(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or WHAT’S UP WITH TECH?),
(MSFT), (TSLA), (AAPL), (QQQ), (NVDA), (MU), (AMD), (BRKB), (ARRK), (ROM), (VIX), (FCX), (TLT), (BRKB), (TSLA), (JPM), (SPY), (QQQ), (SPX)
That great wellspring of personal wealth, technology stocks, has suddenly run dry.
The leading stock market sector for the past decade took some major hits last week. More stable stocks like Microsoft (MSFT) only shed 8%. Some of the highest beta stocks, like Tesla (TSLA), took a heart-palpitating 39% haircut in a mere two months.
Have tech stocks had it for good? Has the greatest investment miracle of all times ground to a halt? Is it time to panic and sell everything?
Fortunately, I have seen this happen many times before.
Technology is a sector that is prone to extremes. Most of the time it is a hero, but occasionally it is a goat. When too many short-term traders sit in one end of the canoe, we all end up in the drink.
This is one of those times.
Technology stocks undeniably need a periodic shaking out. You need to get rid of the day traders, the hot money, the excessively leveraged, and find out who has been swimming without a swimsuit. The sector rotates between being ridiculously cheap to wildly overvalued. We are currently suffering the latter.
During the past 12 years, Apple’s (AAPL) price earnings multiple has traded from 9X to 36X. It was a value play for the longest time, all the way up to 2016. Nobody believed in it. It is currently at a 33X multiple. While the stock has gone nowhere since August, its earnings have increased by more than 10%, and better is yet to come.
After trading tech stocks for more than 50 years, I can tell you one thing with certainty.
They always come back.
And this time, they are in position to come back sooner, faster, and bigger than ever before. Remember the Great Dotcom Bust of 2000-2003? It lasted two years and nine months and saw NASDAQ (QQQ) crater by 82%, from 5,000 to 1,000. This time, it’s only dropped by 13%, by 1,850 from 14,250 to 12,400.
I don’t see the selloff lasting much longer or lower, no more than another 5%-10% until September. For these are not your father’s technology stocks.
There are only three numbers you need to know. Technology now accounts for a mere 2% of the US workforce, but a massive 27% of stock market capitalization and 37% of total us company earnings. A sector with such an impressive earnings output won’t fall for very long, or very far.
The pandemic accelerated technological innovation tenfold. Companies now have mountains of cash with which to bring forward their futures.
This is no more true than for biotech stocks. The technologies used to create Covid-19 vaccines can be applied to cure all human diseases. And they now have mountains of cash to implement this.
So, I’ll be taking my time with tech stocks. But they are setting up the best long side entry point since the March 20, 2020 pandemic low.
The biggest call remaining for 2021 is when to take profits and sell domestic recovery value stocks and rotate back into tech. But if you are running the barbell strategy I have been harping about since the presidential election, the work is already being done for you. Nonfarm Payroll comes in at a blockbuster 379,000 in February, far better than expected. It a preview of explosive numbers to comes as the US economy crawls out of the pandemic. That’s with a huge drag from terrible winter weather. The headline Unemployment rate is 6.2%. The U-6 “discouraged worker” rate is still a sky-high 11%, those who have been jobless more than six months. Leisure & Hospitality were up an incredible 355,000 and Retail was up 41,000. Government lost 86,000 jobs. We are still 12 million jobs short of the year-ago trend. See what employers are willing to do when they see $20 trillion about to hit the economy?
Will US GDP Growth hit 10% this year? That is the sky-high number that is being mooted by the Atlanta Fed for the first three months of 2021. The vaccine is working! They do tend to be high in the home of Gone with the Wind. This Yankee would be happy at 7.5% growth. Manufacturing just hit a three-year high as companies try to front-run imminent explosive growth. The only weak spot is employment, which is still at recessionary highs.
Herd Immunity is here or says the latest numbers from Johns Hopkins University. New cases have plunged from 250,000 to 46,000 in a month, the fastest disease rollback in human history. We may be seeing new science at work here, where mass vaccinations combine with mass infections to obliterate the pandemic practically overnight. If true, the Dow has another 8,000 points in it….this year. Buy everything on dips. The economic data is about to get superheated.
