Mad Hedge Technology Letter
June 3, 2019
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(WHY THE UBER IPO FAILED)
(UBER), (LYFT)
Mad Hedge Technology Letter
June 3, 2019
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(WHY THE UBER IPO FAILED)
(UBER), (LYFT)
Do you want to invest in a company that loses $1 billion per quarter?
If you do, then Uber, the digital ride-sharing company, is the perfect match for you.
Uber couldn’t have chosen a worse time to go public, smack dab in the middle of a trade war almost as if an algorithm squeezed them into tariff headlines that are currently rocking the equity markets.
The tepid price action to Uber’s first period of being a public company has been nothing short of disastrous with the company tripping right out of the gate at $42.
The company that Travis Kalanick built would have been better served if they decided to go public in the middle of their growth sweet spot a few years ago.
Hindsight is 20/20.
Uber took in $2.58B last year during the same quarter and they followed that up with 20% growth to $3.1B, hardly suggesting they are delivering on hyper-growth an investor desire.
It will probably become the case of Uber hoping to manage growth deceleration as best as it can.
Infamously, the company has been busy putting out fires because of past poor leadership that threatened to blow up their business model.
The fall out was broad-based and current CEO of Uber Dara Khosrowshahi was brought in to subdue the chaos.
That worked out great in 2017 and damage control nullified further erosion in the company, but since then, management has not carved out an attractive narrative.
Just as bad, investors have no hope on the horizon that Uber can mutate into a profitable company.
It seems that costs could spiral out of control and even though the company is growing, the company is not a growth company anymore.
Investors must look themselves in the mirror and really question why they should invest in this company now.
In the short-term, positive catalysts are scarce.
The reaction to their first earnings report was slightly positive as management indicated that competition is easing up, spinning a negative issue into a positive light.
Remember that Uber bled market share after their management issues that I mentioned and Lyft (LYFT) has caught up significantly.
Lyft has also grappled with poor price action to their stock after they went public.
The result from both companies going private to public around the same time means that they will not be able to undercut each other on price because public investors will not give the same type of leash that private investors did.
This will cause losses to cauterize because subsidizing drivers will decelerate, and the pool of drivers will shrink.
In addition, passenger fares could rise because Uber will have no choice but to consider profitability when pricing rides meaning higher costs to the user.
What I am saying rings true for many tech companies and raising prices to satisfy shareholders is not a groundbreaking phenomenon.
As I see it, offering rides on the cheap could be coming to a screeching halt and nurturing margins could be the new order of the day.
The subsidizing effect can be found in the higher than normal gross bookings for the quarter of $14.65 billion, up 34% from the same period in 2018.
Cheaper fares will drive demand, and if Uber stopped helping out with the cost of rides, the 34% would fall to single digits in a heartbeat.
Even more worrying is the negative core platform contribution margin falling 4.5%, meaning the amount of profit it makes from its core platform business divided by adjusted net revenue is on the down.
Uber was able to post a positive 17.9% growth rate during the same period last year.
When the core business is reacting negatively, it’s time to go back to the drawing board.
I believe that the underlying problem with Uber is that they aren’t making any big moves to their business model that would put them in the position to foster hyper-growth.
Incremental changes like removing drivers who fail to collect a 4.6 or above rating and creating a subscription model for its higher growth Uber Eats division are just a drop in the bucket of what they could be doing with its brand and clout.
If investors were waiting for a big step forward with shiny announcements during the first earnings call as a public company, then they were left thirsting for more.
Uber gave us a mini baby step when they need leaps in 2019.
The bigger success might be that Uber had no monumental blow ups which is a telling sign that Uber has at least stabilized operations.
The downside with its food delivery business is that private businesses such as Postmates and DoorDash are private and can still tolerate even bigger losses which will put pressure on Uber Eats to endure the same type of losses.
As it stands, net revenue for its Uber Eats segment rose 31% to $239 million, but then investors must understand this business is scarily exposed and could be attacked by the venture capitalists boding ill for the stock.
Then considering that Uber’s fastest growing geographical segment is Latin America, last quarter was nothing short of abysmal with revenue cratering by 13% to $450 million.
Regulatory risks will cause American companies to take big write-downs the further away they operate from America, and Indian regulation is rearing its ugly head with e-commerce companies bearing the brunt of it.
Looking down the road, Uber has a faulty business model because of a lack of autonomous driving technology, and they will need to partner with a Waymo or Tesla which will destroy margins even more.
Uber has no chance of profitability in the near term, and the data suggests they have lost their growth charm.
Do not buy Uber here, it will become cheaper, and at some point, around $30, this name will be a good trade.
Management needs to up the ante in order to show investors why they are better than Lyft.
Global Market Comments
May 17, 2019
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(APRIL 15 BIWEEKLY STRATEGY WEBINAR Q&A),
(MSFT), (GOOGL), (AAPL), (LMT), (XLV), (EWG), (VIX), (VXX), (BA), (TSLA), (UBER), (LYFT), (ADBE),
(HOW TO HANDLE THE FRIDAY, MAY 17 OPTIONS EXPIRATION), (INTU),
Below please find subscribers’ Q&A for the Mad Hedge Fund Trader May 15 Global Strategy Webinar with my guest and co-host Bill Davis of the Mad Day Trader. Keep those questions coming!
Q: Where are we with Microsoft (MSFT)?
A: I think Microsoft is really trying to bottom here. It’s only giving up $8 from its recent high, that's why I went long yesterday, and you can be hyper-conservative and only do the June $110-$115 vertical bull call spread like I did. That will bring in a 13.68% profit in 28 trading days, which these days is pretty good. This morning would have been a great entry point for that spread if you couldn’t get it yesterday.
Q: How will tariffs affect Apple (AAPL) when they hit?
A: The price of your iPhone goes up $140—that calculation has already been done. All of Apple's iPhones are made in China, something like 220 million a year. There’s no way that can be moved, they need a million people for the production of these phones. It took them 20 years to build that facility and production capacity; it would take them 20 years to move it and it couldn't be done anywhere else in the world. So, that's why Apple led the charge on the downside and that's why it will lead the charge to the upside on any trade war resolution.
Q: How bad is the trade war going to get?
A: The market is betting now by only going down 1,400 Dow points it will be resolved on June 28th in Osaka. If that doesn’t happen it could get a lot worse. It could get down to my down 2,250-point target, and if it continues much beyond that, then we’ll get the whole full 4,500 points and be back at December lows. After that, you’re really looking at a global recession, a global depression, and ultimately nearing 18,000 in Dow, the 2016 low.
Q: Will global trade wars force US Treasuries down to around 2.10% on the ten year?
A: Yes. Again, the question is how bad will it get? If we resolve the trade war in six weeks, treasuries will probably double bottom here at around a 2.33% yield. If we go beyond that, then 2.10% is a chip shot and we go into a real live recession. The truth is no one knows anything, and we really don’t have any influence over what happens.
Q: How will equities digest and increase in European tariffs for cars?
A: It would completely demolish the European economy—especially that of Germany (EWG) which has 50% of its economy dependent on exports (primarily cars) and mostly to the U.S. And if we wipe out our biggest customer, Europe, then that would spill over here very quickly. Anybody who sells to Europe—like all the big Tech companies—would get slaughtered in that situation.
Q: Is it time to buy the Volatility Index (VIX)?
A: It’s too late to buy (VIX) now. I don’t want to touch it until we get down to that $12-$13 handle again because the time decay on this is enormous. Time decay is more than 50% a year, so your timing has to be perfect with trading any (VIX) products, whether it’s the (VXX), the (VIX) futures, the (VIX) options, or so on. There are countless people shorting (VIX) here, and they will short it all the way down to $12 again.
Q: What should I do about Boeing at this point?
A: We went long, got out, took our profit and caught this rally up to $400 a share. Then (BA) gave it up and it broke down. It’s a really tempting long here. Along with Apple, Boeing has the largest value of exports to China of any company. They have orders for hundreds of airlines from China, so they are an easy target, especially if there is a ramp up in the intensity of the trade war. That said, something like a June $270-$300 vertical bull call spread is very tempting, especially with elevated volatility up here, so I’m watching that very closely. We’re looking for the recertification of the 737 MAX bounce which could happen in the next few weeks; if that does happen it should rally at least back up to 380.
Q: Are your moving averages simple or exponential?
A: I just use the simple. I find that the simpler a concept is, the more people can understand it, and the more people buy it; that’s why I always try to keep everything simple and leave the algorithms for the computers.
Q: What stocks are insulated from a US/China trade war?
A: None. When the whole market goes risk off, people sell everything. Remember that an overwhelming portion of the market is now indexed with passive investment funds, so they just go straight risk on/risk off. It makes no difference what the fundamentals are, it makes no difference who has a lot of Chinese business or a little—everyone gets hit and everyone will get boosted when the trade war ends. There is no place to hide except cash, which is why I went 100% cash going into this. People seem to forget that cash has option value and having a lot of cash going into one of these situations is actually worth a lot of money in terms of opportunities.
Q: Do you have any thoughts on Uber’s (UBER) bad performance?
A: Yes, the whole sector was wildly overvalued, but no one knew that until they brought it to market and found out the real supply and demand for the issue. The smartest company of the year has to be Lyft (LYFT), which got a nice valuation by doing their issue first and keeping it small. So, they kind of rained on Uber’s parade; at one point, Uber was down 25% from their IPO price. That’s awful.
Q: Is Trump forcing the Fed to drop rates with all this tariff threat?
A: Yes, and if you remember, Trump really ramped up the attacks on the Fed in December. And my bet is at the first sign the trade talks were in trouble, they wanted to lower rates to offset the hit to the U.S. economy. There was no economic reason to suddenly demand huge interest rate cuts last December other than a falling stock market. The tariffs amount to a $72 billion tax increase on the American consumer, felt mostly at the low end, and that is terrible for the economy in that it reduces purchasing power by exactly that much.
Q: Would you buy the dollar as a safe haven trade?
A: No, I would not. The dollar may actually go down some more, especially with the collapse in our interest rates and European interest rates bottoming at negative levels. The best thing in the world in a high-risk environment like this is cash—don’t try to get clever and buy something you think will outperform. You could be disappointed.
Q: Why is healthcare (XLV) behaving so badly?
A: You don’t want to get into political football ahead of an election. That said, they're already so cheap that any kind of recovery could very well take healthcare up big, especially on an individual company basis. This is a sector where individual stock selection is crucial.
Q: Would you buy deep in the money calls on PayPal (PYPL)?
A: Yes, I would. Wait for a down day. Today we’re up slightly, but if we have a weak afternoon and a weak opening tomorrow morning, that would be a good time to add more longs in technology. PayPal is absolutely at the top of the list, as are names like Adobe (ADBE) and Alphabet (GOOGL).
Q: Should I be buying LEAPS in this environment?
A: No; a LEAP is a one-year long term deep out-of-the-money call spread. That was a great December bottom trade. The people who bought leaps then made huge fortunes. We’re too high here to consider leaps for the main market unless it's for something that’s just been bombed out, like a Tesla (TSLA) or a Boeing (BA), where you had big drops—then I would look at LEAPS for the super decimated stocks. But the rest of the market is still too high for thinking about leaps. Wait a couple of months and we may get back to those December lows.
Q: What happened to your May 10th bear market call?
A: Actually, it’s kind of looking good. It’s looking in fact like the market topped on May 2nd. If saner heads prevail, the trade war will end (or at least we’ll get a fake agreement) and the market will go to a new high. If not, then that May 10th target forecast I made two years ago IS the final top.
Q: You’re saying today we’re at a bottom?
A: We’re at a bottom for a short-term trade with a June 21st target. That was the expiration date of the options spreads I did this week. Whether this is the final bottom in the whole down move for a longer term, no one has any idea, even if they try to say differently. This is totally dependent on political developments.
Q: What do you have to say about Lockheed Martin (LMT)?
A: This sector usually does well with a wartime background. Expect that to continue for the foreseeable future. But at a certain point, the defense stocks which have had fantastic runs under Trump will start to discount a democratic win in the next election. If that does happen, defense will get slaughtered. I would be using any future strength to sell out of the whole defense area. Peace could be fatal to this sector.
Global Market Comments
May 13, 2019
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, OR A GAME OF CHICKEN),
(SPY), (TLT), (UBER), (BA), (SOYB)
In summarizing the global financial system today, I recall the classic fifties James Dean movie, Rebel Without a Cause. Two cars are racing towards a cliff and the chicken has to bail out first. But the chicken gets his jacket sleeve stuck on a door knob, and his car dives over the cliff and crashes and burns.
Thus, here we are entranced by the world’s two largest economies in a race towards a cliff, but this time, it’s an economic one. Will rational minds prevail, or will our leaders miscalculate and plunge the world into a Great Depression? In other words, will the crashing car land on us?
That’s what happened during the 1930s when after the 1929 stock market crash lead to tit for tat tariffs that eliminated economic growth for a decade. It was only after the massive defense spending of WWII that the slump ended. This time the script is playing out exactly the same way.
Certainly, the stock market believes in the rosier scenario. The Dow average only fell 1,278 points last week. In a real “NO DEAL” case, it would have given up the full 4,500 points it gained since December.
A prolonged trade war until the next election would take us well into a recession and back to down the 18,000 that prevailed before the last presidential election.
For the short term, the S&P 500 (SPY) is clearly gunning for the 200-day moving average at $275. That would take us down 6.78% from the recent high. I have been using soybean prices (SOYB) as an indicator of China trade negotiation success. It hit a seven-year low this morning.
It's all about trade talks all the time now and nobody has the slightest idea of what is coming next. So, I’ll sit back and wait until the Volatility Index (VIX) hits $30, or the (SPY) drops to $275 before entertaining another trade alert. Until then, I’ll maintain my 100% cash position.
I reach all these conclusions after two days of solid sleep, recovering from four days of bacchanalia at the SALT conference in Las Vegas. I'll write more about this when the market stops crashing long enough for me to write it up.
Long term followers of this letter are laughing because they recall that two years ago I predicted that the next bear market would start precisely on May 10 at 4:00 PM EST. That estimate was arrived at by an intricate calculation of the timing of a coming yield curve inversion and recession.
The S&P 500 (SPY) hit an all-time high of $295 on May 2 at 4:00 PM EST, seven trading days early. Who knew that it would be a Tweet that did it?
Uber went public last week, likely at an $82 billion valuation which sucked $10 billion out of the market. Not helping was a stock market crash and an Uber driver’s strike that spread from the US to London. After car operating expenses are taken out, drivers only net a paltry $5 an hour.
The Fed warned about high stock prices, and business borrowing is at an all-time high just two days before the market dumped. Maybe we should listen to our central bank?
US Job Openings soared in March, by a stunning 346,000 to 7.5 million. This is what tops look like.
Bonds exploded to the upside on stock market panic, as the world stampedes to “RISK OFF.” There’s a great (TLT) short sale setting up here, but not quite yet.
The US trade deficit hit a five-year low in March, down 16.2% to $20.7 billion. This is due to a big 23.7% jump in US exports to China, thanks to China’s massive economic stimulus program, not ours. But at what cost?
The Mad Hedge Fund Trader dumped its last position Monday morning and, as a result, was completely up 50 basis points on the week. You may have noticed that I have been stopping out of positions must faster than usual recently and now you know the reason why.
Global Trading Dispatch closed the week up 14.59% year to date and is down -1.13% so far in May. My trailing one-year retreated to +18.96%.
Mad Hedge Technology Letter gave back some ground with two new very short-term positions in Intuit (INTU) and Google (GOOG) which expire on Friday
Some 11 out of 13 Mad Hedge Technology Letter round trips have been profitable this year.
My nine and a half year profit rose slightly to +314.73%. With the markets in free fall, I am now 100% in cash with Global Trading Dispatch and 80% cash in the Mad Hedge Tech Letter. I’ll wait until the markets find their new range and then jump in on the long side.
The coming week will be pretty boring on the data front.
On Monday, May 13 at 11:00 AM, the April Survey of Consumer Sentiment is announced.
On Tuesday, May 14, 6:00 AM EST, the NFIB Small Business Index is out.
On Wednesday, May 15 at 8:30 AM, March Retail Sales are released
On Thursday, May 16 at 8:30 AM, Weekly Jobless Claims are published. March Housing Starts to come out at the same time.
On Friday, May 17 at 10:00 AM, March Consumer Sentiment is printed.
As for me, I will be flying back from Las Vegas over the weekend having attended the SALT conference and my own Mad Hedge Fund Trader strategy luncheon. The highlight of the week was listening to Woodstock veterans Credence Clearwater Revival. I’ll write more about it next week.
Good luck and good trading.
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
Global Market Comments
May 6, 2019
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, OR HERE’S ANOTHER BOMBSHELL),
(DIS), (QQQ), (AAPL), (INTU), (GOOGL), (LYFT), (UBER), (FCX))
I was all ready to write this week that massive monetary stimulus created by the Federal Reserve will cause the stock market to continue its slow-motion melt up.
The president had other ideas.
As of this writing, the US will impose without warning a surprise 25% increase in tariffs on $200 billion worth of Chinese imports, effective Friday, or in four days.
Clearly, the trade negotiations are not going as well as advertised by the administration. My bet is that the stock market won’t like this. All I can say is that I’m glad I’m 90% in cash and 10% in a Walt Disney vertical bull call spread that expires in nine trading days.
The bigger and unanswerable question is whether this is just a negotiating strategy already well known by the Bronx Housing Authority that sets up a nice dip to buy? Or is it this the beginning of a long overdue summer correction?
Nobody knows.
Certainly, the rally was getting long in the tooth, rising almost every day in 2019, with NASDAQ reaching new all-time highs. Those who kept their big-cap technology stock through the sturm und drang of the December meltdown have been rewarded handsomely. Index players reigned supreme.
However, we live in unprecedented times. Never before has a stock market received this much artificial stimulus at an all-time high unless you hark back to the Tokyo 1989 top. Japanese shares are now trading at 43% lower than that high….30 years later. We all know that our own decade-old bull market will eventually end in tears, but will it be in days, weeks, months, or years?
I had plenty of great wisdom, wonderful sector selections, colorful witticisms, and killer stock picks to serve up to you this week, but they have all be outrun by events. There’s nothing to do now but wait and see how the market responds to this tariff bombshell at the Monday morning opening.
After three months of decidedly mixed data, the information flow on the economy suddenly swung decidedly to the positive. The jobs data could have been more positive.
Of course, the April Nonfarm Payroll Report was a sight to behold. It came in at 263,000, about 80,000 more than expected, and more than makes up for last month’s dismal showing. It was a bull’s dream come true. This is what overheating looks like fueled by massive borrowing. Play now, pay later.
The headline Unemployment Rate fell a hefty 0.2% to 3.6%, the most since 1969 when the Vietnam War was raging, and the economy was booming. I remember then that Levi Strauss (LEVI) was suffering from a denim shortage then because so much was being sent to Southeast Asia to use as waterproof tarps. Wages rose 3.2% YOY.
Professional and Business Services led at a massive 76,000 jobs, Construction by 33,000 jobs, and Health Care by 27,000 jobs. Retail lost 12,000 jobs.
The ADP came in at a hot 275,000 as the private hiring binge continues. Then the April Nonfarm Payroll Report blew it away at 263,000. The headline unemployment rate plunged to a new 49-year low at 3.6%.
Consumer Spending hit a decade high, up 0.9% in March while inflation barely moved. Is Goldilocks about to become a senior citizen?
Apple (AAPL) blew it away with a major earnings upside surprise. The services play is finally feeding into profits. Stock buybacks were bumped up from $100 billion to $150 billion. Don’t touch (AAPL) up here with the stock just short of an all-time high. How high will the shares be when Apple’s revenue split between hardware and software revenues is 50/50?
Pending Home Sales jumped 3.8% on a signed contract basis. No doubt the market is responding to the biggest drop on mortgage rates in a decade. At one point, the 30-year fixed rate loan fell as low as 4.03%. Avoid housing for now, it’s still in a recession.
Topping it all off, the Fed made no move on interest rates. Like this was going to be a surprise? This may be the mantra for the rest of 2019. The big revelation that the Fed will start ending quantitative tightening now and not wait until September, as indicated earlier. More rocket fuel for the stock market. Let the bubble continue.
Uber (UBER) hit the Road for its IPO with valuations being cut daily, from a high of $120 billion to a recent low of $90 billion. The issue goes public on Friday morning. Rival Lyft (LYFT) definitely peed on their parade with their ill-fated IPO plunging 33%.
It wasn’t all Champaign and roses. San Francisco home prices fell for the first time in seven years. The median price is now only $830,000, down 0.1% YOY. Back up the truck! Clearly a victim of the Trump tax bill, this market won’t recover until deductions for taxes are restored. That may take place in two years….or never!
The Mad Hedge Fund Trader suffered a modest setback with the sudden collapse of copper prices last week, thus giving up all its profit in Freeport McMoRan (FCX). Global Trading Dispatch closed the week up 14.48% year to date and is down -1.48% so far in May. My trailing one-year retreated to +18.85%.
Reflecting the huge sector divergence in the market, the Mad Hedge Technology Letter leaped to another new all-time high on the back of two new very short-term positions in Intuit (INTU) and Google (GOOG), which we picked up after the earnings debacle there. Some 11 out of 13 Mad Hedge Technology Letter round trips have been profitable this year.
My nine and a half year profit shrank to +314.62%. The average annualized return backed off to +33.11%. With the markets at all-time highs and my Mad Hedge Market Timing Index forming a 2 ½ month high, I am now 90% in cash with Global Trading Dispatch and 80% cash in the Mad Hedge Tech Letter.
The coming week will be pretty boring after last week’s excitement, at least on the hard data front.
On Monday, May 6, Occidental Petroleum (OXY), now engaged in a ferocious takeover battle for Anadarko, reports. So does (AIG).
On Tuesday, May 7, 3:00 PM EST, we obtain March Consumer Credit. (LYFT), one of the worst performing IPOs this year, gives its first ever earnings report.
On Wednesday, May 8 at 2:00 PM, we get the most important earnings report of the week with Walt Disney (DIS), along with (ROKU).
On Thursday, May 9 at 8:30 the Weekly Jobless Claims are produced. At the same time, we get the March Producer Price Index. Dropbox (DBX) reports.
On Friday, May 10 at 8:30 AM, we get the Consumer Price Index. The Baker-Hughes Rig Count follows at 1:00 PM. (UBER)’s IPO will be priced at the opening. Viacom (VIA) Reports.
As for me, I’ll be watching the Kentucky Derby on Saturday. The field is wide open, now that the favorite, Omaha Beach, has been scratched.
As I will be attending the Las Vegas SALT conference during the coming week, the Woodstock of hedge fund managers, I will take the opportunity to rerun some of my oldies but goodies. We also have recently enjoyed a large number of new subscribers so I will be publishing several basic training pieces.
Maybe it was something I said?
For more on the SALT conference, please click here (you must be logged in to your account to access this piece).
Good luck and good trading.
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
Global Market Comments
May 3, 2019
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(LAST CHANCE TO ATTEND THE LAS VEGAS MAY 9 GLOBAL STRATEGY LUNCHEON)
(APRIL 3 BIWEEKLY STRATEGY WEBINAR Q&A),
(SPY), (LYFT), (TSLA), (TLT), (XLV), (UBER),
(AAPL), (AMZN), (MSFT), (EDIT), (SGMO), (CLLS)
Below please find subscribers’ Q&A for the Mad Hedge Fund Trader May 1 Global Strategy Webinar with my guest and co-host Bill Davis of the Mad Day Trader. Keep those questions coming!
Q: Your old target for the (SPY) was $292.80; we’re clearly above that now. What’s your new target and how long will it take to get there?
A: My new target on the S&P 500 (SPY) is $296.80. You’re looking at $295 on the (SPY), so we’re almost there. However, we’re grinding up too slowly so I can’t give you an exact date.
Q: Will Fed governor Jay Powell give in to pressure from Trump who wants him to drop rates? Does he have any sway over the process?
A: Officially he has no sway, but every day Trump is tweeting: “I want QE back, I want a 1% rate cut.” And if that happened, the economy would completely blow up—an interest rate cut with the market at an all-time high and 3.25% GDP growth rate would be unprecedented, would deliver a short term gain and long term disaster.
Q: What do you think about the Uber (UBER) IPO?
A: I wouldn’t touch it with a 10-foot pole—they’ve been cutting valuations almost every day. At one point they were going to value the company at $120 billion dollars, now they’re at $90 billion and they may even lower it from there. The last car sharing IPO (LYFT) dropped 33% from its high. I would stay away from all of the IPOs once they’re listed. The rule is: only buy these things when they’re down 50%. Warren Buffet never buys IPOs, nor do I.
Q: What do you think about buying or selling Lyft?
A: I would wait a couple of months for Lyft to find its true price. Then you’ll have something to trade against.
Q: Do you think the bad news is over on Tesla (TSLA)? Is it time to buy? Or is it going bankrupt?
A: The whole world knew that the electric car subsidy would be cut in January, so what customers did was accelerate their orders in the 4th quarter, which took us all the way up to $380 in the shares, and then created a vacuum in the Q1 of this year. It reported the first quarter last week—they were disastrous orders, and the company is cutting back overhead as fast as possible as if it’s going into a recession, which it kind of is. The question is whether or not sales will bounce back in Q2 with the smaller subsidy. I happen to think they will. But we may not see 2018 Q4 sales levels again until 2019 Q4.
Q: Why has healthcare (XLV) been so awful this year?
A: There’s an election next year and both parties promise to beat up on the healthcare industry with drug control pricing and other forms of regulation. Of course, the current president promised free competition in drug prices; but then he moved to Washington DC and found the drug industry lobby, and nothing was ever heard again on that front. It’s a very high political risk sector, but there is some great value at these levels in the healthcare industry in the long term. I’m about to start the Mad Hedge Biotech and Health Care newsletter imminently.
Q: Should I buy the (TLT) $120-$123 call spread now?
A: That's a very aggressive trade, I would wait and go with strikes for in the money, and then only on a big dip. Don’t reach for a trade when the market is at an all-time high.
Q: Should I be shorting Tesla down here?
A: Absolutely not, your short trade was at $380, $350, $330 and $300. Down here, you run the risk of a surprise tweet from Elon Musk causing the stock to go $50 against you. Buy the way, he’s already announced that he’s buying $10 million worth of shares in his next capital raise.
Q: What do you think about CRISPR stocks long term, like Editas Medicine (EDIT), Sangamo Life Sciences (SGMO), and Cellectis (CLLS)?
A: These are probably the best bunch of 10 baggers long term. Short term they are afflicted with the same problems impacting all of healthcare—promises of regulation and price control on all of their products ahead of an election. So, hold for the long term; short term I’d only be buying the really big dips. Did I mention that I’m about to start the Mad Hedge Biotech and Health Care newsletter imminently?
Q: Is your May 10th market top forecast still good?
A: Well we’re getting kind of close to May 10th. I made this prediction based on an inverting yield curve two years ago. However, that target did not anticipate interest rates topping out for the 10-year US Treasury bond at 3.25%. Nor did it consider the Fed canceling all interest rate hikes for the year. Without the artificial stimulus, the market would certainly have already rolled over and died. That said, I still have a week to go.
Q: Should I be selling my long term holds in the FANGS, like Apple (AAPL), Amazon (AMZN), and Microsoft (MSFT)?
A: For the long term, no. However, we know from December that these things can get hit with a 40% drawdown at any time. As long as you can handle that, they always bounce back.
Q: What will happen to Venezuela? Any trades?
A: The only related trades would be in the oil market (USO). If we get a coup d’ etat which installs a new pro-American president, which could be at any time, that could lead to a selloff in oil for a couple of days as 1 Million barrels of crude per day come back on the market, but probably no more than that.
Q: With current national debt and budget deficits, when will interest in gold kick in?
A: Very simple: when the stock market goes down, you want to buy gold. It’s the hedge that everyone will chase after, and inflation is just around the corner.
Q: Do you need me to place any Kentucky Derby bets?
A: Me being the cautious guy I am, I pick the horse with the best odds and then I bet him to show. That almost always works.
Q: What about pot stocks?
A: I’ve never liked them very much; after all, how hard is it to grow a weed? The barriers to entry are zero. All of these pot companies coming up now are not really pot stocks as much as they are marketing companies, so you’re buying their distribution capability primarily. That said, I’m having breakfast with the CEO of a major pot company next week, so I’ll be writing about that once I get the inside scoop.
Q: Will the Fed be the non-event?
A: Yes, as stated in the Mad Hedge Hot Tips this morning, it will be a non-event and the news is due out in about an hour.
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