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Tag Archive for: (NVDA)

Mad Hedge Fund Trader

January 20 Biweekly Strategy Webinar Q&A

Diary, Newsletter

Below please find subscribers’ Q&A for the January 20 Mad Hedge Fund Trader Global Strategy Webinar broadcast from Incline Village, NV.

 Q: What will a significant rise in long term bond yields (TLT) do to PE ratios in general, and high tech specifically?

A: Well, the key question here is: what is “significant”. Is “significant” a move in a 10-year from 120 to 150, which may be only months off? I don’t think that will have any impact whatsoever on the stock market. I think to really give us a good scare on interest rates, you need to get the 10-year up to 3.0%, and that might be two years off. We’re also going to be testing some new ground here: how high can bond interest rates go while the Fed keeps overnight rates at 25 basis points? They can go up more, but not enough to hurt the stock market. So, I think we essentially have a free run on stocks for two more years.

Q: What about the Shiller price earnings ratio?

A: Currently,  it’s 34.5X and you want to completely ignore anything from Shiller on stock prices. He’s been bearish on stocks for 6 years now and ignoring him is the best thing you can do for your portfolio. If you had listed to him, you would have missed the last 15,000 Dow ($INDU) points. Someday, he’ll be right, but it may be when the market goes from 50,000 to 40,000, so again, I haven't found the Shiller price earnings ratio to be useful. It’s one of those academic things that looks great on paper but is terrible in practice.

Q: Do you see any opportunity in China financials with the change of administration, like the (CHIX)?

A: I always avoid financials in China because everyone knows they have massive, defaulted loans on their books that the government refuses to force them to recognize like we do here. So, it’s one of those things where they look good on paper, but you dig deeper and find out why they’re really so cheap. Better to go with the big online companies like Baidu (BIDU) and Alibaba (BABA).

Q: Is it too late to enter copper?

A: No, the high in the last cycle for Freeport McMoRan (FCX) was $50 dollars and I think we’re only in the mid $ ’20s now, so you could get another double. Remember, these commodity stocks have discounted recovery that hasn’t even started yet. Once you do get an actual recovery, you could get another enormous move and that's what could take the Dow to 120,000.

Q: Do you see the FANGs coming back to life with the earnings results?

A: I think it'll take more than just Netflix to do that. By the way, Netflix (NFLX) is starting to look like the Tesla of the media industry, so I’d get into Netflix on the next dip. You could get a surprise, out-of-nowhere double out of that anytime. But yes, FANGs will come to life. They've been in a correction for five months now, and we’ll see—it may be the end of the pandemic that causes these stocks to really take off. So that's why I'm running the barbell portfolio and buying the FANGs on weakness.

Q: Are you recommending LEAPS on gold (GLD) and silver (SLV)?

A: Absolutely yes, go out two years with your maturity, you might buy 120% out of the money. That's where you get your leverage on the LEAPS. Something like a (GLD) January 2023 $210-$220 in-the-money vertical bull call spread and generate a 500% profit by expiration.

Q: Do you foresee a cool off for semiconductors ($SOX) even though there's been recent news of shortages?

A: No, not really. There are so many people trying to get into these it’s incredible. And again, we may get a time correction where we sideline at the top and then break out again to the upside. This is classic in liquidity-driven markets, which is what we have in spades right now. Thanks to 5G, the number of chips in your everyday devices is about to increase tenfold, and it takes at least two years to build a new chip factory. So, keep buying (NVDA), (MU), and (AMD) on dips.

Q: Where are the best LEAPS prospects (Long Term Equity Participation Securities)?

A: That would have to be in technology—that's where the earnings growth is. If you go 20% out of the money on just about any big tech LEAPs two years out, to 2023 those will be worth 500% more at expiration.

Q: What about SPACs (Special Purpose Acquisition Company) now, as we’re getting up to five new SPACs a day?

A: My belief is that a SPAC is a vehicle that allows a manager to take out a 20% a year management fee instead of only 1%. And it's another aspect of the current mania we’re in that a lot of these SPACs are doubling on the first day—especially the electric vehicle-related SPACs. Also, a lot of these SPACs will never invest in anything, but just take the money and give it back to you in two years with no return when they can't find any good investments…. If you’re lucky. There's not a lot of bargains to be found out there by anyone, including SPAC managers.

