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
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/02/John-Thomas-of-Arabia.png974752april@madhedgefundtrader.comhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngapril@madhedgefundtrader.com2024-02-12 09:02:392024-02-12 11:11:57The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or Raising my Yearend Target to (SPX) $6,000
Below please find subscribers’ Q&A for the November 15 Mad Hedge Fund Trader Global Strategy Webinar, broadcast from Incline Village, NV.
Q: I was a little surprised that you closed the (TLT) $79-$82 vertical bull call spread so early. Why not wait longer?
A: I took an 84% profit in only four trading days and skipped the last 16% which I would have had to wait another month to get. I was much better off putting on another position and making another 100%. In this kind of market, you want to take quick profits and then roll them into new positions as fast as you can. That’s where you make the big money, and that's what we’ve been doing. You have to strike when the iron is hot.
Q: November’s results are phenomenal!
A: Yes they are, 55 years of practice makes it easy.
Q: Thoughts on Advanced Micro Devices (AMD)?
A: It’s going higher. I think the whole semiconductor sector is the leading sector in the market; we have seen that with these gigantic 30-40% moves in the semis. That will continue, and then it will spread out to the rest of big tech (which it’s already done), and eventually, we get to the industrials and commodities in the second half of 2024 when the big economic growth returns. So that is the script for the coming year.
Q: Will the upcoming Fed interest rate cuts crash the dollar, and which emerging currency should I buy?
A: Yes and yes. It will crush the dollar–we could be entering a new decade of a falling U.S. dollar. The number one currency to buy is the Australian dollar (FXA). It has the most leverage for a global economic recovery. And you can see when we get to the currency section of today’s webinar that the currencies are already starting to move. Whatever currency has falling interest rates is always the weakest, and the U.S. dollar is about to become just that.
Q: What’s the deal with casino stocks lately like Wynn Resorts (WYNN) and MGM Resorts International (MGM)?
A: These companies took on massive amounts of debt during the pandemic to stay in business, so they are now highly sensitive to interest rates. If you look at the collapse of these stocks in the last four months, it is almost perfectly in sync with rising interest rates, and that’s why the stocks performed so poorly. By the way, the same is true for all the cruise companies like Royal Caribbean (RCL), and Carnival (CCL). The flip side of that is when interest rates start to go down these stocks do great, and they are falling interest rate plays, so you probably should be buying the casinos, the cruise lines, and the hotel stocks here because they are all suffering from massive debt loads, the cost of which is about to decline sharply.
Q: Should we roll up the expiration of LEAPS to 2026?
A: Probably not a bad idea, because we may get weakness in commodities for the next several months before we enter a massive new bull market. If you have the 2025, you’ll probably make money on that, but to be ultra-safe you could roll it forward to 2026. We know there’s a global copper shortage developing because of EVs, but right now EV sales are slow, so you don’t want to be piling onto the leverage plays on that too soon. That’s also why I am not in Tesla (TSLA) for the Moment.
Q: What will happen if the Fed cuts interest rates and there’s no recession? Won’t prices of everything from houses to butter go wild?
A: They won’t go wild, but they will go up at a 2% inflation rate, which is what the Fed wants. And house prices, which have been flat for the last year, will rise. And they may rise greater than the inflation rate of 2%; they may rise more like 5%. Falling interest rates mean falling mortgages; we’ve already seen mortgage rates drop from 8 to 7.4%. It's one of the sharpest drops in history, and more drops bring more first-time home buyers into the market. And don’t forget that the Fed could also raise interest rates down the road. If the economy gets too hot again, they may raise again, but I think we’ll see a lot of cuts first.
Q: Do you think financial stocks will go up or fall with potential rate decreases?
A: Banks always go up during falling interest rates because their cost of funds goes down and the default rate on their loans also goes down, so they get a hockey stick effect on earnings; that’s why you’re seeing such monster moves in stocks like JP Morgan (JPM) and the brokers (SCHW) as well as the money managers like BlackRock (BLK).
Q: Does the bull market keep going since unemployment still hasn’t made a dent, meaning consumers are fueling the rise in stocks?
A: Yes, consumer spending is still doing well. People seem to be getting the money from somewhere and it seems to be rising wages. But I expect wage gains to drop by half; people will still get wage increases, but not the peak levels that the UAW got in their deal with Detroit. Is a Goldilocks economy that is setting up, and the economy keeps growing We never do get a recession, and all risk assets rise as a result. That is the outlook!
Q: Bullish on Berkshire Hathaway (BRK/B)?
