Weekly Newsletter   Challenge account   Weekly Newsletter   


Posted by Martin April 30, 2023
No Comments



 




Why bears will get hammered even more


Market bears are bearish as never before. It is stunning. But unfortunately, they are on the wrong side of the market. Their asses will get kicked badly as we are recovering from a recession. I say “recovering” because we were in a recession already. But the bears failed to recognize it, and they expect it yet to come. I don’t think it will come. As inflation eases, companies and the economy will be improving.

In 2020 everyone thought the economy would crash into a deep recession and the businesses would come to a halt. They overestimated the impact. As we saw a sharp recovery, the businesses realized that they were wrong, and the economy was booming. They went on a buying spree. But they were ordering online goods, home improvement tools, merchandise, hardware, etc. They thought people would stay home forever, working from home and remodeling their houses, using Zoom and other online services, streaming movies, and trading stocks. Companies were desperate to hire people, and they hired anyone who applied, even though he or she wasn’t needed but was willing to say “yes.” Even today, businesses still offer sign-up bonuses! They, again, overestimated the Covid and post-Covid impact. Stimmies didn’t last.

In 2021 we saw a sharp recovery, a boom! The stock market rallied like never before. The businesses reported record earnings and hired an enormous number of new employees. And once again, it was overrated.

In 2022 companies failed to meet Wall Street’s unrealistic expectations, and everybody was shocked; how come a company that sported an average EPS in the pre-covid era of 2.00 per share, reported 5.00 per share in 2021, suddenly reported 2.90 in 2022? It was obvious to every normal person with critical thinking that 5.00 EPS per share was not normal, and expecting businesses to report anything close to that number was a pure utopia. But this was not obvious to Wall Street analysts drunk on spectacular gains in the 2021 dream, and they euphorically expected more… like a drug addict who needed more, but it was doomed to crash. And add to it inflation that was sparked by shortages of everything across the board, and the calamity was brewing. And suddenly, all these euphoric bulls flying to the moon turned into bears and predicting crashes, the end of the world, and catastrophes never seen before.

But as these former bulls were wrong with their bullish expectations, they are again wrong with their bearish expectations. We entered this earnings season with S&P 500 EPS expectations of $50.76 a share. So far, 53% of S&P 500 businesses reported earnings, which came out at $52.02 a share! The largest EPS growth we have ever seen! And as we all know, the market is driven by earnings. If earnings stagnate or go down, markets stagnate or go down; when earnings go up, markets follow. And if we, God forbid, extrapolate earnings to the remainder of the S&P 500 companies that are to be reporting soon, we may easily see an EPS of 54%! And if this happens, expect the market to follow. An 8% jump this quarter can easily happen! Can you imagine what will happen to the bears?

And we see this improvement across the board of well-known businesses: Chipotle, Microsoft, Churchill Downs, Meta Platforms, Google, Boeing, etc., etc., etc.! I have always said that in the stock market, it is earnings, earnings, and earnings that matter the most! We are beating them!




We all want to hear your opinion on the article above:
No Comments



Posted by Martin April 27, 2023
No Comments



 




Bears are getting their asses kicked, and it will get worse for them


Amazon (AMZN) reported earnings, and the stock soared more than 7% AH. That will obliterate the bears more as the stock will spur upward pressure in tomorrow’s open market. The GDP report and economy indicate that there will be no recession. Some market analysts, like Ed Yardeni, even think that we actually already had a recession and we are now recovering from it. I agree with him.

I also think that the low of this bear market was in October 2022, and we are now in an early stage of a new bull market. The choppiness and volatility are typical for this stage. It indicates that bears are in denial, trying to add more and more bearish positions as they refuse to accept the trend reversal and think that this is just a dead cat bounce. But that is not the case. Not this time. All bad news and bad future outcomes were priced in, and there is no more bad news coming. But if you are an idiot bear, you think the economy will collapse, you do not know why or what would cause it, you just have guts feeling, so you load up more puts and short positions. Just check the level of bearishness in any survey. Those levels were not seen even during the 2008 financial crisis! Do you really believe this is worse than that? And if so, why?

As the bears buy more puts and short more stocks, bull jump in every dip this creates. And the more bears short this market, the more they get hurt. And one day, they will finally give up and reverse their trading. That will be the moment we will have to recognize and get out. The market will see the parabolic spike before reversing and hurting these former bears once again.




We all want to hear your opinion on the article above:
No Comments



Posted by Martin April 27, 2023
No Comments



 




Crocs (CROX) reported earnings, beat, but dropped more than 17%


CROX CROX beat the estimates but provided weak outlook for the next quarter. Morons rushed to sell everything, including their house, wives, kids, dogs, and CROX. The stock dropped over 17% (as of now), and it was down more than 21% this morning.

