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He just took credit for some of Warren Buffet's best investments. Interesting.
 

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Boz - explain to me, if you have the time - like you were talking to a 5-year old - how to do this in my Schwab account:

With (BRKB) now trading at $254, you can buy the January 2023 $300-$310 call spread for $2.50. If the shares close anywhere over $310 by the 2023 expiration, the position will be worth $10.00, giving you a gain of 300%. And you only need an appreciation of $56, or 22% in the shares to capture this blockbuster profit, giving you upside leverage of an eye-popping 13.63X in the best run company in America.
 

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Coach, your going to have to google how to buy a call spread to understand it. There is much info you need to learn.You will need to be approved for options trading and call spreads from your broker. i will give you some basics here.

Options are traded in contracts. One contract equals 100 shares. In your above example you would be buying the January 2023 $300 call. Lets say it is priced around $14.50. That is 14.50 x 100 = 1450. Then your selling the Jan. 2023 $310 call for around $12.00 for a credit. $12 x 100 = $1200. Your net is a debit of $2.50 x 100 =$250 per contract. So it cost you $250 per contract.

if you don't understand option contracts you need to google/ youtube that stuff to understand it all. All kind of videos on understanding options and call spreads also called vertical spreads. it will take some time to understand it all buy you need to understand it all so you know what your doing.
 

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Boz - explain to me, if you have the time - like you were talking to a 5-year old - how to do this in my Schwab account:

With (BRKB) now trading at $254, you can buy the January 2023 $300-$310 call spread for $2.50. If the shares close anywhere over $310 by the 2023 expiration, the position will be worth $10.00, giving you a gain of 300%. And you only need an appreciation of $56, or 22% in the shares to capture this blockbuster profit, giving you upside leverage of an eye-popping 13.63X in the best run company in America.

Great simple explanation Valium..There are few good online courses out there CB... worth the time and money.
I can't do options on schwab any longer..I got pinched trading without settled funds twice last year and they suspended me for options..ha
I find interactive brokers more friendly for options anyway.

I'm totally confused by the market right now, I'm sitting out for a bit, holding and watching.

Interactive is great BTW..way easier to buy off the US exchanges.
 

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Thanks for the feedback. I'll do some research on it. It seems like I'm missing out by not trading options.
 

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I just bought a book off of Amazon that will hopefully help me with options. I have a basic understanding, but need to learn some of the strategies that can be used.
 

