Global Market Comments
February 1, 2021
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or GAMBLERS HAVE ENTERED THE MARKET),
($INDU), (TSLA), (TLT), (BA), (JPM), (MS), (GME), (STBX), (GE), (MRNA)
Global Market Comments
February 1, 2021
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or GAMBLERS HAVE ENTERED THE MARKET),
($INDU), (TSLA), (TLT), (BA), (JPM), (MS), (GME), (STBX), (GE), (MRNA)
At long last, the 10% correction I have been predicting is happening. No, it wasn’t caused by the usual reasons, like a bad economic data point, an earnings disappointment, or a geopolitical event.
The market delivered the worst week since October because gamblers have entered the stock market. Perish the thought!
It turns out that if a million kids buy ten shares each of a $4 stock, they can wipe out even the largest hedge funds on their short positions. It also turns out they can wipe out their brokers, with infinite capital calls triggered by massive order flows.
If Chicago’s Citadel had not stepped in with a $1 billion bailout, Robin Hood would have gone under last week. Citadel buys Robin Hood’s order flow and is their largest customer. That’s where systemic risk enters the picture.
And it’s not like there was really any systemic risk. Markets have an inordinate fear of the unknown, and no one has ever seen a bunch of kids in a chat room like Redditt wipe out major hedge funds.
Fortunately, there are only a dozen small illiquid stocks that could be subject to such ‘buyers raids”. So, the spillover to the main market is very limited, probably no more than a week or two.
And the regulations to reign in such a practice are already in place. Whenever a broker gets more business than it can handle, it will simply shut it down. Robin Hood did that on Friday when it has limited purchases in 20 stocks to a single share, including Starbucks (STBX), Moderna (MRNA), and General Electric (GE).
What all this does is set up an excellent buying opportunity for you and me, of which there have been precious few in recent months. By ramping up the Volatility Index to $38, it is almost impossible to lose money on front month call options spreads. We are the real winners of the (GME) squeeze.
Stocks would have to fall another 10%-20% on top of existing 10%-20% declines, and that is not going to happen in 13 trading days to the February 19 options expiration with $20 trillion about to hit the economy and the stock markets. That breaks down to $10 trillion in stimulus and $10 trillion worth of global quantitative easing.
My own long, hard-won experience is that a (VIX) at $38 earns you about 20% a month in profits. Options prices are so elevated that scoring winners now is like shooting fish in a barrel. So, join the party as fast as you can.
On Friday, I was taking profits on exiting positions and shipping out new trade alerts in the best quality names as fast as I could write them. Where is that easy, laid back retirement I was hoping for!
Keep at the barbell portfolio. The big tech names are finishing up a six-month sideways “time” corrections. Their earnings are catching up with valuations at a prolific rate. The domestic recovery names have just given back 10%-20% and are ripe for another leg up. All of these are good candidates for 2023 options LEAPS.
After all, if an insurrection and the sacking of the capitol can’t take the market down more than 1%, GameStop (GME) is certainly not going to take it down more than 10%.
GameStop (GME) posted record volatility, up from $4 a month ago to $483. Even the biggest hedge funds can’t stand up to a million kids buying ten shares each at market. All single name shorts in the market are getting covered by hedge funds in fear of getting “Gamestopped”, producing a 700-point Dow rally.
Several brokers banned trading in the name and the SEC is all over this like a wet blanket. Trading is halted due to an excess of sell orders. The problem is that funds are selling real stocks to cover the losses we own, like JP Morgan (JPM) and Tesla (TSLA) and short (TLT).
In the meantime, the action has moved over the American Airlines (AA), which has soared by 50%. AMC Entertainment Holdings (AMC) saw a 400% pop, but I haven’t seen anyone rushing back into theaters to watch Wonder Woman. Blame Jay Powell for flooding the financial system with mountains of cash seeking a home. There is so much money in circulation that traders are invented asset classes to put it into. This can’t last. Buy the dip.
