RF's Financial News

RF's Financial News

Sunday, May 15, 2022

This Week in Barrons: May 15th, 2022


Our FED – who needs ‘em? 
 Think about it, why do we need a FED?  If ever there was a case to support a floating Fed Funds rate based upon real-time efficient markets, that time is now.  The antiquated process of group decisions by seven random Fed governors, appointed by some president for 14-year terms, may have made sense in 1914 but makes zero sense in 2022.  We have a liquid, $50T debt marketplace that sets the true daily rates.  However, for some unknown reason we rationalize that a group of very smart academics are better qualified than the market itself for setting interest rates.  I think the reason those roles still exist is mostly for resume purposes and speaking fees.  Ben Bernanke made less than $200k / yr. as Fed Chair, and now makes $400k / hr. for speaking at industry events.  The Fed hasn’t made a proactive move on interest rates in over 13 years.  Everything they do is a delayed reaction to the current market.  They are the ultimate masters of the obvious.  We use the Fed as an economic distraction much like the UK uses their royal family.  It’s simple - just let the marketplace set the rates and that way there is no confusion, no conflicts, no political pressure, and no more listening to Fed Chairs tell us that nobody can predict the future.  Michael Keaton said it best in Nightshift: “Instead of mixing the tuna fish in a bowl with mayonnaise, why don’t we just feed the tuna fish mayonnaise – problem solved.”  



The Market:



This market is an accident looking for a place to happen…   We are faced with a market in conflict.  What do you do when you see conflict?  Do you: (a) Just go with your gut = solve it with screaming and yelling, and move on?  (b) Avoid any action and the responsibility that comes with it – hoping that time will solve it?  (c) Or wait to get a few questions answered, do your own research (me-search) – then issue a diagnosis.  The preferred path is naturally the third one.  (a) Giving a kneejerk / screaming reaction is not an admirable trait.  (b) Stalling needlessly is never a good look.  (c) Allowing the tension to mount before opening the door for connection, accuracy, and insight = gives everyone enough time for engagement, problem-solving, and solution buy-in.


We are one day into a bear market bounce.  It can last 2 days, 2 weeks, or even 2 months. What I think I know is that we haven’t seen the real bottom in this market…yet.  We may have seen a short-term bottom, but not the big one.  With that in mind, if this upswing holds for a bit, I think you BUY what’s working.  ASML comes to mind, as silver miners finally look primed for a move higher.  Also, look toward the indices (DIA and SPY) as they must move higher along with the market.



InfoBits:



-       What grows in Vegas does NOT stay in Vegas…   as Sin City just outlawed grass.   To save water, Las Vegas is mandating the removal of lawns.


-       Weddings are everywhere in 2022…   and wedding-related expenses and jewelry are set to surpass 2019 levels.


-       Consumer confidence dipped in April…   and people have started spending less.  If inflation remains high and savings run dry, this is how recessions are born.


-       BNPL (buy now, pay later) lenders like Klarna, Afterpay, and Affirm…   are turning into BNPN (buy now, pay now) as credit is beginning to tighten.


-       Ecommerce stocks like Shopify are getting hammered…   as consumers are shopping like it's 2019 – more on experiences, less on stuff.


-       Rivian’s stock plummeted 20%...   after Ford, one of its biggest backers, dumped $8M worth of shares.


-       Uber told employees…   “our focus going forward is on free-cash-flow, and hiring is to be treated as a privilege.” 


-       Fast rising real estate prices…   are coming to an end as a result of higher mortgage rates and diminishing affordability.


-       Going-private deals (think Twitter)…   have reached a 10-year high amid sharp declines in market valuations and high cash balances among deal makers.


-       Oil giant Saudi Aramco surpassed Apple…   as the world’s most valuable firm.


-       Google is releasing its own…   smartwatch and wallet.  Take that Apple.


-       San Fran police are using driverless cars…   as mobile surveillance cameras.


