RF's Financial News

RF's Financial News

Sunday, October 15, 2017

This Week in Barrons - 10-15-2017

This Week in Barrons – 10-15-2017:


"A champion is afraid of losing. Everyone else is afraid of winning." – Billie Jean King 

“In numbers too big to ignore…”
   If we’re judging by the numbers, last week was a pretty bad week for Harvey Weinstein.  He proved that sexual harassment does exist in Hollywood.  Last week model Cara Delevingne joined the ranks of notables such as: Ashley Judd, Angelina Jolie, Jane Fonda, and Gwyneth Paltrow accusing Harvey of sexual harassment.  Last week he was also (a) fired from his own company, (b) accused of rape by 3 women, (c) caught on an NYPD audio tape trying to lure a woman into his hotel room, and (d) his wife left him.  When Ben Affleck heard the news, he said it made him ‘sick’ – right before getting called out by actress Hilarie Burton for groping her.  Hopefully this signifies a turning point as to how this type of behavior will be dealt with going forward.
   If we’re going by the numbers, I don’t know why the University of North Carolina is proclaiming its entrepreneurial ‘StartUp-UNC’ program a success.  They say that their expertise and guidance has helped UNC students, faculty and staff launch 60 new businesses and non-profits since 1999.  Doing the math:
-       60 businesses launched over 28 years = 2 per year (below average).
-       UNC has 30,000 students = 1 business launched per 15,000 students.  (This is well below the 1 per 1,000 student average.  Carnegie Mellon launches 2 per 1,000, and Stanford launches 15 per 1,000.)
With their staff of 8 and over $1m annual budget, they’re spending $500k to launch each business.  Heck, cut your staff, hold a contest, and give away $500k to the top 2 winners.  And make it a condition of the win that they locate in N.C.  Situations like UNC only serve to cement my belief that: (a) there is too much money out there supporting entrepreneurship, (b) it’s driving bad decision-making, (c) it’s pushing the quality of entrepreneurial education downward, and (d) it’s producing diminishing returns for job creation.
   Uber (numerically) is quickly approaching its day of reckoning.  Thanks to MJP for recognizing that the ride-hailing company faces at least 5 criminal probes from the U.S. Justice Department.  They lost London – their largest customer.  Authorities are asking questions about whether the company violated price-transparency laws.  And officials are separately looking into the company’s role in the theft of Google’s (Waymo) trade secrets.
   Numerically, the Girl Scouts lost a little this week when the Boy Scouts of America agreed to remove the ‘No Girls Allowed’ sign from their clubhouse.  The Boy Scouts say the move reflects what modern families want.  The Girl Scouts say that this is merely a ploy to boost the Boy Scouts' declining membership numbers.  Either way, I think Round 1 goes to the Boy Scouts.
   By the numbers, Tesla will need to produce between 100,000 and 200,000 Model 3s in the second half of 2017 to support CEO Elon Musk’s investor promise.  They spent over $1B in cash in Q2, accumulated over $20B to date in liabilities – to produce only 260 Model 3s to date.  To slow their bleeding, Tesla fired hundreds of employees last week – triggering people to start selling their Model 3 reservations.  It’s only a matter of time until Wall Street does the math.



   Last week Bitcoin surged to over $5,850 per coin, and Mr. Jamie Dimon (CEO of J.P. Morgan (JPM)) commented in anger – the 2nd stage of grief.  I’m convinced that the 5 stages of grief (denial, anger, bargaining, depression, and acceptance) are part of a framework that Mr. Dimon is using to allow himself to live with the upcoming loss of the U.S. Dollar as the global reserve currency.  He broke his silence to insult Bitcoin investors and call them “stupid for paying the price”.  He proclaimed that although people will profit because they will sell their Bitcoin to later investors at a higher price (‘greater fools’) – the end result will definitely be a crash.
   Unfortunately, JPM’s own CFO Marianne Lake went as far as to praise blockchain technology on their earnings call, and say: “We are open-minded for digital currencies that are properly controlled and regulated.”  JPM even invited Bart Stephens (co-founder of Blockchain Capital) to speak at their offices in San Francisco with fund managers and clients.  “There’s a lot of hypocrisy and ignorance going on within Jamie Dimon," said Mr. Stephens.  "I would encourage Mr. Dimon and others to do some homework.  Bitcoin is not a fraud, and is not a Ponzi scheme.  It's a robust technology that is going to impact multiple industries.  Don't discount it."  Citigroup’s CFO John Gerspach came out positive on the digital currency sector, along with Goldman Sachs’ Lloyd Blankfein.  Bitcoin’s 30% rise on the week speaks for itself.



