RF's Financial News

RF's Financial News

Sunday, January 5, 2020

This Week in Barrons: 1-5-2020

This Week in Barrons: 1-5-2020:                 



Thoughts:

I remember seeing Bill Gates give a keynote speech in the Superdome when he uttered the words: “We tend to overestimate what will happen in 1 year, and underestimate what will happen in 10.  During the upcoming decade I expect that:
1.    The experiment in using capital as a moat…  to build startups into sustainable businesses will be celebrated as a FAILURE.  Uber  popularized the strategy, and has yet to prove it can support itself.  WeWork was a quick learner with this strategy, as it blew up in everyone’s face.  VCs and Universities are failing right and left with the strategy, and I honestly couldn’t be happier.  “Kill the Beast!”

2.    Countries will create and promote digital / crypto…   versions of their fiat currencies.  China will lead the charge, and will gain the most from its ‘first mover advantage’.  Asian crypto exchanges will become the dominant capital market for all types of financial transactions.  The U.S. will be hamstrung by regulators.  

3.    China will become the dominant…   global superpower because of its  technical prowess and ability to adapt.  Conversely the U.S. will become increasingly isolationist.

4.    Climate change…   will cause dramatic changes in real estate values.  Nuclear and solar power will continue their march toward becoming mainstream.

5.    Plant based diets…   will dominate the world, and labs will be the new farms.

6.    Privacy protection…   will finally ‘matter’ and the biggest consumer technology successes of the decade will be in the area of privacy & security.

7.    Genetics will produce massive wins as cancer and other terminal illnesses become better understood and treatable.

The goal is NOT to be right about the above, but to continue thinking about them.


The Market:  





3 WHAT IF’s:
#1       Apple acquires Tesla:  Elon Musk's EV company always sets insane goals, but 2020 looks particularly crazy. They need to:
o   Scale production at the new Shanghai Gigafactory, 
o   Deliver the first Model Y crossover SUVs (on pre-order since March), 
o   Succeed in China despite America's ongoing trade war, and 
o   Build a 4th Gigafactory near Berlin.
Tesla’s stock is at an all-time high thanks to a profitable last quarter and broken widow-gate.  But Tesla is polarizing, and the stock could quickly turn south.  If shares fall 50% (and it's happened before), that's where Apple comes in.
o   Apple has $206B in cash.
o   Creating an iCar has been rumored for decades.
o   With iPhone sales declining, there’s an open ‘parking’ spot on Apple’s product roadmap.  
o   Both company HQ’s are just 9 miles apart.
If Tesla was acquired, Apple's CEO would take the wheel and bring financial stability to Tesla, and bring a dose of reality to Elon's projections.

#2       Chipotle begins to change to a pick-up and delivery restaurant:
Chipotle should become the 1st major US restaurant chain to eliminate tables and make every store offer pre-order pickup and delivery only.  Why – because:
o   Digital saved Chipotle.  Their online sales for pickup and delivery almost doubled last quarter.
o   Space costs money.  Chipotle restaurants are mostly empty during the mornings and between 2 and 5pm when you're not hangry.
o   Their new CEO came from Taco Bell, and I’m betting his ideas only get wilder.
Convenience is winning over retail.  Target’s stock is at record highs thanks to curbside pickup.  Walmart is committed to "delivery unlimited" subscriptions and grocery curbside pickup.
o   Over half of 2020’s restaurant spending is projected to be outside the restaurant.
o   Last year's $10.2B consumer splurge on 3rd party delivery led to ghost kitchens (delivery-only restaurants where customers can't see the place.)
o   Starbucks is testing its first ever pickup-only stores.
Chipotle is facing fresh, fast-casual competition.  McD’s is spending $6B to renovate its stores.  Going table-free isn't just a profit move or a PR stunt, but rather how Chipotle can stand out in a saturated world of quick quality food options.

#3       Amazon starts ‘naked’ shipping (eliminates cardboard waste):
Currently, billions of packages shipped each year means billions of tree-made cardboard boxes.  Amazon launched “The Climate Pledge” to meet the Paris Climate Agreement 10 years early.  They could meet this goal by offering ‘naked’ shipping.  They’ve already ordered 100k electric delivery vans, and are investing $100m in planting trees.  With: ‘Prime Shipping’, ‘2-hour Shipping’, ‘No-rush Shipping’ – ‘Naked Shipping’ is a natural.
o   ‘Naked Shipping’ = No box within a box.  This allows certain packages to be shipped in their native packaging, and just slapping on a label.
o   Give the customer $1 off to ‘Go Naked’ – because it saves Amazon money (the boxes) and helps achieve its Climate Pledge.
Yes, naked isn’t always appropriate.  A Rolex needs the anonymity of a brown box.  But with customers craving "naked-eligible’ $1-off items – producers may make their native packaging more naked-friendly, (like Tide currently).
o   This could negatively affect Amazon’s profits.  Amazon already pays workers to optimize packaging.  Now it will have to pay for the $1 naked incentive, and for an increase in stolen and damaged items.
But Jeff, sustainability commitments can create brand love (Patagonia).  And preventing trees from being turned into boxes will build customer loyalty.