-       Netflix is planning to launch…   an ad-supported tier by the end of the year.


-       Airbnb is merging…   the things that customers love about the service (like: staying in a treehouse) with the comforts of the traditional hotel experience (think: getting exactly what you pay for, and a refund if you don’t).


-       Just 8% of Manhattan office workers are back at their desks full time…   a sign that employees are winning the hybrid-work battle – at least for now.


-       Tiger Global has seen $17B in losses due to this year’s tech stock sell-off.  That’s one of the biggest declines for a hedge fund in history.


-       SoftBank Group lost more money than it ever has ($13.2B)…   and will cut back its pace of new investments by as much as 50%.



Crypto-Bytes:



-       Stablecoins are cryptocurrencies whose value is basically pegged to USD.   This week TerraUSD (UST), the third-largest stablecoin, was unpegged from its $1 value and fell to 15 cents.  Investors sold UST and LUNA (it’s main backer) (think: crypto bank run), sending jolts through the crypto-market.  Time will tell whether Do Kwon (CEO) can bring it back into equilibrium. 


-       Last year NFTs became a $17B market overnight…   but global sales are down 92% from September.  Recently, Coinbase launched its NFT marketplace, but saw less than $60K worth of trades.


-       The Pomp’s Crypto Jobs List == https://pompcryptojobs.com/   If you don’t like your job or you think the mission is unfulfilling – there are hundreds of open roles at the top crypto companies.  Feel free to browse and respond.


-       A Goldman Sachs’ basket of 11 sensitive to crypto stocks…   is down 68% over the past 6 months – vs the S&P's 15% decline and the Nasdaq's 27% fall.


-       Coinbase is spending more on…   its tech, development, and SG&A expenses – than it’s making in revenue.


-       El Salvador bought the dip…  and purchased 500 more bitcoin for $15.3m.


-       Crypto billionaires are feeling the pinch…   Coinbase's Brian Armstrong’s personal fortune went from $13.7B in Nov. to $2.2B in May, and Mike Novograntz’s (CEO of Galaxy Digital) has gone from $8.5B to $2.5B.


-       NFT collections like Bored Ape Yacht Club…   have seen their prices plummet  29%over the past week.


-       Conspiracy theory…   Citadel Securities and BlackRock allegedly borrowed 100,000 bitcoin from Gemini, swapped 25% for UST which they then dumped – crashing Luna and the price of bitcoin.


-       The CEO of FTX…  took a 7.6% stake ($650m) in Robinhood.


-       Each share of GTBC (trading for $18.35)…   is holding $26.46 worth of bitcoin.

 

-       Japanese investment bank Nomura…   began trading cryptocurrency derivative contracts this week – giving their clients a way into crypto.


-       Per HL:  Look at the TCAP token… as it’s down 60% since November, but gives holders real-time price exposure to the entire cryptocurrency market via a single token.  It’s a new, 200% fully backed, fully collateralized asset that’s both audited and accurately representative of the entire cryptocurrency complex by total market capitalization.  



TW3 (That Was - The Week - That Was):  


Monday:  More losses for U.S. stocks are on tap as the 10-year yield tops 3.2%, and concerns over a hard landing from the Fed raise investor nervousness.  Our FED’s effort to tame inflation with aggressive rate hikes has most worried that a recession is inevitable.  The DOW comes into this week on a 6-week losing streak, while the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite have been down 5-straight weeks.  Investors are unloading both winners and losers to start 2022, with the S&P down -13.5% YTD, the Nasdaq -22.3% YTD, the DOW -9.5% YTD, and the Russell down -18% YTD.  Only 35% of the stocks in the S&P remain above their 200-day moving averages.  Losing 4150 on the S&P has acted like a trap door, and there's no real interest in buying-the-dip.  We are short-term oversold, but there is no panic selling to give us a capitulation signal.  I don't think you can feel good about going long until we see a huge volume bar on an upside tick.  I'm just a watcher for now.  If the DOW closes below 32,272, we could see a significant back-door plunge.  The S&P is flirting with the 4000 level.  If it holds, maybe they bounce us, but if it fails – then it's probably a ride to 3800 in short order. 