Warren Buffet’s Berkshire Hathaway blows it away, buying back a staggering $25 billion worth of his own stock in 2020, including $9 billion in the most recent quarter. It’s what I’m always looking for, buying quality at a discount. Warren pulled in $5 billion in profits during the last quarter of 2020, up 13.6% over a year earlier. Net earnings were up 23%. If Buffet, a long time Mad Hedge reader, is buying his stock, you should too. Buy (BRKB) on dips. It's also a great LEAP candidate as the best domestic recovery play out there. Rising rates have yet to hurt Real Estate, as the structural shortage of housing is so severe. Historically speaking, interest rates are still very low, even though the ten-year yield has soared by 82% in two months. Cash is still pouring into REITs coming off the bottom. Home prices always see their fastest moves up at the beginning of a new rate cycle as everyone rushes to beat unaffordable mortgages. The Chip Shortage worsens, with Tesla shutting down its Fremont factory for two days. The Texas deep freeze made matters much worse, where many US fabs are located, like Samsung, NXP Semiconductors, and Infineon Technologies. Buy (NVDA), (MU), and (AMD) on dips.
Jay Powell lays an egg at a Wall Street Journal conference. He said it would take some time to return to a normal economy. The speed of the interest rate rise was “notable.” We are unlikely to return to maximum employment in a year. We couldn’t have heard of more dovish speech. But all that traders heard was that inflation was set to return, but will be “temporary.” That was worth a 600-point dive in the stock market and a 5-basis point pop in bond yields. My 10% correction is finally here! Here today, gone tomorrow. Cathie Wood was far and away the best fund manager of 2020. She, value investor Ron Baron, and I, were alone in the darkness four years ago saying that Tesla (TSLA) could rise 100-fold. Cathie’s flagship fund The Ark Innovation ETF (ARKK) rose a staggering 433% off the March 2020 bottom. Alas, it has since given up a gut-punching 30% since the February high, exactly when ten-year US Treasury bonds started to crash. Watch (ARKK) carefully. This is the one you want to own when rates stabilize. It’s like another (ROM). 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 at zero, oil cheap, there will be no reason not to. The Dow Average will rise by 400% to 120,000 or more in the coming decade. The American coming out the other side of the pandemic will be far more efficient and profitable than the old. Dow 120,000 here we come!
It’s amazing how well selling tops and buying bottoms can help your performance. My Mad Hedge Global Trading Dispatch reached a super-hot 11.61% during the first five days in March on the heels of a spectacular 13.28% profit in February. The Dow Average is up a miniscule 4.00% so far in 2021.
It was a week of frenetic trading, with the Volatility Index (VIX) all over the map. I took profits in Freeport McMoRan (FCX) and my short in US Treasury bonds (TLT) and buying Berkshire Hathaway (BRKB), Tesla (TSLA), JP Morgan (JPM). I opened new shorts in the S&P 500 (SPY) and the NASDAQ (QQQ).
This is my fifth double digit month in a row. My 2021 year-to-date performance soared to 35.10%. That brings my 11-year total return to 457.65%, some 2.12 times the S&P 500 (SPX) over the same period. My 11-year average annualized return now stands at an unbelievable 40.68%.
My trailing one-year return exploded to 110.25%, the highest in the 13-year history of the Mad Hedge Fund Trader.
We need to keep an eye on the number of US Coronavirus cases at 29 million and deaths topping 525,000, which you can find here.
The coming week will be a boring one on the data front.
On Monday, March 8, at 11:00 AM EST, Consumer Inflation Expectations for February are out.
On Tuesday, March 9, at 7:00 AM, The NFIB Business Optimism Index for February is published. On Wednesday, March 10 at 8:30 AM, the US Inflation Rate for February is printed. On Thursday, March 11 at 8:30 AM, Weekly Jobless Claims are out. On Friday, March 12 at 8:30 AM, the Producer Price Index for February is disclosed.
At 2:00 PM, we learn the Baker-Hughes Rig Count.
As for me, it was with great sadness that I learned of the passing of my old friend, Sheikh Zaki Yamani, the great Saudi Oil Minister. Yamani was a true genius, a self-taught attorney, and one of the most brilliant men of his generation.
It was Yamani who triggered the first oil crisis in 1973, raising the price from $3 to $12 a barrel in a matter of weeks. Until then, cheap Saudi oil had been powering the global economy for decades.
