Global Market Comments
January 31, 2025
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(JANUARY 29 BIWEEKLY STRATEGY WEBINAR Q&A),
(META), (AMZN), (NVDA), (AMD) (GS), (SPY), (TSLA), (SBUX), (CCJ), (ADBE), (LMT), (GD), (RTX), (NVDA)
Global Market Comments
January 31, 2025
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(JANUARY 29 BIWEEKLY STRATEGY WEBINAR Q&A),
(META), (AMZN), (NVDA), (AMD) (GS), (SPY), (TSLA), (SBUX), (CCJ), (ADBE), (LMT), (GD), (RTX), (NVDA)
Below please find subscribers’ Q&A for the January 29 Mad Hedge Fund Trader Global Strategy Webinar, broadcast from Salt Lake City, UT.
Q: Are AI stocks going to crash?
A: Some already have, and others haven’t. It’s really about single-stock-picking the chip area and the pure AI plays, which have been enormously overextended. If you boil it down to a single sentence, if you offer AI for free, AI users like (META) and (AMZN) do really well, while AI producers, like (NVDA) and (AMD) get crushed. I’ve been warning for months that these things were getting too high. The end result is that in two weeks the price earnings multiple for Nvidia has gone from 40 to 25. You know, at 25, it really is quite attractive. It'll be even more attractive at 20 or even 15 if we get that low. I'll show you where we hit that on the charts. Don't forget their earnings are still growing at tremendous rates—we'll talk about that in a second.
Q: What stocks are good to invest in now?
A: Watch the banks. Watch the financials. They’ve hardly sold off. I was begging for Goldman Sachs (GS) to tank. It didn't—we only got a $10 drop. It's just not letting people in, which means higher highs for all the banks and financials are coming. That has become the no-brainer one-way trade of 2025. You know, I had an enormous number of bank LEAPS expire in my personal account on the January 17 option expiration. I'm waiting to get back in now. So that is the play.
Q: What's happening with Starbucks (SBUX)? Are they investable?
A: Starbucks was a disaster area until the summer when they brought in new management, which has a fantastic track record. The stock has since gone up 30%. You're kind of late to get in on this one. I don't really follow the stock anyway. Selling cups of coffee is not a high-margin business. I'd rather stick with the Tesla’s (TSLA) and Nvidia’s (NVDA) of the world where the value added is very high
Q: What will happen with Bitcoin in the new administration?
A: It's the same with everything. Higher highs first, lower lows later. If you're a Bitcoin investor now at 100,000, the big question is what happens when Donald Trump leaves office in four years? Does it go back to 5,000? We really don't know so, why touch Bitcoin when you can get 10 to 1 returns on all these other great companies which make stuff that you can actually touch and feel? Plus, you can leverage up with the LEAPS, and no one's going to steal your account, which happens frequently with Bitcoin holdings.
Q: Do you think tariffs are a good idea for the economy?
A: No, tariffs shrink global trade, they shrink globalization. It's a race to see if we can make other countries more poor than they can make us. It's an economy-shrinking strategy. It was a major contributor to causing the Great Depression in the 1930’s. That's why we abandoned tariffs 80 years ago with the end of World War II. I mean, the last cause of the 1930’s tariffs was World War II. That was a major contributing factor. So do I like tariffs? No. It turns out it's a great defensive strategy. If someone's making a fortune off you, they tend not to blow you up. So I think that's a big mistake and I will be an anti-tariff person to my grave. There are special situations like Chinese EVs, for example, where they're using a huge cost advantage to flood the emerging markets with cheap EVs. If that happened to the US, it would crash the US economy. In that one case, I'm in favor of tariffs. By the way, their EVs are using technology they basically stole from Tesla.
Q: What are your thoughts on defense stocks? With so many wars occurring all over the world.
