juan Carlos Izpisúa Belmonte, who specializes in developing techniques to switch cells from one type to another.
He gained notoriety when he experimented on creating hybridized human and monkey embryos using Yamanaka’s technology.
Another member of Altos’ board is Jennifer Doudna, who shared the 2015 Breakthrough Prize with Yamanaka and later won the 2020 Nobel Prize for her co-discovery of CRISPR genome editing.
Although it’s a startup, the company will have offices in the San Francisco Bay Area, San Diego, Cambridge in the UK, and even Japan.
Admittedly, most of the details about the project are still under wraps. But insiders say that Bezos and his crew seek to become the “Bell Labs” of biology.
The oversimplified explanation of its goal is that Altos Labs plans to reverse diseases, effectively regenerating new cells to help the body perform optimally.
Basically, they seek to come up with a biological reprogramming technology that can rejuvenate the cells and eventually revitalize human beings.
They target cells under pressure, including those with genetic abnormalities, suffering from injuries, or aging.
Using their reprogramming technology, they aim to create medications that can deliver one-time treatments for these conditions. Ultimately, these efforts will lead to a prolonged human life.
Further clarifying their mission, Altos explained that their goal is to extend “health span” and that boosting any longevity initiative would simply be considered an “accidental consequence.”
Inasmuch as Alto Labs is an exciting venture, it isn’t the first in the field. This startup joins the ranks of Calico Labs, which was launched in 2013 and funded by one of Google’s (GOOGL) co-founders, Larry Page.
Other startups working on reprogramming technology are Life Biosciences, Turn Biotechnologies, AgeX Therapeutics, and Shift Bioscience.
The quest to defeat death is a mission as old as time.
In response to this challenge, Alto Labs has put together an impressively pedigreed bunch.
Moreover, a solid and established connection is seen between aging clocks and reprogramming technology—all of which Alto Labs already have access to due to its roster of executives and scientists.
While the technology feels so farfetched, industry experts believe it holds indisputable and repeatable results.
These were already seen in laboratory experiments. However, these have only succeeded so far when applied to individual cells.
The technology can gather a cell from an 80-year-old and, via in vitro, reverse this age by as much as 40 years.
If this succeeds, Altos is poised to lead and dominate the “immortality” industry — a sector projected to be worth $600 billion by 2025 — soon.
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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.