Global Market Comments
February 14, 2024
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(HOW TO HANDLE THE FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 16 OPTIONS EXPIRATION),
(MSFT), (AMZN), (V), (PANW), (CCJ)
Global Market Comments
February 14, 2024
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(HOW TO HANDLE THE FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 16 OPTIONS EXPIRATION),
(MSFT), (AMZN), (V), (PANW), (CCJ)
Followers of the Mad Hedge Fund Trader alert service have the good fortune to own five deep-in-the-money options positions that expire on Friday, February 16 and I just want to explain to the newbies how to best maximize their profits.
This involves the:
Current Capital at Risk
Risk On
(MSFT) 2/$330-$340 call spread 10.00%
(AMZN) 2/$130-$135 call spread 10.00%
(V) 2/$240-$250 call spread 10.00%
(PANW) 2/$260-$270 call spread 10.00%
(CCJ) 2/$38-$41 call spread 10.00%
Risk Off
NO POSITIONS
Total Net Position 50.00%
Total Aggregate Position 50.00%
I’ll do the math for you on our deepest in-the-money position, the Amazon (AMZN) 2/$130-$135 call spread which I will almost certainly run into expiration.
Provided that we don’t have another monster move down in the market in two trading days, this position should expire at its maximum profit point.
So far, so good.
Your profit can be calculated as follows:
Profit: $5.00 expiration value - $4.30 cost = $0.70 net profit
(25 contracts X 100 contracts per option X $0.70 profit per option)
= $1,750 or 16.28% in 27 trading days.
Many of you have already emailed me asking what to do with these winning positions.
The answer is very simple. You take your left hand, grab your right wrist, pull it behind your neck, and pat yourself on the back for a job well done.
You don’t have to do anything.
Your broker (are they still called that?) will automatically use your long position to cover your short position, canceling out the total holdings.
The entire profit will be credited to your account on Monday morning February 19 and the margin freed up.
Some firms charge you a modest $10 or $15 fee for performing this service.
If you don’t see the cash show up in your account on Monday, get on the blower immediately and find it.
Although the expiration process is now supposed to be fully automated, occasionally machines do make mistakes. Better to sort out any confusion before losses ensue.
If you want to wimp out and close the position before the expiration, it may be expensive to do so. You can probably unload them pennies below their maximum expiration value.
Keep in mind that the liquidity in the options market understandably disappears, and the spreads substantially widen, when a security has only hours, or minutes until expiration on Friday. So, if you plan to exit, do so well before the final expiration at the Friday market close.
This is known in the trade as the “expiration risk.”
One way or the other, I’m sure you’ll do OK, as long as I am looking over your shoulder, as I will be, always. Think of me as your trading guardian angel.
I am going to hang back and wait for good entry points before jumping back in. It’s all about keeping that “Buy low, sell high” thing going.
I’m looking to cherry-pick my new positions going into the next quarter's end.
Take your winnings and go out and buy yourself a well-earned dinner. Just make sure it’s take-out. I want you to stick around.
Well done, and on to the next trade.
You Can’t Do Enough Research
Global Market Comments
February 12, 2024
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or RAISING MY YEAREND TARGET TO (SPX) $6,000)
(AAPL), (GOOGL), (META) (MSFT), (AMZN), (V), (PANW), (CCJ), (ARM), (USO), (XOM), (OXY), (INDA), (INDY), (FXI), (BABA), (NVDA), (TSA), (RCL)
When I announced my year-end target for the S&P 500 on the first of January, I knew it was cautious. That provided for only a 15% gain for 2024. Yet here we are a mere six weeks into the New Year, and we only have 10.4% to go.
That is with the six lead stocks, which account for 30% of the entire stock market capitalization, seeing earnings grow up to 300% annually. With that kind of growth, even $6,000 is looking overly conservative, even allowing for no multiple expansion whatsoever.
The top six stocks are over 11% YTD, while half of all S&P 500 stocks are down. A few friends of mine who are still alive and have been in the market for as long as I have never seen a market this concentrated. They are amazed, befuddled, and aghast, as am I.
And if you do want to buy big tech, you’re going to have to compete with the big tech companies themselves to do so. The buyback machine continues full speed ahead, with Apple (AAPL) Hoovering up $20.5 billion of its own shares, Alphabet (GOOGL) $16.1 billion, Meta (META) 6.3 billion, and Microsoft (MSFT) $4 billion.
I am a firm believer that markets will do whatever they have to do to screw the most people. So far this year it has done an admirable job doing just that, going up in a straight line with everyone underinvested and with $8 trillion on the sideline.
This is how markets will continue screwing most people. It keeps going up a little bit more. The NVIDIA earnings announcement due out on February 21 could be the ideal turning point.
Then the market suffers a ferocious correction, maybe 10% in a short period. Traders panic and dump all their positions. Then the (SPX) turns around at about $4,800 on a dime and then rockets all the way up to $6,000, frustrating investors once again.
I just thought you’d like to know.
I am usually cautious about ultra bears, but I picked up an interesting view last week about how long it may take the Chinese economy to recover.
During the US house bust from 2007 to 2012, the United States had 3 million excess unwanted homes weighing on the market like a dead weight, or about a seven-month oversupply. That was enough excess to cause the Great Recession, a 52% crash in the S&P 500, and the demise of thousands of American companies, including Lehman Brothers and Bear Stearns.