A: Don't touch defense stocks with a 10-foot poll if the government is in favor of cost-cutting, the largest cost after Social Security is defense. We had a defense budget of about $824 billion in 2024. We have a 2.8 million man military and that cutting there and running down our weapons stocks would mean that you don't want to buy Lockheed Martin (LMT), General Dynamics (GD), Raytheon (RTX), all the big suppliers of weapons to the Ukraine war, for example, which looks like it's going to get cut off completely. They cut off all humanitarian aid to Ukraine last week. And of course, I was personally involved in delivering some of that humanitarian aid to Ukraine in the recent past. Yeah, defense looks bad if people really get serious about cost-cutting.
Q: Do you see the Fed dropping interest rates later this year?
A: That is possible. I tend to think we don't go into recession this year. It's a next year or year after type of thing. But markets can discount recession in six months to a year in advance like they did in 2007 and 2008. I don't think we get any more interest rate cuts. We'll just have to see what policies the new government implements, and how inflationary they are. And if they are inflationary, interest rates are going up, not down. That is why everybody's sitting on their hands right now and doesn't know what to do. Uncertainty at an eight-year high. You know, the government often talks one game but does the opposite. So, there’s nothing to do but wait and see.
Q: Well, what happened to the US housing market in 2025?
A: Nothing, you know volumes are shrinking. The last two years were the lowest volume sales in housing market history since the numbers were collected, and higher interest rates for longer. It's just more bad news. You know, something like 40% of all of the sales now are all cash. Prices are still going up again on paper, but there's almost no trade happening at these higher prices. And of course, the Millennials have been almost completely shut out of the market—the largest generation in history by the way—because they don't have enough money. They can't earn enough money; especially when AI is wiping out all the entry-level jobs, as it has been doing for two years in Silicon Valley.
Q: Here's a good question. How much time do we need to spend researching a company before we make an investment there?
A: Well, not that much, really. You can spend an hour or two reading the annual report, browsing through the most recent financial statement, and doing some news searches and you'll have a better read than most individual investors are going to have on a single stock. Then you start to see trends on what makes a good company, what makes a bad company, and over time, you get a feel for a company—when to get in, when to get out. That's one way. Or you can listen to the Mad Hedge Fund Trader, who's been doing this for 55 years and watching the same stocks. You wonder why you always have the same stocks up here and it's because I've been following these guys for forever or more. So you really get a handle on when they're doing well and when they're doing awful.
Q: Should we sell Nvidia (NVDA) stock for now?
A: No, I was telling people to cut positions the next time it ran to $150, which it did a few weeks ago. Now we're probably entering buy territory more than sell territory. Nvidia will come back. I just don't know where the bottom is for now, and it depends on your own investing style. If you're a five-year investor, you can forget about all this volatility, if you're a day trader, yeah, you probably should sell Nvidia now because you could buy it back $10 cheaper.
Q: Do you expect a new high after the Fed meeting?
A: No, I don't. I think we're stuck in a range for the S&P 500 for the next six months. After that, we may get a move. Depending on what effect government policies have on the economy.
Q: What about an alert for Adobe (ADBE)?
A: I didn't put out the alert to buy Adobe. The Adobe alert is part of the Mad Hedge Technology Letter service, and if you want to get purely tech trade alerts, go to the Mad Hedge website, go to the store, and you can see the technology letter is offered for sale up there. Here is the link: https://hi290.infusionsoft.app/app/orderForms/techletter
Q: What is the right size of account for doing this kind of trading?
A: We literally have college students trading with $500 accounts. We have lots of individuals trading with $5,000 accounts—that way you can buy 10 $400 positions and still have some room. We only recommend you put 10% of your cash in any one trade. A lot of retired people will keep a large portion of their money in an index like the S&P 500 (SPY) and take 10% of their money and use it to do our trade alerts, which then adds an extra return to the index position. So, the answer is different for different people.
Q: Do I see a meaningful correction like 20% or 30% in the next six months?