It amazes me how stupid the market is (or market participants). A CEO polishes his or her crystal ball, looks into the future, and prophesies a new number. And the prophecy was bad. Spooky investors and algos rushed to exit and screamed along the way.

 
CROX stock drop
 

They completely ignored the fact that the stock is extremely undervalued based on the adjusted operating earnings (yes, the valuation may change, but the long-term outlook is still way positive). The short-sighted Wall Street doesn’t look beyond the next quarter. Chasing a quick buck prevents them from seeing the whole picture. While to them, the next quarter is a catastrophe, to me, it is an opportunity.

 
CROX stock valuation
 

And so, while they were selling, I decided to be buying. Thank you for letting me enter 20% cheaper than yesterday!

 




We all want to hear your opinion on the article above:
No Comments



Posted by Martin April 25, 2023
No Comments



 




Morons dumping and chasing the market


The longer I am in the markets the more disgusted about the stupidity of the morons trading and investing out there I am. Recently, the markets were weak and it seems they are rolling over, but the overall narrative from the media was that “investors were selling awaiting big tech earnings.” Or similar nonsensical crap.

So, if we accept this imbecilic view, the investors were selling afraid of their own shadow. They were selling tech companies (Google among them) because they were afraid that the companies may miss their earnings. If you think that this is stupid and the media usually tell us nonsense that we cannot believe at all, since they are these click baits only, and they usually are, this time I would give them some credibility.

Why? Well, look what happened to Netflix recently. Idiocracy in the making. Netflix posted better-than-expected results pretty much in every aspect that usually matters, like free cash flow, but missed EPS by some insignificant number. The stock sold off by 10% after hours. Then these imbeciles realized (maybe) that they were morons, and start buying the stock back. Before the morning open, the stock was losing only a mere 3%.

And today, we have seen a similar stupidity. Google was on sale. Everybody was dumping the stock. After hours, the company reported earnings and beat expectations. At some point, the stock went up by more than 4% from a losing 2% at the close. So a 6% run AH. Idiots were selling low and now buying high.




We all want to hear your opinion on the article above:
No Comments



Posted by Martin April 23, 2023
No Comments



 




The bull market is still intact


The bull market that started on October 2022 is still intact. It may change, but it hasn’t changed yet. The bond market still continues to show a bullish setup and so far, it is wrong to be on the bearish side. A soft landing is still a strong possibility. The investors are still extremely bearish. Per JP Morgan’s survey, 95% of investors think the stock market will fall for the rest of the year, and 5% think that the prices will remain the same. None (NONE!!) believe that the market may go up. This is usually a pretty good contrarian indicator.

The fund managers are also extremely exposed to defensive equities such as bonds, staples, utilities, cash, or healthcare stocks. What does this tell us? Well, at some point, there will be a moment of reallocation, namely when these fund managers realize that they are behind and will be required to show performance. As the market continues crunching higher, their current positions will hurt them. FOMO is nearby.

Nevertheless, this adds to the choppiness of the market. The market goes higher, bears buy defensive positions, mostly put options, and market makers must hedge against these positions, and that creates the rocking boat we are in right now. I saw this clearly last week in the Optionstrat flow. It was extraordinary to watch how many investors were extremely bearish, buying puts on all underlying equities like crazy. And guess what, many of these positions expired worthless this last Friday. Investors lost millions. Add to it the losses of retail investors trying to day trade 0DTE options. They lose $358,000 per day!

 
Bull market
 

We are still seeing weak economic data, though. So that still may turn into a recession! However, the labor market is still extremely strong, contributing to the expectations of a soft landing.

Some market analysts say that the rate hikes already induced a mild recession, and the economic bottom has already happened. That is why we see the stock market defying the skeptics, and it keeps rallying despite their doom and gloom predictions. They say that the recession started in 2022 and is pretty much ending. Honestly, I am in the same camp.

 
Technical view weekly
 

A Bloomberg model indicates that the market (and the US economy) bottomed out in December 2022. And today, the less bad is a strong bullish force. But to know for sure, we need to wait. And while waiting, we need to approach the market carefully and with caution. This uncertainty will continue contributing to higher volatility. We saw it last week. The markets opened low almost every day (usually -0.13% to -0.65%) and then rallied the rest of the day and erased the early morning losses. This may continue.

How will it translate to our trading? Keep higher cash. Trade small, only a few positions per week, ideally one position a week, depending on your account size. And trade only after the old trades are gone. If they are not gone, close them, roll them or otherwise adjust based on your strategy, and do not open any new trade. If you just buy stocks, buy small and buy dividend stocks only. Do not buy high-flying, risky stocks. There will be plenty of opportunities once this uncertain time passes.
 

This post was published in our newsletter to our subscribers on Saturday, April 23rd, 2023. If you want to learn more about our stock technical analysis subscribe to our weekly newsletter.
 