Today, China has a staggering 50 million excess homes in a population only four times larger than ours. That is a 15-year oversupply for the market. That means China could suffer a decade and a half of subpar growth and lagging stock markets. Don’t touch Chinese stocks even though they offer attractive single-digit multiples.
Why do you care? Because China is the world’s largest consumer and importer of most commodities, food, and energy. The stocks that specialize in these areas could be facing a long-term drag from the Middle Kingdom unless it is offset somewhere else.
The Chinese are only now discovering that the principal driver of their economic growth for the past 30 years has been US investment. President Xi has managed to scare that away with a hostile attitude towards America and saber-rattling over Taiwan. Last year for the first time the US imported more from Mexico than from China, where many companies have re-shored.
Wonder why crude oil (USO), (XOM), (OXY) is at $68 a barrel when the US economy is growing at a 3.1% rate? This is the reason. It is also a strong argument in favor of investing in India, which I discussed last week. Buy the (INDA) and the (INDY), not the (FXI) or (BABA).
In the meantime, you’ve got to love ARM Holdings PLC, whose earnings announcement triggered a heroic 56% one-day move up in the stock. They execute sub-designs for almost every AI chip out there. That’s what a 3% float in the stock gets you. Anyone who has any doubts about the durability of the AI story should take a look at what happened to (ARM) last week.
So far in February, we are up +1.78%. My 2024 year-to-date performance is also at -2.50%. The S&P 500 (SPY) is up +5.03% so far in 2024. My trailing one-year return reached +60.44% versus +33.13% for the S&P 500.
That brings my 16-year total return to +674.13%. My average annualized return has retreated to +51.20%.
Some 63 of my 70 trades last year were profitable in 2023.
I am maintaining longs in (MSFT), (AMZN), (V), (PANW), and (CCJ).
Reheating is Becoming an Issue, with a strong US economy and record-low unemployment rate possibly prompting the Fed to delay interest rate cuts. The stock market has been running on steroids on the expectation of imminent cuts. This is a new market risk and could unleash a thunderstorm on our parade.
CPI Revised Down, in December, from 0.3% to 0.2%. The deflationary economy is back! Stocks loved it, with the S&P 500 catapulting to $5,000. That’s why I revised my yearend target up to $6,000.
Early Retirements are Soaring, thanks to a stock market at new all-time highs. Baby boomers can now afford to “take this job and shove it.”
NVIDIA Enters New Custom Chip Market, potentially adding another $30 billion in revenues. The dominant global designer and supplier of AI chips aim to capture a portion of an exploding market for custom AI chips and to protect itself from the growing number of companies interested in finding alternatives to its products. Buy (NVDA) on dips.
Morgan Stanley Upgrades NVIDIA to an $800 Target. An exceptional supply-demand imbalance in the artificial intelligence-chip sector, as well as a massive shift in spending toward emerging technology, is likely to persist over the near term. Buy (NVDA) on dips.
ARM Holdings (ARM) Soars by 41%, off a spectacular forecast-based demand for designed-up AI chips. UK-based Arm makes money through royalties, when companies pay for access to build Arm-compatible chips, usually amounting to a small percentage of the final chip price. Arm said its customers shipped 7.7 billion Arm chips during the September quarter.
Tesla (TSLA) Looking to Cut Jobs, and reduce costs, as is the rest of Silicon Valley. The move could mark the bottom of the stock. Elon Musk is the master job cutter, axing 80% of the Twitter staff on takeover.
Meta (META) Gains $196 Billion in Market Cap in One Day, off the back of record sales, tripled earnings, and reduced costs.
Construction Spending Gains, up 0.9% in December, the best since October. Watch the industry reaccelerate as interest rates fall.
Royal Caribbean Beats, with record bookings in an industry I have recently become intensely interested in. (RCL) is grabbing market share from land-based vacations, as Millennials are finally discovering cheap cruise vacations, where it is often cheaper than to stay in a motel with all you can eat. Only a few cruises were lost to the Red Sea War. (RCL) just launched Icon of the Seas, the world’s largest cruise ship.
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, February 12, the US Consumer Inflation Expectations are announced.
On Tuesday, February 13 at 8:30 AM EST, the Core Inflation Rate will be released.
On Wednesday, February 14 at 2:00 PM, the Producer Price Index is published. The Federal Reserve announces its interest rate decision.
On Thursday, February 15 at 8:30 AM, the Weekly Jobless Claims are announced. We also get Retail Sales.
On Friday, February 16 at 2:30 PM, the January Building Permits are published, along with the University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment. At 2:00 PM the Baker Hughes Rig Count is printed.
As for me, it was in 1986 when the call went out at the London office of Morgan Stanley for someone to undertake an unusual task. They needed someone who knew the Middle East well, spoke some Arabic, was comfortable in the desert, and was a good rider.
The higher-ups had obtained an impossible-to-get invitation from the Kuwaiti Royal family to take part in a camel caravan into the Dibdibah Desert. It was the social event of the year.