Tuesday:  The Nasdaq is having easily its worst yearly start on record – being down -25.4% YTD All eyes are on inflation data this week with the CPI (Consumer Prices) for April expected on Wednesday 8:30 AM, and the PPI (Producer Prices) expected Thursday.  Yesterday was ugly as the S&P closed below that 4000 level, and I have to believe that 3800 is next on deck.  The charts are all broken, and the market is simply a hot mess.  Heck, Jim Cramer called the bottom in this market well over a month ago.  (How’s that workin’ out for ya?).  This morning, on CNBC, they put Cramer back on, and he said he had just talked to David Tepper, and David just covered his NASDAQ short.  David T. told him that NASDAQ 12K should hold.  Guess we wait and see.


Thursday:  The selling pressure continues, pushing the NASDAQ and Russell down 30% from all-time highs, and the S&P down 18% - hovering around bear market territory.   Even Apple (AAPL) closed down -5.2% to its lowest value since Oct. 15.  Yesterday we had another hot inflation reading as the CPI surged 8.3% in April, holding near 40-year highs.  The PPI came out today (again hot) showing an 11% YoY increase.  I expect more lumpy trading, as every decent attempt at a rally has fizzled out.  In just 6 sessions, the DOW has lost 2,800 points.  Even when I look back to 2008, or even 2000-2001 I don't see drops like that without a single giant surge higher. 


Friday:  So yesterday afternoon, at about 2:40pm the S&P dipped to a level that equated to a 20% drop from the highs – the infamous bear market signal.  Instantly the Plunge Patrol Team kicked in, and took us well off those lows.  With just 8 minutes left in the session, they were gunning for green – but came up a bit shy.  This morning, bitcoin and other crypto assets are rebounding as yesterday’s bitcoin price (around $28k) was down nearly 60% from the all-time high of $69k hit in November.  The entire crypto market now has a market cap. of $1.2T – less than half of the $2.9T it was worth in November.  Musk's purchase of TWTR is on hold, and frankly I'm not buying the reason given.  It’s Friday the 13th, and for the first time in forever it seems like we may have a market follow-thru to the upside.  Could we finally be getting the bear market bounce I expected all the way back on Monday?  Maybe.  Is it safe to buy into this with the DOW up almost 500, the S&P up 80, and the NASDAQ up 300?  No.  When you have this much movement, chances are you might be buying the day’s top.  If this bounce has merit, we can scale into things next week.



AMA (Ask Me Anything…)



Has inflation peaked?  The most recent CPI data pinned inflation at 8.3% and we all know that this metric significantly underestimates the problem.  Unfortunately, with a reading that high – the peak doesn’t matter as much as when can we get it under 4%?  The main culprits for YoY price increases are:  Gasoline: +43.6%, Used Cars: +22.7%, Utilities: +22.7%, Meats/Fish/Eggs: +14.3%, New Cars: +13.2%, Electricity: +11.0%, and Eating Food at Home: +10.8%.  Yes, the ‘Eating Food at Home Index’ saw the largest YoY increase since November 1980.  This is completely unsustainable for the average American family.  It seems odd that Shelter is only up 5% according to our government.  Every report shows rents and real estate prices increasing 20% YoY; therefore, it’s hard to imagine landlord and banks eating all of those increased costs.  



Next Week:  Structural Cracks in the Market



Market Update:

-       Low / S&P Volume:  I worry about our markets trading in huge gaps rather than in normal step-by-step increments.  This shows a Lack of Liquidity.  On the S&P futures, we’re seeing < 100 contracts offered, where we used to trade 1,000’s.  Nobody wants to step in and buy / rescue this market.  Right now, we’re seeing trader’s short-covering buying and not pure investment buying.