Here are the best short squeeze targets with the greatest outstanding short interests. GameStop (GME) tops the list with an eye-popping 139% short interest, followed by Bed Bath & Beyond (BBBY) (67%) and Ligand Pharmaceutical (LGND) (64%). National Beverage (FIZZ), The Macerich Company (MAC), and Fubo TV (FUBO) bring up the rear. These are all failed companies in some form or another, which is why hedge funds had such large short positions.
New Home Sales disappointed in December, up only 1.6% to 842,000 units. This is on a signed contract basis only. Affordability is the big issue caused by high prices. Who buys a house at Christmas anyway?
Case Shiller soared by 9.5% in November, the fastest home price appreciation in history. Phoenix (13.8%), Seattle (12.7%), and San Diego (12.3) were the big movers. Blame a long-term structural housing shortage, a huge demographic push from Millennials, near-zero interest rates, and a flight from the cities to larger suburban homes. The Pandemic is keeping millions of homes off the market.
US GDP may reach pre-pandemic high by end of 2021, it the vaccine gets distributed to every corner of the nation and aggressive stimulus packages pass congress. Growth should come in at a minimum of 5% or higher this year, wiping out last year’s disaster. Keeping interest rates near zero will be a big help, as Treasury Secretary Yellen is determined to do. China and India are already there.
Share Buybacks have returned, the catnip of share prices. Q4 saw a jump to $116 billion from $102 billion in Q2, and this year, banks now have free reign to buy back their own shares. That’s still below the $182 billion seen in Q4 2019. It can only mean that share prices are rising further.
California lifts stay-at-home regulations, enabling restaurants to open after a nearly two-month shutdown. It’s the first ray of hope that the pandemic will end by summer. It will if Biden hits his 1.5 million vaccinations a day target.
Tesla posts sixth consecutive profit quarter, taking the stock down $60 in the aftermarket momentarily on a classic “buy the rumor, sell the news” move. The once cash-starved company now has an eye-popping $19.4 billion in reserves. Revenues reached a massive $10.7 billion, better than expected. Gross margins reached 19.2%. Looking for 50% annual growth for several years. Shanghai, Berlin, and Austin will make their first deliveries this year. Cash flow is at $19.4 billion, enough to build six more factories. No short sellers left here. It’s a perfect entry point for a LEAP. Buy the March 2023 $1,150-$1,200 call spread for a ten bagger.
Space X rocket carries 143 spacecraft into space. The Falcon 9 rocket set a new record with new satellites launched at once. Yes, you too can put 200kg into orbit for only $1 million. Many are from small tech startups selling various types of data. Elon Musk’s hobby, now worth $20 billion according to its government contracts, could be his next IPO. Don’t pass on this one!
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 a blockbuster 10.21% in January, versus a Dow Average that is now down in 2021. This is my third double-digit month in a row.
I used the market selloff to take substantial profits in my short (TLT) holdings and buy new longs in Boeing (BA) and Morgan Stanley (MS). I rolled the strikes down on my JP Morgan (JPM) long by $10.
That brings my eleven-year total return to 432.76%, some 2.15 times the S&P 500 over the same period. My 11-year average annualized return now stands at a nosebleed new high of 38.85%, a new high.
My trailing one-year return exploded to 75.28%, the highest in the 13-year history of the Mad Hedge Fund Trader. We have earned 91.43% since the March 20 2020 low.
We need to keep an eye on the number of US Coronavirus cases at 26 million and deaths at 440,000, which you can find here. We are now running at a staggering 3,800 deaths a day.
The coming week will be all about the monthly jobs data.
On Monday, February 1 at 9:45 AM EST, the Markit Manufacturing PMI for January is out. Caterpillar (CAT) announces earnings.
On Tuesday, February 2 at 7:00 AM, Total Vehicle Sales for January are published. Alphabet (GOOG) and Amgen (AMGN) report.
On Wednesday, February 3 at 8:15 AM, the ADP Private Employment Report is published. QUALCOMM (QCOM) reports.
On Thursday, February 4 at 9:30 AM, Weekly Jobless Claims are printed. Gilead Sciences (GILD) reports.
On Friday, February 5 at 9:30 AM, the January Nonfarm Payroll Report is announced. At 2:00 PM, we learn the Baker-Hughes Rig Count.