During the crisis, I relentlessly pestered the Saudi embassy in London for an interview for The Economist magazine. Then, out of the blue, I received a call and was told to report to a nearby Royal Air Force base….and to bring my passport.
There on the tarmac was a brand-new Boeing 747 with “Kingdom of Saudi Arabia” emblazoned on the side in bold green lettering. Yamani was the sole passenger, and I was the other. He then gave me an interview that lasted the entire seven-hour flight to Riyadh. We covered every conceivable economic, business, and political subject. It led to me capturing one of the blockbuster scoops of the decade for The Economist.
When Yamani debarked from the plane, I asked him “why me.” He said he saw a lot of me in himself and wanted to give me a good push along my career. The plane then turned around and flew me back to London. I was the only passenger on the plane.
When the pilot heard I’d recently been flying Pilatus Porters for Air America, he even let me fly it for a few minutes while he slept on the cockpit floor.
Yamani later became the head of OPEC. At one point, he was kidnapped by Carlos the Jackal and held for ransom, which the king readily paid.
And if you wonder where I acquired my deep knowledge of the oil and energy markets, this is where it started. Today, the Saudis are among the biggest investors in alternative energy in California.
We stayed in touch ever since.
Stay healthy.
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/John-Thomas-on-a-camel.png454470Mad Hedge Fund Traderhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMad Hedge Fund Trader2021-03-08 11:02:032021-03-08 13:21:48The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or What’s Up with Tech?
I know you’re not going to want to hear this. I might as well be trying to pull your teeth, lead you down a garden path, or sell you a high-priced annuity.
But there is nothing to do in the market right now. Nada, diddly squat, bupkis, and for all you Limey’s out there, bugger all.
For during the first six weeks of 2021, we have pretty much squeezed all there is out of the market.
Not only did we nail the timing and the direction, we also got the lead sectors, financials, brokers, chips, and short bonds (MS), (GS), (BLK), (AMD). We also chased the Volatility Index (VIX) down from $38 to a lowly $20, baying and protesting all the way.
That enabled us to extract a 28.29% profit so far in 2021, the best return in the 13-year history of the Mad Hedge Fund Trader. The only other time you see numbers this high is when Ponzi schemes get busted. And not a dollar of this was earned from the really marginal plays like Bitcoin, SPAC’s, GameStop (GME), or pot stocks.
If I feel like I did a year’s worth of work during the first seven weeks of 2021, it’s because I have, issuing 60 trade alerts since January 1.
However, bonds (TLT) are reaching the end of their current leg down. The 1.34% yield we saw on Friday is suspiciously close to the 1.36% yields we saw during the 2012 and 2017 market double bottom.
So, there may be some wood to chop around these, levels, possibly for weeks or months.
This is important because a collapsing bond market has been the principal driver of the winning trades of 2021, such as in banks, brokers, money managers, and other domestic recovery plays.
And when one side of the barbell goes dead, what do you do? You buy the other side. FANGs are just completing a six-month “time” correction where they have gone absolutely nowhere. So, Facebook (FB), Amazon (AMZN), and Apple (AAPL) may be getting ready for a roll.
One other sector that might keep running is the SPDR Mining & Metals ETF (XME), and Freeport McMoRan (FCX). That’s because it's not just us buying metals to front-run a recovery, it’s the entire world. What do you think a $2 trillion infrastructure budget will do to this area?
New lows for bonds, as the ten-year US Treasury yield hits 1.26%, up 38 basis points since January 1 and a one-year high. 1.50% here we come! Ever hear the expression “Don’t fight the Fed”? All financials are off to the races, where we were 60% long. Biden’s $1.9 trillion rescue package will be 100% borrowed and take total US borrowing to a back-breaking 55% of GDP. I hate to sound like a broken record but keep selling rallies in the (TLT), buy (JPM), (BAC), (GS), (MS), and (BRK/B) on dips.
Volatility index hit a one-year Low, which is what you’d expect at the dawn of a decade-long bull market in stocks. The (VIX) may flat line here for a while before the next out-of-the-blue spike.
The Nikkei Stock Average topped 30,000, for the first time in 31 years, Yes, it’s been a long haul. I was heavily short in the initial 1990 meltdown from 39,000 to 20,000 and many fortunes were made. The top marked the end of the Japanese company’s ability to copy their way into leadership. After that, rapidly advancing technology made copying too slow to compete in a global economy.