-       The SKEW is at its lowest level in 9 months:  Which means that PUTs are cheap relatively to where they have been, and that means investors are selling PUTS.  They could be: (a) selling PUTS in order to open positions (which I don’t believe), or (b) selling their hedges – putting themselves in a non-hedged position.  That means that if our market tanks – those that sold their PUTS are out there with no protection. 


-       Volatility did not explode because people are selling PUTS.  Which says that traders are believing that this ‘bounce’ has more room to run.  


-       Volatility futures are normalizing, and that bothers me.  We just went through one of the most tumultuous markets in the past 10 years and volatility is normalizing, something doesn’t feel right to me.


-       The Dollar won’t back off....   and is being use as a flight-to-quality instrument.  Even with the rally on Friday, the dollar did move appreciably lower.  In fact, the dollar has been so strong that it has been keeping the prices of gold and silver lower. 


-       Crypto’s stable coins – aren’t so stable.  You’re seeing more of a spill-over between markets than anything else.  As investors need money to plug a particular hole – they will take it from wherever they can find it.  It’s the curse of dimensionality allowing things to go much, much lower.


-       Oil is moving higher – again.   In the face of an incredibly strong dollar, oil continues to simply move higher – and potentially break above $110/barrel.


-       The hawkishness of our FED is increasing, and (in fact) they warned of an up-coming yield-curve inversion (aka short-term rates rising above long-term rates).  They have also warned J.Q. Public of their being: hard-times-ahead.  Bonds could go back to being a stability hedge.


-       Next Week…   we could see SPX = 4211 before we turn over and move lower.  


SPX Expected Move (EM):

-       Last Week’s EM = $136 – which made the lower bound 3,987.  The SPX touched down as low as 3,858, before rebounding to 4,024.  This shows a degree of efficiency inside of our markets.


-       Next Week’s EM = $133.  The S&Ps are down -16% YTD, the QQQs are down -25% YTD, and the DOW is down -12% YTD.  Look for the largest DOW constituents: UNH, GS, HD and MSFT to play catch-up to the downside.  One of 2 things will happen: (a) either the S&Ps rally another 4% or (b) the DOW will move lower by 4%



Tips:  



HODL’s: (Hold On for Dear Life)


-       CASH == Nexo & Celsius == @ 8 to 12% yield

-       PHYSICAL COMMODITIES == Gold @ $1,810 / oz. & Silver @ $21.12 / oz.


-       **BitFarm (BITF = $2.03 / in at $4.12)

o   Sold May, Dec ‘22: $5 CCs for income,

-       **Bitcoin (BTC = $30,500 / in at $4,310)

-       CPG (CPG = $7.12 / in at $6.44)

o   Sold Jul $7.50 CCs for income,

-       Energy Fuels (UUUU = $5.84 / in at $11.29),

o   Sold June $8 CCs for income, 

-       **Ethereum (ETH = $2,050 / in at $310)

-       GME – Holding

-       **Grayscale Ethereum (ETHE = $14.14 / in @ $13.44)

-       **Grayscale Bitcoin Trust (GBTC = $19.70 / in @ $9.41)

-       Uranium Royalty (UROY = $2.80 / in at $4.41)

o   Sold July $5 CCs for income


** Denotes a crypto-relationship


Trade of the Week: Watch ASML (a silver miner)


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, May 8, 2022

This Week in Barrons: May 8th, 2022


“I’m all in…”  It’s easy to get hooked on the philosophy.  It produces an infinite supply of competition, and goals that are constantly out of reach.  The entrepreneur (on the other hand) is always looking for the customer where their product / service can make a difference, and they can end-the-day satisfied.  Entrepreneurship is NOT an All-In or Hibernation experience, but rather one measured by how we handle transitions and variations.  Learn to gauge yourself on the contributions – not the adrenaline.  


“I can see the enemy…”  It seems that situations now-a-days always call for an opponent because having an enemy serves to focus our attention.  For many people the enemy is the authority figure, maybe another super-power, or potentially a co-worker.  My advice = pick your enemies carefully because you may be picking your future.


A Day of reckoning is coming…”  Bear markets destroy the ill prepared.  Learn how to: trade less, trade with small size, and watch for new leadership.  Per JB: “The S&P finished the month below the 200-day for the first time in 2 years.  Higher volatility is the new normal.  Virtually all of the S&P’s 50 best and worst one-day returns occurred while it was below its 200-day.”  3 trading ideas to remember: 

-       (a) Things are not cheap because they are down 70%, 

-       (b) Companies will forever be valued on FCF (free-cash-flow) and earnings, and

-       (d) The Quality of a company’s revenues and earnings really does matter!



The Market:



-       Worker productivity…  fell 7.5% in Q1 – the fastest decline since 1947.

-       Worker labor costs…   soared 11.6% inn Q1 - the fastest in 40 years.

-       People are behaving like deer in headlights…   because they believe we’re just experiencing a healthy, downward BLIP in the markets.


Paul Tudor Jones…  “I can’t think of a worse investing environment than right now.  Our FED is raising interest rates in the face of worsening financial conditions.”


Per HL…  There is no returning to normal.  We are living in a manipulated, FED-run market.  If you think people were pissed when they had to pay more money for the same everyday items WHILE their investment portfolios were increasing in value – just wait until you see their reaction when their investment portfolios are losing money and prices are still high.”


Per DT…   “I don’t think the FED has a winning hand to play.  It is impossible for any group of humans to navigate an economy between high inflation and recession using simply interest rates and contracting the money supply.  Free markets solve that problem, but we no longer have free markets anymore.”  


It seems: “The only way to win is … not to play”… Joshua … War Games.



InfoBits:



-       Rest-In-Peace selfie sticks…   Snap is launching a mini drone called Pixy that follows you around snapping pics before landing back in your palm.


-       May the Fourth be with you…   a Vegas chapel celebrated Star Wars Day with wedding packages dubbed: “I Chewse You”, and with Princess Leia officiating.


-       Streaming with Ads has something for everyone…   consumers love the price, advertisers love the targetability, and media companies (like FOX) love the back door into the streaming race.   Disney+ and Netflix are considering it.  


-       US job openings hit a record 11.5M…   showing continued tightness in the labor market.  At the same time, another 4.5m Americans quit their jobs, seeking more flexibility and higher pay.


-       Hold on to your sweatpants…   offices are becoming optional.  Work-from-anywhere is now a perk among workers and a hiring strategy for flexible employers that could inspire an applicant to work for Airbnb instead of Apple.


-       About 150k Ukrainians are using SpaceX’s Starlink Internet Service…   and that makes it harder for Russia to interfere with Ukrainian communications.


-       Meta (FB) said in an internal memo…   that it is pausing hiring for the rest of the year.


-       California's population fell last year…   triggered by San Jose losing over 1m residents.


-       3 months after Wordle’s sale to The New York Times…   the paper announced that the game created over 10m new readers of The Times.


-       The Bank of England hiked rates…   to 13-year highs, and sees inflation hitting 10%.


-       #Shrinkflation…   Frito Lay took chips from each bag, Mondelez rebranded Oreos as “Limited Edition”, and Pepsi shrank its Gatorade bottles.


-       U.S. homes are overvalued…   and could fall by 10% over the next few years.


-       Spending like it’s 2019…  as consumers return to their pre-pandemic spending behavior.  U.S. ecommerce sales have dropped 3X compared to 2020 levels.


-       Budweiser saw quarterly profits nearly double.


-       April’s global VC funding…   reached its lowest level in the past 12 months.    The dip isn’t massive, but does signal the start of a longer-term shift – particularly applicable to later stage companies.



Crypto-Bytes:



-       Yuga Labs, the startup behind the popular Bored Ape NFT series…  sold >$300m of virtual metaverse real estate.  There was so much demand that they crashed the ETH network.


-       MicroStrategy is offering employees access to Bitcoin retirement plans.


-       Major BTC investors authored a letter sent to the EPA…   aiming to defend bitcoin mining and discuss the misconceptions about its environmental impact.


-       FIFA has selected blockchain and cryptocurrency platform Algorand…   as its official partner before the World Cup in Qatar in November. 


-       Argentina’s Banco Galicia has launched a crypto trading feature…   that will now allow users to buy and sell bitcoin, ETH, USDC, and XRP.  The feature will not allow users to withdraw or send crypto.


-       SEC member Hester Pierce voiced her opposition…   to the regulatory agency’s plans to bring on 20 people to its new crypto enforcement division.


-       Coinbase ended talks to buy Mercado Bitcoin…   a Brazilian crypto exchange backed by SoftBank and Tribe Capital. 


-       Coinbase’s new marketplace for NFTs is now officially open to all…   and off to a very slow start.


-       Binance, Sequoia Capital, Fidelity and 16 others…   are committing $7B to help finance Elon Musk’s $44B purchase of Twitter.


-       The New York bill aimed at curbing proof-of-work crypto-mining…   is facing opposition from industry leaders, lobbyists and lawmakers.


-       Gucci plans to accept crypto as payment.


-       Analyst Marcus Sotiriou said…   “If we do go into a recession and see growth slow significantly, our FED will be forced to become less aggressive and adjust their monetary policy so bitcoin and crypto will be able to rise again.”

 


TW3 (That Was - The Week - That Was):  



Tuesday:  We are in ‘deeply-oversold’ territory on any short-term scale.  That means that anything perceived as good news, could squeeze this market violently higher like a beachball being held underwater.  So, you can expect that at some point, we will start roaring higher.  The staying power will be questionable, but it could be dramatic for a couple days.  The FED starts its 2-day FOMC meeting today, and we'll hear their decision tomorrow.  I feel we may get a fairly strong sideways and up rally after the FED meeting that could last a few weeks or so.  But ultimately, in the months farther out – I think we have much lower to go.


Wednesday: May the 4th be with you!  Oil prices are rising over 3% on reports that the European Union intends to ban Russian crude imports over the next 6 months and refined fuels by year-end.  The FED announced it would raise interest rates by 50-bps and begin to shrink its $9T asset portfolio next month, with up to $30B in Treasury’s allowed to run off in June, July and August - followed by $60B in subsequent months. This did not come as a big surprise; however, markets soared after the Fed Chair said he wasn’t “actively considering” raising interest rates by 75 bps at a future meeting.


Thursday:  Well, I guess that J. Powell's happy talk wasn't all that happy after all.  He said many times that our FED was going to slay inflation, even if it causes pain.  Just because he said 75 bps were off the table, what the heck is the difference? Isn't 50+50+50 the same as 75 +75?  So, what to do in here?  Is it worth nibbling if you really see them sprinting us higher?  It could be, but don't get silly.  This market is so damaged that we could plunge even further.  The volatility will be nuts, so be prepared. 


Friday:   Yesterday, no sector was safe from the selling.  Even defensive utilities, staples, and healthcare succumbed to the pressure just a day after the FED’s first 50 bps rate hike since 2000 – designed to attack a 40-year high in inflation.



AMA (Ask Me Anything…)



“Will our FED continue to save-the-day?”   Our FED is ‘All In’ to stopping inflation.  Just last week our FED laid out its plans to begin rolling assets off its $9T balance sheet starting in June.  Stocks moved higher on Wednesday as the FED played down the chance of a 75-bps rate hike at future meetings.  But, the ‘all-clear’ sign was waved off when 10-Year Treasury yields moved above 3.1% on Thursday.  Then Friday’s Jobs Report said that we gained 428k jobs – which was actually good.  Unfortunately, the labor force participation rate fell two tenths – which was really bad.  Right now, it's a high-volatility, directionless mess out there.  


Many are still under the impression that our FED will only hike until people feel a little pain and then they will reverse course.  I think this time differs from prior FED rate hikes.  This time our FED may not bow to the stock market.  Having said that, we're probably due for a bear market bounce of 8 to 10% during the month of May.  I would view that as a selling-and-shorting opportunity.  In my opinion, our markets will be heading lower mid-summer, and if our FED doesn’t have to save-the-market – then all heck could break loose.



Next Week:  Volatility Storm Trackers



Market Update:

-       The FED run-up and smack-down to end the week - ‘massively unchanged’.  Tip #1: With this level of volatility, stop trying to handicap every single move.

-       This level of Volatility causes pain on both sides of the aisle.    

-       Bonds have been crushed, and the 10-Year (TNX) has soared – at its fastest rate in history.  The 10-Year (sitting at 3.1%) is up 92% YTD.  When you compare interest rates (TNX) exploding to the S&Ps (SPY = currently at 411), we need to reduce the S&Ps by 50% simply to come in line with the TNX.

-       Tip #2: The TNX or SPY will be dramatically lower very shortly.


What’s Oversold and What’s Not:

-       Oversold: AMZN (-33% YTD), NVDA (-38%), TSLA (-27%), and FB (-39%)

-       Not Oversold:

o   AAPL (-13% YTD) & MSFT (-18%)

o   XLP (-1%) and XLU (+2%)

o   CAT (+3% YTD) & WMT (+3%)

-       Volatility, percentages and correlation == Volatility doesn’t normally subside until we reach a ‘happy medium’.  

-       Mutual Fund redemptions haven’t really started as of yet – because Apple and MSFT are relatively unscathed when compared to other mega-techs.  Tip #3: This is NOT the time to be loading-up on Apple.

-       When marketplaces capitulate – everything gets taken down.  

-       Tip #4: If rates remain high, short: CAT, WMT, XLP, XLU, AAPL and MSFT.    


Gauging Risk:

-       We are at a very scary place on the S&Ps.  If you’re going to sell premium – wait for volatility to hit the 40-level.

-       Tip #5: If rates do NOT come down, buy 30-day, In/Out (controlled risk) PUT Spreads on: CAT, WMT, XLP, XLU, AAPL and MSFT.


SPX Expected Move (EM):

-       Last week’s EM = $168 

-       Next week’s EM = $136

-       Volatility declined from last week to this week.  Why?  Because markets have seen this movie before.  Once the SPX (4,123) breaks through the 4,000 level, then the VIX will move above 40 – and with high volatility comes chaos.  



Tips:  



HODL’s: (Hold On for Dear Life)


-       CASH == Nexo & Celsius == @ 8 to 12% yield

-       PHYSICAL COMMODITIES == Gold @ $1,896 / oz. & Silver @ $22.79 / oz.


-       **BitFarm (BITF = $2.71 / in at $4.12)

o   Sold May, Dec ‘22: $5 CCs for income,

-       **Bitcoin (BTC = $34,700 / in at $4,310)

-       CPG (CPG = $7.39 / in at $6.44)

o   Sold Jul $7.50 CCs for income,

-       Energy Fuels (UUUU = $6.91 / in at $11.29),

o   Sold June $8 CCs for income, 

-       **Ethereum (ETH = $2,550 / in at $310)

-       GME – Holding

-       **Grayscale Ethereum (ETHE = $19.61 / in @ $13.44)

-       **Grayscale Bitcoin Trust (GBTC = $25.02 / in @ $9.41)

-       Uranium Royalty (UROY = $3.32 / in at $4.41)

o   Sold July $5 CCs for income


** Denotes a crypto-relationship


Trade of the Week: 


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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