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[FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]Global Market Comments
March 5, 2021
Fiat Lux
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[FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]Featured Trade:[/FONT]
[FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif](MARCH 3 BIWEEKLY STRATEGY WEBINAR Q&A),
(BRKB), (CRM), (ZM), (AAPL), (AMD), (DIS), (CRSP),
(BRKB), (PLTR), (NVDA), (TLT), (TSLA), (GLD),
(SLV), (VSAT), (EUO), (GME), (VSAT)
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March 3 Biweekly Strategy Webinar Q&ABelow please find subscribers’ Q&A for the March 3 Mad Hedge Fund Trader Global Strategy Webinar broadcast from frozen Incline Village, NV.
Q: Are SPACs here to stay?
A: Yes, but I think that in the next bear market, 80% of these SPACs (Special Purpose Acquisition Companies) will disappear, will deliver large losses, and will continue charging you enormous fees until then. It’s either that or they won’t invest their money at all and give it back, net of the fees. So, I’m avoiding the SPAC craze unless it's associated with a very specific investment play that I know well. The problem with SPACs is that they all come out expensive—there are no bargain basement SPACs on launch day. Me, being the eternal cheapskate that I am, always want to get a great bargain on everything. The time to buy these is actually in the next bear market, if they still exist, because then investors will be throwing their positions away at 10 or 20% discounts. That’s always what happens with specialized ETF, closed-end funds, and so on. They are roach motel investments; you can check-in, but you can never check out.
Q: What do you think of Elizabeth Warren's asset tax idea?
A: It’s idiotic. It would take years to figure out how much Jeff Bezos is worth. And even then, you probably couldn't come within ten billion dollars of a true number. We already pay asset taxes, our local county real estate taxes, and those are bad enough, delivering valuations that are miles from true market prices. There are many other ways to fix the tax system and get billionaires paying their fair share. There are only three things you really have to do: get rid of carried interest so hedge funds can’t operate tax-free, get rid of real estate loss carry forwards which allow the real estate industry to basically operate tax-free, and get rid of the oil depletion allowance, which has enabled the oil industry to operate tax-free for nearly 90 years. So those would be three easy ones to increase the fairness of the tax system without any immense restructuring of our accounting system.
Q: When will share buybacks start?
A: They’ve already started and have been happening all year. There are two ways the companies do this: they either have an outside accounting firm, buying religiously every day or at the end of every month or something like that, so they can’t be accused of insider trading; or they are in there buying on every dip. Certainly, all the big cash-heavy companies like Berkshire Hathaway (BRKB) or Apple (AAPL) were buying their shares like crazy last March and April because they were trading such enormous discounts. So that is another trillion dollars sitting under the market, waiting to come in on any dip, which is yet another reason that we are not going to see any major sell-offs this year—just the 5%-10% variety that I have been predicting.
Q: Is it time to buy Salesforce (CRM)?
A: Yes, Marc Benioff’s goal is to double sales in two years, and the stock is relatively cheap right now because they’ve had a couple of weak quarters and are still digesting some big acquisitions.
Q: Is CRISPR Therapeutics (CRSP) good buy?
A: Yes, I would be buying right here; it’s a good LEAP candidate because the stock could easily double from here. We’ve only scratched the surface on CRISPR technology being adopted and the potential growth in this company is enormous—I'm surprised they haven’t been taken over already.
Q: Will you start a letter for investing advisors on how to deal with the prolific numbers of Bitcoin?
A: There are already too many Bitcoin newsletters; there are literally hundreds of them and thousands of experts on Bitcoin now because there’s nothing to know and nothing to analyze. It’s all a belief system; there are no earnings, there are no dividends, and there is no interest. So, you purely have to invest in the belief that somebody else is going to take you out at a higher price. I think there is a big overhang of selling in that when they raise the number of Bitcoin, we’ll get another one of those 90% crashes that Bitcoin is prone to. So, go elsewhere for your Bitcoin advice; your choices are essentially unlimited now, and they are much cheaper than me. In fact, people are literally giving away Bitcoin advice for free, which means you’re getting what you’re paying for. I buy Bitcoin when they have a customer support telephone number.
Q: Zoom (ZM) has come down a lot after a big earnings report—do you like it?
A: Long term, yes. Short term, no. You want to avoid all the stay-at-home stocks because no one is staying at home anymore. However, there is a long-term story in Zoom once they find their bottom because even after we come out of the pandemic, we’re all still using Zoom. I have like five or ten Zoom meetings a day, and my kids go to school on Zoom all day long. They’re also bringing out new products like telephone servers. They’re also raising their prices—I happen to be one of Zoom’s largest customers. I’m paying $1,100/month now, and that’s rising at 10% a year.
Q: What would be the best LEAP for Salesforce (CRM)?
A: The rule of thumb is that you want to go 30% out of the money on your first strike. So, find a current stock price; your first strike is up 30%, and then your second strike is up 35%. And all you need to double your money on that is a bounce back to the highs for this year, which is not unrealistic. That’s the lay-up there with Salesforce. That’s the basic formula; Advanced Micro Devices (AMD), Walt Disney (DIS), Berkshire Hathaway (BRKB), Palantir (PLTR), and Nvidia (NVDA) are all good candidates for LEAPS.
Q: How often do you update the long-term stock portfolio?
A: Twice a year, and we just updated in January, which is posted on the website in your membership area. If you can't find it, just email customer support at support@madhedgefundtrader.com and they’ll tell you where to find it. And we only do this twice a year because there just aren't enough changes in the economy in six months to justify a more frequent update.
Q: When do you think real estate will come back?
A: It never left. We’ve had the hottest real estate market in history, with 20% annual gains in many cities in 2020. And that will continue, but not at the 20% rate, probably at a more sustainable 5% or 6% rate. Guess what the best inflation play in the world is? Real estate. If you’re worried about inflation, you want to run out and buy a house or two. The only thing that will really kill that market is a rise in 30-year fixed-rate mortgages to 5%, and that is years off. Or a rise in the ten-year treasury to 5% or 6%—that is several years off also. So, I think we’ve got a couple of good years of gains ahead of us. I at least want the market to stay hot until my kids get out of high school, and then I can sell my house and go live on some exotic tropical island with great broadband.
Q: When you’re doing LEAPS, do you just do the calls only or do you do these as spreads?