More importantly, the event was to be attended by the head of the Kuwait Investment Authority, who ran over $100 billion in assets. Kuwait had immense oil revenues, but almost no people, so the bulk of their oil revenues were invested in western stock markets. An investment of goodwill here could pay off big time down the road.
The problem was that the US had just launched air strikes against Libya, destroying the dictator, Muammar Gaddafi’s royal palace, our response to the bombing of a disco in West Berlin frequented by US soldiers. Terrorist attacks were imminently expected throughout Europe.
Of course, I was the only one who volunteered.
My managing director didn’t want me to go, as they couldn’t afford to lose me. I explained that in reviewing the range of risks I had taken in my life, this one didn’t even register. The following week found myself in a first-class seat on Kuwait Airways headed for a Middle East in turmoil.
A limo picked me up at the Kuwait Hilton, just across the street from the US embassy, where I occupied the presidential suite. We headed west into the desert.
In an hour, I came across the most amazing sight - a collection of large tents accompanied by about 100 camels. Everyone was wearing traditional Arab dress with a ceremonial dagger. I had been riding horses all my life, camels not so much. So, I asked for the gentlest camel they had.
The camel wranglers gave me a tall female, which was more docile and obedient than the males. Imagine that! Getting on a camel is weird, as you mount them while they are sitting down. My camel had no problem lifting my 180 pounds.
They were beautiful animals, highly groomed, and in the pink of health. Some were worth millions of dollars. A handler asked me if I had ever drunk fresh camel milk, and I answered no. They didn’t offer it at Safeway. He picked up a metal bowl, cleaned it out with his hand, and milked a nearby camel.
He then handed me the bowl with a big smile across his face. There were definitely green flecks of manure floating on the top, but I drank it anyway. I had to, lest my host would lose face. At least it was white. It was body temperature warm and much richer than cow’s milk.
The motion of a camel is completely different from a horse. You ride back and forth in a rocking motion. I hoped the trip was short, as this ride had repetitive motion injuries written all over it. I was using muscles I had never used before. Hit your camel with a stick and they take off at 40 miles per hour.
I learned that a camel is a super animal ideally suited for the desert. It can ride 100 miles a day, and 150 miles in emergencies, according to TE Lawrence, who made the epic 600-mile trek to Aquaba in only four weeks in the height of summer. It can live 15 days without water, converting the fat in its hump.
In ten miles, we reached our destination. The tents went up, clouds of dust rose, the camels were corralled, and the cooking began for an epic feast that night.
It was a sight to behold. Elaborately decorated huge three-by-five wide bronze platers were brought overflowing with rice and vegetables, and every part of a sheep you can imagine, none of which was wasted. In the center was a cooked sheep’s head with the top of the skull removed so the brains were easily accessible. We all ate with our right hands.
I learned that I was the first foreigner ever invited to such an event, and the Arabs delighted in feeding me every part of the sheep, the eyes, the brains, the intestines, and the gristle. I pretended to love everything and laid back and thought of England. When they asked how it tasted I said it was great. I lied.
As the evening progressed, the Johnny Walker Red came out of hiding. Alcohol is illegal in Kuwait, and formal events are marked by copious amounts of elaborate fruit juices. I was told that someone with a royal connection had smuggled in an entire container of whiskey and I could drink all I wanted.
The next morning I was awoken by a bellowing camel and the worst headache in the world. I threw a rock at him to get him to shut up and he sauntered over and peed all over me.
The things I did for Morgan Stanley!
Four years later, Iraq invaded Kuwait. Some of my friends were kidnapped and held for ransom, while others were never heard from again.
The Kuwaiti government said they would pay for the war if we provided the troops, tanks, and planes. So they sold their entire $100 million investment portfolio and gave the money to the US.
Morgan Stanley got the mandate to handle the liquidation, earning the biggest commission in the firm’s history. No doubt, the salesman who got the order was considered a genius, earned a promotion, and was paid a huge bonus.
I spent the year as a Marine Corps captain, flying around assorted American generals and doing the odd special opp. I got shot down and still set off airport metal detectors. No bonus here. But at least I gained an insight and an experience into a medieval Bedouin lifestyle that is long gone.
They say success has many fathers. This is a classic example.
You can’t just ride out into the Kuwait desert anymore. It is still filled with mines planted by the Iraqis. There are almost no camels left in the Middle East, long ago replaced by trucks. When I was in Egypt in 2019, I rode a few mangy, pitiful animals held over for the tourists.
When I passed through my London Club last summer, the Naval and Military Club on St. James Square, whose portrait was right at the front entrance? None other than that of Lawrence of Arabia.
It turns out we were members of the same club in more ways than one.
Stay healthy,
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
John Thomas of Arabia
Checking Out the Local Camel Milk
This One Will Do
Traffic in Arabia
Global Market Comments
February 8, 2024
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(A NOTE ON OPTIONS CALLED AWAY),
(MSFT), (PANW), (V), (GOOGL), (CCJ)
I was awoken this morning by calls from Concierge members asking what to do when their Visa (V) options were assigned or called away. The answer was very simple: fall down on your knees and thank your lucky stars. You have just made the maximum possible profit for your position instantly.
We have the good fortune to have five option call spreads that are deep in the money going into the February 16 option expiration. They include:
(MSFT) 2/$330-$340 call spread
(AMZN) 2/$130-$135 call spread
(V) 2/$240-$250 call spread
(PANW) 2/$260-$270 call spread
(CCJ) 2/$38-$41 call spread
In the run-up to every options expiration, which is the third Friday of every month, there is a possibility that any short options positions you have may get assigned or called away.
Most of you have short-option positions, although you may not realize it. For when you buy an in-the-money vertical option spread, it contains two elements: a long option and a short option.
The short options can get “assigned,” or “called away” at any time, as it is owned by a third party, the one you initially sold the put option to when you initiated the position.
You have to be careful here because the inexperienced can blow their newfound windfall if they take the wrong action, so here’s how to handle it correctly.
Let’s say you get an email from your broker telling you that your call options have been assigned away. I’ll use the example of the Visa (V) February 2024 $240-$250 in-the-money vertical BULL CALL debit spread.
For what the broker had done in effect allows you to get out of your call spread position at the maximum profit point 8 trading days before the February 16 expiration date. In other words, what you bought for $8.80 on January 10 is now $10.00!
All have to do is call your broker and instruct them to exercise your long position in your (V) February 2024 $240 calls to close out your short position in the (V) February 2024 $250 calls.
This is a perfectly hedged position, with both options having the same expiration date, and the same amount of contracts in the same stock, so there is no risk. The name, number of shares, and number of contracts are all identical, so you have no exposure at all.
Calls are a right to buy shares at a fixed price before a fixed date, and one option contract is exercisable into 100 shares.
To say it another way, you bought the (V) at $240 and sold it at $250, paid $8.80 for the right to do so, so your profit is $1.20 or ($1.20 X 100 shares X 12 contracts) = $1,440. Not bad for a 26-day defined limited-risk play.
Sounds like a good trade to me.
Weird stuff like this happens in the run-up to options expirations like we have coming.
A call owner may need to buy a long (V) position after the close, and exercising his long February $240 call is the only way to execute it.
Adequate shares may not be available in the market, or maybe a limit order didn’t get done by the market close.
There are thousands of algorithms out there that may arrive at some twisted logic that the calls need to be exercised.
Many require a rebalancing of hedges at the close every day which can be achieved through option exercises.
And yes, options even get exercised by accident. There are still a few humans left in this market to make mistakes.
And here’s another possible outcome in this process.
Your broker will call you to notify you of an option called away, and then give you the wrong advice on what to do about it. They’ll tell you to take delivery of your long stock and then most additional margin to cover the risk.
Either that, or you can just sell your shares on the following Monday and take on a ton of risk over the weekend. This generates oodles of commission for the brokers but impoverishes you.
There may not even be an evil motive behind the bad advice. Brokers are not investing a lot in training staff these days. It doesn’t pay. In fact, I think I’m the last one they did train 50 years ago.
Avarice could have been an explanation here but I think stupidity, poor training, and low wages are much more likely.
Brokers have so many legal ways to steal money that they don’t need to resort to the illegal kind.
This exercise process is now fully automated at most brokers but it never hurts to follow up with a phone call if you get an exercise notice. Mistakes do happen.
Some may also send you a link to a video of what to do about all this.
If any of you are the slightest bit worried or confused by all of this, come out of your position RIGHT NOW at a small profit! You should never be worried or confused about any position tying up YOUR money.
Professionals do these things all day long and exercises become second nature, just another cost of doing business.
If you do this long enough, eventually you get hit. I bet you don’t.
Calling All Options!
Global Market Comments
January 29, 2024
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or TOO MUCH OF A GOOD THING?)
(SPY), (TLT), ($VIX), (MSFT), (META), (GOOGL),
(AMZN), (NVDA), (V), (PANW), (CCJ)
There can be too much of a good thing.
Inflation is dramatically falling, with Core PCE down to an amazing 2.6% YOY rate in December. At the same time, GDP growth came in at an incredible 3.3% in Q4 and 2.5% for all of 2023. The long-term average is 3.0%. It’s about as close to a Goldilocks scenario as we’ll ever get.
The problem arises when the economy gets TOO healthy right when the Fed is considering its first interest rate CUTS in four years. That could lead our nation’s central bank to postpone cuts or not to announce them at all.
That would suddenly put the three-month-old bull market on ice, perhaps indefinitely, which has given us one of the worst whipsaw markets I have ever seen. Sector leadership has changed three times so far in 2024. First, there was the AI 5, (MSFT), (META), (GOOGL), (AMZN), and (NVDA). Next came stocks that benefit the most from falling interest rates, financials, precious metals, base metals, industrials, bonds, and foreign currencies.
To say this would be a tough market to trade would be an understatement, evidenced by my multiple stop losses this month. The remedy for this is to shrink your portfolio, sit back, and wait for the market to tell you what to do. I have to say that with the Volatility Index ($VIX) camped out at the $12 handle, options are not offering a lot for you to chew on either.
If you are looking for any further proof that technology is accelerating far faster than we can understand, I shall recall for your edification my last weekend.
After my youngest went off to college, I had to get her headboard refinished because she spent two years in bed looking at her computer while enrolled in high school during COVID-19. She had completely worn the finish off but got all A’s.
So I went to Yelp to look for a furniture restoration business. I clicked on one restorer who had good reviews and lots of pictures, described the job, and included pictures. Within 60 seconds, I received not one bid for the job but four, as Yelp had put the job out for bid across its entire network. One offered to do the job the next day for $100.
Learning how easy it is to refinish furniture, I put a second job out for bid, a small beat-up desk which I picked up at an estate sale for $20. I learned that this was a 100-year-old Craftsman desk highly sought after by collectors worth $2,500. Absolutely, yes, it was worth the $750 cost of a total stripped-down restoration.
I’m thinking “poor furniture restorers”, but what they are losing in the price, they make up in volume. Their craft is in fact a dying one and they can charge whatever they want.
And now you know why I go to estate sales.
What kind of homework is my daughter getting these days? As a Computer Science major at the University of California, she was handed a box of calculators smashed with a hammer. Over a weekend, she was required to invent a tool that identified the good chips from the bad, write code to reprogram the chips, and then glue the good calculators back together.
By Sunday afternoon she had a box full of working but somewhat ugly calculators, thanks to my donation of Gorilla Glue. And this for a sophomore! Needless to say, I didn’t see much of my daughter last weekend, except when she came downstairs to do her laundry.
Next week, they have to fix cell phones.
Gulp! I doubt I could even get into the UC today, even though I graduated Magna Cum Laude 50 years ago. Such is life with college students.
Watch out! The future is happening fast!
So far in January, we are down -4.33%. My 2024 year-to-date performance is also at -4.33%. The S&P 500 (SPY) is up +1.14% so far in 2024. My trailing one-year return reached +54.54% versus +21.14% for the S&P 500.
That brings my 15-year total return to +672.30%. My average annualized return has retreated to +51.06%.
Some 63 of my 70 trades last year were profitable in 2023.
I am maintaining longs in (MSFT), (AMZN), (V), (PANW), and (CCJ).
US GDP Rocketed by 2.5% in 2023, cementing its position as the strongest major economy in the world. Q4 came in at a hot 3.3%. We’re going from soft landing to no landing at all. Unfortunately, the report also put our bond trade to sleep.
Inflation Falls, with the Core PCE index easing to 2.9% last month, the lowest since 2021. That’s in the face of consumer spending posting the biggest back-to-back increase in nearly a year. This is very positive for bond bulls. Buy (TLT) LEAPS on dips.
The Roaring Twenties are Back, says investment guru and old friend Ed Yardeni. He draws parallels with the runaway stock prices that followed the 1918 Spanish flu pandemic, which killed millions. Of course, you had a 10:1 margin during the twenties which made speculation much easier. Are same-day options any worse?
New Homes Sales Recover, on a falling interest rate push, up 8.0% to 664,000. Sales, however, can be volatile on a month-to-month basis. Sales increased 4.4% on a year-on-year basis in December.
Netflix Soars on Big Subscriber Beat, up 8.6% on an add of 13 million new subscribers. It moved solidly into more sports content with the World Wrestling Entertainment deal. Buy (NFLX) on dips, which clearly won the streaming wars. I can’t get enough of The Rock, who is a genuinely nice guy.
Microsoft Tops $3 Trillion Valuation, cementing its hold on the AI lead. (MSFT) has been a top Mad hedge holding for years which we are currently long. Buy (MSFT) on dips which may have another $100 in it this year.
Freeport McMoRan Kills it, with an earnings upside blowout, taking the stock up 5%. CEO Richard Adkerson, a long-time Mad Hedge subscriber, says any problems are short-term. Political problems in Chile and Peru are an issue, which generates 40% of the world’s copper. Electrification of the US economy will continue to be a driving theme.
Mortgage Rates Plunge to 8-Month Low. The average fixed-rate 30-year mortgage fell to 6.60% as of Thursday from 6.66% the week prior, Freddie Mac said in its weekly report on home loan borrowing costs. The next Golden Age of Housing is here.
China Markets Dive, on news that the central bank was forced into the currency markets to support the yuan. Stock markets didn’t like it a bit, down 2.7% on the day. Overseas funds have sold roughly $1.6 billion in Chinese equities so far this year, with investor confidence bruised by signs of a slowdown in the world's second-largest economy. Offshore yuan tomorrow-next forwards jumped to a more than two-month high of 4.25 points late on Monday, reflecting signs of tighter liquidity conditions. Avoid China (FXI) like some stale egg foo young.
“Oppenheimer” Sweeps the Oscars, with a record 13 nominations. It’s a movie where I knew half the characters in real life from my work at the Nuclear Test site in Nevada. It was another opportunity to discuss advanced nuclear physics over dinner with my kids. Click here for the full list. The winners will be announced on March 10.
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, January 29, the Dallas Fed Manufacturing Index was announced.
On Tuesday, January 30 at 8:30 AM EST, the S&P Case Shiller National Home Price Index is released. We also get the JOLTS Job Openings Report.
On Wednesday, January 31 at 2:00 PM, the ADP Private Jobs Opening Report is published. The Federal Reserve announces its interest rate decision.
On Thursday, February 1 at 8:30 AM, the Weekly Jobless Claims are announced.
On Friday, February 2 at 2:30 PM, the December Nonfarm Payroll Report and Unemployment Rate is published. At 2:00 PM the Baker Hughes Rig Count is printed.
