Global Market Comments
March 22, 2021
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or ENTERING TERRA INCOGNITA),
(TLT), (TSLA), (JPM), (VIX), (QQQ), (IWM), (BAC), (C), (SPY)
Global Market Comments
March 22, 2021
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or ENTERING TERRA INCOGNITA),
(TLT), (TSLA), (JPM), (VIX), (QQQ), (IWM), (BAC), (C), (SPY)
During the Middle Ages, when explorers sought new lands and their rich treasures, large sections of their navigational charts were marked with the term “terra incognita.”
That meant what lays beyond was unknown and that they should enter only at their own risk. Often there was a picture of a dragon or a sea monster to mark the spot.
There was also often a warning that you might even sail off of the edge of the earth.
Financial markets have entered a “terra incognita” of their own recently.
Here is the big unknown: How high can ten-year US Treasury bond yields soar when the Federal Reserve is promising to keep overnight interest pegged at 25 basis points until 2024 in the face of essentially unlimited monetary and fiscal stimulus?
So far, the answer is: more.
That is a really big question because we’ve never really been here before.
In fact, some Cassandras from the right are even predicting such a policy will cause us to sail off of the edge of the earth. The modern-day equivalent of running into dragons is inviting runaway inflation.
I can tell you from my own vast, almost immeasurable navigational experience (I am licensed by the US government) that “terra incognita” does not invite inordinate risk-taking or betting of ranches by traders or investors. Instead, they tend to sit on their hands, work on their golf swing, or update their Facebook pages.
That is what the Volatility Index (VIX) last week is essentially screaming at us by touching the $19 handle for the first time in a year.
Almost everyone I know has made more money in the markets than at any time in their lives. That is what a near doubling of the stock market in a year gets you.
And the new wealth was not attained because their intelligence and market insight have suddenly doubled, although a strong case for such can be made for readers of Mad Hedge Fund Trader.
So I used the Friday, March 19 option expiration to go into a rare 100% cash position. I really have gotten away with too much lately.
Then feeling guilty, I slapped on a single long in Tesla (TSLA), that old reliable money-maker. It’s worked for me since it was $3.50 a share. After all, a gigantic green energy infrastructure bill is about to pass in Congress. What better to own than the world’s largest EV car maker.
And what a tear it has been.
After bringing in a ballistic 66.64% profit in 2020, I reeled in another 40.38% gain in the first 2 ½ months of 2021. I did this via 40 trades which generated 38 wins and only two losses. That’s a success rate of an incredible 95%. I have to pinch myself when I read these numbers.
I am concerned because numbers any higher than this will look fake. It’s a rule of thumb in the investment business that when managers claim a 100% success rate, they are either high-frequency traders back by super-fast mainframe computers or running a scam.
So, I have been advising clients to pare back their biggest positions that became massively overweight purely through capital appreciation. Financials come to mind. JP Morgan (JPM) up 81% in three months? Sounds like a Ponzi Scheme.
So let me give you some upside targets in the bond market. We doubled bottomed in 2012 and 2016 at a 1.37% yield in the ten-year Treasury bond yield. We have already surpassed that level like a hot knife through butter.
At the depths of the 2008-2009 Great Recession, rates bottomed at 2.0% yield, which now seems within easy reach. The lowest yield we saw after the 2003 Dotcom Crash was a 3.0%.
When the upside targets in interest rates in this cycle are the lows of the previous economic cycles, that augurs pretty well for the future of stock prices. That is the guaranteed outcome of the tidal wave of cash now sweeping the global financial system.
The permabears are warning that the “Roaring Twenties” have already happened. I argued that they are only just getting started and that the indexes have another 4X of upside in them over the rest of the decade. When the last “Roaring Twenties” occurred, you didn’t sell in 1921.
It also reminds me of the huge “rip your face off” rally we saw from March 2009 to 2010. A lot of market gurus said then that was the peak. They were wrong. Today, they are driving for Uber and Lyft.
So when a talking head warns you that higher interest rates will cause the stock market to crash, just turn off the boob tube and go back to practicing your golf swing.
The Mad Hedge Summit Videos are Up, from the March 9,10, and 11 confab. Listen to 27 speakers opine on the best strategies, tactics, and instruments to use in these volatile markets. The product discounts offered last week are still valid. Start, stop, and pause the videos at your leisure. Best of all, access to the videos is FREE. Access them all by clicking here at www.madhedge.com, click on CURRENT SUMMIT REPLAYS in the upper right-hand corner, and then choose the speaker of your choice.
Ten Year Bond Yields (TLT) soar to a 1.75%, setting financials on fire and demolishing tech (QQQ). We are rapidly approaching a 2.00% yield, which could trigger a huge round of profit-taking on bond shorts, a domestic stock selloff, and a tech rally. The next great rotation may be just ahead of us.
Oil (USO) dives 8% on fears of an imminent Saudi production increase and a worsening Covid-19 outlook in Europe. Are we next with all these early reopening’s? Gone 100% cash at the close with the March quadruple witching option expiration.
A Tax Hike is next on the menu. Corporate tax rates are returning from 21% to 28% for the small proportion of companies that actually PAY tax. Raising taxes on earnings of more than $400,000. Pass through entities to get a haircut. Increasing estate taxes. You better die soon if you want your kids to stay rich. Increase in capital gains taxes over $1 million. I want my SALT deduction back! The grand negotiation begins on who needs bridges, rail lines, and subway extensions. Hint: for some reason, there have been no new federal projects started in California for the past four years and all the existing ones were cut back.
Value Stocks (IWM) are beating growth ones, reversing a decade-long trend. The Russell Value Index is up 11% this year, while growth is unchanged. It’s a total flip from last year when growth was tech-led. This could continue for years, or until the tech becomes the new value stocks. Big winners include Boeing (BA), JP Morgan (JPM), and Morgan Stanley (MS), all Mad Hedge moneymakers.
Bitcoin tops 61,000. Nothing else to say but that because there are no fundamentals. It’s up 80% in 2021 and 540% YOY. But it is becoming a good risk-taking indicator thought, and right now it is shouting a loud and clear “Risk On.”
It’s going to be All About Stock Picking for the Rest of 2021, says Morgan Stanley strategist Mike Wilson. Dragging on the index from here on will be the prospects of rising rates, tax hikes, and inflation. Mike especially dislikes small caps (IWM) which have already had a terrific run, with a 19% YTD gain. Stock picking? Boy, did you come to the right place!
Fed to hold off on rates hikes through 2023, said Governor Jay Powell after the open Market Committee Meeting. Bonds rallied a full half-point on the news and then crashed again, taking yields to a new 1.70% high. It sees inflation reaching a positively stratospheric 2.0% sometime this year, after which it will die, so nothing to do here. This is what a 100% dovish FOMC gets you. Let the games begin!
New Housing Starts Collapse, from an expected +2.5% to -10.3%, as high lumber, land, labor, and interest rates take their toll. This will only drive new home prices high at a faster rate and the little remaining supply dries up. Millennials need some place to live.
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 400% to 120,000 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 120,000 here we come!
It’s amazing how well patience can help your performance. My Mad Hedge Global Trading Dispatch profit reached a super-hot 16.89% during the first half of March on the heels of a spectacular 13.28% profit in February.
It was a tough week in the market, so I held fire and ran my seven remaining profitable positions into the March 19 options expiration. I took advantage of a meltdown in Tesla (TSLA) shares to put on my only new position of the week with a very deep-in-the-money long. That leaves me with 90% cash and a barrel full of dry powder.
This is my fifth double-digit month in a row. My 2021 year-to-date performance soared to 40.38%. The Dow Average is up a miniscule 7.7% so far in 2021.
That brings my 11-year total return to 462.93%, some 2.12 times the S&P 500 (SPX) over the same period. My 11-year average annualized return now stands at an unbelievable 41.14%.
My trailing one-year return exploded to 121.60%, the highest in the 13-year history of the Mad Hedge Fund Trader. 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 29.8 million and deaths topping 542,000, which you can find here. Thankfully, death rates have slowed dramatically, but Obituaries are still the largest sector in the newspaper.
The coming week will be a boring one on the data front.
On Monday, March 22, at 9:00 AM, Existing Home Sales for February are released.
On Tuesday, March 23, at 9:00 AM, New Home Sales are published.
On Wednesday, March 24 at 8:30 AM, we learn US Durable Goods for February are printed.
On Thursday, March 25 at 8:30 AM, Weekly Jobless Claims are out. We also get the final read of US Q4 GDP.
On Friday, March 26 at 8:30 AM, US Personal Income & Spending for February are released. At 2:00 PM, we learn the Baker-Hughes Rig Count.
As for me, I have been doing a lot of high altitude winter mountain climbing lately, and with the warm spring weather, the risk of avalanches is ever present. It takes me back to the American Bicentennial Everest Expedition, which I joined in 1976.
It was led by my old friend, instructor, and climbing mentor Jim Whitaker, who pulled an ice ax out of my nose on Mt. Rainer in 1967 (you can still see the scar). Jim was the first American to summit the world’s highest mountain. I tried to break a high-speed fall and an ice ax kicked back and hit me square in the face. If I hadn’t been wearing goggles I would have been blinded.