Info Bits:




-       Remember Pixar’s 2008 movie WALL-E?   It is set in the 29th century, where mankind has evolved into boneless blobs that: eat, babble at screens, and lounge in high-speed, floating chairs.  With 40% obesity in the U.S., Segway is debuting a new personal transporter pod at CES in Las Vegas.  It uses Segway's self-balancing technology to propel the user forward on two wheels, while sitting down.  The rider navigates via a knob on a control panel, and can go up to 25 mph.  Yee-Haw!

-       Getting down to business:   Google and Facebook still need to defend themselves against the government’s antitrust claims.  Uber, Lyft, Peloton, Slack, Pinterest, Smile Direct Club… – all need to figure out how stay alive.

-       Let the Streaming Wars begin:   The faceoff is now between Netflix, Hulu, HBO Go, Amazon, Disney+, Apple TV+, and others.  That’s a lot of content in 2020.

-       Gig Economy  Uber and Postmates filed a lawsuit to block the new California law that would require companies to classify these workers as employees rather than independent contractors.  The reclassification would impact the entire ‘gig economy’ – adding further costs to already unprofitable businesses.

-       Apple and Microsoft accounted for 1/3 of the Nasdaq’s great 37.8% year:   If you listen closely – you can hear 1,000 hedge funds shutting down.  No wonder more and more people turn to indexing and simple asset allocation when it comes to investing.  If you can’t beat ’em – join ’em.

-       “War, what is it good for?”   A lot!  Aerospace and defense stocks broke to all-time highs last week.  Everybody knows “dangerous escalation” means profits for: Lockheed Martin (LMT), Northrop Grumman (NOC), Raytheon (RTN) and L3 Harris Technologies (LHX).  The military industrial complex only rolls downhill.

-       The Fog of War:   Sun Tzu once wrote: “All war is based on deception.”   The US and Iran may or may not be heading for war.  But one thing is certain, what we’re all going to be hearing from politicians and the media over the coming days is going to be misdirection.  Remember: everything is questionable.


Crypto Bytes:

-       Bitcoin believers…   expect a 2020 rally as a reward for halving.


Last Week:   



   The good news is that the market is treating the above set of unprofitable companies as it should.  All of the hype placed around ‘eyeballs’ (UBER) and ‘kumbaya’ (WeWork) has gone away and we’ll soon see who can put their ‘big boy pants on’.

-       Last Monday:  The stock market is open all day today and Tuesday.  Volumes stink and ‘weird’ movements are common.  Keep an eye on AMT.  It’s stupidly expensive, but if it clears $230 it has a shot at $240.  PG has technicals that are firming up, and a move over $126.50 could set it free.  BMY is threatening a breakout if it can get over $64.60 A report hit the wires that China is to visit the US next week-ish to sign the trade deal.  Interesting if true!
-       Last Tuesday:   Yesterday there was some tax related selling, as we dropped 183 points. But the banks like MS and C held up remarkably well.  The big question is: Do you hold onto whatever you have and take it into the new year or just sell now?  If you’re a big player and your portfolio is up – you probably want to lock in those profits.  But if you sell today, you will have to pay taxes on those gains in April of 2020.  If you hold out and sell on Thursday, you don't have to pay those taxes until April, 2021.  So, it’s possible we see some selling going into next week.  On the other hand, there's a lot of insurance and pension funds that have to do their new year redistributions the first week of January.  So buying may offset profit-taking.  I thought that we’d rise into the first couple of weeks of January and then see the market begin to stair step lower.
-       Last Thursday:   China did some liquidity injections overnight, and everyone liked that.  Microsoft (MSFT) hit a high of $159.55 this morning, and a move over that would be buyable.  AMD over $47.90 could work but it's awfully extended.  AAPL over $298.45 works, but hold your nose.  Of course the SPY and DIA are buyable over their respective morning highs, but look at the prices.  AMD did go over $47.90 so I snagged some.
-       Last Friday:   Overnight the U.S. targeted the top Iranian commander, killing him and another official in a drone strike.  The initial reaction was that oil jumped, gold jumped, and the futures fell 400 points.  But as the morning evolved the DOW is now only down 240.
   This is a game changer.  The guy they took out is the one that orchestrated the attack on the U.S. embassy.  Bottom line, tensions are very high, and something big could happen.  Just as alarming on the economic side of things - here's the latest round of economic data:

U.S. ISM Manufacturing December: 47.2 (estimate was 49.0)
- New Orders December = 46.8 (previous 47.2) – moving lower.
- Prices Paid December = 51.7 (estimate 47.8) – we have inflation.
- Employment in December = 45.1 (previous 46.6) – moving a lot lower.

  That's the worst manufacturing data in 10 years.  The economy is in serious slowdown mode, and the market is being held up ONLY by the FED and corporate buy backs.

-       Remember the 2010s:  Instagram took off because the ‘boomers’ took over Facebook.  The Chilean miners were rescued.  Obama won a 2nd term.   Same-sex marriage was legalized.  Who knew that Gangnam had style, and Hamilton would take over Broadway.  BP had a deadly oil spill.  Vine walked so TikTok could run.  Dozens occupied Wall Street.  Terror attacks and mass shootings shook the world.  Osama bin Laden was killed.  The US had its 1st female presidential nominee by a major political party.  Donald Trump won the 2016 presidential election, and then got impeached.  Women marched, candidates debated, millions fought for the Iron Throne, and we all tried to Catch ‘em all Things with North Korea got way too tense.  Kaepernick took a knee and started a movement.  People came forward with their #MeToo stories.  There were royal weddings and royal babies.  We flossed, planked, and poured ice over our heads.  Beyoncé sipped Lemonade.  Kanye became a Kardashian.  And we all could have a used a little more CBD.  What a decade.





Weed: 

-       Illinois Adult-Use MJ Launched w/ Heavy Demand:  Thousands of marijuana enthusiasts – including Illinois’ lieutenant governor – turned out on a cold New Year’s Day (2020) to mark the historic start of adult-use cannabis sales in what could become one of the largest U.S. recreational markets in the nation ($2B).  More than 77,000 legal recreational cannabis transactions occurred on Jan. 1 in Illinois, resulting in sales of nearly $3.2m with an average basket size of $135.  

-       New effort to legalize recreational cannabis in Oklahoma:  Supporters of recreational cannabis in Oklahoma refiled a petition to legalize adult-use marijuana in the state.  Michelle Tilley, the executive director of the Oklahoma branch of the American Civil Liberties Union who filed the new paperwork said that the petition was redrafted to make sure there were greater protections for the existing medical marijuana industry and its patients. 


-       Adult-use marijuana delivery firms licensed in Michigan:  Michigan regulators licensed the first three companies approved to deliver recreational cannabis to consumers’ homes.  The Michigan Department of Licensing and Regulatory Affairs approved the delivery businesses, Wood TV reported. Adult-use cannabis sales began in Michigan on Dec. 1.

-       Wholesale cannabis prices are on the rise:   Wholesale cannabis prices are going up in the recreational cannabis markets of: Colorado, Oregon and Washington.  The upward price trend seemed related to stronger demand, growers going out of business, and some farmers pivoting to industrial hemp.

-       Coca-Cola – where there’s smoke … Berkshire Hathaway CEO Warren Buffett and Vice Chair Charlie Munger made it clear that Coca-Cola shouldn’t venture into the marijuana business.  However, rumor has it that In Canada, Coca-Cola is coming out with a new line of Coca-Cola that contains CBD extracts.  Humm?

-       Canopy Growth has launched First & Free   a new line of hemp-derived CBD products, in the U.S.  The First & Free portfolio includes softgels, oil drops, and creams, and will be sold only where legal under state law.  The brand’s softgels retail at $15 a 10-pack of 25-milligram gels on its e-commerce website, while oil drops are at $40 per 30-ml. (25 grams of CBD per ml.), and creams will be released shortly.

-       48% of consumers who inhale cannabis…   self-identify "Having Fun" as a benefit – while only 30% of edibles consumers do.

-       Kansas governor supports legalizing medical marijuana…   and it’s one of the top priorities in 2020 for Kansas Gov. Laura Kelly.  The Republican said that although she is not a proponent of legalizing recreational marijuana, she probably would sign a bill into law if Kansas legislators presented her with one.  Mostly because it is bordered on three of its four sides by states with legal cannabis markets: Colorado, Missouri and Oklahoma.

-       Bermuda releases draft medical cannabis law and rules to ‘spark entrepreneurship’:   Bermuda released the draft legislative blueprint to establish a domestic medical cannabis industry that hopes to attract international investment.  Cannabis could be prescribed only by a medical practitioner and dispensed by a pharmacist.  Bermuda’s draft Medicinal Cannabis Bill, 2019 is available here.

-       The U.S. hemp-based CBD market…   will be north of $2.5B in 2020. 