   But why does Bitcoin even matter?  While on the surface China loves building "Everyday Low Prices" merchandise for Walmart, and Russia continues to play nice despite being blamed for everything from interfering in our election to taking over Europe; both nations know that the real war is economic.
   Currently, the U.S. Dollar is our global reserve currency.  If you want to do international business, more times than not you must convert your currency into dollars and then ledger those dollars on the U.S.’s Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunications system (SWIFT).  SWIFT enables financial institutions to send and receive financial transactions in a secure and standardized environment.  Russia knows all about SWIFT because when we leveled sanctions against them, we blocked their use of some of the SWIFT abilities – creating real economic hardships within their country.  China realizes that SWIFT threatens them the same way, and that was their impetus in helping us contain Kim Jung un.  The Chinese and the Russians have been concerned about our SWIFT monopoly for years, and have recently decided to accelerate the implementation of their backdoor system.
    China has been developing a way for nations to sell oil to them using yuan, and then immediately converting those yuan into gold.  In a nutshell, it's a gold backed yuan oil futures contract.  That has caught the eye of the U.S. because our global currency status is built upon OPEC (especially Saudi Arabia) only selling oil in U.S. dollars – creating a constant global demand for U.S. dollars.   We know that China buys oil from Russia without using U.S. dollars.  And Russia (who has been stung multiple times by U.S. economic sanctions) has built a transactional work around.  According to Jim Rickards, the head of Russia’s central bank, Elvira Nebiullina has reported to Vladimir Putin that: “In the past there was a threat of us being shut out of SWIFT.  We have updated our transaction system, and if anything happens with SWIFT – all SWIFT-format operations will continue to work.  We have created an analogous (back-up) system."  According to Jim, Russia's development bank (VEB) and several Russian state ministries have teamed up to develop blockchain technology.  “They’ve created a fully encrypted, distributed, inexpensive payments system that does not rely on SWIFT or the U.S. to move money.  This has nothing to do with bitcoin per se, but rather uses a blockchain technology (often referred to as distributed ledger technology - DLT) platform that can facilitate a wide variety of transfers - possibly including a new Russian-state cryptocurrency backed by gold."  The common thread for both China and Russia is: (a) getting away from U.S. dollar, and (b) using gold for currency support.
   Shortly, China will compel Saudi Arabia to trade oil in yuan, and that will affect the U.S. dollar.  "As soon as the Saudis accept the yuan, then the rest of the oil market will move along with them," said Carl Weinberg, chief economist and managing director at High Frequency Economics.  China (since passing the U.S.) has become the world’s most dominant global player in oil.  Saudi Arabia must pay attention to its largest customer.  According to Carl: "That will remove between $600B and $800B worth of transactions from the dollar.  That will lead to stronger Chinese demand, whether it's securities or its own goods and services.  It is a growth driver for China and that's why they want this to happen."
   On the surface, nations need to get along so that international trade can take place smoothly.  But like any organization, they keep their friends close and their enemies closer.  Military tensions surrounding North Korea, and supply and demand considerations over oil have accelerated the moves by Russia and China to implement their own backdoor, blockchain, digital currency solutions.  The good news is that often in these early days of a solution set – you can gauge a solution’s necessity, capability, and availability by its price action.  If last week’s 30% rise in Bitcoin’s price is any indication, things are indeed moving quickly.  Maybe President Trump is right, this is just the “calm before the storm.”


