Global Market Comments
July 20, 2023
Fiat Lux
Featured Trades:
(CONTANGO IN THE (UVXY) EXPLAINED ONE MORE TIME),
(UVXY), (VIX), (SPY)
CLICK HERE to download today's position sheet.
Global Market Comments
July 20, 2023
Fiat Lux
Featured Trades:
(CONTANGO IN THE (UVXY) EXPLAINED ONE MORE TIME),
(UVXY), (VIX), (SPY)
CLICK HERE to download today's position sheet.
Global Market Comments
June 21, 2023
Fiat Lux
Featured Trades:
(WEDNESDAY, JULY 19, 2023 LONDON GLOBAL STRATEGY LUNCHEON)
(THE BUY AND FORGET PORTFOLIO),
(SPY), (IXUS), (EEM), (VNQ), (TLT), (TIP)
CLICK HERE to download today's position sheet.
All traders and portfolio managers with experience approaching a half-century, like myself and a handful of close friends, agree on one thing.
Someday, you will be wrong.
I don’t mean just a little bit wrong, I mean disastrously wrong. A real humdinger, even a life-threatening experience. Even wrong up the wazoo.
In fact, most old salts, even the best performing ones, suffer at least a couple of 50% losses of their total assets, and at least one 75% hit, at least once in their lives.
We’ve all been there.
The 1973 oil crisis. The 1987 stock market crash, when the Dow Average gave up a withering 22% in a single day (I tried to place an order to buy stock at the close and the clerk burst into tears and dissolved into a puddle on the floor).
The Dotcom crash. And of course, the granddaddy of them all, the Great Crash of 2008, which you all remember with the greatest discomfort.
Even my mentor, Warren Buffet, has admitted to taking three 50% hits in his lifetime and lived to tell about it.
The trick is to keep these misfortunes from wiping you out so completely that you can never make a comeback.
Better yet, don’t get into trouble in the first place. And I’ll tell you exactly how to do that right now.
One of the great pleasures of running the Mad Hedge Fund Trader is that I get to speak to thousands of interesting people every year. Believe me, there are all kinds.
I have found kids straight out of school who take to trading like a fish to water. Their instincts are incredible. They figure out the harsh realities of the market decades before I ever did.
When they ask me questions, I think, “Damn! Why didn’t I think of that?”
I have seen several of these gifted, natural born traders use the Mad Hedge Fund Trader turn pennies into millions over unbelievably short times.
You see, they have the trader gene.
Sadly, I also run into the opposite extreme. With some people you could have George Soros sitting on their left, Paul Tudor Jones on their right, both guiding their hands on the mouse to execute trades, and they are still going to still lose money.
These are not stupid people.
I have met many with Harvard MBAs, advanced degrees from MIT, and even Phi Beta Kappa’s, and it doesn’t do them a whit of good on the trading front. They just don’t have trading in them.
In other words, they lack the trading gene.
When I stumble across these people, I tell them to quit trading, end the self-abuse, and preserve whatever wealth they have left. I then order them to buy what I call my “Buy and Forget Portfolio.”
This is a collection of only six investments, which I have assembled over the decades that will be profitable in almost all circumstances. In good years it will grow generously. In bad years it will be down marginally. Over the long term, it will do extremely well.
Here it is:
The Mad Hedge Buy and Forget Portfolio
20% domestic US stocks (SPY)
20% international stocks (IXUS)
10% emerging stock markets (EEM)
20% Real Estate Investment Trusts (VNQ)
15% long term US Treasury Bonds (TLT)
15% Treasury Inflation Protected Securities (TIP)
Notice that half the money is in equities and the remainder in fixed income securities.
If you initiated this portfolio in 1997, the year that TIPS first became available to the public, you would have earned an average annualized compounded return of 7.86% through the end of 2014, assuming reinvestment of dividends and interest.
During the bear market of 2000-2002, when the S&P 500 dropped 50%, this portfolio never suffered a loss of more than -4.7%. During the Great Crash of 2008, it fell -31%, versus -37% for the (SPY), and then very quickly bounced back.
Most long-only investors would have killed for returns like these.
So the bottom line is this. Expect a 4% drawdown every decade, a 31% hickey twice a century, and one of those twice-a-century events is only eight years behind us. That is not a bad proposition.
The heavy stock weighting can be easily explained by the fact that historically, stocks have outperformed bonds by a large margin.
For long periods of time, such as much of the 19th century, the Great Depression, and now, chronic structural deflation meant that bonds paid very little in interest.
Stocks also have the advantage in that during periods of inflation they can pass rising costs on to consumers via price hikes.
Guess what? We are just going into an inflationary period.
For the past 200 years, stocks have therefore delivered a compounded average annualized return of 8.3%.
Just to give you an example of how valuable the stock advantage can be, $1 invested in 1802 would be worth $8.8 million today.
This is why Oracle of Omaha Warren Buffet constantly sings the praises of compounding and dividend reinvestment and is why he rarely sells anything. In fact, his authorized biography is entitled Snowball (a great read, by the way).
The beauty of the Buy and Forget Portfolio is that the six elements counterbalance each other in all market circumstances. When stocks go up, bonds usually go down, and vice versa.
They both go the wrong way only for very short periods, such as in 2008 and always snap back.
And remember inflation, that long-forgotten thing where prices actually go up? It will make a return someday. And there is no better time to buy TIPS than during the deflationary surge that we are enduring now. TIPS prices are cheap.
