Global Market Comments
September 26, 2022
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or HOW TO TRADE THE 4TH QUARTER)
(SPY), (TLT), (AAPL), (TSLA), (RIVN)
Global Market Comments
September 26, 2022
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or HOW TO TRADE THE 4TH QUARTER)
(SPY), (TLT), (AAPL), (TSLA), (RIVN)
In a mere six months, the Federal Reserve has morphed from Dr. Jekyll into Mr. Hyde.
It has changed from the stock market’s best friend to its worst enemy. Not only has the punch bowl been taken away, but it has also been smashed on the floor in a thousand pieces. A regime change has taken place in risk.
Welcome to a hostile Fed, one that utterly hates the stock market and loves cash. In fact, it loves cash so much it has raised its bid for overnight money from nothing to 4.2% in only six months. It is the fastest rise in interest rates in history.
To say that conditions have changed for the stocks would be the understatement of the century. This makes stocks less valuable, especially anything connected with growth, like technology stocks, and big borrowers, such as cruise lines.
Which raises the important question of the day: How the HECK are we going to trade the stock market in Q4?
It was in September of 2020 when 34 of my clients became millionaires buying TESLA at precisely the right time…
Well, the stars have aligned once again!!!!
In my TESLA free report, I list 10 reasons I’d tell my grandmother to mortgage her house and go all in.
Go to madhedgeradio.com and download my “Tesla Takes Over the World” free report.
Let me give you the good news first.
Q4 is likely to establish the final low for the bear market in stocks for this cycle. I don’t buy the endless years of suffering or the “lost decade” theories. Technology is just evolving too fast. It really makes no difference whether that low is at (SPX) $3,600, $3,300, or even $3,000. The best entry point for stocks in a decade will soon be at hand.
Keep in mind that with an (SPX) at $3,000 the market will be down a horrific 37.5% in a year. That is a worst-case scenario. A collapse this rapid has not happened since 1929.
This is for an economy that has seen no financial stresses whatsoever, except in crypto. This time, there are no banks going under, brokers going bust, housing crashes, or other similar stresses that drove the (SPX) down 52% by 2009.
There is nowhere near the misallocation of capital and malinvestment that we saw 15 years ago. Down 37.5% sounds like a screaming bargain to me.
The early “tell” that we are approaching the end came on Friday when the Volatility Index (VIX) hit $32.31. With any luck, it could top $40 in the coming weeks. Friday, when the Dow Average was down 800 points, we saw the largest put option buying in market history.
At that point, it will be possible for me to construct positions for you that are mathematically impossible to lose money with and offer the upside potential return of 10:1.
Once a handful of other technical indicators kick in, we’re there. This is what you should be looking for:
The (VIX) tops $40
Volume spikes
Down stocks top up ones by 90:10
The put:call ratio hits 2:1
A big intraday reversal that closes higher, like down $100 for the (SPX), up $150
Technology stocks, the most volatile sector in the market, also deliver a major turnaround
We get a dramatically lower report for the Consumer Price Index (and the next one is out October 13)
The Mad Hedge Market Timing Index falls below 10
So, what to buy this time?
With the Midterm elections now only 43 days away on Tuesday, November 8, it’s time to contemplate the implications for your retirement portfolio. The play of the decade is setting up.
Let me give you the good news first.
Whoever wins, and at this point, it really could be anyone, markets will rally after the election and power on until the end of 2022, some 10%-20%. The mere fact that the election is over is a huge market positive.
That’s the easy part.
But what if the election was held today?
The polls are telling us that the Democrats could pick up 2-3 seats in the Senate. The House now looks like a 50/50 split. Control could literally hinge on a handful of battleground states.
Suburban housewives now appear to be the great deciders.
So, what happens if the Democrats keep control of both houses, and the status quo is maintained?
For a start, taxes will be going up a lot, especially for the wealthy. Carried interest might finally make the ultimate sacrifice after coming back from the dead countless times. SALT taxes might get a break, but it is not likely. Once the government gets its hands on a revenue stream, it is loath to give it up.
It’s spending where we will see some important changes. Think more of the last two years, but in larger amounts.
Support for the Ukraine War will continue. So far, the US is getting great value for money. To eliminate the major military threat to the US and Europe for only $50 billion is the deal of the century. I’d pay ten times that.
So far, the Ukrainians are doing all the dying and we only write the checks. I greatly prefer that to a Vietnam-style commitment that bleeds us white (and by the way, I did some of that bleeding). Believe me, I’m doing everything I can to help by advising the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
The real game changer will be an alternative energy bill much larger than the last $733 billion bill. The goal will be to accelerate the decarbonization of the US, and ultimately the global economy. Of course, the free market will drive this anyway. No major automaker will be building internal combustion engines after 2030. What the government can do is to make it happen fast.
A year ago, climate change was an “it might happen someday after I’m long gone” kind of possibility. After a summer of 116 degrees in California and 114 degrees in France, “someday” has become “Yikes, it’s happening now!”
The last bill was truly misnamed as the “Inflation Reduction Act.” It really should have been called the “Tesla Shareholder Enrichment Bill”. Virtually every aspect of the bill somehow impinges on Elon Musk’s creation positively, which has been an overwhelming market leader in national electrification, enhanced EV subsidies, mass construction of charging stations, solar panels, and power walls, and decarbonization.
Since I am a major shareholder in (TSLA) and have been since the shares traded at $2.35, that’s fine with me. That probably explains why the shares are in the process of engineering a major upside breakout well before the election.