As for me, I am often kept awake at night by painful arthritis and a collection of combat injuries and I usually spend this time thinking up new trade alerts.
However, the other night, I saw a war movie just before I went to bed, so of course, I thought about the war. This prompted me to remember the two happiest people I have met in my life.
My first job out of college was to go to Hiroshima Japan for the Atomic Energy Commission and interview survivors of the first atomic bomb 29 years after the event. There, I met Kazuko, a woman in her late forties who was attending college in Fresno, California in 1941 and spoke a quaint form of English from the period. Her parents saw the war and the internment coming, so they brought her back to Hiroshima to be safe.
Her entire family was gazing skyward when a sole B-29 bomber flew overhead. One second before the bomb exploded, a dog barked and Kazuko looked to the right. Her family was permanently blinded, and Kazuko suffered severe burns on the left side of her neck, face, and forearms. A white summer yukata protected the rest of her, reflecting the nuclear flash. Despite the horrible scarring, she was the most cheerful person I had ever met and even asked me how things were getting on in Fresno.
Then there was Frenchie, a man I played cards with at lunch at the Foreign Correspondents Club of Japan every day for ten years. A French Jew, he had been rounded up by the Gestapo and sent to the Bergen-Belson concentration camp late in the war. A faded serial number was still tattooed on his left forearm. Frenchie never won at cards. Usually, I did because I was working the probabilities in my mind all the time, but he never ceased to be cheerful no matter how much it cost him.
The happiest people I ever met were atomic bomb and holocaust survivors. I guess, if those things can’t kill, you nothing can, and you’ll never have a reason to be afraid again. That is immensely liberating.
Stay healthy.
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
Mad Hedge Technology Letter
January 22, 2021
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(THE ADDITIVE MANUFACTURING BOOM)
(DM), (DDD), (SSYS), (GE)
Desktop Metal (DM) produces metal and carbon fiber 3D printing accessible to all engineers, designers, and manufacturers.
I’ve dipped my toe in this industry before by recommending Stratasys Ltd. (SSYS) whose stock has tripled from October 2020.
Since its inception, the company has been a happy recipient of generous funding channels and attracted total funding of $438M, always a good start.
Desktop Metal is truly well-capitalized after its SPAC transaction and strategically positioned to reap the rewards from a "dramatic increase" in the use of 3D printing for end-use part production over the next decade.
The company's outsourcing of manufacturing processes should generate strong free cash flow which should turn positive by 2023.
Sales are expected to explode 286% this year alone, passing $71 million by the end of 2021 as this technology becomes more mainstream.
This is the only publicly traded, pure-play additive manufacturing 2.0 company, and DM has the fastest metal 3D printing technology in the market.
DM is 20 times cheaper than existing laser-based metal 3D printing technologies while allowing the use of a much wider range of alloys.
Not only are they expanding at a rapid clip, but they are also in the perfect market to grow with revenue runway of 11x to $146B this decade, propelled by a shift from prototyping to mass production.
Unlike many other tech startups, the first-mover advantage is buttressed by a diverse blue-chip customer base in the automotive industry.
The automotive industry is a key vertical for volume additive manufacturing and they have started shipping a new, intermediate version of its P-50 Production System, the new P-1 printer, to Ford Motor Company (F).
Buying growth has been a go-to strategy for frothy tech companies as deploying extra capital to take advantage of new efficiencies by owning new assets has been a winning strategy.
M&A is a solid route as a “value creation” strategy and the systems subsector would appear to present a viable strategic acquisition candidate going forward.
Desktop Metal recently bought competitor 3D printing firm EnvisionTEC.
Founded in Germany in 2002, EnvisionTEC specializes in photopolymer additive manufacturing, putting its technology in more direct competition with the likes of 3D printing darling Carbon than Desktop Metal’s own existing competencies.
It’s pouring $300 million to acquire EnvisionTEC through a combination of cash and stock.
There is a great chance for Desktop Metal to grow here.
EnvisionTEC has the underlying technology with the ability to print in more than 190 materials, and Desktop Metal has the resources to help scale that tech.