Q: Does natural gas (UNG) fall into the same “avoid energy” narrative as oil?

A: Absolutely, yes. The only benefit of natural gas is it produces 50% less carbon dioxide than oil. However, you can't get gas without also getting oil (USO), as the two come out of the pipe at the same time; so I would avoid natural gas also. Gas and oil are also about to lose a large chunk, if not all, of their tax incentives, like the oil depletion allowance, which has basically allowed the entire oil industry to operate tax-free since the 1930s.

Q: What about hydrogen cars?

A: I don't really believe in the technology myself, and when you burn hydrogen, that also produces CO2. The problem with hydrogen is that it’s not a scalable technology. It’s like gasoline—you have to build stations all over the US to fuel the cars. Of course, it produces far less carbon than gas or natural gas, but it is hard to compete against electric power, which is scalable and there's already a massive electric grid in place.

Q: If you inherited $4 million today, would you cost average into (QQQ), (IWM), or (SPY)?

A: I would go into the ProShares Ultra Technology ETF (ROM), which is double the (QQQ); and if you really want to be conservative, put half your money into (QQQ) or (ROM), and then half into Berkshire Hathaway (BRK/A), which is basically a call option on the industrial and recovery economy. I know plenty of smart people who are doing exactly that.

Q: Is it weird to see oil, as well as green energy stocks, moving up?

A: No, that's actually how it works. The higher oil and gas prices go, the more economical it is to switch over to green energy. So, they always move in sync with each other.

Q: I heard rumors that Amazon (AMZN) is likely to raise Prime’s annual fee by $10-20 a year in 2021. Will that be a catalyst for the stock to go higher?

A: Yes. For every $10 dollars per person in Prime revenue, Amazon makes $2 billion more in net profit. I would say that's a very strong argument for the stock going up and maybe what breaks it out of its current 6-month range. By the way, Amazon is wildly undervalued, and my long-term target is $5,000.

Q: Do you think that the spike in Apple (AAPL) MacBook purchases means that computers will overtake iPhones as the revenue driver for Apple in 2021, or is the phone business too big?

A: The phone business is too big, and 5G will cause iPhone sales to grow exponentially. Remember, the iPhones themselves are getting better. I just bought the 12G Pro, and the performance over the old phone is incredible. So yeah, iPhones get bigger and better, while laptops only grow to the extent that people need an actual laptop to work on in a fixed office. Is that a supercomputer in your pocket, or are you just glad to see me?

Q: Share buybacks dried up because of revenue headwinds; do you think they will come back in a massive wave, giving more life to equities?

A: Absolutely, yes. Banks, which have been banned from buybacks for the past year, are about to go back into the share buyback business. Netflix has also announced that they will go buy their shares for the first time in 10 years, and of course, Apple is still plodding away with about $100 or $200 million a year in share buybacks, so all of that accelerates. The only ones you won't see doing buybacks are airlines and Boeing (BA) because they have such a mountain of debt to crawl out from before they can get back into aggressive buybacks.

Q: Interest rates are at historic lows; the smartest thing we can do is act big.

A: That’s absolutely right; you want to go big now when we’re all suffering so we can go small later and run a balanced budget or even pay down national debt if the economy grows strong enough. The last person to do that was Bill Clinton, who paid down national debt in small quantities in ‘98 and ‘99.

Q: What do you think about General Motors (GM)?

A: They really seem to be making a big effort to get into electric cars. They said they're going to bring out 25 new electric car models by 2025, and the problem is that GM is your classic “hour late, dollar short” company; always behind the curve because they have this immense bureaucracy which operates as if it is stuck in a barrel of molasses. I don’t see them ever competing against Tesla (TSLA) because the whole business model there seems like it’s stuck in molasses, whereas Tesla is moving forward with new technology at warp speed. I think when Tesla brings out the solid-state battery, which could be in two years, they essentially wipe out the entire global car industry, and everybody will have to either make Tesla cars under license from Tesla—which they said they are happy to do—or go out of business. Having said that, you could get another double in (GM) before everyone figures out what the game is.

Q: Will you update the long-term portfolio?

A: Yes, I promise to update it next week, as long as you promise me that there won’t be another insurrection next week. It’s strictly a time issue. After last year being the most exhausting year in history, this year is proving to be even more exhausting!

Q: Do you see a February pullback?

A: Either a small pullback or a time correction sideways.

Q: Do you think the Zoom (ZM) selloff will continue, or is it done now that the pandemic is hopefully ending?

A: It’s natural for a tech stock to give up one third after a 10X move. It might sell off a little bit more, but like it or not, Zoom is here to stay; it’s now a permanent part of our lives. They’re trying to grow their business as fast as they can, they’re hiring like crazy, so they’re going to be a big factor in our lives. The stock will eventually reflect that.

Good Luck and Stay Healthy.

John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader

https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/john-thomas-8.png 422 564 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2021-01-22 11:02:522021-01-22 11:39:39January 20 Biweekly Strategy Webinar Q&A
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

December 21, 2020

Tech Letter

Mad Hedge Technology Letter
December 21, 2020
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:

(THE BEST WAY TO SUPERCHARGE YOUR TECH PORTFOLIO)
(NVDA), (PLTR), (AMD), (APPL), (OTC:SFTBF), (INTC), (QCOM)

https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png 0 0 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2020-12-21 12:04:322020-12-21 12:11:55December 21, 2020
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

The Best Way to Supercharge Your Tech Portfolio

Tech Letter

Superiority is mainly about taking complicated data and finding perfect solutions for it. Trading in technology stocks is no different.

Investing in software-based cloud stocks has been one of the seminal themes I have promulgated since the launch of the Mad Hedge Technology Letter way back in February 2018.

Well, if you thought every tech letter until now has been useless, this is the one that should whet your appetite.

Instead of racking your brain to find the optimal cloud stock to invest in, I have a quick fix for you and your friends.

Invest in The WisdomTree Cloud Computing Fund (WCLD) which aims to track the price and yield performance, before fees and expenses, of the BVP Nasdaq Emerging Cloud Index (EMCLOUD).

What Is Cloud Computing?

The “cloud” refers to the aggregation of information online that can be accessed from anywhere, on any device remotely.

Yes, something like this does exist and we have been chronicling the development of the cloud since this tech letter’s launch.

The cloud is the concept powering the “shelter-at-home” trade which has been hotter than hot in 2020.

Cloud companies provide on-demand services to a centralized pool of information technology (IT) resources via a network connection.

Even though cloud computing already touches a significant portion of our everyday lives, the adoption is on the verge of overwhelming the rest of the business world due to advancements in artificial intelligence and the Internet of Things (IoT) hyper-improving efficiencies.

The Cloud Software Advantage

Cloud computing has particularly transformed the software industry.

Over the last decade, cloud Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) businesses have dominated traditional software companies as the new industry standard for deploying and updating software. Cloud-based SaaS companies provide software applications and services via a network connection from a remote location, whereas traditional software is delivered and supported on-premise and often manually. I will give you a list of differences to several distinct fundamental advantages for cloud versus traditional software.

Product Advantages

Speed, Ease, and Low Cost of Implementation – cloud software is installed via a network connection; it doesn’t require the higher cost of on-premise infrastructure setup and installation.

Efficient Software Updates – upgrades and support are deployed via a network connection, which shifts the burden of software maintenance from the client to the software provider.

Easily Scalable – deploying via a network connection allows cloud SaaS businesses to grow as their units increase, with the ability to expand services to more users or add product enhancements with ease. Client acquisition can happen 24/7 and cloud SaaS companies can more easily expand into international markets.

Business Model Advantages

High Recurring Revenue – cloud SaaS companies enjoy a subscription-based revenue model with smaller and more frequent transactions, while traditional software businesses rely on a single, large, upfront transaction. This model can result in a more predictable, annuity-like revenue streams making it easy for CFOs to solve long-term financial solutions.

High Client Retention with Longer Revenue Periods – cloud software becomes embedded in client workflow, resulting in higher switching costs and client retention. Importantly, many clients prefer the pay-as-you-go transaction model, which can lead to longer periods of recurring revenue as upselling product enhancements does not require an additional sales cycle.

