I am writing this letter in a Ukrainian army truck on the banks of the Black Sea right where the Dnieper River flows in. Crimea is 20 miles across the water. We just watched an American HIMERS missile destroy a Russian facility there and the black smoke is billowing upward.
We’ve been stuck here at this army checkpoint for two hours on this gorgeous autumn day so they can check my papers and decide if I’m a Russian spy. I definitely don’t look like your average Ukrainian. What better time to knock a newsletter? After I finished my letter I took a nap.
I have to admit I have been somewhat remiss in following the market the past week.
Whenever I had the choice of checking my stock market app or Look Out Ukraine, which tracks incoming Russian missiles, the latter usually won out. Not always, but usually. Then it’s on to the next app, which gives the location of the nearest bomb shelter.
Some people go to the beach for vacations, while I choose war zones. Different strokes for different folks, I guess. Maybe I’m trying to relive my long-lost youth as a war correspondent in Southeast Asia all those years ago.
It’s Becoming increasingly obvious to all that the Fed is done raising interest rates. The only question is how long they will remain at this elevated level. Then year US Treasury yields, which hit a 17-year high of 4.80% last week, might visit 5.0% and then that’s it.
I must apologize to owners of the (TLT) October $89-$92 vertical bear put spread. I should have sent out a trade alert to take profits on Thursday during the bond market meltdown when the price hit $2.92. I know it hit this price because several followers emailed me to say thanks for the trade.
But I was pinned down by Russian fire on the west bank of the Dnieper River and couldn’t escape until after nightfall. Yes, I know, excuses, excuses.
Technical analysts are having a field day with the (SPY) seemingly trapped between the 50 and 200-day moving averages in a narrowing range. Something big is going to happen eventually.
Indexes could get resolved to the upside when big tech earnings come out the week of October 28, which are expected to be great. It could also be resolved to the downside on November 17 when the House of Representatives shuts down the US government.
Maybe this is why markets are going nowhere. In any case, the disaster in the Middle East is blotting out all other news.
Another matter on which traders increasingly agree is that big tech will lead any upside breakout. A sure sign is that they have been moving sideways for the last 2 1/2 months while interest rates-sensitive sectors have been getting slaughtered. Indeed, Alphabet (GOOGL) is down only 3% from its high for the year, a huge AI winner.
Look no further than Microsoft (MSFT), which trades at only 28.2 times earnings. The company expects 16.2% annual growth for the next three years and is the best growth and AI play out there with its ownership of OpenAI. That’s boosting Mr. Softy’s Azure cloud business enormously.
So far in August, we are up +2.23%. My 2023 year-to-date performance is still at an eye-popping +63.03%. The S&P 500 (SPY) is up +13.42% so far in 2023. My trailing one-year return reached +xx% versus +xx% for the S&P 500.
That brings my 15-year total return to +660.22%. My average annualized return has recovered to +47.71%, another new high, some 2.62 times the S&P 500 over the same period.
Some 44 of my 49 trades this year have been profitable.
It’s a Black Swan a Week that is conspiring to keep markets trapped in narrow ranges. The natural tendency seems to be up into a yearend rally, but they keep getting slammed by shocks, like a government shutdown, a leaderless house, and the Middle East War. The trade has been long big tech, long oil, and short small tech and bonds, of which Mad Hedge caught all four through its various services.
The Middle East Descends on Wall Street, and so far, the damage is limited to a few big techs. Oil (USO) is up 3% and gold caught a bid as well. If this develops into a major regional war expect more downside. It paid to buy every geopolitical crisis over the last 30 years.
Dollar (UUP) Soars on Mid East Chaos, as it catches its traditional flight to safety bid. We could be approaching a top here.
IMF Hikes US Growth Forecast. The International Monetary Fund raised its U.S. growth projection for this year by 0.3 percentage points compared with its July update, to 2.1%. It lowered its euro zone forecast by 0.2 percentage points, to 0.7%. China gets a downgrade too. For the US, 2024 is looking better and better.
The Producer Price Index Jumps 0.5%, more than expected. Markets didn’t really care. Gasoline as the biggest gainer.
The Consumer Price Index Explodes to 3.7%, Inflation is still transitory after over 3 years. Strip out food and energy and core inflation is over 4% year over year. The big question moving into 2024 is if the US consumer can handle these uncontrollable price rises and coalesce a Democratic government that parades around prices not going up less than before. The Fed hasn’t budged from their 2% inflation target, but they are taking their sweet time to get there.
JP Morgan (JPM) Announced Record Earnings, boosting the stock by 5%. With high rates, net interest income is the big winner. Reserves for loan losses were also cut. But (JPM) on dips.
Oil (USO) Jumps 4%, on a tightening of US sanctions against Russia. The goal is to deprive Russia of excess profits used to fund its war against Ukraine. Two foreign-flagged ships were barred from moving their cargo.
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, October 16, at 2:30 PM EST, the New York State Manufacturing Index is out.
On Tuesday, October 17 at 2:30 PM, the US Retail Sales are released.
On Wednesday, October 18 at 2:30 PM, the US Building Permits are published.
On Thursday, October 19 at 8:30 AM, the Weekly Jobless Claims are announced. We also get Existing Home Sales.
On Friday, October 20 at 2:00 PM the Baker Hughes Rig Count is printed.
As for me, I’ll record the Story of John Thomas’s Wild Ride, which took place only last Thursday.
We had just finished delivering the last of our food bags to starving peasants in the Kherson region, which is a 12-hour train ride east of Kiev. I received maybe 100 kisses and hugs from aging babushkas who had been cut off from their food supply for months. Most of their homes had been destroyed by Russian fire and they were living in basements.
They said, “Thank you.” I replied, “Stay strong.” They cried.
Then my army escort, a major who we called “Vitally”, got a call. A Russian mortar was harassing Kerson with intermittent fire inflicting casualties, and they were unable to spot it. Would we be willing to act as a decoy and draw fire?
The major looked at me to ask permission. I was on a humanitarian mission and had no obligation to engage in combat. What did I think?
I did the math. A mortar is a notoriously inaccurate weapon, plus we’d be doing at least 80 miles an hour. I decided it was more likely that I win the California lottery than get hit. So I told the major “Sure, why not.” I looked at the rest of my team and they agreed wholeheartedly. So, we headed down to the waterfront in Kherson.
The city has this long street which follows the banks of the Dnieper River. The Russian Army occupies the eastern bank and are well fortified. Kherson was completely deserted without a person or vehicle in sight. It was like a ghost town. Every statue in town had been stolen when the Russians retreated. Once we turned north, we poured on the gas.
We raced along the river as fast as the car would go, weaving left and right to avoid shell craters in the road. Occasionally we hit one and our heads bumped up against the ceiling. We sped through every red light. It was the thrill of a lifetime!
As we approached the bridge over the Dnieper River, which had already been blown up, sure enough, a mortar shell went sailing right overhead, hitting a building 100 yards to our left. Then we screeched to a halt, did a rapid 180, and tore off in the opposite direction. The Ukrainian Army’s 155 mm shells fired over our heads seconds later.
A minute later, we found a bomb shelter and jammed on the brakes. As we piled out of the car the air raid sirens were wailing. Once we got inside, we all burst into laughter. We couldn’t believe what we had just gotten away with.
And I got the whole thing on video.
Sitting in the bomb shelter I felt a stinging in my right hip. I looked down to find an AK 47 7.62mm copper jacketed bullet embedded in my flak jacket about an inch from the edge. When we left the bomb shelter, I inspected the car and sure enough, we had been sprayed with machine gun fire from across the river (see picture below).
It was a lucky hit. The bullet lost much of its velocity crossing the river and the sheet metal of the car slowed it down even further. The Kevlar bulletproof vest did its job. I got away with only a nice bruise.
As we drove out of town the major received another call. Thanks to our effort the mortar had been silenced. He gave me a big smile and a thumbs-up.
At the edge of town, we stopped for a victory photo at the city gates. That’s my team holding the American flag. The major has a scarf covering his face to keep his identity secret.
The major told me I was the bravest man he ever met. Then he turned and started walking back into Kherson.
If you want to watch the video of John Thomas’s Wild Ride please tune into my biweekly webinar on Wednesday, October 18 at 12:00 noon EST.
Stay Healthy,
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader