Global Market Comments
August 13, 2020
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(RAISING MY TESLA TARGET TO $5,000),
(TSLA)
(TESTIMONIAL)
Global Market Comments
August 13, 2020
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(RAISING MY TESLA TARGET TO $5,000),
(TSLA)
(TESTIMONIAL)
The bad news about Tesla (TSLA) is that it may take several months, if not a year to digest the massive ten-fold leap in Tesla shares that has taken play over the past year.
The good news is that I am raising my long term target from the $2,500 that I held for the last decade to $5,000 over the next five years. Remember, I first recommended the stock at $16.50, right after the IPO went bust.
I knew I was on the right track when the salesman told me that the customer who just preceded me for a Tesla Model X 100D SUV was the Golden Bay Warriors star basketball player, Steph Currie.
Well, if it’s good enough for Steph, then it’s good enough for me.
Last week, I received a call from Elon Musk’s office to test the company’s self-driving technology embedded in their new vehicles for readers of the Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader.
I did, and prepare to have your mind blown!
I was driving at 80 MPH on CA-24, a windy eight-lane freeway that snakes its way through the East San Francisco Bay Area mountains. Suddenly the salesman reached over and flicked a lever on the left side of the driving column.
The car took over!
There it was, winding and turning along every curve, perfectly centered in the lane. As much as I hated to admit it, the car drove better than I ever could. It does especially well at night, a valuable asset for senior citizens whose night vision is fading fast.
All that was required was for me to touch the steering wheel every two minutes to prove that I was not sleeping.
The cars do especially well in rush hour driving, as it is adept at stop and go traffic. You can just sit there and work on your laptop, read a book, or watch a movie on the built in 4G WIFI HD TV.
When we returned to the garage, the car really showed off. When we passed a parking space, another button was pushed, and we perfectly backed 90 degrees into a parking space, measuring and calculating all the way.
The range is 290 miles, which I can recharge at home at night from a standard 220-volt socket in my garage in seven hours. The chassis can rise as high as eight inches off the ground so it can function as a true SUV.
The “ludicrous mode,” a $10,000 option, takes you from 0 to 60 mph in 2.9. However, even a standard Tesla can accelerate so fast that it will make the average passenger carsick.
Here’s the buzzkill.
Tesla absolutely charges through the nose for extras.
The 22-inch wheels, the third row of seats to get you to seven passengers, the premium sound, the leather seats, and the self-driving software can easily run you $30,000-$40,000.
A $750 tow hitch will accommodate a ski rack on the back. There is a $1,000 delivery charge, even if you pick it up at the Fremont factory.
It’s easy to see how you can jump from an $84,990 base price to a total cost of $162,500, including taxes, for the ultra-luxury Performance model with every option the company offered.
It's my company that the car will be purchased under, thanks to the incredible tax breaks afforded to the wealthy by the Trump tax bill.
This allowed me to deduct the entire $162,500 cost of the vehicle upfront, plus the maintenance and insurance costs for the entire life of the car. However, I will have to maintain a mileage log as a hedge against any future IRS audits.
It looks like I’ll have to buy yet another Tesla this year as tax breaks for the rich are soon to become a thing of the past.
As for “drop dead’ curb appeal, nothing beats the Model X. Buy the stock on every 20% dip. The days of young ladies writing their phone numbers on post-it-notes under the windshield wipers so they can get a ride are not over.
Global Market Comments
August 12, 2020
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(THE IDIOT’S GUIDE TO INVESTING),
(TSLA), (BYND), (JPM)
Global Market Comments
July 21, 2020
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(A REFRESHER COURSE AT SHORT SELLING SCHOOL),
(SH), (SDS), (PSQ), (DOG), (RWM), (SPXU), (AAPL), (TSLA),
(VIX), (VXX), (IPO), (MTUM), (SPHB), (HDGE)
Global Market Comments
July 20, 2020
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or HERE’S YOUR SERVING OF ALPHABET SOUP),
(SPY), (TLT), (GLD), (TSLA), (DRI), (WYNN), (H), (AMC)
Here is your generous helping of alphabet soup. If you look very closely, you can find some bay leaves, oregano, black pepper, and lots of V’s, W’s, U’s, and L’s.
Now, let’s play a game and see who can pick the letter that most accurately portrays the current economic outlook.
Here is a code key:
V – the very sharp collapse we saw in Q1 and Q2 is followed by an equally sharp recovery in Q3 and Q4.
W – The sharp recovery in Q3 and Q4 fails and we see a double-dip extending into 2021.
U – The economy stays at the bottom for a long time before it finally recovers.
L – The economy collapses and never recovers.
The question is, in which of these forecasts should we invest our investment strategy?
For a start, you can throw out the “L”. Every recession flushes out a covey of Cassandras who predicts the economy will never recover. They are always wrong.
I believe what we are seeing play out right now is the “W” scenario. This is the best cash scenario for traders, as it calls for a summer correction in the stock market when we can load the boat a second time. If you missed the March low you will get a second bite of the Apple.
With corona cases soaring nationwide, and deaths skyrocketing, it is safe to write off the “V” recovery scenario.
If I’m wrong, we will get a “U”, a longer recovery. This cannot be dismissed lightly as the unemployment rate is about to take off as the PPP money runs out, state unemployment benefits are exhausted, and mass evictions ensue.
If I limited the outlook to only four possible scenarios, I’d be kidding you. The truth is far more complicated.
Each industry gets its own letter of the alphabet. Technology, some 27% of total stock market capitalization gets no letter at all because it is thriving, thanks to the global rush to move commerce online. That explains the single-minded pursuit of this sector by investors since the market 23 bottom.
Hotel chains like Hyatt Hotels (H) and casinos like Wynn Resorts (WYNN) get a “U” because they will recover after a long period of suffering. As for Movie theaters like AMC Entertainment Holdings (AMC) and restaurant chains such as Darden Restaurants (DRI), they get an “L” because it is hard to see any sustainable recovery before widespread use of a vaccine.
Weekly Jobless Claims remained at Historic Levels, at 1.3 million, reaching a total of 51 million since the pandemic began. We are about to see a huge surge in the unemployment rate as PPP money and state unemployment benefits run out. Without help from the federal government, millions will be thrown out on the street.
Tesla hit $1,800, up $255, on the news they may join the S&P 500 forcing a ton of institutional buying. Its market capitalization is now a staggering $330 billion, more than the entire global car industry combined. They also cut Model Y prices by $3,000, from $53,000 to $50,000, in another effort to keep new entrants at bay. The model Y is expected to be the biggest seller in history, hence the ballistic move in the shares now. Close your eyes and keep buying (TSLA) on dips.
Tesla is dead, long live Tesla, says Morgan Stanley analyst Adam Jonas. The big upside here will not be in (TSLA) itself, but in supplier companies such as ST Microelectronics, NXP Semiconductors (NXPI), Cree (CREE), and China’s CATL. Jonas, an early Tesla bull, still maintains a $3,000 target, but that is now only a double from here, a far cry from the 110X move behind us off the post IPO low.
5G cell phones could offset Corona losses to the global economy, or so says a French economic research institute. Productivity improvement alone could be worth $2.2 trillion a year. The big winner? Apple (AAPL). Is this really why stocks are going up so fast?
California shut down again as hospital emergency rooms approach capacity. All indoor business has ceased for a state that accounts for 21% of US GDP. The Golden State saw 8,357 new cases on Sunday. Unfortunately, it gives more credence to my “W” shaped recovery for the economy. Stocks noticed about three hours into the Monday session, diving 550 points. It’s not me! I tested negative last week.
Homebuilders saw the best June in history, up 55% YOY. Builders and supplies are now in short supply and prices are rising sharply. New homes are being favored over existing ones, which can’t be viewed through standardized virtual presentations. Keep buying (LEN), (KBH), and (PHM) on dips as the gale-force Millennial tailwind continues unabated.
Homebuilder Confidence jumped back to pre-pandemic levels, up a massive 14 points to 72. The golden age for the sector is just beginning as Millennials working in tech move to the burbs where the home office rules. Lumber is in short supply, thanks to Trump's tariffs with Canada, so prices just hit a two-year high. Keep buying.
We may get our fifth stimulus bill next week, as the Senate attempts to protect corporations from Covid-19 liability. Almost all of the $3 trillion in stimulus so far has ended up in the stock market, and another trillion can only be bullish.
Moderna claimed success with a true Covid vaccine, with 100% results in a 45-person human trial. (MRNA) soared by 15% on the news. A late July trial will involve 30,000. The company has never produced a product before using its RNA technology. Keep buying biotechs on dips. I’m long (SGEN), (ILMN), and (REGN). Dow futures up 300 in Asia on the news.
US air travel was down 89% in May, YOY. Whatever recovery you’re seeing in the economy it’s not happening here. I’m 200,000 miles a year guy and I probably won’t go near a plane until 2022. Avoid all airline stocks on pain of death. There are much better fish to fry.
Apple won a European antitrust case big time, ducking a massive 14.4 billion fine. Stock was up $7 on the news and is rapidly approaching my two-year target of $400. It's yet another case of “not invented here.” European regulators jealous of American success constantly assault US big tech. They view it as just another cost of doing business.
US budget deficit soared to $867 billion in June, taking it to an unprecedented $10.4 trillion annual rate. The national debt will rocket by 50% this year. Your grandkids are going to have a monster bill to pay. Keep selling every rally in the US dollar (UUP) and the bond market (TLT) and buy gold (GLD).
When we come out the other side of this, 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% or more in the coming decade.
My Global Trading Dispatch enjoyed another sizzling week, up a red hot +2.73%. My eleven-year performance rocketed to a new all-time high of 384.54%. A triple weighting in biotech did the heavy lifting. A four-day short position in the bond market (TLT) was the icing on the cake.
That takes my 2020 YTD return up to an enviable +28.63%. This compares to a loss for the Dow Average of -6.2%, up from -37% on March 23. My trailing one-year return popped back up to a record 68.19%, also THE HIGHEST IN THE 13 YEAR HISTORY of the Mad Hedge Fund Trader. My eleven-year average annualized profit recovered to a record +36.32%, another new high.
The only numbers that count for the market are the number of US Coronavirus cases and deaths, which you can find here. It’s jobs week and we should see an onslaught of truly awful numbers.
On Monday, July 20, IBM (IBM) reports Q2 earnings.
On Tuesday, July 21 at 7:30 AM EST, the June Chicago Fed National Activity Index is released. Microsoft (MSFT), Tesla (TSLA), and Lockheed Martin (LMT) report earnings.
On Wednesday, July 22, at 7:30 AM EST, the all-important Existing Home Sales for June are published. Amazon (AMZN) and Thermo Fisher Scientific (TMO) report earnings. At 10:30 AM EST, the EIA Cushing Crude Oil Stocks are out.
On Thursday, July 23 at 8:30 AM EST, the frightful Weekly Jobless Claims are announced. American Airlines (AA) report.
On Friday, June 24, at 7:30 AM EST, the New Home Sales for June are published. The Baker Hughes Rig Count is out at 2:00 PM EST. Verizon (VZ) reports earnings.
As for me, I have been going down memory lane looking at my old travel photos because that’s all I can do in quarantine.
I am now banned in Europe.
So are you for that matter. In fact, there are very few countries in the world that will accept an American visitor. With the world’s highest Covid-19 infection, rates we are just too dangerous to have around. This is tough news for a guy who usually travels around the world once or twice a year.
It’s not the first time I have been banned from a country.
During the 1980s, The Economist magazine of London sent me to investigate the remote country of Nauru, one-half degree south of the equator in the middle of the Pacific Ocean. They had the world’s highest per capita income due to the fact that the island was entirely composed of valuable bird guano.
