The Morning Line

Why the Smart Money Should Spend Some of It Now

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Years ago, I received death threats after writing in the San Francisco Examiner that Apple looked like it was about to go under.  That was in 1997, not long after Steve Jobs returned after a 12-year exile. Ironically, he was fired by the man he’d recruited in 1985 to run the show — cue the hisses and boos — Pepsi CEO John Sculley. Apple shares at the time were trading below $5, and its sub-5% share of the desktop market was in a seeming death spiral. The iPhone was ten years distant, and it appeared that nothing could save the company. How wrong I was! My Examiner column provoked such a firestorm that I recanted its conclusions a few weeks later. Any firm that enjoyed such fanatical support was unlikely to go out of business, I concluded. If only I’d bought a thousand shares at the time.

I mention all of this because last week’s hit-piece on Apple elicited nary a response — not in the Rick’s Picks ‘comments’ section, not on websites that feature my work — not in my own chat room. For all I know, the think-piece went unremarked even in the blogosphere, where the leastmost of our concerns often devolve into bloody battles. Regardless, the premise of my commentary — that shorting APPL and buying TSLA would prove to be the trade of the decade — will be tested by time.

Gates Renounces His Religion

For now, let’s move on to a favorite topic, the fraudulent ‘wealth effect’ that has seized, if not the proletarian mind, then indeed the minds of the 20% who have most benefited from it. The latest faux-wealth superstars are Amazon and Microsoft.  Shares of the latter jumped $23 last week on earnings news that added about $300 billion of quasi-gaseous wealth to shareholders’ accounts. Perhaps it explains why Bill Gates renounced his climate-change religion: he’s grown so rich that he can afford to take on the problem all by himself if it should threaten the millions of acres of prime U.S. farmland that he owns. (Actually, I’m being facetious. Gates changed his mind because Trump brought him to his senses, convincing him in a sit-down meeting they’d just had that there was no longer big money in the climate change racket, or in pretending Greta Thunberg is Joan of Arc.)

Amazon shareholders, especially Jeff Bezos, had a sensational week as well. Last week’s strong but unsurprising earnings news produced a windfall of around $300 billion for them when the stock jumped $27 to $250 in mere minutes. What’s a guy to do with all that money? Bezos already owns a 417-foot sailboat with, of course, the tallest masts in the world, and he could buy five more just like it with the $2.5 billion he made in a single day. As for everyone else who was in on the take, there was still $297 billion of instant booty to go around. An unseemly portion of it will be spent on Lamborghinis, Tiffany bracelets, $400,000 Hermès handbags and other bric-a-brac of the super-rich. The merely filthy rich can take heart, though, since the remaining trickle-down will still suffice to make next summer’s rental in the Hamptons, or yachting in the Mediterranean, affordable.  But the lucky winners should consider spending some of the lucre now, since the coming bear market will destroy wealth even more quickly than the airless gaps that are everywhere on stock charts have created it.

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$MSFT – Microsoft (Last:517.81)

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MSFT’s double top is so obvious that we should be cautious about believing the party is over. My read is that the dirtballs who manipulate the stock for a living had no alternatives. Although they short-squeezed earnings news for all it was worth, they lacked the wattage and the daring to push above July’s 555 peak. The subsequent relapse was so nasty that it will require some time to build a base capable of supporting a push to new record highs. So many bulls got sandbagged by last week’s Whoopee Cushion ride that the retracement will probably take out the 492.37 low recorded early in September. Since the stock market and Microsoft will continue to stay roughly in synch, the foregoing implies that the bull market is due for a significant and possibly protracted correction.  I have no interesting Hidden Pivot targets at the moment, but that shouldn’t preclude our trading this feisty little monster between feints.

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$GCZ25 – December Gold (Last:4013.40)

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$SIZ25 – December Silver (Last:48.250)

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$GDXJ – Junior Gold Miner ETF (Last:93.65)

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Last week’s nasty chop barely recovered ground lost as the week began, when GDXJ’s canny handlers orchestrated a $17 shakedown on Monday’s opening. This was bullish, like all shakedowns, because its purpose was to scare widows and pensioners into selling their shares for relative bargain prices. The subsequent bounce triggered a ‘mechanical’ short when it reached the green line (x=93.97), but the flat price action that followed looked unpromising as a place to bet the ‘don’t’ line. Stay tuned for updates as GDXJ gives us a clearer picture. You can do this by enabling notifications in your account dashboard and by checking the chat room regularly.

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$BTCUSD – Bitcoin (Last:110,174)

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$TLT – Lehman Bond ETF (Last:90.29)

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TLT continues to grind higher, perhaps to deny skeptics the inspiration they need to climb aboard early in this bull market.  It is still in its adolescence, too early to predict which tectonic financial event(s) it is signaling. The trend flouts Trump’s persistent efforts to cheapen the dollar, if not to say trash it.  This is a paradox that I’ve explained here before, to wit: the president’s bold leadership has been attracting hordes of T-Bond buyers from around the world, providing an offset to the fiscal and credit excesses Trump believes will lift the U.S. economy.  Grotesquely inflated asset prices belie the fact that, for most Americans, the economy has slipped into a deep, intractable recession.  For the lucky winners, a debt deflation and bear market in stocks awaits those whose net worth has soared mainly due to Fed easing. Regarding TLT, don’t pass up an opportunity to buy it ‘mechanically’ on a pullback to the green line (x=89.85), stop 88.45.

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$ESZ25 – December E-Mini S&P (Last:6872.25)

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