-       In terms of CBD influence…   nothing is more convincing than a health care practitioners’ guidance.  50% of hemp-CBD interested adults said a health care professional’s guidance would motivate them to use a hemp-CBD product.  CBD products are currently positioned as substitutes for over-the-counter (OTC) solutions targeting arthritis, sleep and general pain.

-       Nielsen projections show that with FDA approval…   ingestible formats could grow their existing user base as much as 250%-375% in a year’s time, as these are the formats that consumers are most familiar with.  We believe that over the next decade, categories that consumers use habitually or as part of their daily routine will contribute significantly to CBD growth and ultimately garner high sales due to replenishment frequency. CBD-infused beverages are especially a good fit for this:  coffee, functional waters, energy drinks, teas and sport drinks. 

-       New CBD consumers…    are more than twice as likely to  shop for products at a grocery chain.  These same consumers are more than 3.5 TIMES more likely to purchase CBD products from a drug store chain.


Next Week:   




In the 2010’s we had:
-       1.  The emergence of the big four web/mobile monopolies; Apple, Google, Amazon, and Facebook.  Today, these four companies own monopolies or duopolies in their core markets and are using the power of those market positions to extend their reach.  What we do about this situation stands as one of the most important issues in tech.

-       2.  Silicon Valley’s position as mecca for tech and startups is finally weakening.  It’s incredibly expensive to live and work in the bay area and the quality of life equation is not moving in the right direction.  The physical infrastructure needs help, BUT that does not mean Silicon Valley is over.  It does mean that other tech sectors will find an easier time recruiting talent to their regions and talent is really the only thing that matters these days.

-       3.  Technology inserted itself right in the middle of society this decade. Our President wakes up and fires off dozens of tweets, possibly while still in bed. We are hostage to our phones and their related services.  There is no putting the genie back in the bottle in this regard, but the fact that the tech sector has such a powerful role means that it will be highly regulated.

   For me, 2019 was downright bizarre.  Everything seemed completely upside down. The stock market came into the year like a bloated pig ripe for slaughter, but the FED had a different idea.  Despite the FACT that the economy had slowed, manufacturing was in a slump, and shipments were down – they manufactured one of the biggest up years in market history.  They accomplished that by slashing interest rates, and pushing trillions into the banks via Repo activity.  The lowered interest rates allowed corps. To borrow billions to continue to buy back their own stock – driving equities higher.  The Repo money that goes to the banks, allows them the leverage to leak that money to institutions and hedge funds.  Not to mention outright Central bank buying of US equities.  The Swiss National bank doesn't even pretend any more. It prints its holdings sheet for all to see.  In their latest 13F filing, the SNB revealed that it held 2,520 US-traded stocks at the end of Q3.  The value of these holdings rose 1.5% to a record of $94.1B.  Its portfolio is loaded with the FANGMAN stocks - Facebook, Amazon, Nvidia, Google, Microsoft, Apple and Netflix - with APPL and MSFT as its largest positions.
   So, instead of the market finally pulling back after 9+ years of simply going higher, the market went insanely higher.  Free money, buy backs, cheap rates, and Central banks buying billions worth of stock worked its miracle.  What happens this year?


Tips:

   Can they keep pushing trillions in "not QE" via the repo markets?  Will corporations continue to buy half a trillion dollars of their own stock back?  Will Central banks continue to buy stocks on the open market?  Trump needs the economy to appear strong and the stock market not to crash.  Well, the economy is NOT strong, and Friday the manufacturing sector posted its worst numbers in 10 years.  Heavy truck sales have fallen the most in 9 years.  The NY December ISM came in at 39.1 versus 50.4 in November.  So the bottom line is this: even If the Feds are on Trump's side, I find it hard to believe they can squeeze 11 more months of upside out of this market.  We're in a bubble of epic proportions right now, and the economy is in contraction.   But I was skeptical last January and look how that turned out.  To do it, they will have to increase the amount of money printed.  Remember, junkies always need more crack just to maintain a high. The market is the same.  Slow the printing and the market will fade.  Which flies in the face of this headline that hit Friday afternoon:  FOMC: EXPECTS TO TRANSITION AWAY FROM ACTIVE REPO OPERATIONS IN MID-JAN.  This market can't go up, and can’t even sustain itself – if they start reducing their Repo activities.  This should get interesting.

