RF's Financial News

RF's Financial News

Sunday, January 24, 2021

This Week in Barrons: January 24th, 2021

 This Week in Barrons: January 24th, 2021 


If you haven’t heard it, I strongly recommend Jerry Seinfeld’s latest interview.  

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yNTmFORn3xQ


What Ends up Working…


   The purpose of marketing is to initiate change.  When we’re trying to create buzz, sell a product, change a lifestyle, build a community – marketing is required to help change the way people act.  Every marketing project begins with a clarification: the problem is ripe, the harm is real, the product works, people need it yesterday, and financially it’s worth doing.  But as valid as the ‘cool’ pitch & presentation that marketing comes up with will be – more often than not, buyers do NOT step up to be a part of the solution.  In the beginning, you can put all the energy you want into it, because it will take TIME (10,000 hours) and your pitch needs to MORPH – before it will begin to resonate.  There are only 3 things that cause people to change:

 

-       Status:    By buying your product, they will be viewed in a better light by their peers / competitors.

 

-       Affiliation:   This further refines ‘status’: “People like us – do things like this.”  Mick Jagger said: “He’s not a man until he smokes the same cigarettes as me.”

 

-       Convenience:  For the semi-lazy buyer of your product: “Things just got easier.”

 

   You can see the impact of these 3 drivers on: the spread of electric cars, the proliferation of Yeezy’s, the decline in smoking, and virtually every consumer decision out there.  However, almost every marketeer STARTS with a different focus & pitch, and then (after 10,000 hours) what ends up working: Status, Affiliation, and Convenience.

 

 

The Market:



   I love EB’s take on retail: “Despite lockdowns, store closures, mass layoffs, and global logistics networks that rival militaries in terms of sophistication – eCommerce still sold less than 17% of all sales in the U.S. last year.”

 

The most significant investing trends over the last 10 years were:

-       (a) Large Caps > Small Caps,

-       (b) U.S. > International,

-       (c) Growth > Value, 

-       (d) Tech > Everything else, and  

-       (e) Stocks > Commodities.

   

   This is because during a global depression: (a) big companies have larger cash reserves, (b) our Dollar is the global reserve currency, and we’ll just ‘out-print’ the rest of the world, (c) growth will be in short supply and ‘bid-up’ accordingly, (d) tech is more easily ‘scaled’ when people are WFH, and (e) bond yields will fall due to deflationary pressures and commodities from lack of demand.  These were playing according to plan – until they weren’t. 

   Investors are beginning to believe that a global depression has been avoided and therefore: (a) smaller companies will benefit more from stimulus measures, (b) global stocks will rise due to a falling dollar and higher global growth, (c) value stocks will improve as people go ‘back to work’, (d) technology will underperform as vaccines allow people to leave their homes, and (e) inflation, bond yields and commodities all will rise.

   I’m amazed at the speed of the shifts, but then again Yellen is back on the command deck singing: “Everything Old is New Again.”  With account initiation being easy and fractional ownership allowing everyone to build their own ETF, the retail trader is back in control and loving every minute of it.  Heck, maybe this market bubble is not getting ready to pop.  Maybe we just went through a massive injection of ‘market demand’ by home traders, and our bankers, founders, VCs and SPAC’ers need to create more supply – which they’re doing.  In fact, if you’re a supply-side company – I think that it will be hard for you to remain on the sidelines and not be SPAC’d in 2021.



InfoBits:



-       The Jan. 6th attack on the U.S. Capitol…   has set the stage for a political reckoning between Washington and Silicon Valley.  This will be the most aggressive regulatory assault against the tech industry we have ever seen. 

 

-       Tesla has started delivering…   its locally made Model Y crossovers in China. Another milestone for the electric carmaker in the world’s largest vehicle market.

 

-       Biden picked Gary Gensler to lead the SEC.  With Gensler and a Dem-controlled Congress, big banks could be in for a tougher time of it.

 

-       GM’s self-driving car company Cruise…   raised $2B at a $30B valuation, and brought in Microsoft as an investor and cloud partner.

 

-       Janet Yellen…   during her Treas. Sec. hearing, stressed 3 points:

o   Stimulus = ASAP:  “Without a new stimulus package, the economy could face a longer, more painful recession now – and a long-term scarring.”

o   Higher taxes = Later:  Focus on getting our economy through the pandemic / recession first – then raise taxes.

o   Strong dollar = Always:  Focus on maintaining a strong and stable currency impacted by the market – not the Treasury.

o   Crypto = NEVER:  Yellen thinks cryptocurrencies are connected to terrorist financing and money laundering.  She’s not a HODLer.

 

-       Donald Trump's list of pardons…   included Anthony Levandowski – the self-driving engineer imprisoned for his theft of autonomous tech trade secrets. 

 

-       Netflix's quarterly sales growth slowed…   and its quarterly profit fell.  But everyone’s giddy over The Flix becoming cash flow positive in 2022.

 

-       P&G’s 's sales jumped 8% last quarter…   partly due to demand for higher-end hygiene products.

 

-       Alibaba shares jumped 6%...    after its founder Jack Ma made his first public appearance in three months.  He's not missing – just in laying low / in-hiding.

 

-       Ad-supported EV charging network Volta…   raised $125m in a funding round managed by Goldman Sachs.

 

-       Amazon is ready to turn its facilities into COVID-19 vaccination sites…   and will offer other resources to the government as well.

 

-       RTD coffee is the fastest growing segment of the N/A beverage industry:  It’s basically the hard seltzer of the caffeine world.  Take your Starbs RTD (ready-to-drink) can from the fridge and hop on that 8am Zoom call. 

 

-       With people driving a lot less…   auto insurance companies like Travelers are reporting very nice bumps in profitability.  Less mileage = More profit.

 

-       Millennial-friendly digital health startup Hims & Hers   went public in a $1.6B SPAC merger.

 

-       What do Plug Power and FuelCell Energy have in common?  They're both fuel cell companies whose stocks are up over 500% in the past 6 months.  They also haven’t turned a profit in over 20 years.

 

-       Gamestop (GME) is up 2,221% from its low close last year.

 

-       Facebook-owned messaging app WhatsApp…   will be fined for EU data protection violations.

 

 

Crypto-Bytes:

 


 

-       Crypto was crazy this week…  as Bitcoin traded in a 10K range, and Ethereum ticked to a new all-time high.

 

-       GS is coming back to crypto…  as Goldman issued a request for information to explore digital asset custody.

 

-       MetLife is the latest legacy financial institution…   taking another ‘hard look at crypto.’

 

-       “It’s a crowded trade”…  Bank of America found that being ‘long Bitcoin’ is the most crowded trade among fund managers – unseating being ‘long tech’.   Shorting the dollar is now the third most popular trade.

 

-       Cryptocurrencies are “mainly for illicit financing”…   said Sec. Treasury nominee Janet Yellen.  Her remarks are par for the course among regulators, though revamping crypto regulation is on her upcoming docket. 

 

-       BlackRock, the world’s largest asset manager…   gave the green light for two of its funds to trade Bitcoin (BTC) futures.

 

-       Grayscale Investments…   is looking at proposing 5 new cryptocurrency trusts.

 

-       Nebraska is pitching itself…   as the next Wyoming for crypto.

 

-       Signature Bank was forced to disclose $10B in crypto deposits…  which represents 16% of the firm’s total deposits.  Wow!

 

 

Last Week:




Monday:  Earnings season has kicked off with a bang, as both Bank of America and Goldman beat their estimates – but BAC turned it up a notch by announcing a massive stock buy-back.  The market swooned but came right back as soon as J. Yellen started talking about how we need "more" of everything.  FED money tops: pandemic lockdowns and 11m unemployed.  I’m looking for smaller chart plays.  POWW is the outfit that makes ammunition, and ammo is still flying off the shelves.  I'll try it over $7.58.  ABML is a little outfit that recycles batteries, and that sounds like a business that will be in demand.  I’ll nibble on it over $1.50.