A: No, I really don't, but that could be 2026 business. When we get a big correction, we get a recession. Again, it's dependent on government policies and we have no idea what those are right now. People can only guess. I'm not in the guessing business. I'm in the sure thing business.
Q: Can you explain how to complete the trade alerts you send out?
A: What all the professionals do is they put out a spread of orders. If I put out an order to buy something at $9.00, you put in a bid at $9.00, $9.10, $9.20, $9.30, and $9.40. By the close, some or all of those will get done. Often they all get done by the end of the day when the high-frequency traders have to dump their positions because they're not allowed to carry overnight positions. You make them good-until-canceled orders. So if you get a low opening the next morning, you'll get entirely filled at the $9.00 level, and this is what my clients in Australia do. They only do overnight good-until-cancelled orders since the market's open from 11:30 PM until 6:00 AM in the morning, Australia time. They tend to make more money than any of my other clients because they only enter overnight GTC orders. So, people trying to outsmart the market on an intraday basis generally don't do very well.
Q: Should I sell the Cameco Corporation (CCJ) stock I bought on the nuclear trade?
A: No, I think (CCJ) recovers. I was looking at it yesterday. Elimination of the electricity trade is complete nonsense. I think the nuclear thing is real. It'll come back. And in fact, I bought Vistra Energy (VST) yesterday, so use this extreme sell-off to get into the nuclear trade if you missed it the first time around.
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, TECHNOLOGY LETTER, or JACQUIE'S POST, then WEBINARS, and all the webinars from the last 12 years are there in all their glory.
Good Luck and Good Trading,
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
Global Market Comments
August 22, 2024
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(THE TOP SEVEN CHINESE RETAILIATION TARGETS),
(AAPL), (GM), (WMT), (TGT), (BA), (SBUX), (CAT),
(AND MY PREDICTION IS….)
It’s looking like the trade war between the US and China is going to heat up some more, no matter who wins the presidential election. It is no longer a question of “if”, but “how much” and “when.”
Please forgive me, but I am new at this. I have only been covering China for 50 years now since the Cultural Revolution was sweeping an impoverished, starving third-world communist country.
With a massive US trade deficit with China in 2023, the Middle Kingdom has become a top administration target.
A real trade war would cause thousands of businesses in the US to go bankrupt and leave millions unemployed. Transpacific transportation would ground to a halt, filling up harbors with hundreds of redundant ships.
Trillions of dollars of direct investment in the two countries would be held hostage.
In other words, a trade war would be like cutting off our noses to spite our faces.
Just as America has its Tea Party and right-wing conspiracy theorists, so does China.
Their entire worldview revolves around the merciless exploitation of China by the Western powers that took place during the 19th century.
British trading companies, like Jardine Matheson, imported cheap opium from India and sold it to the Chinese at the point of a gun, triggering three wars. With only primitive weapons at hand, the Chinese were powerless to resist.
By the time of the fall of the Qing Dynasty in 1912, the entire country had been carved up into spheres of influence dominated by the West and Japan.
Then the Japanese invaded in 1937, and 29 million Chinese died. As recently as 1938, my Marine Corps uncle, Colonel Mitchell Paige, was charged with protecting American gunboats cruising the Yangtze River.
To us, this is all ancient history inhabiting dusty textbooks in libraries never visited. Patriotic Chinese feel like this happened yesterday.
You could dismiss all this as academic musings.
But national pride and sovereignty are really big deals in China today.
During China’s last trade war with Japan only five years ago, several Japanese facilities were burned down by angry, uncontrollable mobs, and visiting businessmen were assaulted on the street. Trade ground to a halt.
So it behooves us to analyze which companies will suffer the most from any deterioration in the US-Chinese relationship before markets figure this out. The Chinese are not interested in any “America First” policy in any way, shape, or form.
Here is my hit list:
1) Apple (AAPL) – Yes, Cupertino, CA-based Apple has a big fat bull’s-eye on its back. The company is a vast, finely tuned machine that needs everything to work perfectly to deliver hundreds of millions of iPhones around the world.