A: You can do both. Just do the math and see what works for you on a risk/reward basis. You can do a 30% out of the money call 2 years out and get anywhere from a 1,000% to a 10,000% return—people did get 10,000% returns buying deep out of the money LEAPS in Tesla (TSLA) a year ago (that’s where all the vintage bourbon is coming from). Or you can do it more conservatively and only make 500% in two years on Tesla spread. For example; do something like a Tesla January 2023 $900-$950 call spread. If Tesla shares rise to $950, that position is an easy quadruple. But do the numbers, figure out the cost today, what the expiration value is in two years, and there you go.
Q: Do you think overnight rates could go negative as some people predict?
A: Not for a long time. They will go negative at the next recession because we’re starting off such a low base—or when we get the next pandemic, which could be as early as next year. We could get another one at any time from a completely different virus, and it would generate the same stock market results that we got last time—down 40% in a month. We’re not out of the pandemic business, we’re just having a temporary break waiting for the next one to come along out of China or some other country, or even right here in the USA. So that may be a permanent aspect of investing in the future. It could be the price we pay having a global population that's at 7 billion heading to 9 billion.
Q: Expiration on LEAPS?
A: I always go out two years. The second year is almost free, that’s why. So why not go for the second year? It gives you twice as much time to be right, always useful.
Q: My two-year United States Treasury Bond Fund (TLT) $125 put LEAPS have turned very positive. Is this a good trade?
A: That is a good trade, which you should put on during the next (TLT) rally. If you think we’re going to $105 in 2 years, do something like a $127-$130 two-year put LEAP, and there's a nice four bagger right there.
Q: Your Amazon (AMZN) price target was recently listed at $3,500, below last year's high, but I’ve also seen a $5,000 forecast in two years. Are you sticking with that?
A: Yes, I think when you get a major recovery in the economy, Amazon will be one of the only pandemic plays that keeps on going. It’s just taking a rest here with the rest of big tech. The breakup value of Amazon is easily $5,000 a share or more. Plus, they’re still going gangbusters growing into new industries that they’ve barely touched so far, like pharmaceuticals, healthcare, and so on. So yes, I would definitely be a buyer of LEAPS, and you could do something like the January 2023 $3700-$4000 LEAP two years out and make a killing on that.
Q: Anything you can do in gold (GLD)?
A: Not really. Although gold and silver (SLV) have been a huge disappointment this year, I think this could be the beginning of a capitulation selloff in gold which will bring us a final bottom, but it may take another month or two to get there.
Q: How can I sell short the dollar?
A: You sell short the (UUP), or there are several 1X and 2X short ETFs in the currencies that you can do, like the ProShares Ultra Short Euro ETF (EUO). That is the way to do it.
Q: What is the best timing for buying LEAPS?
A: Buy at market bottoms. A year ago, I was sending out lists of 10 LEAPS at a time saying please buy all of these. You need both a short-term selloff in the stock, and then an upside target much higher than the current price so your LEAP expires at its maximum profit point. And if you’re in the right names, pretty much all the names that we talk about here, you will have 30%, if not 300% or 3,000% gains in them in the next two years.
Q: Do you think Tesla’s Starlink global satellite system will disrupt the cell tower industry?
A: Yes, that is the goal of Starlink—to wipe out all ground communication for WIFI and for cell phones. It may take them several years to do it, but if they do pull it off, then it just becomes a matter of pricing. The last Starlink pricing I looked at cost about $500 to set up, open the account, and get your dish installed. And the only flaw I see in the Starlink system is that the satellite dishes are tracking dishes, which means they lock onto satellites and then follow them as they pass overhead. Then when that signal leaves, it locks onto a new satellite; at any given time they’re locked onto four different satellites. That means moving parts, and you want to be careful of any industry that has moving parts—they wear out. That’s the great thing about software and online businesses; no moving parts, so they don’t wear out. And that’s also why Tesla has been a success; they eliminated the number of moving parts in cars by 80%. I’m waiting for Starlink to get working so I can use it, because I need Internet access 24 hours a day, even if all the local hubs are out because of a power outage. I’m now using something called Viasat (VSAT), which guarantees 100 megabyte/second service for $55 a month. It's not enough for me because I use a gigabyte service landline, but when that’s not available then I can go to satellite as a backup.
Q: Is there too much Fed liquidity in the market already? Why is the $1.9 trillion rescue package still positive for the market?
A: Firstly, there is too much liquidity in the market; that is screamingly obvious. If you look at liquidity over the decades, we are just staggeringly high right now. M2 is growing at 26% against the normal rate of 5%-6%. What the stimulus package does is get money to the people who did not participate in the bull market from last year. Those are low-income people, cities, and municipalities that are broke and can’t pay teachers, firemen, and policemen. It also goes to individual states which were not invested in the stock market. It turns out that states that were invested in the stock market like California have money coming out of their ears right now. And it gets money to low wage workers with kids who are certainly struggling right now. So, it is rather efficiently designed to get the money to people who need it the most. There is still half the country that doesn't own any stocks or even have savings of any kind. One or two people might get it who don’t deserve it but try doing anything in a 330 million population country and have it be 100% efficient.
Q: Is inflation coming?
A: Only incrementally in tiny pieces, so not enough to affect the stock market probably for several years. I still believe technology is advancing so fast that it wipes out any effort to raise prices or increase wages, and that may be what the perennially high 730,000 weekly jobless claims is all about. Those jobs that might have been there a year ago have been replaced by machines, have been outsourced overseas, or the demand for the product no longer exists. So, as long as you have a 10% unemployment rate and a weekly jobless claim at 730, inflation is the last thing you need to worry about.
Q: Is there any way to cash in on Reddit’s Wall Street Bets action?
A: No, and I would bet the majority of people who are trading off of these emojis and Reddit posts are losing money. You only hear about these things after it’s too late to do anything about them. I don't think you’ll get any more $4 to $450 moves like you did with GameStop (GME) because in that one case only, there was a short interest of 160%, which should have been illegal. All the other high short interest stocks have already been hit, with short interests all the way down to 30%, so I think that ship has sailed. It has no real investing merit whatsoever.
Good Luck and Stay Healthy.