 

Thursday:  Those of you in ABML got the gift that keeps on giving.  Heck about now, I’m wondering why I didn’t buy more.  One that jumps out at me is MGA.  This little outfit is tied into the backbone of Electric vehicles, and has partnerships with dozens of the biggest and best.  Hitting a morning high of $77.55 and then fading off a bit, I'd certainly be interested in taking a shot at that when it decides to find its footing.

 

Friday:   Everyone who’s in ABML is my friend – now that it’s doubled inside of a week.  For decades we’ve been a debt- based economy, and if they’re going to drum up trillions more of it – the market will rejoice.  Stock prices are beyond ‘extended’ – yet they go up almost every day.  Could we see DOW 40K.  Sure, if our FED keeps printing. The money must go somewhere, and I’d rather make $25/share in a day with NFLX than get a half a percent in the bond market.  It’s reminiscent of the late 90’s – but there’s nothing to do but go with the flow.  In normal times, this much stimulus would have gold and silver soaring to new heights, but Bitcoin is taking up that trade.  I think that the metals might be in play here.  PAAS had a big strong day, and it looks like it might be interested in attacking its 50-day moving average.  Lean long, buy the dips, and all this will work out – until it doesn’t.

 

 

Marijuana:



-       Cannabis sales in Colorado totaled $175m in November…  which pushed the YTD total over $2B for the first time.  November was split: $35m in medical sales and 140m in recreational sales.  Since recreational sales began in January 2014, Colorado has sold $10B worth of recreational cannabis.

 

-       New York renews MJ legal push…  with other eastern states following suit.

 

-       Alabama, Kansas, Kentucky and South Carolina…   could legalize MJ this year.  If so, they will generate hundreds of millions of dollars in business opportunities throughout the supply chain.

 

-       COVID-19 has been devastating to most industries…   except the cannabis business.  Mature markets continue to see records for medical and adult-use sales, and newbies keep setting constantly higher benchmarks.

 

 

Next Week:  Markets Morph into Monopoly Money.




Market Overview:  This week the NASDAQ caught fire, and it was all about the ‘monsters of tech’ [AAPL + AMZN + FB + GOOGL + MSFT + NFLX].  They accelerated and took the rest of the market with them.  But, fair warning – a lot of their earnings are directly on the horizon.  Surprisingly, the S&P 500 move stopped once it reached the upper limit (3,861) of its expected move.

 

The Market Internals broke down, and often ‘this move ends’ with a total downside, correlated crash.  To look at the markets (sitting at all-time-highs), you would never know that the number of stocks declining were higher than the number of stocks advancing.  This can’t go on forever, but it is why I’m scared about this ending badly.  This week was all about the ‘monsters of tech’, and of course: GameStop.  

 

Retail Options Bubble Goes On:  The options marketplace is large, and in control of the overall stock market.  This week GameStop (GME) was nothing short of awe inspiring.  Its Friday chart (see above) looked like the world was having fun playing on an Xbox with Monopoly money.  GME traded over 2.1m options, worth over $14B – on Friday alone.  Factually, 1.2m of those option contracts were ‘market orders’.  Now, in this market – ‘you need to be a few fries short of a Happy Meal’ – to do a market order – especially in something as volatile as GameStop.  But GameStop isn’t moving this market – call options purchased within the ‘monsters of tech’ are the driver.

 

The S&P 500 Rally was put on Hold:  The S&Ps desperately need the financials to catch a bid in order to move higher.  The financials (XLF) actually stalled the entire market as they tagged (and stayed) at the lower edge of their expected move.  Energy also took a hit lower last week.  If we see any continued action lower in the financials next week, the S&Ps will move lower.  Also, if the bonds (/ZB) move higher next week, the financials will have a tough time getting out of their own way.

 

‘Monster of Tech’ Earnings Week…  is upon us.  My only question is whether these stocks are priced to perfection?   Will this be a: ‘buy the rumor – sell the news’ event?  If Netflix (NFLX) was any indication – tech stocks do have the ability to move even higher. 

 

Potential Trade(s):

1.   With this tremendous rally in the Nasdaq (QQQ), take this opportunity to SELL way out-of-the-money call-spreads in the April QQQ’s.

2.   Also, with the continued rally and good feelings, take the opportunity to BUY way out-of-the-money call-spreads in the May VIX (volatility index).  That will allow you to take advantage of a ‘spike’ in the VIX when it comes.  

