Mad Hedge Technology Letter
February 12, 2024
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(THE AI WAR STOCK)
(PLTR), (SMCI), (NVDA)
Mad Hedge Technology Letter
February 12, 2024
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(THE AI WAR STOCK)
(PLTR), (SMCI), (NVDA)
Palantir’s (PLTR) performance in the US is nothing short of extraordinary, and some would even say scintillating.
I’ll tell you why.
The numbers on the screen make you giggle like the 70% year-on-year growth in Q4.
It’s almost inconceivable to do what they did and I am referring to signing that many contracts given the way the product is.
We are witnessing a convergence of Palantir’s software products becoming easier to use which is leading to an augmentation of its capabilities, both driven by developments in AI, and large language models.
The heightened demand and ability to meet that demand is something Palantir’s management calls “with a pilot.”
This new piloting approach is what they call boot camp.
They did over 500 boot camps last year.
Palantir’s management travels around the country now convincing CEOs, CTOs, CFOs, and really, whoever has $1 million to buy the software and transform their enterprise by harnessing everything achieved in AI since inception and putting the best people on it.
Palantir then coaches these best employees on how to run data at a boot camp for 10 hours per day until they know it like the back of their hand.
One unique part of Palantir’s business model is their principle of making it known that they are proud of their work on the war front. They are proud to support the US.
Specifically, they are proud to support the US military.
However, this has rubbed some the wrong way like the Europeans who refuse to do much business with PLTR.
PLTR has been unable to make inroads across the Atlantic.
Yet PLTR is proud to have carved out a pivotally crucial role not only in Ukraine, but management is proud that after October 7, within weeks, Palantir is on the ground, and is involved in operationally crucial roles on the software side in Israel.
I know of no other software company in the world that is at the focal point of Ukraine and Israel and it is important for investors to know this before they decide to invest in the company.
This tech company boards the most talented, interesting, and performance-based people in the world.
Some of the numbers that can’t just be ignored are the 55% growth in customer count year-over-year.
This is the early days of generative AI in software products and for Palantir to describe the rocket fuel growth they are experiencing backs up the AI narrative.
For better or worse, the sector is relying on the AI pixie dust to carry the rest of the tech market.
As soon as the market gets wind that AI-based growth isn’t supercharging balance sheets, the tech sector will pull back.
Therefore, it’s highly positive for technology momentum to see stocks like PLTR and chip stocks like Super Micro Computer (SMCI) hit a home run in earnings.
Sadly, Nvidia (NVDA) can’t just carry the load for the entire sector and there needs to be some alternative leadership from other tech stocks connected to the AI story.
PLTR has tripled in the past 365 days and I don’t believe that type of stock performance can continue in the short-term.
The last earnings beat was met with yet another impressive 20% rise in the stock price.
Investors will need to be patient and wait for the stock to pull back otherwise chasing usually ends in tears.
I would advise readers to not chase and wait for big drops in individuals' names to put money to work.
Mad Hedge Technology Letter
February 9, 2024
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(THE NEW HOT A.I. STOCK)
(SMCI), (NVDA)
Super Micro Computers (SMCI) could be a legitimate dark horse in this race to AI supremacy.
They are the meat of the whole operation.
This is an upstart company from California who really knows their stuff about computer infrastructure.
Although they are no Nvidia, they do pack a punch and its share price has exploded higher as the company has been buoyed by both excellent quarterly results and an even better forecast for the full year.
Institutional interest is also gaining steam as the stock continues to be bid up to higher highs.
It’s proving itself, along with Nvidia, to be one of the cleanest stock plays on the AI theme.
Shares of SMCI were languishing lower than $20 per share in 2019.
Fast forward to today and underlying shares are sitting pretty at $750 per share.
Nvidia and Supermicro are somewhat correlated.
Nvidia’s high-performance chips are essential for the AI revolution, they need cutting-edge data infrastructure and that’s how Supermicro’s slots in nicely.
SMCI takes an innovative, customized, and flexible approach to meet customers’ computing needs – which has made it the choice of heavyweight clients like Meta and Amazon. SMCI supplies in rapid time, and the uber-complicated tech behind these centers, which needs servers, networks, and cloud storage solutions to function.
The company also uses a liquid cooling technique to manage the temperature of its multi-rack servers in a more energy-efficient way.
By the end of September, research firm IDC estimated that Supermicro had become the fourth-biggest server provider in the world, ahead of Lenovo.
And, sure, Dell and Hewlett Packard Enterprise are the leaders, but their revenue growth has been falling while Supermicro’s is muscling up at a double-digit pace, making it a leader in the higher-priced and higher-margin AI server market.
In its latest earnings report, SMCI announced revenues of $3.66 billion, a 133% increase from the year-earlier period, and predicted sales of at least $14.3 billion in 2024.
Supermicro’s leadership will not stay inert.
They are partnering with Nvidia, AMD, and Intel – the three biggest AI chip suppliers – on next-generation AI designs. So its customers will likely include all the big AI spenders like Meta, Amazon, Apple, and Tesla.
SMCI is forecasted to bust out an EPS growth rate of 31% moving forward.
The key risk ahead is that Dell and maybe even Hewlett Packard Enterprise might compete again with Supermicro’s capability in data centers and put its operating margins under pressure.
That could undermine the company’s profit outlook, especially if overall demand growth for data centers wavers.
The stock is expensive even to the point where short-term technical indicators have shown the stock to be overbought for the past 3 weeks.
In fact, the stock was sitting at $300 per share on January 18th and the parabolic trajectory has meant that the stock has more than doubled in the past few weeks.
Readers need to let this stock drop and any medium-sized pullback just be bought with two hands.
These types of premium AI stocks are hard to find optimal entry points which could mean a long wait time.
Global Market Comments
February 9, 2024
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(FEBRUARY 7 BIWEEKLY STRATEGY WEBINAR Q&A),
(LLY), (FXI), (TSM), (BABA), (PLTR), (MSBHF), (SMCI), (JPM), (INDY), (INDA), (TSLA), (BYDDF), (NFLX), (META), (UNG)
Below please find subscribers’ Q&A for the February 7 Mad Hedge Fund Trader Global Strategy Webinar, broadcast from Silicon Valley, CA.
Q: Have you ever flown an ME-262?
A: There's only nine of the original German jet fighters left from WWII in museums. One hangs from the ceiling in the Deutsches Museum in Munich (click here for the link), I have been there and seen it and it is truly a thing of beauty. You would have to be out of your mind to fly that plane, because the engines only had a 10 hour life. That's because during WWII, the Germans couldn't get titanium to make jet engine blades and used steel instead, and those fell apart almost as soon as they took off. So, of the 1,443 ME-262’s made there’s only nine left. The Allies were so terrified of this plane, which could outfly our own Mustangs by 100 miles per hour, that they burned every one they found. That’s also why there are no Japanese Zeros.
Q: Thoughts on Palantir (PLTR) long term?
A: I love it, it’s a great data and security play. Right now, markets are revaluing all data plays, whatever they are. But it is also overvalued having almost doubled in a week.
Q: What do you make of all these layoffs in Silicon Valley? What does this mean for tech stocks?
A: It means tech stocks go up. The tech stocks for a long time have practiced over-employment. They were growing so fast, they always kept a reserve of about 10% of extra staff so they could be put them to work immediately when the demand came. Now they are switching to a new business model: fire everybody unless you absolutely have to have them right now, and make everybody you have work twice as hard. That greatly increases the profitability of these companies, as we saw with META (META), which had its profits triple—and that seems to be the new Silicon Valley business model. If you're one of the few 100,000 that have been laid off in Silicon Valley, eventually the economy will grow back to where they can absorb you. That's how it's going to play out. In the meantime, go take a vacation somewhere, because you're not going to get any vacations once you get a new job.
Q: I have had shares of Alibaba (BABA) since 2020 and the stock has been in free fall since. Should I take the 80% loss or hold?
A: Well, number one, you need to learn about risk control. Number two, you need to learn about stop losses. I stop out when things go 10% against me; that's a good level. At 80%, you might as well keep the stock. You've already taken the loss and who knows, China may recover someday. It's not recovering now because no foreigners want to invest in China with all the political risk and invasion risk of Taiwan. After all, look at what happened to Russia when they invaded Ukraine—that didn't work out so well for them.
Q: On the Chinese economy (FXI), is the poorer performance due to the decision to move to a war economy? The move in the economic front was described in Xi's speech to the CCP in January of 2023.
A: The real reason, which no one is talking about except me, is the one child policy, which China practiced for 40 years. What it has meant is you now have 40 years of missing consumers that were never born. And there is no solution to that, at least no short-term solution. They're trying to get Chinese people to have more kids now, and you're seeing three and four child families for the first time in 40 years in China. But there is no short-term fix. When you mess with demographics, you mess with economic growth. We warned the Chinese this would happen at the time, and they ignored us. They said if they hadn't done the one child policy, the population of China today would be 1.8 billion instead of 1.2 billion. Well, they’re kind of damned no matter what they do so there was no good solution for them. Of course, threatening to invade your neighbors is never good for attracting foreign investment for sure. Nobody here wants to touch China with a 10-foot pole until there’s a new leader who is more pacifist.
Q: What do you think of Eli Lilly (LLY)?
A: I absolutely love it. If there's a never-ending bull market in fat Americans, which is will go on forever, they're one of two companies that have the cure at $1,000 a month. On the other hand, the stock has tripled in the last 18 months, so it’s kind of late in the game to get in.
Q: Are there any stocks that become an attractive short in the event of a Taiwan invasion, such as Taiwan Semiconductor (TSM)?
A: All stocks become attractive shorts in the event of another war in China. You don't want to be anywhere near stocks and the semis will have the greatest downside beta as they always do. You don't want to be anywhere near bonds either, because the Chinese still own about a trillion dollars’ worth of our bonds. Cash and T-bills suddenly looks great in the event of a third war on top of the two that we already have in Gaza and Ukraine.
Q: What do you think about the prospects of the Japanese stock market now?
A: I think the big move is done; it finally hit a new high after a 34-year wait. The next big move in Japan is when the Yen gets stronger, and that is bad for Japanese stocks, so I would be a little cautious here unless you have some great single name plays like Warren Buffett does with Mitsubishi Corp. (MSBHF). So that's my view on Japan—I'm not chasing it after being out for 34 years. Why return? The companies in the US are better anyway.
Q: What is the deal with Supermicro Computer (SMCI)? It went up 23 times in a year to $669 after not clear $30 for a decade.
A: The answer is artificial intelligence. It is basically creating immense demand for the entire chip ecosystem, including high end servers, which Supermicro makes. It also has the benefit of being a small company with a small float, hence the ballistic move. It was too small to show up on my radar. I’ll catch the next one. There are literally thousands of companies like (SMCI) in Silicon Valley.
Q: Will JP Morgan (JPM) bank shares keep rising, or will they fall when the Fed cuts rates?
A: (JPM) will keep rising because recovering economies create more loan demand, allow wider margins, and cause default rates to go down. It becomes a sort of best case scenario for banks, and JP Morgan is the best of the breed in the banking sector. It also benefits the most from the concentration of the US banking sector, which is on its way from 4,000 banks to 6 with help from the US government.
Q: Is India a good long-term play? Which of the two ETFs I recommend are the better ones?
A: Yes, India is a good long-term play. You buy both iShares India 50 (INDY) and the iShares MSCI India (INDA), which I helped create yonks ago. India is the new China, and the old China is going nowhere. So, yes, India definitely is a play, especially if the dollar starts to weaken.
Q: Do you expect to pull back in your market timing index?
A: Yes, probably this month. Have I ever seen it go sideways at the top for an extended period? No, I haven't. On the other hand, we’ve never had a new thing like artificial intelligence hit the market, nor have we seen five stocks dominate the entire market like we're seeing now. So, there are a lot of unprecedented factors in the market now which no one has ever seen before, therefore they don't know what to do. That is the difficulty.
Q: Does India have an in-country built EV, and what is their favorite EV in India?
A: No, but Tesla (TSLA) is talking about building a factory there. And I would have to say BYD Motors (BYDDF) because they have the world’s cheapest EV’s. There is essentially no car regulation in India except on imports. Car regulation and safety requirements is what keeps the BYDs out of the United States, and it's kept them out for the last 15 years. So that is the issue there.
Q: What do you think about META as a dividend play?
A: I think META will go higher, but like the rest of the AI 5, it is desperately in need of a pull back and a refresh to allow new traders to come in.
Q: Why does Netflix (NFLX) keep going up? I thought streaming was saturated—what gives?
A: Netflix won the streaming wars. They have the best content and the best business strategy; and they banned sharing of passwords, which hit my family big time since it seemed like the whole world was using my Netflix password. And no, I'm not going tell you what my password is. I’ve already paid for Griselda enough times. Seems there is a lot of demand for strong women in my family. Netflix they seem to be enjoying a near monopoly now on profits.
Q: Has the NASDAQ come too far too fast, and does it have more to run?
A: Well it does have more to run, but needs a pull back first. I'm thinking we'll get one this month, but I'm definitely not shorting it in the meantime.
Q: Have you ordered your Tesla (TSLA) Cybertruck?
A: I actually ordered it two years ago and it may be another two year wait; with my luck the order will come through when I'm in Europe and I'll miss it. Some of my friends have already gotten deliveries because they ordered on day one. They love it.
Q: What happened to United States Natural Gas (UNG)?
A: A super cold spell hit the Midwest, froze all the pipes, and nobody could deliver natural gas just when the power companies were screaming for more gas. That created the double in the price which you should have sold into! Usually, people don't need to be told to take a profit when something doubles in 2 weeks, but apparently there are some out there as I've been here getting emails from them. Further confusing matters further is that (UNG) did a 4:1 reverse split right at this time. They have to do this every few years or the 35% a year contango takes the price below $1.00 and shares can’t trade below $1.00 on the New York Stock Exchange.
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 WEBINARS, and all the webinars from the last 12 years are there in all their glory.
Good Luck and Stay Healthy,
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
Mad Hedge Technology Letter
December 15, 2023
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(A TECH COMPANY MOST PEOPLE HAVEN’T HEARD OF)
(SMCI), (PLTR)
It won’t be the case that only 1 or 2 AI stocks hit pay dirt.
There will be more winners.
Most importantly, companies need to get a set at the table whether it be hardware, software, or chips.
There are different ways to play AI and for example, Palantir is a good bet through the software side of it as it gobbles up government contracts that are indeed lucrative, but also highly stable.
Palantir (PLTR) has become one of the top stocks mentioned in conversations I’ve had and I don’t believe it’s going away.
The company has long used AI in its Gotham and Foundry platforms, and its Artificial Intelligence Platform (AIP) has produced eye-popping productivity gains.
But Palantir is currently expensive and management likes to issue new stock like there is no tomorrow.
One stock that could garner attention is Super Micro Computer (SMCI).
It’s a dark horse AI stock that few know about.
Super Micro stands out as a "rack-scale" IT solutions provider, designing servers, switches, storage systems, and software with global support services.
Since this approach combines hardware and software, it provides a competitive advantage over peers who focus primarily on either hardware or software.
Despite a market cap of only $14 billion, Super Micro has built a customer base in more than 100 countries. And so large is its operation that it requires more than 6 million square feet of manufacturing space globally.
A demand surge led to more need to attract talent through stock-based compensation.
Thus, that expense came to $57 million in fiscal Q1, up from $11 million in the year-ago quarter.
Super Micro maintained its fiscal 2024 revenue guidance of $10 billion to $11 billion.
This amounts to a 47% increase which definitely bolsters this tech stock as a prototypical growth stock that investors love.
The stock has skyrocketed by 210% over the last 12 months. And despite that surge, the stock sells at a P/E ratio of 24.
Considering the rapid growth expected, Super Micro's gains are not likely to stop anytime soon.
Thanks to a lack of name recognition, investors are only now seeing the potential for this AI stock.
Consequently, investors can buy a fast-growing stock at a low price.
This means that if they missed the opportunity to buy Palantir more cheaply, Super Micro gives them a second chance. Moreover, with its ability to combine hardware and software, it appears to have a competitive advantage in the AI space.
I’m not saying that investing in something like Nvidia won’t work.
There is room for other chip suppliers and Super Micro Computer is one of them.
The stock has really surged in the past year, but I would be inclined to add on big drawdowns.
Entry points are few and far between for SMCI.
This is just the early stages of AI and to get into one of the better names at a cheaper price is a good long-term strategy.
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