Global Market Comments
January 31, 2025
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(JANUARY 29 BIWEEKLY STRATEGY WEBINAR Q&A),
(META), (AMZN), (NVDA), (AMD) (GS), (SPY), (TSLA), (SBUX), (CCJ), (ADBE), (LMT), (GD), (RTX), (NVDA)
Global Market Comments
January 31, 2025
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(JANUARY 29 BIWEEKLY STRATEGY WEBINAR Q&A),
(META), (AMZN), (NVDA), (AMD) (GS), (SPY), (TSLA), (SBUX), (CCJ), (ADBE), (LMT), (GD), (RTX), (NVDA)
Below please find subscribers’ Q&A for the January 29 Mad Hedge Fund Trader Global Strategy Webinar, broadcast from Salt Lake City, UT.
Q: Are AI stocks going to crash?
A: Some already have, and others haven’t. It’s really about single-stock-picking the chip area and the pure AI plays, which have been enormously overextended. If you boil it down to a single sentence, if you offer AI for free, AI users like (META) and (AMZN) do really well, while AI producers, like (NVDA) and (AMD) get crushed. I’ve been warning for months that these things were getting too high. The end result is that in two weeks the price earnings multiple for Nvidia has gone from 40 to 25. You know, at 25, it really is quite attractive. It'll be even more attractive at 20 or even 15 if we get that low. I'll show you where we hit that on the charts. Don't forget their earnings are still growing at tremendous rates—we'll talk about that in a second.
Q: What stocks are good to invest in now?
A: Watch the banks. Watch the financials. They’ve hardly sold off. I was begging for Goldman Sachs (GS) to tank. It didn't—we only got a $10 drop. It's just not letting people in, which means higher highs for all the banks and financials are coming. That has become the no-brainer one-way trade of 2025. You know, I had an enormous number of bank LEAPS expire in my personal account on the January 17 option expiration. I'm waiting to get back in now. So that is the play.
Q: What's happening with Starbucks (SBUX)? Are they investable?
A: Starbucks was a disaster area until the summer when they brought in new management, which has a fantastic track record. The stock has since gone up 30%. You're kind of late to get in on this one. I don't really follow the stock anyway. Selling cups of coffee is not a high-margin business. I'd rather stick with the Tesla’s (TSLA) and Nvidia’s (NVDA) of the world where the value added is very high
Q: What will happen with Bitcoin in the new administration?
A: It's the same with everything. Higher highs first, lower lows later. If you're a Bitcoin investor now at 100,000, the big question is what happens when Donald Trump leaves office in four years? Does it go back to 5,000? We really don't know so, why touch Bitcoin when you can get 10 to 1 returns on all these other great companies which make stuff that you can actually touch and feel? Plus, you can leverage up with the LEAPS, and no one's going to steal your account, which happens frequently with Bitcoin holdings.
Q: Do you think tariffs are a good idea for the economy?
A: No, tariffs shrink global trade, they shrink globalization. It's a race to see if we can make other countries more poor than they can make us. It's an economy-shrinking strategy. It was a major contributor to causing the Great Depression in the 1930’s. That's why we abandoned tariffs 80 years ago with the end of World War II. I mean, the last cause of the 1930’s tariffs was World War II. That was a major contributing factor. So do I like tariffs? No. It turns out it's a great defensive strategy. If someone's making a fortune off you, they tend not to blow you up. So I think that's a big mistake and I will be an anti-tariff person to my grave. There are special situations like Chinese EVs, for example, where they're using a huge cost advantage to flood the emerging markets with cheap EVs. If that happened to the US, it would crash the US economy. In that one case, I'm in favor of tariffs. By the way, their EVs are using technology they basically stole from Tesla.
Q: What are your thoughts on defense stocks? With so many wars occurring all over the world.
A: Don't touch defense stocks with a 10-foot poll if the government is in favor of cost-cutting, the largest cost after Social Security is defense. We had a defense budget of about $824 billion in 2024. We have a 2.8 million man military and that cutting there and running down our weapons stocks would mean that you don't want to buy Lockheed Martin (LMT), General Dynamics (GD), Raytheon (RTX), all the big suppliers of weapons to the Ukraine war, for example, which looks like it's going to get cut off completely. They cut off all humanitarian aid to Ukraine last week. And of course, I was personally involved in delivering some of that humanitarian aid to Ukraine in the recent past. Yeah, defense looks bad if people really get serious about cost-cutting.
Q: Do you see the Fed dropping interest rates later this year?
A: That is possible. I tend to think we don't go into recession this year. It's a next year or year after type of thing. But markets can discount recession in six months to a year in advance like they did in 2007 and 2008. I don't think we get any more interest rate cuts. We'll just have to see what policies the new government implements, and how inflationary they are. And if they are inflationary, interest rates are going up, not down. That is why everybody's sitting on their hands right now and doesn't know what to do. Uncertainty at an eight-year high. You know, the government often talks one game but does the opposite. So, there’s nothing to do but wait and see.
Q: Well, what happened to the US housing market in 2025?
A: Nothing, you know volumes are shrinking. The last two years were the lowest volume sales in housing market history since the numbers were collected, and higher interest rates for longer. It's just more bad news. You know, something like 40% of all of the sales now are all cash. Prices are still going up again on paper, but there's almost no trade happening at these higher prices. And of course, the Millennials have been almost completely shut out of the market—the largest generation in history by the way—because they don't have enough money. They can't earn enough money; especially when AI is wiping out all the entry-level jobs, as it has been doing for two years in Silicon Valley.
Q: Here's a good question. How much time do we need to spend researching a company before we make an investment there?
A: Well, not that much, really. You can spend an hour or two reading the annual report, browsing through the most recent financial statement, and doing some news searches and you'll have a better read than most individual investors are going to have on a single stock. Then you start to see trends on what makes a good company, what makes a bad company, and over time, you get a feel for a company—when to get in, when to get out. That's one way. Or you can listen to the Mad Hedge Fund Trader, who's been doing this for 55 years and watching the same stocks. You wonder why you always have the same stocks up here and it's because I've been following these guys for forever or more. So you really get a handle on when they're doing well and when they're doing awful.