The number of things that can go wrong here can’t be counted. What if the one million workers at its Foxconn subcontractor fail to show up for work someday? What if they are not allowed to go to work? What if they burn THAT factory down?
Another problem is that Chinese growth is a key part of Apple’s long-term sales strategy. A Chinese boycott would put a huge dent in those plans.
Remember, Apple is getting it from both sides, with Trump promising a 35% import duty on all Apple products. That would certainly hurt sales.
I’m sure Apple management is on tenterhooks as to how all this will play out in the coming months.
There is no backup plan here. Apple is just too big and too sophisticated to change any part of its incredibly complex supply chain in less than a decade.
2) General Motors (GM) – Is one of the most globalized US companies of all. (GM) can’t build a car in Detroit without 40% of its parts coming from Japan, Mexico, South Korea, or dozens of other countries.
General Motors is also hugely dependent on Chinese sales. It sells more Buicks in China than it does in the US. That is one-third of GM’s total worldwide sales.
Next, the company plans to sell Chinese-made Buicks in America.
While we weren’t looking, General Motors has become a Chinese company, and many others are falling suit.
3) Wal-Mart (WMT) – Imagine walking into your local Walmart one day and finding out that all of the prices have been marked up by 35%.
This is the reason why the company is called the “Chinese Embassy.” I dare you to find anything there that is NOT made in China, except for the food and the flowers (a dozen long stem red roses are only $10!).
Like Apple, the company is so big that any change in its supply chain would take years. You can add Target (TGT) to this hit list for the same reasons.
On top of that, Wal-Mart has 432 stores operating in China. Imagine the effect that a boycott would have there.
4) Boeing (BA) - The local flight school that maintains my plane has been totally taken over by Chinese students. That is because China needs to buy $1 trillion worth of aircraft over the next 20 years, some 6,800 jetliners in all.
Boeing expects to provide the lion’s share of these. The company has already entered the planning phases for the construction of a giant new aircraft assembly plant in China.
It would be really easy for China to switch a major part of these orders over to Europe’s Airbus Industries, which has been aggressively competing to accomplish exactly that.
Boeing didn’t get the business because of the advanced technology seen in the 787 Dreamliner. Chinese were simply attempting to even out the trade balance.
5) Starbucks (STBX) – Starbucks founder Howard Schultz made no secret of his dislike for Donald Trump before the election. With 2,500 stores in China, and plans to double that figure, he had little other choice.
With relations between the US and China turning colder than the firm’s overpriced ice espresso, sales, growth plans, and share prices could take a big hit. Chinese may have to postpone their caffeine addiction until the next Democratic administration.
6) Caterpillar (CAT) – You can’t have an infrastructure boom anywhere in the world without Caterpillar, whose heavy machinery is the gold standard for large public works projects. I have been covering the company for 40 years.
7) Tesla (TSLA) – Tesla’s factory in China is the company’s biggest seller. If the Chinese expropriate or impede in any way such as through strikes, Tesla’s share price would drop by half instantly. I know the Chinese promised to play nice when Tesla made this groundbreaking, technology-transferring investment. But guess what Elon? The Chinese can change their minds.
As a result of the upcoming US round of massive deficit spending, (CAT)’s share has been one of the best performers since the presidential election.
Unfortunately, this time the company is so heavily invested in China that it has also built a large assembly plant there. China accounts for 20% of the firm’s worldwide sales.
Time for a short?
The net effect on the impairment of business at all of these companies will be lower profits, high volatility of profits, and continued uncertainty. The shares will be forced to trade at a discount.
When you are running a mammoth global business, the last thing in the world you want is unpredictability.
It will also bring a rapid rise in inflation, as prices are raised to offset higher costs and a strong dollar.
Who will be the biggest victims?