A: I completely agree, it’s one of the best-run companies in the world. 93-year-old Warren Buffet and 99-year-old Charlie Munger have delivered double the performance of the S&P 500 over the last three years.
Q: When does the IPO market come back to life, and which industries will benefit the most?
A: AI and Technology will benefit the most. There are several AI companies in the wings waiting to go public, and they will be the first out the door with the highest multiples, and then the IPO business will broaden out from there.
Q: Will a worsening Chinese property market blow up the U.S. Stock rally or is it just a fake risk I shouldn’t worry about?
A: The Chinese (FXI) real estate market is detached from the global economy. There is no international implication, and it’s also typical of emerging markets to overbuild and then have a financial collapse. Nobody I know has suffered anything in China in a long time, and if anything, they’re liquidating what little they have left. It doesn’t affect us at all. It’s interesting reading about it in the newspapers, and that’s about it.
Q: What are some stocks we should consider day trading these days?
A: None. Most people who try day trading lose money doing it; some people pull it off but they have many years of experience. Algorithms from big brokers have essentially taken over the day trading business with high-frequency trading. You do better on a one-month view, which I do on my front-month options. Most 2023 Stock Gains Happened in only eight days, up some 14% since January 1, and only seven stocks accounted for most of the increase. If you are a day trader, you most likely missed all of this because most of the moves were on gap openings.
Q: Home builders (XHB) have just had a great run, is this an area too short?
A: “Short” is a term you need to remove from your language! You don’t want to short a big bull move like this. If anything, wait until May when the summer seasonals start to favor short positions, and it depends on how high the market runs up until then. Don’t ever think about shorting the very beginning of a new bull market in stocks–not for housing, not for anything! And the outlook for housing over the long term looks fantastic; there’s still an overwhelming supply and demand in favor of the home builders. Some 85 million new Millennials need to buy first-time homes.
To watch a replay of this webinar with all the charts, bells, whistles, and classic rock music, just log in to www.madhedgefundtrader.com, go to MY ACCOUNT, select your subscription (GLOBAL TRADING DISPATCH, TECHNOLOGY LETTER, or Jacquie's Post), then click on WEBINARS, and all the webinars from the last 12 years are there in all their glory.
Good Luck and Stay Healthy,
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
2023 Kherson Ukraine – Ha Ha Missed Me! It was a dud.
Below please find subscribers’ Q&A for the February 8 Mad Hedge Fund Trader Global Strategy Webinar broadcast from Silicon Valley in California.
Q: What do you make of the Chinese balloon that crossed the United States last week?
It was the most overhyped, least consequential event in recent memory, and is not a new thing. There is no chance this was an innocent scientific mission as there was no flight plan filed. What’s China’s new frontline weapon? A catapult? A bow and arrow? Are American balloon makers going to demand increased defense spending? Curiously, no mention was ever made of the three Chinese balloons that crossed the US during the previous administration when no action was taken. My guess is that a Chinese Army faction wanted to keep their defense spending rising and torpedoed any rapprochement that was in the works with the US. Another theory was that they wanted to test our response. There is nothing the balloon could have captured that the Chinese didn’t already have from their satellites or even Google Earth for free. The media coverage has been a flood of false information. If the Chinese really can predict global winds at 60,000 feet two weeks in advance, then their math is so far more advanced than our own then we might as well surrender. By the way, during WWII the Japanese sent 20,000 balloons our way in an attempt to set the Western US on fire. Only one exploded, killing a family in Oregon.
Q: I’m getting worried about my long-term LEAPS in (TLT) and (FCX) given the recent market action. Thanks in advance for your help.
A: The (TLT)'s should be OK by expiration because they hit max profit even in an unchanged bond market. But Republican radicals who want a government shutdown at any price are definitely going to rattle your cage. That’s why I currently have no short-term position in bonds and am waiting for a bigger pullback to maybe $101 before I get back in. As for Freeport McMoRan (FCX) you can take profits any time. The stock doubled after we recommended the LEAPS in October. Longer term, I think (FCX) goes to $100 because of a coming global copper shortage.
Q: Should I buy Royal Caribbean (RCL) because we’re looking at a record-breaking cruise season coming up this year?
A: The time to buy Royal Caribbean was actually last June; it was one of the first outperformers in the market, completely skipped the October meltdown, and is practically doubled off the low. So great idea, just 8 months too late. And that actually is the case with a lot of stocks now—they've had such enormous runs over a short time, that you’re taking a lot of risks to get involved here.