Today, EnvisionTEC has over 5,000 customers across a broad spectrum of industries, including medical devices, jewelry, automotive, aerospace, and biofabrication.
They are major players in the dental market, more than tripling the number of Envision One dental shipments from 2019 to 2020 and with over 1,000 dental customers now using its AM machines for end-use parts.
Key customers include Cartier, Celgene, Ford, Hasbro, Oral Arts, Stuller, and Smile Direct Club.
In addition to extensive customer adoption, EnvisionTEC has a broad library of over 190 materials, featuring photopolymer resins with material properties in-line with or exceeding those of thermoplastics and multiple FDA-listed and 510(K)-cleared resins for the manufacturing of medical devices.
The company augments its robust proprietary material development efforts with a selectively open business model, leveraging relationships with major chemical companies such as Henkel Loctite, DSM Somos, Detax, Keystone, and Arkema to sell third-party, industry-validated resins for use with its additive manufacturing platforms.
This is most likely the beginning of many purchases as they are flush with new capital from the IPO and other outside investors.
Investors need to know there are a few risks to take note of.
The rapid prototyping to mass production timetable appears quite ambitious, especially since DM has had significant issues with deploying its technology in the field.
Also, the attractive branding of “additive manufacturing 2.0” perhaps could turn into an overhyped industry.
Even though they have solid technology to become successful, there are industry veterans that won’t just lie down including 3D Systems Corporation (DDD), General Electric (GE), (GE Additives), and SSYS.
These recipients are also beneficiaries of all the hot money pouring into the sector the past year.
China could also bring down the 3D printing sector with a race to zero type of domino effect.
DM is a 3D printing company stock to put on their watchlist and buying growth isn’t always a guarantee to buy the “right” growth, but let’s see how they execute it.
Either case, the secular tailwinds can’t be ignored and if this technology goes viral, then watch out.
Global Market Comments
December 2, 2020
Fiat Lux
FEATURED TRADE:
(WHAT HAPPENED TO THE DOW?)
($INDU), (EK), (S), (BS), (CVX), (DD), (MMM),
(FBHS), (MGDDY), (FL), (GE), (TSLA), (GM)
When I joined Morgan Stanley some 35 years ago, one of the grizzled old veterans took me aside and gave me a piece of sage advice.
“Never buy a Dow stock”, he said. “They are a guarantee of failure.”
That was quite a bold statement, given that at the time the closely watched index of 30 stocks included such high-flying darlings as Eastman Kodak (EK), Sears Roebuck & Company (S), and Bethlehem Steel (BS). It turned out to be excellent advice.
Only ten of the Dow stocks of 1983 are still in the index (see tables below), and almost all of the survivors changed names. Standard Oil of California became Chevron (CVX), E.I du Pont de Nemours & Company became DowDuPont, Inc. (DD), and Minnesota Mining & Manufacturing became 3M (MMM).
Almost all of the rest went out of business, like Union Carbide Corporation (the Bhopal disaster) and Johns-Manville (asbestos products) or were taken over. A small fragment of the old E.W. Woolworth is known as Foot Locker (FL) today.
Charles Dow created his namesake average on May 26, 1896, consisting of 12 names. Almost all were gigantic trusts and monopolies that were broken up only a few years later by the Sherman Antitrust Act.
In many ways, the index has evolved to reflect the maturing of the US economy, from an 18th century British agricultural colony, to the manufacturing powerhouse of the 20th century, to the technology and services-driven economy of today.
Of the original Dow stocks, only one, US Leather, vanished without a trace. It was the victim of the leap from horses to automobile transportation and the internal combustion engine. United States Rubber is now part of France’s Michelin Group (MGDDY).
American Tobacco reinvented itself as Fortune Brands (FBHS) to ditch the unpopular “tobacco” word. National Lead moved into paints with the Dutch Boy brand. It sold off that division when the prospects for leaded paints dimmed in 1970 (they cause mental illness in children).
What was the longest-lived of the original 1896 Dow stocks? General Electric (GE), originally founded by light bulb inventor Thomas Edison. It went down in flames thanks to poor management and was delisted in 2018. It was a 122-year run. Today, it is one of the great turnaround challenges facing American Industry.
Which company is the American Leather of today? My bet is that it’s General Motors (GM), which is greatly lagging behind Tesla (TSLA) in the development of electric cars (99% market share versus 1%). With a product development cycle of five years, it simply lacks the DNA to compete in the technology age.
What will be the largest Dow stock in a decade? Regular readers of the Mad Hedge Fund Trader already know the answer.
Global Market Comments
July 8, 2020
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(TRADING THE BLUE WAVE STOCK MARKET),
(FB), (AAPL), (MSFT), (AMZN), (ADBE), (SQ), (PYPL), (CRM), (SGEN), (REGN), (ILMN) (FEYE), (PANW), (AMD), (MU), (NVDA), (TSLA), (LEN), (PHM), (KBH), (XOM), (CVX), (XOM), (RTN), (NOC), (LMT), (KOL), (X), (GE)
At this point, it is possible that the president may lose the November election.
He is 14 points behind Democratic candidate Joe Biden in the polls. The odds at the London betting polls have him losing by a similar amount. My old employer The Economist magazine in London gives him a 10% chance of winning using a mix of economic and polling data.
And this assumes the election is held today. The fact is that the president is digging himself into a deeper hole every day, taking the wrong side of every issue confronting the country today. He seems to be refighting the Civil War….and taking the Confederate side when even the State of Mississippi is taking its symbol off its flag.
So, what will the post-Trump world look like? Will taxes go through the roof? Will the market crash? Is it time to go 100% cash, change our names, and move to a country with no US extradition treaty?
I don’t think so. In fact, with stocks soaring to meteoric new highs every day, the market expects that a Biden administration will be great news for stocks, perhaps the best ever.
Taxes will certainly go up. Favorable tax treatment of the energy, real estate, and private equity funds will get axed. Carried interest will finally become history. Marginal tax rate on net income over $1 billion could get hiked to the Roosevelt levels of 80-90%.
Biden has already announced an increase in the corporate tax rate from 21% to 28%. That will cut earnings for the S&P 500 by $9 a share. But the stock market is not the economy, with S&P earnings only accounting for 10% of US GDP.
And the $9 companies lose in taxes they will make back and more from new government spending, which isn’t slowing down any time soon. Some 14,000 American bridges need to be rebuilt. The Interstate Highway System is a shambles. High-speed broadband needs to go rural. The electrification of the US needs to accelerate to accommodate the millions of electric cars headed our way.
I believe that eventually, 51 million Americans will lose their jobs as a result of the pandemic. Perhaps a third of those are never coming back because the future has been so accelerated. That will leave the broader U-6 Unemployment rate stuck in double digits for years, maybe for decades.
So, we’re going to need some kind of Roosevelt style programs like the Works Progress Administration (WPA) and the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) who built much of the monolithic infrastructure that we all enjoy today.
At least 300,000 educated workers could immediately be put to work in contact tracing. Millions more could be employed in national infrastructure programs. One thing is certain. A new administration won’t stop massive government spending, it will simply redirect it.
And let's face it. A Biden win would bring a big expansion of Obamacare. With the best healthcare technology in the world, private industry has done the world’s worst job controlling the pandemic.
Countries with well-run national healthcare systems like Australia, New Zealand, Japan, and Singapore have almost wiped out the disease. This is why I am avoiding the healthcare sector for the foreseeable future.
Who are the big winners of all this? Big tech (FB), (AAPL), (MSFT), (AMZN), medium tech (ADBE), fintech (SQ), (PYPL), the cloud (CRM), and biotech (SGEN), (REGN), and (ILMN).
Cybersecurity will always be in demand (FEYE), (PANW). The global chip shortage will continue to worsen (AMD), (MU), (NVDA).
And Tesla (TSLA)? What can I say? It is already up nearly 100-fold from my initial $16.50 recommendation in 2010, and I’ve bought three Tesla’s (two S’s and an X).
Followers of the Mad Hedge Trade Alert service know that I am already long these names up the wazoo, and is why I am up 26% in 2020. It’s simply a matter of all pre-pandemic trends hyper-accelerating, which we were already tapped into.