It isn’t just Tesla that will cash in. There is a broadening new leadership developing for the market to replace my technology stocks. Call it the “decarbonization sector”.
It includes EVs like Tesla (TSLA) and Rivian (RIVN), commodity stocks like copper miner Freeport McMoRan (FCX), uranium stocks like Cameco (CCJ) and the Uranium ETF (URA), solar companies like First Solar (FSLR) and SunPower (SPWR), alternative utilities like NextEra Energy (NEE), the world’s largest generator of electricity from wind and the sun, and silver plays like the iShares Silver Trust (SLV) and Wheaton Precious Metals (WPM), essential for high-efficiency wiring.
I will be adding more names to this list as I find them. Watch your research inbox.
Of course, 43 days in the political world is a couple of lifetimes in the real world, so anything can happen. A boatload of October surprises is probably just around the corner.
As for me, I’m putting more of my money into Tesla.
It all raises a new risk that we haven’t dealt with before.
What if the US government can’t afford to pay its own debt? When the last financial crisis and recession began in 2007, the US national debt was only a paltry $9 trillion, or 60% of GDP. It has since risen to $30 trillion, or 140% of GDP. Holy smokes!
That was all well and good while interest rates were dropping from 7% to zero. What happens when rates go back up from zero to 7.0%? The cost of carry for the US Treasury more than doubles as well, taking a much bigger bite of government spending, more than it can afford.
Just thought you’d like to know.
My Ten-Year View
When we come out the other side of pandemic and the recession, we will be perfectly poised to launch into my new American Golden Age, or the next Roaring Twenties. With oil peaking out soon, and technology hyper-accelerating, there will be no reason not to. The Dow Average will rise by 800% to 240,000 or more in the coming decade. The America coming out the other side will be far more efficient and profitable than the old. Dow 240,000 here we come!
With some of the greatest market volatility in market history, my September month-to-date performance maintained at +1.68%.
I used last week’s extreme volatility to add shorts in Apple (AAPL), the S&P 500 (SPY), and the United States US Treasury bond fund (TLT). That takes me to 30% long, 30% short, and 40% cash. I am holding back my cash for a truly cataclysmic market selloff.
My 2022 year-to-date performance ballooned to +61.64%, a new high. The Dow Average is down -18.48% so far in 2022. It is the greatest outperformance on an index since Mad Hedge Fund Trader started 14 years ago. My trailing one-year return maintains a sky-high +72.06%.
That brings my 14-year total return to +574.20%, some 2.86 times the S&P 500 (SPX) over the same period and a new all-time high. My average annualized return has ratcheted up to +44.74%, easily the highest in the industry.
On Monday, September 26 at 8:30 AM, the Chicago Fed National Activity Index for August is released.
On Tuesday, September 26 at 7:00 AM, the Durable Goods Index for August is out. New Home Sales are also printed.
On Wednesday, September 28 at 7:00 AM, Pending Home Sales for August are published.
On Thursday, September 29 at 8:30 AM, Weekly Jobless Claims are announced. We also learn the final report for US Q2 GDP.
On Friday, September 30 at 7:00 AM, the Personal Income and Spending are disclosed. At 2:00 the Baker Hughes Oil Rig Count is out.
As for me, I’ve found a new series on Amazon Prime called 1883. It is definitely NOT PG rated, nor is it for the faint of heart. But it does remind me of my own cowboy days.
When General Custer was slaughtered during his last stand at the Little Big Horn in 1876 in Montana, my ancestors spotted a great buying opportunity. They used the ensuing panic to pick up 50,000 acres near the Wyoming border for ten cents an acre.
Growing up as the oldest of seven kids, my parents never missed an opportunity to farm me out with relatives. That’s how I ended up with my cousins near Broadus, Montana for the summer of 1966.
When I got off the Greyhound bus in nearby Sheridan, I went into a bar to call my uncle. The bartender asked his name and when I told him “Carlat”, he gave me a strange look.
It turned out that my uncle had killed someone in a gunfight in the street out front a few months earlier, which was later ruled self-defense. It was the last public gunfight seen in the state, and my uncle hasn’t been seen in town since.
I was later picked up in a beat-up Ford truck and driven for two hours down a dirt road to a log cabin. There was no electricity, just kerosene lanterns and a propane-powered refrigerator.
Welcome to the 19th century!
I was hired as a cowboy, lived in a bunk house with the rest of the ranch hands, and was paid the princely sum of a dollar an hour. I became popular by reading the other cowboys newspapers and their mail since they were all illiterate. Every three days we slaughtered a cow to feed everyone on the ranch. I ate steak for breakfast, lunch, and dinner.
On weekends, my cousins and I searched for Indian arrowheads on horseback, which we found by the shoe box full. Occasionally, we got lucky finding an old rusted Winchester or Colt revolver just lying out on the range, a remnant of the famous battle 90 years before. I carried my own six-shooter to help reduce the local rattlesnake population.
I really learned the meaning of work and developed callouses on my hands in no time. I had to rescue cows trapped in the mud (stick a burr under their tail and make them mad), round up lost ones, and sawed miles of fence posts. When it came time to artificially inseminate the cows with superior semen imported from Scotland, it was my job to hold them still. It was all heady stuff for a 15-year-old.
The highlight of the summer was participating in the Sheridan Rodeo. With my uncle being one of the largest cattle owners in the area, I had my pick of events. So, I ended up racing a chariot made from an old oil drum, team roping (I had to pull the cow down to the ground), and riding a brahman bull. I still have a scar on my left elbow from where a bull slashed me, the horn pigment clearly visible.
