RF's Financial News

RF's Financial News

Sunday, May 5, 2019

This Week in Barrons: Cinco de Mayo, 2019

This Week in Barrons: Cinco de Mayo, 2019:




“No amount of money ever bought one second of time.” … Howard Stark (Avengers Endgame)

-      Electric Cars:  Electric cars are gaining traction.  If you're thinking of buying an expensive gasoline car – lease it because the value is about to drop.  People say that they don't want driverless cars – but they said that about laptops, cellphones, and streaming services as well.

-      5G Smartphones:  People will purchase the next round of smartphones when there is 5G service everywhere.  The smartphone is like a Swiss Army knife.  You create value via software – not by constantly buying more of them.  

-      Renewable Energy:  The U.S. is coming up on a milestone.  For the 1sttime, the renewable energy sector (hydro, wind and solar) is generating more electrical power than coal.  This is because investments have made renewable energy technologies cheaper, and there's more demand for cleaner energy because of concerns about climate change.

-      Presentations 102:  New data is telling us that the LESS you say – the more valuable your presentation becomes.  The following ‘new’ format forces you to speak more concisely and clearly by allowing just 20 slides and just 20 seconds to present each slide.  This technique forces a new way of thinking that eliminates the excess and leads to shorter, more creative and highly polished presentations.  The 5 Rules are:
1.   20 slides:  For each slide, ask yourself, “What will the audience learn from this slide?  What questions might they ask?  Is this relevant to my main objective?”  If you can’t answer those questions easily & correctly – don’t include it.
2.   20 seconds per slide:  You don’t have to speak for all 20 seconds.  To cut down the script, try describing your slide in a single sentence – and then in 7 words.
3.   Exchange Words for Visual:  People’s brains remember a total of: 7 numbers, 12 phrases and 1,200 pictures.  Choose words that evoke images.  When your audience SEES what you’re saying – you will appear absolutely brilliant.
4.   Forget Bullet Points:  Limit yourself to 7 words per slide.  Give every image or graphic a discernible “holy mackerel”point that’s easy to digest.  Use words and visuals that complement (not mirror) each other.
5.   Practice, Practice & Practice:  Practice getting to your point in 20 seconds. Practice in front of ‘friends and family’ and ask them what they learned.

-      “Everyone fails at who they’re supposed to be.  The measure of a person is how well they succeed at being who they are.” … Thor (Avengers Endgame)


The Market:



“Some people move on… Not us.”  … Captain America (Avengers Endgame)

   Last week, even the FED reminded us that they are NOT moving on.  They announced no rate cut, no rate hike, but rather lowered the interest rate they pay on reserves.  [FYI:  The FED pays banks to keep reserves with them.  But because banks are keeping many of their reserves with the FED, they're not lending as much as they should.  So on Wednesday, the FED lowered the interest rate they are paying on those reserves – in hopes that it will force banks to lend-out more of those reserves at higher rates.]  The FED also talked about a dip in inflation that might be “transitory” (temporary) – and then all heck broke loose.  Why?  The market was looking for the FED to talk about reduced inflation leading to a rate cut. By suggesting that the pause in inflation was temporary, that took a rate cut off the table.  
    The market is flirting with all-time highs.  It's struggling with its own manipulative tactics. If you were going by true fundamentals, GAAP accounting, and the way we used to measure unemployment and inflation – this market would have the DOW at 12,000 not 26,000.  So there’s a real war going on, and our banksters need to choose between two alternatives: (1) continue printing and allowing inverted yield curves and lower interest rates, or (2) let things start to normalize and watch the market collapse.  For the past ten years, our FED has chosen Door #1.  Powell said last week that “some equities” appear to be overvalued. Powell, are you kidding me?  Companies have used so much fuzzy math that their balance sheets look like Chia pets.  Corporations have gotten quite accustomed to: pro-forma accounting, zero business expansion, and stock buybacks for their execs.  If that behavior stops – this market crashes. The FED knows that there is no way out – it’s print or crash.


InfoBits:

-      The Unhappy Meal:  Burger King finally decided to answer McDonald’s “Happy Meals” with “Unhappy Meals” – because “No one is happy ALL the time.” Yes – this is real, and NO – I’m not kidding.  While it is an initiative to promote mental health – they’re also trying to sell more burgers.  So companies are now using a generation’s growing depression to sell stuff – and it’s working. 