The Market:



   In Texas Hold-Um, there are approximately 170 different 2-card hands that you can be dealt.  But only 10 of those hands will get you into a winning position.  Therefore, the overall market and your specific entry points are often just as important as your particular holdings themselves.

Factually:
-       The top 10 digital currencies (Bitcoin, Ethereum, Ripple, Bitcoin Cash, Litecoin, Dash, NEM, Bitconnet, NEO and Monero) make up 90% of the entire crypto economy.  The others will be judged by their ability to partner with the top 10 players, and/or to innovate themselves into a ‘must have’ situation.
-       Japan enshrined bitcoin as legal tender, in an apparent bid to become the global center for the next wave of financial technology (fintech).
-       The CPI (a measure of inflation) came in at a calm 2.23% per year.
-       The S&Ps are on pace to register their longest ‘quiet’ period in over 20 years.  It hasn’t experienced a 3% decline since Nov. 7, 2016.
-       Watch Health Insurance Innovations (HIIQ), because it’s one stock that may benefit from Trump’s recent executive healthcare order urging regulators to stop capping the duration of short-term plans at 3 months.

   Investor optimism remains high as every major equity index is at or near historic highs.  Year-to-date the S&P is up by 14%, the Nasdaq 23%, and the Dow Jones is up nearly 16%.  Wall Street is pointing to the first synchronized global economic uptrend which should be good for markets these coming weeks.  I suspect that along with the uber-trillions that are sloshing around the globe from our friendly Central Bankersters and sovereign wealth funds, there will be a ‘year-end money grab’ to look forward to.  For example: you're a major hedge fund, and you haven’t trusted this market because you know that it’s simply rising on liquidity and not on basic fundamentals.  So, you have not been fully invested.  You’ve been waiting for the big correction and it just hasn’t come.  Now that it’s October, you only have 3 months to make up that lost ground.  Is it possible that you will throw caution to the wind, and just dive into the deep end?  Absolutely it’s possible, and we're probably seeing some of that as we speak.  With that in mind, you can make the case that this market continues to ‘melt-up’ into December – ignoring any and all things nasty.  North Korea and Iran?  Forget about it.  Lousy housing sales and other economic date?  Ignore it.
   But ever-rising markets make seasoned investors nervous.  Bank of America’s David Woo said: “We find it difficult to reconcile the record low volatility in financial markets at the moment with growing political risk in Washington and geopolitical risk in Asia.  There are many reasons why we are living in a different world than the one we used to know and we would caution against relying too much on history for forecasting the likely outcome of these risks.”
   If the Iran bickering calms down, I have to think that they’ll continue to press these markets higher.  No, it’s not organic growth, low unemployment, or solid fundamentals.  When there are trillions of dollars sloshing around the globe looking for a home, some amount of those will come home to roost in the market.  Until the Central Banksters stop printing, it’s hard to experience a correction much less call a top.
   Just remember that none of this market action is ‘normal’.  This market charges ahead, but for the wrong reasons.  No one seems to think that it can ever go down again.  But they thought that back in 1999, and again in 2007.  Don’t think it in 2017.   None of us know which final snowflake will start that avalanche.  Have a great day – and a better week ahead.


Tips:
   BTC:   Another fork is coming.  Last time, people sold prior to the fork and jumped back in within a short time span of the successful split.  This time, people are buying prior to the fork, in order to benefit from the new coins.  This is looking like a crowded trade.  Nevertheless, the next target is $6,197 – with support at $5,000 and a sell at below $4,800.
   ETH:    Ethereum is on the verge of breaking out of the range.  After 4 false breakouts, I’ll wait for Ethereum to end the day above $354, making a move to $400 very possible at that point.
   LTC:   Litecoin is one of the few altcoins that has shown strong buying support.  It recently broke above its overhead resistance at $57.72.  My target is $71, and my stop loss remains at $50.

   To say that many banks want ‘nothing to do with Bitcoin’ is an understatement.  SZ brought me the following discussion that was picked from an active PNC (Pittsburgh National Bankcorp) blog.  The PNC customer recounts: “I've had a banking relationship with PNC Bank for 15 years, and I just got a call to verify unusual activity.  He asked me to confirm a couple transactions then asked ‘For what purpose are you buying Bitcoin’?  I refused to divulge the purpose, and the bank’s representative threatened to close my account.  I told him I wouldn't answer, and he then asked ‘What are you going to do with the Bitcoin’?  I again told him I wouldn't answer.  He then informed me that his security team told him they would ‘exit the relationship with me’ if they didn't get a satisfactory answer.”  Non-visionary banks will view digital currency as a threat to their existence, while others will view it as an opportunity to gain more of your trust and business.  It’s up to us to sort out what type of relationships we want going forward.
   Be prepared for interest rates to remain low for the next 3 years, and look no further than the chart below to understand why.  Low interest rates allow the U.S. dollar to remain low – driving sales and corresponding stock prices higher because our products are less expensive overseas. 



Recommendations:
Bullish: (Sell PCS = Sell a Put Credit Spread)
-       Autodesk (ADSK = 119.63) – Sell PCS – Oct 20: +114 / -116, $0.30
-       Boeing (BA = 260.74) – Sell PCS – Oct 20: +252.5 / -255, $0.60
-       DBV Technologies (DBVT = 47.48) – Sell PCS – Oct 20: +10 / -15,
-       Gilead (GILD = 81.17) – Sell PCS – Oct 20: +78.5 / -80, $0.30
-       Ionis Pharma (IONS = 59.1) – Sell PCS – Oct 20: +54.5 / -55, $0.45
-       Jr. Gold Miners (JDST = 51.22) – Sell PCS – Oct 20: +46 / -47, $0.20
-       Lumentum (LITE = 57.7) – Buy Fly – Oct 20: +55 / -57.5 / +60,
-       Gold Miners (NUGT = 35.26) – Sell PCS – Oct 20: +32.5 / -33.5, $0.25
-       Restoration Hdwr (RH = 80.08) – Sell PCS – Oct 13: +72 / -73, $0.20
-       Nasdaq ETF (TQQQ = 121.03) – Sell PCS – Oct 20: +113 / -115, $0.25
-       Sina (SINA = 116.59) – Sell PCS – Nov 17: +97.5 / -100, $0.50
-       Semiconductor (SOXL = 129.60) – Sell PCS – Oct 20: +118 / -120, $0.30
-       VIX Futures (SVXY = 103.66) – Sell PCS – Oct 20: +98 / -99, $0.20
-       Ultra-Semi (USD = 109.90) – Sell PCS – Oct 20: +101 / -102, $0.13
-       Wynn (WYNN = 142.33) – Sell PCS – Oct 20: +138 / -143, $2.14
-       XL (XL = 41.51) – Sell PCS – Oct 20: +38 / -39, $0.11
-       YY Inc. (YY = 93.22) – Sell PCS – Oct 13: +84 / -85, $0.38

My Crypto-Currency Holdings Include:
-       Bitcoin (BTC), Ethereum (ETH), Litecoin (LTC), Dash (DASH), Digix (DGD), MaidSafeCoin (MAID), Metal (MTL), OmiseGo (OMG), PIVX (PIVX), Patientory (PTOY), Steem (STEEM), and NEM (XEM).

To 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, October 8, 2017

This Week in Barrons - 10-8-2017

This Week in Barrons – 10-8-2017:




“Courage is resisting and mastering fear – not the absence of it.” … Mark Twain

   Why is it so hard for us to focus on what really matters?  Why do we allow distractions to divert our attention – without stopping to ask whether any of them will make a real difference to our issues at hand?  Psychiatrists tell us that fear and greed are the top 2 motivating factors in our lives.  In fact, by controlling fear and greed – we would not only improve our decision-making, but remove over 80% of our distractions.  Imagine the cross-currents if you’re a banker discussing bitcoin.  I can almost hear the fear in Jamie Dimon’s (CEO of JPM), Ray Dalio’s (Bridgewater Associates) and Larry Fink’s (BlackRock Capital) voices when they talk about bitcoin being a ‘fad’ and in a ‘bubble’ – as they watch their customers walk over to one of the 75+ new crypto-hedge funds that have been formed this year.  And now that bitcoin is over $100B in market cap, that fear is just getting too big to ignore.  I can almost see the greed in the eyes of James Gorman (CEO Morgan Stanley), Lloyd Blankfein (CEO Goldman) and Mark Cuban (Shark Tank) as they begin to open their own bitcoin trading businesses, and remark that bitcoin and blockchain are the ‘wave of the future’.



        



































   Banking clients are greedy and are demanding bitcoin exposure in greater numbers;
therefore, banks have little choice but to give-in to their clients’ wishes.  However, the road to enter the bitcoin business is paved in fear.  For example, how do banks (that are required by law to prevent money-laundering) handle a currency that’s not issued by a government, and that keeps its users anonymous?  From the perspective of the U.S. Treasury, do you classify bitcoin as an asset that has steadily increased in value and can be taxed, or as a transactional currency?  Joshua Satten at Sapient Consulting said: “If banks are starting to manage and hold bitcoin for their clients, you would immediately have the OCC and the FDIC looking at how they classify those assets on their balance sheet and how they potentially re-state those assets within a client’s portfolio.” 
   This fear extends across the bank’s customer base because if they don’t offer bitcoin, then customers will find someone that does.  For bank regulators, the fear intensified recently when Switzerland granted a license to Falcon Bank to transact its bitcoin business on behalf of its wealth-management clients.  More banks endorsing bitcoin will help cement its reputation as a legitimate asset.  It will also bring changes as regulators demand more transparency.  The lack of transparency and the difficulty enforcing financial laws were both cited by the SEC as reasons for rejecting two proposed bitcoin ETFs back in March.  Assuming U.S. regulators allow banks to deal in bitcoin, the fundamental question then becomes: Will bankers change bitcoin, or will bitcoin change the banks?
   But fear and greed go far beyond banking.  In the greed column, we have Tesla that took in billions in significant, pre-production deposits for their Model 3.  Tesla fearfully announced that they are missing production quotas and are not converting as many deposits to sales as previously anticipated.  But don’t worry Elon, you still have your scheduled trip to Mars in 7 years.  And you may need it, given GM’s most recent announcement that ‘batteries will be included’ with their 20, new, all-electric vehicles that they plan on rolling out over the next 6 years.
   In the greed column, we also learned that Google’s self-driving service (Waymo) is almost ready for prime-time.  They used the word ‘almost’ because Google is fearful of their own ability to make left-hand turns.  It seems that even Google Maps has a fondness for right-hand turns because programmers thought left-hand turns were dangerous.  Well, at least 3 rights make a left – right?
   In the greed column, the EU is beginning to get its ‘tax act’ together.  The EU says Apple and Amazon need to start writing some very large checks – to the tune of $300m for Amazon and almost $15B for Apple.  It’s also taking Ireland to court for missing the deadline on getting its money back from Apple.  For years, there's been a tug of war between those who say these big tax deals make the EU more competitive, and those who say they're just big corporate handouts.  Amazon and Apple should be fearful because it looks like the EU is starting to win.
   In the greed column, Yahoo was sold to Verizon.  I’m fearful that Yahoo just decided to tell me NOW that their 2013 data breach was actually 3 TIMES as bad as originally anticipated.  The hack affected ALL 3B accounts and included: names, passwords, phone numbers, and birth dates.
   In the greed column, Spain really doesn’t want to sing ‘Bye, Bye, Bye’ to Catalonia by allowing it to declare independence.  Catalonia is the northeastern region of Spain that includes wealthy Barcelona.  If Catalonia moves forward, it could force Spain to take control of the region by force.  Spain is fearful of losing Catalonia, and after declaring the vote to be illegal – dawned riot gear and sprayed Catalan people with rubber bullets – injuring more than 800.  As the Catalan government meets to discuss next steps toward formal independence, the fear across the EU is that this could fan the flames of other independence movements.
   Andrew Weil said it best: “Fear and greed are potent motivators.  When both of these forces push in the same direction – virtually no human being can resist.”