I hated to leave when I had to go home and back to school. But I did hear that the winters in Montana are pretty tough.
It was later discovered that the entire 50,000 acres were sitting on a giant coal seam 50 feet thick. You just knocked off the topsoil and backed up the truck. My cousins became millionaires. They built a modern four-bedroom house closer to town with every amenity, even a big screen TV. My cousin also built a massive vintage car collection.
During the 2000s, their well water was poisoned by a neighbor’s fracking for natural gas, and water had to be hauled in by truck at great expense. In the end, my cousin was killed when the engine of the classic car he was restoring fell on top of him when the rafter above him snapped.
It all gave me a window into a lifestyle that was then fading fast. It’s an experience I’ll never forget.
Stay healthy,
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
Global Market Comments
September 19, 2022
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or THE FART HEARD ROUND THE WORLD)
(SPY), (TLT), (TSLA), (RIVN), (FDX), (FCX)
It was the fart heard around the world.
Every investor was positioned for inflation to crater and stocks to soar. We got the opposite instead with the Dow delivering its worst day since the pandemic lows 2 ½ years ago.
But every trader I know thought the recent rally smelled of three-day old fish and was poised for a selloff. I was expecting the latter and went into a rare 100% cash position. I have probably had 100% cash positions maybe six days over the last 15 years.
A lot of traders who only trade the CPI got flushed out of the market on Wednesday at the lows because they were the wrong way.
I attended karate school in Japan for ten years, and besides learning a fearsome attitude and losing my front teeth I also picked up a valuable lesson. ALWAYS kick a man when he is down because that is when he is least likely to hit you back.
The market got that second kick-in with the FedEx earnings on Friday indicating that the economy is in much worse shape than traders realize. Not only did (FDX) crater by 23%, the entire technical structure of the market broke down.
A double bottom in the (SPY) at $362 is now not only a possibility, but a probability and a cycle final low of (SPY) $330 is now on the table, if only for seconds. The latter would give us a top to bottom bear market of $150, or 31.25%. This is “screaming buy” territory.
It’s an old market that has seen the stock market discount 12 of the last six recessions. This is one of those “non-recessions.” Tuesday saw only 1% of stocks up on the day. Whenever this happens the return for the following 12 months averages 15.6%. Sell here at your peril.
The next major market event will be a Fed interest rate rise of 75 basis points on September 21. That will probably be the last hike of this magnitude this decade. After that, we’re dealing with quarter-point rate rises at worst and cuts at best.
Inflation expectations are falling. Consumers are morphing from “I’ll take it whatever the price” to “can you give me a deal.” Price competition is returning after a long absence. Supply chain problems have disappeared. All those ships in the harbor have gone.
Competition from imports is also increasing, thanks to a super strong US dollar. Look how fast they turned the lights out in the residential real estate market.
I have been in the market for 54 years and can tell you that when inflation peaks, stocks bottom. That means you should start scaling into your favorite positions right now.
With my Mad Hedge Market Timing Index gaping down to 32, I decided to dip my toe in the water with what will probably be the lead sector in the market for the next decade. You may not have noticed, but we have just entered the golden age of the electric vehicle, thanks to climate change and massive government support.
That draws me to Tesla (TSLA), the overwhelming leader and Rivian (RIVN), the top up and comer, or should I say it, the next Tesla.
Of course, whenever a report defies expectations like the CPI, naysayers come out of the woodwork decrying its validity. My old friend, Dr. Jeremy Siegel of Wharton School of Business, says the CPI is overreading inflation by employing an arcane method of calculating housing costs that make up half the index.
The result is a read on real estate costs which is 18 months out of date. The CPI says home costs are still rising sharply, while any real estate broker in the country will tell you it’s in free fall.
My own agent has six homes for sale and expects to get another seven this month. The only people showing up for her open houses are neighborhood gawkers. Actual buyers are a thing of yesterday and prices have easily dropped 10% in six months and that’s being charitable.
And here is the bet that you are going long here. In 2021, technology stocks, the overwhelming lead sector in the market, saw earnings increase by 30%. In 2022, they will probably come in at 6%. In 2023, they will likely bounce back to 10-12%. Here, today, the market has not yet discounted next year’s bounce. If there is a recession, it is a small one and is already fully backed into prices.
I have been fighting off requests for LEAPS (Long Term Equity Anticipation Securities) all year. Well, start checking your inbox because my LEAPS alerts are going to start coming hot and heavy. I sent out LEAPS for Tesla (TSLA) and Rivian (RIVN) last week and there are more to come. Hint: watch the price of copper with an eagle eye.
Consumer Price Index Came in at a hot 8.3% in August, much higher than expected. Stocks dropped 500 points in a heartbeat. It’s not what traders wanted to hear, up from 8.2% last month. It guarantees a 75-basis point rate hike next week. Is 100 basis points now on the table? Good thing I’m 100% cash.
Yikes! That’s Going to Leave a Bruise after the worst day in the markets since the pandemic low 2 ½ years ago. Investors were perfectly positioned for falling inflation. Tech stocks led the charge to the downside, with NASDAQ off 5%. Bitcoin crashed 10%. Bonds almost hit my 2022 target with a 2.43% yield. The US Dollar (UUP) soared. Get the Volatility Index (VIX) over $30 and I will start adding call spreads from my 100% cash position.
Are US Treasury Bonds Now a “BUY” with yields approaching my 2022 target of 3.50%? Even allowing for overshoot, you can start adding longs close to here. Notice how the (TLT) opened low and then rallied all day, despite despicable trading conditions. We all know that inflation will be back to 2% in a year.
Google gets hit with a $4.1 Billion fine in Europe over antitrust concerns where it controls 92% of the online advertising market. It’s the largest fine in corporate history, but it’s like water off a duck's back with a $1.67 trillion market capitalization. Just a cost of doing business. Buy (GOOGL) on dips.
It’s Like They Shut the Lights Out in the real estate market, which flipped from the offer to the bid side of the market in weeks. A 30-year fixed at 5.89% hasn’t helped. Open Houses are now clogged with gawking neighbors and few buyers. Six months ago, you needed an appointment. No More. It’s a global problem. I can get you a great deal on a mansion.
British Pound Hits 37-Year Low at $1.14 to the US dollar. Traders cite a lack of confidence in the new prime minister Liz Truss. The real reason is the structural toll taken by Brexit, the consequences of which will take a half-century to play out. It means a weak economy, falling standards of living, and a much lower British pound.
US Oil Reserves Hit 38-Year Low at 434 million barrels, down 39% from maximum capacity. That is about 22 days of consumption. Capping oil prices to save consumers has its price.
Weekly Jobless Claims Come in at 213,000, down 5,000 and lower for the fifth consecutive week according to the Department of Labor. The data gives ample room for a 75-basis point Fed rate hike next week.
Rail Strike Averted at the last possible minute after an all-night session. Biden clearly called in his IOUs with the unions to get a deal done. A rail strike would have been a complete disaster for the economy and demolished his election hopes.
Ether Dives on the Merge, down 6%, with the short sellers piling in at the highest possible prices. The merge involved the transition from a proof-of-work to proof-of-stake model. Avoid all crypto while the winter continues, especially (ETHE). Looks like a great head-and-shoulders top on the charts to me.
My Ten-Year View
When we come out the other side of pandemic and the recession, we will be perfectly poised to launch into my new American Golden Age, or the next Roaring Twenties. With oil peaking out soon, and technology hyper-accelerating, there will be no reason not to. The Dow Average will rise by 800% to 240,000 or more in the coming decade. The America coming out the other side will be far more efficient and profitable than the old. Dow 240,000 here we come!
With some of the greatest market volatility in market history, my September month-to-date performance clawed its way up to +2.45%. My 2022 year-to-date performance ballooned to +62.41%, a new high.
I used the monster selloff to add my first new longs in a while, in EV makers Tesla (TSLA) and Rivian (RIVN).
The Dow Average is down -18.26% so far in 2022. It is the greatest outperformance on an index since Mad Hedge Fund Trader started 14 years ago. My trailing one-year return maintains a sky-high +74.75%.
That brings my 14-year total return to +574.97%, some 2.66 times the S&P 500 (SPX) over the same period and a new all-time high. My average annualized return has ratcheted up to +44.84%, easily the highest in the industry.
We need to keep an eye on the number of US Coronavirus cases at 95.6 million, up 100,000 in a week and deaths topping 1,053,000 and have only increased by 1,000 in the past week. You can find the data here.
On Monday, September 19 at 8:30 AM, the NAHB Housing Market Index for September is released.
On Tuesday, September 20 at 7:00 AM, the Housing Starts and Building Permits for August are out.
On Wednesday, September 21 at 7:00 AM, Existing Homes Sales for August are published. At 11:00 AM EDT, we get the Fed interest rate decision where they are likely to raise by 75 basis points.
On Thursday, September 22 at 8:30 AM, Weekly Jobless Claims are announced.
On Friday, September 23 at 7:00 AM, the S&P Global Flash PMI for September is disclosed. At 2:00 the Baker Hughes Oil Rig Count is out.
As for me, I am reminded of my own summer of 1967, back when I was 15, which may be the subject of a future book and movie.
My family summer vacation that year was on the slopes of Mount Rainer in Washington state. Since it was raining every day, the other kids wanted to go home early. So my parents left me and my younger brother in the hands of Mount Everest veteran Jim Whitaker to summit the 14,411 peak (click here for his story). The deal was for us to hitchhike back to Los Angeles when we got off the mountain.
In those days, it wasn’t such an unreasonable plan. The Vietnam war was on, and a lot of soldiers were thumbing their way to report to duty. My parents figured that since I was an Eagle Scout, I could take care of myself.
When we got off the mountain, I looked at the map and saw there was this fascinating country called “Canada” just to the north. So, we were off to Vancouver. Once there, I learned there was a world’s fair going on in Montreal some 2,843 away, so we hit the TransCanada Highway going east.
Crossing the Rockies, the road was closed by a giant forest fire. The Mounties were desperate and were pulling all abled-bodied men out of the cars to fight the fire. Since we looked 18, we were drafted, given an ax and a shovel, and sent to the front line for a week, meals included.
We ran out of money in Alberta, so we took jobs as ranch hands. There we learned the joys of running down lost cattle on horseback, working all day at a buzz saw, inseminating cows with a giant hypodermic, and eating steak three times a day.
I made friends with the cowboys by reading them their mail, which they were unable to do. There were lots of bills due, child support owed, and alimony demands. Now I know where all those country western lyrics come from.
In Saskatchewan, the roads ran out of cars, so we hopped on a freight train in Manitoba, narrowly missing getting mugged in the rail yard in the middle of the night. We camped out in a box car occupied by other rough sorts for three days. There’s nothing like opening the doors and watching the scenery go by with no billboards and the wind blowing through your hair!