-      Berkshire Hathaway – Pt1:  “I’ve been an idiot for not buying,”is what Warren Buffet told CNBC in regards to Amazon – when it was revealed that Berkshire Hathaway now has a stake in the internet giant.

-      Serial Convertible Bonds:  is what Tesla offered this week to investors.  PH reminded me that of the following previous serial convertible bond issuers: SunEdison*, Chesapeake Energy, Molycorp*, Lehman Brothers*, iStar Financial*, Calpine*, Fannie & Freddie MAC*, Enron*, Tyco*, Adelphia*, Six Flags*, eToys*, Avaya*, and Worldcom* – ALL of the ones marked with an * went bankrupt.

-      Loyalty programs get VIP treatment:  Starbucks rose on word that membership in its rewards program topped 17m.  Domino’s sales rose 4% as its calorie club surpassed 20m members.  And Chipotle boasted that its loyalty program already has 3M burrito faithful.

-      Beyond Markets:  Beyond Meat (the maker of plant-based meat substitutes) IPOd last week, and had the best-performing IPO in almost 20 years.  With Friday’s close of over $70, they’ve almost tripled their IPO price of $25. 

-      Worst week of the year for the Pig:  Last week the Shanghai stock index dropped 6% even though the country's GDP growth beat economists' expectations. One big worry: their economic growth is increasingly driven by government-supported real estate development.  That can't go on forever.

-      WeWork  is going public.  The We Company (formerly known as WeWork) has filed for an IPO.  They were most recently valued at $47B.  They doubled their revenue last year, but also doubled their losses.   

-      Another EV study:  As PKD correctly pointed out, the latest Volkswagen (VW) study compares a diesel-powered Golf TDI with an all-electric e-Golf.  They found that the Golf TDI diesel emitted 140g CO2/km over its entire life cycle, while the e-Golf released only 119g CO2/km.  VW came up with these results by considering: (a) their e-Golf would use a mixture of power coming from natural resources along with renewable energy sources.  And (b) they considered their battery life to not end after 150,000km but rather be available all the way until the end of the battery warranty and then be available for recycling.  

-      Berkshire Hathaway Pt2: Charlie Munger (vice chairman of Berkshire Hathaway) recently told their 2019 shareholders meeting: “I was recently invited to a happy hour by Bitcoin people.  I always wanted to know what they did in their happy hours.  I found out that they celebrate the life and work of Judas Iscariot – you know the apostle that betrayed Jesus.”  In the past Munger has claimed that Bitcoin and cryptocurrencies are: “anti-social, stupid, and immoral.”  And most recently claimed: “Trading Bitcoin is like dementia.  It’s like somebody else is trading turds and you decide that you can’t be left out.” Mr. Munger – are you saying that an investment that has gone from $1 to $6,000 in 5 years is a bad investment? If so, has Berkshire produced similar returns?  I didn’t think so.


Crypto-Bytes:

-      BTC vs Gold:  Gold is on the defensive, and down 6% since mid-February. Bitcoin (on the other hand) is on the rise. The 90-day correlation coefficient between Bitcoin and gold is currently at -0.71 – its lowest level since March 20.  Of course, correlation is not causation, yet gold’s near-term bearish outlook may be a sign of positive things to come for Bitcoin’s value.

-      The Price is Right:  Bitcoin has hit fresh almost 6-month highs – currently above $5,700.  As a result, a rally to $6,000 could be seen in the next week.  Bitcoin will encounter resistance at $5,780 and $5,890 as it heads into that level.

-      Squares’ makin’ $’s with Bitcoin:  The payments company Square has disclosed $65.5m in bitcoin revenue came in during Q1 of 2019.  Bitcoin’s costs are listed at $64.7m – for a bitcoin profit of roughly $832k.  Those figures are all-time highs for Square.

-      A Central Bank 1st:  Those words don’t normally go together.  The Central Banks of Canada and Singapore have concluded a trial of cross-border payments using blockchain technology and central bank digital currencies.  The Bank of Canada (BoC) and the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) jointly said that the successful trial – the first of its kind between two central banks – showed “great potential to increase efficiencies and reduce risks for cross-border payments.”