The Market:





   If you're wondering what last week was all about – you’re not alone, but need to look no further than the above chart and data showing maximum greed – minimum fear.  Art Cashin (an NYSE staple) said it best: “I've been doing this for 50 years, and I've never seen anything quite like it.  Small-cap stocks, big industrials, micro-caps surge to their most overbought levels in 20 years – while bonds shrug.  They are hitting levels never seen before – based upon what?”  Most of history’s bull runs are explained away by ‘investors going crazy’.  It’s different this time because it isn't millions of individuals – it’s our FED, the Swiss National Bank, Mario Draghi, the Bank of Japan and the world’s sovereigns all pushing markets for all they can get.  Throughout history, when things have been pushed to excess, they always have resolved themselves via war.  There's a behind the scenes play that we’re not seeing – yet.
   The most confusing time for traders is when every day is Groundhog Day.  Up or down, any sustained move can be incredibly frustrating because our minds process things cyclically, and without any accountability for momentum.  Any continuous, one-sided tape goes counter to how our brains work for all other aspects of our life.  Remember the saying: “I don’t know what happened – they always looked so happy together.”  The right-hand always has a left-hand, and without a downside, this market moves from real-life into ‘Stepford’.
   The latest rationale for the market not going down is the President’s new tax proposal, and the math goes something like this:
-       The tax proposal would boost the profits of the S&P 500 companies by about $17/share.
-       With the S&P index trading at 19 times 2017 earnings, an extra $17/share implies a 320-point gain.
-       If the tax proposal has a 65% chance of passing, that would be worth a 200 S&P point gain.



   One of the smartest things you could have done with your money at the start of the year was to get it out of the U.S.  As the above chart shows, the U.S. market indices have performed much worse than their overseas counter-parts in 2017.  That’s despite the U.S. dollar tumbling sharply lower against major international currencies.  Yes, the S&P 500 has risen 13.3% this year, but international markets have risen 17.5% and emerging markets 27%.  Germany is up 22%, France 25%, Brazil 29%, and China is up 45%.  That only looks at the S&P 500, but when you include all of the stocks in the indices – the median rise is only 9%.
   The decline in the dollar has been a blessing for U.S.-based manufacturers.  It makes imports more expensive, and exports cheaper.  Any campaign to restore manufacturing to the U.S. is going to need to ‘tank the dollar’ – and continued uncertainty, crazy talk, and political paralysis should do just that.  Unfortunately, what is good for the ‘rust belt’ is not the same as what is good for the markets.  A falling dollar will lead to U.S. inflation, and is likely to lead to even greater gains on financial assets held in other currencies.  Hopefully global diversification is a watchword in your portfolio, and that is especially true when political risks and uncertainty are high – like now.
   In terms of crypto, Bitcoin (BTC = $4,460) has risen off of its critical support level of $4,200.  If it can break through $4,488, the next level of resistance before $5,000 is $4,680.  Therefore, it would make sense to hold positions and tighten stops.  If however, it turns down and breaks below $4,100 – the fall could extend to $3,900 and then to $3,730.  Ethereum (ETH = $312) has spent the past week consolidating in a tight range, but this won’t last much longer.  Assuming that it breaks to the upside (above $320), it is likely to start a new uptrend with a target of $355.  Therefore, getting long over $320 would be the strategy.  If however, it drops below $278, it will move to $260 rather quickly.  And finally, Litecoin (LTC = $52.50) is trading in a range between $44 and $58.  The best way to trade a range-bound asset is to buy at support and sell at resistance.  If Litecoin can break this range it signals strength, and I would recommend a long position over $58 with a target of $71.  However, a break below $50 will signal a fall to $44 in short order.
   We now must start to include seasonality into our trading.  Coming into the final months of 2017, fund managers that doubted this market are going to face a rude dilemma.  If their fund’s performance is lagging, they are going to want to try and make up for their underperformance by simply diving into this market ‘head first’.  Therefore, there’s a chance that this bubble rally will simply keep levitating right into the end of the year.  This market is a QE driven, ponzi scheme market – and should be played as such.  I continue to lean long, use smaller-sized positions, and take profits early.  I also sell out-of-the-money ‘put credit spreads’ because with them I win when the market is flat to rising vs just winning when the market goes up.  I’m long and cautious – because it still works.