Top Equity Recommendations:
   HODL’s:
-       Aurora (ACB = $2.00 / in @ $3.07),
-       First Majestic Silver (AG = $11.97 / in @ 10.50),
-       Canopy Growth Corp (CGC = $19.90 / in @ $22.17),
-       DRD Gold (DRD = $5.49 / in @ $4.20),
-       GBTC Bitcoin (GBTC = $8.59 / in @ $10.01), 
-       Microsoft (MSFT = $158.62 / in @ $145),
-       Pan American Silver (PAAS = $23.48 / in @ 18.00),

   Crypto:
-       Bitcoin (BTC = $7,500),
-       Ethereum (ETH = $140),
-       Bitcoin Cash (BCH = $230)

   Options:
-       RIOT ($1.18): 
-       Bot Jan 17, Sold $3 Call / Sold $3 Put / Bot $4 Call for $1.85 CR,
-       Bot Jan 17, Sold $2 Call / Sold $2 Put / Bot $3 Call for $1.45 CR,
(can only lose money if RIOT falls below $0.70).

   Watching:
-       EXK over $2.50,

   Thoughts:  (courtesy of Tasty Trade):

Back on July 5, 2019, the halfway mark of the year, I used the current prices and vols of five of the most popular indices to create likely ranges for the rest of 2019.  They were:

SPY    68% probability of landing between $272 and $325 // Actual = $321.86
QQQ   68% chance between $170 and $214 // Actual = $212.60
IWM    68% between $139 and $174  // Actual = $165.67
TLT     68% between $124 and $144  //  Actual = $135.48
VIX      68% landing above $11.00 //  Actual = $13.82

So the 3 equity indices landed in the middle of the ranges despite the past six months of rallying.  TLT landed in the middle despite some wild rides in the late summer, and the VIX landed above 11 despite that equity rally that kept it below 20 for most of the year.  This is why probabilities work and not charts, fundamentals or Wall St. analysts.  I’d wait to ‘place your bets’ on the next 6 months until the VIX is higher mid- January – fyi – but here are today’s bets for July 1st:

SPY    68% between $294 and $347
QQQ   68% between $186 and $239
IWM    68% between $147 and $186
TLT     68% between $123 and $147
VIX      68% above $10.75
 
   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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Until next week – be safe.

R.F. Culbertson






Sunday, December 29, 2019

This Week in Barrons: 12-29-2019:             





Thoughts:

   I am Gumby, DAMMIT!  This line has many meanings, one of which is:  I’m here to blow away the competition."  What kind of crazy world do we live in where SNL has its best show in decades when Eddie Murphy (after 35 years) revisits his roots.  It seems like such a long time ago that one of my comedy heroes came home to roost.  Then Chris Rock joined him - which brought back memories of George Carlin.  Then Dave Chappelle stepped on stage.  Dave, who had the audacity to walk away from his own TV show, only to come back as the highest paid performer on Netflix.  These are all guys that ‘made it’ when a pre-requisite for ‘making it’ was paying your dues.  Seeing Eddie Murphy made me realize that we’ve created a world in which everybody believes they can ‘make it’ on the Internet.  The Internet gives way too much credit to those who don’t deserve it, because they never paid their dues.  By teaching the philosophy that anyone can do anything as long as they put their mind to it, we’re finding out that what most people do best is self-promotion.  Eddie taught us that you actually need 35 years of paying your dues, in order to utter the words: I am Gumbycorrectly.

   I am Gumby, DAMMIT!  Another meaning of this line is: “I’m here to get s%$t done”.   But ‘getting s&*t done’ is NOT the same thing as being popular.  There are hundreds of thousands of people from all backgrounds and genders trying to be popular on Instagram.  Facebook is filled with anonymous bots creating popularity.  Billions of hours are being spent believing that the social media pyramid scheme of attention gathering – will somehow pay off.  It won’t and can’t because the MATH doesn’t work.  But the even bigger problem is that the things people are doing to become popular – are NOT the things that they will be proud of later in life.  When we use a single success metric of ‘likes’, we focus on the rear-view mirror rather than the road ahead.  Behaving weirdly to create a certain social media outcome – is different than ‘leading by example’.  Gumby is telling us that by ‘getting s&*t done’ – the remainder will take care of itself.  

   I am Gumby, DAMMIT!   Gumby’s message is simple, easy to understand, and trustworthy.  It’s like someone asking you to come with them to visit a new ice-cream shop down the street.  Every word is self-explanatory.  We have a real frame of reference, and we know exactly what to expect.  It’s very different when asking someone about a particular crypto-currency or cbd.  When you ask a question about a new entry that’s also in a new category, you’re challenging yourself to do 3 things: (1) explain both the category and the entry, (2) instill trust, and (3) ask them to buy.  That’s why competition is such a gift.  Others help to explain the category.  When there’s competition, you can say: “We’re like Uber, only but without the scandals.”
 


The Market:  

   What a difference a year makes.  One year ago, the S&P 500 bottomed out at 2,351.  The index had lost nearly one-sixth of its value over the preceding 14 trading sessions.  It was the worst December for stocks since the Great Depression.  Since then, the S&P 500 has rallied almost 40%.

   This week we crossed Nasdaq 9,000 which means the Nasdaq is just 11% from Nasdaq 10,000.  Technically, there is still a lot of pent up energy in the Nasdaq given it took 16 years to regain the 5k level.  I imagine CNBC and Fox Business will start a countdown to Nasdaq 10,000 any day now.  After all, this current uptrend has survived: (a) Impeachment, (b) a stalled Amazon, Netflix and Facebook for the last few years, and (c) many ‘unicorn’ startup / IPO’s that were focused on growth instead of profitability.  But let’s remember: the iPhone, AWS, Facebook, and Google will all keep printing money.  The wildcard is the U.S. Government, but the GOP is too busy with an election to try and slow tech down.  And Charlie Bilello did remind us: “The following economies are easing: U.S. = FED, ECB, BOE, BOJ, SNB, Denmark, Australia, Brazil, Russia, India, China, Korea, Indonesia, Turkey, Mexico, Chile and the Philippines.”  The real question could be: Will this bull cycle carry us to Nasdaq 20,000?






Info Bits:

-       Don’t be feeling alone:  12m of our cellphones are being actively tracked by the U.S. Gov’t.  Last week’s data leak revealed over 50B location pings from the cellphones of over 12m ‘tracked’ Americans.  Hey Alexa, tell the NSA to…

-       “Where the Crawdads Sing”…  is a book about a lonely girl’s coming of age in the marshes of North Carolina.  It has sold more than 4.5m print copies, and has outsold every other adult title in 2019.

-       It’s been 35 years…   since Eddie Murphy put away his Gumby costume and bid farewell to the cast of Saturday Night Live.  Last Saturday he told SNL viewers: “This is the last episode of 2019, but if you’re black – this is the first episode since I left back in 1984.”

-       $420/share was only a dream for Elon...   Tesla stock soared 12% last week to close above $430 – more than double its price in June.  Investors are going gaga for the new Gigafactory to start creating Tesla’s in China.  That is strategically important for 2 reasons: (a) China is the biggest market for electric cars (by far) and producing there could help avoid a tariff war.  (b) Lower costs would help Tesla cut the price of its Model 3 in China by 20%, which could help it achieve mainstream status.

-       That's a hard "Nein":   Last week, a German court banned Uber because it's not following all of Germany's many rules.  And we received news that ex-CEO/co-founder Travis Kalanick has sold all of his stock in the company ($2.7B), resigned from the board, and said for the near future he will be: “calling a cab”.

-       CFO = Chief Freak-out Officer:  FedEx’s 40% profit drop last quarter was horrific according to its own CFO.  It seems 7-day shipping will require a lot more spending on an updated ground game.  The stock is down 39% since Amazon launched 3rd party shipping.  FedEx thinks it will “start lapping” Amazon in 2021.  Ho-Ho-Ho – “I’ll have what they’re having.

-       Tesla raised another $1.4B…   from Chinese banks to finance its Shanghai Gigafactory.  Buyers came flooding in, bidding the stock up above the famous “funding secured”  $420 level.  TSLA is up 72% this quarter. 

-       Boeing’s CEO is ‘fully baked’…   Dennis Muhlenberg is now the x-CEO of Boeing as he was fired last week for his handling of the 737 Max disaster.

-       Who’s long Palladium?  It’s the metal of the decade.  This beast has done nothing but base and rally for the past ten years.

-       Nasdaq’s wild ride:  The past 20 years of the Nasdaq (QQQ) have been a wild ride to say the least.  From the dot com bubble top in March of 2000 above 5k to the low of 1100 in October 2002.  The index then took 15 years to close above its 2000 high, fully resolving to the upside in 2016. Tech giants, Facebook, Amazon, Apple, Netflix and Google have led the way.  Next stop 10K.

-       Shopify hits ATHs!  Shopify closed at all-time highs, bringing its YTD performance to over 200%.  This is the best kind of capitalism – a company everyone can root for as they assist the entrepreneurial endeavor. 

-       WSJ exposes how China funded tech giant Huawei to the tune of $75B:  It  gave figures for 4 different ways the Chinese state helped Huawei become the largest telecom-equipment firm vying to build 5G networks around the world.  $46B in loans, lines of credit, and other financing from state lenders.  $25B in tax breaks, $2B in discounts on land purchases, and $1.6B in grants.  Huawei said the information was false, but did not provide any details.

-       Japan’s population is declining …   by at least half a million people per year.  Two reasons: (a) a large older population that is dying, and (b) their  already low birth rate is falling even lower.  A lower birth rate means fewer young people entering the workforce – which could make it harder for Japan to support the elderly.  The same problem the U.S., U,K,, and France will face by 2030.

-       Automation’s a b*tch:   Over 50 banking lenders have announced their biggest job cuts since 2015.  Rationale: a slowing economy and new technology.