Lower Expenses – cloud SaaS companies can have lower R&D costs because they don’t need to support various types of networking infrastructure at each client location.

I believe the product and business model advantages of cloud SaaS companies have historically led to better margins, growth, higher free cash flow, and efficiency characteristics as compared to non-cloud software companies.

How does the WCLD ETF select its indexed cloud companies?

Each company must satisfy critical criteria such as they must derive the majority of revenue from business-oriented software products, as determined by the following checklist.

+ Provided to customers through a cloud delivery model – e.g., hosted on remote and multi-tenant server architecture, accessed through a web browser or mobile device, or consumed as an application programming interface (API).

+ Provided to customers through a cloud economic model – e.g., as a subscription-based, volume-based, or transaction-based offering Annual revenue growth, of at least:

+ 15% in each of the last two years for new additions

+ 7% for current securities in at least one of the last two years

Some of the stocks that would epitomize the characteristics of a WCLD stock are Salesforce, Microsoft, Amazon-- I mean, they are all up, you know, well over 100% from the nadir we saw in March and contain the emerging growth traits that make this ETF so robust.

If you peel back the label and you look at the contents of many tech portfolios, they tend to favor some of the large-cap names like Amazon, not because they are “big” but because the numbers behave like emerging growth companies even when the law of large numbers indicate that to push the needle that far in the short-term is a gravity-defying endeavor.

We all know quite well that Amazon isn't necessarily a direct play on cloud computing, but the elements of its cloud business are nothing short of brilliant.

But ETF funds like WCLD, what they look to do is to cue off of pure plays and include pure plays that are growing faster than the broader tech market at large. So you're not going to necessarily see the vanilla tech of the world in that portfolio. You're going to see a portfolio that's going to have a little bit more sort of explosive nature to it, names with a little more mojo, a little bit more risk because you're focusing on smaller names that have the possibility to go parabolic and gift you a 10-bagger.

One stock that has the chance of a 10-bagger is my call on Palantir (PLTR).

Palantir is a tech firm that builds and deploys software platforms for the intelligence community in the United States to assist in counterterrorism investigations and operations, and my call was to buy them at $10 after it’s IPO, it's up to $26 and has an easy pathway to $50.

This is one of the no-brainers that procure revenue from Democrat and Republican administrations even though its CEO Alex Karp has been caught on video making fun of the current administration’s leaders.

In a global market where the search for yield couldn’t be tougher right now, right-sizing a tech portfolio to target those extraordinary, extra-salacious tech growth companies is one of the few ways to produce alpha without overleveraging.

No doubt there will be periods of volatility, but if a long-term horizon is something suited for you, this super-growth strategy is a winner and don’t forget about PLTR while you’re at it.

cloud software

 

 

cloud software

 

cloud software

 

cloud software

https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png 0 0 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2020-12-21 11:02:042020-12-23 17:21:23The Best Way to Supercharge Your Tech Portfolio
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

December 18, 2020

Tech Letter

Mad Hedge Technology Letter
December 18, 2020
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:

(TECH IN 2021)
(ZM), (WORK), (NVDA), (AMD), (QCOM), (SQ), (PYPL), (INTU), (PANW), (OKTA), (CRWD), (SHOP), (MELI), (ETSY), (NOW), (AKAM), (TWLO)

https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png 0 0 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2020-12-18 11:04:112020-12-18 12:21:14December 18, 2020
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

Tech in 2021

Tech Letter

The tech sector has been through a whirlwind in 2020, and if investors didn’t lose their shirt in March and sell at the bottom, many of them should have ended the year in the green.

My prediction at the end of 2019 that cybersecurity and health cloud companies would outperform came true.

What I didn’t get right was that almost every other tech company would double as well.

Saying that video conferencing Zoom (ZM) is the Tech Company of 2020 is not a revelation at this point, but it shows how quickly a hot software tool can come to the forefront of the tech ecosystem.

M&A was as hot as can be as many cash-heavy cloud firms try to keep pace with the Apples and Googles of the tech world like Salesforce’s purchase of workforce collaboration app Slack (WORK).

Not only has the cloud felt the huge tailwinds from the pandemic, but hardware companies like HP and Dell have been helped by the massive demand for devices since the whole world moved online in March.

What can we expect in 2021?