I made it up to 22,000 feet on Everest, to Base Camp II without oxygen because there were only a limited number of canisters reserved for those planning to summit. At that altitude, you take two steps, and then break to catch your breath.
There is a surreal thing about that trip that I remember. One day, a block of ice the size of a skyscraper shifted on the Khumbu Ice Fall and out of the bottom popped a body. It was a man who went missing on the 1962 American expedition. Everyone recognized him as he hadn’t aged a day in 15 years, since he was frozen solid.
I boiled my drinking water, but at that altitude, water can’t get hot enough to purify it. So I walked 100 miles back to Katmandu with amoebic dysentery. By the time I got there, I’d lost 50 pounds, taking my weight to 120 pounds.
Jim was an Eagle Scout, the first full-time employee of Recreational Equipment Inc. (REI), and last climbed Everest when he was 61. Today, he is 92 and lives in Seattle, WA.
Jim reaffirms my belief that daily mountain climbing is a great life extension strategy, if not an aphrodisiac.
Stay healthy.
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
Global Market Comments
March 19, 2021
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(MARCH 17 BIWEEKLY STRATEGY WEBINAR Q&A),
(JPM), (TLT), (TBT), (SQ), (MMM), (SIL), (QQQ), (WMP), (CCIV), (TSLA), (USO), (CRSP), (PLTR), (HYG), (FCX), (XME)
Global Market Comments
March 15, 2021
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or LISTEN TO THE (VIX),
(SPY), (IWM), (QQQ), (TLT), (VIX), (DAL), (BA), (ALK)
I decided to take a day off over the weekend and see what was happening in the real economy.
As I drove over the Bay Bridge, I spotted over 30 very large container ships from China loaded to the gills. They were diverted from Los Angeles where the delay to unload ships has extended to two months.
The San Francisco farmers market was jammed with a mask-wearing crowd. Standing in front of me in the line to buy lavender salt was former 49ers quarterback Joe Montana, who took his team to the Super Bowl four times. He was in great shape, looking at least 30 pounds lighter than in his heyday.
Leaving Half Moon Bay after picking up some driftwood for my garden, the traffic to get into town was at least an hour long.
It all underlies a theme for the economy and the markets that I have been expounding upon for the last year.
The Roaring Twenties have begun, the number of consumers and investors who believe this is increasing every day, and the impact on business and stocks is still being wildly underestimated.
You can see this in the Volatility Index (VIX), which has made a rare two roundtrips over the past month, and that means two possible things. Markets are undecided. When they make up their minds, they will either crash, or make a new leg up.
I vote for the latter.
I keep especially close attention on the (VIX) these days because it tells me when I can turn on or off my printing press for $100 bills. Anywhere over a (VIX) of $30 and I can strap on “free money” trades where the chances of losing money are virtually nil.
You can see this in my performance this year, where 40 roundtrips trade alerts in 11 weeks generated 38 wins and only two losses. That’s a success rate of an unprecedented 95%.
The indecision in the markets is obvious in the charts below. The large cap S&P 500 (SPX) and the small cap Russell 2000 (IWM) clawed their way to new highs last week, but the tech heavy NASDAQ (QQQ) made a feeble, halfhearted effort at best. Technology alone is being punished for rising interest rates as the ten-year US Treasury yield hit 1.62%.
This makes absolutely no sense as the larger tech companies are massive cash generators, run huge cash balances, and are enormous let lenders to the financial system. That means they make millions in interest payments from rising rates. What they are really being punished for is doubling from the pandemic low a year ago.
But never argue with Mr. Market.
Biden signs, with a record $1.8 trillion hitting the economy immediately. Money could start hitting your bank account this weekend if you are signed up for electronic payments with the IRS. Let the party begin! I already spent my money a long time ago. The Fed is forecasting a 10% GDP growth rate in Q2. Money is about to come raining down upon the economy….and the stock market. The big question is how much of this is already in the market. “Buy the rumor, sell the news”. Given the wild swings in the market, and multiple visits to a $32 (VIX), it’s clear that markets don’t know….yet.
The Next Battle is over infrastructure, which the democrats want to have an environmental. “green” slant. Look for a big gas tax rise to pay for it. They may get what they want with Senate control. Look for a September target. The economy needs $2 trillion a year in new government spending to keep the stock market rising and it will probably happen.
Nonfarm Payroll comes in at a blockbuster 379,000 in February, far better than expected. It's a preview of explosive numbers to come as the US economy crawls out of the pandemic. That’s with a huge drag from terrible winter weather. The headline Unemployment Rate is 6.2%. The U-6 “discouraged worker” rate of still a sky high 11%, those who have been jobless more than six months. Leisure & Hospitality were up an incredible 355,000 and Retail was up 41,000. Government lost 86,000 jobs. See what employers are willing to do when they see $20 trillion about to hit the economy?