Q: Should we sell Nvidia (NVDA) stock for now?
A: No, I was telling people to cut positions the next time it ran to $150, which it did a few weeks ago. Now we're probably entering buy territory more than sell territory. Nvidia will come back. I just don't know where the bottom is for now, and it depends on your own investing style. If you're a five-year investor, you can forget about all this volatility, if you're a day trader, yeah, you probably should sell Nvidia now because you could buy it back $10 cheaper.
Q: Do you expect a new high after the Fed meeting?
A: No, I don't. I think we're stuck in a range for the S&P 500 for the next six months. After that, we may get a move. Depending on what effect government policies have on the economy.
Q: What about an alert for Adobe (ADBE)?
A: I didn't put out the alert to buy Adobe. The Adobe alert is part of the Mad Hedge Technology Letter service, and if you want to get purely tech trade alerts, go to the Mad Hedge website, go to the store, and you can see the technology letter is offered for sale up there. Here is the link: https://hi290.infusionsoft.app/app/orderForms/techletter
Q: What is the right size of account for doing this kind of trading?
A: We literally have college students trading with $500 accounts. We have lots of individuals trading with $5,000 accounts—that way you can buy 10 $400 positions and still have some room. We only recommend you put 10% of your cash in any one trade. A lot of retired people will keep a large portion of their money in an index like the S&P 500 (SPY) and take 10% of their money and use it to do our trade alerts, which then adds an extra return to the index position. So, the answer is different for different people.
Q: Do I see a meaningful correction like 20% or 30% in the next six months?
A: No, I really don't, but that could be 2026 business. When we get a big correction, we get a recession. Again, it's dependent on government policies and we have no idea what those are right now. People can only guess. I'm not in the guessing business. I'm in the sure thing business.
Q: Can you explain how to complete the trade alerts you send out?
A: What all the professionals do is they put out a spread of orders. If I put out an order to buy something at $9.00, you put in a bid at $9.00, $9.10, $9.20, $9.30, and $9.40. By the close, some or all of those will get done. Often they all get done by the end of the day when the high-frequency traders have to dump their positions because they're not allowed to carry overnight positions. You make them good-until-canceled orders. So if you get a low opening the next morning, you'll get entirely filled at the $9.00 level, and this is what my clients in Australia do. They only do overnight good-until-cancelled orders since the market's open from 11:30 PM until 6:00 AM in the morning, Australia time. They tend to make more money than any of my other clients because they only enter overnight GTC orders. So, people trying to outsmart the market on an intraday basis generally don't do very well.
Q: Should I sell the Cameco Corporation (CCJ) stock I bought on the nuclear trade?
A: No, I think (CCJ) recovers. I was looking at it yesterday. Elimination of the electricity trade is complete nonsense. I think the nuclear thing is real. It'll come back. And in fact, I bought Vistra Energy (VST) yesterday, so use this extreme sell-off to get into the nuclear trade if you missed it the first time around.
To watch a replay of this webinar with all the charts, bells, whistles, and classic rock music, just log in to www.madhedgefundtrader.com, go to MY ACCOUNT, click on GLOBAL TRADING DISPATCH, TECHNOLOGY LETTER, or JACQUIE'S POST, then WEBINARS, and all the webinars from the last 12 years are there in all their glory.
Good Luck and Good Trading,
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
Global Market Comments
November 18, 2024
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD or OUT WITH THE NEW, IN WITH THE OLD) Plus REPORT FROM THE QUEEN MARY II),
(TLT), (TSLA), (DHI), (LEN), (KBH), (LMT), (RTX), (GD), (GLD), (SLV), (GOLD), (WPM), (JPM), (NVDA), (BAC), (C), (CCJ), (MS), (SPY)
“Take things as they are and profit off the folly of the world.”
That is one of my favorite quotes from Anselm Rothschild, founder of the Rothschild banking dynasty, which ruled the financing of Europe for centuries. I lived next door to his great X 10 grandson in London for ten years, the late Jacob Rothschild, and boy, did I learn a few nuggets from him.
It's really just another way of saying that you have to trade the market you have, not the one you want. By the way, Anselm’s other famous quote? In 1815, the year the British defeated Napoleon at the Battle of Waterloo, he said, "I care not what puppet is placed upon the throne of England to rule the Empire on which the sun never sets. The man who controls the British money supply controls the British Empire, and I control the British money supply."
And that shall be my strategy in the coming years. The good news? There is a ton of folly out there and, therefore, tons of great new trades.
Let’s start with the market themes. Out with the new, in with the old. Falling interest rates plays are out. Rates will stay higher for longer. Artificial Intelligence will take an extended vacation. Saving the environment is history. Take a look at the woeful underperformance of NASDAQ. That will allow earnings to catch up with share prices, which are already at nosebleed levels.
Money managers will sell these areas, which in many cases have seen enormous appreciation, to finance the purchase of the new themes. These include deregulation, the end of antitrust, the Bitcoin ecosystem, and Tesla (TSLA).
It helps a lot that the outgoing themes are incredibly expensive, with price-earnings multiple of 30X-100X, while the new ones are dirt cheap, with multiples of 15X down to single digits.
Buy cheap, sell expensive….I like it!
If you think I’m just an aging old hippy from Berkeley spouting his iconoclastic, out-of-touch-with-reality views, then check with Mr. Market, who agrees with me on every point and is never wrong.
Notice the collapse of the bond market (TLT) since September. Fed funds futures have already backed out 100 basis points of easing, from 250 basis points to only 150, and we have already seen the first 75. If inflation makes a rapid comeback (prices started rising on November 6), we are likely to only see a couple more 25 basis point cuts from the Fed in this cycle, and that’s it.
The 30-year fixed rate mortgage has rocketed from 6.0% to 7.13%, sticking a dagger through the heart of the real estate market and homebuilders (DHI) (LEN), KBH).
Defense? Who needs weapons when we are withdrawing from the international community? We will just have to depend on our existing 50-year-old defense systems. And while you’re at it, end “cost plus” contracts, which have inflated defense spending since 1940.