-      Crypto is ‘Exploding’:  The U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) expects to see more companies apply to become federally-regulated clearinghouses as a result of growing interest in cryptocurrencies.  Chairman J. Christopher Giancarlo, testifying on “the state of the CFTC”before the U.S. House Agriculture Committee on Wednesday, said, “The Commission anticipates new applications for clearinghouse registration resulting from the explosion of interest in cryptocurrencies.”

-      Here they come – yeah!  U.S. stock broker E*Trade is set to launch Bitcoin and Ether Trading.  They will initially add trading support for Bitcoin (BTC) and ether (ETH), with more cryptocurrencies being added in the future. And last week, TD Ameritrade, was testing Bitcoin (BTC) and Litecoin (LTC) trading on its platform.

-      11% of Americans own Bitcoin:  Analysts expect the Crypto markets to continue surging despite Bitcoin’s current stability.  Bitcoin’s transaction volume is showing real signs of a bull market as the quarterly trend reverses, and more people become comfortable with the digital assets.


Last Week:



“Part of the journey … is the end.” … Tony Stark (Avengers Endgame)

   Avengers Endgame was the last in a series of extremely successful Avenger movies. Unfortunately we couldn’t say the same about last week’s market action.  I have to continuously remind myself of some basic facts: (a) car sales are at 7 year lows, (b) high-end housing is seeing it's biggest drop in 8 years, and (c) global industrial production is in a synchronized slow down.   If I don’t remind myself of those elements – I begin to listen to the ‘white noise’ that’s telling me things like: “Stocks should to be higher because they deserve higher multiples.”
   Last Friday (jobs day) was a perfect case in point.  The number we were fed was that in April, the U.S. economy created 263,000 jobs, and the unemployment rate had come down to 3.6%.  But I still have some basic questions:
-      How is that number so high when the services index is at 20 month lows, and services employment is crumbling?
-      How is that number even true when: manufacturing is down, average incomes are down, workweek hours are reduced, the household survey employment number (real jobs) is down, full-time jobs are down, and the labor participation rate is down?
-      And then there is the Birth/Death model.  It’s the beautifully fictitious number that is added to each month’s jobs report to reflect net new business hires.  It’s a fake number – with no basis in fact – and in April they said that entrepreneurs created +281,000 jobs.  Again, there's no proof that these jobs exist, no tax receipts – simply an equation that suggests that they could be there.

   But ah-hah, if we subtract the fictitious jobs (281k) from the total jobs that they said were created (263k) – we get the real answer that the U.S. economy LOST 18,000 jobs in the month of April.  Now suddenly all of the other downward facts listed above make sense.  Wow, they’re pulling out all the stops to keep this market alive.


Weed:

   Warren Buffett loves Coca-Cola to the tune of drinking 5 cans per day.  His company (Berkshire Hathaway) is the largest Coke shareholder – owning roughly 10% ($19.5B) worth.  So let's just say, when Warren talks – Coca-Cola’s management team listens.  Let’s assume when Coke was in talks with Aurora Cannabis to produce CBD-infused beverages – Warren said something similar to his CNBC interview on Friday: “It would be a mistake for Coca-Cola to get into the marijuana – cannabis business.  They have a wholesome image and that would be detrimental to it.” Unfortunately, Constellation Brands and Molson Coors have already announced their own investments in the industry.  And in the back of every Coca-Cola executive’s mind must be the fact that they’re missing out on a huge opportunity if they heed Buffett's advice.  The burgeoning CBD market in the U.S. alone is exploding from $1B in 2019 to $16B by 2025. Given that potential, Coca-Cola may have to ignore Warren Buffett to take advantage of an opportunity the company can't afford to miss.
    In 2019 alone, Canopy Growth Corp (CGC) shares have gained 73% - making it the largest cannabis stock by market cap.  Their current deal with U.S. based Acreage Holdings could push their stock's value much higher.  Right now the deal has no precise date set for the wedding – because only when the U.S. government legalizes marijuana will this marriage actually be consummated.  The contingency deal is necessary because under Canadian regulations, companies listed on the Toronto Stock Exchange cannot own assets in locations where marijuana isn't legal.  It’s interesting to note that everyone is speaking in terms of ‘WHEN’ rather than ‘IF’ the U.S. government formally recognizes the state-by-state movement toward the legalization of marijuana.  Canopy Growth chairman and CEO Bruce Linton said it best:  “Our right to acquire Acreage Holdings secures our entrance strategy into the United States as soon as a federally-permissible pathway exists.  When the right is exercised, having access to Canopy Growth’s deep resources will enable us to innovate, develop and distribute quality cannabis brands across the U.S. and continue expanding our U.S. footprint.”  With the Acreage deal, Canopy will be active in 20 states, in markets valued upwards of $17B.
   Canopy Growth’s acquisition of Acreage Holding is not their only connection to the U.S. economy.  But among Acreage’s high-profile board of directors is former Canadian prime minister Brian Mulroney.  Many have interpreted Mulroney’s position on Acreage's board (which also includes former speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives John Boehner) as a sign that legalization in the U.S. is a bankable event.  For those investors keeping count, Canopy has done other deals recently:
-       A $4B deal with Constellation Brands (STZ), the U.S. based international beer and wine producer behind brands such as Corona and Robert Mondavi.
-       The acquisition of U.S. hemp producer AgriNextUSA – which calls for Canopy to invest between $100m and $150m in AgriNextUSA’s NY hemp operations. 
-       A multi-year agreement with British Columbia-based HollyWeed – a process used to dry cannabis producing high-quality oil and resin.  This will help Canopy better meet the oncoming demand for new CDB-infused edible products.
-       And an extension of its partnership with OG DNA Genetics – a globally recognized cannabis brand that brings genetic technologies to Europe.
   You can almost smell the excitement in the air – or maybe that’s cannabis?


Next Week:



   The good news is – I’m not alone in distrusting our government / FED.  The bond market is also not believing any of what they’re selling.  The bond market doesn’t believe our FED will raise rates any time soon, and in fact (from the chart above) thinks that there’s zero chance for a rate increase, and a 50/50 chance of a rate ‘decrease’ by the EOY.
   This week it was the financials that rocketed higher – allowing the S&Ps to remain level.  After all, the energy sector took it on the chin, while the Nasdaq (and specifically the FAANGs) crested into all-time high territory.  IPO fever is in play right now, and next week should be Uber’s coming-out party.
   This resembles the making of a topping pattern with: bonds being up, gold being up, and energy breaking down.  A couple plays to consider going forward:
-      Cisco (CSCO) = Buy the June 21st$60 PUT.  It’s a bearish position, because Cisco basically sat out last week’s rally in tech.  Their earnings are mid-May – so as the stock runs into earnings I would initiate the position.
-      Citigroup (C) = I’m looking at the same type of position in Citigroup – purchasing an in-the-money, June 21stPUT option – with the belief that it’s time to take some ‘off the table’ with the financials. 
-      As the chart below displays – I’m also looking at taking the exact opposite position in New Beverage (NBEV) and Aphria (APHA) – two cannabis stocks right after earnings next week because people will always pay-up for growth.

   I'm certainly not the only person that knows this market is rigged, but nobody knows when the wheels will fall off.  My guess has been that we exceed the highs, run for another short leg higher, and then we see them pull the rug out from under us.  I still like that thinking, but you can sense their desperation.  It's getting harder to manufacture happy news when the fundamentals are creaking and groaning.  Don’t fight the tape. The ‘powers-that-be’ want this market higher, and thus far they've been successful in making it happen.  Until that stops, you have to lean into this.


Tips:




Top Equity Recommendations:
   HODL’s:
-      Aurora (ACB = $8.90 / in @ $3.07), Earnings on May 7th
-      Canntrust Holdings (CTST = $6.05 / in @ $3.12),
-      Canopy Growth Corp (CGC = $49.08 / in @ $22.17),
-      HEXO (HEXO = $7.73 / in @ $6.37),
-      Nova Vax (NVAX = $0.47 / in @ $1.59), Earnings on May 2nd


   Crypto:
-      Bitcoin (BTC = $5,865)
-      Ethereum (ETH = $165)
-      Bitcoin Cash (BCH = $292)


   Options:
-      CGC (49.08): Buy May 17, 47.5 / 50 / 55 Call BFly for $0.03 CR
-       SPY (294.03): Buy May 17, (-1) 268 / (+3) 258 / (-1) 256 Put BFly for $0.44 DB


   Follow me on StockTwits.com to get my daily thoughts and trades – my handle is: taylorpamm.

Please be safe out there!

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Sunday, April 28, 2019

This Week in Barrons: 4.28.2019

This Week in Barrons: 4-28-2019:




Myth-Busters:
   Myth #1 – EVs:  When you include the production of the batteries and the additional power-plant energy required to run electric vehicles, it seems that EVs emit between 11% to 28% more CO2 than their diesel counterparts.
   Myth #2 – Single-use Plastic:  Single-use plastic is being painted as the devil, but reusable cotton bags are ONLY a substitute if you reuse them consistently for over 11.5 years. Anything less won’t offset the fact that making cotton bags creates over 600 TIMES more water pollution as making a plastic bag.
   Myth #3 – Uber & Lyft:  Both companies were touted as reducing our carbon footprint by bringing down car ownership and rentals.  Data shows: a) more people are abandoning mass transit for the ride services, and b) many ride service drivers sit and idle their cars, or roam around empty, waiting for their next ride – increasing emissions. 
   Myth #4 – Recycling:  Waste-management companies are telling towns, cities, and counties that there is no longer a market for their recycling so they can either a) pay much higher rates to get rid of recycling, or b) throw it all away.  Most are choosing the latter. Judie Milner, the city manager of Franklin, New Hampshire – for 8 years has offered her residents curbside recycling and the use of green bins to hold: paper, metal, and plastic.  Franklin used to SELL her recycling for $6 / ton.  Now, she’s being charged $125 / ton to recycle, or $68 / ton to incinerate.  With many residents living below the poverty line, she’s putting the recycling program ‘up in smoke’.
   Myth #5 – Education:  Thx to RL: Colleges have 3 big problems: a) they’re too expensive, b) they don’t teach very much, and c) over 40% of their graduates end-up working in high-school level jobs.  Too costly: For the past 40 years the cost of college has gone up 300%, but for the 40 years before that – it only went up 40%. What happened?  Since 1978, new federal student financial assistance programs were initiated that provided colleges the ability to raise fees – and they have.  They’ve built fancier facilities, and have engaged in employee bloat to the point where they have more bureaucrats than teachers.  Given most college students spend less time on studies than the average 8thgrader – the buildings mostly go empty.  Too little Learning:  Colleges used to be in the knowledge business, but now the literacy rate of college graduates is falling.  Seniors in college have marginally better critical reasoning and writing skills than seniors in high-school.  And with most colleges being more concerned about making students comfortable than challenging them with different ideas – free speech, problem solving and intellectual debate are increasingly coming under attack.  Underemployment:  Recent federal data shows that 41.4% of recent college graduates are underemployed – doing jobs previously held by high-school graduates.  For example, college graduates holding the profession of taxi driver has risen from 0.5% in 1970 to over 16% today.  The same can be said for waitress / coffee shop attendant.  The ‘generic’ college graduate is no longer in demand, and the earnings ‘bump’ given to that graduate vs a high-school diploma is rapidly declining.  Solution =  Information, Incentives and Innovation:  Most high-school students are clueless about: school fit, impact of non-graduation, student debt, and the outcome of picking the wrong major.  Students don’t study very much because it’s in the college’s best interest (rankings) to give out high grades regardless of achievement. And heaven forbid we incentivize professors to spend more time in classrooms and administrators to keep costs down.  I’m assuming we’re insane because the teaching techniques are basically the same ones Socrates used 2,400 years ago – yet we continue to expect a different outcome.


The Market:

  Well we did it.  We got the Nasdaq over its all-time closing high.  The S&P came up slightly shy, but hey let’s not get picky.  So what happens now?  We could easily stall out here, but I don't think we will.  I think Mr. Market has the last laugh by getting us up and over these levels, running a bit, and THEN rolling over.  



   The Shark TankTeam  went all-in with the Manscaped team of aerospace engineers who designed tools specifically for below the waist grooming and hygiene!  Over 750,000 men have already purchased the Manscaped Perfect Package 2.0 for their downstairs maintenance.  Nothing says ‘Welcome to 2019’ as a beautifully manscaped nether-region.
  Social Security  flashed its red lights when their annual report announced that by 2035 they will be completely tapped out.  That means that by 2035, Social Security will only have enough funds to pay people ¾ of their benefits when they retire.  The SSA urged lawmakers to come up with a fix for this looming problem, but Congress has been hesitant to address the issue because it would likely involve cutting benefits, raising payroll taxes, or both.  And President Trump has said he won’t touch Social Security.
  Greenland is melting so fast that it’s raising sea levels.  Its ice loss has increased six-fold over the past 46 years.  That's bad news for places like Hawaii's Waikiki Beach – where rising sea levels will put beachfront property underwater inside of 20 years.
   Jeopardy’s Jason Holzhauer:  Have you seen this guy in action.  
He just keeps betting and winning, and word on the street is that he's broken the game.  He wagers absurd amounts on the Daily Double.  He starts with the expensive clues – jumps all around the board – it’s riveting education.  How is it that in nearly 60 years – no one else has done this? Jason’s all about taking risks and doing it differently.  Even Ken Jennings’s said: “He’s amazing, and what a class act.”  Now the weird thing is – Jeopardy is pre-taped, so people know how this story ends.  Can you imagine if this were live?  It would then truly be ‘must-see TV’.  Jason inspires you to get off the couch, and try to put a dent in the knowledge universe.




   Homeschooling:  When you look at industries that continue to operate on old, outdated, and highly regulated models: Education, Healthcare, and Banking – come to mind.  It’s interesting to look at the numbers of consumers who are opting out of the legacy education model.  In K-12 education, many people think of charter schools as being the disruptive force – capturing almost 10% of the US’s 55m K-12 students.  But if you really want to look at where disruption exists, you need to look at parents who are moving toward homeschooling.  Parents today may not have the time or inclination to homeschool, but all of the tools are out there for everyone to pull this off.  It seems if educators won’t change their model, the world will change without them.  As JR always said: “Tell me a way to short the educational system, and I’m in.”  


InfoBits:

-      Cut Us Some Slack:  Slack is gearing up for their IPO.  They’ll be listing directly on the NYSE with a $17B valuation.  Last year they had $400m in revenue, and $139m in losses.  Daily active users were over 10m – which is a lot.

-      One Day Shipping For All:  Is what Amazon is planning for Prime members.  This should be even more incentive to purchase due to a tighter turnaround.

-      Uber & Lyft are public because:  in 1983, 50% of all 16 year-olds had their driver’s license.  Today, it’s less than half that number.  Ignore the money losses, and focus on the lives Uber and Lyft have saved, and that stat alone may make them priceless.  “I doubt the public markets will allow them to run profitless much longer” says HL.

-      Railroads vs Tech:  FYI: over the past 20 years railroads have crushed the Nasdaq and the S&P by nearly 1,000% in investment performance.

-      Who exhibits less Privacy than your Parents – Facebook:  During its earnings call Facebook said they were setting aside $5B for future fines associated with their own privacy violations.

-      Happiness Survey:  Gallup’s annual survey showed that levels of sadness, anger and fear made new highs last year. Chad (a country in Africa) took home the dubious honor of being the world's most unhappy country – while Paraguay was the world's happiest and most positive country.

-      Your Drone Is Waiting:  Alphabet’s drone delivery startup Wing is the first to get  FAA approval for making commercial business drone deliveries.  

-      Elon Predicts:  a) a new microchip will be in every new Tesla car allowing for autonomous driving, b) by mid-2020 Teslas will drive themselves – allowing drivers to avoid paying attention to the road, and c) autonomous Tesla taxis could make their owners $30,000 a year.

-      Disney’s CEO Bob Iger recieved $65.6m:  In compensation last year.  That is too much money according to Abigail Disney, Roy Disney’s granddaughter. She also pointed out that she has no say in how the company operates.

-      That Was Fast:  Now that they’re not suing each other, Apple and Qualcomm are working to put 5G chips into the 2020 iPhone.  This comes when no one in the U.S. has even semi-usable 5G capabilities.

-      All aboard the AWS Club:  Apple is paying Amazon $30m a month for AWS cloud services.  Apple uses AWS to support its iCloud and related services, and will spend close to $1.5B on AWS over 5 years.

-      KP – keep saying Yes:  PM wrote a great piece titled: ‘How Kleiner Perkins (KP) Fell.’  She mentions how KP said ‘no’ to investing in Robinhood at valuations of: $61m, $250m, $1.3B – and at $5.6B said ‘yes’.  PM said ‘yes’ and invested at $8m, $250m & $1.3B – and said ‘no & sold’ at $5.6B.   KP – keep sayin’ yes.

 


Crypto-Bytes:

-      Bitcoin:  is up 40% in 60 days, and has halted the Altcoin season in its tracks. If Bitcoin can maintain its uptrend, a big move is imminent to around $7k.  That’s why crypto-traders are abandoning Altcoins and bullishly buying Bitcoin.  By the way, do you know any other asset that has raised $0 from VCs in the past 10 years – and yet is worth over $100B?  I don’t.

-      Lending crypto?  Genesis Global Trading's crypto lending arm continues to grow.  Genesis Global Capital wrote $425m of crypto loans in Q1, bringing its total originations since March 2018 to $1.53B.  Short sellers now account for only 3% to 5% of Genesis' bitcoin loans, down from 50% in early 2018.

-      A Brave new Ad world:  Brave’s promise to compensate you for viewing online ads is finally coming true.  The privacy-minded web browser is debuting the feature and promising that 70% of its ad income will go back to the users.  The rewards will be paid out in Brave’s Basic Attention Token (BAT).

-      India and China:  Are considering banning ‘cash’.  This is when Bitcoin will really click in people’s minds.

-      Chase Bank’s Lawsuit:  Verdict could hear (for once and for all) a N.Y. Federal judge say: “Crypto is cash.”

-      Sovereign Bitcoin:  Afghanistan and Tunisia are racing to become the first nations to issue a sovereign bond using Bitcoin.

-      We are Secure:  Crypto custodian BitGo says it is the first crypto to pass the advanced security review by a “Big Four” firm.  BitGo’s chief security officer said. “We did it to further legitimize the industry, and to let people see that we are taking our work seriously.”

-      Coinbase is Cutting:  Their Chicago office personnel that were dedicated to creating sophisticated electronic market technologies for cryptocurrencies.  It will consolidate the work being done with their San Francisco office, and 30 engineers will soon hit Michigan Ave with resumes in-hand.

-      Identity matters:  It started by selling beer, but age verification could crack open a whole new crypto-industry market for Civic.  After this year’s SXSW beer selling demo, Civic announced partnerships with six major automated retail companies that control more than one million internet-connected vending machines.


Last Week:



   On Friday, we got a first look at Q1 GDP, and instead of growing at an expected pace of 2.5%, it came out at + 3.2%.  That caused economy doubters (like me) to question our thinking – temporarily.  Soon the facts started pouring in and to quote David Rosenberg: “This was a low-quality GDP report.  All one-offs - lower imports, higher inventories & Pentagon spending.  Real private sales grew a puny 1.3% causing adjusted GDP to FALL at a 2% annual rate; the deepest decline in nearly a decade.”
   This further shows that like an iceberg – things can look good on the surface, but it’s what you can’t see that will kill you.  For example: a) we have supposedly the lowest unemployment – yet we have the highest amount of homelessness. b) equities have been losing investment dollars for 13 out of 14 weeks – yet the market is challenging all-time highs.  Goldman even came out and said: "Without company buybacks, demand for shares would fall dramatically."  Over the past 5 years, the following groups bought and sold: a) Foreign Investors sold $234B, b) Pension Funds sold $901B, c) Stock Mutual Funds sold $217B, d) Life Insurers bought $61B, and e) Households bought $223B.  So ‘net-net’ investors pulled $1.2T out of equities over the last 5 years, but the market went up due to corporations doing $3T in stock buybacks.  That does NOT include any Central Bank purchases, or the Swiss National Bank buying 24m shares of Microsoft and recently buying 2m shares of Linde.  Who knows what the Bank of Japan or our own FED purchased via proxy?
   The GDP report stinks like 3-day old fish.  Virtually all of the growth was fueled by $32B of inventory building.  The problem is that NOBODY can figure out where these inventories came from.  Goods must come from somewhere – either produced by domestic firms or imported from abroad. Unfortunately, according to the same government data – both production (- 0.3%) and imports (- 3.7%) FELL during these first three months of the year.  “You can’t stockpile what you don’t import or don’t produce,”said Robert Brusca, chief economist at FAO Economics. Brusca continued: “Spending on consumer durable goods fell 5.3% in Q1, the biggest drop in 10 years.  Business spending on equipment was also weak.  This GDP report is an absolute mess.  Another possibility is that the government tinkered with the report.”  Ya think?


Next Week:




   My point behind all of this is that: a) the S&P is less than a single percent from its all-time high, b) the Nasdaq has set an all-time high, and c) the DOW is less than 2% from its all-time high.  It's obvious that the plan since the December melt down, was to get the market back and probably exceed its September highs.  One might have thought that they would have used those ‘wonderful’ GDP numbers to push us up and over all-time highs, but they didn't.  So, what are they going to do?  After all, next week we have:
-      An FOMC meeting that resolves itself on Wednesday.
-      A yield curve (as shown above) that is the smallest percentage from inverting again on the 10-Year, and has already inverted on the 7-Year.
-      A NO FEAR market place – with a volatility index (VIX) reading of 12.  
-      Interest rates that continue to fall – showing a disbelief in the 3.2% GDP number.
-      The ‘monsters of tech’ (FB, GOOGL, AMZN, AAPL, MSFT) moving the Nasdaq higher – while the chip sector is in pain due to lack of demand.
-      The Chinese government (temporarily) stepping away from supporting its own stock market, and the markets (DJSH) fading appropriately.
-      South Korea, Japan and Germany all in recession.
-      Exxon and Chevron reporting weaker than expected energy numbers.
-      Bonds and Financials moving higher – and this is the ‘canary in the coal mine.’

   Everyone knows that the bond buyer is the smartest person in the room.  So when interest rates are moving lower (bonds moving higher) – it’s a warning that equity financials are in for a ‘rocky road’ ahead.  Combine that with the short positions in the VIX (volatility index) being the largest they’ve been in decades – signals a potential violent move to the downside coming shortly, but not tomorrow.  My position for the last several months has been that a) we'd get to the all -time highs, b) we'd squeak through them, c) we'd rally a bit longer – sucking in the people afraid of missing a new leg higher and then d) we’d pull the rug and relieve all those investors of their money.  I still believe in that position.  It’s completely possible that we roll-over from here, but the market had an opportunity to do that with 3M's horrific numbers last week and it did not.  I’m still leaning long, but realize that at some point all this ends – and probably ends badly.


Tips:

Top Equity Recommendations:
   HODL’s:
-      Aurora (ACB = $9.04 / in @ $3.07), Earnings on May 7th
-      Canntrust Holdings (CTST = $7.29 / in @ $3.12),
-      Canopy Growth Corp (CGC = $49.75 / in @ $22.17),
-      HEXO (HEXO = $7.81 / in @ $6.37),
-      Nova Vax (NVAX = $0.49 / in @ $1.59), Earnings on May 2nd


   Crypto:
-      Bitcoin (BTC = $5,335)
-      Ethereum (ETH = $160.00)
-      Bitcoin Cash (BCH = $267.00)


   Options:
-      CGC (42.29): Buy May 17, 47.5 / 50 / 55 Call BFly for $0.03 CR
-       SPY (290.16): Buy May 17, (-1) 268 / (+3) 258 / (-1) 256 Put BFly for $0.44 DB


   Thoughts:

-      Small Cap Index (IWM):  What’s that creaking sound you hear?  It’s just the small cap index (IWM) which rallied the equivalent of 1.4 standard deviations last week, but still failed to keep up with the big boys.  While SPY, QQQ and DIA rally to near record highs, IWM has been content to be pretty much flat for the past two months.  That means that any plays should be directional in nature – debit spreads.  And if this market sells off, IWM is leading the way lower.  If you are bearish on IWM, the long put vertical that’s short the $157 PUT and long the $159 PUT in the June monthly expiration period is a bearish strategy that has a 61% probability of making 50% of its max profit before expiration.


   Follow me on StockTwits.com to get my daily thoughts and trades – my handle is: taylorpamm.

Please be safe out there!

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