Q: Do you think Silicon Valley should force all workers back into the office? Wouldn't that enhance creativity?
A: It does enhance creativity but at the cost of productivity. People are much more productive when they work at home, don’t have to spend 2 hours commuting, and can build their job around their lifestyle. They work at home cheaper too. So, it’s a trade-off, do you want creativity or do you want productivity? Well, the productive people should stay at home, the creative people should go to the office—it’s a company by company, product by product decision.
Q: You say you never touch 2x and 3x ETFs?
A: The only exception to that is the ProShares UltraShort 20+ Year Treasury ETF (TBT) which we traded for 2.5 years while the bonds were making a straight line move down, or the ProShares Ultra Technology ETF (ROM) which tends to have straight up move like this year. And the only time you could do a 2x is if you think the move in the underlying is going to be so enormous it covers up all the costs of dealing in these ETFs, then it’s worth doing. 3xs I never ever touch them because those reset at the end of the day and are really designed to be intraday hedging instruments, which we’re not interested in.
Q: Are you still bearish on the US dollar (UUP)?
A: Absolutely, we’ve had almost a straight line move down ever since October, and we’re getting a temporary break on that while interest rates stay higher for longer. The next dive in interest rates, the dollar collapses once again.
Q: When you buy back into bonds, where in the curve will you be buying?
A: In bull markets, you always want to buy the longest maturity available. Back in the 1970s, I used to buy WWI infinite British Treasury bonds because they had 100-year maturities, and therefore, in any bull market, have the largest gains. In the US, the 30-year instruments are pretty illiquid, so I focus on the 10-year, which is the iShares 20 Plus Year Treasury Bond ETF (TLT).
Q: What could be the next entry point for Tesla (TSLA) LEAPS?
A: I’m afraid that we have left LEAPS land for Tesla, I mean $100, $110, $120, $130—that’s all LEAP territory. Up here? Not unless you want to do a very low return LEAP like a $150/$160. I don’t see Tesla going below $150. Too many people trying to get into the stock, and Elon Musk is a master at delivering short squeezes, which he has done a perfect job of this year.
Q: What do you think about Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITS)?
A: I love REITS. They are a falling interest rate play. Highly exposed to interest rates, highly leveraged, and you get some great performance—and we’ve already had some since October. I think the bear market in real estate ends this year and we get a new bull in housing that starts next year because we still have a chronic structural shortage of housing. We’re missing about 10 million houses that we need—in that situation, prices go up. In fact, there are still bidding wars going on in the prime residential (mostly rural) parts of the country.
Q: Wouldn’t you want to buy at-the-money calls, not spreads in a low Volatility Index ($VIX) market on a 4-6 month view, because of cheaper pricing?
A: Yes you do, but not on top of a record move to the upside. If we can get a pullback in the markets of a1 /3-1/2 of their recent moves, and the ($VIX) is still low, then that makes all the sense in the world, to buy at the money calls with ($VIX) of $17. The only problem is if we give up half the recent gains, you’re not going to have a ($VIX) at $17 anymore, it’ll be more like $27 if we get a pullback like that and options will be expensive again. It’s amazing how cheap upside exposure gets at market tops—that’s what the ($VIX) market is telling you. In other words, it’s a sucker’s bet. You can’t have your cake and eat it too.
Q: What do you think about Alphabet (GOOGL)?
A: It’s overbought like the rest of the stocks in the sector. But the charts are looking very attractive, with an upside breakout of the 200-day. Long-term, they have a killer business model, but they also have antitrust problems. Again, everything is way too overbought for me to get involved on a short-term basis.
Q: What price would you get in at for Berkshire Hathaway (BRK/B)?
A: It’s not selling off, it’s flatlining. So even a small dip like we had yesterday would be a decent place to get into. Long term we’re looking for $400/share for this by the end of this year.
Q: Will strong wage growth lead the Fed to raise interest rates higher?
A: Well they’ve already said essentially they’re going to do 2 more quarter point rises. Beyond that, the Fed itself doesn’t know. When you have interest rates at 10-20 year highs, and 3.4% unemployment. No one has ever seen that before, there is no playbook for what’s happening now—either in the economy or in the stock market. So everyone’s standing around, scratching their heads, trying to figure out what to do, and waiting for more data to come out to give direction. And I’m in the same position really.
Q: Will the US Treasury bond get down to a 2.0% yield by the end of the year?
A: I think it's a possibility but expect a lot of volatility and fears around prospects of a government shutdown this summer and a debt default. Part of the Republican party seems intent on forcing that, and that is not good for bond longs. You get through that, you could have an absolutely ballistic move up in the (TLT), to $120 or even $130.
