Below please find subscribers’ Q&A for the August 16 Mad Hedge Fund Trader Global Strategy Webinar, broadcast from Silicon Valley, CA.
Q: Did you hear that Michael Burry was putting on a big short (the guy who made a fortune shorting housing in 2009)?
A: Yes, I heard that, but I never, ever trade-off of those kinds of comments. First of all, I think he’s wrong; and often, what happens in those situations is you hear about them going into the trade, but you never hear about them getting out, which might be tomorrow or next week. Also, there’s a nasty habit of big hedge fund managers telling you the opposite of what they’re actually doing. We hear big hedge fund traders like Bill Ackman getting super bearish at market bottoms, and then a few months later learn that they were buying with both hands, as was the case with the pandemic bottom. Be careful about other people’s opinions—they can be hazardous to your wealth. Just look at the data and the facts. That’s what I do.
Q: Would you buy Snowflake (SNOW) around current prices?
A: Yes—first of all Snowflake is a Warren Buffet favorite, which I always tend to follow. However, Warren can wait 5 years for a stock to work, and you can’t. So, I would wait for a bigger dip before getting into SNOW. So far, we are down 25% from the recent peak. One thing’s for sure, cybersecurity is a long-term winner, as seen by the ballistic move in Palo Alto Networks (PANW) since we started recommending it about 8 years ago.
Q: Why are US consumers so strong, and will that hold up for the rest of 2023?
A: US consumers are so strong because they banked so much money during 10 years of QE and all the pandemic stimulus, that they have a lot saved. They are now happy to spend to make up for the spending they couldn’t do during the pandemic. They’re basically in spending catch-up mode or revenge spending.
Q: How far do you see the iShares 20 Plus Year Treasury Bond ETF (TLT) go?
A: My worst-case scenario has it going to $90 down from $94—that’s a yield of about 4.50%. And that's where a lot of bond investors see fair value, and will start piling in. But as long as the momentum is against it, I’m not touching it. As soon as I am convinced there is a real bottom in the (TLT), I’m going to jump in with both hands and buy long-term LEAPS, where you can get a 100% or 200% return pretty quickly.
Q: Time to buy the Tesla (TSLA) dip?
A: We’re getting close. My guess is you might get a spike down to $200 from the recent $300 high. That’s also going to be LEAPS territory for us because the long-term outlook for this company is spectacular.
Q: What do you think of Freeport McMoRan (FCX), Silver (WPM), and United States Natural Gas Fund (UNG)?
A: I think they are all strong buys; I have LEAPS out on all of them. I think we start to get a big move in the 4th quarter of this year that’ll go well into next year—so big money just sitting on the table begging for you to take it.
Q: What are we to make of the crash of the Chinese Yuan?
A: The Chinese economy is weak and looks like it’s getting weaker. They still have a pandemic hangover. We don’t know what their real pandemic numbers are—they adopted our pandemic policy 2 years after we did, and they’re suffering as a result. They also insist on using their own vaccine, Sinovac, for nationalist reasons which is only 30% effective. But, when the Chinese economy does come back on stream, that’ll be the gasoline on the fire for the global economy, and that’s why we like commodities, industrials, energy, and so on.
Q: What does an 8% mortgage rate mean for the housing sector?
A: It is a disaster. I don’t think prices will drop very much—it’ll just cease all new buying because nobody qualifies for an 8% mortgage. They are going to either be only cash buyers out there or people waiting for the next drop in interest rates, and we’re already seeing that with the mortgage rate at 7.24%. If we do get a move up to 8%, it’ll just be a short-term spike that won’t last very long.
A: Yes, absolutely. Since people can’t afford to buy houses, they are renting until they can, which pushes rental prices up and adds to the inflation numbers.
Q: When do you think the tech sector will rebound? It’s had a really bad three weeks.
A: End of August or sometime in September. I think. When people come back from the beach, they’re going to look at the long-term future of these companies and think “holy smokes,” why don’t I own more of these?” And we may even be doing LEAPS at high prices, which I almost never do, but the growth rate in tech next year is looking to be spectacular, and I think if we do a conservative at-the-money, we should at least double our money in a few months, similar to how US Steel (X) LEAPS did.
Q: Is Amazon (AMZN) a buy? They’re starting to develop their pharmacy rather well.
A: Yes, Amazon is on the buy list—it’s already up 50% this year. Jassy, the new CEO, is doing a great job. They also have a massive investment in AI which they can monetize anytime they want, and online pharmacies are a great place to start. They’ve been talking about doing that for at least 10 years.
Q: Are gold (GLD), wheat (WEAT), and precious metals a buy?
A: Yes, those are all strong buys on the dip.
Q: What about Tesla (TSLA) LEAPS?
A: Yes Tesla is definitely a LEAPS candidate $30 down from where it is now.
Q: What about Crown Castle International (CCI)?
A: CCI took a major hit from Verizon, canceling a contract with them (which is their biggest customer), so I want to wait for that to digest before I do anything yet. However, we are definitely approaching “BUY” territory; I think the yield is up to about 6.5% now.
Q: Should I take profits on the next jump up in United States Steel Corporation (X)?
A: Yes, it’s not worth hanging on 16 more months to maturity when there’s only 30% of the profit left. And, if all the takeover bids fail for some reason, the stock goes back to $20, and then your LEAPS becomes worthless. So, I would take profits; 100% profit in 2 months is nothing to turn up your nose at.
Q: How confident are you in (TLT) going to $110 by the end of the year?
A: Very confident; by then we will start seeing more hints of Fed interest rate cuts, inflation should be lower, and Goldman Sachs is in fact forecasting that the first rate cut will happen in March. So you’ll certainly start discounting that in the (TLT) by December. We could see the high in yields and the low in prices at the central bankers conference in Jackson Hole next week.
Q: What do you think about cruise lines and hotels right now?
A: The business is great, they’re all packed. However, during the pandemic, these sectors had to take on massive amounts of debt to keep from going under when their ships were tied up with zero revenue for two years; same with the hotels. So, the balance sheets are terrible in all of these areas including airlines. That’s why I’ve been avoiding them, too many better plays. Don’t go away from your core trades looking for trouble.
Q: When do we finally start seeing the Fed stop raising rates?
A: I think they already have; I think the most recent rate rise was the last one. If I’m wrong, they’ll do one more quarter—it’s totally dependent on the numbers.
Q: Won’t falling rates be bullish for bonds and gold?
A: Yes, that's why we’re buying them; but I’m waiting on the bond LEAPS—I want to see a firm bottom before getting back in there. 2024 will be all about falling interest rates plays.
Q: What’s causing the volatility in the United States Natural Gas Fund (UNG)?
A: A Strike in Australia, collapsing supplies in Europe (where prices are up 40%), and expectation of a global economic recovery in China. Ultimately, it’ll be China that takes this thing up to $10, $12, or $14 for the UNG, but you need them to recover first. That’ll probably happen next year, which is why we have the two-year LEAPS on there.
Q: With junk (JNK), have we seen the high rates?
A: Yes. If not, we’re very close, so it’s worth starting to scale in here.
Q: Should I short Home Depot (HD), as US consumers are holding back on home upgrades?
A: No, you should not short anything because you’re going against a long-term bull market trend that probably continues for another 10 years. So, any shorts should be measured in days and not weeks.
Q: Should I start chasing oil, because it’s been on quite a run, and should I buy Exxon (XOM)?
A: Yes, if we get an economic recovery next year, oil goes over 100 easily and will take all the oil companies up with it.
Q: Is (UNG) a domestic or foreign gas ETF?
A: It’s mostly domestic, and it’s a mix of the top natural gas producers in the US.
Q: Are the BRIC countries going to bring down the dollar?
A: You’ve got to be out of your mind. Would you rather store your money in China and Indonesia or the US? That’s your choice. I know there’s a lot of internet conspiracy theories out there—I get about a question a day on this. It’s Never going to happen; not in my lifetime. But it does attract internet traffic, which is the purpose of putting out these ridiculous stories like a BRIC-engineered digital currency replacing the dollar as a reserve currency. It’s just clickbait.
Q: Why is there a short squeeze in copper?
A: EV production is going from 2 million to 10 million a year in 2030, and every EV needs 200 pounds of copper. By the way, there are now 527 EV models on the market, but only one company makes money doing this, and that’s Tesla (TSLA).
Q: We’ve been waiting for a recession in the US for years, and US consumers are still going strong. What gives? I want rates to drop so I can invest in real estate again.
A: Well, yes. This recession has been predicted for 2 years. The problem is we have a certain political party telling us every day that the economy is the worst it’s ever been when, in actuality, the health of the economy is amazingly strong, and certainly the strongest economy in the world. So, I don't think we get a real recession until well into the 2030s because of massive technological development and a huge demographic tailwind—that’s an absolute winning combination, last seen in the 1990s. Plus, now we have AI accelerating everything. So, look at the numbers; don’t listen to opinions. Opinions can be fatal to your wealth.
Q: Does the use of an adjustable-rate loan make sense for the purchase of a second home?
A: Yes, it does. During the great interest rate spike of the 1980s, I bought my home in New York with an adjustable-rate loan. The initial interest rate was 18%, but when rates dropped to 11%, the value of the home tripled. Not a bad trade—and I bet the same kind of opportunity is out there now, provided you can get another adjustable-rate loan. By the way, in Europe, they only have adjustable-rate loans. The 30-year fixed anomaly only exists in the US and Canada because you have the US government as the unlimited buyer of last resort for 30-year fixed mortgages.
Q: Thoughts on other steel companies and aluminum?
A: I like them all. The country needs 200,000 miles of new long-distance transmission lines to accommodate the electrification of the economy, and those are all made out of aluminum except for the last mile—most people don’t know that. Buy Alcoa (AA).
To watch a replay of this webinar with all the charts, bells, whistles, and classic rock music, just log in to www.madhedgefundtrader.com , go to MY ACCOUNT, click on GLOBAL TRADING DISPATCH, then WEBINARS, and all the webinars from the last 12 years are there in all their glory.
Good Luck and Stay Healthy
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
(MARKET OUTLOOK FOR THE WEEK AHEAD, or THE GREAT ROTATION OF 2023 IS ON)
(AAPL), (TSLA), (NVDA), (GOOGL), (OXY), (QQQ),
(TSLA), (WPM), (UNG), (BRK/B), (RIVN), (TLT)
When I boarded the Queen Mary II in early July, big technology stocks (AAPL), (TSLA), (NVDA), (GOOGL) were on fire and knew no bounds, while bonds (TLT) were holding steady at a 3.40% yield. Energy stocks (OXY) were scraping the bottom.
One month later and big tech is in free fall while energy, commodities, and precious metals have taken over the lead. Bonds are probing for new lows at a 4.20% yield and may have another $5.00 of downside.
The Great Rotation of 2023 has begun!
The only question is how long it will last.
I happen to believe that we are into a traditional summer correction that could last until the usual September or October bottom. That is when I will be picking up long-term bull LEAPS with both hands. After that, it’s off to the races once again to new all-time highs once again.
Except that this time, everything will go up, both big tech, the domestics recovery plays, and bonds. That’s because they will be discounting the next great market mover, several successive cuts in interest rates by the Federal Reserve certain to take place in 2024.
We all know that markets discount market-moving developments six to nine months in advance. That means you should start buying about….September or October.
Perhaps the best question asked at my many strategy luncheons this summer came from a dear old friend in London. “Where is all the money coming from to pay for all this”? The answer is, well complicated. I’ll give you a list”
1) All of the Quantitative Easing money created since 2008, some $10 trillion worth, is still around. It is just sleeping in 90-day T-bills.
2) With inflation basically over, thanks to hyper-accelerating technology and collapsing energy prices, the case for the Fed to stop raising and start cutting interest rates is clear.
3) Falling interest rates trigger a collapse in the US dollar.
4) Earnings at big tech companies explode, which earn about half of their revenues from abroad.
5) The falling interest rate sectors are also set alike. These include energy, commodities, precious metals, and bonds.
6) A cheap greenback pours gasoline on the economy.
7) The $1 trillion in stimulus approved last year provides the match as most of it has yet to be spent.
8) China finally recovers and turbocharges all of the above trends.
9) 2024 is a presidential election year and the economy always seems to do mysteriously well going into such events.
10) All we are left to do is sit back and watch all our positions go up, figure out how we are going to spend all that money, and sing the praises of the Mad Hedge Fund Trader.
So far in August, we are down -4.70%. My 2023 year-to-date performance is still at an eye-popping +60.80%. The S&P 500 (SPY) is up +17.10% so far in 2023. My trailing one-year return reached +92.45% versus +8.45% for the S&P 500.
That brings my 15-year total return to +657.99%. My average annualized return has fallen back to +48.15%, some 2.50 times the S&P 500 over the same period.
Some 41 of my 46 trades this year have been profitable.
The Nonfarm Payroll drops to 187,000 in July, a one-year low, less than expectations. The Headline Unemployment Rate returned to 3.5%, a 50-year low. The soft-landing scenario lives! That’s supposed to be impossible in the face of 5.25% interest rates. Average hourly earnings grew at a restrained 3.6% annual rate. Half of the new jobs were in health care. At the rate we are aging, that is no surprise.
Rating Agencies Strike Again, with Moody’s threatened downgrade of a dozen regional banks. Stocks took it up on the nose giving up Monday’s 400-point gain. Higher funding costs, potential regulatory capital weaknesses, and rising risks tied to commercial real estate are among strains prompting the review, Moody’s said late Monday. The summer correction is finally here.
Berkshire Hathaway Post Record Profit, with profits up 38% and interest and other investment income growing sixfold as Warren Buffet’s trading vehicle goes from strength to strength to strength. Sky-high interest rates enabled its Geico insurance holding to really coin it this time. Buffet turns 93 this month. Keep buying (BRK/B) on dips. Our LEAPS are looking great, up 327% in 11 months.
Rivian Beats, losing only $1.08 a share versus an expected $1.41. The stock jumped 3% on the news. The gross profit per vehicle showed a dramatic improvement at $35,000. The production forecast edged up from 50,000 to 52,000 vehicles for 2023. Momentum is clearly improving making our LEAPS look better by the day. Buy (RIVN) on dips as the next (TSLA).
Deflation Hits China, as the post-Covid recovery continues to lag. Their Consumer Price Index fell 0.3% YOY. Imports and exports are falling dramatically as trade sanctions bite. Youth unemployment hit a new high as 11.6 million new college grads hit the market. Global commodities could get hit but so far the stocks aren’t seeing it. Avoid anything Chinese (FXI), even the food.
Inflation Jumps, 0.2% in July and 3.2% YOY. Rents, education, and insurance (climate change) were higher while used cars were down 1.3% and airfares plunged by 8.1%. Stocks rallied on the small increase preferring to focus on the smallest back-to-back increase in two years. Bonds (TLT) rallied big. The big question is what will the Fed do with this?
Weekly Jobless Claims came in at a strong 278,000, showing the Fed’s high-interest rate policy is having an effect on the jobs market. Stocks want to know how much longer it will last.
Natural Gas Soars to a new high and accomplished an upside breakout on all charts. European gas prices have just jumped 40%. An Australian strike shut down an LNG export facility. Energy traders are looking for higher highs. My (UNG) LEAPS, a Mad Hedge AI pick, are looking great, doubling off our cost in two months.
Biden Cracks Down on Technology Investment in China, especially on our most advanced tech which can be used in weapons development. Tech investment in the Middle Kingdom is already down 70% over the last two years. No point in selling China the rope with which to hang us.
Home Mortgage Rates Hit a 22-Year High, at 7.08%. But the existing home market is heating up and the new home market is absolutely on fire in anticipating of a coming rate fall. You can’t beat a gale-force demographic tailwind.
My Ten-Year View
When we come out the other side of the recession, we will be perfectly poised to launch into my new American Golden Age, or the next Roaring Twenties. The economy decarbonizing and technology hyper accelerating, creating enormous investment opportunities. The Dow Average will rise by 800% to 240,000 or more in the coming decade. The new America will be far more efficient and profitable than the old.
Dow 240,000 here we come!
On Monday, August 14 at 8:00 AM EST, the US Consumer Inflation Expectations are out,
On Tuesday, August 15 at 8:30 AM, US Retail Sales are released.
On Wednesday, August 16 at 2:30 PM, the US Building Permits are published.
On Thursday, August 17 at 8:30 AM, the Weekly Jobless Claims are announced.
On Friday, August 18 at 2:00 PM, the Baker Hughes Rig Count is printed.
As for me, occasionally, I tell close friends that I hitchhiked across the Sahara Desert alone when I was 16 and I am met with looks that are amazed, befuddled, and disbelieving, but I actually did it in the summer of 1968.
I had spent two months hitchhiking from a hospital in Sweden all the way to my ancestral roots in Monreale, Sicily, the home of my Italian grandfather. My next goal was to visit my Uncle Charles who was stationed at the Torreon Air Force base outside of Madrid, Spain.
I looked at my Michelin map of the Mediterranean and quickly realized that it would be much quicker to cut across North Africa than hitching all the way back up the length of Italy, cutting across the Cote d’Azur, where no one ever picked up hitchhikers, then all the way down to Madrid, where the people were too poor to own cars. So one fine morning found me taking deck passage on a ferry from Palermo to Tunis. From here on, my memory is hazy and I remember only a few flashbacks.
Ever the historian, even at age 16, I made straight for the Carthaginian ruins where the Romans allegedly salted the earth to prevent any recovery of a country they had just wasted. Some 2,000 years later it, worked as there was nothing left but an endless sea of scattered rocks. At night, I laid out my sleeping bag to catch some shut-eye. But at 2:00 AM, someone tried to bash my head in with a rock. I scared them off but haven’t had a decent night of sleep since.
The next day, I made for the spectacular Roman ruins at Leptus Magna on the Libyan coast. But Muamar Khadafi pulled off a coup d’état earlier and closed the border to all Americans. My visa obtained in Rome from King Idris was useless.
I used to opportunity to hitchhike over Kasserine Pass into Algeria, where my uncle served under General Patton in WWII. US forces suffered an ignominious defeat until General Patton took over the army 1n 1943. Some 25 years later, the scenery was still littered with blown-up tanks, destroyed trucks, and crashed Messerschmitts. Approaching the coastal road, I started jumping trains headed west. While officially the Algerian Civil War ended in 1962, in fact, it was still going on in 1968. We passed derailed trains and smashed bridges. The cattle were starving. There was no food anywhere.
At night, Arab families invited me to stay over in their mud brick homes as I always traveled with a big American Flag on my pack. Their hospitality was endless, and they shared what little food they had.
As a train pulled into Algiers, a conductor caught me without a ticket. So, the railway police arrested me and on arrival took me to the central Algiers prison, not a very nice place. After the police left, the head of the prison took me to a back door, opened it, smiled, and said “si vou plais”. That was all the French I ever needed to know. I quickly disappeared into the Algiers souk.
As we approached the Moroccan border, I saw trains of camels 1,000 animals long, rhythmically swaying back and forth with their cargoes of spices from central Africa. These don’t exist anymore, replaced by modern trucks.
Out in the middle of nowhere, bullets started flying through the passenger cars splintering wood. I poked my Kodak Instamatic out the window in between volleys of shots and snapped a few pictures.
The train juddered to a halt and robbers boarded. They shook down the passengers, seizing whatever silver jewelry and bolts of cloth they could find.
When they came to me, they just laughed and moved on. As a ragged backpacker, I had nothing of interest for them.
The train ended up in Marrakesh on the edge of the Sahara and the final destination of the camel trains. It was like visiting the Arabian Nights. The main Jemaa el-Fna square was amazing, with masses of crafts for sale, magicians, snake charmers, and men breathing fire.
Next stop was Tangiers, site of the oldest foreign American embassy, which is now open to tourists. For 50 cents a night, you could sleep on a rooftop under the stars and pass the pipe with fellow travelers which contained something called hashish.
One more ferry ride and I was at the British naval base at the Rock of Gibraltar and then on a train for Madrid. I made it to the Torreon base main gate where a very surprised master sergeant picked up a half-starved, rail-thin, filthy nephew and took me home. Later, Uncle Charles said I slept for three days straight. Since I had lice, Charles shaved my head when I was asleep. I fit right in with the other airmen.
I woke up with a fever, so Charles took me the base clinic. They never figured out what I had. Maybe it was exhaustion, maybe it was prolonged starvation. Perhaps it was something African. Possibly, it was all one long dream.
Afterwards, my uncle took for to the base commissary where I enjoyed my first cheeseburger, French fries, and chocolate shake in many months. It was the best meal of my life and the only cure I really needed.
I have pictures of all this which are sitting in a box somewhere in my basement. The Michelin map sits in a giant case of old, used maps that I have been collecting for 60 years.
Mediterranean in 1968
Stay healthy,
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/young-john-1968-scaled-e1692035288591.jpg429400Mad Hedge Fund Traderhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMad Hedge Fund Trader2023-08-14 09:02:072023-08-14 14:39:58The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or the Great Rotation of 2023 is On
Mad Hedge has made fortunes for thousands of followers over the last 15 years with its aggressive options spread strategy, which profits mightily from falling market volatility ($VIX). That is what is happening in the market 95% of the time.
However, it doesn’t make sense when the ($VIX) drops below $20, and that may now continue to be the case for a prolonged period of time.
However, just as one window closes, another opens.
While low volatility makes options spreads no longer attractive, it makes two-year LEAPS the bargain of the century. With volatility this low, you essentially get the second year for free. That is more than adequate time to go into any recession that may or may not happen and then come back out the other side at max profit.
If the underlying stock suddenly rockets, which is often the case with my recommendations, you can collect 90% of the maximum potential profit in a two-year LEAPS within months, if not weeks.
Better yet, while we used to make 15%-20% on front month options spreads, which benefited from accelerated time decay, the profit on two-year LEAPS can run from 100% to 500%. One client bagged a 5,000%, or 50X profit on an NVIDIA (NVDA) LEAPS he strapped on last October.
He doesn’t work anymore.
The timing for this strategy adjustment is perfect. We have just entered a new bull market for stocks that could run for another decade. With the exception of the “Magnificent Seven,” most US stocks are now just above their bear market bottoms. What better time to increase your leverage tenfold.
I won’t be adding LEAPS to my daily position sheet or P&L. They will remain a front-month trading tool. So the millions you are about to make will just have to remain our little secret. Concierge members will get access to a dedicated website that will keep a running total of all Mad Hedge LEAPS issued.
All good strategies must come to an end. Market conditions change or the copycats and wannabees squeeze the life out of them. I have seen too many good traders go out of business clinging to strategies that worked yesterday, but not today. They were hauled away in straight jackets, kicking and screaming because they lost all their money.
The stock market is like working in a hurricane. If you don’t learn how to bend with the wind, you snap and end up in a pile of debris.
When the ($VIX) gets back above $20, or better yet $30, and the Mad Hedge Market Timing Index plunges down to the $20’s, I’ll be back fully loaded with front month options spreads by the dozens.
Good luck.
So far in June, we are up +0.47%. My 2023 year-to-date performance is still at an eye-popping +62.52%. The S&P 500 (SPY) is up only a miniscule +12.63% so far in 2023. My trailing one-year return reached +101.75% versus +24.19% for the S&P 500.
That brings my 15-year total return to +659.71%. My average annualized return has blasted up to +48.86%, another new high, some 2.54 times the S&P 500 over the same period.
Some 42 of my 46 trades this year have been profitable. Only 23 of my last 24 consecutive trade alerts have been profitable.
I executed no trades last week. Concierge members received a LEAPS trade alert on Crown Castle International (CCI), which regular subscribers should receive shortly. My longs in Tesla (TSLA) and Freeport McMoRan (FCX) expired at max profit, which I easily ran into the June 16 option expiration this week. I now have a very rare 100% cash position due to the lack of high-return, low-risk short-term trades.
A Mad Hedge Market Timing Index at 82 is not exactly encouraging me to bet the ranch. Don’t rush to buy the top.
On another matter, I am proud to say that every Mad Hedge service saw positions expire at their maximum profit at the June 16 quadruple witching options expiration.
Global Trading Dispatch rang the cash register with Tesla (TSLA) and Freeport McMoRan (FCX). The Mad Hedge Technology Letter coined it with Apple (AAPL). The Mad Hedge Biotech & Health Care Letter printed money with Amgen (AMGN). Jacquie’s Post pleased followers with a profit in the (TLT). Finally, Mad Hedge AI, launched only on Monday, saw the shares for its initial trade alert for (UNG) jump a breathtaking 15% in four days.
I must be doing something right.
My Ten-Year View
When we come out the other side of the recession, we will be perfectly poised to launch into my new American Golden Age, or the next Roaring Twenties. The economy decarbonizing and technology hyper-accelerating, creating enormous investment opportunities. The Dow Average will rise by 800% to 240,000 or more in the coming decade. The new America will be far more efficient and profitable than the old.
Dow 240,000 here we come!
Tesla Model Y Became World’s Top Selling Car in Q1, the first EV to do so. Some 267,200 Y’s were shifted, edging out Toyota’s Corolla by 10,800 units, which led the field for decades. Elon Musk’s price-cutting volume play is working to the competition’s chagrin. The Model Y is on track to top one million sales this year. Buy (TSLA) on dips
Tesla Drops Model 3 Price to $33,000, net of $7,500 federal EV tax credit. That helped it become the world’s top-selling car. Late to the market EV makers are getting killed, hemorrhaging cash. That took the shares up to a new 2023 high of $231. Keep buying (TSLA) on dips.
Apple Launches $3,497 Vision Pro Headset, in a run at Meta (META) in the virtual headset world. It’s the company’s first new product launch since the Apple Watch in 2014 coining yet another new revenue stream. Apple shares hit a new all-time high on the news. Buy (AAPL) on dips. Weekly Jobless Claims Jump to 261,000, an increase of 28,000, as the deflationary effects of high-interest rates take hold.
Europe Enters a Recession, with a -0.1% GDP print in Q1. Sharp rises in Euro interest rates get the blame. General Motors Adopts Tesla’s Charging System, essentially giving a near monopoly to Elon Musk. (GM) is joining Ford’s (F) capitulation from two weeks ago. This should grow into a $20 billion a year profit item for Tesla. All of my outrageous forecasts are coming true. Buy (TSLA) on dips.
US to Send Another $2 Billion Worth of Advanced Missiles to Ukraine. The package includes advanced Raytheon (RTX) Himars and Lockheed (LMT) Patriot 3 missiles. Buy both (RTX) and (LMT) on dips as both missiles now have order backlogs extending for years.
Coinbase Gets Crushed after the SEC throws the book at them. The government agency is intent on destroying the entire crypto infrastructure. Get your money out if you can. Avoid (COIN) on pain of death.
Volatility Index ($VIX) Hits 3 ½ Year Low, at $14.26. Complacency with the S&P 500 is running rampant, which always ends in tears. The level implies a maximum up-and-down range of only 8.2% for 30 days.
Airline Profits to Double in 2023, as service sharply deteriorates with revenge travel accelerating. Looks for this summer to be a perfect travel storm. On Monday, June 19 is the first-ever Juneteenth National Holiday celebrating the freedom of the slaves in Texas, the last state to do so. Markets are closed.
On Tuesday, June 20 at 8:30 PM EST, US Building Permits for May are announced.
On Wednesday, June 21 at 10:00 AM, Fed Chairman Powell testifies in front of Congress.
On Thursday, June 22 at 8:30 AM, the Weekly Jobless Claims are announced.
On Friday, June 23 at 9:45 AM the S&P Global Flash PMI is printed. At 2:00 PM the Baker Hughes Rig Count is printed.
As for me, with the shocking re-emergence of Nazis on America's political scene, memories are flooding back to me of some of the most amazing experiences in my life. I thought we were done with these guys I have been warning my long-term readers for years now that this story was coming. The right time is now here to write it.
I know the Nazis well.
During the civil rights movement of the 1960s, I frequently hitchhiked through the Deep South to learn what was actually happening.
It was not usual for me to catch a nighttime ride with a neo-Nazi on his way to a cross burning at a nearby Ku Klux Klan meeting, always with an uneducated blue-collar worker who needed a haircut.
In fact, being a card-carrying white kid, I was often invited to come along.
I had a stock answer: "No thanks, I'm going to another Klan meeting further down the road."
That opened my driver up to expound at length on his movement's bizarre philosophy.
What I heard was chilling. Suffice it to say, I learned to talk the talk.
During 1968 and 1969, I worked in West Berlin at the Sarotti Chocolate factory in order to perfect my German. On the first day at work, they let you eat all you want for free.
After that, you got so sick that you never wanted to touch the stuff again. Some 50 years later and I still can’t eat their chocolate with sweetened alcohol on the inside.
My co-worker there was namedJendro, who had been captured by the Russians at Stalingrad and was one of the 5% of prisoners who made it home alive in 1955. His stories were incredible and my problems pale in comparison.
Answering an ad on a local bulletin board, I found myself living with a Nazi family near the company's Tempelhof factory.
There was one thing about Nazis you needed to know during the 1960s: They absolutely loved Americans.
After all, it was we who saved them from certain annihilation by the teeming Bolshevik hoards from the east.
The American postwar occupation, while unpopular, was gentle by comparison. It turned out that everyone loved Hershey bars. Americans became very good at looking the other way when Germain families were trying to buy food on the black market. That’s why Reichsmarks wasn’t devalued until 1948.
As a result, I got free room and board for two summers at the expense of having to listen to some very politically incorrect theories about race. I remember the hot homemade apple strudel like it was yesterday.
Let me tell you another thing about Nazis. Once a Nazi, always a Nazi. Just because they lost the war didn't mean they dropped their extreme beliefs.
Fast-forward 30 years, and I was a wealthy hedge fund manager with money to burn, looking for adventure with a history bent during the 1990s.
I was mountain climbing in the Bavarian Alps with a friend, not far from Garmisch-Partenkirchen, when I learned that Leni Riefenstahl lived nearby, then in her 90s.
Attending the USC film school decades earlier, I knew that Riefenstahl was a legend in the filmmaking community.
She produced such icons as Olympia, about the 1932 Berlin Olympics, and The Triumph of the Will, about the Nuremburg Nazi rallies. It is said that Donald Trump borrowed many of these techniques during his successful 2016 presidential run.
It was rumored that Riefenstahl was also the one-time girlfriend of Adolph Hitler.
I needed a ruse to meet her since surviving members of the Third Reich tend to be very private people, so I tracked down one of her black and white photos of Nubian warriors, which she took during her rehabilitation period in the 1960s.
It was my plan to get her to sign it.
Some well-placed intermediaries managed to pull off a meeting with the notoriously reclusive Riefenstahl, and I managed to score a half-hour tea.
I presented the African photograph, and she seemed grateful that I was interested in her work. She signed it quickly with a flourish.
I then gently grilled her on what it was like to live in Germany in the 1930s. What I learned was fascinating.
But when I asked about her relationship with The Fuhrer, she flashed, "That is nothing but Zionist propaganda."
Spoken like a true Nazi.
The interview ended abruptly.
I took my signed photograph home, framed it, and hung it on my office wall for a few years. Then I donated it to a silent auction at my kids' high school.
Nobody bid on it.
The photo ended up in storage at my home, and when it was time to make space, it went to Goodwill.
I obtained a nice high appraisal for the work of art and then took a generous tax deduction for the donation, of course.
It is now more than a half-century since my first contact with the Nazis, and all of the WWII veterans are gone. Talking about it to kids today, you might as well be discussing the Revolutionary War.
By the way, the torchlight parade we saw in Charlottesville, VA in 2017 was obviously lifted from The Triumph of the Will, except that they didn't use tiki poolside torches in Germany in the 1930s.
Good Luck and Good Trading
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/john-parthenon.jpg340432Mad Hedge Fund Traderhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMad Hedge Fund Trader2023-06-20 09:02:262023-06-20 14:06:06The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or Time to Change Strategy
Below please find subscribers’ Q&A for the April 12 Mad Hedge Fund Trader Global Strategy Webinar, broadcast from Incline Village, CA.
Q: Should I “Sell in May and go Away”
Why wait until May? Up 49% YTD, we’ve already picked the low hanging fruit for 2023. The market is now at the top end of the range in the face of a weakening economy. Maybe there is another 100 points of upside potential in the market versus 400 points of downside risk. The markets have pulled forward not only the first quarter’s performance, but possibly that for the entire year. That’s what an $18 (VIX) is telling you. The game from here is to buy the next bottom in big technology stocks for an explosive second half move up to (SPY) $4,800. This is a short-term call only. Keep all your one- and two-year LEAPS. The market won’t fall enough to justify a round trip in these illiquid positions.
Q: How do I avoid assignment risk with these call spreads and put spreads?
A: You don't want to avoid it. You want to be exercised early on the short leg of your call spreads because it allows you to take 100% of the profits well before expiration day. Some people were getting called on the banking call spreads last week because dividends were imminent and I had to explain how lucky they were. The reason hedge funds call away these options is that they want to buy the stock one, two, or three days before the stocks go ex-dividend, so they can get an immediate payoff and then get rid of the position. In the case of JP Morgan (JPM), they paid out a $1 dividend on Monday last week, so we had a lot of exercises right before that. All you have to do is call your broker (they’re not allowed to do this unless you call them), tell them to exercise your long option to meet your short, and you’re out of the position at max profit and you get the money immediately. So that is the issue. Only stocks that pay dividends or interest get called away, so the high dividend things like the banks or the iShares 20 Plus Year Treasury Bond ETF (TLT) will get called away. Zero dividend stocks almost never get called away unless someone is trying to cover a short in aftermarket hours. My experience is that only 1% of your positions ever get called away.
Q: What are your thoughts on the bottom for United States Natural Gas Fund (UNG) and what will trigger the reversal on it?
A: The bottom is somewhere around here—we’re very close to or even below some of the historic bottoms for natural gas over the last 20 years, which is around $2/MM BTU for natural gas. We could bounce around here for a while. The trigger for the recovery will be a stronger economic recovery in China, which is the world's largest natural gas importer. When the Ukraine War broke out, a lot of that gas got diverted to Germany. Those contracts are now expiring and we’re in a position now where we can start re-exporting that gas to China. They’ll take all we can produce. So that should be positive for Nat Gas. Also, because of the damage caused by the explosion at the Cheniere Energy (LNG) export facilities in Texas, our capacity to exported was impaired for many months. Those are coming back online now. This is why you look at Nat Gas now, and is why I put on a two-year LEAPS instead of a one-year.
Q: Would I go into cash with my favorite stocks?
A: Yes, for the short term. No, for the long term. All of my stocks are great long-term holds, but if you’re day trading or weekly trading or monthly trading, now is not a bad place to go cash so you have lots of dry powder on the next meltdown, especially with 90-day T-bills giving you 5%.
Q: Should we purchase gold bullion as a small percentage of our portfolio?
A: Better to buy gold stocks like SPDR Gold Trust (GLD), VanEck Gold Miners ETF (GDX), and Barrick Gold (GOLD) and Newmont Mining (NEM). Gold bullion is expensive to store, is heavy, takes up a lot of space in your safe deposit box, and it can be stolen—that is the problem with physical assets. I prefer the financial assets, the gold miners, to the underlying metal, which should perform at 4x the rate of actual gold.
Q: Have you changed your December 2024 view on bank stocks?
A: No.
Q: Is it true that Warren Buffet thinks the banking crisis is not over?
A: Yes it is, but it will be confined to smaller banks, which are losing their deposits to larger banks like JP Morgan (JPM), Bank of America (BAC), Citibank (C), and Berkshire Hathaway (BRK/B). It’s the regional banks that are going to have a much more difficult time rolling over real estate loans that are coming due. You have a $1.5 trillion of commercial real estate loans coming due in the next year, and these loans originally were taken out at 0% or 2% or 3%. They’re now going to have to refinance at 7%, 8%, 9% or 10%, and that will create a problem because a lot of their borrowers don’t qualify for their loans anymore. That’s going to be a drag but it’s going to hit the Midwest in one-off situations that can be easily ring-fenced. The net effect of the regional banking crisis is going to be to suck money out of the middle part of the US and park it on the coasts where the big banks are, mostly on the east coast.
Q: Based on your view, the market is due for a short-term correction, would you keep long-term LEAPS on the banks?
A: Absolutely yes. First off the banks have already had their correction, thanks to the regional banking crisis. If you have any downside in banks it will be minimal, the upside is maybe 10x greater than the downside in banks. So yes, you keep your LEAPS, and that’s why you have long-term LEAPS—to take the long-term view and just forget about them, don’t even look at them day to day because they won’t change. The time value on those long-dated options is so great that you get very little day-to-day movement in the actual price.
Q: How are you going to be successful with AI?
A: Well you hire only the absolute best software engineers, which we have here in San Francisco and Silicon Valley. How to invest in AI is much harder; there are no pure AI plays. Microsoft bought the frontrunner for $13 billion, ChatGPT, and any other participants in cutting edge AI are all giant companies where it’s just a small part of their business. However, down the road, like in a year or two or three, you will be invited to buy pure AI spinoffs at tremendously inflated multiples, and that will be the only way to get in. That might be the top for the stock. I’ve only seen this happen like 100 times before, why should AI be any different? The best way to benefit from AI is to use it yourself, just like when Microsoft brought out Office—there was no way to get a pure play on Microsoft Office other than buying Microsoft (MSFT) itself. You did a lot better using the apps for your own business and your own investment styles. The big view on AI is that it will double the value of all existing companies that you already own by cutting costs and improving service value. That part of my Dow 240,000 call.
Q: Do you like Chinese solar stocks?
A: No, China has its own unique political risks which I don’t want to get involved with right now. And even the solar companies in the US are hugely overbought. Great long-term businesses for all of these companies, but the stocks have already discounted a decent chunk of that, there are better fish to fry, like bank stocks for example. The best way to play China is to buy the surrounding emerging countries (EEM) it buys from, not China itself.
Q: I hear that India is the next China. How best to play it?
A: That’s true, India is the next China; but it won’t grow at the peak rate that China did in its best days in the 2000s, which is a growth rate of around 13% a year. India might do half of that, and the simple answer is that China is a dictatorship and could order what they needed to do to max out growth. India is a democracy and can’t do things like arbitrary land seizures or big infrastructure projects and so on. So, that will cut the growth rate in India by half but that’ll still be double America’s long term growth rate, which is a mature economy. And the ETFs to play there in India are (FLIN), the (EPI), and the (INDA). Those are three good index ETFs in India.
Q: Do you expect a 2.5% US Treasury yield by year-end?
A: Yes, and in fact we’ve already done half of that move from the 4.60% yield that we have at the peak last October. So yes, the trend is our friend, and the hard thing to do in the bond market is to get into it, because everybody in the world is now expecting lower interest rates.
Q: What options spreads would you do on the iShares 20 Plus Year Treasury Bond ETF (TLT)?
A: Well here, none, because we’re at a high for the year, but wait for a $5 point selloff and then do $5 points in-the-money. That’s what I do like clockwork, don’t even think about it. If we drop more that $5 I’ll just buy more.
Q: Do you expect Natural Gas (UNG) to be higher by the end of the year for the current price?
A: Absolutely, yes, 8 months is more than enough time to get China online again and buying all the natural gas they can get their hands on unless they invade Taiwan.
Q: Any interesting LEAPS on First Republic Corporation (FRC)?
A: You can buy the July 2023 $22.500$25 vertical bull call debit spreads LEAPS for 60 cents and see it expire at $2.50 in 15 months. With an incredible implied volatility at 177% that’s the furthest option maturity that is trading. I think the better trade here is just to buy the stock. You’re going to be limiting your upside with a LEAPS. With a “BUY” in the stock here, you’re looking at 2, 3, 4 times upside potential in a recovery—and remember this thing’s trading at $14, it used to be trading at $100 a month ago. So, don’t limit your upside with an options trade on something that’s clearly extremely oversold after a 90% down-move in a month. That's a rare situation. Full disclosure: I own (FRC). I bought some at $15 and I bought more at $12, just as a go-crazy trade—but I know the (FRC) bank and the management.
Q: How to buy Natural Gas?
A: You buy (UNG), the ETF, to make it really easy. Just remember you have a -35% one-year contango on that so it’s got to go up more than 35% in a year for you to make money.
Q: Any risk of holding banks and brokers through earnings?
A: I would say not much. If they announce surprise losses, they’ll be small. The first quarter was actually a very good quarter for banks and brokers because they made tons of money on their options business, where the volumes have doubled. And the banking crisis didn’t really kick in during the first quarter, at least from a business point of view. So, I don’t expect downside surprises—if there are, it will be small ones, not worth selling and trying to get back in because you’ll just end up paying a higher price.
Q: Are we building new nuclear plants?
A: No, but we had the first expansion in 7 years of the exiting Vogtle plant in Georgia which added a new reactor. The real demand will come from new designs of nuclear plants and the US modernizing its nuclear weapons designs. All of the nuclear fuel that we bought from the Soviet Union after its collapse 30 years ago has all been used up. It ran all of the nuclear power plants in the US for 20 years. That has run out and the prospects of resupplying from Russia now are zero.
Q: Do you foresee China invading Taiwan?
A: Never going to happen. If China (FXI) does invade Taiwan they 1.) lose their entire foreign food supply from the US and 2.) lose all their trade with the US that they need to earn the money to pay for food from other sources like Australia and Russia. So, never going to happen, but they will keep bluffing all year, as they have done continuously since 1949.
Q: Could commercial real estate be a problem for large insurance companies?
A: Only if the default rate goes up; and again, it’s going to be a case-by-case basis where they invested—is it Manhattan or San Francisco where the vacancy rates are at all-time highs at 30%, or is it the Midwest, where the credit quality has deteriorated the most, and is looking at the higher default rates? What is more likely is that interest rates will fall sharply by 2024 bailing these companies out.
To watch a replay of this webinar with all the charts, bells, whistles, and classic rock music, just log in to www.madhedgefundtrader.com , go to MY ACCOUNT, click on GLOBAL TRADING DISPATCH or TECHNOLOGY LETTER then WEBINARS, and all the webinars from the last 12 years are there in all their glory.
Good Luck and Stay Healthy,
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png00Mad Hedge Fund Traderhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMad Hedge Fund Trader2023-03-24 09:04:552023-03-24 10:35:00March 24, 2023
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