Working-class Trump voters in Rust Belt states, least able to afford price hikes, especially those who already have jobs in Midwest manufacturing.
Global Market Comments
August 16, 2024
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
( AUGUST 15 BIWEEKLY STRATEGY WEBINAR Q&A),
(SPY), (CMG), (SBUX), (TLT), (CCI),
(FCX), (SLRN), (DAL), (TSLA), (LRCX)
Below please find subscribers’ Q&A for the August 15 Mad Hedge Fund Trader Global Strategy Webinar, broadcast from London, England
Q: Do you think we’ll still have another significant test of the lows for the year, or was that it last week? Stocks are rebounding huge this week.
A: They never really went down very much. The average drawdown IN THE S&P 500 (SPY) in any given year is 15%. We only got a 10% drawdown this month because there is still $8 trillion dollars in cash sitting under the market, which never got into stocks. All of this year it's been waiting for a pullback, so I was kind of surprised we even got 10%. I was forecasting maybe 6%. So could we get a new low? You never discount the possibility, but we really have to have another shocking data point to get down to a 15% correction. That is exactly what triggered this sell-off with the Nonfarm Payroll we got in early July. So give me another rotten Nonfarm Payroll report, and we could be back at last week's lows. Which is why I'm 100% cash. I want to have tons of dry powder, if and when that happens.
Q: We've seen a big increase in refi’s for homes in the last week. Is this going to be positive for the economy?
A: Absolutely yes, and that's why we're not going to have a recession. You get housing back into the economy which has been dead meat for almost 3 years now, and suddenly one quarter to one-third of the economy recovers. So that's what takes us into probably 3% economic growth for another year in 2025.
Q: What do you think of the Chipotle CEO (CMG) moving to take over Starbucks (SBUX)?
A: I think it's a very positive move. Starbucks was dead in the water. Their stores are old and dirty and products need refreshing. So if anyone needs a fresh view it's Starbucks, and the guy from Chipotle has a spectacular track record. Chipotle is probably one of the more successful fast-food companies out there. I usually don't ever play fast food—the margins are too low, but I certainly like to watch the fireworks when they happen.
Q: Should I be shorting airline stocks here like Delta Airlines (DAL), now that a recession risk is on the table?
A: Absolutely not. If anything, airlines are a buy here. They've had a major sell-off over the last 3 months for many different reasons, not the least of which was the software crash that they had a month ago. This is not shorting territory. That was 3 months ago for the airlines. Just because it's gone down a lot doesn't mean you now sell, it's the opposite. You should be buying airlines. I usually avoid airlines because they never have any idea if they're going to make money or not, so it's a very high-risk industry, and the margins are shrinking. Let me tell you, the airlines in Europe are absolutely packed. The fares are rock bottom and the service is terrible. Anybody who thinks the consolidation of the airline industry brought you great service has got to be out of their mind.
Q: Do you have any rules on when you stop loss?
A: The answer is very simple. If I do call spreads, whenever we break the nearest strike price, I'm out of there. That’s where the leverage works exponentially against you. Usually, you get a 1 or 2% loss when that happens, and you want to roll it into another trade as fast as you can and make the money back. Sometimes you have to do three trades to make up one loss because when you issue stop losses, everybody else is trying to get out of there at the same time. It's not a happy situation to be in, so we try to keep them to a minimum—but that is the rule of thumb. Keep your discipline. Hoping that it can recover your costs is the worst possible investment strategy out there. Hoping is not a winning strategy.
Q: Why don't you wait for the bottom?
A: Because nobody knows where the bottoms are. All you can do is scale. When you think things are oversold, when you think things are cheap, then you start buying things one at a time unless you get these giant meltdown days like we got on August 5th. So that's what I probably will be doing, is scaling in on the weak days on stocks that have the best fundamentals. That’s the only way to manage a portfolio.
Q: Is it a good time to buy REITs for income?
A: Absolutely. REITs are looking at major drops in interest rates coming. That will greatly reduce their overheads as they refi, and of course, the recovering economy is good for filling buildings. So I've been a very strong advocate of REITs the entire year, and they really have only started to pay off big time in the last month, and Crown Castle Inc (CCI) is my favorite REIT out there.
Q: I own Freeport McMoRan (FCX). Do you think China’s problems will make FCX a sell?
A: Not a sell, but a wait. China (FXI) is delaying any recovery in a bull market. If we get another move in (FCX) down to the thirties I would double up, because eventually American demand offsets Chinese weakness, and we’ll be back in a bull market on the metals. It's American demand that is delivering the long-term bull case for copper, not the return of Chinese construction demand, which led to the last bull market. So we really are changing horses as the main driver of the demand for copper. It still takes 200 pounds of copper to make an EV whose sales are growing globally.
Q: Is it time to buy (TLT) now?
A: No, the time to buy (TLT) was at the beginning of the year, seven months ago, three months ago, a month ago. Now we've just had a really big $12 point rally, and really almost $18 points off the bottom. I would wait for at least a 5-point drop-in (TLT) before we dive back into that. If you noticed, I haven't been doing any (TLT) trades lately because the move has been so extended. And in fact, if they only cut a quarter of a point in September, then you could get a selloff in (TLT), and that'll be your entry point there. You have to ditch your buy high, sell low mentality, which most people have.
Q: What bond should I buy for a 6 to 10-year investment?
A: I’d buy junk bonds. Junk bonds have always been misnamed, or I would buy some of the high-yield plays like the BB loans (SLRN). With junk bonds, the actual default rate even in a recession, only gets to about 2%. So it certainly is worth having. I still think they're yielding 6 or 7% now, so that's where I would put my money. Or you can buy REITs which also have similarly high yields, like the (CCI), which is around 5% now. Risks in both these sectors are about to decline dramatically.
Q: Will there be an inflation spike next year?
A: No. Technology is accelerating so fast it's wiping out the prices of everything that's highly deflationary, and that pretty much has been the trend over the last 40 years. So don't expect that to change. The post-COVID inflationary spike was a one-time-only event, which then ended two years ago. We've gone from a 9% down to a 2.8% inflation rate; unless we get another COVID-induced inflation spike, there's no reason for inflation to return. Deflation is going to be the next game.
Q: What do you think of the UK economy now that you're in London?
A: Awful! Brexit was the worst thing that happened to England—that's why it was financed by the Russians. Brexit will have the effect of dropping both the economic growth rate and standards of living by half over the next 20 years. Expect England to beg their way back into Europe sometime in the future, although I may not live long enough to see it. There are no English people in London anymore. It's all foreigners. No one can afford it.
Q: Should I leap on Tesla (TSLA) where the current price is?
A: No. We’re waiting for the nuclear winter in EVs to end—no sign of it yet. And unfortunately, Elon Musk is scaring away buyers, especially in blue states, by palling around with Donald Trump, a well-known climate change denier. What's in that relationship? I have no idea. One of the first things Trump did was to dump subsidies for electric cars last time he was president. It's hard to tell who’s gone crazier, Trump or Musk.
Q: I have an empty portfolio, when should we expect your options trade to start coming in again?
A: As soon as I see a great sell-off or a great individual situation like we got a couple days ago with the Mad Hedge Technology Letter in Lam Research (LRCX). That's what we look for all day, every day of the year. There's no point in trading for the sake of trading, that only makes your broker rich, not you. There's no law that says you have to have a trade every day, and actually having cash isn't so bad these days. They're still paying 5% for 90-day T Bills. If you don’t know what T Bills are, look up 90-day T bills on my website.
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, then WEBINARS, and all the webinars from the last 12 years are there in all their glory.