During an interview with the president, I managed to steal a top-secret copy of the national budget. I discovered that the president’s wife had been commandeering aircraft from Air Nauru to go on lavish shopping expeditions in Sydney, Australia where she was blowing $200,000 a day, all at government expense.
It didn’t take long for missing budget to be found. I was arrested, put on trial, sentenced to death for espionage, and locked up to await my fate.
Then one morning, I was awoken by the rattling of keys. The editor of The Economist in London had made a call. I was placed in handcuffs and placed on the next plane out of the country. When I was seated next to an Australian passenger, he asked “Jees, what did you do mate, kill someone?” On arrival, I sent the story to the Australian papers (click here for the story).
I have not been back to Nauru since.
Stay healthy.
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
Global Market Comments
July 13, 2020
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or HERE COME HERD IMMUNITY),
(INDU), (TSLA), (SPY), (GLD), (JPM), (IBB), (QQQ), (AAPL), (MSFT), (DCUE), (NVDA)
The US passed a single-day record of 70,000 new cases for Covid-19 over the weekend, with Florida bringing in an astounding 15,300.
We missed a chance to stop the epidemic in January because we were blind. Then we missed again in April because we were lazy, when New York City was losing nearly 1,000 souls a day and ignored the lessons therein.
So, we relentlessly continue our march towards herd immunity, when two-third of the population gets the disease, protecting the remaining one third. That’s about a year off.
That implies total American deaths will reach 2.2 million, more than we have lost from all our wars combined.
The faster people die, the closer we are to the end of the plague, which is good news for everyone.
And the stock market keeps going up every day, the worse the news, the faster. That may be happening because the more severe the shock to the system, the faster companies must evolve to survive, making them ever more profitable.
Out with the Old America, in with the new. The future is happening fast.
We here at Mad Hedge Fund Trader have just delivered the most astonishing quarter in our 13-year record, up some 41.98% from the March 16 low.
That makes me cautious. Things never stay that good for long. Just because I can’t see the next black swan doesn’t mean it isn’t going to happen.
If stocks rise when corona cases are exploding, what do they do when cases fall? Do they fall too, or do they rise even faster?
That’s above my pay grade. I’m only a captain, not a general.
So, I will be moving to a 100% cash position in coming days and then let the next black swan tell me what to do. If we suffer a severe dive, and 10%-20% is entirely possible, then I’ll jump back in with my “BUY” hat on. That means testing the lower up of my six-month (SPX) 2,700-$3,200 range.
If we suddenly surge to far greater heights and new all-time highs, then I will be selling short as fast as I can write the trade alerts.
In the meantime, we have Q2 earnings to look forward to in the coming week, which will certainly be one for the history books. The bullish view is that they will be down only 44% from a dismal Q1. The bearish view is far worse. Banks (JPM) kick off on Tuesday.
NASDAQ (QQQ) hit a new high at 10,622, with Apple (AAPL) and Microsoft (MSFT) leading the charge. Elon Musk is now looking at another $1.7 billion payday with his shares touching $1,500. I’m moving to 100% cash, peeling off one profitable position a day as each option play reaches its maximum profit. I just had the best quarter in a decade, up an eye-popping 40%, and I’m just not that smart to keep it going. Humility always wins in the long-term.
Goldman Sachs chopped its growth forecast in the face of soaring Covid-19 cases, paring their Q3 prediction from +33% to +25%. Political campaign rallies are spreading the disease faster than expected. Q1 most likely came in at negative -5%. Expect worse to come. If the stock market can’t break at 135,000 corona deaths, it will at 260,000 or 520,000, which is certainly coming.
NVIDIA topped Intel as most valuable chip company. No surprise here. High-end graphics cards are worth a lot more money than plain commodity processors. Keep buying dips on (NVDA) which we’ve been loading the boat with now for four years. There’s an easy double from here.
Warren Buffet bought Dominion Energy (DCUE), in one of the only distressed sales available this year, thanks so much to government support. With natural gas prices at all-time lows, the big boys are throwing in the towel. Immense public pressure is forcing public utilities to abandon fossil fuels. Warren will sell all of his newfound energy in the $10 billion deal to China. It’s the beginning of the end for carbon. Buy (TSLA) on dips.
Dividend Cuts will drive stock trading in H2. Energy, airline, cruise lines, casinos, movie theaters, and hotels are most at risk, while big technology companies like Apple are the safest. Currently, the S&P 500 is yielding 2.0%, while the ten-year US Treasury bond is paying out 0.65%. Room for a cut?
Tesla to reach $100 billion in annual revenue by 2025, says San Francisco-based JMP Securities. The logic goes that if they can produce 90,000 vehicles a quarter during a pandemic, 140,000 a quarter should be no problem by yearend. The news delivered a move in the shares to a new all-time high of $1,549. Inclusion of (TSLA) in the S&P 500 would also deliver a lot of forced institutional buying, which might take the shares up 40% more. The future is happening fast. Keep buying (TSLA) on dips for a 2021 target of $2,500. If this keeps up, we may see it next week. Remember, I traded Tokyo in 1989. Nothing is impossible.
US student visas were canceled in ostensibly an administration coronavirus-fighting measure, but really in the umpteenth measure to shut foreigners out. “America first” is turning into “America only.” Midwestern schools in particular will be hurt by the loss of 400,000 full tuition-paying international students, especially when state education budgets are getting cut to the bone. That’s down from 800,000 three years ago. If they’re already here, how does this help us? Most colleges are moving to online-only models to limit infections.
When we come out the other side of this, 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% or more in the coming decade.
My Global Trading Dispatch enjoyed another blockbuster week, up an astounding +2.28. It was a week when everything worked in the extreme….again.
My eleven-year performance rocketed to a new all-time high of 381.74%. A triple weighting in biotech and a double weighting in gold were a big help. A foray into the banks proved immediately successful. I seem to have the Midas touch these days.
That takes my 2020 YTD return up to an industry-beating +25.83%. This compares to a loss for the Dow Average of -8.8%, up from -37% on March 23. My trailing one-year return popped back up to a record 66.22%, also THE HIGHEST IN THE 13-YEAR HISTORY of the Mad Hedge Fund Trader. My eleven-year average annualized profit recovered to a record +36.07%, another new high.
The only numbers that count for the market are the number of US Coronavirus cases and deaths, which you can find here. It’s jobs week and we should see an onslaught of truly awful numbers.
On Monday, July 13 at 10:00 AM EST, the June Inflation Expectations are out.
On Tuesday, July 14 at 7:30 AM EST, US Core Inflation for June is published
On Wednesday, July 15, at 7:30 AM EST, US Industrial Production for June is announced. At 10:30 AM EST, the EIA Cushing Crude Oil Stocks are out.
On Thursday, June 16 at 8:30 AM EST, Weekly Jobless Claims are announced. At 7:30 AM, US Retail Sales for June is printed.
On Friday, June 17, at 7:30 AM EST, the US Housing Starts for June are released.
The Baker Hughes Rig Count is out at 2:00 PM EST.
As for me, I am training hard for my upcoming 50-mile hike with the Boy Scouts, knocking off 10 miles a day at 9,000 feet on the Tahoe Rim Trail. I have to confess that I’m feeling the knees like never before.
As they used to say in the Marine Corps, “Pain is fear leaving the body.” More than knowledge comes with age. Pain is there as well.
Marine Corps to Boy Scout leader. It’s been a full life.
Stay healthy.
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
Mad Hedge Technology Letter
July 13, 2020
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(WILL A.I. SAVE US)
(TSLA), (AMZN), (FB)
Anti-A.I. physicist Professor Stephen Hawking was a staunch supporter of preserving human interests against the future existential threat from machines and artificial intelligence (A.I.).
He was diagnosed with motor neuron disease, more commonly known as Lou Gehrig's disease, in 1963 at the age of 21 and sadly passed away March 14, 2018 at the age of 76.
Famed for his work on black holes, Professor Hawking represented the human quest to maintain its superiority against quickly advancing artificial acculturation.
His passing was a huge loss for mankind as his voice was a deterrent to A.I.'s relentless march to supremacy. He was one of the few who had the authority to opine on these issues.
Gone is a voice of reason.
Critics have argued that living with A.I. poses a red alert threat to privacy, security, and society as a whole. Unfortunately, those most credible and knowledgeable about A.I. are tech firms.
They have shown that policing themselves on this front is remarkably unproductive.
Mark Zuckerberg, CEO of Facebook (FB), has labeled naysayers as "irresponsible" and dismissed the threat. After failing to prevent Russian interference in the last election, he is exhibiting the same defensive posture translating into a de facto admission of guilt. His track record of shirking accountability is becoming a trend leading him to allow politicians to post untrue marketing material for the 2020 U.S. election.
Share prices will materially nosedive if A.I. is stonewalled and development stunted. Many CEOs who stake careers on doubling or tripling down on A.I. cannot see it die out. There is too much money to lose – even for Mark.
The world will see major improvements in the quality of life in the next 10 years. But there is another side to the coin which Zuckerberg and company refuse to delve into...the dark side of technology.
Tesla's (TSLA) CEO Elon Musk has shared his anxiety about robots flipping the script on humans. Elon acknowledges that A.I. and autonomous vehicles are important factors in the battle for new technology. The winner is yet to be determined as China has bet the ranch with unlimited resources from the help of Chairman Xi and state-sponsored institutions.
The quagmire with China has been squarely centered around the great race for technological supremacy.
A.I. is the ultimate X factor in this race and whoever can harness and develop the fastest will win.
Musk has hinted that robots and humans could merge into one species in the future. Is this the next point of competition among tech companies? The future is murky at best.
Hawking's premise that evolution has inbuilt greed can be found in the underpinnings of America's economic miracle.
Wall Street has bred a culture that is entirely self-serving regardless of the bigger system in which it finds itself, with one of the few winners of the coronavirus being the stock market.
Most of us are participating in this perpetual money game chase because our system treats it as a natural part of life. A.I. will help a select few do well in this paper chase to the detriment of the majority and even more so that the pandemic shed 50 million U.S. jobs with many of them to never come back.
Quarterly earnings performance is paramount for CEOs. Return value back to shareholders or face the sack in the morning. It's impossible to convince anyone that America's capitalist model is deteriorating since the ones who are set to gain are the exact people in power.
Wall Street has an insatiable hunger for cutting-edge technology from companies that sequentially beat earnings and raise guidance. Flourishing technology companies enrich the participants creating a Teflon-like resistance to downside market risk.
The issue with Stephen Hawking's work is that his timeframe was too far in the future. Professor Hawking was probably correct, but it will take 25 years to prove it.
The world is quickly changing as science fiction becomes reality.
People on Wall Street are a product of the system in place and earn a tremendous amount of money because they proficiently execute a specialized job. Traders are busy focusing on how to move ahead of the next guy.
Firms building autonomous cars are free to operate as is. Hyper-accelerating technology spurs on the development of A.I., machine learning, and enhanced algorithms. Record profits will topple, and investors will funnel investments back into an even narrower grouping of technology stocks after the weak hands are flushed out.
That is exactly what is happening with 6 tech companies dominating during the health crisis with everyone falling out of the race.
Professor Hawking said we need to explore our technological capabilities to the fullest in order to avoid extinction. In 2020, exploring these new capabilities still equals monetizing through the medium of products and services.
This is all bullish for equities as the leading companies associated with A.I. to reap the benefits.
And let me remind you that technology is still the least regulated industry on the planet even with all the recent hoopla.
It is having its cake and eating it too. Hence, technology is starting to cross over into other industries demonstrating the powerful footprint tech has extracted in economics and the stock market.
The only solution is keeping companies accountable by a function of law or creating a third-party task force to regulate A.I., but as many can see, global governance is failing miserably already with keeping global citizens safe from the health crisis.
In 2020, the thought of overseeing robots sounds crazy.
...The future will be here sooner than you think.
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