As for me, I received calls from six readers last week saying I remind them of Ernest Hemingway. This, no doubt, was the result of Ken Burns’ excellent documentary about the Nobel prize-winning writer on PBS last week.
It is no accident.
My grandfather drove for the Italian Red Cross on the Alpine front during WWI, where Hemingway got his start, so we had a connection right there.
Since I read Hemingway’s books in my mid-teens I decided I wanted to be him and became a war correspondent. In those days, you traveled by ship a lot, leaving ample time to finish off his complete work.
I visited his homes in Key West, Florida, and Ketchum, Idaho. His Cuban residence is high on my list, now that Castro is gone. His home in Cuba is on the menu.
I used to stay in the Hemingway Suite at the Ritz Hotel on Place Vendome in Paris where he lived during WWII. I had drinks at the Hemingway Bar downstairs where war correspondent Ernest shot a German colonel in the face at point-blank range. I still have the ashtrays.
Harry’s Bar in Venice, a Hemingway favorite, was a regular stopping-off point for me. I have those ashtrays too.
I even dated his granddaughter from his first wife, Hadley, the movie star Mariel Hemingway, before she got married, and when she was still being pursued by Robert de Niro and Woody Allen. Some genes skip generations and she was a dead ringer for her grandfather. She was the only Playboy centerfold I ever went out with. We still keep in touch.
So, I’ll spend the weekend watching Farewell to Arms….again, after I finish my writing.
Oh, and if you visit the Ritz Hotel today, you’ll find the ashtrays are now glued to the tables.
As for last summer, stayed in the Hemingway suite at the Hotel Post in Cortina d’Ampezzo Italy where he stayed in the 1950s to finish a book. Maybe some inspiration will rub off on me.
Good Luck and Good Trading,
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
Global Market Comments
January 16, 2024
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or WHAT WILL KILL THIS MARKET)
(MSFT), (BA), (AMZN), (DAL), (V), (PANW), (CCJ), (TLT), (NVDA), (META), (TSLA), (GOOGL)
What if Goldilocks decided to hang around for a while? I’ve always been in favor of a long-term relationship.
It could be weeks. It could be months.
Certainly, the widely predicted New Year selloff has failed to materialize.
Failure to fall after the first week of 2024 has delivered a rally almost as ferocious as the one that launched in October. (NVDIA) up 15% in a week? Good thing I have a double position. Cameco (CCJ) up 25%? The market action was so positive that it rushed me into a rare 100% fully invested portfolio.
Which all begs the question of what WILL eventually kill this market. After all, nothing goes up forever.
It's very simple.
If the coming Fed interest rate cuts become so certain that companies start aggressively investing for the recovery NOW, there could be a problem. The headline Unemployment Rate never falls, inflation reaccelerates, and even the idea of interest rate cuts gets pushed off until 2025. That would thrust a dagger through the heart of the current rally post haste, which has been interest rate-driven from day one.
If there’s anyone who will save our bacon from this dire scenario, it is the legion of dour analysts out there who are perpetually behind the curve with their ultra-conservative earnings forecasts. That is scaring companies from expanding too quickly and is why every announcement delivers an upside surprise. That alone could provide enough of a drag on the economy to keep the Goldilocks scenario on track.
Watch Out Above!
If that is the case, then the ten positions I added last week to achieve a rare 100% invested portfolio should do pretty well, which has a strong technology bent. In the AI-dominated world, data is king. Let’s see who owns the data.
Microsoft (MSFT) – knows every keystroke you have executed since you bought your first PC in 1990.
Google (GOOGL) – knows every search you have performed since 2005 plus every YouTube video you have watched, even the X-rated ones (oops!).
Tesla (TSLA) – knows every function your car has performed since 2010 and has 12 videos of where you have been (double oops!).
Meta (META)– knows every keystroke you have performed on your social media accounts.
If all of this sounds scary, it should be. But it also means that while these stocks may be expensive relative to 2023 earnings, they are still in the bargain basement regarding 2024 and 2025 earnings. Buy everything on dips. Investors are adding to what they already own because it’s been working big time, including me.
On a completely different topic, Uranium is going nuclear again. Yellow cake, the fuel used by nuclear power plants, has seen prices up 45% since May. Before the Ukraine war, Russia produced 50% of the world’s nuclear fuel. Now it is banned due to sanctions. The US has announced the creation of a nuclear fuel stockpile.
Congress is about to vote on a ban on Russian fuel. France just announced the addition of 14 large nuclear plants. Oh, and it’s green.
Uranium prices endured a long nuclear winter starting with the Three Mile Island accident in 1979, followed by Chernobyl in 1986, and Fukushima in 2011. That time is now over, thanks to more advanced reactor designs and better risk control.
I used to collect Czech uranium glass, which emits a very low level of gamma radiation and glows in the dark under ultraviolet light. Time to collect some of Canadian uranium miner Cameco (CCJ) also … again.
So far in January, we are up +6.19% with a 100% invested position. My 2024 year-to-date performance is also at +6.19%. The S&P 500 (SPY) is down -0.07% so far in 2024. My trailing one-year return reached +67.65% versus +37.82% for the S&P 500.
That brings my 15-year total return to +682.82%. My average annualized return has exploded to +52.19%, another new high.
Some 63 of my 70 trades last year were profitable in 2023.
I am going into 2024 with longs in (MSFT), (BA), (AMZN), (DAL), (V), (PANW), (CCJ), (TLT), and a double long in (NVDA).
FAA Grounds the Boeing 737 Max….Again, after a huge chunk of the fuselage fell off on a passenger flight which made an emergency landing in Portland. Dozens of the troubled aircraft were grounded. The move affects about 171 planes worldwide. The 737 Max is by far Boeing’s most popular aircraft and its biggest source of revenue. United Airlines is the biggest operator of the type followed by Alaska. Use any major dips to buy (BA) stock, which is facing a golden age.
NVIDIA Ramps Up its Graphics Cards. Nvidia is playing up its strength in consumer GPUs for so-called “local” AI that can run on a PC or laptop from home or an office. The new chip can be used to generate images on Adobe Photoshop’s Firefly generator to remove backgrounds in video calls, or even make games that use AI to generate dialogue. Buy (NVDA) on dips, as I did this last week.
Energy Prices Collapse Again, with Texas tea diving 4% to $70 on Saudi price cuts. This is despite steady buying from the US government for the SPR. The kingdom is moving to shortcut cheating by lesser OPEC members, as it usually does. If you throw good news in the market and it fails to go up, you sell it. Avoid (USO), (XOM), and (OXY).
Natural Gas Goes Ballistic, up 50% in three weeks. The 2026 $8-9 LEAPS I recommended over Christmas have already doubled. Expansion of export facilities to China is the reason, for accommodating more demand. BUY (UNG) on dips.
Mortgage Demand Soars by 10% in the first week of the year, and the next leg in the bull market for residential housing begins anew. Applications to refinance a home loan jumped 19% from the previous week and were 30% higher than the same week one year ago.
Consumer Price Index Flies, coming in at 0.3% for December instead of the anticipated 0.2%, a 3.4% annual rate. Fed rate cuts just got pushed back from March to June, where they belong. Used car and apparel prices get the blame. Car insurance was up a shocking 20% YOY. Go figure.
Bitcoin ETF’s SEC Approved, after a ten-year wait, potentially marking a market top. The SEC is still warning about market risks, even if the ETF sellers don’t. During the last crypto spike, there was an absence of cheap quality growth stocks. Now there is an abundance. Bitcoin prospered when we had a cash surplus and asset shortage. Now we have the opposite.
Global EV and Hybrid Sales Jump by 31% in 2023, compared to only 10% for internal combustion driven cars. Global sales of fully electric and plug-in hybrid vehicles (PHEVs) rose 31% in 2023, down from 60% growth in 2022, according to market research firm Rho Motion. For 2024, there are forecasts of global EV sales growth of between 25% and 30%. That’s really quite amazing given the weak 2023 global economy.
Microsoft Tops Apple, as the world’s most valuable publicly traded company, with a $3 trillion market cap. A huge lead in AI and a growing storage presence with Azure are the reasons. I’m long (MSFT) lower down.
US Budget Deficit Tops $500 Billion in Q1, starting October 1, 2023. But the frenetic price action, up a mind-blowing $19 in 2 ½ months proves the government isn’t borrowing too much money, it isn’t borrowing enough! There is a severe bond shortage in the marketplace. Never argue with Mr. Market as he is always right. Buy the (TLT) on dips, as I have.
Tesla to Halt Production in Germany, thanks to soaring shipping costs in the Red Sea. Tesla has been selling Berlin-made Model Ys to China via the Suez Canal. Shipping costs have doubled to $5,000 per container since October.
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, January 15, markets are closed for Martin Luther King Day.
On Tuesday, January 16 at 8:30 AM EST, the New York Empire State Manufacturing Index will be released.
On Wednesday, January 17 at 2:00 PM, the Retail Sales are published.
On Thursday, January 18 at 8:30 AM, the Weekly Jobless Claims are announced. We also get the Building Permits for December.
On Friday, January 19 at 2:30 PM, the December University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment is published. At 2:00 PM, the Baker Hughes Rig Count is printed.
Uranium Glass
As for me, when you make millions of dollars for your clients, you get a lot of pretty interesting invitations. $5,000 cases of wine, lunches on superyachts, free tickets to the Olympics, and dates with movie stars (Hi, Cybil!).
So it was in that spirit that I made my way down to the beachside community of Oxnard, California just north of famed Malibu to meet long-term Mad Hedge follower, Richard Zeiler.
Richard is a man after my own heart, plowing his investment profits into vintage aircraft, specifically a 1929 Travel Air D-4-D.
At the height of the Roaring Twenties (which by the way we are now repeating), flappers danced the night away doing the Charleston and the bathtub gin flowed like water. Anything was possible, and the stock market soared.
In 1925, Clyde Cessna, Lloyd Stearman, and Walter Beech got together and founded the Travel Air Manufacturing Company in Wichita, Kansas. Their first order was to build ten biplanes to carry the US mail for $125,000.
The plane proved hugely successful, and Travel Air eventually manufactured 1,800 planes, making it the first large-scale general aviation plane built in the US. Then, in 1929, the stock market crashed, the Great Depression ensued, aircraft orders collapsed, and Travel Air disappeared in the waves of mergers and bankruptcies that followed.