When the engineer spotted us on a curve, he stopped the train and invited us to up to the engine room. There, we slept on the floor, and he even let us take turns driving! That’s how we made it to Ontario, the most mosquito-infested place on the face of the earth.
Our last ride into Montreal offered to let us stay in his boat house as long as we wanted, so there we stayed. Thank you, WWII RAF bomber pilot Group Captain John Chenier!
Broke again, we landed jobs at a hamburger stand at Expo 67 in front of the imposing Russian pavilion. The pay was $1 an hour and all we could eat. At the end of the month, Madame Desjardin couldn’t balance her inventory, so she asked how many burgers I was eating a day. I answered 20, and my brother answered 21. “Well, there’s my inventory problem” she replied.
And then there was Suzanne Baribeau, the love of my life. I wonder whatever happened to her?
I had to allow two weeks to hitchhike home in time for school. When we crossed the border at Niagara Falls, we were arrested as draft dodgers as we were too young to have driver’s licenses. It took a long conversation between US Immigration and my dad to convince them we weren’t.
Then they asked Dad if we should be arrested and sent back on the next plane. He replied, “No, they can make it on their own.”
We developed a clever system where my parents could keep track of us. Long-distance calls were then enormously expensive. So, I called home collect and when my dad answered, he asked what city the call was coming from. When the operator gave him the answer, he said he would not accept the call. I remember lots of surprised operators. But the calls were free, and dad always knew where we were.
We had to divert around Detroit to avoid the race riots there. We got robbed in North Dakota, where we were in the only car for 50 miles. We made it as far as Seattle with only three days left until school started.
Finally, my parents had a nervous breakdown. They bought us our first air tickets ever to get back to LA, then quite an investment.
I haven’t stopped traveling since, my tally now topping all 50 states and 135 countries.
And I learned an amazing thing about the United States. Almost everyone in the country is honest, kind, and generous. Virtually every night our last ride of the day took us home and provided us with an extra bedroom or a garage to sleep in. The next morning, they fed us a big breakfast and dropped us off at a good spot to catch the next ride.
It was the adventure of a lifetime and am a better man for it.
Stay healthy.
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
Summit of Mt. Rainier 1967
McKinnon Ranch Bassano Alberta 1967
American Pavilion Expo 67
Hamburger Stand at Expo 67
Picking Cherries in Michigan 1967
Global Market Comments
September 9, 2022
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(SEPTEMBER 7 BIWEEKLY STRATEGY WEBINAR Q&A),
(MSFT), (NVDA), (RIVN), (AMZN), (POAHY), (SPWR), (FSLR), (CLSK), (FCX), (CCJ), (GOOG), (TLT), (TSLA)
Below please find subscribers’ Q&A for the September 7 Mad Hedge Fund Trader Global Strategy Webinar broadcast from Silicon Valley in California.
Q: Do you think a snapback rally has started? If so, should we increase the size of the September Microsoft (MSFT) spread?
A: Absolutely not. There is no money in 7-day-to-expiration trades. That's why you never see them from me. If you are going to do a position, we’re now looking at October, which has five weeks to run; and I'm waiting for a better entry point. One day does not make a bull market. We also have the volatility index at $25, which is not a good entry point either, so don’t double up on Microsoft here, and avoid 7-day options trades unless you want to be a day trader.
Q: What is your target for the year-end S&P 500?
A: I’m still looking at 4,800. I think we could bottom sometime in the next few weeks—the worst case is the beginning of October—and then it’ll be straight up for the rest of the year. Once we go from discounting the next CPI, which is out on Tuesday the 13th, then we have sort of a no man's land and in October, we start discounting the midterm election, which at the moment is looking like a Democratic win on all fronts.
Q: Amazon (AMZN) has been losing money over the past 2 quarters due to fuel expenses. Is the solution investment in new electric delivery trucks?
A: Yes. In fact, Amazon owns 25% of Rivian (RIVN), and their initial order was to manufacture 100,000 all-electric delivery trucks for Amazon. That has always been the basis for investing in Rivian. It’s been a fantastic investment for Amazon as a stock so far, and when Amazon goes all electric you can bet they’ll power that largely with solar energy. Then they will be out of the energy business entirely; they’ll be producing their own energy and then consuming it, which is the most efficient way to use alternatives, cutting out about 10 different middlemen.
Q: Will the UK pound perform well with this new prime minister?
A: No, the pound is being driven down by rising US interest rates and the energy crisis in Europe, and in fact, I think no matter who the prime minister is, they’re going to have a really difficult time with the economy because of Brexit, which I believe over the long term will reduce British standards of living by half. I don’t know much about the new prime minister as she was in diapers when I was living in England, but it’s a terrible place to invest for the foreseeable future for all of those reasons.
Q: Is it time to buy Tesla (TESLA) for a trade?
A: Well you know me, I’m a perfectionist always trying to buy the bottom. I’m waiting for the market to throw up on its shoes, which it just hasn’t done this year. And I did make a killing on that last move down to $210. We then went up to $310. So, I'm sitting here, 100% cash, waiting to go 100% into Tesla again. It just seems to be a money-making machine for me, and the good news about the company just keeps coming every day.
Q: What strategy would you recommend for income?
A: I would go short dated. 2-year papers now paying 3.5%. I would not go long dated at all, that would be just throwing your money away. Locking in a 3.5% yield for 10 or 20 years would be a perfect money destruction machine. So, go to 2 years, which is essentially going to cash. At least you’ll get the 3.5% with no volatility.
Q: Prediction for the midterms?
A: I’m looking for a Democratic sweep. I analyzed all 33 Senate seats last night that are up for grabs and the Democrats could pick up 2 or even 3 seats. The weak candidates the Republican party has put forward in the most important states are performing very poorly in both fundraising and the polls.
Q: When do you think would be a good time to buy a house for your personal residence?
A: I would say the next time they start to cut interest rates in a couple of years. That is when housing takes off again. I was actually researching this just yesterday—the worst housing crisis we had in 100 years, you had a bear market for houses that only lasted 2 years. That was of course the 2008-2009 disaster driven by massive overbuilding of speculative housing. We haven't had that happen this time. And in fact, we’re short 10 million houses because the capacity cutbacks that happened in ‘08 and ‘09 never recovered. So, I’m kind of thinking, you don’t get crashes in real estate prices now, you get flatlines, and then they take off again because everybody in the world now has 2.75% interest rates and if they sell their house and move their cost-of-living doubles because their mortgage interest rate doubles. So we’re all kind of trapped in our houses now and can’t sell because the alternatives are so much more expensive. That takes enormous pressure off the real estate market, which leans in favor of the flat market thesis.
Q: Do you still love Nvidia (NVDA)?
A: I still love Nvidia. They’ll make up the China losses in no time. And by the way, guess who else uses Nvidia chips? The HIMARS missiles, where demand has suddenly rocketed from 3,000 to 14,000 missiles a year, which is more than the Chinese were ever going to use, and we’re using those up very rapidly by giving them to Ukraine. Every time one of those missiles gets fired uses a whole batch of Nvidia AI cards. So use this dip to load the boat, you’re looking at 20% of downside and maybe 300% of upside on Nvidia on a three-year view. NVIDIA is now down 58% from its high so averaging anywhere around here is fine.
Q: Can you suggest a hedge for the next 4-6 weeks?
A: The only hedge that works is cash. I’ve tried a million hedging strategies over the last 50 years, and the only thing you can rely on is cash. And by the way, cash actually pays you money now. You can earn 2% in interest or more if you’re going to deposit it with a broker.
Q: With electricity shortages already happening, what electricity infrastructure company would you be looking at for investing in the future of EVs?
A: I’ve been investing based on exploding electric power costs myself for the last 15 years. A lot of my plays like SunPower (SPWR) and First Solar (FSLR) have already had enormous moves. That said, I’d use any weakness in the market to buy those on dips because one thing we know for sure is that alternative electricity demand is going to be soaring over the next several years as oil and gas are phased down to zero. And of course, the whole sector got a huge push from Vladimir Putin, who’s massively bringing forward the shift to alternative because he’s using carbon-based energy as a weapon of war against us now.
Q: What’s a good entry point on Nvidia?
A: I tell people to start scaling. A perfect scale would be, let’s say, if you want to put $100,000 into Nvidia, break it up into 10 $10,000 pieces, put in $10,000 today and $10,000 every day until you have a full position, and then you get a nice low average. This is what the companies themselves do when they’re buying their own stock—they just buy small pieces every day to minimize the market impact.
Q: How do you see the Euro?
A: Down 10% in another year, because Jay Powell is going to keep raising interest rates. And even if he doesn’t and the next rate rise is the last one, we’re still going to have interest rates 3.5% higher than everyone else in the world for at least 1 or 2 years, so you could easily get another 10% against all the currencies and maybe more. The outlook for foreign currencies: grim. Outlook for dollar: great.
Q: What about the Porsche (POAHY) IPO?
A: I always avoid IPOs because they get overhyped at the beginning, prices get too high, and then when the restrictive stock comes off, everybody dumps. So wait. I did that with Tesla. Tesla was overhyped—it had a $15 IPO price that went straight up to $30 on opening day. I waited for it to back off to the original IPO price and that’s when I went in and split-adjusted that price which today is $2.35.
Q: Wouldn’t it be good to pick up the speculator houses that aren’t really selling even 50% down with a 5% mortgage?
A: If you could get them 50% down, that would be great; but I don't think any place in the country has seen a 50% drawdown yet—maybe 5% or 10%. The markets that will have the biggest drops will be rural markets that saw the biggest increases, and I’m thinking specifically about Boise, Idaho, where prices doubled in two years, and then they’ll give up a major piece of that. That's where you’ll see the biggest declines the fastest. But, for your bigger quality markets like New York and San Francisco, they went down maybe 5% at worst, and then they go back up again. The only selling you have now is demographic selling, where people die, get married, have more kids and need to change houses for those reasons.
Q: On the electric power side, any thoughts about Clean Sparks (CLSK)?
A: I would be careful not to buy things just because they are “electrical”. You have to be discriminating in your alternative power plays because a lot of these will never make money. In the case of (CLSK), they have yet to make any money and the stock is down 90%. They are in low-margin businesses. Buying electric power and reselling it for charging stations is not a high-margin business. You’re in competition with your local utilities and unless you have something special about your business model, like putting them in shopping malls like Tesla does, the added value there is not that great. I would look very carefully at their business plans and figure out if they’re actually going to make money doing this. Tesla has the perfect model— a giant 20,000 charging station network that only Tesla cars can use, and they’re making the cars that use the power and the panels that generate it and the batteries that store it. It’s a fully integrated vertical model. Remember, anything entering alternative anything now is competing against Tesla, which has a 15-year head start and a dominant market share. So, that is the issue there.
Q: What is the risk of a European crisis and how is that going to affect the US?
A: It is going to affect the US, and we don’t have to wait for a crisis—there's one happening now. I looked at the numbers this morning, and the average British household is looking at a $4,000 annual power bill this year against a per capita income of $47,000 pretax, and their taxes are much higher than ours. Moreover, this is for a country that is a net energy producer. It’s going to be double that cost in energy-consuming countries in eastern Europe and Germany. About ⅓ of all US exports go to Europe, so yes it will affect us but we’ll have to see how it plays out.
Q: What’s your forecast for profit margins for next year?
A: I’m looking for S&P 500 earnings of 10% for 2023. That may be one reason why stocks keep failing to break down.
Q: Would a price cap on oil prices raise the price of oil?
A: No, it’s having the opposite effect, making oil go down; and you’re seeing this at the free market price, which is the price at which Russia is selling their oil to China and India. That’s happening at a 20% discount to market, so all the Russian oil going to China now is happening at $12 below the current spot price for oil, which is around $82.
Q: How about Nuclear energy plays?
A: Yeah, we did put out one recommendation for Cameco (CCJ) in the spring. I’m still buying that on the dips. Germany resuscitated three nuclear power plants, California one, and Japan is doing the same. Of course, France is sitting pretty—they already have 75% of their electric power coming from nuclear. Who ever knew the French would outsmart the Germans? But betting your energy future on Russia was a terrible idea, and only happened because a lot of key German politicians were bribed by Russians. So yes, oil is dropping and you should expect it to continue.
Q: Did we just see the peak in interest rates for the year?
A: No, at a minimum we’re looking at 3.50% on the yield. We were 3.35% yesterday but could easily overshoot to 3.60% or 3.70% which is why I’m being a little cautious jumping in on the long side here.
Q: When is the time to do LEAPS on Freeport McMoRan (FCX)?
A: Soon. If we can double bottom at around $24, that would be great LEAP territory because I expect in 2 to 3 years this will be a $100 stock and a good LEAPS to do here. If we get down to $24, then you really want to look hard at doing something like a $30/$32, because then you could get like a 500% return on that maybe a year or two out. The leverage in LEAPS is astronomical as many of you discovered with my (TLT) put LEAPS last year. If you want more specific information about LEAPS, please sign up for my Concierge service.
Q: When will you send out LEAP recommendations?
A: On a cataclysmic capitulation selloff day—that is the time to do them.
Q: If Tesla does attempt to raise more capital with new share issues, will that drive the price down?
A: Yes, that's usually what happens, but Elon Musk is a great market timer, and you can bet that he’ll wait for a massive run-up in the stock first before he does this. Every one of these capital races he’s done has been after a massive run-up in the stock and then it tends to cap the stock for 6 months after that. You can safely buy it now because Elon doesn’t think the stock has topped out yet, since he hasn’t announced any new secondary equity issues yet.
Q: What is the actual cause of the surge in natural gas prices?
A: The complete shutoff of natural gas flows from Russia to Europe, especially Germany, which used to get 55% of its total natural gas from Russia.
Q: What is your take on the current Ukraine situation?
A: Ukraine is winning—they’re doing it slowly. The US has quadrupled production of the HIMARS missiles, from 3,000 a year to 14,000 a year, and that has made all the difference in the world. Ukraine has been able to take the upper hand in this war because of literally just 16 vehicles we gave them to fire these missiles. My guess is it goes on for another year, there's a coup in Russia, Putin gets assassinated or deposed, giving us a new government in Russia, and Ukraine gets all its old territory back, joining NATO and the EC.
Q: Thoughts on Google (GOOGL)?
A: Good long-term hold but could be an antitrust target in the near future.
Q: Some say energy will be in critical shortage for many years. Why are you long-term bearish on energy/oil?
A: You have to separate the two; I’m long-term bullish on energy, which is why I built this massive solar system. But oil will be illegal within a decade—that you can count on. Demand will go to zero. It won’t be governments that do this, it’ll be the market. By the way, we’ve already gone to zero once before. If you look at the Spring of 2020, we had negative $37 in the futures market on oil. This is not some far-out thing—the zero prices will just come back. On the way to zero though, you will get several doubles, triples, and quadruples in the price. The smaller the market becomes, the more volatile the price becomes; oil is no exemption from that. That’s why Elon Musk says we need to increase our oil production for the short term to get ourselves on the way to zero—you have to do the transition. The problem is that nobody wants to make 30-year investments in a product that is going to be banned in eight years, hence the shortages.
Q: What's a flight-to-safety asset right now?
A: There are three: Cash, cash, and cash.
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The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
Teslas are Great, but they are not Crash Proof
Mad Hedge Technology Letter
August 19, 2022
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(A WALK IN THE PARK)
(RIVN), (AAPL), (LCID)
Rivian (RIVN) produces nice EVs, but their business model still needs to work out the kinks.
Creating an EV company from scratch these days is something that doesn’t get a lot of attention.
Bellwether EV company Tesla (TSLA) built its reputation when doing something like this was easier. We assume it’s like a walk in the park.
Now the post-health situation world has really put the clamps on business with energy not cheap anymore, made in China not working smoothly, and the strong dollar making sales from abroad lower in greenback terms.
Naturally, RIVN has felt all these bottlenecks and the usual result is losing money.
This has forced RIVN to raise prices as it is discontinuing the cheapest versions of its pickup truck and SUV models, citing low customer demand.