Good Luck and Good Trading
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
Mad Hedge Biotech and Healthcare Letter
February 13, 2024
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(PILL PUSHERS IN PERIL)
(CVS), (WBA), (RADCQ), (SBUX)
Once upon a time, in the not-so-distant 1980s, national pharmacy chains sprouted up across the American landscape like mushrooms after a rainstorm.
They nestled into every nook and cranny of our lives, from the bustling urban streets to the tranquil rural towns, becoming as ubiquitous as the local diner.
Fast forward to 2010, and their numbers had climbed from 18,600 to a staggering 22,500.
It was a golden era for these giants. Like a high school jock on prom night, Walgreens (WBA) and CVS Health (CVS) were on top of the world. Their share prices did the financial equivalent of bench pressing 300 pounds, ballooning to about 14 times their original size between 1995 and 2015, while the S&P 500 merely did a respectable fourfold increase.
Walgreens' wallet got a lot thicker, going from a total revenue of $42.2 billion in 2005 to a hefty $103.4 billion a decade later.
CVS wasn't far behind, with its treasure chest growing from $37 billion to an eye-watering $153.3 billion.
But as the saying goes, what goes up must come down. Today, the once invincible giants are feeling the squeeze, like a middle-aged man trying to fit into his high school jeans.
The tale of woe includes Rite Aid's (RADCQ) bankruptcy bow in October 2023, CVS's share price taking a more than 30% nosedive over two years, and pharmacists so fed up they're leaving their posts faster than rats from a sinking ship.
The crux of their dilemma? A dwindling stream of reimbursement rates from the pharmacy benefit managers, akin to trying to drink a milkshake through a cocktail straw.
Walgreens saw its adjusted operating income from its U.S. retail pharmacy division shrink by 31.1%, from $5.4 billion in 2016 to a more modest $3.7 billion in 2023.
In a similar bind, CVS saw its profits dip, leading to a drastic measure: closing up shop on hundreds of stores.
Despite these turbulent times, the enduring importance of chain pharmacies in the U.S. healthcare system cannot be overstated. They continue to play a crucial role, dispensing everything from life-saving medications to the latest in blood pressure tech.
The question now is, what's next for these once mighty titans? So far, we can see that both CVS and Walgreens are attempting a Hail Mary, broadening their healthcare horizons in hopes of justifying their sprawling presence across the nation.
Over the coming years, a significant transformation is expected to happen to Walgreens and CVS, with the brands likely to streamline their presence. With an extensive network of physical outlets, these companies are confronted with the inevitable: the need for a massive workforce and substantial resources, all of which escalate operational costs and complexities.
In an age where efficiency is king — think Starbucks (SBUX) with its pivot to drive-thru exclusives — it stands to reason that Walgreens and CVS might steer in a similar direction.
Actually, Walgreens has already dabbled in new solutions like drone delivery, a venture that aligns perfectly with the future of quick and efficient distribution of essentials, including medicines, to its customer base.
The next thing to consider is how dramatic this downsizing will be. Looking a decade ahead, we can anticipate a considerable shrinkage in their storefronts, possibly with a shift towards more compact, delivery- and pick-up-friendly formats.
As they move forward with these changes, one thing remains clear: the landscape of American healthcare and retail is evolving, and with it, these pharma giants need to adapt or risk being left behind in the annals of history, remembered as nothing more than relics of a bygone era.
The stories of these national pharmacy chains are far from over, but the next chapters promise to be as unpredictable as they are compelling. So grab your popcorn. This is one show you won't want to miss.
Global Market Comments
August 15, 2023
Fiat Lux
Featured Trades:
(THE TOP SIX CHINESE RETALIATION TARGETS),
(AAPL), (GM), (WMT), (TGT), (BA), (SBUX), (CAT),
(AND MY PREDICTION IS….)
CLICK HERE to download today's position sheet.
Mad Hedge Technology Letter
April 8, 2019
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(THE BATTLE FOR COFFEE IN CHINA)
(SBUX), (MSFT), (AAPL), (IBM)
Legal Disclaimer
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