This is what fried the shares of Lockheed Martin (LMT), builder of the Blackhawk helicopter, Raytheon (RTX), maker of Javelin antitank missiles, and General Dynamics (GD), manufacturer of the Abrams tank after the past month. What happens to these stocks when the Ukraine War ends?
I have received a lot of questions about whether it is time to go into pharmaceutical and biotech stocks. The answer is no, a thousand times no. The appointment of anti-vaxxer Robert F. Kennedy as the head of Health and Human Services puts the kibosh on that trade, who is likely to declare war on that department. That explains the wipeout of shares in that sector.
Precious metals? Forget it (GLD), (SLV), (GOLD), and (WPM). Witness their own recent hell they have entered. There is no doubt that the election ended the gold trade, which has fallen by 8.3% since November 5. That’s because investors pulled $600 million out of gold-backed ETFs just in the week ending November 8, according to the World Gold Council. It just had its worst week in three years. “Interest rates higher for longer” absolutely does not fit anywhere in the precious metals trade.
Another contributing factor has been the strength of Bitcoin, which raced to a new all-time high of $93,000 on the back of the Trump win. The industry had been a major contributor to the Trump campaign. What better way to fund Bitcoin purchases than to sell your gold, which in any case is up 40% in a year? Money has been pouring into Tesla shares for the same reason.
At some point, gold will fall to a level where Chinese saving alone supports the price. There is no way of knowing where that is, so I’ll wait for the market to tell me. Central bank buying will continue unabated, which has totaled 694 metric tonnes ($5.3 billion) so far in 2024.
I believe that gold will still hit $3,000 an ounce over the long term. But for now, the shine is clearly off those American Eagles. The last time gold took a rest, from 2011 to 2019, it was for eight years.
The bottom line is that there are plenty of new fish to fry out there and plenty of fire with which to cook them. Does anyone have any matches?
In November, we have gained a breathtaking +8.19%, amazing adding to our gains while the market dropped 2.3%. My 2024 year-to-date performance is at an amazing +61.33%. The S&P 500 (SPY) is up +25.79% so far in 2024. My trailing one-year return reached a nosebleed +62.15%. That brings my 16-year total return to +737.86%. My average annualized return has recovered to +53.02%.
I maintained a 100% long-invested portfolio, betting that the market doesn’t drop below pre-election levels. That includes (JPM), (NVDA), (BAC), (C), (CCJ), (MS), and a triple long in (TSLA). My November position in (JPM) expired at max profit. We should make 46 basis points a day until the December 20 option expiration in 24 trading days, thanks to time decay and falling volatility.
Some 63 of my 70 round trips, or 90%, were profitable in 2023. Some 73 of 93 trades have been profitable so far in 2024, and several of those losses were really break-even. That is a success rate of +78.49%.
Try beating that anywhere.
My Ten-Year View – A Reassessment
We have to substantially downsize our expectations of equity returns in view of the election outcome. My new American Golden Age, or the next Roaring Twenties, is now looking at a headwind. The economy will completely stop decarbonizing. Technology innovation will slow. Trade wars will exact a high price. Inflation will return. The Dow Average will rise by 600% to 240,000 or more in the coming decade. The new America will be far more efficient and profitable than the old.
My Dow 240,000 target has been pushed back to 2035.
On Monday, November 18 at 8:30 AM EST, the NAHB Housing Market Index is out.
On Tuesday, November 19 at 8:30 AM, the US Building Permits take place. Nvidia (NVDA) announces earnings after the close.
On Wednesday, November 20 at 8:30 AM, the MBA Mortgages Rates are announced.
On Thursday, November 21 at 8:30 AM, Existing Home sales are printed. We also get Weekly Jobless Claims.
On Friday, November 22 at 8:30 AM, the S&P Global Flash PMI is announced. At 2:00 PM the Baker Hughes Rig Count is printed.
Location: 48 degrees, 02.12 minutes North, 043 degrees, 42.08 minutes West, or 1,421 nautical miles ENE of New York.
As for me, The Queen Mary 2 is currently plowing its way through a massive fog bank a thousand miles thick, sounding the foghorn every two minutes. Visibility is less than 100 yards, and the waves are a rough 12 feet high. The captain has closed the outside decks for fear of losing a passenger overboard. The weather has disrupted our satellite link, and our Internet is down. So here I write. Leave me alone with a laptop for an hour, and I can conquer the world.
One hour out of New York, and a passenger suffered a heart attack. So the captain turned the ship around and headed back to the harbor, where the New Jersey Search and Rescue sent out a launch to pick up the unfortunate man and his distraught spouse. Every passenger leaned over the port railing to watch.
That meant we could pass under the Verrazano Bridge three times, on each occasion deftly clearing the span by a mere ten feet. Talk about inauspicious beginnings. Visions of Leonardo di Caprio going down with the ship danced across my mind.
The ship is truly gigantic. You must allow 20 minutes to get anywhere, 5 minutes to walk there, and 15 minutes to get lost. When launched two decades ago, it was the largest cruise ship ever built at 148,900 tons, nearly double the size of the now decommissioned Queen Elizabeth II. It whisks up to 3,000 passengers and 1,325 crew across the seas in the utmost luxury at a steady 21.5 knots. You could water ski behind this leviathan of a vessel if only the crew permitted it.
As a 50-year guest of Cunard and the highest paying customer on the ship, I managed to bag the Sandringham Suite, possibly the most luxurious publicly available oceangoing accommodation ever created. The 2,200 square foot, two-floor, two-bedroom, three-bathroom, Q1 class apartment on decks nine and ten included a formal dining room, kitchen, his and her closets, a small gym, and 1,000 square feet of rear-facing teak deck.
All of this was a bargain for $56,000, or about the same as renting the presidential suite at the San Francisco Ritz for a week at $10,000 a night, except at the end, you wake up in England five pounds heavier. Not that I noticed, though. By the afternoon, the two complimentary bottles of Dom Perignon Champagne were already headed for the recycling bin.
The suite came staffed with two full-time butlers, Peter and Henry, who were an endless font of fascinating information about the ship. During one unfortunate cruise, eight senior citizens passed away. The onboard morgue held only six, so the extra two were stashed in the meat locker for the duration of the voyage. There was no reported change in the flavor of the Beef Wellington.
I asked if Cunard had ever performed burials at sea in these circumstances. They said they used to. But a few years back, an elderly billionaire, “Mr. Smith,” checked into a deluxe Q1 cabin with a hot young “Mrs. Smith” and then promptly expired. The grieving widow requested he be buried mid-Atlantic with the traditional yard of sail and a cannonball. When the ship docked at Southampton, a much older, real “Mrs. Smith” appeared to claim the body and sued the company when informed of his current disposition. So, no more burials at sea.
Yes, the ship did hit a whale once, which stuck to the bulbous bow. When it landed in Portugal, Cunard was fined for commercial fishing without a license. The unlucky cetacean’s skeleton is now in a Lisbon maritime museum. Apparently, this company gets sued a lot.
Of course, the memory of the sinking of the Titanic is ever present. There is a history display down on deck 2, and you can even have your photo taken in front of a backdrop of the grand staircase of the ill-fated ship. When we passed 10,000 feet over the wreck at 48 degrees, 38.50 minutes North, 50 degrees, 00.11 minutes West one day out of New York, the Queen Mary 2 let out three long blasts of its horn in memory of the lost. Cunard took over the Titanic’s White Star Line during the Great Depression and is, therefore, the inheritor of this legacy.
When I visited the computer center, I was stunned to learn that they were offering three-hour long classes on Apple products and programs every hour, all day long. They covered iMacs, iPads, iPhones, and all of the associated software and gizmos. I promptly signed up for five classes. Watch for my next webinar. It will be a real humdinger, with all the bells and whistles.
You would think that with 280 pounds of luggage, I could remember to bring a pair of black socks. It was not to be. So I headed out to the ballroom with my black tux and navy blue socks to tango, rhumba, and foxtrot with the best of them. The problem is that just as you twirl, the ship rolls, swiping the dance floor right out from under you. With several Octogenarian couples within range and my size, the consequences could have been fatal. Still, those oldsters really knew their steps. I really hope those pictures come out, especially the one of me on the dance floor, flat on my back.
Looking at the vast expanse of the sea outside my cabin window, I am reminded of the opening scenes of the 1950’s WWII documentary Victory at Sea. An endless, dark, tempestuous ocean churns and boils relentlessly. I am now even more awed by my early ancestors, who took three months to cross from Falmouth to Boston in a 50-foot-long wooden ship called the Pied Cow in 1630. They did this without navigation to speak of rotten food and a dreaded fear of sea monsters. What courage or religious ferocity must have driven them?
Four days of hearing foghorns is starting to get tiring. Captain Wells has been ducking many of his social responsibilities, feeling more secure in the bridge close to the radar. After a few days of intermittent access, the Internet is now gone for good, the satellite connection having given up the ghost. People are blaming everything from a lightning strike on the Virginia ground station to late-night watching of porn by the crew.
Instead of surfing the net, I am devoting more time to exercise in anticipation of my upcoming Swiss mountain climbing adventures. I have developed a careful routine where I fast walk three times around deck 7 in a brisk wind, take the elevator down to deck 1, walk up the stairs to deck 13, speed past the kennels, the practice golf range, two swimming pools, and a bar.
I can accomplish all of this three times in an hour and do it with 40 pounds of books stashed in my backpack. My butler, Peter, tells me there is always a certifiable nut case on every cruise, and I have been designated by the crew as “THE ONE”.
The 2,600 passengers are quite a mixed batch. We have 1,200 British, 750 Americans, 350 Germans, 80 Canadians, 4 dogs, three cats, and an assortment of other nationalities, and exactly one Japanese couple who didn’t speak a word of English.
I took pity on them and spent an evening translating and catching up on the world at large with them. He was a retired dance instructor, which explains why he and his wife owned the dance floor on most nights. They were grateful for the conversation, for during their entire 30-day cruise from New York to Southampton, then the Baltic Sea and the Norwegian fiords, then back to New York, they had no one to speak to. Still, that was better than last year, when they completed a 105-day round-the-world cruise with no one to talk to. Before they left, they gave me an exquisite, handmade, traditional Japanese purse as a gift.
Queen Mary II Passing Under the Verrazano Bridge
Your Intrepid Reporter
Breakfast on the High Seas
Check Out My New Digs
The Hard Life at Sea
Good Luck and Good Trading,
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
Global Market Comments
June 23, 2023
Fiat Lux
Featured Trades:
(JUNE 21 BIWEEKLY STRATEGY WEBINAR Q&A),
(AAPL), (ABNB), (GLD), (BA), (CAT), (DE), (X), (PYPL), (SQ), (MSFT), (GD), (GE), (INDA), (META) (GOOGL), (CCI), (NVDA), (ABNB), (SNOW), (PLTR), (TSLA)
CLICK HERE to download today's position sheet.
Below please find subscribers’ Q&A for the June 21 Mad Hedge Fund Trader Global Strategy Webinar, broadcast from Lake Tahoe, NV.
Q: When do we buy Nvidia (NVDA) and Tesla (TSLA)?
A: On at least a 20% dip. We have had ballistic moves—some of the sharpest up moves in the history of the stock market for large stocks—and certainly the greatest creation of market caps since the market was invented under the Buttonwood Tree in 1792 at 68 Wall Street. Tesla’s almost at a triple now. Tripling one of the world's largest companies in 6 months? You have to live as long as me to see that.
Q: Is it a good time to invest in Bitcoin?
A: No, absolutely not. You only want to invest in Bitcoin when we have an excess of cash and a shortage of assets. Right now, we have the opposite, a shortage of cash and an excess of assets, and that will probably continue for several years.
Q: Should I short Apple (APPL)?
A: Only if you’re a day trader. It’s hugely overbought for the short term, but still in a multiyear long-term uptrend. I think we could see Apple at $300 in the next one or two years.
Q: Is it better to focus on single stocks or ETFs?