If you have to add a purely domestic sector, a gigantic Millennial tailwind will keep homebuilders bubbling for years like (LEN), (PHM), and (KBH).
And while you won’t find me as a player here, retail will recover. The sector has not prospered during the current administration, thanks to a trade war with China and the pandemic.
And the losers? There is a classification of “Trump” stocks you don’t want to be anywhere near. Energy will do terribly (XOM), (CVX), (XOM), with Texas tea possibly revisiting negative numbers. If you take away the tax breaks, energy hasn’t really made money in decades.
Defense stocks (RTN), (NOC), (LMT) will take a big hit from budget cutbacks and fewer wars. Coal (KOL) will finally get shut down for good, probably sold to China in bankruptcy proceedings. Industrials will continue to lag (X), (GE), with no more free handouts from the government and no technology advantage.
So if Biden wins, you don’t need to slit your wrists, hang yourself from the showerhead, or cease investing completely. Just take your stock market winnings and go out and get drunk instead.
Global Market Comments
December 2, 2019
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or 2020 IS ALREADY HAPPENING),
(TSLA), (X), (GE), (FCX), (SLB), (GOOGL), (MSFT), (GLD)
You know the melt-up that is going on in the stock market right now? That is your 2020 performance being pulled forward.
One thing I have noticed over the past half-century of trading is that when market participants agree on a direction, it gets accelerated. Once the traditional October selloff failed to show, it was pedal to the metal to achieve new all-time highs.
Traders have become so overconfident that they have already completed this year’s performance and are now working on next year's. They are in effect pulling performance forward from 2020.
This historic run is taking place in the face of year-on-year earnings growth that is zero. ALL of the 29% price appreciation in the S&P 500 (SPY) in 2019 has been due to multiple expansion, from 14 times earnings to 19 times, a 20-year high. Market multiples rising by 50% anytime is almost unprecedented in history. I can only recall that happening twice: in 1929 and 1999.
So, that leaves only two possibilities for 2020. Either the multiple rises to a new 20-year multiple high, say to 20, 21, or 22, or the stock market goes down.
With a trade war-induced global economic slowdown still unfolding, don’t expect any respite from a sudden earnings recovery. Enjoy 2019 because the more we go up now means the more we will go down in 2020.
Were you waiting for the euphoria to make a market top? This is it. Sharply rising markets in the face of sharply falling earnings can only end in tears.
Needless to say, risk in the stock market is very high right now.
Jay Powell gave the market another boost, promising to hit the Fed’s 2% inflation target, giving plenty of room for wage hikes. The last inflation reading was 1.7% YOY. He might as well have said Dow 29,000 by yearend. I wish it were always this easy.
Hong Kong stalled the rally with the passage of a pro-democracy support by congress, with sanctions. China is warning of “firm countermeasures.” That throws cold water on any trade deal for 2019. New all-time highs for stocks may have to take a vacation.
US Q3 GDP was revised up to 2.1%, an improvement of 0.2% from the last read. The trade war seems to be costing us 1% of growth a year or about one-third of the total. That’s why we’re getting such a strong stock market move on the possibility of a trade deal. No-deal means lookout below.
Durable Goods came in at 0.6% in October, a nine-month high and better than expected. What does this week’s spate of positive data means, the first in many months? Is the recession risk over? If so, how much is already in the price?
Stocks love a steepening yield curve, with long term interest rates rising faster than short term ones. It puts the recession talk on hold, if not in abeyance.
It’s time to go dumpster diving, as the upside breakout in the Russell 2000 demonstrated last week. So, it’s time to start looking at the forlorn and the ignored of this bull market, like US Steel (X), General Electric (GE), Freeport McMoRan (FCX), and Schlumberger (SLB). There are no fundamentals in any of these names, they’ve just been down for so long anything looks like up from here. The liquidity-driven bull market has to find some fresh meat to rotate into, even temporarily, or it will die.