A midwest storm upended energy markets, with oil popping $8 to $67 and gas deliveries spiking from $4 to $999. It would have gone higher, but the software only provided for three digits. Electricity prices are all over the map. Some 4 million Texas customers are without power. Fracking has ground to a halt. Windfarms are frozen solid. If you are a net producer (as I am), you are in heaven. The turmoil is expected to be gone by the weekend. It’s another high price paid for ignoring global warming.
Weekly Jobless Claims soared, to 861,000, casting a dark cloud over the economic recovery. The news took a 300-point bite out of the Dow. Illinois and California saw the biggest gains. We are not out of the woods yet.
SpaceX was valued at $74 Billion, according to an $850 billion venture capital fundraising round this week. However, Elon Musk’s rocket company won’t go public until men are landed on Mars. The company is also the launching pad for its Starlink global WIFI project, which will cost at least $10 billion to build out. Blowing up rockets is not a good backdrop for an IPO.
Cash is still pouring off the sidelines, with equity mutual funds attracting some $7.8 billion last week. As long as this is the case, which could be for years, any market corrections will be limited. Strangely, bond funds are still pulling in money too, some $5.7 billion. It’s called a liquidity-driven market, silly!
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 at zero, oil cheap, there will be no reason not to. The Dow Average will rise by 400% to 120,000 or more in the coming decade. The American coming out the other side of the pandemic will be far more efficient and profitable than the old. Dow 120,000 here we come!
My Mad Hedge Global Trading Dispatch earned an amazing 17.27% so far in February after a blockbuster 10.21% in January. The Dow Average is up a trifling 2.92% so far in 2021.
This is my fourth double-digit month in a row. My 2021 year-to-date performance soared to 27.28%. After the February 19 option expiration, I am now 80% in cash, with a single long in Tesla (TSLA) left.
That brings my 11-year total return to 450.03%, some 2.05 times the S&P 500 (SPX) over the same period. My 11-year average annualized return now stands at an Everest-like new high of 40.30%.
My trailing one-year return exploded to 94.09%, the highest in the 13-year history of the Mad Hedge Fund Trader. We have earned 109.00% since the March 20, 2020 low.
We need to keep an eye on the number of US Coronavirus cases at 28 million and deaths approaching 500,000, which you can find here. We are now running at a heart breaking 3,000 deaths a day. But that is down 35% from the recent high.
The coming week will be a boring one on the data front.
On Monday, February 22, at 8:30 AM EST, the Chicago Fed National Activity Index is out. Zoon (ZM) reports.
On Tuesday, February 23 at 9:00 AM, the S&P Case-Shiller National Home Price Index for December is announced. Square (SQ) and Intuit (INTU) report.
On Wednesday, February 24 at 8:30 AM, New Home Sales for January are printed. NVIDIA (NVDA) reports.
On Thursday, February 25 at 9:30 AM, Weekly Jobless Claims are printed. US Durable Goods for January and Q4 GDP are out. Salesforce (CRM), (Moderna (MRNA), and Airbnb (ABNB) report.
On Friday, February 26 at 8:30 AM, US Personal Income and Spending are published. DraftKings (DKNG) reports. At 2:00 PM, we learn the Baker-Hughes Rig Count.
As for me, if you want to see what it is like to work at Amazon, watch the movie Nomadland. It’s an artsy Francis McDormand film made with a $4 million budget about the end of life, which I caught over the weekend on Hulu.
It covers a contemporary trend in US society where retirees with no savings move into RVs and live off the grid, working occasionally to earn gas money. They raved about it in Europe.
If I don’t keep those trade alerts coming, that could be me in a couple of years.
Stay healthy.
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/11yr-feb22.png454864Mad Hedge Fund Traderhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMad Hedge Fund Trader2021-02-22 09:02:012021-02-22 10:23:06The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or Time for a Break
Below please find subscribers’ Q&A for the February 3 Mad Hedge Fund TraderGlobal Strategy Webinar broadcast from Incline Village, NV.
Q: Is there a big difference between COVID-19 vaccines?
A: The best vaccine is the one you can get. It’s better than being dead. But there are important differences. The Pfizer (PFE) and Moderna (MRNA) vaccines are RNA vaccines, they’re very safe, and getting similar results. But the evidence shows that about 15% of Moderna recipients are coming down with flu-like symptoms on their second shot. Nobody knows why, as the two are almost biochemically identical. AstraZeneca is a killed virus type vaccine, which means if they have a manufacturing error, you end up giving the disease to people by accident, as with the original polio vaccine. So that's the less safe vaccine. So far, that one has only been used in Europe and Australia, as it is made in England. There isn’t enough data about the John & Johnson (JNJ) single-shot vaccine.
Q: Is Moderna (MRNA) a long term buy?
A: The trouble with all the vaccine plays is that we’re heading for a global vaccine glut in about 4 months when we’ll have something like 12 companies around the world making them. The rush for everyone to get a vaccination as soon as possible is leading to inevitable overproduction and falling stock prices. Moderna is already a 12 bagger for us. I’m not really looking to overstay my welcome, so to speak. Time to cash in and say, “Thank you very much, Mr. Market.” There will be another cycle down the road for (MRNA) as its technology is used to cure cancer, but not yet.
Q: Would you recommend a silver (SLV) LEAP?
A: Yes, silver was run up 35% for a day by the GameStop (GME) crowd and crashed the next day, which was to be expected because there are no short positions in silver. Everything was just hedged to look like there were short positions because the big banks had huge open short options positions that were public and hedges in the futures and silver bars that were private. The (GME) people only saw the public short positions. Long term, I would go for a $30-$32 vertical call spread expiring in 2023. Go out 2 years, and I think you could get silver at $50. So, a good LEAP might get you a 1000% return in two years. Those are the kinds of trades I like to do.
Q: What do you think of Amazon now that Jeff Bezos is retiring?
A: Buy the daylights out of it. That was the great unknown overhanging the stock for years, Jeff’s potential retirement. Now it's no longer unknown, you want to buy (AMZN). Even before the retirement, I was targeting $5,000 a share in two years. Now we have everybody under the sun raising their targets to $5,000 or more— we even had one upgrade today to $5,200. There are at least half a dozen businesses that Amazon can expand into, like healthcare, which will be multibillion-dollar earners. And then if you break it up because of antitrust, it doubles in value again, so that's a screaming buy here. We have flatlined for six months, so this could be a trigger for a long-term breakout.
Q: Is there anything else left after GameStop? Another short play?
A: Well, this was the worst short squeeze in 25 years, and everyone else covered their other shorts because they don't want to get wiped out like the one Melvin Capital. There were only around a dozen potential single-digit heavily shorted stocks out there, and those are mostly gone. So, the GameStop crowd will have to roll up their sleeves and do some hard work finding stocks the old fashion way—by doing research. I’m guessing that GameStop was a one-hit-wonder; we probably won’t be surprised again. At the same time, you should never underestimate the stupidity of other investors.
Q: What do you think of the cloud plays like Cloudera and Snowflake?
A: I love cloud plays and there will be more coming. The entire US economy is moving on to the cloud. But everyone else loves them too. Snowflake (SNOW) doubled on its first day, and Cloudera (CLDR) doubled over the last three months, so they're incredibly expensive and high risk. But you can't argue with their business models going forward—the cloud is here to stay.
Q: Would you buy LEAPS in financials?
A: Absolutely yes; go out two years for your maturity and 30% on your strike prices, you will get a ten bagger on the trade. If I’m wrong, it only goes to zero.
Q: Is US Steel (X) a buy?
A: Yes. They are being dragged up by the global commodity boom triggered by the global synchronized recovery. (X) took a hit today because they just priced a $700 million secondary share issue which the flippers dumped like a hot potato. If given the choice, I’d rather do a copper play with Freeport McMoRan (FCX) which is seeing much more buying from China. I bought it on Monday.
Q: Any chance you can include one-, three-, and five-year price targets?
A: No chance whatsoever. I’ve never heard of a fund manager that could do that and be right. Stocks are just too imprecise an instrument with all the emotion that’s involved. But for the better stocks, you can with confidence predict at least a double. And by the way, all my predictions for the last 13 years have been way, way on the low side, so I tend to be conservative. Like, remember when Amazon was at $10? I said it would go to $20. Boy was I right!
Q: How can you say the next four years will be good for the stock market?