A: Single stocks always, because a single stock will outperform a basket that's in an ETF by 2 to 1 or even 3 to 1. That's always the case; whenever you add stocks to a basket, it diversifies risk and dilutes the performance. Better to just own Tesla, and if you want to diversify, diversify to Nvidia, but then I live next door to these two companies. That's what I tell my friends. You only diversify if you don’t know what is going to happen, which is most investors and financial advisors.
Q: Is the bottom of the housing market in, and are we due for a spike in home prices when interest rates can only go lower?
A: Yes, absolutely. In fact, we will enter a new 10-year bull leg for housing because we have a structural shortage of 10 million homes and 82 million millennials desperately trying to buy them at any price. I just got a call from my broker and she is panicking because she is running out of inventory. Even the lemons are starting to move.
Q: When do you think energy will rise?
A: Falling interest rates could be a good key because it sets the whole global economy on fire and increases energy demand.
Q: Outlook for the S&P 500 (SPY) second half of the year?
A: We hit 4,800 at least, maybe even higher. That's about a little more than 10% from here, so it’s not that much of a stretch, not like it was at the beginning of the year when it needed to rise 25% to reach my yearend target.
Q: Best time to invest from here on?
A: Either a 10% pullback in the market, or a sideways move of 3 months—that's called a time correction. It usually counts as a price correction because of course, over 3 months, earnings go up a lot, especially in tech.
Q: I’m seeing grains (WEAT) in rally mode.
A: Yes, that's true. They are commodities, and just like copper’s been rallying, and it’s yet another signal that we may get a much broader global commodity rally in everything: iron ore, coal, energy, gold, silver, you name it.
Q: Will inflation drop to 2%, causing stocks to go on another epic run?
A: The answer is yes, I do see inflation dropping to 2% —maybe not this year, but next year; not because of any action the Fed is doing, but because technology is hyper-accelerating, and technology is highly deflationary. The tech product you bought two years ago is now half the price, and they offer you twice as much functionality with an auto-renew for life. So, that is happening across the entire technology front and feeds into the inflation numbers big time, including labor. There's going to be a lot of labor replacement by machines and AI in the coming years.
Q: Is Airbnb (ABNB) a good stock to buy?
A: Well, if we’re going into the most perfect travel storm of all time, which is this summer, and which is why I’m going to remote places only like Cortina, Italy. Airbnb is the perfect stock to own. It’s a well-run company even in normal times.
Q: Should I buy gold here on the pullback?
A: Yes, you should. Gold is also highly sensitive to any decline in interest rates, and by the way: buy silver, it always moves 2.5x as much as the barbarous relic.
Q: How can inflation not go up if commodities and wage demands are going up due to state and federal unions? What about farm equipment and truck supplies? Costs keep rising, should we buy John Deere (DE)?
A: There are three questions here. Inflation will not go up because, though commodities will rise, they are only 0.6% of the $100 trillion global economy, or $660 billion in 2022. That will be more than offset by technology cutting prices, which is 30% of the stock market. You have to realize how important each individual element is in the global picture. And regarding wage demands going up caused by state and federal unions, less than 11.3% of the workforce is now unionized and that figure has been declining for 40 years. Most growth in the economy has been in non-unionized technology firms which largely depend on temporary workers, by design. What IS unionized is mostly teachers, the lowest paid workers in the economy, so incremental pay rises will be small. Unions were absolutely slaughtered when 25 million jobs were offshored to China during the Bush administration. Buy farm equipment and trucks? Absolutely, buy John Deere (DE) and buy Caterpillar (CAT) on the next dip. I was actually looking at Caterpillar for the next LEAPS the other day, but it’s already had a big run; I'm going to wait for a pullback before I get CAT and John Deere. So, again, people see headlines, see union wage headlines—I say focus on the 89% and not on the 11% if you want to make good decisions.
Q: Is Boeing (BA) a buy on the dip?
A: Yes, they got 1,000 new aircraft orders and the stock hasn't moved. So yes, if you get any kind of selloff down to $200, I'd be hoovering this thing up.
Q: Can you please explain how the profit predictor works?
A: It’s a long story; just go to our website, log in and do a search for “profit predictor,” and you’ll get a full explanation of how it works. It’s actually where Mad Hedge has been using artificial intelligence for 11 years, which is why our performance has doubled. Just for fun, I'll run the piece next week.
Q: Gold (GLD) is having a hard time going up because Russia is being squeezed by other governments. Since they need cash, they may be either selling their gold or stop buying new gold.
A: That is a good point, but at the end of the day, interest rates are the number one driver of all precious metals—period, end of story. We’re long gold too, I’ve got lots of gold coins stashed around the world in various safe deposit boxes, and I'm keeping them. I’ve got even more silver coins, which take up a lot of space.
Q: Do you like India (INDA) long term?
A: Yes, it’s the next China. But as Apple is finding out it is very difficult to get anything done there. A radical reforming Prime Minster Modi may be changing things there with his recent Biden visit and (GE) contract to build jet engines.
Q: What do you think of General Dynamics Corp (GD)?
A: I like General Dynamics because I think defense spending is in a permanent long term upcycle as a result of the Ukraine war. And it won’t end with the Ukraine war—the threat will always be out there, and the buying is done by not only us but all the other countries that think Russia is a threat.
Q: Do you like MP Materials Corp (MP)?
A: Yes, I do. The whole commodities space is ready to take off and go on fire.
Q: What about Square (SQ)?
A: The only reason I’m not recommending Square right now is huge competition in the entire sector, where all the stocks including PayPal (PYPL) are getting crushed. I will pass on Square for now, especially when I can buy US Steel (X) at close to its low for the year.
Q: If you had to pick one: Nvidia (NVDA), Tesla (TSLA), Microsoft (MSFT), Meta (META), and Google (GOOGL), which is the best to buy for next year?
A: All of them. Diversify. If I have to pick the top performer, it’s going to be either Tesla or Nvidia, probably Nvidia. But you need at least a 10% correction before you do anything. Actually, the split-adjusted price for our first (NVDA) recommendation eight years ago was $2 a share.
Q: Do you like Crown Castle International (CCI)?
A: Yes, I like it very much—it has very high dividend yield at 5.5%. The reason it hasn’t moved yet is that as long as interest rates are high, any REIT structure will suffer, and (CCI) has a REIT structure. Sure, it’s in a great sector—5G cell towers—but it is still a REIT nonetheless, and those will start to recover when interest rates go down; that’s why we did a 2.5-year LEAPS on CCI. For sure interest rates are going to go down in the next 2.5 years, and you will double your money on (CCI). That’s why we put it out.
Q: Which mid cap will do best over the long term: Airbnb (ABNB), Snowflake (SNOW), or Palantir (PLTR)?
A: That’s easy: Snowflake. They have such an overwhelming technology on the database and security front; I would be buying Snowflake all day long. Even Warren Buffet owns Snowflake, so that’s good enough for me.
Q: Could you comment on the pace of EV adoption/potential for (TSLA) robot fleet acceleration and implications for oil investments in holding pattern till the eventual collapse to near 0?
A: Yes, oil may collapse to near zero, but it may take twenty years to do it—that’s how long it takes to transition an energy source. That’s how long it took the move from horses and hay to gasoline-powered cars at the beginning of the 20th century. A national robot fleet of taxis with no drivers at all is a couple of years off. There are about 1,000 of them working in San Francisco right now, but they still have more work to do on the software. When it gets foggy, they often congregate at intersections causing traffic jams. Suffice it to say that eventually Tesla shares go to $1,000 and after that, $10,000—that’s my bet. By the way, my Tesla January 2025 $595-$600 LEAPS are starting to look pretty good.
To watch a replay of this webinar with all the charts, bells, whistles, and classic rock music, just log in to www.madhedgefundtrader.com , go to MY ACCOUNT, click on GLOBAL TRADING DISPATCH or TECHNOLOGY LETTER, then WEBINARS, and all the webinars from the last 12 years are there in all their glory.
Good Luck and Stay Healthy,
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
2018 in Australia
Global Market Comments
June 3, 2022
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(JUNE 1 BIWEEKLY STRATEGY WEBINAR Q&A),
(AAPL), (GOOGL), (MSFT), (JPM), (BAC), (C), (UUP), (FXA), (FXC), (EEM),
(VIX), (CRM), (AAPL), (TSLA), (COIN), (EDIT), (CRSP), (LMT), (RTX), (GD)
Below please find subscribers’ Q&A for the June 1 Mad Hedge Fund Trader Global Strategy Webinar broadcast from Silicon Valley.
Q: What are the 3 best stocks to own for the end of the year?
A: Apple (AAPL), Alphabet Inc. (GOOGL), and Microsoft (MSFT). Those you want to buy on meltdown days, kind of like today. Make sure you scale into these—so maybe buy 20% on every down-500-point Dow day. Eventually, you’ll end up with a pretty decent position at a market low in a stock that will double in 3-5 years.
Q: Why these three stocks?
A: Lots of reasons: They’re huge, they’re safe, two out of three pay dividends, Alphabet is about to split, and they have huge moats so nobody can get into their sectors. They have near monopolies in what they do, and they have immense cash on the balance sheet. These are the kind of stocks that portfolio managers dream about. And watch what rallied the hardest in the last dead cat bounce we had—it was these three names. That tells you that they will lead any long-term bull market in the future. These are the stocks that people want to own.
Q: What will bring your predicted second half-bull market in the stock market?
A: Inflation drops from 8% to 4%. That will happen for a couple of reasons. The year-on-year comparisons become highly favorable starting from next month when inflation started to take off a year ago. Inflation numbers are going to be climbing the wall of worry from here on out. That could get us down to 4% by the end of the year. The second reason is the Ukraine War either ends or becomes a stalemate and is no longer a factor in the global markets, and we’ve had time to replace all the Russian oil and Ukrainian wheat.
Q: Are banks positioned to benefit from the coming rally?
A: Absolutely. I think big tech and banks will be the top-performing stock sectors for the next five years because inflation will go away, recession fears will go expire, and credit quality will improve, but interest rates will remain 300 basis points higher than they were during the pandemic. Buy (JPM), (BAC), and (C) on dips.
Q: What will be the worst performing sector?
A: Energy—anything energy-related will get absolutely slaughtered, which is why I don't want to touch it with a ten-foot pole right now. That includes oil companies, exploration companies, E&P companies, and master limited partnerships, as well as coal and other natural gas stocks. So, if you’re long these names don’t forget to sit down when the music stops playing. You could get your head handed to you at the end.
Q: Can we make lower lows?
A: Yes, that’s entirely possible. Market moves are basically random when you get down to these levels— down more than 20%. And on all future downturns, I would be spending your cash going back into the market expecting a second half rally.
Q: What about green energy?
A: Unfortunately, green energy is very tied to old energy because $120 oil makes green companies much more competitive from a cost point of view. So, I’m not going to go piling into green companies right here, especially if I think oil is topping out in the near future. Buying green energy companies here is the same as buying oil at $120 a barrel.
Q: What is the best way to play the declining US dollar?
A: Buy the iShares MSCI Emerging Markets ETF (EEM). Also, the Aussie dollar (FXA) and the Canadian Dollar (FXC), which benefit tremendously from commodity prices, which will rise for another decade in a global economic recovery.
Q: Why will energy be the worst sector?
A: If you end the war in the Ukraine or you replace Russian oil, either by finding new sources of oil, getting other producers to increase production which they can do (including the US), or by accelerating the move to alternatives, then you move oil back to pre-invasion prices which were about $70 a barrel or $50 lower than they are here.
Q: Best way to hedge a falling market?
A: Do what I'm doing: keep a balanced portfolio of longs and shorts, that way you always have something that’s going up. And if you do it through the options, you have time decay working for you on both sides of the equation. If you want to go outright, buy outright puts on individual stocks because they had double the moves of the indexes. And go to my short selling school which you can find by going to my website at https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com. There’s actually 12 different ways to benefit from falling markets.
Q: How deep in the money can we go on our call spreads?
A: Wait for the Volatility Index (VIX) to go over $30, and then go 15-20% in the money. And yes, you only make 10, 15, or 20% on those positions in a month but then you put together ten of them and that adds up to quite a lot of money. You want to find the position that has the greatest probability of happening—i.e. something that’s 20% in the money. Do that when the market has just dropped 20%, which it already has, and then you have a position that has a minuscule chance of losing money.
Q: How much longer do you see this current bear market bounce lasting?
A: Until yesterday.
Q: What's your favorite commodity ETF?
A: My favorite commodity stock is Freeport McMoRan (FCX), the world’s largest copper producer. Rather than pay the extra management fees for an ETF, I prefer just to go straight to the source and buy (FCX).
Q: When do you think the Fed will pivot to dovish or neutral?
A: This summer. It’s just a question of whether it’s the July or the September meeting.
Q: When you say “buy on dips”, what does that mean? 1%, 3%, 5%?
A: Well in this market, a dip would be a retest of the previous lows which is going to be down 10% or 15% on the major positions in your portfolio. If you’re day trading, a dip is only 1%, so it really depends on your timeframe and your risk tolerance. That’s why I always tell people to scale by doing everything in incremental pieces—20%, 25%, and so on. You never know what the market’s actually going to do on a short-term basis. Randomness can’t be predicted.
Q: If you plan to enter a LEAPS on Apple, what strikes would you do?
A: Well, first of all, I want to see if Apple drops all the way to $125, which is a lot of people’s downside target. If it did, then I would do the $125/$135 call spread two years out, and that will probably double. And if it starts a long term up trend, then I’ll keep rolling up the strike prices. If, say, Apple goes to $125, you put your LEAPS on. If the stock rises to 150, then take profits on the $125/$135 and roll into the $150/$160. That’s how you can get like 1,000% returns like we got on Tesla (TESLA) a few years ago. You just keep rolling up your strike prices on every weak day and maintain your leverage.
Q: When do we bet the farms on Editas Medicine Inc. (EDIT) and Crispr (CRSP) Therapeutics?
A: Never. These are small, highly speculative companies which will make money someday, but if the someday is in five years and you’re betting the farm with a LEAPS, you lose the farm. It's going to take a long time for these smaller biotech stocks to come back. If you want to play biotech, go with the big ones like Amgen. It takes a long time to convert cutting-edge technology into profits. The big companies already have a stable of reliable money-making drugs on hand.
Q: Salesforce Inc. (CRM) is up big on earnings—what should I do with the stock?
A: Buy the dips. It’s still way, way below its all-time highs, so use the weekdays to accumulate Salesforce for the long term. It’s one of the best cloud plays out there.
Q: What do you think about NVIDIA Corporation (NVDA)?
A: I absolutely love it. It rallied 20% off the bottom. Use any other additional weak days like today to increase your position. This stock someday is worth $1,000, up from today’s $195.
Q: Do you like SPACS?
A: No, I hate them and think they’re a rip-off. And a lot of them have become totally illiquid and untradable, so you have no choice but for them to shut down and return their money if they have any left. I’ve hated SPACS from day one and people are now getting their comeuppance on these.
Q: What do you think about the weakness in Coinbase Global Inc. (COIN) down here?
A: It’s just going down with all the other high-risk, speculative, meme stock type plays, which include all of the crypto plays like Bitcoin. I would avoid all of those. You want to buy quality at the discount now, and you want to buy the Cadillacs at Volkswagen prices and leave the speculative plays for the next generation, Gen Z, who are already highly interested in stocks.
Q: What is your favorite non-US country to invest in?
A: Australia, because you get a double play there on the currency, which should go up 30% from here, and they will benefit from a global commodity boom which continues for another ten years. They pretty much sell a lot of the major commodities like iron ore, wheat, sheep, and so on. It’s also a really nice country to visit. The only negative with Australia are the sharks.
Q: Biotech takeover targets?
A: Well (EDIT) and (CRSP) would be two of them. Things in the sector are so cheap that they are all potential takeover targets. M&A (Mergers and Acquisitions) will be a major play in the biotech sector for the foreseeable future.
Q: Should we sell short the defense industry here?
A: No, even if the war ends tomorrow, you might get some profit-taking, but the fact is that long term military spending is increasing permanently. The peace dividend now has to be paid back, and that is great for all the defense companies, so I would not be shorting them. If anything, I’d be buying on dips. Buy Lockheed Martin (LMT), Raytheon (RTX), who make the Javelin antitank missile for which there is now a two-year order backlog. You can also throw in General Dynamics (GD) for good measure which builds nuclear submarines and the Stryker armored vehicle.
To watch a replay of this webinar with all the charts, bells, whistles, and classic rock music, just log in to www.madhedgefundtrader.com, go to MY ACCOUNT, click on GLOBAL TRADING DISPATCH, then WEBINARS, and all the webinars from the last 12 years are there in all their glory.
Good Luck and Stay Healthy,
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
Keep Those Defense Plays
Global Market Comments
October 30, 2020
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(OCTOBER 28 BIWEEKLY STRATEGY WEBINAR Q&A),
(INDU), (VIX), (AMZN), (TSLA), (FEYE), (HACK), (PANW), (V), (TLT), (FXA), (FXC), (ZM), (DOCU), (RTX), (LMT), (NOC), (GD)
Below please find subscribers’ Q&A for the October 28 Mad Hedge Fund Trader Global Strategy Webinar broadcast from Silicon Valley, CA with my guest and co-host Bill Davis of the Mad Day Trader. Keep those questions coming!
Q: Do you think if Trump contests the election, it will be bad for stocks?
A: Yes, count on that knocking another 10% off of stocks. The market has spent the last six months pricing in a Biden win. Take that away and you have to price that back out again, about 6,000 Dow Average points (INDU). We’ve already dropped 2,500 points so that leaves another 3,500 points of downside t0 go in the event of a Trump win.
Q: Will that result in a crash?
A: Yes. At least 1,000 points in the overnight session following.
Q: Do you think it’s going to happen?
A: No. According to the polls, Trump will lose by at least 15 million votes. While the polls missed the Electoral College result last time, they were dead on with the popular vote, with Hillary Clinton winning by 3 million votes. If the margin were only a few hundred or thousand votes in a single battleground state, Trump might win a court fight. But he can’t win if the margin is in ten states and tens of millions of votes. That is too much to fudge. That is how markets react: they hate surprises, and a second Trump win would be the surprise of the century.
Q: With all of the earnings positive, do you think markets will stay positive?
A: Earnings aren’t important right now. Everyone knew earnings would be great because we were coming off of hundred-year lows caused by the pandemic. So yes, we knew they’d be up 50%, 100%, 150%; that's not the surprise. The bigger issue is what the pandemic is going to do, and of course, only biochemists know that—most stock traders have no idea, which is reflected in these gigantic swings we’re seeing in the market both on the upside and the downside. As a biochemist, I can tell you that this is our final wave that's coming up and it could last several months. After that, we get a vaccine or herd immunity. When it's done, you have the bull market of a lifetime—up 400% in ten years from these levels. Dow 120,000 here we come!
Q: Do you see a tax selloff if Biden gets in? Should we get short?
A: Definitely; there will be a tax selloff. Past ones have only lasted a week or two and those were the last two weeks of December, so it really won’t be that bad. It’s not like it’s a surprise that Biden is ahead in the polls, because he has been for 6 months. Nor is it a surprise that he is going to raise taxes on the wealthy. I wouldn’t get short though. The short play was last week and the week before; and I did manage to get out three shorts but didn't want to get too big in front of an election. So those all worked. I'm out of all of them now, and now we’re looking only at long plays. And with the Volatility Index (VIX) over $40, you can go 20% or 30% in-the-money on these call spreads and still look to make 10%-20% profit on the position in a month.
Q: Isn’t the pandemic great for Amazon (AMZN)?
A: Yes, Amazon was taking over the world anyway, and forcing everyone to an online-only economy which couldn’t be better for them. A lot of this shifting is permanent and won’t be going back to the way it was before the pandemic with brick and mortar shops and malls. So yes, we love Amazon and I would buy on the dips. There’s a double from here.
Q: Do you have long term names I can buy to sit on?
A: Yes, we actually do have a long-term portfolio posted on the website. It would be listed under your subscription area once you log in—we rebalance that twice a year. And of course, we had a 10% holding in Tesla (TSLA) which went up ten times, so the performance of the long-term portfolio is through the roof. To find the long-term portfolio, please click here.
Q: Do you record this webinar?
A: Yes, we post it on the www.madhedgefundtrader.com site in two hours.
Q: Do you still like the Internet security stocks like FireEye (FEYE)?
A: Yes. Hacking is growing faster than the Internet itself. You should also look at Palo Alto Networks (PANW) and the ETF (HACK).
Q: Should we hold on to the Visa (V) spread hoping it will come back after the election drop?
A: Hope is not an investment strategy. I always stop out of positions when they hit a 2% loss. The only time I have 4% losses is when we get these gigantic gap moves overnight, which tend to happen once every one or two years. In this case, Visa got hit with a surprise antitrust suit from the Department of Justice that knocked $10 off of the stock. So no, I will not hold on to it in the hope that it does better; I will try to minimize my losses, get out, and get into the next winning position. Hope is what turns a 4% loss into a complete 10% write off.
Q: What’s your view on the Canadian dollar (FXC)?
A: I like it, but it’s not as good as the Australian dollar (FXA) because Canada has a major oil exposure, and actually the worst kind of oil exposure—tar sands in northern Alberta. The outlook for oil is poor and that will be a drag on the currency in the form of fewer exports. Buy the (FXA). No oil troubles here. Kangaroos are another story.
Q: Will you be looking to sell short on the United States Treasury Bond Fund (TLT)?
A: Yes, if we can just get a little bit higher. We’re looking at an economic recovery next year, so we’d expect the (TLT) to be lower by at least $20 points in 2021.
Q: Do you think the San Francisco and New York housing markets will return to what they were before with so many people are moving out of the city?
A: Yes, they will come back, I’ve been through many of these cycles in San Francisco over the past 50 years; it always comes back. Once the pandemic is over, people will say, “Oh my gosh, I can’t believe you can get a two-bedroom apartment in San Francisco for only $2 million.” That's probably another year or two off after a vaccine is in widespread distribution.
Q: Is real estate in a bubble?
A: Absolutely, but real estate bubbles can go on for a long time, like ten years. The bubble in Australia has been going on for 30 years. Ultimately, real estate prices are driven by the earnings power of the local economy which, in the case of San Francisco, is huge. This time around, we have a record large millennial generation looking for real estate. There are 85 million millennia buyers with only 65 million Gen X-er’s selling homes. So, we have to make up a shortfall of 20 million houses at some point. That’s why building permits are through the roof every month.
Q: Zoom (ZM) and DocuSign (DOCU) are the darling stocks of COVID 2020—what do you think about them at these high prices?
A: Very high risk. If you bought these a year ago when we first started covering them, good for you as they're up ten times. However, there are better fish to fry than chasing these big pandemic winners at all-time highs.
Q: If Biden wins, what happens to defense stocks like Raytheon Technology (RTX)?
A: They go down. It turns out a lot of the defense business is in very long term contracts that can’t be broken. They have to supply so many planes a year to the government for a decade or more. However, the sentiment on these sectors sours under democratic administrations because they are not initiating new weapons systems where the big money is made. Lockheed Martin (LMT), Northrop Grumman (NOC), and General Dynamics (GD) all have the same problem. I grew up with these companies. They were the FANGs of their day.
Q: How does a Biden win affect Tesla (TSLA)?
A: Then $2,500 a share for Tesla looks cheap (it’s now at $410). Biden will do everything he can to slow climate change and accelerate alternative energy. Tesla is front and center on that. Under current law, car manufacturers are limited on the number of units they can sell to get the $7,500 tax break per vehicle. Tesla used up all their subsidies five years ago. My bet is that the limits will be eliminated and that leads to a huge surge in Tesla sales in the U.S., which is why the stock has gone up 10 times in the last year. Tesla has promised to drop their car price to $25,000 in three years. If you throw in $10,000 in federal and state tax subsidies you get the car for free. Then you can write off General Motors (GM) and Ford (F).
Good Luck and Stay Healthy.
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
Legal Disclaimer
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