John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader


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Quote of the Day“Owning a non-controlling portion of a wonderful business is more profitable, more enjoyable and far less work than struggling with 100% of a marginal enterprise,” said Oracle of Omaha Warren Buffet.

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Q: Is there too much Fed liquidity in the market already? Why is the $1.9 trillion rescue package still positive for the market?
A: Firstly, there is too much liquidity in the market; that is screamingly obvious. If you look at liquidity over the decades, we are just staggeringly high right now. M2 is growing at 26% against the normal rate of 5%-6%. What the stimulus package does is get money to the people who did not participate in the bull market from last year. Those are low-income people, cities, and municipalities that are broke and can’t pay teachers, firemen, and policemen. It also goes to individual states which were not invested in the stock market. It turns out that states that were invested in the stock market like California have money coming out of their ears right now. And it gets money to low wage workers with kids who are certainly struggling right now. So, it is rather efficiently designed to get the money to people who need it the most. There is still half the country that doesn't own any stocks or even have savings of any kind. One or two people might get it who don’t deserve it but try doing anything in a 330 million population country and have it be 100% efficient.


stunning. Powell didnt appease the market last week, does he ever? i guess the bond market is stable? doesnt look it

bizarre how poorly the metals have done-- M2 going nuts , seasonality ...and zippo.
 

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Q: Is there too much Fed liquidity in the market already? Why is the $1.9 trillion rescue package still positive for the market?
A: Firstly, there is too much liquidity in the market; that is screamingly obvious. If you look at liquidity over the decades, we are just staggeringly high right now. M2 is growing at 26% against the normal rate of 5%-6%. What the stimulus package does is get money to the people who did not participate in the bull market from last year. Those are low-income people, cities, and municipalities that are broke and can’t pay teachers, firemen, and policemen. It also goes to individual states which were not invested in the stock market. It turns out that states that were invested in the stock market like California have money coming out of their ears right now. And it gets money to low wage workers with kids who are certainly struggling right now. So, it is rather efficiently designed to get the money to people who need it the most. There is still half the country that doesn't own any stocks or even have savings of any kind. One or two people might get it who don’t deserve it but try doing anything in a 330 million population country and have it be 100% efficient.


stunning. Powell didnt appease the market last week, does he ever? i guess the bond market is stable? doesnt look it

bizarre how poorly the metals have done-- M2 going nuts , seasonality ...and zippo.

Major deposits. its crazy when you look at the last year historically on the graph below.






















































































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Anyone own or follow stocks in the shipping business?
 

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Anyone own or follow stocks in the shipping business?


I'm poking around...