A: Well, $10 trillion in fiscal stimulus, $10 trillion in QE; stocks tend to like that. Oh, and technology exponentially accelerating on all fronts and far more broadly than what we saw in the 1990s. Also, there is a certain person who is no longer president, so add about 10-20% on top of all stock valuations. Companies can finally do long term planning again, after being unable to do so for four years because policies were anti-trade, anti-business, and flip-flopping every other day. So yes, I think that's enough to make the next 4 four years good; and actually, I think the next 8 years could be good—I'm predicting Dow 120,000 by 2030, if you recall.
Q: When do you expect the next 5% correction if there is one? February is always very volatile.
A: With an unlimited liquidity market like we have, it is really tough to see negatives of any kind. What kind of negatives are out there? The pandemic doesn’t stop—that's the main one. There’s another one people aren't talking about: the reason we got all these vaccines so fast is they took all regulation and threw it out the window. What if one of these vaccines kill off a million people? That would be pretty negative for the market. Interest rates could rocket faster than expected. But I’m always short there so that would be a moneymaker. But these are pretty out there possibilities, and that is why the market is not backing off, and when it does, it only gives us 5%.
Q: Is the Fed stimulating the economy too much?
A: The bond market says no with a ten-year yield of 1.10%, and the bond market is always the ultimate arbiter of when the stimulus ends. That’s because the Fed can’t directly control bond market interest rates, only overnight rates. But when we get bonds up to, say, a 3% yield (which is probably 2 or 3 years off), that’s when we’re getting too much stimulus, and we’ll probably take our foot off the pedal way before then. I know Janet Yellen and she agrees with me on this point. She’ll be throttling back well before we see a 3% yield in the Treasury market.
Q: Do you manage other people’s money?
A: No, because it costs a million dollars in legal fees to set up even a small fund these days. When I set up my hedge fund 30 years ago, there were no regulatory costs because no one knew what a hedge fund was; they all thought they were doing something illegal, so they didn't have to register for anything. That’s why it’s changed now.
Q: What is your target on NVIDIA (NVDA), and will it split?
A: It’s an easy double, with a global chip shortage running rampant. They make the best graphics cards in the world, bar none. These big tech companies tend not to split until they get share prices into the thousands, which is what Apple (AAPL) and what Tesla (TSLA) did three or four times.
Q: If we get 3.25% in bonds, is that going to hurt gold?
A: Yes, and that’s one of the reasons I bailed on my gold positions a couple of weeks ago. It effectively turned into a bond long. A sharp rise in interest rates is bad for gold because we all know that gold yields to zero.
Q: What about Fireye (FEYE)?
A: Yes, we also love Fireye in addition to Palo Alto Networks (PANW) because there is a near-monopoly—there are only about six players in the entire cybersecurity industry and hacking is getting worse by the day. Look at the Solar Winds (SWI) fiasco and the national Russian hack there.
Q: What about copper as a recovery play?
A: Well, I voted with my feet on Monday when I bought a position in Freeport McMoRan, after it just sold off 15%. I think (FCX) could double at some point in the coming economic recovery. So, copper is an absolute winner, and when having to choose between copper and steel, I’ll pick copper all day long.
Q: What do you recommend for gold (GLD)?
A: Gold is a trading range for the time being. Buy the dips, sell the rallies; you won’t get more than about 10% or 15% range on that. And there are just better fish to fry right now, like financials, which benefit from rising interest rates as opposed to being punished. Bitcoin is stealing gold’s thunder and the markets keep creating more Bitcoins.
Q: Should high-frequency trading be banned?
A: I don’t think it should be. It does create liquidity; the effect on the market is wildly overexaggerated. They’re basically trading for pennies or tenths of pennies, so they do provide buying on selloffs and selling at huge price spikes. They do have a positive effect and they’re probably only taking about $10 or $20 billion in profit a year out of the market.
Q: Should I buy Wynn Resorts (WYNN) here?
A: Buy the dips for sure; this is a major recovery play. We here in Nevada are expecting an absolute tidal wave of people to hit the casinos once the pandemic ends, and (WYNN), (MGM), and (LVS) would be a great play in those areas.
Good Luck and Stay Healthy.
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
I am really happy with the performance of the Mad Hedge Long Term Portfolio since the last update on July 21, 2020. In fact, not only did we nail the best sectors to go heavily overweight, we also completely dodged the bullets in the worst-performing ones.
For new subscribers, the Mad Hedge Long Term Portfolio is a “buy and forget” portfolio of stocks and ETFs. If trading is not your thing, these are the investments you can make, and then not touch until you start drawing down your retirement funds at age 72.
For some of you, that is not for another 50 years. For others, it was yesterday.
There is only one thing you need to do now and that is to rebalance. Buy or sell what you need to reweight every position to its appropriate 5% or 10% weighting. Rebalancing is one of the only free lunches out there and always adds performance over time. You should follow the rules assiduously.
Despite the seismic changes that have taken place in the global economy over the past nine months, I only need to make minor changes to the portfolio, which I have highlighted below.
To download the entire new portfolio in an excel spreadsheet, please go to www.madhedgefundtrader.com, log in, go “My Account”, then “Global Trading Dispatch”, then click on the “Long Term Portfolio” button.
Changes
I am cutting back my weighting in biotech from 25% to 20% because Celgene (CELG) was taken over by Bristol Myers (BMY) at a 110% profit compared to our original cost. We also earned a spectacular 145% gain on Crisper Therapeutics (CRSP). I’m keeping it because I believe it has more to run.
My 30% weighting in technology also gets pared back to 20% because virtually all of my names have doubled or more. These have been in a sideways correction for the past six months but are still an important part of any barbell portfolio. So, take out Facebook (FB) and PayPal (PYPL) and keep the rest.
I am increasing my weighting in banks from 10% to 20%. Interest rates are finally starting to rise, setting up a perfect storm in favor of bank earnings. Loan default rates are falling. Banks are overcapitalized, thanks to Dodd-Frank. And because of the trillions in government stimulus loans they are disbursing, they are now the most subsidized sector of the economy. So, add in Morgan Stanley (MS) and Goldman Sachs (GS), which will profit enormously from a continuing bull market in stocks.
Along the same vein, I am committing 10% of my portfolio to a short position in the United States Treasury Bond Fund (TLT) as I think bonds are about to go to hell in a handbasket. I rant on this sector on an almost daily basis, so go read Global Trading Dispatch.
I am keeping my 10% international exposure in Chinese Internet giant Alibaba (BABA) and the iShares MSCI Emerging Market ETF (EEM). The Biden administration will most likely dial back the recent vociferous anti-Chinese stance, setting these names on fire.
I am also keeping my foreign currency exposure unchanged, maintaining a double long in the Australian dollar (FXA). The Aussie has been the best performing currency against the US dollar and that should continue.
Australia will be a leveraged beneficiary of the synchronized global economic recovery, both through strong commodity prices and gold which has already started to rise, and the post-pandemic return of Chinese tourism and investment. I argue that the Aussie will eventually make it to parity with the US dollar, or 1:1.
As for precious metals, I’m baling on my 10% holding in gold (GLD), which delivered a nice 20% gain in 2020. From here, it is having trouble keeping up with other alternative assets, like Bitcoin, and there are better fish to fry.
Yes, in this liquidity-driven global bull market, a 20% return is just not enough to keep my interest. Instead, I add a 5% weighting in the higher beta and more volatile iShares Silver Trust (SLV), which has far wider industrial uses in solar panels and electric vehicles.
As for energy, I will keep my weighting at zero. Never confuse “gone down a lot” with “cheap”. I think the bankruptcies have only just started and will stretch on for a decade. Thanks to hyper-accelerating technology, the adoption of electric cars, and less movement overall in the new economy, energy is about to become free. You are looking at the next buggy whip industry.
My ten-year assumption for the US and the global economy remains the same. I’m looking at 3%-5% a year growth for the next decade.
When we come out the other side of this, we will be perfectly poised to launch into my new American Golden Age, or the next Roaring Twenties. With interest rates still at zero, oil cheap, there will be no reason not to. The Dow Average will rise by 400% or more in the coming decade. The America coming out the other side of the pandemic will be far more efficient, productive, and profitable than the old.
You won’t believe what’s coming your way!
I hope you find this useful and I’ll be sending out another update in six months so you can rebalance once again.
Stay healthy.
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
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 Trader2021-01-08 10:04:082021-01-08 10:54:44January 8, 2021
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