Q: Would you consider a LEAPS on housing stocks?
A: LEAPS are things you do at multi-year market bottoms, not after 50% moves; and the housing stocks have actually been moving since June; so that was a June story. Buy low, sell high—it’s my revolutionary new concept; most people do the opposite.
Q: Should I invest in Disney (DIS) on a buy it on a Bob Iger turnaround?
A: Yes, but only on a dip; we’ve already had a massive move. If we don’t get a recession, that is fantastic for Disney’s park business.
Q: What is your target for Silver (SLV)?
A: $50/oz. We’re at $20 now. Silver is becoming the new industrial metal, far outstripping any jewelry demand that you used to have; and that’s because of EVs and solar. Who knew that we’re at 10 million homes with solar panels in California now? That is just an enormous number that’s happened mostly in the last five years.
Q: When you look at Natural Gas, would you consider LEAPS?
A: Yes, but I haven’t run the numbers yet. The price has gotten so low, down 80% in eight months that you buy it even if you hate it.
Q: Should I pay attention to demographics when I invest? What is the most important one right now?
A: Demographics are very important, because children born today become customers in 20 years, and companies will start adapting their policies for those customers now in terms of capital investments and so on. It also affects stock markets now. Also, you always want to invest in the country that had the fastest growing population, which used to be China but isn’t anymore. By the way, the reason the US economy has outperformed Europe by 1% a year in GDP growth for the last 70 years is because we allow immigrants, and they don’t. All parties used to be in favor of immigration while now only one is. Why, I don’t understand.
Q: What about a LEAP on Silver (SLV)?
A: That is a possible candidate because we have had a move, but it’s only been about 20%. It’s not like 50% or 100% like we’ve seen with Tesla (TSLA). There are a few asset classes that are still in LEAPS territory—I think Silver would be one of them, and certainly natural gas (UNG). If I were to do a LEAPS, I’d go out 2 years and do something like a $25-$27; the old high is $50. You should get about a 5x leverage on that kind of LEAPS.
Q: Would you buy LEAPS puts on Carvana (CVNA)?
A: Absolutely not. Again, another great one-year-ago idea, not a now idea. Buy Put LEAPS at extreme market tops, not now. Carvana had dropped 95% in the last year.
Q: Is seasonality an important consideration in your trading strategy?
A: Absolutely yes. If you buy stocks in November and do the sell-in-May strategy, your average annual return is something like 20% a year. If you buy stocks in May and sell them in December, the 70-year return on that is zero. I love having the tailwind of seasonality; I can’t remember seeing it when it didn’t work. It’s an important consideration, and we’re right in the middle of the “BUY” season and the market is agreeing with me.
Q: You should do a LEAPS letter.
A: I already do in fact do a LEAPS letter, and it’s called the Mad Hedge Concierge Service where we have a whole website dedicated to just LEAPS. Some ten out of 12 made money last year, and some went up 10X. Contact customer support at support@madhedgefundtrader.com if you’re interested. Concierge members are very happy with their LEAPS coverage.
To watch a replay of this webinar with all the charts, bells, whistles, and classic rock music, just log in to www.madhedgefundtrader.com , go to MY ACCOUNT, click on GLOBAL TRADING DISPATCH or TECHNOLOGY LETTER, then WEBINARS, and all the webinars from the last 12 years are there in all their glory.
Good Luck and Stay Healthy,
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
Below please find subscribers’ Q&A for the November 30 Mad Hedge Fund Trader Global Strategy Webinar broadcast from Silicon Valley in California.
Q: You keep mentioning December 13th as a date of some significance. Is this just because the number 13 is unlucky?
A: December 13th at 8:30 AM EST is when we get the next inflation report, and we could well get another 1% drop. Prices are slowing down absolutely across the board except for rent, which is still going up. Gasoline has come down substantially since the election (big surprise), which is a big help, and that could ignite the next leg up in the bull market for this year. So, that is why December 13 is important. And we could well flatline, do nothing, and take profits on all our positions before that happens, because whatever it is you will get a big move one way or another (and maybe both) on December 13.
Q: I’m a new subscriber, and I am intrigued by your structuring of options spreads. Why do you do debit spreads instead of credit spreads?