Such is the beauty of diversification.
The great thing about the Buy and Forget Portfolio is that you can literally buy and forget about it. You won’t lose sleep at night, you could care less about what they say on CNBC, and don’t have to hide those embarrassing brokerage statements from your spouse.
The only thing you have to do is to rebalance it once a year to restore each component to its original weighting. More often than that and you run up big commission and tax bills.
Remember, you are trying to buy your own yacht, not your broker’s.
This will free you up to focus on the more important things in life.
Will Daenerys Targaryen gain her rightful place on the throne of the Seven Kingdoms in The Game of Thrones? Will Don Draper get his well-deserved comeuppance in the final season of Mad Men? Can the widow, Lady Mary, ever find true love again in the next season of Downton Abbey?
Of course, knowing all of this, some bad traders will continue to trade. For some, it is like an addition. They just have to win, whatever the cost. For others, it's like buying lottery tickets. Some just love the adrenaline and the thrill of the chase, even if it costs them money.
Whatever the reason, they continue trading until they run out of money. Then they will try to borrow your money to trade.
Could this be you?
All I can do is wish them the best.
Leave the trading to the masochists, like me.
Leave the Trading to the Masochists
Global Market Comments
June 20, 2023
Fiat Lux
Featured Trades:
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or TIME TO CHANGE STRATEGY),
(SPY), (TLT), (UNG), (FCX), (TSLA), (AMGN)
CLICK HERE to download today's position sheet.
All good things must come to an end.
Mad Hedge has made fortunes for thousands of followers over the last 15 years with its aggressive options spread strategy, which profits mightily from falling market volatility ($VIX). That is what is happening in the market 95% of the time.
However, it doesn’t make sense when the ($VIX) drops below $20, and that may now continue to be the case for a prolonged period of time.
However, just as one window closes, another opens.
While low volatility makes options spreads no longer attractive, it makes two-year LEAPS the bargain of the century. With volatility this low, you essentially get the second year for free. That is more than adequate time to go into any recession that may or may not happen and then come back out the other side at max profit.
If the underlying stock suddenly rockets, which is often the case with my recommendations, you can collect 90% of the maximum potential profit in a two-year LEAPS within months, if not weeks.
Better yet, while we used to make 15%-20% on front month options spreads, which benefited from accelerated time decay, the profit on two-year LEAPS can run from 100% to 500%. One client bagged a 5,000%, or 50X profit on an NVIDIA (NVDA) LEAPS he strapped on last October.
He doesn’t work anymore.
The timing for this strategy adjustment is perfect. We have just entered a new bull market for stocks that could run for another decade. With the exception of the “Magnificent Seven,” most US stocks are now just above their bear market bottoms. What better time to increase your leverage tenfold.
I won’t be adding LEAPS to my daily position sheet or P&L. They will remain a front-month trading tool. So the millions you are about to make will just have to remain our little secret. Concierge members will get access to a dedicated website that will keep a running total of all Mad Hedge LEAPS issued.
All good strategies must come to an end. Market conditions change or the copycats and wannabees squeeze the life out of them. I have seen too many good traders go out of business clinging to strategies that worked yesterday, but not today. They were hauled away in straight jackets, kicking and screaming because they lost all their money.
The stock market is like working in a hurricane. If you don’t learn how to bend with the wind, you snap and end up in a pile of debris.
When the ($VIX) gets back above $20, or better yet $30, and the Mad Hedge Market Timing Index plunges down to the $20’s, I’ll be back fully loaded with front month options spreads by the dozens.
Good luck.
So far in June, we are up +0.47%. My 2023 year-to-date performance is still at an eye-popping +62.52%. The S&P 500 (SPY) is up only a miniscule +12.63% so far in 2023. My trailing one-year return reached +101.75% versus +24.19% for the S&P 500.
That brings my 15-year total return to +659.71%. My average annualized return has blasted up to +48.86%, another new high, some 2.54 times the S&P 500 over the same period.
Some 42 of my 46 trades this year have been profitable. Only 23 of my last 24 consecutive trade alerts have been profitable.
I executed no trades last week. Concierge members received a LEAPS trade alert on Crown Castle International (CCI), which regular subscribers should receive shortly. My longs in Tesla (TSLA) and Freeport McMoRan (FCX) expired at max profit, which I easily ran into the June 16 option expiration this week. I now have a very rare 100% cash position due to the lack of high-return, low-risk short-term trades.
A Mad Hedge Market Timing Index at 82 is not exactly encouraging me to bet the ranch. Don’t rush to buy the top.
On another matter, I am proud to say that every Mad Hedge service saw positions expire at their maximum profit at the June 16 quadruple witching options expiration.
Global Trading Dispatch rang the cash register with Tesla (TSLA) and Freeport McMoRan (FCX). The Mad Hedge Technology Letter coined it with Apple (AAPL). The Mad Hedge Biotech & Health Care Letter printed money with Amgen (AMGN). Jacquie’s Post pleased followers with a profit in the (TLT). Finally, Mad Hedge AI, launched only on Monday, saw the shares for its initial trade alert for (UNG) jump a breathtaking 15% in four days.
I must be doing something right.
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 decarbonizing and technology hyper-accelerating, creating enormous investment opportunities. The Dow Average will rise by 800% 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!