LISTEN TO TODAY'S PODCAST AVAILABLE AT 8AM ON:
Welcome to Wall Street Brunch, our preview of stock market events for investors to watch during the upcoming week. You can also catch this article a day early by subscribing to the Stocks to Watch account for Saturday morning delivery.
Outlook
Economic reports in the week ahead​
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Investors will continue to evaluate the impact of the congressional vote on stimulus in the week ahead and the direction of interest rates. On the corporate calendar, earnings reports will only trickle in, but U.S. telecom giants Verizon Communications (NYSE:VZ), T-Mobile US (NASDAQ:TMUS) and AT&T hold big investor events. Gaming platform Roblox Corp (RBLX) is set to go public in a direct listing next week. Roblox expects its revenue to double in Q1 and daily active users to be up 59% to 68% from last year's level. Roblox joins a list of high-profile companies like Palantir Technologies and Spotify Technology that went public through the direct path. That list could include Instacart (ICART) shortly.​
Earnings
XPeng (NYSE:XPEV), Stitch Fix (NASDAQ:SFIX) and Casey's General Stores (NASDAQ:CASY) on March 8; Dick's Sporting Goods (NYSE:DKS) and MongoDB (NASDAQ:MDB) on March 9; Oracle (NYSE:ORCL), Campbell Soup (NYSE:CPB), Cloudera (NYSE:CLDR), REV Group (NYSE:REV) and BEST Inc. (NYSE:BEST) on March 10; JD.com(NASDAQ:JD) and DocuSign (NASDAQ:DOCU) on March 11 and JinkoSolar (NYSE:JKS) on March 12.​
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IPOs
IPOs expected to price include Coupang (CPNG) and First High-School education (FHS) on March 11 and Joann (JOAN) and Hayward Holdings (HAYW) on March 12. The direct listing for Roblox (RBLX) is expected to start trading on March 10. The IPO lockup period expires on Nanobiotix SA (NASDAQ:NBTX) on March 11. Quiet period expirations during the week include Adagene (NASDAQ:ADAG), Apria (NASDAQ:APR), Bumble (NASDAQ:BMBL), Bioventus (NASDAQ:BVS), Viant Technology (NASDAQ:DSP), LoanDepot (NYSE:LDI), Cloopen Group (NYSE:RAAS), Signify Health (NYSE:SGFY), Decibel Therapeutics (NASDAQ:DBTX) and NexImmune (NASDAQ:NEXI).​
Dividends
Projected dividend increases (quarterly): The list of notable dividend increases anticipated to be announced next week includes Oracle (ORCL) to $0.30 from $0.24, Dick's Sporting Goods (DKS) to $0.39 from $0.3125, Retail Properties (NYSE:RPAI) to $0.07 from $0.06, Innovative Industrial (NYSE:IIPR) to $1.30 from $1.24, Applied Materials (NASDAQ:AMAT) to $0.23 from $0.22, Hill-Rom (NYSE:HRC) to $0.23 to $0.22 and Colgate-Palmolive (NYSE:CL) to $0.45 from $0.44.​
M&A
There are a number of shareholder votes on mergers this week. The IHS Markit (NYSE:INFO)-S&P Global (NYSE:SPGI) deal goes to a vote on March 11 and the Alaska Communications (NASDAQ:ALSK)-ATN International (NASDAQ:ATNI) merger goes to a vote on March 12.​
Events
Verizon (VZ), T-Mobile (TMUS) and AT&T (T) will hold analyst days next week. Taking the broad view, Bank of America expects the carriers to discuss 5G deployment efforts and capex expectations. "We suspect AT&T and Verizon will continue spending at the same level to attempt to take advantage of C-band spectrum as quickly as possible. Based on our conversation with the company, we believe T-Mobile will likely lower its prior '~$40bn over 3 years' capex budget per its 2018 merger deck. We suspect this is a mix of signing new long term tower deals, improved purchasing power, and greater insight into the merger integration effort," previews the firm. JPMorgan says it hopes to get a better view on how AT&T will account for the cost of the 15-17 films that will be streamed for 30 days on HBO Max this year, without which it is impossible to estimate segment EBITDA for the year. The firm also expects an update of long-term domestic and international subscriber guidance.

DraftKings (NASDAQ:DKNG) holds its first Investor Day event as a public company. The presentation will give the company a chance to comment on what it sees as the total addressable market for sports betting in the U.S. and the path to profitability. Investor events are also scheduled for Cigna (NYSE:CI), Fortinet (NASDAQ:FTNT), Chevron (NYSE:CVX) and CyberArk Software (NASDAQ:CYBR).