A decade later, WWII broke out and Wichita produced the tens of thousands of the small planes used to train the pilots who won the war. They flew B-17 and B-25 bombers and P51 Mustangs, all of which I’ve flown myself. The name Travel Air was consigned to the history books.
Enter my friend Richard Zeiler. Richard started flying support missions during the Vietnam War and retired 20 years later as an Army Lieutenant Colonel. A successful investor, he was able to pursue his first love, restoring vintage aircraft.
Starting with a broken down 1929 Travel Air D4D wreck, he spent years begging, borrowing, and trading parts he found on the Internet and at air shows. Eventually, he bought 20 Travel Air airframes just to make one whole airplane, including the one used in the 1930 Academy Award-winning WWI movie “Hells Angels.”
By 2018, he returned it to pristine flying condition. The modernized plane has a 300 hp engine, carries 62 gallons of fuel, and can fly 550 miles in five hours, which is far longer than my own bladder range.
Richard then spent years attending air shows, producing movies, and even scattering the ashes of loved ones over the Pacific Ocean. He also made the 50-hour round trip to the annual air show in Oshkosh, Wisconsin. I have volunteered to copilot on a future trip.
Richard now claims over 5,000 hours flying tailwheel aircraft, probably more than anyone else in the world. Believe it or not, I am also one of the few living tailwheel-qualified pilots in the country left. Yes, antiques are flying antiques!
As for me, my flying career also goes back to the Vietnam era as well. As a war correspondent in Laos and Cambodia, I used to hold Swiss-made Pilatus Porter airplanes straight and level while my Air America pilot friend was looking for drop zones on the map, dodging bullets all the way.
I later obtained a proper British commercial pilot license over the bucolic English countryside, trained by a retired Battle of Britain Spitfire pilot. His favorite trick was to turn off the fuel and tell me that a German Messerschmidt had just shot out my engine and that I had to land immediately. He only turned the gas back on at 200 feet when my approach looked good. We did this more than 200 times.
By the time I moved back to the States and converted to a US commercial license, the FAA examiner was amazed at how well I could do emergency landings. Later, I added on additional licenses for instrument flying, night flying, and aerobatics.
Thanks to the largesse of Morgan Stanley during the 1980s, I had my own private twin-engine Cessna 421 in Europe for ten years at their expense where I clocked another 2,000 hours of flying time. That job had me landing on private golf courses so I could sell stocks to the Arab Prince owners. By 1990, I knew every landing strip in Europe and the Persian Gulf like the back of my hand.
So, when the first Gulf War broke out the following year, the US Marine Corps came calling at my London home. They asked if I wanted to serve my country and I answered, “Hell, yes!” So, they drafted me as a combat pilot to fly support missions in Saudi Arabia.
I only got shot down once and escaped with a crushed L5 disk. It turns out that I crash better than anyone else I know. That’s important because they don’t let you practice crashing in flight school. It’s too expensive.
My last few flying years have been more sedentary, flying as a volunteer spotter pilot in a Cessna-172 for Cal Fire during the state’s runaway wildfires. As long as you stay upwind, there’s no smoke. The problem is that these days, there is almost nowhere in California that isn’t smokey. By the way, there are 2,000 other pilots on the volunteer list.
Eventually, I flew over 50 prewar and vintage aircraft, everything from a 1932 De Havilland Tiger Moth to a Russian MiG 29 fighter.
It was a clear, balmy day when I was escorted to the Travel Air’s hanger at Oxnard Airport. I carefully prechecked the aircraft and rotated the prop to circulate oil through the engine before firing it up. That reduced the wear and tear on the moving parts.
As they teach you in flight school, better to be on the ground wishing you could fly than be in the air wishing you were on the ground!
I donned my leather flying helmet, plugged in my headphones, received a clearance from the tower, and was good to go. I put on max power and was airborne in less than 100 yards. How do you tell if a pilot is happy? He has engine oil all over his teeth. After all, these are open-cockpit planes.
I made for the Malibu coast and thought it would be fun to buzz the local surfers at wave top level. I got a lot of cheers in return from my fellow thrill seekers.
After a half hour of low flying over elegant sailboats and looking for whales, I flew over the cornfields and flower farms of remote Ventura County and returned to Oxnard. I haven’t flown in a biplane in a while and that second wing really put up some drag. So, I had to give a burst of power on short finals to make the numbers. A taxi back to the hangar and my work there was done.
There are old pilots and there are bold pilots, but there are no old, bold pilots. I can attest to that.
Richard’s goal is to establish a new Southern California aviation museum at Oxnard airport. He created a non-profit 501 (3)(c), the Travel Air Aircraft Company, Inc. to achieve that goal, which has a very responsible and well-known board of directors. He has already assembled three other 1929 and 1930 Travel Air biplanes as part of the display.
The museum’s goal is to provide education, job training, restoration, maintenance, sightseeing rides, film production, and special events. All donations are tax-deductible. To make a donation, please email the president of the museum, my friend Richard Conrad at rconrad6110@gmail.com
Who knows, you might even get a ride in a nearly 100-year-old aircraft as part of a donation.
To watch the video of my joyride, please click here.
Where I Go My Kids Go
Good Luck and Good Trading,
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
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