Tesla Model Y Became World’s Top Selling Car in Q1, the first EV to do so. Some 267,200 Y’s were shifted, edging out Toyota’s Corolla by 10,800 units, which led the field for decades. Elon Musk’s price-cutting volume play is working to the competition’s chagrin. The Model Y is on track to top one million sales this year. Buy (TSLA) on dips
Tesla Drops Model 3 Price to $33,000, net of $7,500 federal EV tax credit. That helped it become the world’s top-selling car. Late to the market EV makers are getting killed, hemorrhaging cash. That took the shares up to a new 2023 high of $231. Keep buying (TSLA) on dips.
Apple Launches $3,497 Vision Pro Headset, in a run at Meta (META) in the virtual headset world. It’s the company’s first new product launch since the Apple Watch in 2014 coining yet another new revenue stream. Apple shares hit a new all-time high on the news. Buy (AAPL) on dips.
Weekly Jobless Claims Jump to 261,000, an increase of 28,000, as the deflationary effects of high-interest rates take hold.
Europe Enters a Recession, with a -0.1% GDP print in Q1. Sharp rises in Euro interest rates get the blame.
General Motors Adopts Tesla’s Charging System, essentially giving a near monopoly to Elon Musk. (GM) is joining Ford’s (F) capitulation from two weeks ago. This should grow into a $20 billion a year profit item for Tesla. All of my outrageous forecasts are coming true. Buy (TSLA) on dips.
US to Send Another $2 Billion Worth of Advanced Missiles to Ukraine. The package includes advanced Raytheon (RTX) Himars and Lockheed (LMT) Patriot 3 missiles. Buy both (RTX) and (LMT) on dips as both missiles now have order backlogs extending for years.
Coinbase Gets Crushed after the SEC throws the book at them. The government agency is intent on destroying the entire crypto infrastructure. Get your money out if you can. Avoid (COIN) on pain of death.
Volatility Index ($VIX) Hits 3 ½ Year Low, at $14.26. Complacency with the S&P 500 is running rampant, which always ends in tears. The level implies a maximum up-and-down range of only 8.2% for 30 days.
Airline Profits to Double in 2023, as service sharply deteriorates with revenge travel accelerating. Looks for this summer to be a perfect travel storm.
On Monday, June 19 is the first-ever Juneteenth National Holiday celebrating the freedom of the slaves in Texas, the last state to do so. Markets are closed.
On Tuesday, June 20 at 8:30 PM EST, US Building Permits for May are announced.
On Wednesday, June 21 at 10:00 AM, Fed Chairman Powell testifies in front of Congress.
On Thursday, June 22 at 8:30 AM, the Weekly Jobless Claims are announced.
On Friday, June 23 at 9:45 AM the S&P Global Flash PMI is printed.
At 2:00 PM the Baker Hughes Rig Count is printed.
As for me, with the shocking re-emergence of Nazis on America's political scene, memories are flooding back to me of some of the most amazing experiences in my life. I thought we were done with these guys I have been warning my long-term readers for years now that this story was coming. The right time is now here to write it.
I know the Nazis well.
During the civil rights movement of the 1960s, I frequently hitchhiked through the Deep South to learn what was actually happening.
It was not usual for me to catch a nighttime ride with a neo-Nazi on his way to a cross burning at a nearby Ku Klux Klan meeting, always with an uneducated blue-collar worker who needed a haircut.
In fact, being a card-carrying white kid, I was often invited to come along.
I had a stock answer: "No thanks, I'm going to another Klan meeting further down the road."
That opened my driver up to expound at length on his movement's bizarre philosophy.
What I heard was chilling. Suffice it to say, I learned to talk the talk.
During 1968 and 1969, I worked in West Berlin at the Sarotti Chocolate factory in order to perfect my German. On the first day at work, they let you eat all you want for free.
After that, you got so sick that you never wanted to touch the stuff again. Some 50 years later and I still can’t eat their chocolate with sweetened alcohol on the inside.
My co-worker there was named Jendro, who had been captured by the Russians at Stalingrad and was one of the 5% of prisoners who made it home alive in 1955. His stories were incredible and my problems pale in comparison.
Answering an ad on a local bulletin board, I found myself living with a Nazi family near the company's Tempelhof factory.
There was one thing about Nazis you needed to know during the 1960s: They absolutely loved Americans.
After all, it was we who saved them from certain annihilation by the teeming Bolshevik hoards from the east.
The American postwar occupation, while unpopular, was gentle by comparison. It turned out that everyone loved Hershey bars. Americans became very good at looking the other way when Germain families were trying to buy food on the black market. That’s why Reichsmarks wasn’t devalued until 1948.
As a result, I got free room and board for two summers at the expense of having to listen to some very politically incorrect theories about race. I remember the hot homemade apple strudel like it was yesterday.
Let me tell you another thing about Nazis. Once a Nazi, always a Nazi. Just because they lost the war didn't mean they dropped their extreme beliefs.
Fast-forward 30 years, and I was a wealthy hedge fund manager with money to burn, looking for adventure with a history bent during the 1990s.
I was mountain climbing in the Bavarian Alps with a friend, not far from Garmisch-Partenkirchen, when I learned that Leni Riefenstahl lived nearby, then in her 90s.
Attending the USC film school decades earlier, I knew that Riefenstahl was a legend in the filmmaking community.
She produced such icons as Olympia, about the 1932 Berlin Olympics, and The Triumph of the Will, about the Nuremburg Nazi rallies. It is said that Donald Trump borrowed many of these techniques during his successful 2016 presidential run.