-       $500m … is the “Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker” 1st week’s gross sales.





Last Week:   

   The market is giving us a very low volume creep higher.  No one's on the floor because they’re all in the Hamptons.  I'm not complaining, everything is in the "up" mode that I have. The question is, do I want to add anything here?  I would suggest the silver miners, but maybe they should put in a pause day or two – they’ve run a long way.  That said EXK over $2.50 could be interesting.  Also, watch Twitter (TWTR) over $33, it has a shot at closing that huge gap all the way up to $39.





Weed:  Predictions for 2020:
-       #20:  Canadian cannabis companies (after getting rid of all of their ‘home-grown’ upper managers) will realize that need to put their ‘big boy pants on’ and manage toward profitability.

-       #19:  More and more good beverages will begin to filter down from the north.  Tilray’s joint venture with A-B just launched Everie – a line of CBD-infused tea bags.  Acreage Holdings just launched its Botanist and Tweed brands in Oregon.

-       #18:  States will continue their run toward recreational marijuana legalization.  Illinois is expecting long lines as access to their $2B MJ market opens at 6 a.m. CT New Year’s Day.  Even Ohio’s medical marijuana program is growing from 46 MMJ dispensaries to 58 shortly.


-       #17:  Brenda Verghese, Stratos sees…   2020 starting with even more smaller players.  When the FDA comes out with regulations, many of these companies will not be able to withstand the cost compliance.  In turn, the cost of product and hemp will go back up – with a lot fewer players.

-       #16:  Ted Haney, Canadian Hemp Trade Alliance sees…   increased hemp acreage in Canada, and whole-plant utilization.  He sees an increase in the sale of hemp protein concentrate and isolate to large food processors.

-       #15:  James McCoy, Farmer and Retailer sees.    8 TIMES more hemp than necessary (in the short-term) out there.

-       #14:  Ray Mazzie, Hemp Industries Association:  The hemp industry will surely experience explosive growth in 2020 as the USDA and FDA begin to release rules, take comments and eventually implement said regulations.

-       #13:  Marysia Morawska, Horticulture Educator:  We will see a movement toward a trifecta or even quad-usage plant – that’s utilized for the hurd, the fiber,  the flower, and for the grain.

-       #12:  Ross Burtness, ReGrow:  We will start to see more specific lines of products aimed at new and existing consumers.  Stricter regulations will push the market toward adopting proper genetics, DNA markers and compliant resin varieties.  Soon, there will be more variety available to the public at lower costs.

-       #11:  Jillian Hishaw, F.A.R.M.S.:  2020 will bring more stabilization to hemp farmers as they enter the planting season.  Many farmers that suffered an unrecoverable loss will not plant next year, but will wait until 2021 to ensure the regulatory kinks have been ironed out.

-       #10:  Scott Propheter, Criticality:  There will be an overall decline in planted acreage for 2020 caused by the oversupply from 2019.  2020 will be the catalyst year that begins a widespread consolidation in the processing community as margins continue to compress.

-       #9:  Priyanka Sharma, Kazmira:  We will see investment into genetics and harvesting technology in order to adhere to the USDA final rule.  I foresee more consumer awareness on traceability of product from farm to shelf.

-       #8:  Michael Bronstein, Amer. Trade Assn. for Cannabis and Hemp:  The hemp industry will have its best year of growth since 1941, but not everyone is going to win.  Complexity of the business and supply issues in the market will favor early adopters who can produce quality and consistent product at scale. The CBD market will find increasing competition and additional regulatory scrutiny before the dust settles.

-       #7:  Brent Williams, Highwater Financial:  The hemp industry will have a large focus on expanding infrastructure in 2020.  With many farmers getting burned on production contracts in 2019, we also believe there will be a slower growth rate in the number of acres grown until there is a tangible increase in demand.

-       #6:  Adrienne Snow, Western States Hemp:  Extraction capacity will increase by another 20%. Grow licenses will possibly double, however, actual harvested product will increase only by 50%.  There will still be a lot of confusion between the states and USDA.  The big players will continue to watch from the sidelines through 2020, awaiting calmer seas before jumping in and truly merging Wall Street and Main Street Hemp.

-       #5:  Russ Cersosimo, Hemp Synergistics:  With increased regulatory compliance, I expect to see many of the first-wave farmers, extractors and product manufacturers exit the business.  The second wave is coming in 2020, and then the market will level out.

-       #4:  Patrick McCarthy (PM), ValidCare sees:  Safety product assurance:  Consumers will care about where the products they put in, and on, their bodies come from.  This trend will hit the hemp industry next, as consumers demand information on plant origin, farming practices, product composition and sustainability.

-       #3:  PM sees:  More minor supplements:  CBD was this decade’s craze, but minor cannabinoids like CBN and CBG, are already being touted as having functional benefits tied to sleep and appetite.  Expect the FDA to voice concerns about these ‘cannabis derived compounds’ and expect product companies to market them nonetheless.

-       #2:  PM sees:  Hemp as a mental health aid:  One in five Americans use hemp-derived CBD for ‘mental health reasons’ such as anxiety.  In 2020, we’ll see even more people ditch Prozac prescriptions for non-impairing hemp-derived CBD to support their mental health goals.  Expect brands targeting this audience to commission research on hemp-derived CBD’s functional benefits for mental health.

-       #1:  PM sees:  Boomer Consumption – BOOMING:  The AARP crowd is one of the largest demographics using hemp-derived CBD for chronic joint pain and sleep. This trend will increase as Boomers replace prescription and OTC drugs with hemp-derived products — and lobby for coverage and reimbursement through FSAs, HSAs and supplemental Medicare policies.





Next Week:   

   The market is doing what I expected, and that is stair stepping higher.  During the past 10 days we’ve seen big uptakes followed by pause days.  I expect that behavior to continue until Powell’s $500B runs out in mid-January.  After all, FED Chairman Powell told us that he was doing $500B in short term / overnight Repo's.  With all of that money, it allows banks to give "X" amount to their fund managers to help manipulate the markets.  The fund managers deploy that money into ETFs, and the ETF algorithms buy the corresponding basket of stocks.  Repo money is why we're hitting new records, and we will continue to do so until it runs out – in early January.  Fund managers will do their biggest allotments in the first 2 weeks of the new year pushing us into the middle of the month.  But after that – what’s there to prop up the market?
   Remember, whether it's QE or Repo, just like a junkie – the market needs more and more juice to keep it going.  If the FED isn’t willing to continue with its insane money printing and pushing policies – what will keep things moving higher?  NOTHING.  Certainly not earnings or organic growth.  Maybe we’ll see some jawboning about a China deal, but that won’t be enough to drive the markets.
   Enjoy the free money, but don't bet the ranch because I don’t know what moves past mid-January.  In the short-term watch: Amazon (AMZN), Microsoft (MSFT), Apple (AAPL), Nvidia (NVDA), Goldman Sachs (GS), the S&Ps (SPY), the Nasdaq (QQQ), and the DOW (DIA) move higher as FED Repos continue to push this market.


Tips:

Top Equity Recommendations:
   HODL’s:
-       Aurora (ACB = $1.91 / in @ $3.07),
-       First Majestic Silver (AG = $11.89 / in @ 10.50),
-       Canopy Growth Corp (CGC = $19.21 / in @ $22.17),
-       DRD Gold (DRD = $5.17 / in @ $4.20),
-       GBTC Bitcoin (GBTC = $8.58 / in @ $10.01), 
-       Microsoft (MSFT = $158.96 / in @ $145),
-       Pan American Silver (PAAS = $23.14 / in @ 18.00),

   Crypto:
-       Bitcoin (BTC = $7,400),
-       Ethereum (ETH = $130),
-       Bitcoin Cash (BCH = $210)

   Options:
-       RIOT ($1.22): 
-       Bot Jan 17, Sold $3 Call / Sold $3 Put / Bot $4 Call for $1.85 CR,
-       Bot Jan 17, Sold $2 Call / Sold $2 Put / Bot $3 Call for $1.45 CR,
(can only lose money if RIOT falls below $0.70).

   Watching:
-       EXK over $2.50,
-       Twitter (TWTR) over $33, and 
-       Amazon (AMZN), Microsoft (MSFT), Apple (AAPL), Nvidia (NVDA), Goldman Sachs (GS), the S&Ps (SPY), the Nasdaq (QQQ), and the DOW (DIA).

   Thoughts:  (courtesy of Tasty Trade):
It’s the day after Christmas and Santa’s back trading,
After spending all Tuesday on his present crusading.
The elves got bored – making all of the toys,
And are back to the markets like good girls and boys.
Mrs. Claus too, is sick of the baking,
Scans overnight markets while the North Pole’s just waking.
It’s crossed their minds, how can people afford all this stuff?
The population is growing, and maybe just enough.

They’re all raring to trade, since it’s past Christmas night.
But they have to be careful of making all their dough in one bite.
Don’t become a gambler, channel your inner frenzy,
Keep those occurrences high, fight for fills to the penny.
Elves need to be patient, and wait for the data,
While they’re on top of their deltas, and their portfolio’s beta.
Today they’ll be watching, all of the other trades,
Getting some tips, on how real wealth is made.
So, it’s up to us and Team Claus – to avoid the noise,
And to stick with our plan, for all of our trading joys!

   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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