Tips:



Recommendations:
Bullish: (Sell PCS = Sell a Put Credit Spread)
-       Applied Optical (AAOI = 58.25) – Sell PCS – Oct 13: +52.5 / -53.5, $0.20
-       Activision (ATVI = 63.25) – Sell PCS – Oct 13: +59 / -59.5, $0.10
-       Juniper Net (JNPR = 28.43) – Sell PCS – Oct 13: +25 / -25.5, $0.25
-       Bio-Tech Bull ETF (LABU = 90.43) – Sell PCS – Oct 13: +82 / -83, $0.18
-       Restoration Hdwr (RH = 76.46) – Sell PCS – Oct 13: +70.5 / -71, $0.20
-       Nasdaq ETF (TQQQ = 119.3) – Sell PCS – Oct 13: +111.5 / -112.5, $0.08
-       Western Digital (WDC = 83.85) – Sell PCS – Oct 13: +77 / -78, $0.08
-       YY Inc. (YY = 88.74) – Sell PCS – Oct 13: +84 / -85, $0.38
-        
-       Boeing (BA = 258.58) – Sell PCS – Oct 20: +252.5 / -255, $0.60
-       DBV Technologies (DBVT = 43.46) – Sell PCS – Oct 20: +15 / -10,
-       Gilead (GILD = 82.14) – Sell PCS – Oct 20: +78.5 / -80, $0.30
-       Nvidia (NVDA = 181.30) – Sell PCS – Oct 20: +170 / -172.5, $0.41

My Crypto-Currency Holdings Include:
-       Ethereum (ETH), Litecoin (LTC), Dash (DASH), Digix (DGD),  MaidSafeCoin (MAID), Metal (MTL), OmiseGo (OMG), PIVX (PIVX), Patientory (PTOY), Steem (STEEM), and NEM (XEM).

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

Please be safe out there!

Disclaimer:
Expressed thoughts proffered within the BARRONS REPORT, a Private and free weekly economic newsletter, are those of noted entrepreneur, professor and author, R.F. Culbertson, contributing sources and those he interviews.  You can learn more and get your subscription by visiting:

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If you'd like to view RF's actual stock trades - and see more of his thoughts - please feel free to sign up as a StockTwits follower -  "taylorpamm" is the handle.

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Startup Incinerator = https://youtu.be/ieR6vzCFldI

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Views expressed are provided for information purposes only and should not be construed in any way as an offer, an endorsement, or inducement to invest and is not in any way a testimony of, or associated with Mr. Culbertson's other firms or associations.  Mr. Culbertson and related parties are not registered and licensed brokers.  This message may contain information that is confidential or privileged and is intended only for the individual or entity named above and does not constitute an offer for or advice about any alternative investment product. Such advice can only be made when accompanied by a prospectus or similar offering document.  Please make sure to review important disclosures at the end of each article.

Note: Joining BARRONS REPORT is not an offering for any investment. It represents only the opinions of RF Culbertson and Associates.

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.

Alternative investment performance can be volatile. An investor could lose all or a substantial amount of his or her investment. Often, alternative investment fund and account managers have total trading authority over their funds or accounts; the use of a single advisor applying generally similar trading programs could mean lack of diversification and, consequently, higher risk. There is often no secondary market for an investor's interest in alternative investments, and none is expected to develop.

All material presented herein is believed to be reliable but we cannot attest to its accuracy. Opinions expressed in these reports may change without prior notice. Culbertson and/or the staff may or may not have investments in any funds cited above.

Remember the Blog: <
http://rfcfinancialnews.blogspot.com/> 
Until next week – be safe.


R.F. Culbertson