S&P Case Shiller rose 3.2% in September, the third consecutive month of price increases. Only San Francisco is showing falling prices. Phoenix (6.0%), Charlotte (4.6%), and Tampa (4.5%) are showing the greatest prices rises. Only a shortage of inventory is preventing prices from rising faster, now at a record low of 3.9 months. The builders who went under ten years ago aren’t building anymore.
New Home Sales drop 0.7%, in October, but are still up a massive 31.6% YOY. Sales in the northeast and south plunged, while those in the Midwest and west rise. The seasonally adjusted annual rate is 733,000 units. The Median Home Price fell 3.6% to $316,700. A 30-year fixed-rate mortgage at 3.66% is a major factor.
Merger mania in drug land continues, with the Novartis takeover of The Medicines Co. for $9.7 billion. It wants to take on Amgen (AMGN), Regeneron (REGN), and Sanofi in the heart drug space. No wonder this is the top-performing sector since I launched the Mad Hedge Biotech and Healthcare Letter.
Tesla shattered, both windows and sales records with an incredible 250,000 cyber trucks sold in a week. It’s one of the largest consumer orders in history, second only to the Tesla Model 3 launch four years ago. I may get one myself to make the Lake Tahoe run on a single 500-mile charge. Keep buying (TSLA) on dips. It is the clearest ten bagger out there.
Who is the mystery gold (GLD) buyer? Someone made a massive bet in the options market that gold will rise above $4,000 an ounce in 18 months. It would take a 32% move just to get gold back to its old $1,927 high. If the trade war continues, we may get it.
This was a week for the Mad Hedge Trader Alert Service to burst upon new all-time highs. I know this sounds boring, but I made all the money long technology stocks. This is net a -2.16% loss on my short position in Tesla (TSLA). If I’d only held on two more days this would have been a big winner over the disappointment over the shocking Cyber truck design. My long positions have shrunk to my core (MSFT) and (GOOGL).
By the way, running out of positions at a market top is a good thing.
My Global Trading Dispatch performance held steady at +352.76% for the past ten years, pennies short of an all-time high. My 2019 year-to-date catapulted back up to +52.62%. We closed out November with a respectable +3.07% profit. My ten-year average annualized profit ground back up to +35.28%.
The coming week will be hot with the jobs data trifecta.
On Monday, December 2 at 8:00 AM, the ISM Manufacturing PMI for November is out.
On Tuesday, December 3 at 2:30 PM, the API Crude Oil Stocks are announced.
On Wednesday, December 4, at 6:15 AM, the private sector ADP Employment Report is published.
On Thursday, December 5 at 8:30 AM, the Weekly Jobless Claims are printed.
On Friday, December 6 at 8:30 AM, the November Nonfarm Payroll Report is released.
The Baker Hughes Rig Count follows at 2:00 PM.
As for me, I am going to battle my way through the blizzards at Donner Pass this weekend to get back to the San Francisco Bay Area. There, I’ll be helping the local Boy Scout troop to set up their Christmas tree lot. The enterprise helps finance all the camping trips for the coming year.
Good luck and good trading.
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
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Because these cookies are strictly necessary to deliver the website, refuseing them will have impact how our site functions. You always can block or delete cookies by changing your browser settings and force blocking all cookies on this website. But this will always prompt you to accept/refuse cookies when revisiting our site.
We fully respect if you want to refuse cookies but to avoid asking you again and again kindly allow us to store a cookie for that. You are free to opt out any time or opt in for other cookies to get a better experience. If you refuse cookies we will remove all set cookies in our domain.
We provide you with a list of stored cookies on your computer in our domain so you can check what we stored. Due to security reasons we are not able to show or modify cookies from other domains. You can check these in your browser security settings.
These cookies collect information that is used either in aggregate form to help us understand how our website is being used or how effective our marketing campaigns are, or to help us customize our website and application for you in order to enhance your experience.
If you do not want that we track your visist to our site you can disable tracking in your browser here:
We also use different external services like Google Webfonts, Google Maps, and external Video providers. Since these providers may collect personal data like your IP address we allow you to block them here. Please be aware that this might heavily reduce the functionality and appearance of our site. Changes will take effect once you reload the page.
Google Webfont Settings:
Google Map Settings:
Vimeo and Youtube video embeds: