Part of these artificial intelligence executives going on record to sound out the problems with AI is mostly to protect themselves if this weird digital experiment goes disastrously wrong.
They have mostly said that AI going rogue is a real possibility and could end mankind.
Obviously, we hope that doesn’t happen.
Much of the tech market gains this year have been because of the technology surrounding AI.
Strip that out and the gains will look paltry.
A good example is Nvidia (NVDA) offering legendary guidance to the demand of their chips because of the need to install them in AI-based technology.
The AI narrative truly has legs – it will be the theme that defines 2023 in technology stocks.
The Big 7 tech stocks will possess explosive qualities to their stock precisely because of this thesis.
Then there is the fear of missing out (FOMO).
Every financial advisor is pitching AI as an investment of a lifetime – something that cannot be missed by their clients.
Therefore, I do expect meteoric legs up in shares of Nvidia, Apple, Microsoft, Tesla, Amazon, Facebook, and Google in 2023.
These 7 stocks dominate the tech market and the generative AI gains will mostly manifest themselves in these 7 tech firms.
Yet there are dangerous concerns that AI could also destroy these companies and the internet which we interface with, because the changes could erode the trust in platforms by populating fake photos like deep fakes.
In Washington speech, Brad Smith calls for steps to ensure people know when a photo or video is generated by AI.
Brad Smith, the president of Microsoft, has said that his biggest concern around artificial intelligence was deep fakes, realistic-looking but false content.
Smith called for steps to ensure that people know when a photo or video is real and when it is generated by AI, potentially for harmful purposes.
For weeks, lawmakers in Washington have struggled with what laws to pass to control AI even as companies large and small have raced to bring increasingly versatile AI to market.
Last week, Sam Altman, CEO of OpenAI, the startup behind ChatGPT, told a Senate panel in his first appearance before Congress that the use of AI interferes with election integrity is a “significant area of concern,” adding that it needs regulation.
Lawmakers need to ensure that safety brakes be put on AI used to control the electric grid, water supply and other critical infrastructure so that humans remain in control.
It’s hard to know what is fake and real these days. Fake photos of politicians getting attacked or fake videos of tigers roaming around freely in Times Square New York look weirdly authentic.
AI is getting so good that nobody knows what is real anymore.
I’m sure some of you saw the recent Tom Cruise deep fake where the fake Tom Cruise is telling the audience that he does a lot of “industrial clean up” along with his own stunts. Honestly, I could not tell it was fake, and most people wouldn’t. It caught me – hook, line, and sinker.
As it stands, ride this generative AI to riches in the short-term, but be aware that this technology could blow up the internet or make the internet unusable because of security and trust reasons.
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 Trader2023-05-26 14:02:022023-05-29 22:56:33Ride the Elevator Up With Generative AI
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or THE GOLDEN AGE OF BIG BANKING HAS JUST BEGUN) (JPM), (FRC), (BAC), (C), (WFC), (AAPL), (GOOGL), (META), (AMZN), (TSLA), (NVDA), (CRM), ($VIX), (USO), (TLT), (QQQ)
The United States is about to change beyond all recognition.
Most investors have missed the true meaning of the JP Morgan takeover of First Republic Bank for sofa change, some $10.6 billion. It in fact heralds the golden age of big banking. The US is about to move from 4,000 banks to four, with all of the profits accruing at the top.
Look at the details of the (JPM)/(FRC) deal and you will become utterly convinced.
(JPM) bought a $90 billion loan portfolio for 87 cents on the dollar, despite the fact that the actual default rate was under 1%. The FDIC agreed to split losses for five years on residential losses and seven years on commercial ones. The deal is accretive to (JPM) book value and earnings. (JPM) gets an entire wealth management business, lock, stock, and barrel. Indeed, CEO Jamie Diamond was almost embarrassed by what a great deal he got.
It was the deal of the century, a true gift for the ages. If this is the model going forward, you want to load the boat with every big bank share out there.
And the amazing thing was that (JPM) made the highest bid among a half dozen contenders.
Along with Health Care, banking is the last unconsolidated US industry. We have five railroads, four airlines, three trucking companies, three telephone companies, two cell phone providers….and 4,000 banks?
Other countries get by with much less. England has five major banks, Australia four, and Germany two, one of which goes bankrupt every decade (I’m not naming names). America’s financial system is an anachronism of its federal system where each of the 50 states is treated like a mini country.
The net net of this will be a massive capital drain from the entire country to New York where the big banks are concentrated. Local economies in the Midwest and the South will collapse for lack of funding. The West Coast will be OK with behemoth technology companies spinning off gigantic cash flows.
The other big story here is the dramatic change in the administration’s antitrust policy. Until now, it has opposed every large merger as an undue concentration of economic power. Then suddenly, the second largest bank merger in history took place on a weekend, and there will be more to come.
All it takes is a Twitter run by depositors. Every weekend has become a waiting game for the foreseeable future.
Needless to say, this makes all the big banks a screaming buy. Hoover up every one of the coming dip, including (JPM), (BAC), (C), and (WFC).
Big is beautiful.
To prove I am not perfect, my position in First Republic Bank (FRC) still sits on my broker statement a week after it filed for bankruptcy, dead, moribund, and worthless as if it is some form of punishment. It’s a very small position but it stings nonetheless.
It’s like they want to punish me for leading them astray. They have been copying my trades for ages without paying for them and I hope they took a big one in (FRC).
So far in May, I have managed a modest +0.55% profit. My 2023 year-to-date performance is now at an eye-popping +62.30%. The S&P 500 (SPY) is up only a miniscule +8.40% so far in 2023. My trailing one-year return reached a 15-year high at +120.45% versus -3.67% for the S&P 500.
That brings my 15-year total return to +659.49%. My average annualized return has blasted up to +48.86%, another new high, some 2.79 times the S&P 500 over the same period.
Some 40 of my 43 trades this year have been profitable. My last 20 consecutive trade alerts have been profitable.
I initiated no new trades last week, content to run off existing profitable ones. With the Volatility Index at a two-year low at 15.78%, opportunities are few and far between. Those include both longs and shorts in Tesla (TSLA), a long in the bond market (TLT), and a short in the (QQQ).
That leaves me with only one remaining position, a short-dated long in the bond market. I now have a very rare 90% cash position due to the lack of high-return, low-risk trades.
The Fed Raises Rates 0.25%, likely the last such move in this cycle. Futures markets are now discounting a 25-basis point CUT by September, the beginning of a new decade-long falling rate cycle. The problem is that AI is creating more jobs than it is destroying, keeping the Fed fixated on the wrong data.
Nonfarm Payroll Jumps by 253,000, another hot number. The headline Unemployment Rate dropped to a half-century low of 3.4%. These figures suggest for rate hikes to come.
The JP Morgan Buys First Republic Bank from the FDIC, for $10.6 billion, thus wiping out the shareholders. It’s a huge win for (JPM), which picked up 87 branches and $90 billion in loans in the wealthiest part of the country, taking the share up $5. What you lost on (FRC) you made pack on (JPM) LEAPS. Live and learn. On to the next trade! The FDIC got out for nearly free, a big win for the government.
Government DefaultDate Moved Up to June 1, by US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, smacking the bond market for three points. The House remains an albatross around the bond market’s debt.
Europe Ekes Out 0.1% Growth in Q1, versus a 1.1% rate for the US. This is despite the drag of the Ukraine War, energy shortages, high inflation, and Brexit. What’s the difference between the US and Europe? We allow immigrants who become customers, while the continent doesn’t.
You Only Need to Buy Seven Stocks This Year, as the rest are going nowhere. That include (AAPL), (GOOGL), (META), (AMZN), (TSLA), (NVDA), (CRM). Watch out when the next rotation broadens out to the rest of the market.
Is Volatility Bottoming Now? The Fed announcement of a 25 basis point hike on Wednesday could end the move up in stocks. After that, shares will only have an imminent debt default and US government downgrade to focus on. ($VIX) seven-week fade will end that revisit the old highs in the high $20’s. Great shorting opportunities are setting up.
Oil (USO) Crashes 5% on US debt default fears in the biggest drop since January. This is the worst asset class to own going into a recession. EV competition is also starting to take a bite. No gas needed here. $66 a barrel here we come.
More Tesla Price Cuts to Come, with swelling inventories forcing Musk’s hand. The only consolation is that Detroit will suffer more. Musk is cutting profits while the big three are accelerating losses. Tesla has excess inventory for the first time in its 20-year history.
Apple (AAPL) Earnings Beat, led by stronger than expected Q1 iPhone sales at $53.1 billion. EPS came in at $1.53 versus $1.42 expected, revenues at $94.84 billion versus $92.96. Mac and iPad sales are down YOY. Services rose 5.3%. Apple bought back a stunning $90 billion of its own shares and paid dividends. The shares popped $3. The long-term growth play here is low prices phone in India where second hand phone sales have been burgeoning. That's why Apple is now offering to buy your old phone. Next stop: New Delhi.
My Ten-Year View
When we come out the other side of the recession, we will be perfectly poised to launch into my new American Golden Age, or the next Roaring Twenties. The economy decarbonizing and technology hyper-accelerating, creating enormous investment opportunities. The Dow Average will rise by 800% to 240,000 or more in the coming decade. The new America will be far more efficient and profitable than the old.
Dow 240,000 here we come!
On Monday, May 8 at 7:30 AM EST, the Consumer Inflation Expectations are out.
On Tuesday, May 9 at 6:00 AM, the NFIB Business Optimism Index is announced. On Wednesday, May 10 at 11:00 AM, the US Inflation rate is printed. On Thursday, May 11 at 8:30 AM, the Weekly Jobless Claims are announced. We also get the Producer Price Index.
On Friday, May 12 at 8:30, the University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index for April is released.
As for me, I have been going down memory lane looking at my old travel photos looking for new story ideas and I hit the jackpot.
Most people collect postcards from their foreign travels. I collect lifetime bans from whole countries.
During the 1970s, The Economist magazine of London sent me to investigate the remote country of Nauru, one half degree south of the equator in the middle of the Pacific Ocean.
At the time, they had the world’s highest per capita income due to the fact that the island was entirely composed of valuable bird guano essential for agriculture. Before the Haber-Bosch Process to convert nitrogen into ammonia was discovered, guano was the world’s sole source of high grade fertilizer.
So I packed my camera, extra sunglasses, and a couple of pairs of shorts and headed for the most obscure part of the world. That involved catching Japan Airlines from Tokyo to Hawaii, Air Micronesia to Majuro in the Marshall Islands, and Air Nauru to the island nation in question.
There was a problem in Nauru. Calculating the market value of the bird crap leaving the island, I realized it in no way matched the national budget. It should have since the government owned the guano mines.
Whenever numbers don’t match up, I get interested.
I managed to wrangle an interview with the president of the country in the capital city of Demigomodu. It turns out that was no big deal as visitors were so rare in the least visited country in the world that he met with everyone!
When the president ducked out to take a call, I managed to steal a top-secret copy of the national budget. I took it back to my hotel and read it with great interest.
I discovered that the president’s wife had been commandeering Boeing 727s from Air Nauru to go on lavish shopping expeditions to Sydney, Australia where she was blowing $200,000 a day on jewelry, designer clothes, and purses, all at government expense. Just when I finished reading, there was a heavy knock on the door. The police had come to arrest me.
It didn’t take long for missing budget to be found. I was put on trial, sentenced to death for espionage, and locked up to await my fate. The trial took 20 minutes.
Then one morning I was awoken by the rattling of keys. My editor at The Economist, the late Peter Martin, had made a call and threatened the intervention of the British government. Visions of Her Majesty’s Navy loomed on the horizon.
I was put in handcuffs and placed on the next plane out of the country, a non-stop for Brisbane Australia. When I was seated next to an Australian passenger, he asked “Jees, what did you do mate, kill someone?” On arrival, I sent the story to the Australian papers.
I dined out on that story for years.
Alas, things have not gone well for Nauru in the intervening 50 years. The guano is all gone, mined to exhaustion. It is often cited as an environmental disaster. The population has rocketed from 4,000 to 10,000. Per capita incomes have plunged from $60,000 a year to $10,000. The country is now a ward of the Australian government to keep the Chinese from taking it over.
If you want to learn more about Nauru, which many believe to be a fictitious country, please click here.
As for me, I think I’ll pass. I don’t ever plan to visit Nauru again. Once lucky, twice forewarned.
Stay healthy,
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/oceana-may2023.png6861024Mad Hedge Fund Traderhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMad Hedge Fund Trader2023-05-08 09:02:522023-05-08 12:00:34The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or The Golden Age of Big Banking has Just Begun!
It’s clear that the cost of gaining each incremental load of revenue is a lot harder than it used to be for Meta (META) platforms.
This is why expenses have exploded out of control, but I wouldn’t say that it’s time to take profits because they benefit from the “too big to fail” mantra just like other systemically important stocks.
I don’t believe they will rekindle sales growth of yore because there isn’t anything on the horizon that strikes me as something that would be a game changer.
The metaverse which they are sinking a fortune into has turned into a black hole of capital.
CEO Mark Zuckerberg himself couldn’t explain on the conference call when there would be tangible results that would deliver help to the bottom line.
That means open-ended funding to R&D and that is not what you want to hear from shareholders.
The pay-as-you-go elements to this don’t bode well, because they still don’t understand how they can monetize AI.
The silver lining here is that Meta is still quite profitable.
The top line of $28.6 billion was up 3% year over year.
It was the first year-over-year revenue growth Meta has been able to muster since the first quarter of last year. Per-share earnings of $2.20 also topped the consensus of $2.02.
Sales guidance for the quarter currently underway was also better than expected, with the company forecasting a top line of somewhere between $29.5 billion and $32 billion.
Q1's net income of $5.7 billion is 24% less than the bottom line from the first quarter of 2022 showing that even though they make a lot of money, profitability is slowing.
While Meta did sequentially add 60 million daily users to its services last quarter, most of that growth came from the Asia-Pacific market or the "rest of the world" - not Europe, Canada, or the U.S.
Those two markets experience the lowest ARPU (average revenue per user) figures among all the ones Meta serves.
And in both of those cases, ARPU figures have been essentially stagnant since the second quarter of last year.
It’s increasingly worrisome that the growth part of META is low quality.
Zuckerberg knows that it’s a fight to the bottom with his existing business which is why he is hell-bent on making the metaverse work.
Don’t forget that META shares fell from $360 per share last year and many investors can describe the recent price action as a reversion to the mean.
Expect higher costs to eat into META’s bottom line, but not so damaging that it will kill the business model.
The gains are there to be had, but don’t expect any high growth to come from META – those days are essentially over.
META will most likely grind higher and I do believe investors should buy the dip when available.
When the trend isn’t broken, then don’t fight against it.
Don’t forget they will benefit from another tailwind of end of 2023 rate cuts.
Tech business models aren’t as good as they used to be, but that doesn’t mean these stocks won’t go up.
A tepid META receiving investor love also shows how bad things are at the bottom of the barrel from SPACS to lockdown darlings.
Small growth stocks have little to no chance to compete moving forward so investors should only focus on “too big to fail” tech stocks in a world of higher rates.
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 Trader2023-05-01 16:02:442023-06-07 00:33:20Grinding Higher
This is a seven-stock tech market and there is no point to getting exotic and buying something aside from these 7.
That is what the price action is telling us.
Four of the seven are no other than tech overlords Alphabet (GOOGL), Amazon, (AMZN), Microsoft (MSFT), and Meta Platforms (META). These four Big Tech stocks alone account for 41% of the S&P 500's 2023 gain.
The other three are Apple (AAPL), which reports next week, Nvidia (NVDA), and Tesla (TSLA) stock.
These seven account for 86% of the S&P 500's 2023 gain.
These seven Big Tech stocks have essentially made the market this year and everybody else is dragging behind kicking and screaming.
Part of the great performance has to do with the market's oversold nature in 2022.
Rarely does a market operate at the extremes for so long.
These seven have done more than bounce back.
The January Effect is a seasonal increase in stock prices throughout the month of January. The increase in demand for stocks in January is often preceded by a decrease in prices during the month of December, in part due to tax-loss harvesting.
Second, many of these tech companies have been aggressively cutting costs.
I would even say again that Facebook cutting 25% of staff since 2022 is not enough.
Get rid of 80% like Twitter did.
Even more important, the world's most advanced AI models are coming together with the world's most universal user interface - natural language - to create a new era of computing.
Microsoft helped kick off Big Tech's AI obsession with its multi-year, multi-billion dollar investment in ChatGPT developer OpenAI.
MSFT has since implemented versions of OpenAI's technology in its Edge browser, Bing search engine, Microsoft 365 productivity software, and cybersecurity offerings.
Microsoft leading the AI means that rival Alphabet's Google (GOOGL) is playing catch up. Amazon (AMZN), meanwhile, is working to bring generative AI to its services, while Facebook parent Meta (META) is piecing together teams to kick-start its own efforts.
And while Microsoft’s stock has seemingly benefited from both the AI hype and overall market rebound after a rough 2022, the company's main growth driver continues to be its cloud computing efforts in its Azure unit.
But that growth has drastically cratered over the last year. In Q3 2022, Microsoft reported Azure growth of 46% year-over-year. But that's since fallen each quarter, landing at 27% in Q3 2023.
Part of the reason for this decline was large customers pulling back on spending as higher interest rates challenged global growth. Microsoft is also contending with scarce PC sales, as demand from consumers and business customers falls from pandemic-era highs.
It’s easy to say that tech has fared quite well this year.
However, peel back the layers and the lack of participation in this tech rally is highly worrisome.
In a winner take all economy, we have never been reliant on a small group of stocks to save us from collapse.
Interest rates as high as they mean that without a strong balance sheet, it is tough sledding out there for the growth companies.
In the short term, I fully expect tech companies with poor fundamentals to struggle and show minimal price appreciation as recession risks pile up.
These 7 should be a fortress for investors looking to protect their wealth.
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 Trader2023-04-26 16:02:142023-05-02 00:40:32The Fortress
Artificial Intelligence (AI) has become a crowd-pleaser and is taking oxygen away from crypto and blockchain.
What has initiated this trend?
Sam Altman and Open AI’s ChatGPT.
Altman wanted to create a non-profit that would use AI technology for the greater good of humanity. His mission was backed by Tesla’s Elon Musk and LinkedIn co-founder Reid Hoffman, thereby ensuring the success of its genesis.
Upon its launch, in just one week, one million users quickly signed up.
ChatGPT can create persuasive marketing messages, ad copy, and complex computer programs.
Altman’s venture may be even considered a challenge to the most established tech giants, such as Google (GOOGL). At a $29 billion valuation, Chat GPT is grabbing attention. Venture capital firms are already in negotiations to acquire a stake in OpenAI.
Despite the NASDAQ’s decline, OpenAI has achieved unprecedented success and a remarkable valuation.
Is ChatGPT only for the sophisticated investor?
No, you can invest in this space via a publicly traded fund that has indirect exposure to ChatGPT. Deep pockets are not necessary.
Microsoft (MSFT) has recently made a $13 billion investment in Open AI, which will cement the tech giant’s partnership. This new alliance will provide critical funding to OpenAI and enable could computing power to run increasingly complex models. Microsoft plans to use OpenAI’s technology in a variety of products, including Bing’s search engine and Microsoft Design.
Nvidia Corporation (NVDA) plays a pivotal role in the tech industry. It is best known for its production of top-end graphics chips, which serve as an important source for AI software models, but its role in the technology space may evolve rapidly as it expands into the developing AI industry.
Although we are in the early stages of the AI movement, many businesses have already grabbed AI and strapped it to their core business. It has become a growing trend and is making those businesses a ton of money. AI is growing far faster than anyone realized and the impact on corporate earnings will be enormous.
BigBear.ai Holdings Inc. (BBAI) has seen its share price increase fivefold because of its use of AI to assist clients in data analysis.
A media company called BuzzFeed Inc. (BZFD), saw its stock price increase more than 300% in just two days after announcing its plan to integrate AI-based content into its “core business.”
C3.ai Inc. (AI) is one of the top-performing software makers, with a 77% rally last month, driven by customers like Raytheon Technologies Corp (RTX) and Baker Hughes Co (BKR).
Another company, LivePerson Inc (LPSN), is attracting much notice with its plans to integrate generative capabilities from OpenAI, causing its shares to surge by as much as 19%.
Baidu (BIDU) also has plans to launch its own version of Chat GPT, but its stock price isn’t impressed yet.
ChatGPT offers impressive advances in the field of AI, which can be helpful in performing various personal and professional tasks. Growth and innovation in this area is certain.
AI technology is powerful, useful, and beneficial for our modern society if used responsibly.
Investment in this area should be done thoughtfully and after much careful research. Microsoft (MSFT) and Nvidia (NVDA) would be excellent choices to start your investment in this space.
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/robot.jpg300532Mad Hedge Fund Traderhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMad Hedge Fund Trader2023-04-20 11:02:312023-04-20 14:26:21Has AI Replaced the Blockchain Craze?
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