It was rumored that Riefenstahl was also the one-time girlfriend of Adolph Hitler.
I needed a ruse to meet her since surviving members of the Third Reich tend to be very private people, so I tracked down one of her black and white photos of Nubian warriors, which she took during her rehabilitation period in the 1960s.
It was my plan to get her to sign it.
Some well-placed intermediaries managed to pull off a meeting with the notoriously reclusive Riefenstahl, and I managed to score a half-hour tea.
I presented the African photograph, and she seemed grateful that I was interested in her work. She signed it quickly with a flourish.
I then gently grilled her on what it was like to live in Germany in the 1930s. What I learned was fascinating.
But when I asked about her relationship with The Fuhrer, she flashed, "That is nothing but Zionist propaganda."
Spoken like a true Nazi.
The interview ended abruptly.
I took my signed photograph home, framed it, and hung it on my office wall for a few years. Then I donated it to a silent auction at my kids' high school.
Nobody bid on it.
The photo ended up in storage at my home, and when it was time to make space, it went to Goodwill.
I obtained a nice high appraisal for the work of art and then took a generous tax deduction for the donation, of course.
It is now more than a half-century since my first contact with the Nazis, and all of the WWII veterans are gone. Talking about it to kids today, you might as well be discussing the Revolutionary War.
By the way, the torchlight parade we saw in Charlottesville, VA in 2017 was obviously lifted from The Triumph of the Will, except that they didn't use tiki poolside torches in Germany in the 1930s.
Good Luck and Good Trading
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
Leni Riefenstahl
Olympia
Followers of the Mad Hedge Fund Trader alert service have the good fortune to own a deep in-the-money options position that expires on Friday, June 16, and I just want to explain to the newbies how to best maximize their profits.
This involves the Tesla (TSLA) June 2023 $120-$130 in-the-money vertical bull call debit spread.
Provided that we don’t have another 80-point move down in Tesla in ten trading days, this position should expire at its maximum profit point.
So far, so good.
Your profit can be calculated as follows:
Profit: $10.00 expiration value - $8.80 cost = $1.20 net profit
(12 contracts X 100 contracts per option X $1.20 profit per option)
= $1,440 or 13.63% in 25 trading days.
Many of you have already emailed me asking what to do with these winning positions.
The answer is very simple. You take your left hand, grab your right wrist, pull it behind your neck, and pat yourself on the back for a job well done.
You don’t have to do anything.
Your broker (are they still called that?) will automatically use your long position to cover your short position, canceling out the total holdings.
The entire profit will be credited to your account on Monday morning, June 19 and the margin freed up.
Some firms charge you a modest $10 or $15 fee for performing this service.
If you don’t see the cash show up in your account on Monday, get on the blower immediately and find it.
Although the expiration process is now supposed to be fully automated, occasionally machines do make mistakes. Better to sort out any confusion before losses ensue.
If you want to wimp out and close the position before the expiration, it may be expensive to do so. You can probably unload them pennies below their maximum expiration value.
Keep in mind that the liquidity in the options market understandably disappears, and the spreads substantially widen, when a security has only hours, or minutes until expiration on Friday. So, if you plan to exit, do so well before the final expiration at the Friday market close.
This is known in the trade as the “expiration risk.”
One way or the other, I’m sure you’ll do OK, as long as I am looking over your shoulder, as I will be, always. Think of me as your trading guardian angel.
I am going to hang back and wait for good entry points before jumping back in. It’s all about keeping that “Buy low, sell high” thing going.
I’m looking to cherry-pick my new positions going into the next quarter end.
Take your winnings and go out and buy yourself a well-earned dinner. Just make sure it’s take-out. I want you to stick around.
Well done, and on to the next trade.
You Can’t Do Enough Research
Global Market Comments
May 30, 2023
Fiat Lux
Featured Trades:
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or A TALE OF TWO MARKETS)
(SPY), (TLT), (TSLA), (NVDA), (TOL), (LEN), (KBH), (PHM), (TLT), (MRVL), (F)
CLICK HERE to download today's position sheet.
Investors are so out of position it hurts.
I have always believed that markets will always do whatever they have to do to screw the most people and it is doing that right now with a vengeance.
Some $750 billion has poured into cash and equivalents since January 1. Margin debt is now at the Dotcom bust low of 1.4% of the S&P 500 not seen since 2002. Equity Allocations are at a 15 Year Low, with massive amounts of cash in 90-day T-bills now yielding 5.25%.
The broader market is expensive looking at 19 times 2023 earnings. But take out the top five performing FANGS and we are down to a very reasonable 15 times for the remaining 495 stocks.
I told you this would happen, that the bear market ended on October 15 and that big tech would lead any recovery. I reiterated this view in depth with my 2023 All Asset Class Review on January 4 (click here for the link).
In the meantime, a lot of investors had angry conversations with investment advisors this week as to why they didn’t own NVIDIA (NVDA). They heard it was too expensive, that it had already moved too much (triple since October 15), the government was going default on its debt, and that we were headed into recession.
Suffice it to say that if they lived here with me in Silicon Valley, they wouldn’t take this view. The world is going NVIDIA crazy on a huge earnings beat, taking the shares up 30%. Q1 revenues came in at $7.2 billion versus an expected $6.5 billion. Demand from AI and data centers is surging.
(NVDA) has been a core Mad Hedge holding since it went public a decade ago. It is now up 175-fold and has at least another seven bagger ahead of it. (NVDA) has matched the 175-fold gain we caught with our 2010 recommendation for Tesla. The (NVDA) January 2025 LEAPS I recommended on September 29 at 50 cents is now worth $6.25 and expires worth $10, up 20-fold!
It all vindicates my own long-term vision, unique in the investing community, that in the coming decade, technology profits will more than replace the Fed liquidity we feasted on during the 2010s.
The Internet has created about $10 trillion in value since inception. AI will create a lot more than that. That’s what will take the Dow from 33,000 to 240,000.
In the meantime, new home building is incredibly going from strength to strength and is one of the few domestic sides of the economy that is prospering mightily. New Home Sales hit a 13-Month High, up 4.1% in April. If you had told me five years ago that while 30-year fixed mortgage rates were at a two-decade high of 7.0%, demand for new homes was so strong that builders were running out of inventory, I would have told you that you were out of your mind.
Yet, here we are.
This is because half of the builders that went bust in the 2008 subprime housing crash never came back, creating a structural shortage of homes that will take 20 years to return to balance.
Baby boomers now aged 61 to 78 rushed to buy homes in their late 20s during the prosperity of the 1960s and 1970s. Only 10% paid cash for their homes, many of whom worked on Wall Street, like me.
Some 75 million Millennials are now buying homes in their mid 30’s and are therefore much wealthier than previous generations. Working in tech like my kids, some 35% are paying all cash and are immune to the interest rate cycle. That means they can afford much nicer homes than we boomers could.
Those who do borrow plan to refi quickly in a year or two when mortgages are back below 5.0%. Then the residential real estate will absolutely catch on fire. Buy (TOL), (LEN), (KBH), and (PHM) on dips.
Oh, and buy boatloads of bonds (TLT) too.
There is another angle to the story that is fascinating. High housing prices are turning Yankees into Confederates and Hawaiians into cowboys.
An onslaught of my friends have recently retired from New York for the green hills of North Carolina. The problem is that if I moved there, they’d be burning crosses on my front lawn in the first week.
Natives Hawaiians have fled their green hills for the Nevada deserts because they can’t afford to live there anymore, moving from an $800,000 median homes price to $400,000. When I was in Las Vegas a few weeks ago, I noticed ads for a hula contest, Hawaiian language lessons at the county library, and SPAM at Safeway. Outrigger canoes have been spotted on a disappearing Lake Mead. The chief complaint? Leis wilt a lot faster in the dry desert air.
So far in May, I have managed a modest 1.38% profit. My 2023 year-to-date performance is now at an eye-popping +63.13%. The S&P 500 (SPY) is up only a miniscule +10.53% so far in 2023. My trailing one-year return reached a 15-year high at +108.59% versus +12.02% for the S&P 500.
That brings my 15-year total return to +660.32%. My average annualized return has blasted up to +48.91%, another new high, some 2.72 times the S&P 500 over the same period.
Some 41 of my 44 trades this year have been profitable. My last 22 consecutive trade alerts have been profitable.
I executed no trades last week, content to run my long in Tesla and a short in Tesla, the “short strangle” strategy. I now have a very rare 80% cash position due to the lack of high-return, low-risk trades. I ran a rare loss last week because while my long in Tesla is now at max profit, my short is approaching its near strike. That goes with my philosophy of when you’re wrong, be small. When you’re right, go big.
Ford (F) Cuts Deal with Tesla to Share National Charger Network, putting Elon Musk well on his way to becoming the largest electric utility in the world. It won’t affect the existing 4 million Tesla drivers yet. Ford only sold 62,000 EVs in 2022 and 25,000 the year before. Access will be provided through adapters, the (F) adopting the Tesla charging standard. It kind of screws (GM) left on its own. It was worth a $13 pop for (TSLA). Keep buying (TSLA) on dips.
Divergence Between the S&P 500 and the S&P Equal Weight is the greatest since December 1999. The Dotcom Bubble topped four months later. It’s a function of concentration in the top five tech stocks, my “Five Aces” strategy. Risk is rising. The flight to big tech balance sheets and AI has been huge. You heard it here first.
Marvel Technologies (MRVL) Rockets 25% on Spectacular Earnings Beat, as the AI fever spreads out into infrastructure plays like second-line chip makers. Demand for integrated circuits from data centers, carrier infrastructure, networking, and the auto industry is off the charts. The Internet has to grow 500% quickly to accommodate new AI demand right now. The gold rush is on. Buy (MRVL) on dips.
Inflation Continues to Fall, down 0.4% in April according to the Personal Consumption Expenditures Index Price Index. Food prices rose 6.9% from a year ago while energy fell 6.3%.
Fitch Puts US Debt on Credit Watch, meaning that it is due for a downgrade. It’s the first time since the 2011 Moody’s downgrade from AAA to AA+. Threats of default have real-world consequences.
Pending Home Sales Collapse, unchanged from March, but down 20% YOY on a signed contract basis. Soaring interest rates get the blame. The northeast took the big hit.
Ely Lily Price Target Raised to $500, by Bank of America on the strength of their Ozempic weight loss drug. The stock is up fivefold since Mad Hedge recommended it five years ago. Keep buying (LLY) on tips.
30-Year Fixed Rate Mortgages Jump Back to 7.0%, on the impasse in Washington and default fears. The residential real estate recovery goes back on hold.
(TLT) Approaches 2023 Low. The closer we get to a debt ceiling deal, the lower we go. When a deal is done, it unleashes a new onslaught of bond selling by the Treasury, and lower lows on bonds. In the dream scenario, we fall all the way to $95 in the (TLT) where we will be issuing recommendations for call spreads and LEAPS by the boatload.
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 decarbonizing and technology hyper-accelerating, creating enormous investment opportunities. The Dow Average will rise by 800% 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, May 29 is Memorial Day. All markets are closed.
On Tuesday, May 30 at 6:00 AM EST, the S&P Case Shiller National Home Price Index is printed.
On Wednesday, May 31 at 7:00 AM, the JOLTS Job Openings Report is out.
On Thursday, June 1 at 8:30 AM, the Weekly Jobless Claims are announced.
On Friday, June 2 at 2:00 PM, the May Nonfarm Payroll Report is released.
As for me, with the 36th anniversary of the 1987 crash coming up this year, when shares dove 20% in one day, I thought I’d part with a few memories.
I was in Paris visiting Morgan Stanley’s top banking clients, who then were making a major splash in Japanese equity warrants, my particular area of expertise.
When we walked into our last appointment, I casually asked how the market was doing (Paris is six hours ahead of New York). We were told the Dow Average was down a record 300 points. Stunned, I immediately asked for a private conference room so I could call the equity trading desk in New York to buy some stock.
A woman answered the phone, and when I said I wanted to buy, she burst into tears and threw the handset down on the floor. Redialing found all transatlantic lines jammed.
I never bought my stock, nor found out who picked up the phone. I grabbed a taxi to Charles de Gaulle airport and flew my twin Cessna as fast as the turbocharged engines take me back to London, breaking every known air traffic control rule.
By the time I got back, the Dow had closed down 512 points. Then I learned that George Soros asked us to bid on a $250 million blind portfolio of US stocks after the close. He said he had also solicited bids from Goldman Sachs, Merrill Lynch, JP Morgan, and Solomon Brothers, and would call us back if we won.
We bid 10% below the final closing prices for the lot. Ten minutes later he called us back and told us we won the auction. How much did the others bid? He told us that we were the only ones who bid at all!
Then you heard that great sucking sound.
Oops!
What has never been disclosed to the public is that after the close, Morgan Stanley received a margin call from the exchange for $100 million, as volatility had gone through the roof, as did every firm on Wall Street. We ordered JP Morgan to send the money from our account immediately. Then they lost the wire transfer!
After some harsh words at the top, it was found. That’s when I discovered the wonderful world of Fed wire numbers.
The next morning, the Dow continued its plunge, but after an hour managed a U-turn, and launched on a monster rally that lasted for the rest of the year. We made $75 million on that one trade from Soros.
It was the worst investment decision I have seen in the markets in 53 years, executed by its most brilliant player. Go figure. Maybe it was George’s risk control discipline kicking in?
At the end of the month, we then took a $75 million hit on our share of the British Petroleum privatization, because Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher refused to postpone the issue, believing that the banks had already made too much money.
That gave Morgan Stanley’s equity division a break-even P&L for the month of October 1987, the worst in market history. Even now, I refuse to gas up at a BP station on the very rare occasions I am driving a rental internal combustion engine from Enterprise.
My Quotron Screen on 1987 Crash Day
Good luck and good trading!
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
Global Market Comments
March 27, 2023
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or THE BANKING CRISIS IS OVER),
(SPY), (TLT), (SCHW), (NFLX), (CS), (GLD), (USO), (BRK/B), (TSLA), (BAC), (C), (JPM), (IBKR), (MS)
CLICK HERE to download today's position sheet.
I think it is safe to say that the banking crisis is now in the market. You saw this in the ritual Friday selloff of bank stocks, which last week made back two-thirds of its losses by the end of the day.
Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen has made it clear that she will use her emergency authority to bail out the depositors of any US banks and leave the shareholders drifting in the wind. That’s OK as long as failures happen in ones and twos and not hundreds.
So after this coming dead, data-less week, we may launch into a serious rally next month, often the strongest of the year, back up to the top of the recent trading range. After that, it will be time to “Sell in May and go away,” and not come back until an interest rate collapse is imminent.
Personally, I have suites on the Queen Mary II and the Orient Express waiting for me. How about you?
And what happens when a crisis winds down? The need for protection ebbs as well. That means that big tech stocks with large balance sheets which had a great March will be due for a rest.
You see this in other flight-to-safety assets, like gold (GLD), which gave up some of its recent gains.
Given the failure of the Volatility Index ($VIX) to maintain a sustainable rally this year, it is clear that something important has changed in that market. That would be same-day options, which are stealing the thunder of the old ($VIX).
Instead of panicking and buying the ($VIX) at market, hedge fund algorithms are now programmed to buy individual same-day stock put options. That vastly increases the volatility of single stocks, with one day 10%-15% moves becoming normal.
When a piece of bad news erupts about the banking system, same-day put options across the entire sector rocket, regardless of whether any individual bank is having problems or not.
Needless to say, as ($VIX) opportunities fade, spectacular new trades are opening up in single stocks which Mad Hedge is happily taking advantage of. As a result, the profitability of our trading strategy has near doubled. This has produced the blowout numbers which I list below.
When panic put buying tanks a stock, we pile on call spreads, as we did two weeks ago with many bank and broker stocks. When fears of recession drive bond prices insanely high, we buy (TLT) put spreads.
Buy low, sell high, it’s my new investment strategy. I’m thinking of patenting it.
With some of the most extreme volatility of the year, Mad Hedge continued on up tear, with March up an eye-popping +12.52%.
My 2023 year-to-date performance is now at an incredible +38.28%. The S&P 500 (SPY) is up a miniscule +0.77% so far in 2023. My trailing one-year return maintains a sky-high +95.52% versus -10.23% for the S&P 500.
That brings my 15-year total return to +635.47%, some 2.8 times the S&P 500 (SPY) over the same period. My average annualized return has recovered to +48.26%, another new high.
I executed only two trades last week, content to leave alone my remaining eight positions that are profitable. I used a bond selloff to take profits with my bond short (TLT). A frenetic 25% rally prompted me to close out my long in Charles Schwab (SCHW) as we were nearing our maximum profit.
Fed Raises Interest Rates 25 basis points, to an overnight range of 4.75% to 5.00%, a 15-year high. But it left the door open to a further 25 basis points on May 3. The statement substantially weakened the prospect for future interest rate hikes, a de facto pause. Stocks loved the move, especially brokerage and technology stocks. Powell said the US banking system is sound and announced further support measures for small banks.
Yellen to Guarantee Deposits if More Banks Fail, which traders are taking to the bank as a nationwide government backstop. That explains the ballistic moves in financials yesterday. Today, Fed governor Jay Powell plays his hand.
Will the Banking Crisis End the Bear Market? I think so, as a drop in interest rates is the only possible solution. The Fed may have to guarantee all US bank deposits for a year to get there. Bank and technology stocks certainly think so, which have been on a tear this week.
Fed Window Increases By $94 Billion on the Week, and $400 billion in two weeks, in its so far successful effort to float the banking system. Some $60 billion went to foreign borrowers. It has to be viewed as a positive and the emergency need for funding is declining.
Netflix (NFLX) Soars 10%, by ending password sharing in Canada. The United States is expected to be next. The move is expected to boost paid subscriptions. I took profits on my long in (NFLX).
Oil (USO) Dives 1%, as the US energy secretary says it may take “years” to refill the Strategic Petroleum Reserve. How about never?
Existing Home Sales Soar 14.5% in February, a three-year high on a signed contract basis. The annualized rate was 4.58 million according to the National Association of Home Builders. Inventories shrink to an incredible 2.6 months or 980,000 homes. The median home prices fell 0.2% to $363,000, the first decline in 11 years. The sharp drop in interest rates last week will further turbocharge sales. Cash sales were 28% of total sales.
Gold (GLD) Tops $2,000 an Ounce, as the flight to safety bid continues. Lower interest rates sooner will also provide less yield competition for precious metals. Silver will provide the higher beta from here, as it always does.
UBS Buys Credit Suisse (CS) for $3.25 Billion, less than half of where it traded on Friday, eliminating another threat to the global financial system. It looks like there were $5 billion in hidden trading losses. Some $17 billion in lower tier bonds were written down to zero, which several US bond funds like Pimco owned. The deal includes a sweetheart $100 billion loan facility from my friends at the Swiss National Bank. The forced marriage will create one of the largest banks in Europe. Some 9,000 CS jobs will get axed.
Berkshire Hathaway Steps up Share Buybacks, totaling $1.8 billion in 2022. The three-year total is an incredible $60 billion. It explains why (BRK/B) was unchanged in an otherwise horrific year. Buffet still holds a stunning $147 billion in cash, most of which is invested in US Treasury short terms bills.
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 decarbonizing and technology hyper accelerating, creating enormous investment opportunities. The Dow Average will rise by 800% 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, March 27 at 7:30 AM EST, the Dallas Fed Manufacturing Index is out.
On Tuesday, March 28 at 6:00 AM, the S&P Case Shiller National Home Price Index is announced.
On Wednesday, March 29 at 7:00 AM, the Pending Home Sales for February are printed.
On Thursday, March 30 at 8:30 AM, the Weekly Jobless Claims are announced. The final read on Q4 GDP is disclosed.
On Friday, March 31 at 8:30 AM, the Personal Income & Spending are released.
As for me, not a lot of people get a chance to board a WWII battleship these days. So when I got the chance, I jumped at it.
As part of my grand tour of the South Pacific for Continental Airlines in 1981, I stopped at the US missile test site at Kwajalein Atoll in the Marshall Islands, a mere 2,000 miles west southwest of Hawaii and just north of the equator.
Of course, TOP SECRET clearance was required and no civilians are allowed.
No problem there, as clearance from my days at the Nuclear Test Site in Nevada was still valid. Still, the FBI visited my parents in California just to be sure that I hadn’t adopted any inconvenient ideologies in the intervening years.
I met with the admiral in charge to get an update on the current strategic state of the Pacific. China was nowhere back then, so there wasn’t much to talk about in the wake of the Vietnam War.
As our meeting wound down, the admiral asked me if I had been on a German battleship. “It’s a bit before my time,” I replied. “How would you like to board the Prinz Eugen?" he responded.
The Prinz Eugen was a heavy cruiser, otherwise known as a pocket battleship built by Nazi Germany. It launched in 1938 at 16,000 tons and with eight 8-inch guns. Its sister ship was the Admiral Graf Spee, which was scuttled in the famous Battle of the River Platte in South America in 1939.
Early in the war, it helped sink the British battleship HMS Hood and damaged the HMS Prince of Wales. The Prinz Eugen spent much of the war holed up in a Norwegian fjord and later provided artillery support for the retreating German Army on the eastern front. At the end of the war, the ship was handed over to the US Navy as a war prize.
The US postwar atomic testing was just beginning so the Prinz Eugen was towed through the Panama Canal to be used as a target. Some 200 ships were assembled, including those from Germany, Japan, Britain, and even some American ships deemed no longer seaworthy like the USS Saratoga. One of the first hydrogen bombs was dropped in the middle of the fleet.
The Prinz Eugen was the only ship to remain afloat. In the Navy film of the explosion, you can see the Prinz Eugen jump 200 feet into the air and come down upright. The ship was then towed back to Kwajalein Atoll and put at anchor. A typhoon came later in 1946, capsizing and sinking it.
It was a bright at sunny day when I pulled up to the Prinz Eugen in a small boat with some Navy divers. There was no way the Navy was going to let me visit the ship alone.
The ship was upside-down, with the stern beached to the bow in 300 feet of pristine turquoise water. The propellers had recently been sent off to a war memorial in Germany. The ship’s eight cannons lay scattered on the bottom, falling out of their turrets when the ship tipped over.
The small part of the Prinz Eugen above water had already started to rust through. But once underwater it was like entering a live aquarium.
A lot of coral, seaweed, starfish, and sea urchins can accumulate in 36 years and every inch of the ship was covered. Brightly tropical fish swam in schools. A six-foot mako shark with a hungry look warily swam by.
My diver friends knew the ship well and showed me the highlights to a depth of 50 feet. The controls in the engine room were labeled in German Fraktur, the preferred prewar script. Broken dishes displayed the Nazi swastika. Anti-aircraft guns frozen in time pointed towards the bottom. No one had been allowed to remove anything from the ship since the war, and in the Navy, most men follow orders.
It was amazing what was still intact on a ship that had been blown up by a hydrogen bomb. You can’t beat “Made in Germany.” Our time on the ship was limited as the hull was still radioactive, and in any case, I was running low on oxygen.
A few years later the Navy banned all diving on the Prinz Eugen. Three divers had gotten lost in the dark, tangled in cables, and downed. I was one of the last to visit the historic ship.
I checked with my friends in the Navy and the Prinz Eugen is still there, but in deteriorating condition. When the ship started leaking oil in 2018 and staining the immaculate beaches nearby, the Navy launched a major effort to drain what was left from the 80-year-old tanks. No doubt a future typhoon will claim what is left.
So if someone asks if you know anybody who’s been on a German battleship, you can say “Yes,” you know me. And yes, my German is still pretty good these days.
Vielen dank!
Good Luck and Good Trading,
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
The Prinz Eugen in 1940
The Prinz Eugen Today
Legal Disclaimer
There is a very high degree of risk involved in trading. Past results are not indicative of future returns. MadHedgeFundTrader.com and all individuals affiliated with this site assume no responsibilities for your trading and investment results. The indicators, strategies, columns, articles and all other features are for educational purposes only and should not be construed as investment advice. Information for futures trading observations are obtained from sources believed to be reliable, but we do not warrant its completeness or accuracy, or warrant any results from the use of the information. Your use of the trading observations is entirely at your own risk and it is your sole responsibility to evaluate the accuracy, completeness and usefulness of the information. You must assess the risk of any trade with your broker and make your own independent decisions regarding any securities mentioned herein. Affiliates of MadHedgeFundTrader.com may have a position or effect transactions in the securities described herein (or options thereon) and/or otherwise employ trading strategies that may be consistent or inconsistent with the provided strategies.
This site uses cookies. By continuing to browse the site, you are agreeing to our use of cookies.
OKLearn moreWe may request cookies to be set on your device. We use cookies to let us know when you visit our websites, how you interact with us, to enrich your user experience, and to customize your relationship with our website.
Click on the different category headings to find out more. You can also change some of your preferences. Note that blocking some types of cookies may impact your experience on our websites and the services we are able to offer.
These cookies are strictly necessary to provide you with services available through our website and to use some of its features.
Because these cookies are strictly necessary to deliver the website, refuseing them will have impact how our site functions. You always can block or delete cookies by changing your browser settings and force blocking all cookies on this website. But this will always prompt you to accept/refuse cookies when revisiting our site.
We fully respect if you want to refuse cookies but to avoid asking you again and again kindly allow us to store a cookie for that. You are free to opt out any time or opt in for other cookies to get a better experience. If you refuse cookies we will remove all set cookies in our domain.
We provide you with a list of stored cookies on your computer in our domain so you can check what we stored. Due to security reasons we are not able to show or modify cookies from other domains. You can check these in your browser security settings.
These cookies collect information that is used either in aggregate form to help us understand how our website is being used or how effective our marketing campaigns are, or to help us customize our website and application for you in order to enhance your experience.
If you do not want that we track your visist to our site you can disable tracking in your browser here:
We also use different external services like Google Webfonts, Google Maps, and external Video providers. Since these providers may collect personal data like your IP address we allow you to block them here. Please be aware that this might heavily reduce the functionality and appearance of our site. Changes will take effect once you reload the page.
Google Webfont Settings:
Google Map Settings:
Vimeo and Youtube video embeds: