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Green light on BABA..The US backing off from delisting the three Chinese telecoms off the US markets is huge...Just huge.
Bulls arrive this AM

JD up
BABA up...

Jack Ma hasn't been taken in to custody ...This shit is nuts with the CCP..I'd never be involved without the market being what it is in China

Good news!!
 

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Good news!!


Man, the past mouth hasn't been a good time holding BABA, I'll hold long I'm not as worried this AM as I've been.
Well done buying where you did last CB ... wasn't it @ 221ish.?
More bumps coming but the headwinds lessened today at least form the US side and sorta from the CCP.

Sounds like Manuchin played a key roll glueing this back together...
 

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Man, the past mouth hasn't been a good time holding BABA, I'll hold long I'm not as worried this AM as I've been.
Well done buying where you did last CB ... wasn't it @ 221ish.?
More bumps coming but the headwinds lessened today at least form the US side and sorta from the CCP.

Sounds like Manuchin played a key roll glueing this back together...

I added a few shares when it hit $213. My dollar cost average is $253, so I'm still down a bit.
 

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Done for the day I think...I've played the vix two or three times this year but today isn't lining up unfortunately ...
Tomorrow could be another shot...Looking for some amount of put and bull spreads calls/ Option action going in to the 6th..But maybe not if the Georgia election is called within a reasonable amount of time. It'll be an interesting few days coming up.

I'm not sure what MH's point is the exploding Chinese middle class is key...148 billion people in China is a mind bender IMO





China’s middle class is on fire. According to a study by consulting firm McKinsey & Company, 76 percent of China’s urban population will be considered middle class by 2022. That’s defined as urban households that earn US$9,000 – US$34,000 a year. (That might not sound like a lot, but adjusted for prices, it delivers a roughly comparable “middle class” existence to other countries.) In 2000, just 4 percent of the urban population was considered middle class.


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Global Market Comments
January 5, 2021
Fiat Lux

Featured Trade:
(NOTICE TO MILITARY SUBSCRIBERS),
(CHINA’S COMING DEMOGRAPHIC NIGHTMARE)

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Notice to Military Subscribers

To the dozens of subscribers in Afghanistan, Somalia, Iraq, and the surrounding ships at sea, thank you for your service!I think it is very wise to use your free time to read my letter and learn about financial markets in preparation for an entry into the financial services when you muster out.
Nobody is going to call you a baby killer and shun you, as they did when I returned from Southeast Asia four decades ago. In fact, employers have been given fantastic tax breaks and other incentives to hire you.
I have but one request. No more subscriptions with .mil addresses, please. The Defense Department, the CIA, the NSA, Homeland Security, and the FBI do not look kindly on private newsletters entering the military network, even the investment kind.
If you think civilian spam filters are tough, watch out for the military kind! And no, I promise that there are no secret messages embedded with the stock tips. “BUY” really does mean “BUY.” “Sell” means “Sell” too.
If I did not know the higher-ups at these agencies, as well as the Joint Chiefs of Staff, I might be bouncing off the walls in a cell at Guantanamo by now wearing an orange jumpsuit.
It also helps that many of the mid-level officers at these organizations have made a fortune with their meager government retirement funds following my advice. All I can say is that if the Baghdad Stock Exchange ever becomes liquid, I'm going to own it.
Where would you guess the greatest concentration of readers The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader is found? New York? Nope. London? Wrong. Chicago? Not even close. Try a ten-mile radius centered on Langley, Virginia, by a large margin.
The funny thing is, half of the subscribing names coming in are Russian. I haven't quite figured that one out yet. Did we hire the entire KGB at the end of the cold war? If we did, it was a great move. Those guys were good. That includes you, Yuri.
So, keep up the good work, and fight the good fight. But please, only subscribe to my letter with personal Gmail, Yahoo, or Hotmail addresses. That way my life can become a lot more boring.
Oh, and by the way, Langley, you're behind on your bill. Please pay up, pronto, and I don't want to hear whining about any damn budget cuts!

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I Want My Mad Hedge Fund Trader!



China's Coming Demographic Nightmare

Now that China has ended its “One Child” policy, it is time to assess its long-term costs.Adopted 33 years ago, there are now 32 million more boys under the age of 20 than girls.

Large scale interference with the natural male:female ratio has been tracked with some fascination by demographers for years and is constantly generating unintended consequences.

Until early in the last century, starving rural mothers abandoned unwanted female newborns in the hills to be taken away by “spirits.”

Today, pregnant women resort to the modern-day equivalent by getting ultrasounds and undergoing abortions when they learn they are carrying girls.

Millions of children are “little emperors,” spoiled male-only children who have been raised to expect the world to revolve around them.

The resulting shortage of women has led to an epidemic of “bride kidnapping” in surrounding countries. Stealing of male children is widespread in Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos, and Mongolia.

The end result has been a barbell shaped demographic curve unlike that seen in any other country. The Beijing government says the program has succeeded in bringing the fertility rate from 3.0 down to 1.8, well below the 2.1 replacement rate.

As a result, the Middle Kingdom's population today is only 1.2 billion instead of the 1.6 billion it would have been.

Political scientists have long speculated that an excess of young men would lead to more bellicose foreign policies by the Middle Kingdom. But so far the choice has been for commerce, to the detriment of America's trade balance and Internet security.

In practice, the one-child policy has only been applied to those who live in cities or have government jobs. That is about two-thirds of the population.

On my last trip to China I spent a weekend walking around Shenzhen city parks. The locals doted over their single children, while visitors from the countryside played games with their three, four, or five children. The contrast couldn’t have been more bizarre.

Economists now wonder if the practice will also understate China's long-term growth rate. Parents with boys tend to be bigger savers, so they can help sons with the initial big-ticket items in life, like an education, homes, and even cars.

The end game for this policy has to be the Japan disease; a huge population of senior citizens with insufficient numbers of young workers to support them. The markets won't ignore this.

In the latest round of reforms announced by the Chinese government was the demise of the one-child policy. But no matter how hard you try, you can’t change the number of people born 30 years ago.

The boomerang effects of this policy could last for centuries.


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Quote of the Day

"Brains are the new tonsils. Thanks to the Internet, you don't have to know anything anymore," said comedian Paul Riser.
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Wow, the 'one child' policy is going to create a problem for them going forward. Imagine being a young man trying to just get laid - you'd have some serious competition!
 

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Wow, the 'one child' policy is going to create a problem for them going forward. Imagine being a young man trying to just get laid - you'd have some serious competition!


hahahaha..Yeah..I'm investing in Chinese "hand job" provider companies going forward.

https://finance.yahoo.com/quote/MNKKQ/

The fun is over with MNKKQ ..The company keeps saying the stock will be worthless eventually and the volume is also leaving with that statement..
Sadly no more 35% days that I feel safe messing with....volume being the main problem IE getting out.

RIP MNKKQ..what a company in its day..unreal.
 

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New dispatch and fat today.




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Global Market Comments
January 6, 2021
Fiat Lux
2021 Annual Asset Class Review
A Global Vision
FOR PAID SUBSCRIBERS ONLY
Featured Trades:
(SPX), (QQQ), (XLF), (XLE), (XLY),
(TLT), (TBT), (JNK), (PHB), (HYG), (PCY), (MUB), (HCP)
(FXE), (EUO), (FXC), (FXA), (YCS), (FXY), (CYB)
(BHP), (FCX), (VALE),
(AMLP), (USO), (UNG),
(GLD), (GDX), (SLV), (ITB), (LEN), (KBH), (PHM)

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2021 Annual Asset Class Review

I am once again writing this report from a first-class sleeping cabin on Amtrak’s legendary California Zephyr.
By day, I have two comfortable seats facing each other next to a panoramic window. At night, they fold into two bunk beds, a single and a double. There is a shower, but only Houdini could navigate it.

I am anything but Houdini, so I go downstairs to use the larger public hot showers. They are divine.


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We are now pulling away from Chicago’s Union Station, leaving its hurried commuters, buskers, panhandlers, and majestic great halls behind. I love this building as a monument to American exceptionalism.

I am headed for Emeryville, California, just across the bay from San Francisco, some 2,121.6 miles away. That gives me only 56 hours to complete this report.

I tip my porter, Raymond, $100 in advance to make sure everything goes well during the long adventure and to keep me up-to-date with the onboard gossip.

The rolling and pitching of the car is causing my fingers to dance all over the keyboard. Microsoft’s Spellchecker can catch most of the mistakes, but not all of them.


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As both broadband and cell phone coverage are unavailable along most of the route, I have to rely on frenzied Internet searches during stops at major stations along the way to Google obscure data points and download the latest charts.

You know those cool maps in the Verizon stores that show the vast coverage of their cell phone networks? They are complete BS.

Who knew that 95% of America is off the grid? That explains so much about our country today.

I have posted many of my better photos from the trip below, although there is only so much you can do from a moving train and an iPhone 12 Pro.

After making the rounds with strategists, portfolio managers, and hedge fund traders in the run-up to this trip, I can confirm that 2020 was one of the most challenging for careers lasting 30, 40, or 50 years.

This was the year that EVERYTHING crashed, then posted heroic recoveries. Comparisons with 2008, 1999, and 1929 were frequently made. It truly was a year of extremes.

My own 66.64% return for last year is the best in the 13-year history of the Mad Hedge Fund Trader, nearly ten times the Dow Average performance of 7.3%. Yet, even during the darkest days of the March bottom, when the Dow was down 40%, we were never down more than 12%.

That took my eleven-year average annualized return up to an eye-popping 38.18%.

If you think I spend too much time absorbing conspiracy theories from the Internet, let me give you a list of the challenges I see financial markets are facing in the coming year:


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The Ten Key Variables for 2020

1) Will the Covid-19 vaccine work, or will new mutations render it useless?
2) When will the pandemic peak, at 500,000 or 1 million deaths?
3) Will there be a double dip recession in Q1, or will the economy keep powering on?
4) Will the Democrats get control of the Senate through the Georgia Senate races, paving the way for more government spending?
5) Will technology stocks continue to dominate, or will domestic recovery stocks take over for good?
6) How long will the commodities boom continue?
7) Is the US dollar dead for good or are we approaching a bottom?
8) How long can the Fed artificially support the bond market, or is a crash imminent?
9) Has international trade been permanently impaired or will it recover?
10) Is oil seeing a dead cat bounce or is this a sustainable recovery?


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The Thumbnail Portfolio

Equities – buy dips
Bonds – sell rallies
Foreign Currencies – buy dips
Commodities – buy dips
Precious Metals – buy dips
Energy – stand aside
Real Estate – buy dips


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1) The Economy – The Roaring Twenties is Here
With the worst economic whipsaw in American history taking place in 2020, one might be hesitant about making forecasts for 2021. However, I shall press onward.

Last year saw a horrific 32.8% drawdown in Q2 GDP followed by an explosive 33.4% growth in Q3. It was the perfect “V” shaped recovery. However, we won’t see 2019 GDP levels until 2022, so there is plenty of growth to come, both nationally and on an individual company basis.

The reopening of the economy will bring us more double-digit growth after a Q1 slowdown mired by a peaking pandemic and delayed stimulus spending.

But it won’t be the same economy.

I figured out early that the pandemic was instantly moving us ten years into the future, placing a turbocharger on all existing trends. The economy is digitized at a rate that it has never seen before at the expense of mass closings of shopping malls and other old-line business models.

This will continue.

The online economy, working at home, and Zoom meetings are here to stay. You can’t get the genie back into the bottle. That has permanently increased the profitability of all the benefiting industries, while many others will never come back. As a result, the investment portfolio you should own in the future will look nothing like the one you had in the past. It’s not your father’s stock market.

It all sets out a base for an economic boom that could extend for another decade. Yes, Virginia, the Roaring Twenties are here. Better learn that Charleston!

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[h=3]A Rocky Mountain Moose Family[/h] 2) Equities (SPX), (QQQ), (IWM) (AAPL), (XLF), (BAC)
Stocks will finish much higher in 2021, and with much less volatility. I doubt we see pullbacks of more than 10%. The entire gain in stocks last year came from a massive expansion in earnings multiples. That could continue.

S&P 500 earnings per share will grow in 2021 from the current $180 per share to $200. If we increase the market earnings multiple from the current 18X to 22X, that brings us a combined gain in stock prices of 30%. That will take the (SPX) from a current $3,754 to $4,860. If that sounds high, remember that tech stocks reached 100X multiples in 2000. Many already have.

Why are earnings multiples headed to twenty-year highs? Because the pandemic has greatly increased the productivity of American companies, boosting their profitability and making them vastly more valuable.

Stocks also will rally from here because they are STILL receiving the greatest monetary stimulus in history, some $120 billion a month from the Fed alone, and this is a global trend. And Federal Reserve governor Jay Powell has promised NOT to raise interest rates from near zero for three years. Most of the excess cash is going into the stock market, either directly or indirectly.

Finally, the stock buybacks that drove the market from 2010 to 2019 but were frozen in 2020 will boisterously resume in 2021, exceeding $1 trillion a year.

And here’s the part you don’t want to hear. When QE ends a few years down the road and interest rates rise, the bull market in stocks will take a break. That’s when you get your cut churning 20% correction. I’ll give you the heads up right before that happens.

Technology stocks will continue their relentless rise, although less than at last year’s torrid pace. Love them or hate them, big tech accounts for 27% of stock market capitalization but 50% of US profits. It's why Willie Sutton robbed banks. That is where the money is.

However, in 2021, they will be joined by domestic recovery stocks, such as banks, online financials, constructions, commodities, delivery companies, hotels, airlines, and railroads. This, a barbell portfolio split between the two groups, will be the most effective strategy in 2021.

You can add on Biotech and Healthcare companies as a further diversification, which are entering a golden age of their own.

Passive index investing is over. This year, portfolio managers are going to have to earn their crust of bread through perfect market timing, sector selection, and individual name picking. Good luck with that. But then, that’s why you read this newsletter. I expect the blockbuster 2020 rally to continue into 2021. After that, I expect a correction. Piece of cake!


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[h=3]Frozen Headwaters of the Colorado River
[/h]3) Bonds (TLT), (TBT), (JNK), (PHB), (HYG), (MUB), (LQD)
Amtrak needs to fill every seat in the dining car to get everyone fed on time, so you never know who you will share a table with for breakfast, lunch, and dinner.

There was the Vietnam Vet Phantom Jet Pilot who now refused to fly because he was treated so badly at airports. A young couple desperately eloping from Omaha could only afford seats as far as Salt Lake City. After they sat up all night, I paid for their breakfast.

A retired British couple was circumnavigating the entire US in a month on a “See America Pass.” Mennonites returning home by train because their religion forbade automobiles or airplanes.

The national debt ballooned to an eye-popping $28 trillion in 2020, a gain of an incredible $5 trillion and a post-World War II record. Yet, as long as global central banks are flooding the money supply with trillions of dollars in liquidity, bonds will not fall in value too dramatically. I’m expecting a slow grind down in prices and up in yields.

With a stable Fed, the best-case scenario is that the ten-year Treasury bond yield (TLT) will rise from 0.95% to 1.25% in 2021, and the worst case is they rise all the way up to 2.00%. That would take the price of the (TLT) down from $158 to $136. Remove any of that record liquidity from the system sooner than expected, and the bond market crashes, causing interest rates to soar and prices to crater.

It’s not impossible. We now have a democratic president and a republican Fed governor. Suffice it to say that all risks and surprises in the bond market are overwhelmingly to the downside.

What is different this year is that the US dollar is in free fall. That will dampen foreign demand for US debt, about half of the total.

Bond investors today get an unbelievably bad deal. If they hang on to the longer maturities, they will get back only 90 cents worth of purchasing power at maturity for every dollar they invest a decade down the road, at best.


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A Visit to the 19[SUP]th[/SUP] Century
4) Foreign Currencies (FXE), (EUO), (FXC), (FXA), (YCS), (FXY), (CYB)
Throughout human history, whenever a country’s borrowing exceeded its GDP, its currency collapsed. It happened to the Roman Empire, Bourbon France, Weimer Germany, post-colonial Great Britain, and now the US. Quite simply, whenever you print more of a currency, it becomes less valuable.

The national debt just exploded from $23 trillion to $28 trillion in 2020, and we are in store for $32 trillion in a year or 152% of the US GDP of $21 trillion. How many people have noticed?

Check out your charts and you’ll see that the US dollar started to depreciate while the Japanese yen and Euro started to gain, after we topped the 100% mark. This greenback weakness could continue for a decade.

There is even more trouble.

I have pounded away at you for years that interest rate differentials are far and away the biggest decider of the direction in currencies.

This year will prove that concept once again.

With American overnight rates now at 0.25% and ten-year Treasury bonds at 0.92%, the US has the highest interest rates of any major industrialized economy with the exception of China. This means that the US will be the last to raise interest rates from here.

Compounding the problem is that a weak dollar begets selling from foreign investors. The Chinese government, the world’s largest buyer of government bonds, have been boycotting US Treasuries for three years now. Maybe it’s something the president said? They are in a mood to do so anyway, as they see a chronically high US trade deficit as a burgeoning threat to the value of the greenback.

So, the dollar will continue weak against all major currencies, especially the Japanese yen (FXY), the Australian (FXA), and Euro (FXE).

This explains the recent success with points all weak dollar plays, including emerging markets (EEM), commodities (FCX), and precious metals (GLD).

You can take that to the bank!


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5) Commodities (FCX), (VALE), (DBA)
The global synchronized economic recovery now in play can mean only one thing, and that is sustainably higher commodity prices.

Industrial commodities, like copper and iron ore, have just posted their best years in a decade, the red metal rising by an eye-popping 87% off of the March market bottom.

The heady days of the 2011 commodity bubble top are now in play. That is as investors are already front running that move, loading the boat with Freeport McMoRan (FCX), US Steel (X), and BHP Group (BHP).

Now that this sector is convinced of a permanently weak US dollar and higher inflation, it is taking off like a scalded chimp.

China will still demand prodigious amounts of imported commodities, but not as much as in the past. Much of the country has seen its infrastructure build out, and it is turning from a heavy industrial to a service-based economy, like the US. Miners are keeping a sharp eye on India as the next major commodity consumer.

The great thing about commodities is that it takes a decade to bring new supply online, unlike stocks and bonds, which can merely be created by an entry in an excel spreadsheet. As a result, they always run far higher than you can imagine.

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[h=3]Snow Angel on the Continental Divide[/h] 6) Energy (DIG), (RIG), (USO), (DUG), (UNG), (USO), (XLE), (AMLP)
One of my best predictions of 2020 was that energy would be a complete disaster, and so it was. In fact, energy has been a horrific investment for the last 20 years. I never thought I’d see negative oil prices in the futures market, but we got them in April.

The industry invested trillions in infrastructure in a grand plan to export natural gas to China. Just as it was coming onstream, the president declared a trade war against China, its principal customer. Then the pandemic collapsed the global economy.

So, where does that leave us for 2021?

A lot of people have been piling into energy lately on the hope that happy days are here again.

I view carbon-based energy companies as the next generation of buggy whip makers. No matter how green the seven sisters talk, we are moving to an all-alternative energy economy over the next 20 years. That means you should sell energy NOW. Tesla (TSLA) shares rocketing from $3.30 to $600 in a decade tells you as much.

I believe what we are seeing is a lot of buying on technicals, on cheap prices, and of dogs of the Dow. No one is talking about an embedded structural oversupply of oil that will never be unwound.

Saudi Arabia said as much with the flotation of Saudi Aramco, which has a monopoly on oil production in the kingdom. After a three-year effort, they were only able to shift 1.5% of the company in a local stock exchange listing. It was one of the greatest accounting frauds in history. Only global index funds that HAD to buy shares picked it up. When Saudi Arabia wants to get out of the oil business, so should you.

OPEC Plus engineered a modest 500,000 production increase at their December Vienna meeting, and that has helped prices rise 10%. It is no more than a band-aid on a great gaping wound.

And now, ESG investing has banned new money from going into energy by most of the investment community. Like tobacco, that will leave a permanently cheap energy sector to a handful of niche players.

Use this as your last chance to get out at a decent price.

Our train has moved over to a siding to permit a freight train to pass, as it has priority on the Amtrak system.

Three Burlington Northern engines are heaving to pull over 100 black, spanking brand-new tank cars, each carrying 30,000 gallons of oil from the fracking fields in North Dakota.

There is another tank car train right behind it. No wonder Warren Buffett tap dances to work every day, as he owns the railroad.

We are also seeing relentless improvements on the energy conservation front with more electric vehicles, high mileage conventional cars, and newly efficient buildings. Electric cars are now 4% of US car sales and that could rise to 25% by 2025. Conventional Energy doesn’t fit anywhere in this industry.

In addition, the incoming administration is distinctly pro-environment and anti-energy and could deep six a 100-year accumulation of oil and gas subsidies in the next tax bill. The energy industry now carries far more political risk than the drug industry, once an unimaginable thought.

Any one of these inputs is miniscule on its own. But, add them all together, and you have a game-changer, a new paradigm.

We will never see $100/barrel crude again. The last peak in oil prices is the last one we ever see. The word is that leasing companies will stop offering five-year agreements in five years because cars with internal combustion engines will become worthless by then.

As a result, I think I will stand aside from the energy industry in 2021, and maybe, forever. You should too.


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7) Precious Metals (GLD), (DGP), (SLV), (PPTL), (PALL)
The train has added extra engines at Denver, so now we may begin the long laboring climb up the Eastern slope of the Rocky Mountains.

On a steep curve, we pass along an antiquated freight train of hopper cars filled with large boulders.

The porter tells me this train is welded to the tracks to create a windbreak. Once, a gust howled out of the pass so swiftly that it blew a passenger train over on to its side.

In the snow-filled canyons, we sight a family of three moose, a huge herd of elk, and another group of wild mustangs. The engineer informs us that a rare bald eagle is flying along the left side of the train. It’s a good omen for the coming year.

We also see countless abandoned 19[SUP]th[/SUP] century gold mines and the broken-down wooden trestles leading to them, relics of previous precious metals booms. So, it is timely here to speak about the future of precious metals.

Gold (GLD) brought in a respectable 21% return in 2020, its best performance in ten years. It’s not as much as many hot stocks, but better than a poke in the eye with a sharp stick.

As long as the world was clamoring for paper assets like stocks, gold was just another shiny rock. After all, who needs an insurance policy if you are going to live forever?

But the long-term bull case is still there. Gold is not dead; it is just resting.

If you forgot to buy gold at $35, $300, or $800, there is another entry point up here at $1,800 for those who, so far, have missed the gravy train.

To a certain extent, the belief that high interest rates are bad for gold is a myth. Wealth creation is a far bigger driver, and we have had plenty of that lately. Since the March bottom, stock has gained some $12.6 trillion in value, a meteoric 70% gain. To see what I mean, take a look at a gold chart for the 1970s when interest rates were going through the roof.

Remember, this is the asset class that takes the escalator up and the elevator down, and sometimes the window.

If the institutional world devotes just 5% of their assets to a weighting in gold, and an emerging market central bank bidding war for gold reserves continues, it has to fly to at least $2,300, the inflation-adjusted all-time high, or more.

This is why emerging market central banks step in as large buyers every time we probe lower prices. China and India emerged as major buyers of gold in the final quarters of 2020.

They were joined by Russia, which was looking for non-dollar investments to dodge US economic and banking sanctions.

That means it’s just a matter of time before gold breaks out to a new all-time high, above $2,080 an ounce. ETF players can look at the 1X (GLD) or the 2X leveraged gold (DGP).

I would also be using the next bout of weakness to pick up the high beta, more volatile precious metal, silver (SLV), which I think could rise from the present $18 and hit $50 once more, and eventually $100. Next year will see the production of one million electric cars and 500,000 solar panels and all of them require some amount of silver.

The turbocharger for gold will hit sometime in 2021 with the return of inflation. Hello stagflation, it’s been a long time.


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[h=3]Would You Believe This is a Blue State?
[/h]8) Real Estate (ITB), (LEN)
The majestic snow-covered Rocky Mountains are behind me. There is now a paucity of scenery, with the endless ocean of sagebrush and salt flats of Northern Nevada outside my window, so there is nothing else to do but write.

My apologies in advance to readers in Wells, Elko, Battle Mountain, and Winnemucca, Nevada.

It is a route long traversed by roving banks of Indians, itinerant fur traders, the Pony Express, my own immigrant forebearers in wagon trains, the transcontinental railroad, the Lincoln Highway, and finally US Interstate 80, which was built for the 1960 Winter Olympics at Squaw Valley.

Passing by shantytowns and the forlorn communities of the high desert, I am prompted to comment on the state of the US real estate market.

There is no doubt a long-term bull market in real estate is underway.

The good news is that we will not see a 2008 repeat when home values cratered by 50%-70%. There is just not enough leverage in the system yet to do any real damage. That has gone elsewhere, like in exchange traded funds, leveraged ETFs, Bitcoin, and SPACs. You can thank Dodd/Frank for that, which imposed capital rules so strict that it is now almost impossible for banks to commit suicide.

You are not going to see any serious damage in a market where there is a generational structural shortage of supply, as with housing.

We are probably ten years into an 18-year run at the next peak in 2028.

There are only three numbers you need to know in the housing market for the next 20 years: there are 80 million baby boomers, 65 million Generation Xer’s who follow them, and 86 million in the generation after that, the Millennials.

The boomers have been unloading dwellings to the Gen Xer’s since prices peaked in 2007. But there is not enough of the latter, and three decades of falling real incomes mean that they only earn a fraction of what their parents made. That’s what caused the financial crisis.

If they have prospered, banks won’t lend to them. Brokers used to say that their market was all about “location, location, location.” Now it is “financing, financing, financing.” Imminent deregulation is about to deep six that problem.

There is a happy ending to this story.

Millennials now aged 25-40 are already starting to kick in as the dominant buyers in the market. They are transitioning from 30% to 70% of all new buyers of homes.

The Great Millennial Migration to the suburbs has just begun. So has the migration from the coast to the American heartland. Personally, I like Reno, Nevada.

As a result, the price of single-family homes should rocket tenfold during the 2020s, as they did during the 1970s and the 1990s when similar demographic forces were at play.

This will happen in the context of a coming labor shortfall, soaring wages, and rising standards of living.

Rising rents are accelerating this trend. Renters now pay 35% of their gross income, compared to only 18% for owners, and less, when multiple deductions and tax subsidies are taken into account.

Remember, too, that the US will not have built any new houses in large numbers in 12 years. The 50% of small homebuilders that went under during the crash aren’t building new homes today.

We are still operating at only a half of the peak rate. Thanks to the Great Recession, the construction of five million new homes has gone missing in action.

That makes a home purchase now particularly attractive for the long term, to live in, and not to speculate with.

You will boast to your grandchildren how little you paid for your house, as my grandparents once did to me ($3,000 for a four-bedroom brownstone in Brooklyn in 1922), or I do to my kids ($180,000 for a two-bedroom in Upper East Side Manhattan high rise with a great view of the Empire State Building in 1983).

That means the major homebuilders like Lenar (LEN), Pulte Homes (PHM), and KB Homes (KBH) are a buy on the dip.

Quite honestly, of all the asset classes mentioned in this report, purchasing your abode is probably the single best investment you can make now.

If you borrow at a 2.8% 30-year fixed rate, and the long-term inflation rate is 3%, then, over time, you will get your house for free.

How hard is that to figure out?

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[h=3]Crossing the Bridge to Home Sweet Home[/h]
9) Postscript
We have pulled into the station at Truckee in the midst of a howling blizzard.

My loyal staff has made the ten-mile trek from my beachfront estate at Incline Village to welcome me to California with a couple of hot breakfast burritos and a chilled bottle of Dom Perignon Champagne, which has been resting in a nearby snowbank. I am thankfully spared from taking my last meal with Amtrak.

john-truckee.jpg

After that, it was over legendary Donner Pass, and then all downhill from the Sierras, across the Central Valley, and into the Sacramento River Delta.

Well, that’s all for now. We’ve just passed what left of the Pacific mothball fleet moored near the Benicia Bridge (2,000 ships down to six in 50 years). The pressure increase caused by a 7,200-foot descent from Donner Pass has crushed my plastic water bottle. Nice science experiment!

The Golden Gate Bridge and the soaring spire of Salesforce Tower are just around the next bend across San Francisco Bay.

A storm has blown through, leaving the air crystal clear and the bay as flat as glass. It is time for me to unplug my Macbook Pro and iPhone 12 Pro, pick up my various adapters, and pack up.

We arrive in Emeryville 45 minutes early. With any luck, I can squeeze in a ten-mile night hike up Grizzly Peak and still get home in time to watch the ball drop in New York’s Times Square.

I reach the ridge just in time to catch a spectacular pastel sunset over the Pacific Ocean. The omens are there. It is going to be another good year.

I’ll shoot you a Trade Alert whenever I see a window open at a sweet spot on any of the dozens of trades described above.

Good luck and good trading in 2021!

John Thomas
The Mad Hedge Fund Trader


John-Thomas.jpg
[h=2]The Omens Are Good for 2021![/h]​


Quote of the Day

"We underestimated the negative impact of the slowdown in the housing market, and we may be underestimating the tailwind in its recovery," said Uwe Mark Ruttke of Merrill Lynch, the top financial advisor in Colorado.



 

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LISTEN TO TODAY'S PODCAST AVAILABLE AT 8AM ON:
Top News
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Democrat Raphael Warnock, a senior pastor at the historic Black church Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta, has defeated Republican incumbent Sen. Kelly Loeffler in the Georgia Senate runoff elections, according to the Associated Press. The victory puts the Senate 50-49 in favor of the GOP, but Democrats could flip control of the chamber if Jon Ossoff prevails over incumbent David Perdue (that race remains too close to call). Vice President-elect Kamala Harris would be the tiebreaking vote in the Senate, giving the Democratic party control of the White House and Congress, and solidifying President-elect Joe Biden's economic policy platform.

What's moving? Big Tech appears to be getting nervous about possible legislation, with Nasdaq futures off by 1.8%, though the potential of a big fiscal boost saw contracts linked to the Dow rise 0.4% and the S&P 500 remain steady. Knee-jerk reactions are typical following any election, but the key to actual price movement will depend on the final results and how subsequent lawmaking will play out.

Outlook: "For new tech companies, Congressional action could mean opportunity to compete, to innovate, to build products and services without immediately being squashed by one of the giants," political strategist and venture capitalist Bradley Tusk declared. "So while a Democratic Senate is unquestionably bad for Big Tech, it's not necessarily bad for tech overall." He also predicts Democrats would likely enact laws around internet privacy, similar to Europe's GDPR legislation.

As reported yesterday, a repeat of the chaotic vote re-counts that followed the U.S. presidential election in November is likely to ensue. More drama will come today as the House and the Senate formalize Biden's Electoral College win (a group of 13 Republican senators are objecting to the certification).
Energy
Oil prices jumped on Tuesday after Saudi Arabia pledged to slash another 1M barrels per day in production in February and March, while Russia and Kazakhstan said they would increase their output by a combined 75,000 bpd. Energy shares outperformed all other sectors and rose the most since late November on the news, while Moscow hailed the concession a "new year gift" for the crude markets.

What's happening? On the one hand the kingdom is caught in supply/demand fundamentals, but at the same time, Saudi Oil Minister Prince Abdulaziz painted the decision as some kind of leadership position. He said it was a sovereign political move to support the Saudi economy, members of the OPEC+ group, as well as the wider industry.

Go deeper: It'll be interesting to see what longer-term impact the decision will play for unity within OPEC+, as well as its related political dynamics. Last night, a Saudi-led bloc of Arab states agreed to restore ties with Qatar following a three-year trade and travel blockade. The Gulf dispute erupted in 2017 after Riyadh accused the nation of being too close to Iran and supporting terrorism.
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IPOs
Oatly (OATLY) is planning a 2021 initial public offering that could raise $1B, sources told CNBC, noting the vegan milk brand's valuation will depend on the status of the pandemic-hit economy. Bloomberg already reported on the potential listing back in September, but the latest account suggests 2021 might be another record year for the IPO market.

Some statistics: During 2020, oat milk sales in the U.S. soared over 300% to $213M, becoming the second most consumed plant milk after almond milk ($1.5B in 2020 sales). Soy milk fell down a spot, with sales declining 4.5% to $202M (a decade ago, they topped $1B).

Oatly's got some big backers betting on shifting consumer preferences. Last summer, Blackstone led a $200M funding round in the Sweden-based brand which saw Oprah Winfrey, Natalie Portman, Jay-Z's Roc Nation and former Starbucks (NASDAQ:SBUX) CEO Howard Schultz come aboard. In fact, Starbucks is launching Oatly in all its U.S. stores this spring following a successful regional trial.

Bigger picture: Led by Gen Z and millennials, trends are moving away from conventional animal products due to environmental, health and ethical concerns. Shares of Beyond Meat (NASDAQ:BYND), an alternative protein supplier, are up 400% since the company went public a year and a half ago.
Real Estate
The coronavirus pandemic is turning struggling malls into new kinds of real estate. Latest? The company behind popular videogame Fortnite, Epic Games, is shelling out $95M for the Cary Towne Center mall in North Carolina, converting it into its new global headquarters. Epic plans to open the new 980K-square-foot campus by 2024, which would nearly quadruple the size of its current property.

Will there be videogame tournaments at the new HQ? Epic hasn't yet offered details, but it's considering including space for use by the local community.

Thought bubble: While many businesses are aiming to downsize their office space and welcome work-from-home policies, others are looking for good deals to make new and larger office locations as a part of their future. Underperforming malls could also become attractive acquisition targets for investors aiming to convert them into residential units or warehouses.

Recent examples: In West Los Angeles, Calif., the Westside Pavilion is undergoing a makeover into an office campus that will be occupied by Google (GOOG, GOOGL), while Urban Edge Properties said this week that it had scooped up the Sunrise Mall in Massapequa, N.Y., and plans to redevelop it for industrial purposes.

Another question... How will all the news impact mall and shopping center players like Simon Property Group (NYSE:SPG), Taubman Centers (NYSE:TCO) and Macerich (NYSE:MAC)?
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Regulation
Alipay (NYSE:BABA) has been in Washington's crosshairs for months, but the White House just locked on target. President Trump has signed an order banning transactions with eight Chinese payment apps in 45 days, and while he won't be in office by that date, the move will cement his tough-on-China legacy, which has involved a trade war and using national security powers against China's largest technology companies.

Other companies included in the ban are Tencent's (OTCPK:TCEHY) QQ Wallet and WeChat Pay, CamScanner, SHAREit, Tencent QQ, VMate and Beijing Kingsoft Office Software’s WPS Office. The new measure also deals a blow to Ant co-founder Jack Ma, who hasn't been seen in public ever since Chinese regulators halted Ant's $35B IPO and opened an antitrust investigation into Alibaba.

"By accessing personal electronic devices such as smartphones, tablets, and computers, Chinese connected software applications can access and capture vast swaths of information from users, including sensitive personally identifiable information and private information," the executive order states. Such data collection "would permit China to track the locations of federal employees and contractors, and build dossiers of personal information."

Outlook: The directive mirrors executive orders signed in August that aimed to ban downloads and block some U.S. transactions on Chinese-owned WeChat and TikTok. While those restrictions were blocked by courts mainly on freedom of speech grounds, the White House sees the latest executive action standing up to judicial scrutiny as apps like Alipay would struggle to bring a First Amendment case.
What else is happening...
Feds say Russia was likely behind SolarWinds (NYSE:SWI) hack.

NYSE (NYSE:ICE) may go through with Chinese telco delisting plan.

Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN) grows fleet with purchase of Boeing (NYSE:BA) jets.

Macy's (NYSE:M) is shuttering 45 more locations this year.

GE (NYSE:GE) will not claw back Jeff Immelt's pay - WSJ.

M&A... UnitedHealth (NYSE:UNH) to acquire Change Healthcare (NASDAQ:CHNG).
Today's Markets
In Asia, Japan -0.4%. Hong Kong +0.2%. China +0.6%. India -0.5%.
In Europe, at midday, London +2.5%. Paris +0.9%. Frankfurt +1%.
Futures at 6:20, Dow +0.4%. S&P flat. Nasdaq -1.8%. Crude +0.2% to $50.03. Gold flat at $1953.60. Bitcoin +10.4% to $35042.
Ten-year Treasury Yield +6 bps to 1.01%.​
Today's Economic Calendar
 

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AVDL 6.89...FDA decision should come down by the end of Feb.
If it gets FDA approved this will be off to the races.
JAZZ 168.00 today

Bought a tad of the vix just now @ 16.70.
I don't think the markets going to like what's about to go down in Washington DC....Bad day for "institutions"..uncertainty is the market foe.
 

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Boz - I'm thinking about dumping some of the stocks I've made a profit on. I have a few that I'm down on that I'm iffy about keeping. I also have one (AGNC) that I'm down about 2% but it pays over $100/month dividend - I have about $13,000 in it and I'm fine w/ holding it.

I'm also holding SQQQ and I'm down about 50%. I figure at this point why sell? (this was a huge mistake, I didn't fully understand how this stock works).

Anyhow, what are your thoughts?
 

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Boz - I'm thinking about dumping some of the stocks I've made a profit on. I have a few that I'm down on that I'm iffy about keeping. I also have one (AGNC) that I'm down about 2% but it pays over $100/month dividend - I have about $13,000 in it and I'm fine w/ holding it.

I'm also holding SQQQ and I'm down about 50%. I figure at this point why sell? (this was a huge mistake, I didn't fully understand how this stock works).

Anyhow, what are your thoughts?

On SQQQ? Today was thinking about buying it again but just for a few hours. Market +500 could dump depending on the next few hours...
The Market in 2021? Man, I have no idea..Most of my plays are speculative stuff that haven't participated in the runs..AVDL, LLNW, EDT..China and TWST being the exception BABA ,JD and in and out of TENCENT a bunch of times....I have another account and I'm out a bit more than 50% ..so far it looks like a good hedge.

That SQQQ will just keep splitting down..A lot of smart people like the market next year..I'm not totally sure what's up next year but anything leveraged isn't anything I'd hold long unless you have a good cushion on the up side.
You've been killing it..
Today I'm kicking myself for selling VALE.SA @ 11 and change. +18 today..I've fucked myself a bunch of times here not holding what I liked.
If nothing else I've learned I know "absolute shit in reality" about the market with this thread but somehow have still done super well $$$ like a lot of people... Do DD, Stick with what you believe, don't listen to all analysts , hold through the pain of the down turns has been my lesson ..So many winners I've bailed on..The attraction to low priced equities with big upside has anyways been my weakness.. we'll see my cakes aren't baked yet on LLNW, ADVL and the one I might like the most given the recent management moves EDT.TO On the Canadian Market (Toronto) and EDTXF on the OTC market (Pinks) In the past I've won Big playing the long shots, just takes one but it's usually a waiting game..IDK dude.
Nutty year CB best to you pal.

VIXX and SQQQ might be fun to watch till the close...Gambling in its least pure forum today with these today.
16.66 VX AND 15.62 SQ RIGHT NOW.
 

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Thanks Boz.

So for clarification - I should just hold SQQQ? Like I said, I've lost a ton (about 50% and everytime the NASDAQ goes up....it goes down). I can sell now and cut my losses, or just ride it out and see what happens?

I feel I've done great this year in the market....but so has most people, so I don't feel like I'm any sort of expert. I want to protect some of it though, so I'm willing to be more conservative. I guess we have to see where this new administration takes us. I'm sure they'll keep running up the national debt. But I'm also concerned w/ housing (as I'm selling my primary home this year and my vacation/airbnb property - and moving to Florida, and will likely rent when we get there....but I'm worried about the 1031 exchange also if I rent longer than 180 days).

Anyhow, a lot going on..... Thanks boz!
 

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Thanks Boz.

So for clarification - I should just hold SQQQ? Like I said, I've lost a ton (about 50% and everytime the NASDAQ goes up....it goes down). I can sell now and cut my losses, or just ride it out and see what happens?

I feel I've done great this year in the market....but so has most people, so I don't feel like I'm any sort of expert. I want to protect some of it though, so I'm willing to be more conservative. I guess we have to see where this new administration takes us. I'm sure they'll keep running up the national debt. But I'm also concerned w/ housing (as I'm selling my primary home this year and my vacation/airbnb property - and moving to Florida, and will likely rent when we get there....but I'm worried about the 1031 exchange also if I rent longer than 180 days).

Anyhow, a lot going on..... Thanks boz!

I wouldn't mess with it if you're that far down sitting with an equity is one thing See PRED ( totalass kicking so far but bruce is sharp)..Like I said a lot of people like the market in 21..I think it's over sold valuations are nuts..
I honestly don't have a long bet on the market..meaning no options plays of any date.
I'd hold SQ short term and see if we don't have at least a correction or maybe a major slide..it's that's very possible and soon if things get UGLY politically.

I usually have an opinion, I'm pretty lost on what's happening in 21 CB. Seeing the treasury rise says inflation but who knows...
 

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I'd buy and hold short..Over night ...Shits going to get weird tonight in DC I wouldn't be surprised to see fires ..markets going to hate this.

Don't go huge...
 

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Bozzie:

In the solar world you have panels which produce power in direct current (D/C) and you have inverter which inverts the power to alternating current (A/C). There are 100's of panel manufacturers but only a handful of inverter manufacturers. Probably 6 or 7 years ago I recommended SEDG an inverter company. I have recommended multiple times here. It was probably in the teens somewhere initially and is over $300 today. Stock has been a rock star.

Solar Edge runs a bunch of panels at once. Another inverter is one that is put behind each panel. Called a micro inverter. Enphase (ENPH) is a big player in that market. They had reliability issues and might have been close to going under. They have made a strong recovery.

SolarEdge makes residential size inverters along with commercial sizes. Enphase is mostly a residential player in the market. You could see a company like Enphase partner up with a panel manufacturer and install the microinverter at the factory with cheap labor and thus reduce the install time in the field.

The bigger things to know about the industry is the potential growth. The residential market is about 100 times as large as the commercial market. Additionally the new administration will offer pass more green friendly deals. One that passed the house and senate was not signed by the Trump. Solar is one of the largest growing fields in the country. They are above average paying jobs and the are in every state. With that said I think you will continue to see solar boom and the companies that make products for the industry. If the democrats win Georgia it could be an even bigger bump.

Take a look at SEDG and ENPH.

Lastly on the industry and I dont know how to capitalize on this....maybe someone else can do research. The latest trend is bi-facial panels. Basically absorbs sun either hitting it on the front or sun that misses the panel and reflects up and hits it on the back. You can see 20-40% more production on a ground mounted system using a bifacial panel. So what is different? They put glass on the front and the back of the panel versus a traditional panel only has glass on the front. The result is there is a high demand for bifacial panels. They use more glass and now there is a shortage of glass. Not sure who the glass manufacturers are but there is definitely a demand.

Northern Star

SEDG and ENPH are liking the election results
 

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I'd buy and hold short..Over night ...Shits going to get weird tonight in DC I wouldn't be surprised to see fires ..markets going to hate this.

Don't go huge...

I bought 400 shares and it's already up. I was up over $1400 earlier today (total portfolio), now it's up about $150 - big tank after this DC protest! Wow!! Thanks for the heads up!
 

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I bought 400 shares and it's already up. I was up over $1400 earlier today (total portfolio), now it's up about $150 - big tank after this DC protest! Wow!! Thanks for the heads up!


Just watch it like a bird dog now...in the morning it'll open way up I think... the market being up 600 at the time was a bonus..In a perverse way.
I'm truly saddened to see this today.
 

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