Below, please find subscribers’ Q&A for the November 20 Mad Hedge Fund Trader Global Strategy Webinar, broadcast from Lake Tahoe, Nevada.
Q: What are your stock recommendations for the end of the first quarter of 2025?
A: I say run with the winners. Dance with the girl who brought you to the dance. I think portfolio managers are going to be under tremendous pressure to buy winners and sell losers. And, of course, you all know the winners—they’re the stocks I have been recommending all year, like Nvidia (NVDA), Tesla (TSLA), and so on. And they're going to sell losers like energy to create the tax losses to offset their gains in the technology area. That could continue well into next year. Although, we’ve probably never entered a new administration with more uncertainty at any time in history, except maybe during the Civil War. I don’t think it will get as bad as that, but it could be bad.
Q: Is Putin bluffing about nuclear war?
A: Yes. First of all, Russia has 7,000 nuclear weapons, but only maybe 200 of those work. If he does use nuclear weapons, Ukraine will use its nuclear weapons in retaliation. During the Soviet Union, where did the Soviet Union make all their nuclear weapons? In Ukraine. That's where they had the scientists. They certainly have the Uranium—that's the hard part. You could literally put one together in days if you had the right expertise around. This will never go nuclear, and Putin has always been all about bluffing. There's a reason why the world's greatest chess masters are all Russian; it's all about the art of bluffing. So that doesn't worry me at all.
Q: Will Russia sacrifice a higher and higher percentage of its population in the war?
A: Yes, that is the military strategy: keep throwing bodies at your enemy until they run out of bullets.
Q: What is your prediction for 30-year US Treasury yields (TLT)?
A: They go higher. Higher for longer certainly includes the 30-year. The 30-year will be the most sensitive to long-term views of interest rates. If you get a return of inflation, which many people are predicting, the 30-year gets absolutely slaughtered. Adding a potential $10 trillion to the national debt, taking it to $45 trillion, is terrible for debt instruments everywhere.
Q: Should we be exiting the LEAPS that you put out on Occidental Petroleum (OXY) and Schlumberger (SLB)?
A: For Occidental, I would say maybe; it’s already at a low. The outlook for oil prices is poor, with massive new production coming on stream. Regarding Schlumberger, they make their money on the volume of oil production—that probably is going to be a big winner.
Q: What do you think interest rates will do as we go into the end of Powell's term in 18 months?
I have no idea. It just depends on how fast inflation returns. My guess is that we'll get an out-of-the-blue sharp uptick in inflation in the next couple of months, and when that happens, stocks will get slaughtered. People assume that inflation just keeps going up forever after that.
Q: Crude oil (USO) has been choppy at around $70 a barrel. Where do you see it going next year?
A: My immediate target is $60, and possibly lower than that. It just depends on how fast deregulation brings on new oil supplies, especially from the federal lands that have been promised to be opened up. As it turns out, the federal government owns most of the western United States—all the national forests and so on. If you open that up to drilling, it could bring huge supplies onto the market. That would be deflationary. It would be death for oil companies, but it would be a death for OPEC as well. Every cloud has a silver lining. OPEC has been a thorn in my side for the last 60 years.
Q: I'm tempted to buy stocks that are flying up, like Palantir (PLTR) and MicroStrategy (MSTR). What would be an experienced investor trade in these situations?
A: Don't touch them with a 10-foot pole. You buy stocks before they fly up, not afterwards. By the way, if anyone knows of an attorney who is an expert at recovering stolen Crypto, please contact me. I have several clients who've had their crypto accounts cleaned out. Oh, and by the way, the heads of every major crypto exchange have been put in jail in the last three years. Imagine if the heads of Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley Fidelity, and Vanguard were all put in jail for fraud and theft? How many stocks would you want to buy after that? Not a lot.
Q: Your recommendations for AI and chips?
A: I think you get a slowdown. In order to buy the new plays in banks, brokers, and money managers, you need to sell the old plays. Those are going to be technology stocks and AI stocks—AI itself will keep winning. They will keep advancing, but the stocks have become extremely expensive. And everyone is waiting to see how anti-technology the new administration will be. Some of the early appointments have been extremely anti-technology, promising to rein in big tech companies. If you rein in big tech companies, you rein in their stock prices, too. I am being very cautious here. The next spike up in Nvidia (NVDA) might be the one you want to sell.
Q: Do you think the uranium play will continue under the new administration?
A: Absolutely, yes. Restrain the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, and costs for the new nuclear starts up like (SMR) go way down.
Q: What do you think of NuScale Power Corp (SMR)?
A: I love it. Again, deregulation is the name of the game—and if you lose a city by accident, tough luck. Let's just hope it happens somewhere else. It's only happened three times before… Three Mile Island, Chernobyl, and Fukushima.
Q: Super Micro Computer (SMCI), what do you think?
A: Don't touch it. There's never just one cockroach. Hiring a new auditor to find out how much money they misrepresented is not a great buy argument to buy the stock. I'm sorry. Very high risk if you get involved.
Q: If Nvidia (NVDA) announces great earnings but sells off anyway, what should I do?
A: Get rid of it and get rid of all your other technology stocks because this is the bellwether for all technology. Tech always comes back over the long term, but short term, they may continue going nowhere as they have done for the last six months, which correctly anticipated a Trump win. Trump is not a technology guy— he hates California. Any California-based company can't expect any favors except for Tesla.
Q: Is there any reason why you prefer in-the-money bull call spreads?
A: Well, there are lots of reasons. Number 1, it's a short volatility play. Number 2 it's a time decay play, which is why I only do front months because that's when the time decay is accelerated. Thirdly, it allows you to increase your exposure to the stock by tenfold, which brings in a much bigger profit when you're right. If you look at our trade alerts, we make 15% to 20% on every trade, and 200 trades a year adds up to a lot of money. You can see that with our 75% return for this year. And it's a great risk management tool; the day-to-day volatility of call spreads is low because you're long one call option short the other. So, the usual day-to-day implied volatility on the combination is only about 8% or 9%. The biggest problem with retail investors is the volatility scares them out of the market at market lows and scares them back in at market highs. So, call spread reduces the volatility and keeps people from doing that. The risk-reward is overwhelmingly in your favor if you have somebody like me with an 80% or 90% success rate making the calls on the stocks. And, of course, having done this for almost 60 years, nothing new ever happens in the stock market—you're just getting repetitions of old stuff. All I have to do is figure out is this the 1970s story, the 1980s story, the 1990s, the 2000s, 2010s story? I have to figure out which pattern is being repeated. People who have been in the market for one year, or even 10 years, don't have that luxury.
Q: I’m having trouble getting filled on your orders.
A: You put out a spread of orders. So if I put in an order to buy at $9.00, split your order up into five pieces: at $9.00, $9.10, $9.20, $9.30, $9.40; and one or all of those orders will get filled. Another hint is that algorithms often take my trade alerts to the maximum price. Don't pay more than that price immediately, but they have to be out by the end of the day, so if you just enter good-till-cancel orders, you have an excellent chance of getting filled by the end of the day or at the opening tomorrow.
Q: Should I purchase SPDR S&P Regional Banking ETF (KRE)?
A: I'd say yes. That probably is a good buy with deregulation, making all of these small banks takeover targets.
Q: What should we be looking for in the fear and greed index?
A: When we get to the high end, like in the 70s, start taking profits. When we get to the low end, like the 20s, start buying and adding LEAPS and more long-term leverage option plays.
Q: What are we looking for to go short?
A: Much higher highs and a bunch of other monetary and technical indicators flashing warning signals, which are too many to go into here. Suffice to say, we did make good money on the short side this year, a couple of times on Tesla (TSLA), including a pre-election short that we covered in Tesla, and we were short a whole bunch of technology stocks going into the July meltdown. So, you know, we do both the long side and the short side, but it's been a long play—11 months this year and a short play for a month.
Q: Is the euro going back up eventually, or does the dollar (UUP) rule?
A: Sorry, but as long as the US dollar has the highest interest rates in the developing world and the prospect of even higher rates in the future, it's going to be a dollar game for the next couple of years.
Q: Will a ceasefire in the Middle East affect the markets?
A: No. The U.S. interest in geopolitical data ends at the shores—all three of them. So if the war of the last couple of years doesn't change the market—and it's been an absolutely horrific war with enormous civilian casualties—why should the end of it affect markets?
Q: What stock market returns do you see for the next four years?
A: About half of what they were for the last four years, which will be about 90% by the time Biden leaves office. You're going to have much higher interest rates and much higher inflation, and while the new administration is very friendly for some industries, it is very hostile for others, and the net could be zero. So, enjoy the euphoria rally while it lasts.
Q: What about crypto?
A: Well, I did buy some crypto for myself at $6,000, and I'm now thinking of selling it at $96,000. Would I recommend it to a customer? Not on pain of death—not at this level. You missed the move. Wait for the next 95% decline, which is a certainty in the future. And, by the way, absolutely nobody in the industry can tell you when that is.
To watch a replay of this webinar with all the charts, bells, whistles, and classic rock music, just log in to www.madhedgefundtrader.com, go to MY ACCOUNT, select your subscription (GLOBAL TRADING DISPATCH, TECHNOLOGY LETTER, or Jacquie's Post), then click on WEBINARS, and all the webinars from the last 12 years are there in all their glory
Good Luck and Good Trading
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or GOLDILOCKS ON STEROIDS, plus A KERFFUFLE IN PARIS),
(SPY), (FXI), ($COMPQ), (CCJ), (SLB), (OXY), (TSLA),
(TLT), (DHI), (NEM), (GLD), (TSLA)
The 6,000 targets for the S&P 500 are starting to go mainstream.
That was my forecast on January 1, back when everyone said I was nuts. The inflation rate is 2.2%, GDP growth is 3.0%, and interest rates are falling sharply, on their way to 3.0% by next summer.
Goldilocks is back, but this time she’s on steroids.
Also helping is that we are in the midst of a global interest rate decline. The US, Europe, China, and Australia are all cutting interest rates at the same time. Japan is the sole exception, which is on the verge of raising rates from 0.25%. All of this has a compounding effect on the health of the global economy.
Long-term market veterans like myself are amazed, astounded, and astonished that here we are on October 7, and instead of testing new lows for the year, we are punching through to new all-time highs. It’s proof that if you live long enough, you see everything.
Some five seconds after Jay Powell cut interest rates by a shocking 0.50%, everyone in the world suddenly realized they had way too much cash and not enough stocks. This is the kind of market you get from that realization, one that doesn’t breathe, take a break, have a correction, nor let in outsiders.
Further confusing matters is that we are witnessing the most contentious presidential elections in history. One party is proclaiming how great the US economy is, while the other is claiming it is the worst ever.
Those who believed the former description are having a great year. Those who bought the latter are having an awful one, with many owning no stocks at all. Fortunately, election concerns will disappear in four weeks not to return for four years. This is hugely positive for stocks.
But as all steroid users eventually find out, they cause impotence, sterility, and cancer, so enjoy while it lasts. That may be a mid-2025 or 2026 event.
China (FXI) came back with a vengeance. A 25% rise in a stock market in a week is not to be taken lightly, although a lot of this was short covering. Pouring gasoline on the fire is a government promise to buy $1 billion worth of stocks.
The question bedeviling all investors is whether China is a one-hit wonder or is it reborn again. I know that if this stimulus package doesn’t work, they have the resources to follow up with many more. But there is a bigger problem.
Chinese stock markets have not exactly done well since Xi Jinping came into power in 2013. In fact, they are exactly unchanged. During the same period, the (SPY) was up 308%, and the NASDAQ ($COMPQ) was up 525%. Many investors, like my old friend hedge fund legend Paul Tudor Jones, don’t want to touch China until Xi vacates the scene.
In any case, if you want to play China, the best risk-adjusted plays are not there but here in the US. Any US blue chip oil play (OXY) (SLB) would be a great choice, as China is the world’s largest oil consumer. Oil happens to be the cheapest and worst-performing sector in the stock market. And you don’t have to worry about a CEO getting rolled up in a carpet and disappearing for a few years, as has happened in the Middle Kingdom. At least here, you get all the US investor protections.
We closed out September with a blockbuster +10.28% profit. My 2024 year-to-date performance is at +44.97%.The S&P 500 (SPY) is up +19.92%so far in 2024. My trailing one-year return reached a nosebleed +62.77. That brings my 16-year total return to +721.60.My average annualized return has recovered to +52.32%.
With my Mad Hedge Market Timing Index at the 70 handles for the first time in five months, it was a good week to take profits. I sold longs in (CCJ) and (TSLA) and covered a short in (TLT). I stopped out of my long in (TLT) because of the blowout September Nonfarm Payroll Report on Friday.
This is what we’ve got left:
Risk On
(NEM) 10/$47-$50 call spread 10.00%
(TSLA) 10/$200-$210 call spread 10.00%
(DHI) 10/$165-$175 call spread 10.00%
Risk Off
NO POSITIONS 0.00%
Total Net Position 30.00%
Some 63 of my 70 round trips, or 90%, were profitable in 2023. Some 58 of 77 trades have been profitable so far in 2024, and several of those losses were really break evens. Some 16 out of the last 17 trade alerts were profitable. That is a success rate of +75.32%.
Try beating that anywhere.
September was Great, butOctober is Looking Tough, right on the doorstep of the November 5 election and the market waiting for another interest rate cut on November 6. I think I’ll run out the positions I have into the October 18 options expirations, then wait for the market to come to me. I am up too much this year to take on needless risk.
Nonfarm Payroll Report Comes in Hot, as US employers added 254,000 jobs in September, topping economists’ estimates. The payroll gain, the biggest advance since March, was led by leisure and health care. The headline Unemployment Rate fell to a three-month low of 4.1%.
Interactive Brokers Starts US Election Forecast Trading on the heels of a federal court ruling in their favor. The following Forecast Contracts on US election results will be available:
*Will Kamala Harris win the US Presidential Election in 2024?
*Will Donald Trump win the US Presidential Election in 2024?
Plus a dozen other election outcomes. The opening bids were 49% for Harris and 50% for Trump. The port Strike is Settled with a 62% six-year settlement. The bananas were rotting. 54 container ships queued outside ports, risking shortages. The Strike cost the U.S. economy $5 billion/day. Shipping stocks tumble across Asia and Europe. Expect the US to move to full automation, where Europe went 30 years ago. EC Imposes 45% Tariffs on Chinese EVs in a desperate bid to save the local car industry. The Commission, which oversees the bloc's trade policy, has said it would counter what it sees as unfair Chinese subsidies after a year-long anti-subsidy investigation, but it also said on Friday it would continue talks with Beijing. Expect the same to follow in the US.
A possible compromise could be to set minimum sales prices. Hedge Funds Stampede into China on news that government agencies promised to pour $1 billion into local stock markets. Chinese equities saw the largest net buying ever from hedge funds last week, marking the most powerful weekly purchase on record, according to Goldman Sachs prime brokerage data.
Weekly Jobless Claims Climb to 225,000, not straying too far from a four-month low touched in the prior week. That is an increase from an upwardly-revised mark of 219,000 last week, data from the Labor Department showed on Thursday. Economists had anticipated 222,000. Will This Crisis Take Gold to $3,000? Almost certainly, yes, given the way the barbarous relic traded yesterday. Buy all gold (GLD), plays on dips, the metal, ETFs, futures, and miners. Tesla Bombs, with Q3 deliveries down flat, but the shares fell only 5%. Total deliveries came in at 462,890, while total production was 469,796. YOY Tesla is facing increased competitive pressure, especially in China, from companies like BYD and Geely, along with a new generation of automakers, including Li Auto and Nio. US Car Makers Get Slaughtered, with Stellantis stock falling by double digits after the Jeep maker cut its 2024 financial guidance, citing deteriorating industry dynamics and Chinese competition. The warning, amid similarly negative news from other car makers, also dragged down shares of (F) and (GM). Avoid the auto industry except for (TSLA). Nvidia Still has more to Run, so says Samantha McLemore, the founder and Chief Investment Officer of Patient Capital Management. Nvidia has been crushing every quarter for a year. CEOs want to make the decision to invest more [in AI] rather than getting caught behind. She doesn’t see the bull market ending soon. Current operating profit margins are 65%. Buy (NVDA) on dips.
My Ten-Year View
When we come out the other side of the recession, we will be perfectly poised to launch into my new American Golden Age or the next Roaring Twenties. The economy is decarbonizing, and technology hyper accelerating, creating enormous investment opportunities. The Dow Average will rise by 600% to 240,000 or more in the coming decade. The new America will be far more efficient and profitable than the old.
Dow 240,000 here we come!
On Monday, October 7 at 8:30 AM EST, Used Car Prices are out On Tuesday, October 8 at 6:00 AM, the NFIB Business Optimism Index is released.
On Wednesday, October 9 at 11:00 PM, the Fed Minutes from the last meetingis printed.
On Thursday, October 10 at 8:30 AM, the Weekly Jobless Claims are announced. We also get the Consumer Price Index.
On Friday, October 11 at 8:30 AM EST, the Producer Price Index and the University of Michigan Consumer Price Index are announced. At 2:00 PM, the Baker Hughes Rig Count is printed.
As for me, dentists find my mouth fascinating as it is like a tour of the world. I have gold inlays from Japan, cheap ceramic fillings from Britain’s National Health, and loads of American silver amalgam, which are now going out of style because of their mercury content.
But my front teeth are the most interesting as they were knocked out in a riot in Paris in 1968.
France was on fire that year. Riots on the city’s South Bank near Sorbonne University were a daily occurrence. A dozen blue police buses packed with riot police were permanently parked in front of the Notre Dame Cathedral, ready for a rapid response across the river. They did not pull their punches.
President Charles de Gaulle was in hiding at a French air base in Germany. Many compared the chaos to the modern-day equivalent of the French Revolution.
So, of course, I had to go.
This was back when there were five French francs to the US dollar, and you could live on a loaf of bread, a hunk of cheese, and a bottle of wine for a dollar a day. I was 16 years old.
The Paris Metro cost one franc. To save money, I camped out every night in the Parc des Buttes Chaumont, which had nice bridges to sleep under. When it rained, I visited the Louvre, taking advantage of my free student access. I got to know every corner. The French are great at castles….and museums.
To wash, I would jump in the Seine River every once in a while. But in those days, not many people in France took baths anyway.
I joined a massive protest one night, which originally began over the right of men to visit the women’s dorms at night. Then the police attacked. Demonstrators came equipped with crowbars and shovels to dig up heavy cobblestones dating to the 17th century to throw at the police, who then threw them back.
I got hit squarely in the mouth with an airborne projectile. My front teeth went flying, and I never found them. I managed to get temporary crowns, which lasted me until I got home. I carry a scar across my mouth to this day.
I visited the Left Bank again just before the pandemic hit in 2019. The streets were all paved with asphalt to make the cobblestones underneath inaccessible. I showed my kids the bridges I used to sleep under, but they were unimpressed.
But when I showed them the Mona Lisa at the Louvre, she was as enigmatic as ever. The kids couldn’t understand what the fuss was all about.
Everyone should have at least one Paris in 1968 in their lifetime. I’ve had many and am richer for it.
Stay Healthy,
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/John-thomas-in-Paris.png706658april@madhedgefundtrader.comhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngapril@madhedgefundtrader.com2024-10-07 09:02:262024-10-07 10:26:01The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or Goldilocks on Steroids
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD,
or THE HIGHER WE GO THE CHEAPER WE GET),
(JPM), (BAC), (C), (GS), (MS), (BLK), (FCX), (X),
(WYNN), (MGM), (ALK), (LUV), (HAL), (SLB), (TLT)
I am sitting here holed up in my office in San Francisco.
Lake Tahoe is being evacuated as the Caldor fire is only ten miles away and the winds are blowing towards it. The visibility there is no more than 500 yards. The ski resorts are pointing their snow cannons towards their buildings to ward off flames.
Conditions are not much better here in Fog City. We are under a “stay at home” order due to intense smoke and heat. Even here, the fire engines are patrolling by once an hour.
The Boy Scout trip got cancelled this weekend, so the girls are having a cooking competition, chocolate chip waffles versus a German chocolate cake.
To make matters worse, I have been typing with only one finger all week, thanks to the elbow surgery I had on Tuesday. Next time, I’ll think twice before taking down a 300-pound steer. When I told the doctor how I incurred this injury, he laughed. “At your age?”
Which leaves me to contemplate this squirrelly stock market of ours. I have always been a numbers guy. But the higher the indexes rise, the cheaper stocks get. That’s not supposed to happen, but that is the fact.
We started out 2021 with an S&P 500 price earnings multiple of 25X. Now, we are down to a lowly 21X and the (SPY) is 20% higher, rising from $360 to $450.25.
The analyst community, ever the lagging indicator that they are, had S&P forward earnings for 2022 all the way down to $175. They have been steadily climbing ever since and are now touching $200 a share.
This is what 20/20 hindsight gets you. That and $5 will get you a cup of coffee at Starbucks. It takes a madman like me to go out on a limb with high numbers and then be right.
So what follows an ever-cheaper market? A more expensive one. That means stocks will continue to my set-in-stone target of $475 for the (SPY) for yearend, and (SPY) earnings of over $200 per share.
It gets better.
(SPY) earnings should hit $300 a share by 2025 and $1,400 a share by 2030. That makes possible my (SPY) target of $1,800 and my Dow Average target of 240,000 in a decade.
What are markets getting right that analysts and bears are getting wrong?
The future has arrived.
The pandemic brought forward business models and profitability by a decade. Technology is hyper-accelerating on all fronts.
Cycles are temporary but adoption is permanent. We are never going back to the old pre-pandemic economy. As a result, stocks are now worth a lot more than they were only two years ago.
So what do we buy now? There is a second reopening trade at hand, the post-delta kind. That means buying banks (JPM), (BAC), (C), brokers (GS), (MS), money managers (BLK), commodities (FCX), (X), hotels (WYNN), (MGM), airlines (ALK), (LUV), and energy (HAL), (SLB).
And what do we avoid like the plague? Bonds (TLT), which offer only confiscatory yields in the face of rising inflation with gigantic negative interest rates.
As for technology stocks, they will go sideways to up small in the aftermath of their ballistic moves of the past three months.
You all know that I am a history buff and there are particular periods of history that are starting to disturb me.
In August, we saw ten new intraday highs for the S&P 500 (SPY). That has not happened since 1987. Remember what happened in 1987?
We have not seen 11 new highs in August since 1929. The only negative three months seen since 1929 are August, September, and October. Remember what happened in 1929?
If that doesn’t scare the living daylights out of you, then nothing will. So, it seems we are in for some kind of correction, even if it’s just the 5% kind.
As for me, I’m looking forward to 2030.
The “Everything” Rally is on, according to my friend, Strategas founder Tom Lee. You can see it in the recent strength of epicenter stocks like energy, hotels, airlines, and casinos. It could run into 2022.
The Taper is this year and interest rate rises are later, said Jay Powell at Jackson Hole last week. Markets will be jumpy, especially bonds. Fed governor Jay Powell’s every word was parsed for meaning. Dove all the way. The larger focus will be on the August Nonfarm Payroll report out this week. Pfizer Covid vaccination gets full FDA approval, requiring millions more to get shots and bringing forward the end of the pandemic. All 5 million government employees will now get vaccinated, including the entire military. It’s the fastest drug approval in history. Some 37,000 new cases in one day. The stock market likes it. Take profits on (PFE) Bitcoin tops $50,000 after breaking several key technical levels to the upside. Next stop is a double top at $66,000. It helps that Coinbase is buying $500 million worth of crypto for its own portfolio. Buy (COIN) on dips. The US Dollar will crash in coming years, says Jeffry Gundlach and I think he is right. Emerging markets will become the next big play but not quite yet. Gold (GLD) will be a great hideout once it comes out of hibernation. China will soon return to outperforming the US. The dollars reserve currency status is at risk. The lumber crash is saving $40,000 per home, says Toll Brothers (TOL) CEO, Doug Yearly. Last year, lumber prices surged from $300 per board foot to an insane $1,700, thanks to a Trump trade war with Canada and soaring demand. It all flows straight through the bottom line of the homebuilders which should rally from here. Buy (TOL) on dips. China’s crackdown creates investment opportunities, says emerging investing legend Mark Mobius. He sees corporate governance improving over the long term. The gems are to be found among smaller companies not affected by Beijing’s hard-line. Mobius loves India too. My Ten-Year View
When we come out the other side of pandemic, we will be perfectly poised to launch into my new American Golden Age, or the next Roaring Twenties. With interest rates still at zero, oil cheap, there will be no reason not to. The Dow Average will rise by 800% to 240,000 or more in the coming decade. The American coming out the other side of the pandemic will be far more efficient and profitable than the old. Dow 240,000 here we come!
My Mad Hedge Global Trading Dispatch saw a healthy +7.62% gain in August. My 2021 year-to-date performance appreciated to 76.83%. The Dow Average was up 15.87% so far in 2021.
That leaves me 80% in cash at 20% in short (TLT) and long (SPY). I’m keeping positions small as long as we are at extreme overbought conditions.
That brings my 12-year total return to 499.38%, some 2.00 times the S&P 500 (SPX) over the same period. My 12-year average annualized return now stands at an unbelievable 42.80%, easily the highest in the industry.
My trailing one-year return popped back to positively eye-popping 116.67%. I truly have to pinch myself when I see numbers like this. I bet many of you are making the biggest money of your long lives.
We need to keep an eye on the number of US Coronavirus cases at 39 million and rising quickly and deaths topping 638,000, which you can find here.
The coming week will bring our monthly blockbuster jobs reports on the data front.
On Monday, August 30 at 11:00 AM, Pending Home Sales are published. Zoom (ZM) reports.
On Tuesday, August 31, at 10:00 AM, S&P Case Shiller National Home Price Index for June is released. CrowdStrike (CRWD) reports.
On Wednesday, September 1 at 10:45 AM, the ADP Private Employment report is disclosed.
On Thursday, September 2 at 8:30 AM, Weekly Jobless Claims are announced. DocuSign (DOCU) reports.
On Friday, September 3 at 8:30 AM, the all-important August Nonfarm Payroll report is printed. At 2:00 PM, the Baker Hughes Oil Rig Count is disclosed.
Oh and the German chocolate cake won, but please don’t tell anyone.
As for me, given the losses in Afghanistan this week, I am reminded of my several attempts to get into this troubled country.
During the 1970s, Afghanistan was the place to go for hippies, adventurers, and world travelers, so of course, I made a beeline for straight for it.
It was the poorest country in the world, their only exports being heroin and the blue semiprecious stone lapis lazuli, and illegal export of lapis carried a death penalty.
Towns like Herat and Kandahar had colonies of westerners who spent their days high on hash and living life in the 14th century. The one cultural goal was to visit the giant 6th century stone Buddhas of Bamiyan 80 miles northwest of Kabul.
I made it as far as New Delhi in 1976 and was booked on the bus for Islamabad and Kabul ($25 one-way). Before I could leave, I was hit with amoebic dysentery.
Instead of Afghanistan, I flew to Sydney, Australia where I had friends and knew Medicare would take care of me for free. I spent two months in the Royal North Shore Hospital where I dropped 50 pounds, ending up at 125 pounds.
I tried to go to Afghanistan again in 2010 when I had a large number of followers of the Mad Hedge Fund Trader stationed there, thanks to the generous military high-speed broadband. The CIA waved me off, saying I wouldn’t last a day as I was such an obvious target.
So, alas, given the recent regime change, it looks like I’ll never make it to Afghanistan. I won’t live long enough to make it to the next regime change. It’s just one more concession I’ll have to make to my age. I’ll just have to content myself reading A One Thousand and One Nights at home instead. The Taliban blew up the stone Buddhas of Bamiyan in 2001.
In the meantime, I am on call for grief counseling for the Marine Corps for widows and survivors. Business has been thankfully slow for the last several years. But I’ll be staying close to the phone this weekend just in case.
Good luck and good trading.
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/08/john-thomas-india.png576864Mad Hedge Fund Traderhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMad Hedge Fund Trader2021-08-30 09:02:562021-08-30 10:27:35The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or The Higher We Go the Cheaper We Get
You know the melt-up that is going on in the stock market right now? That is your 2020 performance being pulled forward.
One thing I have noticed over the past half-century of trading is that when market participants agree on a direction, it gets accelerated. Once the traditional October selloff failed to show, it was pedal to the metal to achieve new all-time highs.
Traders have become so overconfident that they have already completed this year’s performance and are now working on next year's. They are in effect pulling performance forward from 2020.
This historic run is taking place in the face of year-on-year earnings growth that is zero. ALL of the 29% price appreciation in the S&P 500 (SPY) in 2019 has been due to multiple expansion, from 14 times earnings to 19 times, a 20-year high. Market multiples rising by 50% anytime is almost unprecedented in history. I can only recall that happening twice: in 1929 and 1999.
So, that leaves only two possibilities for 2020. Either the multiple rises to a new 20-year multiple high, say to 20, 21, or 22, or the stock market goes down.
With a trade war-induced global economic slowdown still unfolding, don’t expect any respite from a sudden earnings recovery. Enjoy 2019 because the more we go up now means the more we will go down in 2020.
Were you waiting for the euphoria to make a market top? This is it. Sharply rising markets in the face of sharply falling earnings can only end in tears.
Needless to say, risk in the stock market is very high right now.
Jay Powell gave the market another boost, promising to hit the Fed’s 2% inflation target, giving plenty of room for wage hikes. The last inflation reading was 1.7% YOY. He might as well have said Dow 29,000 by yearend. I wish it were always this easy.
Hong Kong stalled the rally with the passage of a pro-democracy support by congress, with sanctions. China is warning of “firm countermeasures.” That throws cold water on any trade deal for 2019. New all-time highs for stocks may have to take a vacation.
US Q3 GDP was revised up to 2.1%, an improvement of 0.2% from the last read. The trade war seems to be costing us 1% of growth a year or about one-third of the total. That’s why we’re getting such a strong stock market move on the possibility of a trade deal. No-deal means lookout below.
Durable Goods came in at 0.6% in October, a nine-month high and better than expected. What does this week’s spate of positive data means, the first in many months? Is the recession risk over? If so, how much is already in the price?
Stocks love a steepening yield curve, with long term interest rates rising faster than short term ones. It puts the recession talk on hold, if not in abeyance.
It’s time to go dumpster diving, as the upside breakout in the Russell 2000 demonstrated last week. So, it’s time to start looking at the forlorn and the ignored of this bull market, like US Steel (X), General Electric (GE), Freeport McMoRan (FCX), and Schlumberger (SLB). There are no fundamentals in any of these names, they’ve just been down for so long anything looks like up from here. The liquidity-driven bull market has to find some fresh meat to rotate into, even temporarily, or it will die.
S&P Case Shiller rose 3.2% in September, the third consecutive month of price increases. Only San Francisco is showing falling prices. Phoenix (6.0%), Charlotte (4.6%), and Tampa (4.5%) are showing the greatest prices rises. Only a shortage of inventory is preventing prices from rising faster, now at a record low of 3.9 months. The builders who went under ten years ago aren’t building anymore.
New Home Sales drop 0.7%, in October, but are still up a massive 31.6% YOY. Sales in the northeast and south plunged, while those in the Midwest and west rise. The seasonally adjusted annual rate is 733,000 units. The Median Home Price fell 3.6% to $316,700. A 30-year fixed-rate mortgage at 3.66% is a major factor.
Merger mania in drug land continues, with the Novartis takeover of The Medicines Co. for $9.7 billion. It wants to take on Amgen (AMGN), Regeneron (REGN), and Sanofi in the heart drug space. No wonder this is the top-performing sector since I launched the Mad Hedge Biotech and Healthcare Letter.
Tesla shattered, both windows and sales records with an incredible 250,000 cyber trucks sold in a week. It’s one of the largest consumer orders in history, second only to the Tesla Model 3 launch four years ago. I may get one myself to make the Lake Tahoe run on a single 500-mile charge. Keep buying (TSLA) on dips. It is the clearest ten bagger out there.
Who is the mystery gold (GLD) buyer? Someone made a massive bet in the options market that gold will rise above $4,000 an ounce in 18 months. It would take a 32% move just to get gold back to its old $1,927 high. If the trade war continues, we may get it.
This was a week for the Mad Hedge Trader Alert Service to burst upon new all-time highs. I know this sounds boring, but I made all the money long technology stocks. This is net a -2.16% loss on my short position in Tesla (TSLA). If I’d only held on two more days this would have been a big winner over the disappointment over the shocking Cyber truck design. My long positions have shrunk to my core (MSFT) and (GOOGL).
By the way, running out of positions at a market top is a good thing.
My Global Trading Dispatch performance held steady at +352.76% for the past ten years, pennies short of an all-time high. My 2019 year-to-date catapulted back up to +52.62%. We closed out November with a respectable +3.07% profit. My ten-year average annualized profit ground back up to +35.28%.
The coming week will be hot with the jobs data trifecta.
On Monday, December 2 at 8:00 AM, the ISM Manufacturing PMI for November is out.
On Tuesday, December 3 at 2:30 PM, the API Crude Oil Stocks are announced.
On Wednesday, December 4, at 6:15 AM, the private sector ADP Employment Report is published.
On Thursday, December 5 at 8:30 AM, the Weekly Jobless Claims are printed. On Friday, December 6 at 8:30 AM, the November Nonfarm Payroll Report is released.
The Baker Hughes Rig Count follows at 2:00 PM.
As for me, I am going to battle my way through the blizzards at Donner Pass this weekend to get back to the San Francisco Bay Area. There, I’ll be helping the local Boy Scout troop to set up their Christmas tree lot. The enterprise helps finance all the camping trips for the coming year.
Good luck and good trading.
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/biy-scouts.png347464Mad Hedge Fund Traderhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMad Hedge Fund Trader2019-12-02 16:02:182019-12-02 16:57:24The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or 2020 is Already Happening
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