Mad Hedge Technology Letter
November 9, 2022
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(RISKY BUSINESS)
(ARKK), (SARK), (ROKU), (TSLA)
Mad Hedge Technology Letter
November 9, 2022
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(RISKY BUSINESS)
(ARKK), (SARK), (ROKU), (TSLA)
Tech growth is a sub-sector that readers really need to stay away from right now.
It’s toxic for the time being.
We are still right in the middle of the Fed Funds rate hike cycle and the pounding has been relentless with former tech darlings breaking records for lower lows.
The poster child for the excesses in tech growth is Cathie Wood who is the CEO of ARK (ARKK) innovation funds.
She has completely ignored “market timing” and has used every brash sell-off to go big without doing much research.
This strategy has proven to be highly unsuccessful, as many of her top holdings like Tesla are again in free fall.
CEO of Tesla Elon Musk just sold $4 billion of stock to divert into his new company Twitter which lost a massive amount of advertising revenue when he took over.
Yesterday, crypto experienced an unbelievable meltdown when the 2nd largest exchange FTX once valued around $35 billion was and still is on the brink of bankruptcy.
The same day Wood bet the ranch on crypto exchange Coinbase (COIN) adding 420,949 shares of COIN to the current 7.7 million that ARK Investment Management currently holds.
Bitcoin is down 13% at the time of this writing, representing yet another giant flop for Wood.
Wood is performing highly risky moves at the peak of turmoil in an industry that many think is a Ponzi scheme.
Her exploits are so infamous that it now has an inverse ETF that tracks the opposite of what she decides and performance has been stellar.
That ETF, called AXS Short Innovation Daily ETF (SARK), has soared more than 111% since launching a year ago. That’s the second best performance among the nearly 450 ETFs that launched over the past year.
Wood’s second biggest position is ad tech firm Roku (ROKU) which has gone from $460 to $48 today.
SARK’s first-year performance is among the 20 best of all-time measured against funds that are still trading.
Wood’s poor performance represents the pitfalls of choosing an investment adviser when they are one-dimensional and unable to acknowledge initial mistakes.
Instead of adjusting a flawed strategy, she has used it as the impetus to double down on a bad strategy.
The best hedge fund managers know when they are wrong and quickly reverse course or cut their losses.
Wood’s failures are quickly dealt with by blaming others, routinely saying that others “don’t do their research.”
Wood’s propensity to hype up tech like there is no tomorrow is now directly working against her.
She views any and every selloff as a brilliant entry point while ignoring broader market fundamentals.
In short, the day Cathie Wood is bearish is the day to go big into tech shares, because there are likely no more incremental buyers willing to hold the bag.
Truth be told, the Nasdaq currently sits 35% down from its November 2021 peak a year on.
I would call that pretty good, considering we are deleveraging from the biggest man-made financial bubble that was ever created in financial markets.
The bubble has caused the US Federal government to shoulder more than $31 billion of government debt that needs to be serviced with constant interest payments.
The only reason why tech shares are down 35% is because every investor believes the US Central Bank will kick the can down the road and save corporate America when push comes to shove.
This is precisely why recent bear market rallies have been epic, and any scintilla of interest rate loosening talk is met with thunderous buying.
If investors were more scared of the Fed, tech shares would be down at least 60% by now.
Mad Hedge Technology Letter
September 26, 2022
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(DARLING TO DEMOTED)
(ARKK), (SARK), (PRNT), (IZRL), (ZM), (DNA), (TSLA)
ARK Innovation ETF (ARKK) and its infamous CEO Cathie Wood was the poster boy for tech growth as the 10-year bull market in technology shifted into high gear.
That was then and this is now.
Oh, how one full year makes a world of difference in the tech universe.
ARKK is not touted anymore as the tech fund that could do no wrong.
We, as investors, cannot recreate the world we desire by a click of a button but must roll with the punches and embrace a paradigm shift into a new normal of economic uncertainty, stagnation, de-globalization, supply chain bottlenecks, weak emerging currencies, and most important, higher interest rates.
It just so happens that the best trade out there all along has been long the US dollar to the detriment of tech stocks. Tech usually does well when the US dollar is weak.
ARK’s underperformance is finally creating a change as Wood is relinquishing her role as portfolio at 3D Printing ETF (PRNT) and ARK Israel Innovative Technology ETF (IZRL).
Recent criticism has been fierce accusing the fund of being a one-woman show with much of the hopes and dreams pinned on Wood.
Much of this has to do with her earlier success in Tesla (TSLA) which I would like to give her credit for.
However, since then, she has ridden the coattails of popularity to become a tech growth evangelist no matter what conditions.
She has often cut a polarizing figure in the world of tech investing.
ARK’s centralization of management could prove to be their downfall.
The demotion for Wood won’t be taken lightly and this also could be a way to throw the next guy under the bus as tech stocks go from bad to worse.
There have been headscratchers lately.
ARKK bought more of Zoom Video Communications Inc. (ZM) last month and I find that more of a beggar’s belief than anything else.
A pandemic darling shouldn’t be confused with a small company with no competitive advantages against big tech.
Another bizarre decision was to buy Ginkgo Bioworks Holdings Inc. (DNA), which has fallen 69% this year. The company invests in early-stage biotech companies and has lost around $1.5 billion in the first half of 2022. The company in 2021 lost $1.8 billion as well, but Wood continues to pour capital into this start-up.
The Nasdaq is now rescinding the premium they used to generously deliver for loss-making companies but fast-growing companies.
Woods hypers herself up as investing in disruptive tech, but many of her companies aren’t that disruptive and she is not aware of market cycles or market timing.
For the past year, she has proved that she is a specialist in being wrong.
ARKK needs to be careful of a meltdown instead of flashing the cash on pandemic darlings because they are cheap today.
There is a reason that many of these speculative tech firms are now cheap, it’s because they aren’t growing enough or making enough money. She still doesn’t understand that.
Expect more demotions for Wood as her pixie dust has run dry.
Buy the inverse of ARKK called AXS Short Innovation Daily ETF (SARK) after bear market rallies.
Mad Hedge Technology Letter
June 22, 2022
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(EARNINGS REVISION IN THE PIPELINE)
(SARK), (ARKK), (AAPL), (UBER), (LYFT)
“We could have a couple of negative quarters” – uttered Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia President Patrick Harker.
We badly needed to hear that, because the jargon we’ve been offered so far from federal representatives has not been honest enough.
Ironically enough, saying the truth could offer relief to the Nasdaq index as pricing in a recession moves us along, but that doesn’t mean we are out of the woods yet.
Harker also said it is possible the U.S. economy might see a modest contraction in growth, but he expects the job market to remain strong.
Let me translate that for you.
Harker expects a soft recession, and he feels that it is increasingly priced into stocks.
However, the Nasdaq isn’t priced for a hard recession today, which could be the potential driving force for another dip in the index.
Adding some validation to a possible leg lower is that one of the biggest dip buyers out there, Blackrock (BLK), has said that it is not buying the dip in stocks, as valuations haven’t really improved.
Maybe they are targeting more single-family homes!
To get a real reversal of momentum, we will need not only big stocks like Apple to participate, but also the big buyers.
Don’t look at the Saudi’s either, they are busy earnings $2 billion a day selling oil.
From behind the scenes talks, there is still the hush hush feeling that positioning indicates that we are in for a sharp V-shaped rebound.
How do I know this?
Tech earnings still have a highly optimistic tinge to them, and lower inflation is built into earnings’ calculations.
Don’t forget that many garden-variety tech CFOs built low inflation into their 2nd half of the year revenue models.
Inflation, according to them, is supposed to subside triggering earnings’ beats around the pantheon of great tech companies.
This is what is supposed to happen if consensus plays out.
It rarely does.
Adding fuel to the fire is a proposed federal gas tax holiday by the current administration which is extraordinarily inflationary even if it does help marginal tech companies like Uber (UBER) and Lyft (LYFT) in the short run.
A tax holiday will destroy oil capacity by disincentivizing oil companies in capital investments.
Supply will also crash by encouraging gas hoarding by clever consumers and CEOs hellbent on taking advantage of this brief tax holiday.
The 800-pound gorilla in the room is clearly China.
Imagine if the Communists finally start to peel back their dystopian arbitrary lockdowns and what that will do for rampant inflation.
Pork prices will rise 25% and more importantly oil prices will revisit the peak we had from the on set of the military event East of Poland.
All of this matters for tech companies that consummate contracts for chips, parts, pay salaries to inflationary traumatized coders and build computers.
The conundrum here is that CFOs and CEOs might be guilty of being too positive in regard to the economic cycle.
Consensus estimates (IBES data by Refinitiv) still show very healthy levels of earnings growth. S&P 500 earnings per share for 2022 remain at +10.8%, but the expectations for 2023 continue to reflect a probably optimistic +8.1% growth, with revenues up 4%.
This is ridiculously overly optimistic and isn’t in tune to the realities on the ground.
It is highly plausible we will experience another bear market rally in tech only to be reminded by upcoming earnings’ revisions that there’s still multiple contractions that needs to be rammed down our throat.
Tech stocks will be the most volatile during this period and traders looking for the best bang for a buck should look at smaller positions but in higher beta names like Tuttle Capital Short Innovation ETF (SARK) for the post-bear market rally and ARK Innovation ETF (ARKK) for the current bear market rally.
It’ll be interesting to see if stocks like Apple (AAPL) can eclipse their previous bear market rally peak of $151.
Apple stands at $138, and I presume with these lower gas prices, it should eke out at least $145 before another acid test.
Mad Hedge Technology Letter
April 29, 2022
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(TELADOC IMPLODES)
(ARKK), (SARK), (TDOC), (ROKU), (SHOP), (ZM)
The Cathie Wood circus keeps making new lows as digital doctor platform Teladoc (TDOC) recorded the biggest drop in shares since its IPO.
At one point, shares were down 45% and this was the day after buying another tranche of over $200 million worth of shares before the earnings came out.
TDOC was a pandemic darling and since then, the stock has done nothing but dive lower.
There is even an inverse ETF to jump on the anti-Cathie Wood bandwagon called Tuttle Capital Short Innovation ETF (SARK).
SARK is almost up 100% year to date showing that as market conditions distort, traders must distort with them.
To stay long tech growth is like throwing money off an apartment balcony.
The lack of understanding Cathie Woods exhibits about the stock market is hard to fathom.
Her go-to excuse is that others “aren’t doing the research.”
We were smack dab in a low-rate environment for a decade when even marginal tech companies would get the benefit of the doubt.
As the goalposts have moved and narrowed, Wood is still sticking to her 5-year time horizon and still explaining to investors that other analysts “aren’t doing their homework.”
This really is a case of the emperor having no clothes if I have ever seen it.
To add insult to injury, she has gone on public television to speak about how she believes the global economy is experiencing deflationary pressures.
No matter what changes to the trading environment, she sticks to her narrow story of deflation and her 5-year time horizon while her investors lose money.
If that’s not enough, she blames the market for not understanding her ARKK fund which is down more than 50% this year.
She claims that many people are “devaluing innovation” and just do not understand innovation like she does.
With an unrelenting belief in her growth strategy, miraculously, another $1.5 billion of inflows have juiced up her fund in 2022.
There are many out there that still think she is a great money manager after her one call of Tesla going up was correct.
Investors have chosen to back her further even with mounting losses and that has now backfired as ETF ARK Innovation ETF (ARKK) appears as if the market has not recognized how smart Cathie Wood is.
ARKK is Teladoc’s largest shareholder with a 12% stake worth.
It’s not just TDOC, but other investments like Roku (ROKU), Zoom Video Communications (ZM), and Shopify (SHOP) whose shares have experienced cataclysmic meltdowns of epic proportions.
Why did TDOC shares perform so poorly?
Higher advertising expenses in the mental health market, as well as an “elongated sales cycle” in chronic conditions as employers and providers of healthcare plans evaluate strategies.
TDOC’s services aren’t as good as first thought.
TDOC also took a $6.6 billion charge for impairment of goodwill, a non-cash charge the company excluded from its adjusted results.
The competition also has increased significantly and many of these first-move advantages are not holding up like they used to in tech.
The recent performance has been met with a bevy of analyst downgrades and tech growth as a sub-sector will have a hard time recovering until a lower interest rate sentiment comes back to sweep up the market.
Still, not a peep out of Cathie Wood on modifying her controversial strategies and that’s when we are staring down a barrel of multiple 50 basis point interest rate rises.
She was photographed partying in the Bahamas at some beach parties the day before the TDOC debacle, apparently, she isn’t bothered that much by her followers losing generation wealth.
If readers want to get back into tech growth after an easing of credit conditions, avoid buying ARKK and just buy a collection of strong tech growth yourself.
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