Eliminating the base version, coined the Explore package, now means the most affordable pickup truck in the R1T model line will have a price of $73,000—an increase of $5,500, Rivian said. The least expensive version of its all-electric SUV, the R1S, is now $78,000.
These mid-$70,000 EV pickup trucks will most likely be closer to $100,000 in 2-3 years as inflation isn’t going anywhere.
RIVN isn’t profitable when selling at the lower price point and raising prices will effectively lower demand but not by too much.
This isn’t the first time RIVN has jacked up prices, but truthfully, it is just a sign of the times.
Actually, this is the second time that Rivian has gone rogue citing rising raw-material costs, particularly for batteries, and manufacturing difficulties that have led the company to report a $1.7 billion loss for the second quarter.
Today, the world's biggest nickel producer, Indonesia, may impose a tax on exports of the metal this year, President Joko Widodo says.
It pours fuel on the fire.
Back in March, RIVN raised prices by $20,000, even the ones who had already put down a $1,000 deposit to reserve their vehicles.
RIVN is now in an unenviable position of slashing costs to conserve cash and giving priority to certain trims of its vehicles in an effort to boost factory output.
Rivian said it aims to produce 25,000 vehicles this year from its plant in Normal, Ill.
Luckily, the Federal government has given EVs a new subsidy where any electric truck or SUV selling for over $80,000 would become ineligible for the $7,500 tax credit under the planned revisions.
Naturally, after the $80,000 price point breaches, it’s a mere formality that prices will need to compensate the lost tax credit and go straight to $90,000 and above like a runaway train.
As expected, the company is losing lots of money and at the end of June, it had about $15.46 billion in cash and cash equivalents, about $1.5 billion less than at the close of the first quarter.
The company has a great product that consumers want, but producing these cars at scale at an affordable price is the issue.
I would wait for the stock to drop from $35 to $25 then hold long term and incrementally add as the stock goes down.
If the operations teams can pull out a few victories here and there, then sourcing the next factory is in the cards to increase output.
It’s not just a RIVN problem, Tesla (TSLA) and Lucid (LCID) have also increased prices as well, but Tesla has a larger balance sheet and a profitable busine model.
Scale into this stock at lower levels and put it away for the long term. If the company survives, the stock price will be higher in the long term especially if someone can get the Chinese back in the factories.
Mad Hedge Technology Letter
June 15, 2022
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(HIGH STAKES)
(LCID), (RIVN), (TSLA)
CEO of Tesla (TSLA) Elon Musk commented in an interview that he thought EV makers Rivian (RIVN) and Lucid (LCID) would go bankrupt.
Musk can’t seem to avoid media scrutiny.
Yet while there are indeed elements of truth in his words, we should take it with a grain of salt.
Tesla was once in the same position as RIVN and LCID.
Out of everyone in the world, Musk knows how it feels to be in their position now, and it most likely feels like the world caving in on you.
The pressure from shareholders can be intense, and defying gravity by creating new industries can be incredibly tedious.
What are my thoughts?
Give it some time, even though there isn’t much of it.
Musk’s timing for a sucker punch couldn’t be more cruel as we head into the Fed meeting where there is a 95% chance of a 75-basis point.
In an industry where to become profitable takes many years of losses, it hurts to hear that borrowing money will be at least .75% higher tomorrow.
This matters for Rivian and Lucid because they most likely will need to tap the debt market to keep existing.
The debt markets can either be your friend or foe as a startup.
Musk quipped that raising prices will reduce customers.
Talk about stating the obvious and yes, he is technically accurate, but I think that the comments need some color that wasn’t offered during the interview.
Rivian bled $1.5 billion last quarter, and it has significant negative gross margins and so do many unproven tech firms.
If it keeps hemorrhaging on electric vehicles it sells and delivers, it will go bankrupt unless it can raise more money, which is getting more expensive literally by the day.
Lucid is in a similar situation.
They can also sell a stake and release control over the operation which isn’t great either.
However, this is where you’d expect Rivian and Lucid to be at this stage in their evolution and Tesla was in a very similar situation around the same time.
Tesla was losing money and relied on raising more capital for a long time before it got its costs under control.
Costs are out of control because the global supply chain is in chaos, and Musk shouldn’t make it seem like he’s not dealing with the same external forces as Rivian and Lucid.
Tesla has also been raising the prices of their vehicles too so it’s not only Rivian.
Musk also can’t afford to piss off the Chinese communist party so I would say that each company has rather outsized idiosyncratic risk but in different shapes and forms.
Rivian has $16 billion in cash and even if that pile dwindles, it most likely will be enough gunpowder to get them where they need in the short run.
It’s easy for Musk to lash out from his ivory tower and he has every incentive for RIVN and Lucid to fail because every one of their customers potentially converts to Tesla.
Perhaps, he would also buy these bankrupt car companies for a discount if they did happen to topple.
Both Lucid and Rivian have good products that are sleek and what you would imagine from a new EV car.
Getting through the short-term to enjoy economies of scale is where they are trying to go and just like Tesla, it’s a hard slog with many infrastructure problems building new gigafactories along the way.
Oh, and don’t forget that not everybody is still in love with Tesla either.
There are still haters like vaccine entrepreneur Bill Gates who wagered $1 billion in put options against Tesla.
Many aren’t sold on Tesla the business yet even though the car is great.
In the short-term, I believe it’s a rate story and rising rates induced by Central Bank negligence doesn’t invite higher stock prices, nor if a recession hits next year.
On the other side, high oil prices are driving customers to EV purchases and once rate hikes are priced in later this year, EV stocks have a chance to rebound.
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