A: It’s really six of one and a half dozen of the other—the net profit is pretty much the same for either one. However, debit spreads are easier to understand than credit spreads. We have a lot of beginners coming into this service as well as a lot of seasoned old pros. And it’s easier to understand the concept of buying something and watching it go up than shorting something and watching it go down. Now, doing the credit spreads—shorting the put spread—gives you a slight advantage in that it creates cash which you can then use to meet margin requirements. However, it’s only a small amount of cash—only the potential profit in that position. And guess what? All the big hedge funds actually kind of like easy-to-understand trade alerts also, so that’s why we do them.
Q: I have a lot of exposure in NVIDIA (NVDA), so is it worth trading out of it and coming back in at a lower rate?
A: NVIDIA is one of the single most volatile stocks in the market—it’s just come up 50%. But it could well test the lower limits again because it is so volatile, and the chip industry itself is the most volatile business in the S&P 500. If your view is short-term, I would take profits now, and look to go back in next time we hit a low. If you’re long-term, don’t touch it, because NVIDIA will triple from here over the next 3 years. I should caution you that if you do try the short-term strategy, most people miss the bottom and end up paying more to get back into the stock; and that's the problem with all these highly volatility stocks like Tesla (TSLA), NVIDIA (NVDA) and Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) unless you’re a professional and you sit in front of a screen all day long.
Q: Would you buy now and step in to make it long-term?
A: I think we get a couple more runs at the lows myself. We won’t get to the old lows, but we may get close. Those are your big buying points for your favorite stocks and also for LEAPS. And I’m going to hold back on new LEAPS recommendations—we’ve done 12 in the last two months for the Concierge members, and maybe half of those went out to Global Trading Dispatch before they took off again. So, that would be my approach there.
Q: How much farther can the Fed raise interest rates until they reverse?
A: 1%-2%, unless they get taken over by the data—unless suddenly the economy starts to weaken so much that they panic and reverse like crazy. I think that's actually what’s going to happen, which is why we went hyper-aggressive in October on the long side, especially in bonds (TLT). You drop rates on the ten-year from 4.5% to 2.5% in six months—that’s an enormous move in the bond market. That is well worth running a triple long position in it; I think that’s what's going to happen. That’s where we will make out the first 30% in 2023.
Q: Should I short the cruise lines here, like Royal Caribbean (RCL)?
A: They do have their problems—they have massive debts they ran up to survive the pandemic when all the ships were mothballed, so it is an industry with its major issues. The stock has already doubled since the summer so I wouldn’t chase it up here. I’m not rushing to short anything here right now though unless it’s really liquid or has horrendous fundamentals like the oil industry, which everyone seems to love but I hate—right now the haters are winning for the short term, until December 16, which is all I care about.
Q: Is the diesel shortage going to affect farmers and all other industries like the chip?
A: As the economy slows down, you can expect shortages of everything to disappear, as well as all supply chain issues, which is a positive for the economy for the long term.
Q: What about the 2024 iShares 20 Plus Year Treasury Bond ETF (TLT) 95—is that not a trade?
A: That’s a one-year position with a 100% potential profit. That is worth running to expiration unless we get a huge 20-point move up in the next 3 months, which is possible, and then there won’t be anything left in the trade—you’ll have 95% of the profit in hand at which point you’ll want to sell it. So, with these one-year LEAPS or two-year LEAPS, run them one or two years unless the underlying suddenly goes up a lot, and then grab the money and run; that's what I always tell people to do. Because if you sell your position, they can’t take the money away from you with a market correction.
Q: Is the current US economy the best economy in the world?
A: It is. If you look at any other place in the world, it’s hard to find an economy that's in better shape, and it’s because we have the best management in the world and hyper-accelerating technology which everyone else begs and borrows. Or steals. People who are predicting zero return on stocks for 10 years are out of their minds. You don’t short the best economy in the world. If anything, technology is accelerating, and that will take the stock market with it in the next year or so.
Q: Do you see the Dow ($INDU) outperforming the other indexes until the Fed positive pivots?
A: Absolutely yes, because the S&P 500 (SPY) has a very heavy technology weighting and technology absolutely sucks right now. That would probably be a good 3-month trade—buy the Dow, and short the S&P 500 in equal amounts. Easy to do—you might pick up 10% on a market-neutral trade like that.
Q: Do you see a Christmas rally this year?
A: Actually, I do, but it won’t start until we get the next inflation report on December 13, at which point I'm going 100% cash. I’ve made enough money this year, and this is a problem I had when I ran my hedge fund: when you make too much money, nobody believes it, so there's really no point in making more than 50% or 60% a year because people think it’s fake. This is true in the newsletter business as well. Markets also have a nasty habit of completely reversing in January; this year, we had one up day in January, and then it was bombs away and we just piled on the shorts like crazy, so you have to wait for the market to first give you the fake move for the year, and then the real one after that. The best way to take advantage of that is to be 100% cash, and that’s why I usually do.
Q: What indicators do you see that give you the most confidence that inflation has peaked?
A: There's one big one, and that’s real estate. Real estate is absolutely in a recession right now and has the heaviest weighting of any individual industry in the inflation calculation. If anybody thinks house prices are going up, please send me an email and tell me where, because I’d love to know. The general feeling is they’re down 10-15% over the last six months. New homes are only being sold with massive buydowns in interest rates and free giveaways on upgrades. It is an industry that is essentially shut down, with interest rates having gone from 2.75% to 7.5% in a year, so there’s your deflation, but unfortunately, real estate is also the slowest to price in in the Fed’s inflation calculation, so we have to go through six months of torture until the Fed finally sees proof that inflation is falling. So, welcome to the stock market because it's just one of those factors. Just for fun, I got a quote on financing an investment property. The monthly payment would have been double for half the house that I already have.
Q: Are LEAPS a buy with the CBOE Volatility Index (VIX) this low?
A: No, you want to look at stocks first, and then the VIX; and with all the stocks sitting on top of 30-50% rises, it’s a horrible place to do LEAPS. LEAPS were an October play—we bought the bottom in a dozen LEAPS in October, and those were great trades, except for Tesla (TSLA) and Rivian (RIVN) which still have two years left to run. Up here, you’re basically waiting on a big selloff before you go into these one to two-year options positions.
Q: Why does Biden keep extending student loans? Will this catch up at some point?
A: He’s going to take it to the Supreme Court, and if he loses at the Supreme Court, which is likely, then he’ll probably give up on any loan extensions. At this point, the loan extensions on student loans are something like 2 or 2.5 years. The reason he’s doing this is to get 26 million people back into the economy. As long as you have giant student loan balances, you can’t get credit, you can’t get a credit card, you can’t buy a house, you can’t get a home loan. Bringing that many new people into the economy is a huge positive for not only them but for everyone else because it strengthens the economy. That has always been the logic behind forgiving student loans—and by the way, the United States is virtually the only country in the world that makes students pay back their loans after 30 or 40 years. The rest give college educations away either for free or give some interest-free break on repayments until they can get a salary-paying job.
Q: Does the budget deficit drop impact the stock market?
A: Yes, but it impacts the bond market first and in a much bigger way. That’s one of the reasons that bonds have rallied $13 points in six weeks because less government borrowing means lower interest rates—it’s just a matter of supply and demand. This has been the fastest deficit reduction since WWII, and markets will discount that.
Q: Will the US dollar (UUP) crash?
A: Yes, it will. You get rid of those high interest rates and all of a sudden nobody wants to own the US dollar, so we have great trades setting up here against everything, except maybe the Yuan where the lockdowns are a major drag.
Q: Is silver (SLV) a buy now?
A: No, it’s just had a big 10% move; I would wait for any kind of dip in silver and gold (GOLD) before you go into those trades. And when/if you do, there are better ways to do it.
Q: How is the Ukraine war going?
A: It’ll be over next year after Ukraine retakes Crimea, which they’ve already started to do. Russia is running out of ammunition, and so are we, by the way. However, the United States, as everybody learned in WWII, has an almost infinite ability to ramp up weapons production, whereas Russia does not. Russia is literally using up leftover ammunition from WWII, and when that’s gone, they’ve got nothing left, nor the ability to produce it in any sizable way. All good reasons to sell short oil companies ahead of a tsunami of Russian oil hitting the market. By the way, oil is now down for 2022.
Q: What's the number one short in oil (USO)?
A: The most expensive one, that would be Exxon Mobile (XOM).
Q: What’s going to happen to the markets in January?
A: After this Christmas rally peters out, I’m looking for profit-taking in January.
Q: When is a good time to buy debit spreads on oil?
A: Now. Look at every short play you can find out there; I just don’t see a massive spike up in oil prices ahead of a recession. And by the way, if the war in Ukraine ends and Russian oil comes back on the market, then you’re looking at oil easily below $50.
Q: What is the best way to invest in iShares Silver Trust (SLV) in the long term?
A: A two-year LEAP on the Silver (SLV) $25-$26 call spread—that gets you a 100%-200% return on that.
Q: Is lithium a good commodity trade?
A: Lithium will move in sync with the EV industry, which seems to have its own cycle of being popular and unpopular. We’re definitely in the unpopular phase right now. Long term demand for lithium will be increasing on literally hundreds of different fronts, so I would say yes, lithium is kind of the new copper. Look at Albemarle (ALB), Societe Chemica Y Minera de Chile (SQM), and FMC Corp. (FMC).
Q: If we do a LEAPS on Crown Castle Incorporated (CCI), you won’t get the dividend right?
A: No, you won’t, it’s a dividend-neutral trade because you’re long and short in a LEAPS. You have to buy the stock outright and become a registered shareholder to earn the dividend which, these days, is a hefty 4.50%. That said, if you’re looking for a high dividend stock-only play, buying the (CCI) down here is actually a great idea. For the stock-only players, this would be a really good one right now.
Q: Do you know people who are selling because of large capital gains?
A: The only people I know who are selling have giant tax bills to pay because of all the money they made trading options this year. I happen to know several thousand of those, as it turns out. So yes, I do know and that could affect the market in the next couple of weeks, which is why I went with the flatlined scenario for the next two weeks. Most tax-driven selling will be finished in the next two weeks, and after that, it kind of clears the decks for the markets to close on a high note at the end of the year.
To watch a replay of this webinar with all the charts, bells, whistles, and classic rock music, just log in to www.madhedgefundtrader.com, go to MY ACCOUNT, click on GLOBAL TRADING or DISPATCH TECHNOLOGY LETTER as the case may be, then click on WEBINARS, and all the webinars from the last 12 years are there in all their glory.
Good Luck and Stay Healthy,
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
Below please find subscribers’ Q&A for the November 16 Mad Hedge Fund Trader Global Strategy Webinar broadcast from Silicon Valley in California.
Q: What do you see Tesla (TSLA) moving to from here until next year?
A: Not much; I mean if you’re lucky, Tesla won’t move at all. The problem is Twitter is looking like a disaster of huge proportions—firing half the staff on day one? Never good for building a business. Tesla has also been tied to the rest of big tech, which has been in awful condition and may not see a continuous move upward until the Fed actually starts lowering interest rates in the second quarter of next year. Tesla could be dead money here for a while; eventually, a company growing at 50% a year will go up—especially when it’s just had a 50% decline in the share price. As to when that is, I don’t know, and asking me 15 more times will get you just the same answer.
Q: Should we start piling into iShares 20 Plus Year Treasury Bond ETF (TLT) longs now or wait?
A: You go now. Every day you waited meant paying one point more in TLT. I think the bottom is in; we have a 20-30 point move ahead of us. Everybody in the world is now trying to get into this trade, just like I spent all this year trying to get out of it. And if anything, November CPI could be a long term-term top in inflation, especially if we came in with another cold number. So, I would start scaling in now, even though we’re over $100 in the (TLT) today and I first recommended this around $95.
Q: If the Fed keeps raising interest rates, will the US Treasury market fall?
A: Probably not because the Fed only has control of overnight interest rates—the discount rate, the interbank rate—whereas the (TLT) is a 10-to-20-year maturity bond. No matter what short term rates do, the inversion will just keep getting bigger, but in fact, the bond market itself was yielding 4.46%, yielding 8% with junk, has bottomed and will probably start going up from here. So that is the difference between the Fed and what the actual market does.
Q: Do you prefer Junk (JNK), (HYG), or (TLT)?
A: I always go for the highest risk. Junk has about an 8% yield here compared to 3.75% for the TLT. By the way, if you want to do one trade and go to sleep, buy the junk on 2 to 1 margin, get your 16% yield next year, and just take a one-year vacation. That’s what some people do.
Q: When you say the dollar is going to go down what do you mean?
A: I mean the US dollar, while Canadian (FXC) and Australian dollars (FXA) will go up.
Q: What is the best time to buy US dollars?
A: Maybe in five years, as it could go down for five or 10 years from here, now that it’s going to imminently give up its yield advantage.
Q: What's the forecast for casinos?
A: I think casinos do better. Las Vegas was absolutely packed, you couldn’t get into the best hotels—people are spending money like crazy.
Q: What’s the best way to play (TLT)?
A: With a one-year LEAP. I put out the $95/$100 last week for my concierge members. Here, you probably want to do the $100/$105; that’ll still give you a one-year return of 100%.
Q: How do you short the dollar?
A: There are loads of short dollar ETFs out there, or you can just sell short the Invesco DB US Dollar Index Bullish Fund (UUP), which is the dollar basket, or buy the (FXA) or (FXE).
Q: Freeport McMoRan (FCX) just went from 25 to 38; is it time to take a profit and re-enter at a lower point?
A: Short term yes, long term no. My long-term target for (FCX) is $100 because of the exponential growth of copper demand caused by EV production going from 1.5 million to 20 million a year in the next 10 years. Each EV needs 200 pounds of copper, so by 2030, annual copper demand for EVs only will be 20 billion pounds. In 2021, the total annual global copper production was 46.2 billion pounds. In order words, global copper production has to double in eight years just to accommodate EV growth only.
Q: Do you think there’ll be a rail worker strike?
A: I have no idea, but it will be a disaster if there is. There’s your recession scenario.
Q: What strike prices do you like for a Tesla LEAP?
A: Anything above here really. You could be cautious and do something like a $200/$210 two years out—that has a double in it. Or you could be more adventurous and go for a 400% return with like a $250/$260 in two years. I’m almost sure that we’ll have a major recovery in Tesla within two years.
Q: What’s your opinion on PayPal (PYPL) and Albemarle (ALB)?
A: I’m trying to stay away from the fintech area, partly because it’s tech and partly because the banks are recapturing a lot of the business they were losing to fintech a couple of years ago by moving into fintech themselves. That is the story and we’re clearly seeing that in the share prices of both banks and PayPal. I like Albemarle because the demand for lithium going forward is almost exponential.
Q: What’s your thought on the Australian dollar (AUD)?
A: Buy it with both hands as it is going to parity. Australia is a great indirect play on trade with China (FXI), gold (GLD), uranium (CCJ), and iron ore (BHP). It’s a great play on the recovery of the global economy, which will start next year.
Q: What do you think about Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd (RCL)?
A: Probably a buy but remember all the cruise lines will be impaired to some extent by the massive debts they had to take on to survive two years of shutdown with the pandemic. I took the Queen Victoria last July on their Norwegian Fjord cruise, and it had not been operated for two years. None of the staff had any idea what to do. I had to show them.
Q: Will big tech have a good second half?
A: Probably, but it’s going to be a slow first quarter, and I think if we start getting actual cuts in interest rates, then it’s going to be off to the races for tech and they’ll all go to all-time highs as they always do.
Q: How come you haven’t issued any trade alerts yet on the currencies?
A: Calling a five-year turnaround is a big job. Now that we have the turnaround in play, we’re in dip-buying mode. So, you will see these in the future. But I also have to look at what currency trades are offering compared to other trades in other asset classes. And for the last year or two, the big opportunities have all been in stocks. You had volatility constantly visiting the mid $30s, you didn’t get that in the currencies, and more money was to be made in stock trades than foreign currency trades. That is changing now; let's see if we have a sustainable trend and if we get a good entry point. There’s a lot that goes into these trade alerts that you don’t always get to see. We only get a 95% success rate by being very careful in sending out trade alerts and that means long periods of doing nothing when the risk/reward is mediocre at best, which is right now. The services that guarantee you a trade alert every day all lose money.
Q: What is the recommended minimum portfolio size to amortize the cost of the concierge service?
A: I tell people to have a half a million in assets because we want people who are financially sophisticated to understand what we’re telling them. That said, we do have people with as little as 100,000 in the concierge service and they usually make the money back on the first trade. This is a very sophisticated high-return, very active service. You get my personal cell phone number and all that, plus your own dedicated website, and specific concierge-only research. It’s a much higher level of service. It’s by application only and we currently have no places available for new concierge members. However, if you’re interested, we can put you on the waitlist so that when another millionaire retires, we can open up a space.
Q: Despite recent moves, the algo looks bearish. There are lots of mixed signals.
A: Yes, it does. And yes, that’s often the case when the market timing index hangs around 50.
Q: Do concierges go for short term moves?
A: No, concierges are looking for the big, long-term trades that they can just buy and forget about. That is where the big money is made. At least 90% of the people that try day trading lose money but make all the brokers rich.
To watch a replay of this webinar with all the charts, bells, whistles, and classic rock music, just log in to www.madhedgefundtrader.com, go to MY ACCOUNT, click on GLOBAL TRADING DISPATCH or Technology Letter, then WEBINARS, and all the webinars from the last 12 years are there in all their glory.
Good Luck and Stay Healthy,
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/John-with-fish-story-3-e1524263315551.jpg378300Mad Hedge Fund Traderhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMad Hedge Fund Trader2022-11-18 10:02:302022-11-18 11:44:34November 16 Biweekly Strategy Webinar Q&A
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