Weekly Jobless Claims dive to 712,000 has pandemic restrictions fall across the country, the lowest since November. However, ongoing claims still stand at an extremely high 4.1 million. Total US joblessness still stands at 18 million. Will the pandemic come back to haunt us from these early reopenings?
California Disneyland (DIS) to reopen April 1, lifting a very dark cloud and huge expenses off the company. Cases on the west coast have fallen so dramatically that the state feels it can get away with this. Maybe this is an effort to derail the recall movement against the government. Stock is up 2% in the after-market, which Mad Hedge followers are long. Time to dig out my mouse ears. Keep buying (DIS) on dips.
Oil (USO) soars 3% on an attack on Saudi oil facilities and a building US economic recovery. $69 a barrel is printed. This is setting up as a great short. High prices in a decarbonizing economy have no future. A (USO) $34-$36 put LEAP with a January 2023 maturity might make all the sense in the world here.
Boeing (BA) announced Fist Positive Deliveries, in 14 months, finally turning around the mess with the 737 MAX. United Airlines was the biggest buyer. The perfect storm is finally over. And Boeing is about to snag another giant order, this time from Southwest (LUV). This comes on the heels of similar big order from Alaska Air (ALK). Keep buying (BA) on dips. An upside breakout is imminent.
Consumer Price Index Comes in at 0.4%, and 0.1% ex food and energy. It’s still at a nonexistent level. Rising gasoline prices were a factor, but airline ticket prices remain at all-time lows. I’ll worry about inflation when I see the whites of its eyes. Commodity prices have doubled in a year but show nowhere in the inflation numbers. With a headline Unemployment Rate at 6.1% and a U-6 at 18 million, it's unlikely we’ll see wage any time soon, which is 70% of the inflation calculation.
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 400% to 120,000 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 120,000 here we come!
It’s amazing how well selling tops and buying bottoms can help your performance. My Mad Hedge Global Trading Dispatch profit reached a super-hot 16.32% during the first half March on the heels of a spectacular 13.28% profit in February. The Dow Average is up a miniscule 8.2% so far in 2021.
It was a total rip your face off rally in the markets last week, so I took off my hedged and covered shorts in the S&P 500 (SPY) and the NASDAQ (QQQ). That leaves me to run my seven remaining profitable positions into the March 19 options expiration.
I also had my hands full running the three-day Mad Hedge Traders & Investors Summit, introducing some 27 speakers to a global audience of 10,000. The speakers’ videos go up on Tuesday at www.madhedge.com.
This is my fifth double-digit month in a row. My 2021 year-to-date performance soared to 39.81. That brings my 11-year total return to 465.36%, some 2.12 times the S&P 500 (SPX) over the same period. My 11-year average annualized return now stands at an unbelievable 41.09%. I am concerned because numbers any higher than this will look fake.
My trailing one-year return exploded to 122.6%, the highest in the 13-year history of the Mad Hedge Fund Trader. 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 29.5 million and deaths topping 535,000, which you can find here. Thankfully, death rates have slowed dramatically, but Obituaries are still the largest sector in the newspaper.
The coming week will be a boring one on the data front.
On Monday, March 15, at 7:30 AM EST, the New York Empire State Manufacturing Index for March is released.
On Tuesday, March 16, at 8:30 AM, US Retail Sales for February are published.
On Wednesday, March 17 at 8:30 AM, we learn Housing Starts for February. At 2:00 PM we get the Federal Reserve interest rate decision and press conference.
On Thursday, March 18 at 8:30 AM, Weekly Jobless Claims are out. We also obtain the Philadelphia Fed Manufacturing Index.
On Friday, March 19 at 2:00 PM, we learn the Baker-Hughes Rig Count.
As for me, I was saddened to learn of the death of George Schultz, Treasury Secretary and Secretary of State under president Ronald Reagan. He was 101.
George graduated from Yale at the outbreak of WWII and immediately joined the US Marine Corps (Semper Fi) where he used his ample math background to become an anti-aircraft officer. He issued my dad’s unit the useful advice to always lead an attacking Zero fighter by four plane lengths to hit the engine with a machine gun. It’s simple ballistics.
After the war, he used the GI bill to get a PhD from MIT, and later worked for President Eisenhower. He then became the Dean of the Chicago Business School.
I first met George when The Economist magazine sent me to interview him in San Francisco as the CEO of Bechtel Corp, a major engineering and construction company in 1982. The following week, he was drafted by the incoming Reagan administration, where he stayed for eight years. We kept in touch ever since.
When the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991, Schultz as Secretary of State was instrumental in managing the event so that it stayed peaceful….and moved forward. I later flew to Berlin to watch the Russian Army pull its troops out of my former home.
In his later years, George was very active in the Marines Memorial Association where I got to know him very well, he often was wearing his full-dress blues looking as new as if they came out of the factory that day, bringing a fascinating series of military speakers.
As Schultz got older, he couldn’t remember what he knew was top-secret or classified, and what wasn’t. I benefited greatly from that, but kept my mouth shut. However, I learned some amazing things.
He was also very active in arms control and flew to Moscow as recently as 2019. In recent years, I help him to the podium, George grasping my arm and walking his slow shuffle.
George Schultz was a great example of the best leaders that American can produce. He will be missed.
Stay healthy.
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
Global Market Comments
March 8, 2021
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or WHAT’S UP WITH TECH?),
(MSFT), (TSLA), (AAPL), (QQQ), (NVDA), (MU), (AMD), (BRKB), (ARRK), (ROM), (VIX), (FCX), (TLT), (BRKB), (TSLA), (JPM), (SPY), (QQQ), (SPX)
Global Market Comments
March 5, 2021
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(MARCH 3 BIWEEKLY STRATEGY WEBINAR Q&A),
(BRKB), (CRM), (ZM), (AAPL), (AMD), (DIS), (CRSP),
(BRKB), (PLTR), (NVDA), (TLT), (TSLA), (GLD),
(SLV), (VSAT), (EUO), (GME)
Below please find subscribers’ Q&A for the March 3 Mad Hedge Fund Trader Global Strategy Webinar broadcast from frozen Incline Village, NV.
Q: Are SPACs here to stay?
A: Yes, but I think that in the next bear market, 80% of these SPACs (Special Purpose Acquisition Companies) will disappear, will deliver large losses, and will continue charging you enormous fees until then. It’s either that or they won’t invest their money at all and give it back, net of the fees. So, I’m avoiding the SPAC craze unless it's associated with a very specific investment play that I know well. The problem with SPACs is that they all come out expensive—there are no bargain basement SPACs on launch day. Me, being the eternal cheapskate that I am, always want to get a great bargain on everything. The time to buy these is actually in the next bear market, if they still exist, because then investors will be throwing their positions away at 10 or 20% discounts. That’s always what happens with specialized ETF, closed-end funds, and so on. They are roach motel investments; you can check-in, but you can never check out.
Q: What do you think of Elizabeth Warren's asset tax idea?
A: It’s idiotic. It would take years to figure out how much Jeff Bezos is worth. And even then, you probably couldn't come within ten billion dollars of a true number. We already pay asset taxes, our local county real estate taxes, and those are bad enough, delivering valuations that are miles from true market prices. There are many other ways to fix the tax system and get billionaires paying their fair share. There are only three things you really have to do: get rid of carried interest so hedge funds can’t operate tax-free, get rid of real estate loss carry forwards which allow the real estate industry to basically operate tax-free, and get rid of the oil depletion allowance, which has enabled the oil industry to operate tax-free for nearly 90 years. So those would be three easy ones to increase the fairness of the tax system without any immense restructuring of our accounting system.
Q: When will share buybacks start?
A: They’ve already started and have been happening all year. There are two ways the companies do this: they either have an outside accounting firm, buying religiously every day or at the end of every month or something like that, so they can’t be accused of insider trading; or they are in there buying on every dip. Certainly, all the big cash-heavy companies like Berkshire Hathaway (BRKB) or Apple (AAPL) were buying their shares like crazy last March and April because they were trading such enormous discounts. So that is another trillion dollars sitting under the market, waiting to come in on any dip, which is yet another reason that we are not going to see any major sell-offs this year—just the 5%-10% variety that I have been predicting.
Q: Is it time to buy Salesforce (CRM)?
A: Yes, Marc Benioff’s goal is to double sales in two years, and the stock is relatively cheap right now because they’ve had a couple of weak quarters and are still digesting some big acquisitions.
Q: Is CRISPR Therapeutics (CRSP) good buy?
A: Yes, I would be buying right here; it’s a good LEAP candidate because the stock could easily double from here. We’ve only scratched the surface on CRISPR technology being adopted and the potential growth in this company is enormous—I'm surprised they haven’t been taken over already.
Q: Will you start a letter for investing advisors on how to deal with the prolific numbers of Bitcoin?
A: There are already too many Bitcoin newsletters; there are literally hundreds of them and thousands of experts on Bitcoin now because there’s nothing to know and nothing to analyze. It’s all a belief system; there are no earnings, there are no dividends, and there is no interest. So, you purely have to invest in the belief that somebody else is going to take you out at a higher price. I think there is a big overhang of selling in that when they raise the number of Bitcoin, we’ll get another one of those 90% crashes that Bitcoin is prone to. So, go elsewhere for your Bitcoin advice; your choices are essentially unlimited now, and they are much cheaper than me. In fact, people are literally giving away Bitcoin advice for free, which means you’re getting what you’re paying for. I buy Bitcoin when they have a customer support telephone number.
Q: Zoom (ZM) has come down a lot after a big earnings report—do you like it?
A: Long term, yes. Short term, no. You want to avoid all the stay-at-home stocks because no one is staying at home anymore. However, there is a long-term story in Zoom once they find their bottom because even after we come out of the pandemic, we’re all still using Zoom. I have like five or ten Zoom meetings a day, and my kids go to school on Zoom all day long. They’re also bringing out new products like telephone servers. They’re also raising their prices—I happen to be one of Zoom’s largest customers. I’m paying $1,100/month now, and that’s rising at 10% a year.
Q: What would be the best LEAP for Salesforce (CRM)?
A: The rule of thumb is that you want to go 30% out of the money on your first strike. So, find a current stock price; your first strike is up 30%, and then your second strike is up 35%. And all you need to double your money on that is a bounce back to the highs for this year, which is not unrealistic. That’s the lay-up there with Salesforce. That’s the basic formula; Advanced Micro Devices (AMD), Walt Disney (DIS), Berkshire Hathaway (BRKB), Palantir (PLTR), and Nvidia (NVDA) are all good candidates for LEAPS.
Q: How often do you update the long-term stock portfolio?
A: Twice a year, and we just updated in January, which is posted on the website in your membership area. If you can't find it, just email customer support at support@madhedgefundtrader.com and they’ll tell you where to find it. And we only do this twice a year because there just aren't enough changes in the economy in six months to justify a more frequent update.
Q: When do you think real estate will come back?
A: It never left. We’ve had the hottest real estate market in history, with 20% annual gains in many cities in 2020. And that will continue, but not at the 20% rate, probably at a more sustainable 5% or 6% rate. Guess what the best inflation play in the world is? Real estate. If you’re worried about inflation, you want to run out and buy a house or two. The only thing that will really kill that market is a rise in 30-year fixed-rate mortgages to 5%, and that is years off. Or a rise in the ten-year treasury to 5% or 6%—that is several years off also. So, I think we’ve got a couple of good years of gains ahead of us. I at least want the market to stay hot until my kids get out of high school, and then I can sell my house and go live on some exotic tropical island with great broadband.
Q: When you’re doing LEAPS, do you just do the calls only or do you do these as spreads?
A: You can do both. Just do the math and see what works for you on a risk/reward basis. You can do a 30% out of the money call 2 years out and get anywhere from a 1,000% to a 10,000% return—people did get 10,000% returns buying deep out of the money LEAPS in Tesla (TSLA) a year ago (that’s where all the vintage bourbon is coming from). Or you can do it more conservatively and only make 500% in two years on Tesla spread. For example; do something like a Tesla January 2023 $900-$950 call spread. If Tesla shares rise to $950, that position is an easy quadruple. But do the numbers, figure out the cost today, what the expiration value is in two years, and there you go.
Q: Do you think overnight rates could go negative as some people predict?
A: Not for a long time. They will go negative at the next recession because we’re starting off such a low base—or when we get the next pandemic, which could be as early as next year. We could get another one at any time from a completely different virus, and it would generate the same stock market results that we got last time—down 40% in a month. We’re not out of the pandemic business, we’re just having a temporary break waiting for the next one to come along out of China or some other country, or even right here in the USA. So that may be a permanent aspect of investing in the future. It could be the price we pay having a global population that's at 7 billion heading to 9 billion.
Q: Expiration on LEAPS?
A: I always go out two years. The second year is almost free, that’s why. So why not go for the second year? It gives you twice as much time to be right, always useful.
Q: My two-year United States Treasury Bond Fund (TLT) $125 put LEAPS have turned very positive. Is this a good trade?
A: That is a good trade, which you should put on during the next (TLT) rally. If you think we’re going to $105 in 2 years, do something like a $127-$130 two-year put LEAP, and there's a nice four bagger right there.
Q: Your Amazon (AMZN) price target was recently listed at $3,500, below last year's high, but I’ve also seen a $5,000 forecast in two years. Are you sticking with that?
A: Yes, I think when you get a major recovery in the economy, Amazon will be one of the only pandemic plays that keeps on going. It’s just taking a rest here with the rest of big tech. The breakup value of Amazon is easily $5,000 a share or more. Plus, they’re still going gangbusters growing into new industries that they’ve barely touched so far, like pharmaceuticals, healthcare, and so on. So yes, I would definitely be a buyer of LEAPS, and you could do something like the January 2023 $3700-$4000 LEAP two years out and make a killing on that.
Q: Anything you can do in gold (GLD)?
A: Not really. Although gold and silver (SLV) have been a huge disappointment this year, I think this could be the beginning of a capitulation selloff in gold which will bring us a final bottom, but it may take another month or two to get there.
Q: How can I sell short the dollar?
A: You sell short the (UUP), or there are several 1X and 2X short ETFs in the currencies that you can do, like the ProShares Ultra Short Euro ETF (EUO). That is the way to do it.
Q: What is the best timing for buying LEAPS?
A: Buy at market bottoms. A year ago, I was sending out lists of 10 LEAPS at a time saying please buy all of these. You need both a short-term selloff in the stock, and then an upside target much higher than the current price so your LEAP expires at its maximum profit point. And if you’re in the right names, pretty much all the names that we talk about here, you will have 30%, if not 300% or 3,000% gains in them in the next two years.
Q: Do you think Tesla’s Starlink global satellite system will disrupt the cell tower industry?
A: Yes, that is the goal of Starlink—to wipe out all ground communication for WIFI and for cell phones. It may take them several years to do it, but if they do pull it off, then it just becomes a matter of pricing. The last Starlink pricing I looked at cost about $500 to set up, open the account, and get your dish installed. And the only flaw I see in the Starlink system is that the satellite dishes are tracking dishes, which means they lock onto satellites and then follow them as they pass overhead. Then when that signal leaves, it locks onto a new satellite; at any given time they’re locked onto four different satellites. That means moving parts, and you want to be careful of any industry that has moving parts—they wear out. That’s the great thing about software and online businesses; no moving parts, so they don’t wear out. And that’s also why Tesla has been a success; they eliminated the number of moving parts in cars by 80%. I’m waiting for Starlink to get working so I can use it, because I need Internet access 24 hours a day, even if all the local hubs are out because of a power outage. I’m now using something called Viasat (VSAT), which guarantees 100 megabyte/second service for $55 a month. It's not enough for me because I use a gigabyte service landline, but when that’s not available then I can go to satellite as a backup.
Q: Is there too much Fed liquidity in the market already? Why is the $1.9 trillion rescue package still positive for the market?
A: Firstly, there is too much liquidity in the market; that is screamingly obvious. If you look at liquidity over the decades, we are just staggeringly high right now. M2 is growing at 26% against the normal rate of 5%-6%. What the stimulus package does is get money to the people who did not participate in the bull market from last year. Those are low-income people, cities, and municipalities that are broke and can’t pay teachers, firemen, and policemen. It also goes to individual states which were not invested in the stock market. It turns out that states that were invested in the stock market like California have money coming out of their ears right now. And it gets money to low wage workers with kids who are certainly struggling right now. So, it is rather efficiently designed to get the money to people who need it the most. There is still half the country that doesn't own any stocks or even have savings of any kind. One or two people might get it who don’t deserve it but try doing anything in a 330 million population country and have it be 100% efficient.
Q: Is inflation coming?
A: Only incrementally in tiny pieces, so not enough to affect the stock market probably for several years. I still believe technology is advancing so fast that it wipes out any effort to raise prices or increase wages, and that may be what the perennially high 730,000 weekly jobless claims is all about. Those jobs that might have been there a year ago have been replaced by machines, have been outsourced overseas, or the demand for the product no longer exists. So, as long as you have a 10% unemployment rate and a weekly jobless claim at 730, inflation is the last thing you need to worry about.
Q: Is there any way to cash in on Reddit’s Wall Street Bets action?
A: No, and I would bet the majority of people who are trading off of these emojis and Reddit posts are losing money. You only hear about these things after it’s too late to do anything about them. I don't think you’ll get any more $4 to $450 moves like you did with GameStop (GME) because in that one case only, there was a short interest of 160%, which should have been illegal. All the other high short interest stocks have already been hit, with short interests all the way down to 30%, so I think that ship has sailed. It has no real investing merit whatsoever.
Good Luck and Stay Healthy.
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
Global Market Comments
March 4, 2021
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(THE BARBELL PLAY WITH BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY),
(BRKA), (BRKA), (BAC), (KO), (AXP), (VZ), (BK) (USB),
(TLT), (AAPL), (MRK), (ABBV), (CVX), (GM), (PCC), (BNSF)
It’s time to give myself a dope slap.
I have been pounding the table all year about the merits of a barbell strategy, with equal weightings in technology and domestic recovery stocks. By owning both, you’ll always have something doing well as new cash flows bounce back and forth between the two sectors like a ping pong ball.
After all, nobody gets sector rotation right, unless they have been practicing for 50 years, like me.
Full disclosure: I have to admit that after 50 years of following him, I love Buffet. He was one of the first subscribers to my newsletter when it started up in 2008. Some of his best ideas have come from the Mad Hedge Fund Trader, like buying Bank of America for $5 in 2008.
Oh, and he hates Wall Street for constantly fleecing people. Ditto here.
In reading Warren Buffet’s annual letter (click here for the link), it occurred to me that his Berkshire Hathaway (BRKB) shares were in effect a one-stop barbell investment.
For a start, Warren owns a serious slug of Apple (AAPL), some $120 billion worth, or 2.5% of the total fund. That gives (BRKB) some technology weighting. It cost him only $20 billion. The dividends he received entirely paid for the initial cost. So he owns 4% of Apple for free.
I remember the battle over the initial “BUY” five years ago. Warren fought it, insisting he didn’t understand the smart phone business. In the end, he bought Apple for its global brand value alone.
That is Warren Buffet to a tee.
The next five largest publicly listed holdings are Bank of America (BAC), Coca-Cola (KO), American Express (AXP), and Verizon Communications (VZ). These are your classic domestic recovery sectors. And with a heavy weighting in other banks (BK) (USB), Buffet is effectively short the bond market (TLT), another position I hugely favor.
Also included in the package is a liberal salting of pharmaceuticals, Merck (MRK) and AbbVie (ABBV). He has a small energy weighting with Chevron (CVX). He even has a position in old heavy metal America with General Motors (GM).
Berkshire is also one of the world’s largest property & casualty insurance owners. Its current “float” is $138 billion. You all know his flagship holding, GEICO. And the gecko mascot isn’t going anywhere as long as Warren lives. It was Warren’s idea.
It all seems to work for Warren. In 2020, he earned a staggering $42.5 billion. All told, Berkshire’s businesses employ 360,000, second to only Amazon (AMZN), and is the largest taxpayer in the United States, accounting for 3% of government revenues. Berkshire is also the largest owner of capital goods & equipment in the US worth $156 billion, topping (AT&T).
Many of Warrens's early 1956 $1,000 investors are millionaires many times over….and over 100 years old, prompting him to muse if ownership of his shares extended life.
Warren’s annual letter, which he spends practically the entire year working on, is always one of the best reads in the financial markets. There isn’t a better 50,000-foot view out there. He also admits to his mistakes, such as his disastrous purchase of Precision Castparts (PCC) in 2016 for $37 billion, which later suffered from the crash in the aerospace industry. In 2020, Buffet wrote off $11 billion of that acquisition.
He can do worse. In 1993, he bought the Dexter Shoe Company for $433 million worth of Berkshire stock. The company went under, but the Berkshire stock today is worth $8.7 billion.
Buffet’s letters always refer back to some of his “greatest hits,” today legends in the business history of the United States: GEICO, Furniture Mart, Berkshire Hathaway Energy, and See’s Candies, one of the largest employers of women in the US using 150-year-old recipes. Its peanut brittle is to die for.
In 2009, Buffet snatched away from me BNSF for a song, now the most profitable railroad in the country, an amalgamation of 360 railroads over 170 years. I say “snatched away” because it was my favorite railroad trading vehicle for decades until he bought the entire company. I hear its trains run by my home every night as a grim reminder.
Another benefit to owning (BRKB) is that Buffet is far and away the largest buyer of his own shares, soaking up $25 billion worth in 2020. And he is buying the shares of other companies that are also aggressively buying their own shares, like Apple ($200 billion with last year). It all sounds like the perfect money creation machine to me.
It gets better. Berkshires “B” shares trade options, meaning you can buy LEAPS (Long Term Equity Anticipation Securities), which by now, you all know and love. I’ll run some numbers for you.
With (BRKB) now trading at $254, you can buy the January 2023 $300-$310 call spread for $2.50. If the shares close anywhere over $310 by the 2023 expiration, the position will be worth $10.00, giving you a gain of 300%. And you only need an appreciation of $56, or 22% in the shares to capture this blockbuster profit, giving you upside leverage of an eye-popping 13.63X in the best run company in America.
See, I told you you’d like it.
This is how poor people become rich. In fact, my target for (BRKB) is $300 for end of 2021 and $400 for 2022, right when the two-year LEAPS expire.
One question I often get about Berkshire is what happens when Warren Buffet goes to his greater reward, not an impossible concept given that he is 90 years old.
I imagine the shares will have a bad day or two, and then recover. Buffet has been hiring his replacements for a decade or more, and he handed off day-to-day operation years ago (I didn’t want to move to Omaha, no mountains).
When that happens, it will be the best buying opportunity of the year. And another chance to load up on those LEAPS.
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