Conferences rundown: The UBS Global Consumer and Retail Virtual Conference may be the headliner event of the week. Presenting companies include Lowe's (NYSE:LOW), Hasbro (NASDAQ:HAS), Procter & Gamble (NYSE:PG), Under Armour (NYSE:UAA) and Walmart (NYSE:WMT). Other notable conference in the week includes the Deutsche Bank 29th Annual Media, Internet and Telecom Conference, the Citi Global Property CEO Conference including presentations by American Express (NYSE:AXP) and Hilton Worldwide (NYSE:HLT),the RBC Capital Markets Global Financial Institutions Conference 2021, the Barclays Global Healthcare Conference including presentations by Moderna (NASDAQ:MRNA) and Sarepta Therapeutics (NASDAQ:SRPT), the Truist Securities Technology, Internet & Services Conference 2021 including presentations by BigCommerce (NASDAQ:BIGC) and Zscaler (NASDAQ:ZS), the Susquehanna 10th Annual Technology Conference, the HC Wainwright Global Life Sciences Conference, the Bank of America Securities Consumer and Retail Technology Conference featuring presentations by RealReal (NASDAQ:REAL) and eBay (NASDAQ:EBAY), the Baird's Vehicle Technology & Mobility Conference, the D.A. Davidson 4th Annual Consumer Growth Conference, the Loop Capital Consumer, Industrials and TMT Investor Conference, the JP Morgan Gaming Lodging Restaurant & Leisure Management Access Forum and the Gabelli & Company 12th Annual Specialty Chemicals Conference.
Go Deeper: Check out Seeking Alpha's Catalyst Watch for a detailed list of events to watch.
Barron's mentions
The publication makes a strong case that the pullback in Vertex Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ:VRTX) is overdone. Despite the slide in the stock following the canceled development of a promising drug, it is noted that not enough has actually changed for Vertex to warrant the loss of confidence. A sleeper pick in the e-commerce sector is also called out. MYT Netherlands Parent B.V. (NASDAQ:MYTE) is seen benefiting from tailwinds in the luxury market. The company is growing by about 7% annually and is set up for further expansion in the U.S. and China. Finally, the concerns of Lowe's (LOW) being a COVID-19 play are dismissed. "With Covid receding, Lowe’s is set to become a more-profitable company, while housing might be more resilient than it’s given credit for. Just as important, Lowe’s has also been a turnaround story, and with life returning to normal, it can finally demonstrate how far it has come," reads the rundown on the home improvement retailer.

Sources: EDGAR, Bloomberg, CNBC, The Verge, Renaissance Capital



 

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LISTEN TO TODAY'S PODCAST AVAILABLE AT 8AM ON:
Top News
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Over the weekend, the Senate passed a $1.9T coronavirus relief bill that contains $1,400 stimulus checks for many Americans, $300/week more in jobless benefits, as well as aid for state and local governments. The measure is expected to pass in the Democratic-held House on Tuesday. It would then be sent to President Biden's desk before a March 14 deadline to renew unemployment aid programs.

"With the Senate's passage, we expect growth momentum to accelerate and forecast global GDP growth will surge to a 7.5% annualized rate in the middle quarters of the year," JPMorgan wrote in a research note. "Every $1T of fiscal stimulus adds around $4-$5 to EPS, implying 6-7% upside for the remainder of the year."

Outlook: This time around, investors are getting worried about a sharp acceleration in inflation, with the 10-year Treasury yield rising another 5 bps overnight to 1.6%. Contrast that with a stock market where bulls were rooting for another big stimulus package during the push-and-pull negotiations at the end of the Trump administration. In fact, stock futures are pointing to another fall to start the week, particularly in the tech space, where high-growth valuations have been underpinned by low rates: Dow -0.3%; S&P 500 -0.8%; Nasdaq -1.9%

Thought bubble: While many are concerned about inflationary effects, the Fed has been vocal that it has no immediate plans to tighten monetary policy. In fact, its main worry doesn't appear to be inflation, but rather the damage done to the labor market by the pandemic. The last time the U.S. had a bad bout of sustained price increases was in the 1970s, when its economy was more insulated from the world, it depended on foreign oil and ended the Bretton Woods system that rendered the dollar a fiat currency. That picture looks much different today, and since the 2008 financial crisis, the U.S. economy has even struggled to achieve its inflation goals. (32 comments)
Energy
Brent crude oil futures (CO1:COM) popped above $70 a barrel overnight, while U.S. WTI crude (CL1:COM) hit its highest level in more than two years, after a key Saudi oil site came under attack by missiles and bomb-laden drones. Iranian-backed Houthi rebels in Yemen claimed responsibility for the assault on the Ras Tanura export terminal, which is capable of exporting about 6.5M barrels a day (nearly 7% of global demand). While such attacks rarely result in big damages, their frequency has created unease in the Gulf and in oil markets.

Quote: Such acts of sabotage do not only target the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, but also the security and stability of energy supplies to the world, and therefore, the global economy," said a spokesman for the Saudi Ministry of Energy. "They affect the security of petroleum exports, freedom of world trade, and maritime traffic."

Last month, the Biden administration said it would remove the Iran-backed Houthi rebels in Yemen from the Foreign Terrorist Organization and Specially Designated Global Terrorist lists. It also announced the end of U.S. support for offensive operations by its allies in Yemen, which has been devastated by a six-year civil war in which more than 110,000 people are believed to have died.

Outlook: Crude prices have been rising sharply since OPEC and allied producers decided to keep output cuts largely unchanged in April, accelerating a rally this year that has seen prices surge more than 35%. The OPEC move sparked several analysts to raise their price forecasts, with Goldman Sachs estimating Brent crude will hit $75/bbl by Q2 and top $80/bbl during Q3. (129 comments)
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On The Move
Besides a broader correction that has weighed on tech stocks in recent weeks, the halo of the electric vehicle sector has been fading. That can be clearly seen with poster EV maker Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA), whose shares are down nearly another 6% in premarket trade to $560. The company led by Elon Musk has seen its shares fall from an intraday high of $900.40 at the end of January to a low of $539.49 on Friday, marking a 40% plunge over the course of six weeks.

What happened? Frothy valuations are having a reckoning, while semiconductor shortages have caused many automakers to temporarily close some lines at their factories. There has also been an onslaught of EV competition from Ford (F), Volkswagen (OTCPK:VWAGY) and Lucid Air (CCIV), while others, like former Tesla board member Steve Westly, have suggested the automaker is "not going to be king of the hill in electric forever." There have been additional concerns like Musk's Bitcoin (BTC-USD) purchases, and some big Tesla backers have even cashed out a chunk of their stakes, like famed investor Ron Baron (he still hopes to hold the stock for years, but has also invested in two rivals, GM-owned Cruise and Amazon (AMZN)-backed Rivian).

The moves have meanwhile triggered a diversification reassessment of how much exposure investors should have to high-flying shares that offer "big potential" but not necessarily big profits (at least in the near term). Take, for example, Cathie Wood's ARK Innovation ETF (NYSEARCA:ARKK), in which Tesla shares account for about 10% of the fund. The ETF is off another 4.8% premarket to $111.50 and is down 30% since the end of January.

Go deeper: While it's still up for discussion how long all this will last, market cycles have been increasingly moving at a rapid pace in the current trading atmosphere. It took just 16 trading days for the S&P 500 in 2020 to fall from its record into a bear market, and its rebound was the quickest bear to bull market recovery in history. The pace of action is even more pronounced in speculative corners of the market (think GameStop), but has also manifested in Tesla itself. After a S&P 500 inclusion announcement on Nov. 16, shares rocketed 120% - from $408 to eventually $900 - in the span of ten weeks. (56 comments)
Outlook
Jack Dorsey is the latest entrepreneur to jump on the non-fungible token (NFT) bandwagon, listing his first ever tweet for sale. "Just setting up my twttr," reads the post from March 2006. The highest offer is currently from Sina Estavi, CEO of Bridge Oracle, for $2.5M. While the buyer will receive a certificate - digitally signed and verified by Dorsey - the post will remain publicly available on Twitter (NYSE:TWTR) even after it has been auctioned off.

What is an NFT? It's a type of cryptocurrency - run on Ethereum blockchain - that's used to represent a unique asset and is valued as a collectors' item. They are usually art, but can also be a meme, GIFs, songs, videos or items in video games. NFTs work like other speculative assets, where buyers hope that their value goes up and they can be sold for a profit. Investors, however, caution the market could represent a price bubble.

Bigger picture: A video by a digital artist who goes by "Beeple" recently sold for $6.6M and a crypto art rendition of the Nyan Cat meme sold for $590K. Even musicians like Grimes, 3LAU and the Kings of Leon have dabbled in the sector. That's helped NFT marketplace OpenSea grow its monthly sales to $86.3M in February, while auction house Christie's just launched its first ever sale of digital art.

NFTs seem to be a natural extension of Jack Dorsey's advocacy of cryptocurrencies. He's been displaying "#bitcoin" in his Twitter bio for some time, while his digital payments company Square (NYSE:SQ) scooped up another 3,318 Bitcoins (BTC-USD) in late February (it purchased 4,709 in October 2020). Square's Cash App is also a major venue for retail investors to purchase crypto, while Dorsey has invested in Lightning Labs, a second layer on the Bitcoin network. (142 comments)
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Trending
It's getting harder to find one of the six Dr. Seuss books the writer's estate has pulled from publication. Some of the titles can still be found on eBay (NASDAQ:EBAY), albeit at steep collector prices, despite the company announcing last week that it will ban their resale on its marketplace. The books can also be bought for hundreds of dollars on Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN) via third parties, though the titles have been pulled from Barnes & Noble's (NYSE:BKS) online platform.

What happened? Last week, Dr. Seuss Enterprises decided that six of the famed author’s books - And to Think That I Saw It on Mulberry Street, If I Ran the Zoo, McElligot's Pool, On Beyond Zebra!, Scrambled Eggs Super! and The Cat's Quizzer - would no longer be published because they "portray people in ways that are hurtful and wrong." The statement added that "ceasing sales of these books is only part of our commitment and our broader plan to ensure Dr. Seuss Enterprises's catalog represents and supports all communities and families."

As the Dr. Seuss books get pulled from the market, Universal Orlando, a division of NBCUniversal (NASDAQ:CMCSA), is weighing whether to redesign or remove an area of its theme park inspired by material from If I Ran the Zoo. Certain parts of "Seuss Landing" are based on the animals and characters portrayed in the book, which has been decried for its depiction of Asian people, though none of that imagery is featured in the section. The Mulberry Street Store gift shop also gets its name from And to Think That I Saw It on Mulberry Street.

Go deeper: While some companies have been removing controversial legacy content, others have been experimenting with warning labels. Among those attaching disclaimers are streamers like Disney (NYSE:DIS) and Netflix (NASDAQ:NFLX), which appear more hesitant to dent much of their lucrative libraries. In recent weeks, warnings have even been applied to certain episodes of The Muppet Show, on top of labels for Peter Pan, Dumbo, The Aristocats, The Jungle Book, Lady and the Tramp and Swiss Family Robinson. (17 comments)
What else is happening...
Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) hack worsens, White House warns of 'active threat.'

GE (NYSE:GE) nears $30B deal to sell plane leasing unit to AerCap (NYSE:AER).

Air Force prepares to test Lockheed Martin's (NYSE:LMT) hypersonic missile.

Sovereign borrowing expected to hit $12.6T in 2021 - S&P.

Ongoing M&A deals back in focus as SPAC combos lose luster.

Royal Caribbean's (NYSE:RCL) newest ship stuck at port due to COVID-19 cases.

Skepticism over one-shot regimen for Pfizer (NYSE:PFE), Moderna (NASDAQ:MRNA) vaccines.

Four tech stocks that offer solid yield and dividend growth - Barron's.​
Today's Markets
In Asia, Japan -0.4%. Hong Kong -1.9%. China -2.3%. India +0.1%.
In Europe, at midday, London +0.2%. Paris +0.9%. Frankfurt +1.3%.
Futures at 6:20, Dow +0.2%. S&P +0.3%. Nasdaq +0.4%. Crude +0.2% to $66.24. Gold -0.5% at $1690.10. Bitcoin -1.4% to $50000.
Ten-year Treasury Yield +5 bps to 1.6%
Today's Economic Calendar
 

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Any of you guys buying any oil stocks? I've been out of oil for at least 6 months.

I added some more AAPL this morning and 1 share of Berkshire/B this morning.
 

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No oil, but if I was looking longterm I would much rather be in the EV market.
 

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No oil, but if I was looking longterm I would much rather be in the EV market.

I've got some TSLA, but what other EV are you looking at. I sold NIO - which is under $40 right now (wow! It was over $60 not too long ago). I had Nikola a while back but got out after it started getting too volatile.
 

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I like reading the mad hedge fund news letter. Easy to read and I can get a different perspective. Sometimes it seems like a sales tool tooting his own horn.

I read the last one and two things I dont agree with. One is Bitcoin. It is getting accepted more and more. Banks and other entities are going to start to adopt it. If you can do something faster and cheaper society will adopt it. He is old school and has made his money in the market and he will stick with what got him to where he is. But think about it this way. If you went way back in time. People used to barter. From there it went to something that was supposed to have value like gold. Which is really just a pretty metal that you cant eat, drink or build anything with. Then to money like a piece of paper (which we have seen over time become worthless). What is the value of that? Bitcoin is no different. If you are not on the crypto bandwagon for at least part of your portfolio you are missing out.

The second thing is inflation. He said it will only be minor. I am one who is a little skeptical of the government reporting of inflation. If they "keep" it low then they dont have to pay as much in increases to seniors. I just dont believe inflation is less than 1%. Look around and use your own eyes and then make that decision. Gas is up almost a $1. Goods used in making things: copper is is up 50% in six months, Soybeans up over 50%, shipping costs on cargo ships sending goods are probably doubled from a year ago, lumber is up significantly, houses are going up in values, the main electric company here is asking for a 20% rate increase. There is zero chance inflation is only 1%.
 

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Any of you guys buying any oil stocks? I've been out of oil for at least 6 months.

I added some more AAPL this morning and 1 share of Berkshire/B this morning.

I always get scared playing the energy sector as you never know what the oil production is going to be week to week. I'd be looking more at options for oil. Specifically XOM or MRO. Make a few bucks then get out.

I'm also just about fully out of EV and green stocks right now. Took my profits and ran.
 

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