 

SPX Expected Move:

-       Last week’s expected move was $82.50.  We moved right to the upper edge of it and stalled.  Since mid-December, we have tagged an edge of the expected move every week.

-       Next week’s expected move is $73.50, and we’ll see every penny it.

 

It’s time to clean up your risk.  We have seen: (a) the financials and energy start to decline, (b) the Dollar form a bottom (maybe), and (c) bonds (maybe) start to rally.  If those 3 elements continue, the market will not perform well.  Non-performance scares retail traders, so they will be the first to pull-out.  Don’t be the first one to hit the exists, but PLEASE don’t be the one turning off the lights either.

 

 

Tips:  Go Big or Go Home…




1.   The U.S. money supply grew 20% from $15.3T in 12/2019 to $18.3T in 7/2020.

2.   Inflation is when ‘extra’ money chases the same amount of goods and services.

3.   Inflation rates are approximately 11% (Chapwood Inflation Index).

4.   Housing costs are rising at 9% per year.

5.   There are only 2 places for your money: Stocks & Crypto.

 

HODL’s:  (Hold On for Dear Life)

-       American Battery Metals Corp (ABML = $3.35 / in at $1.50),

-       Bitcoin (BTC = $32,100 / in at $4,310),

-       Bitcoin Cash (BCH = $430 / in at $170),

-       CLOV ($13.55 / in @ $12.51),

o   Sold Feb. $12.50 / $15 covered calls for income

-       CTIC ($3.37),

o   Sold Feb. $3 / $4 covered calls for income

-       DM ($25.05 / in @ 14.24),

o   Sold Feb. $22.50 / $25 covered calls for income

-       Ethereum (ETH = $1,230 / in at $310),

-       ETHE ($14.25 / in @ $13.44), 

-       GBTC ($34.45 / in @ $9.41), 

-       HYLN ($17.39 / in @ $0.32).

o   Sold Feb. $15 and $17 covered calls for income

-       NGD ($1.90)

o   Sold Feb. $2 covered calls for income

-       Pan American Silver (PAAS = $30.22 / in @ $13.07),

o   Sold Jan. $34 covered calls for income

-       Silver Elephant Mining (SILEF = $0.33 / in @ $0.37).

 

Thoughts:  The US Dollar has been rallying vs the Euro, but our new Treasury Secretary – Janet Yellen – has called for a large stimulus package to get people back to work.  That’ll take the edge off the Dollar’s strength.  Even though Yellen stated that her goal would not be a weak Dollar, the reality of more currency pushed into the economy will do just that.  If you think the Dollar’s rally might be over, the Euro ETF (FXE) should bounce back.  FXE OTM calls are trading over equidistant OTM puts, suggesting that the market sees risk to the upside.  And FXE’s 14% implied volatility rank points to long verticals as the preferred strategy.  If you do think the FXE may rally over the next few weeks, the long call vertical that’s long the $112 Call and short the $114 Call in the March expiration is a bullish strategy that has a 64% probability of making 50% of its max. potential profit before expiring.

 

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

 

Please be safe out there!

 

Disclaimer:

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PAST RESULTS ARE NOT INDICATIVE OF FUTURE RESULTS. THERE IS RISK OF LOSS AS WELL AS THE OPPORTUNITY FOR GAIN WHEN INVESTING. WHEN CONSIDERING ALTERNATIVE INVESTMENTS (INCLUDING HEDGE FUNDS) AN INVESTOR SHOULD CONSIDER VARIOUS RISKS INCLUDING THE FACT THAT SOME PRODUCTS AND OTHER SPECULATIVE INVESTMENT PRACTICES MAY INCREASE RISK OF INVESTMENT LOSS; MAY NOT BE SUBJECT TO THE SAME REGULATORY REQUIREMENTS AS MUTUAL FUNDS, OFTEN CHARGE HIGH FEES, AND IN MANY CASES THE UNDERLYING INVESTMENTS ARE NOT TRANSPARENT AND ARE KNOWN ONLY TO THE INVESTMENT MANAGER.

 

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Until next week – be safe.


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Sunday, January 17, 2021

This Week in Barrons: January 17th, 2021

 This Week in Barrons:  January 17th, 2021


Thoughts:

 

Born to Run (things):  The first half of Bruce Springsteen’s autobiography makes some things abundantly clear: (1) He had no natural ability to play the guitar.  In fact, after his first lessons, he quit – unable to play a note.  (2) He had no singing talent.  Every early group he was part of that needed a lead singer – did not promote him.  Audiences walked out.  His first agent stopped returning his calls, and his bandmates gave up and moved on.  (3) And he had no natural charisma.  So, not only wasn’t he dating in high school – he wasn’t even cruising around town oozing ‘cool’.  

   Great leaders realize that: (a) TALENT is overrated, (b) HARDWORK is expected, and (c) SKILLS can be acquired.  They also realize: (1) SHOWING UP is the key ingredient that every creative leader has in common.  (2) Followed closely by: DOING AND SHIPPING.  In business, in the arts, in society – despite anyone’s reactions, skillsets, and doubts – you need to DO & SHIP.  And (3) your COMMUNITY is essential.  The people you surround yourself with not only reinforce your story, but also raise your bar.  In fact, your COMMUNITYbecomes an integral part of your success.  But before anything else – you must commit to the journey.



The Market:

 


Stockless Stocks:  With the invention of meat-less meat and chicken-less chicken, stock-less stocks make total sense.  Just as stockbrokers and floor traders have become extinct, stock-less stocks could be an extremely positive change.  In fact, other than long-term holds, why does anyone still trade stocks?  Stocks (like real-estate) are a passive component of a financial portfolio.  Trading is currently dominated by options, futures, and highly leveraged alternative products like: digital assets, spot FX, pairs trading and spread betting.  Stocks are intentionally pricing themselves high for insider control purposes – appealing to institutions that will buy-and-hold through the hard times.  With individuals back to trading options, commodities, crypto, and doing pairs trading – I took down the Christmas wreath, and am ready for some changes in 2021:

-       Per JC, it seems that small caps, SPAC’s, IPO’s, alt-coins, and late stage funding rounds are getting money flows – while FAANG-n-FRIENDS are going nowhere.

-       There could be a sea-change developing toward smaller caps over mega caps, and decentralized over centralized.

-       Per HL, index unbundling continues as investors pick stocks, build their own portfolios using fractionalization, and markets continue to replenish with thousands of new public companies over the next 3 years. 

 

   This market will keep going up…   as long as they continue to create money faster than we create bad companies.  The instant the number of smart people / companies are exhausted – the bull market will simultaneously run out of gas.  Currently, there is a flashing put/call ratio warning – that could indicate an up-coming correction, but the FED is our friend until the end, and the fat lady isn’t even warming up.

 


InfoBits:




-       Nobody wants their stuff back:  Returns cost companies $10 to $20 per return – not including transportation.  So, it makes more economic sense to just issue a refund – rather than return, restock and resell that $13 item.  Score one for brick-and-mortar.  And, online purchases are returned three to four times as frequently as in-store.  As return volumes hit record highs, e-commerce just doesn't make sense for some businesses.

 

-       The Senate flipped blue…   but the market already knew because solar, EVs, clean energy, cannabis, infrastructure and Chinese stocks have been rallying for weeks.  The FAANG stocks are no longer the story.

 

-       Inflation expectations are rising…   along with interest rates and energy – as Saudi Arabia cut oil output.

 

-       In the lithium space…   a company to watch (per MP) is SQM.  They are a company based in Chile and are one of the top producers of lithium chemistries. 

 

-       Lordstown Motors has received…   over 100,000 reservations for its all-electric pickup truck.  The average order was for 600 trucks.

 

-       Walmart is launching a fintech startup…   that will offer money management and other financial services to the underbanked individuals in the US.

 

-       The CES – the largest tech conference kicked off last week…   with a slate of product intros that included: a rollable computer chess board, a Keurig-style ice cream machine, and my personal favorite – an AI shower that infuses the soap and shampoo directly into the stream.

 

-       Visa’s $5.3B purchase of Plaid gets ‘DECLINED’ by the Gov’t:  Plaid's customer base has grown over 60% - post-acquisition announcement.  In the pandemic, consumers are flocking to digital payments and online banking – and Plaid is the ‘plumbing’ that connects them.  Plaid is worth more NOW than before.

 

-       GM introduces the ‘air taxi’:  The automobile giant introduced the Cadillac eVTOL air taxi this week.  Yes, it’s a flying car.  The 4-rotor aircraft will be powered by a 90-kWh EV motor and move at speeds up to 56 mph.  No timeframe was given, but it pushed GM stock to all-time-highs.

 

-       The financing company Affirm began trading this week:  The stock priced above its expected range, coming in at $49 – and it still popped to $90 during the day.  So much for investment banks getting the pricing right – ugh.

 

-       Online clothing reseller Poshmark…   ended its IPO-day up more than 141%.  Are investment banks even trying to get close to the right valuation?

 

-       HomeValet is a WiFi-enabled cooler – chilling on your doorstep:  This ‘smart cooler’is brought to you by Walmart, and all it does is wait for your grocery delivery – so you don't have to.  Groceries account for over half of WMT’s sales, and Walmart+ offers free unlimited grocery delivery.  This could definitely level-up standard grocery delivery that’s for sure.

 

-       You’ve got the power…   GM's next-gen battery system, Ultium – gets 450 miles per charge at nearly 40% less cost than current batteries.  GM is making Ultium its base for future EVs, like the GMC Hummer EV pickup.

 

-       This week 965,000 jobless claims were filed…   making it the highest unemployment rate since August.

 

-       The semi-conductor (chip) industry is consolidating:  In September, Nvidia bought chip designer ARM for $40B.  In October, AMD bought Xilinx for $35B.  Qualcomm just announced a $1.4B acquisition of a 5G chip startup.  With volumes this high, you need to stay huge to stay competitive.

 

-       Retail sales declined in December 0.7%...   marking the sector’s second consecutive monthly decline and an ‘absolute disaster’.  The number represents discretionary consumer spending, and is an indicator of economic health.  

 

 

Crypto-Bytes:

 


-       Bitcoin failed to establish itself above $40k.   Analysts are calling this week’s decline a healthy correction for an overheated market. 

 

-       The Intercontinental Exchange will take it’s crypto-venture public…    by merging it with a SPAC.  The deal will further its goal of launching a consumer app for trading and making payments using digital assets.

 

-       Last week there were over 1.3m active bitcoin addresses in a single day…    which is the most since the crypto bull run of 2017 – largely driven by a rise in retail interest.

 

-       Institutional investors are ‘key’ to curbing Bitcoin’s volatility.  Neither bitcoin’s 20% drop or its volatility, have stopped ‘whales’ from buying the dip.

 

-       I’m noticing that my personal weekend discussions…   are dominated by crypto.  That never happened before – fair warning.

 

-       Half of all advisors….  started to allocate crypto to client portfolios last year. 

 

-       Per MCC:  "You’re focusing on the problem.  If you focus on the problem, you can’t see the solution." - Patch Adams.  Stop focusing on Bitcoin, and start focusing on pair trading Bitcoin.  Bitcoin is most often the first cryptocurrency someone hears about.  Many cryptocurrencies are highly correlated to Bitcoin.  There are countless crypto markets which are quoted in Bitcoin (over 1450 markets in the first 11 exchanges that were reviewed).  Resultingly, there are patterns in these Bitcoin-esque pairs that go back years (decades when we convert from crypto to traditional-finance time).  Whether you are attempting to time the next crypto-altcoin season, invest directly into the meme economy, or trade network effects against ‘the new and unproven’, here are 3 pairs you should be pattern-watching:

 

1.   Ethereum (ETH) / Bitcoin (BTC): an Ethereum vs Bitcoin chart

2.   Dogecoin (DOGE) / Bitcoin (BTC): a Dogecoin vs Bitcoin chart

3.   Polkadot (DOT) / Ethereum (ETH): a Polkadot vs Ethereum chart

 

Wayne Gretzky once said: “I skate to where the puck is going to be, not to where it has been.”  Trying to time your next Bitcoin or Ethereum purchase is an investment in futility, but also a ‘crowded trade’.  Think differently.  Think in terms of pairs, because that’s where the pros and the rest of the globe are skating.

 

 

Last Week:



Tuesday:  Inflation’s on the rise, oil continues moving higher, and interest rates are now over 1% - “is this a great country or what?”  Oil moving higher gives the oil patch money to keep paying their loans - which makes the banks stronger.  On the other hand, it hits J.Q. Public squarely in the wallet.  All that said, oil names like SLB and RIG are still on the move.  I’d try: SLB > $26.43, and XOM > $47.85.  I could see taking some GOGO > $11.56 and TLRY > $13.45.  There's a little silver exploration company that I think could be a decent play over time.  SILEF is only $0.34.  I think it could be a $1 stock in the not too distant future. With all the talk of ‘reopening NYC’, pay attention to some travel stocks.  EXPE > $144.50 is definitely tempting.

 

Thursday:  The initial jobless claims number came in, and it was a doozy.  Everyone expected 800k, but it came in at 960,000 applied for first time unemployment last week.  It doesn't get much worse than that.  The futures couldn't care less – because all they heard is Biden’s $2T stimulus package.  Almost lost in the noise is the fact that the big banks start reporting earnings tomorrow.  Years ago, earnings were the fundamental reason you either bought or sold a stock.  Today they're nothing more than ‘fake math’ that amuses analysts.  I'm hoping that I haven't shot myself in the foot with CLOV – a healthcare company that WMT loves.  I’m liking OSTK, but it’s up $6 today and I’m not going to chase it.

 

Friday:   This is a Friday ahead of a 3-day weekend.  The futures are soggy this morning because they were expecting the stimulus bill to be $2,000 per person, but it turns out to be just $1,400.  The total bill is $1.9T.  So, if every American gets $1,400 – that totals $450B.  Where's the other $1.5T going?  It’s going into ‘pet pork projects’ all around the world.  

   Wells Fargo’s earnings are out and they missed top-line revenues – but ‘faked’ earnings well enough to beat by 4 cents.  Citi had mixed results.  JPM beat as their trading desk put in another astonishing year.  But interestingly, all of the banks are lower.  I don't know that I want to play in this swamp.  I love the idea of OSTK which bounced off its 50-day, but it's hard to want to buy something ahead of a 3-day weekend with so much tension in the air.

 

 

Marijuana:

 


-       Sales of edibles skyrocketed…   across the nation in 2020 as consumers shied away from inhalable forms of cannabis during the COVID-19 pandemic in favor of more discreet consumption methods.

 

-       Following massive MJ legalization successes…   in: New Jersey, Arizona, Montana, and South Dakota, momentum and public sentiment have shifted dramatically toward acceptance.  Nowhere are the shifting winds more apparent than in New York State, where governor Andrew Cuomo is once again placing cannabis reform front and center in his overall proposal for post-Covid recovery. Cuomo said: “We will legalize adult-use recreational cannabis, joining 15 other states who’ve already done so. This will raise revenue and end the over-criminalization of this product that has left so many communities of color over-policed and over-incarcerated.”  New York’s cannabis market is currently expected to generate $300m in state revenue annually.  In Virginia, governor Ralph Northam is pushing for legalization following his success in decriminalizing cannabis last year.  Connecticut’s governor Ned Lamont likewise called for legalization, and Kentucky lawmakers are slated to consider a proposal to implement a medical marijuana program.

 

-       Canopy Growth CEO David Klein expects…   that Federal action from the incoming Biden administration could set the stage for the company to enter the U.S. by this time next year.

 

-       A Democratically controlled Senate…   has spurred action by major U.S. multistate operators to raise money in order to accelerate growth

 

 

Next Week:  Retail vs Institutional … who’s gonna win?

 

 

Are we seeing a change in perspective?  Maybe.  Clearly, markets sold the $1.9T stimulus package news.  JPM and Citibank beat their earnings estimates – yet the banks got pummeled on Friday.  Does this mean that all of the good news is priced into the market?  Maybe.  Where does any more good news come from?  Answer: the FED.  Be careful here, because the FED has already started talking about ‘unwinding the massive amount of monetary stimulus’ – that’s in our economy

 

Option volumes are pointing to…   a retail fueled, call buying bubble like no one has ever seen.  After reviewing the charts, retail call-buying volume has doubled over the past year.  Also, over 80% of the stock buying was in response to retail call buying.  Unfortunately, what drove markets higher (market makers buying stock in order to cover the calls that they sold to millions of new retail traders) could easily be unwound – only faster.  After all, in investor-land ‘you take the stairs up, and the elevator down.’  My portfolio advice for the next week or so, is to put on some hedges so that we’re prepared for whatever the markets throw our way.  

 

Are they worried about inflation or deflation?  One of the reasons I’m asking is that the $1.9T stimulus bill that was announced – is definitely inflationary.  Which should have driven interest rates and gold higher, but both declined on the news.  Potentially, the reaction in rates and gold was because of another deflationary announcement centered around changes in the tax code.  The only way to know is to watch the bonds (/ZB) over the next couple of weeks.  If traders flock to bonds and they rise off the 168 level, then you’ll know that we have a perceived ‘deflationary’ environment.  Last week, the S&Ps sold off, bonds (/ZB) were bought along with volatility (VIX) and the dollar ($DXY).  If the world sees sell-side activity, then there will be a flight to quality including the U.S. dollar.

 

The VIX (volatility index) has started to move higher…   and I’ve started to sell premium.  I’m selling ‘covered calls’ on all of my stock holdings – some above and some below their existing prices.  The equity skews are inverted – allowing you to sell further ‘out-of-the-money’ options than normal.  The index skews are massive – giving us ‘fair warning’ of something coming.  In fact, the ‘out-of-the-money’ Puts are more expensive than the calls – so the Puts are the way to go in the index products.  Finally, the VIX has remained above the 20-handle for the past year, and has started to provide an excellent premium selling opportunity.

 

The expected move for the SPX next week…   (a 4-day trading week) is $82.50.  Last week (a 5-day trading week), the SPX’s expected move was only $77.  So, be prepared for some action / volatility.  Anticipate: lower volumes, increased volatility, and if you see a rally in bonds – additional sell-side activity inside the equities.

 

 

Tips:



HODL’s:  (Hold On for Dear Life)

-       Bitcoin (BTC = $35,700 / in at $4,310),

-       Bitcoin Cash (BCH = $480 / in at $170),

-       CLOV ($13.24 / in @ $12.51),

o   Selling Feb. $12.50 / $15 covered calls for income

-       CTIC ($3.24),

o   Selling Feb. $3 / $4 covered calls for income

-       DM ($23.75 / in @ 14.24),

o   Selling Feb. $22.50 / $25 covered calls for income

-       Ethereum (ETH = $1,228 / in at $310),

-       ETHE ($14.05 / in @ $13.44), 

-       GBTC ($39.34 / in @ $9.41), 

-       HYLN ($16.43 / in @ $0.32).

o   Selling Feb. $15 and $17 covered calls for income

-       NGD ($1.93)

o   Selling Feb. $2 covered calls for income

-       Pan American Silver (PAAS = $29.33 / in @ $13.07),

o   Sold Jan. $34 covered calls for income

 

Thoughts:  Pot stock APHA rallied the equivalent of 3.1 standard deviations on news that it actually turned a profit and beat expectations.  APHA’s strength pulled up other pot stocks like TLRY and CGG, whose earnings are coming up in the next couple of months.  And as APHA is the largest component in MJ (the cannabis ETF), MJ rallied the equivalent of 2 standard deviations.  While you may think MJ’s rally would be due for a break, its OTM calls are trading over equidistant OTM puts – suggesting the market sees more room to the upside.  If you’re inclined to agree with the market, you might consider a bullish strategy in MJ.  With a 39%, MJ’s options are ripe for short premium strategies.  If you think MJ will continue to rally or at least not drop back too much, the short $18 Put in the Feb expiration is a bullish strategy that has an 85% probability of making 50% of its max potential profit before expiring.

 

   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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