Although I don’t foresee many tech firms making 100% returns like in 2020, they are still the star QB on the team and are carrying the rest of the market on their back.

That won’t change and in fact, tech will need smaller companies to do more heavy lifting come 2021.

The only other sector to get through completely unscathed from the pandemic is housing, and unsurprisingly, it goes hand in hand with converted remote offices that wield the software that I talk about.

The world has essentially become silos of remote offices and we plug into the central system to do business with each other with this thing called the internet.

In 2021, this concept accelerates, and cloud companies could easily check in with 20%-30% return by 2022. The true “growth” cloud firms will see 40% returns if external factors stay favorable.

This year was the beginning of the end for many non-tech businesses and just because vaccines are rolling out across the U.S. doesn’t mean that everyone will ditch the masks and congregate in tight, indoor places. 

There is nothing stopping tech from snatching more turf from the other sectors and the coast couldn’t be clearer minus the few dealing with anti-trust issues.

I can tell you with conviction that Facebook, Google, Apple, and Amazon have run out of time and meaningful regulation will rear its ugly head in 2021.

We are already seeing the EU try to ratchet up the tax coffers and lawsuits up the wazoo on Facebook are starting to mount.

Eventually, they will all be broken up which will spawn even more shareholder value.

Even Fed Chair Jerome Powell told us that he thinks stocks aren’t expensive based on how low rates have become.

That is the green light to throw new money at growth stocks unless the Fed signal otherwise.

As we head into the 5G world, I would not bet against the semiconductor trade and the likes of Nvidia (NVDA), AMD (AMD), Qualcomm (QCOM) should overperform in 2021.

Communication is the glue of society and communications-as-a-platform app Twilio (TWLO) will improve on its 2020 form along with cloud apps that make the internet more efficient and robust like Akamai (AKAM).

Workflow cloud app ServiceNow (NOW) is another one that will continue its success.

The uninterrupted shift to the cloud will not stop in 2021 and will be a strong growth driver for numerous tech companies next year.

I will not say this is a digital revolution, but as corporate executives realize they haven’t spent enough on the cloud in the lead-up to the pandemic and must now play catch-up in order to satisfy new demands in the business.

The most recent CIO survey was the thesis that cloud and digital adoption at 10% of enterprise and 15% of consumer spend entering 2020 would continue to accelerate post-pandemic and into 2021-2022.

A key dynamic playing out in the tech world over the next 12 to 18 months is the secular growth areas around cloud and cybersecurity that are seeing eye-popping demand trends.

Consumers will still be stuck at home, meaning e-commerce will still be big winners in 2021 such as Shopify (SHOP), Etsy (ETSY), and MercadoLibre (MELI).

The reliance on e-commerce will open the door for more tech companies to participate in the digital flow of transactions and the U.S. will finally catch up to the Chinese idea of paying through contactless instruments and not cards.

This highly benefits U.S. fintech companies like Square (SQ) and PayPal (PYPL). Intuit (INTU) and its accounting software is another niche player that will dominate.  

Intuit most recently bought Credit Karma for $8.1 billion signaling deeper penetration into fintech.

Since we are all splurging online, we need cybersecurity to protect us and the likes of Palo Alto Networks (PANW), Okta (OKTA), and CrowdStrike Holdings, Inc. (CRWD).

The side effect of the accelerating shift to digital and cloud are troves of data that need to be stored, thus anything related to big data will also outperform.

Most of the information created (97%) has historically been stored, processed, or archived.

As new mountains of digital gold are created, we expect AI will have an increasingly critical role.

I believe that 2021 will finally see the integration of 5G technology ushering in another wave of digital migration and data generation that the world has never seen before and above are some of the tech companies that will make out well.

The average household is using 38x the amount of internet data they were using ten years ago and this is just the beginning.

 

tech 2021

 

tech 2021

 

 

https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png 0 0 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2020-12-18 11:02:262020-12-19 00:05:37Tech in 2021
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

December 14, 2020

Tech Letter

Mad Hedge Technology Letter
December 14, 2020
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:

(NVIDIA’S SHOW OF FORCE)
(NVDA), (AMD), (APPL), (OTC:SFTBF), (INTC), (QCOM)

https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png 0 0 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2020-12-14 12:04:142020-12-14 12:39:46December 14, 2020
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

Nvidia's Show of Force

Tech Letter

One of the best buy and hold tech stock has to be Nvidia (NVDA).

They are positioned at the vanguard of every major cutting-edge technology in the world such as self-driving technology, data center, and artificial intelligence.

Their cash cow business of manufacturing GPUs (graphics processing unit) which are essential to video gaming has been bolstered by the shelter-at-home movement.

Video games as an activity or something to just pass the time has never been so popular and Nvidia is the best of breed in this department.

The key takeaway from Nvidia’s asset portfolio is the diversity.

They aren’t beholden to any one division and I wouldn’t bet anytime soon that video games are going to go out of fashion because of the generational tailwind occurring.

In fact, the underlying Nvidia stock has risen more than 120% in 2020 and semiconductors have proven to be an astute place to put your money in during the pandemic.

The same goes for competitive rivals such as Advanced Micro Devices (AMD), Intel (INTC), and Qualcomm (QCOM) who explore some of those same markets.

Nvidia counts Amazon (AMZN) Web Services as a customer for data-center chips. It is partnering with VMware (VMW) and Amazon on an AI-driven cloud platform for big businesses.

Be mindful that semiconductor stocks are volatile because of the boom-bust nature of their business cycle.

Global chip sales cratered in late 2018 and fell 12% in 2019.

They rallied early this year on signs of an industry recovery and on a U.S.-China trade deal, then sold off on coronavirus fears.

The trade war has also thrown a spanner in the works of global chip production.

Production was first halted in China and then put global economies under strain.

Despite the pandemic, the semiconductor industry will return to growth in 2020.

Chip sales will rise by 5.1% to $433 billion this year and accelerate to 8.4% in 2021.

The spread of 5G wireless networks is a key catalyst.

Moving forward, it’s highly likely that U.S. lawmakers maintain an anti-China doctrine, and Nvidia and AMD derive only 1% to 2% of revenue from Huawei.

In fact, other companies are more exposed like Cisco and Intel.

How well is Nvidia doing?

They increased revenue by 57% year over year in the third quarter predominately due to its data center business, which grew revenue by 162% over the same period.

In Q3, the data center division accounted for $1.9 billion of the company's $4.7 billion of revenue.

Nvidia is also growing through acquisitions with its blockbuster pending $40 billion acquisition of chip design licensor ARM Holdings from Softbank (OTC:SFTBF).

ARM’s acquisition will help NVIDIA maintain the best of breed quality through 2021 and beyond. 

That is important because the semiconductor industry is becoming more cutthroat with many big players sourcing chips in-house after deeply investing in this technology.

Apple (AAPL) recently unveiled its own stable of Mac processors, the M1, making its debut in late 2020. Manufacturing chips is historically a capital-intensive activity, and new chips don’t roll out that fast. In any case, cash-rich companies the size of Google and Apple have the firepower to pull this off.

ARM holds many unique patents forcing many companies to license from them, Apple can customize those designs, and the actual fabrication is outsourced to Taiwan Semiconductor (TSM), the largest and most technologically advanced semiconductor fabricator in the world.

In this specific case, Intel is the direct loser from the production of Apple M1 chips and at this point, this is becoming an existential crisis for Intel.

The acquisition of ARM is a gamechanger, and not just because NVIDIA would gain access to new markets like CPUs for mobile as early as 2021.

Integrating with ARM signals NVIDIA's future shift toward licensing of technology - a far more stable business model than the traditionally cyclical nature of semiconductor industry sales driven by upgrade cycles.

It all comes down to the quality of NVIDIA's chips which remain highly competitive in secular growth areas of tech, such as data centers and artificial intelligence. This alone should keep NVIDIA high up investors' list for years to come.

Demand for the new Nvidia GeForce RTX GPU has been “overwhelming” and the company completed its Mellanox acquisition, a tech firm that sells adapters, switches, software, cables, and silicon for markets including high-performance computing, data centers, cloud computing, computer data storage, and financial services, in April, helping it to double down on their revenue drivers.

Sales for Nvidia's chips remain robust across some of the most desirable end markets and there is nothing meaningful out there to suggest that Nvidia won’t continue its overperformance next year even if the shelter-at-home economy stops.

I am highly bullish on Nvidia stock into 2021 and beyond.

 

Nvidia stock

 

Nvidia stock

https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png 0 0 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2020-12-14 12:02:472020-12-17 02:03:09Nvidia's Show of Force
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

November 16, 2020

Tech Letter



Mad Hedge Technology Letter
November 16, 2020
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:

(THE GOLD STANDARD OF U.S. SEMICONDUCTOR COMPANIES)
(NVDA)

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Mad Hedge Fund Trader

The Gold Standard of U.S. Semiconductor Companies

Tech Letter

Tech investors who want a sure-fire way to sleep well at night while holding tech stocks should consider one semiconductor stock that is a generational gamechanger.

Short-duration trades in chip companies are susceptible to major selloffs because of the inherent boom-bust nature of the chip market.

Combine that with geopolitical headwinds that make consistent contract negotiations a possible one-off activity making it difficult to decode the short-term movements of the underlying shares.

Even with all the difficulties, Nvidia (NVDA) is a must-own stock for anyone that has any ambition to overperform deploying a basket of tech stocks.

This is the gold standard of technology buttressed by a plethora of secular growth drivers.

There are not many companies out there recreating a significant smorgasbord of multiple long-term growth segments.

Nvidia’s cash cow is its secular growth in gaming and graphics chips plus the data center business.

But it also has skin in the game in AI and machine learning, autonomous driving, and professional graphics.

Not only do they participate in these segments, but they are downright beasts in every segment they take part in which validates the firm as a high-quality operational outfit.

Basically, the company’s GPU (graphics processing unit) offerings are the best in the business.

I tell my high school nephews to find a job at Nvidia in the future.

Even though competition has increased—how could it not?—we know Nvidia’s products are top-notch because its margins are better, and they are able to command a higher premium with no push back.

Accelerating growth is really the common denominator found across the myriad of segments.

I expect 44.6% total revenue growth this year to $15.8 billion.

This estimate stood at just $10.8 billion at the beginning of the year and thus, I have moved up my revenue forecasts by about 50%.

Revenue estimates increasing by $5 billion for this year confirm that Nvidia is one of the tech titans of the world.

Constant revenue upgrades are the hallmark of a healthy tech company and its parabolic rise is in the early innings.

And can you believe that this was a supposed down year because of the macroeconomic weakness?

Imagine what they could do during a “good” year?

Earnings are forecast to grow an even more stellar 57% to $9.11 per share this year.

This year, 2020, isn’t just a demand-driven event due to the novel coronavirus.

The runway is long on the supply side and the elevated demand for its products is just one piece of the puzzle.

Soon enough Nvidia (NVDA) will report quarterly results on Wednesday, November 18, and they will most likely confirm my hunch that the overperformance in 2020 will spill over into 2021 and beyond.

The company has been a prime beneficiary of the “shelter-at-home” driven secular trends such as gaming and data center.

The underlying stock has doubled to over $530 this year and I forecast Nvidia to deliver a solid beat and model above any extreme estimate, driven by an expectation of an extra week of revenue that may not be fully accounted for.

The unparalleled growth due to the renaissance in video games cannot be understated and now that a third wave in the U.S. and second wave in Europe is inevitable, gaming will be thrust into the limelight again.

Some of the segments that I see expanding rapidly are 153% year-over-year growth for Datacenter and a 27% year-over-year increase for Gaming, with the two segments making up 41% and 47% of sales, respectively.

Even though they continue to hit on all cylinders in an otherwise challenging macro environment, I feel the overall premium is reflected in its share price.

Even though operational execution is likely to be perfect, I don’t see much upside in the stock in the short-term and investors will need to use any 10% dip to buy and hold Nvidia long-term.

I don’t recommend short-duration trades in Nvidia because of the volatile nature of the price action.

This is a transformational tech institution and is absolutely worth owning.

 

nvidia

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Mad Hedge Fund Trader

October 30, 2020

Tech Letter



Mad Hedge Technology Letter
October 30, 2020
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:

(THE TWO CAN'T-MISS CHIP COMPANIES)
(NVDA), (AMD), (XLNX), (ARM)

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