We all want to hear your opinion on the article above:
No Comments



Posted by Martin April 19, 2023
No Comments



 




Technical view: Jackson Financial Inc. (JXN)


Technical view
 

JXN is in stage #2. The stock bounced at 200-day MA support. The recovery from the recent “banking crisis” selloff continues. The price is “hugging” the 200-day MA and the upward-moving trend line. At the current level, the stock is extremely undervalued, but it may take several years before we see the stock reach its valuation (the valuation may also drop before the price gets there). The stock pays good dividends and at the current price, it is a buy.

 
Technical view weekly
 

The company is a spinoff of Purdue insurance company, so its revenue track record is short and so far, somewhat choppy. Despite the choppiness, the company seems to be growing its revenue:

 
Technical view weekly
 

Free cash flow is also growing:

 
Technical view weekly
 

The company pays 2.48 annual dividends (6.75%) and despite its short history, increased the dividend twice:

 
Technical view weekly
 

Since the spinoff, the company also reduced shares outstanding significantly:

 
Technical view weekly
 

The company has plenty of cash and very little debt, so it is not affected by the current interest rates. This is very good news. With rising interest rates, we want to be investing in companies that have little to no exposure to debt (leveraged). JXN is one of them:

 
Technical view weekly
 

The stock is well undervalued, and it offers an astounding 745% rate of return by 2025 (119% annualized return). The question is when investors recognize it and start buying this stock up.

 
Technical view weekly
 

Technical view weekly
 

The stock is now AGGRESSIVE BUY
 

This post was published in our newsletter to our subscribers on Saturday, April 15th, 2023. If you want to learn more about our stock technical analysis subscribe to our weekly newsletter.
 




We all want to hear your opinion on the article above:
No Comments



Posted by Martin April 18, 2023
No Comments



 




Technical view: Nuvei Corporation (NVEI)


Technical view
 

NVEI is in stage #2. NVEI is my new addition to the portfolio. I was resisting investing in fintech companies as I couldn’t find any diversified enough to give me the comfort of not investing in companies exposed to cryptocurrency only. It is a purely speculative trade. I plan on holding this and selling options against this position (spreads). The stock is now under pressure from a short seller (Spruce Point) who claims a few issues with the company. First, they brag about their correct prediction that the stock would drop by 35% (they called it in December 2021). Then they posted a few issues with the company, such as that Ryan Reynolds didn’t disclose his investment properly and the management had ties to FTX. I think this is not a reason for the additional 50% drop. But I am competing against a bunch of analysts who do nothing the entire day but dig out anything they can about a company of their interest, so I may be utterly wrong. Nevertheless, on the chart, the stock is in stage #2 and may continue recovering if the report turns out to be bogus just to push the stock down (note, short sellers usually post their reports after they open their short positions. And just because they were right once doesn’t mean they will be right again. It may easily be that they remained short and now trying to prevent a short squeeze as the markets, tech, and fintech stock start recovering.

 
Technical view weekly
 

The weekly chart also indicates potential, and the stock may, in fact, recover to the previous levels of $100 – $120 a share. Will it happen? No one knows, but if we take a look at the fair value correlated to the adjusted operating earnings, we see that the stock’s fair value should be around $100 a share by 2025. Today’s fair value is at $63.92 a share, so the stock is undervalued:

 
Technical view weekly
 

However, Spruce Point claims that the stock value is inflated by the company’s buybacks to “channel cash out of business.” If we look at the shares outstanding, this claim doesn’t seem to hold water much. The company was diluting shareholders for years, though nothing significant, just about 2.2% 5-year average dilution. In 2022 it started buybacks at a rate of 1.09%. I do not think that is a reason for fraudulent money drainage claims, and Spruce Point might be just inflating a problem that isn’t there.

 
Technical view weekly
 

The company is increasing its revenue every year. There was a small hiccup in 3Q 2022, but then the revenue improved. The revenue chart below indicates total revenue, not revenue per share, so buybacks do not impact the numbers.

 
Technical view weekly
 

Another claim is that Nuvei’s acquisition of Paya, exposure to cryptocurrency, and inflating customer base will hurt the company and fail. Where does the free cash flow come from if that is the case?

 
Technical view weekly
 

The company has more cash in hand than the debt, and it is paying it off. I consider this a good sign. So, if we summarize the claims of Spruce Point that the company:
1. Was draining money from the coffers by questionable buybacks.
2. Was inflating customer base.
3. Was involved in questionable acquisitions
4. Had questionable ties to failed FTX

Where did it get the cash needed to show positive and growing free cash flow and could keep its debt at a reasonable level without borrowing more money? Consider that this is a fintech company in the realm of high-flying tech stocks that are usually leveraged.

 
Technical view weekly
 

So, yes, the company is new, in an interest rates sensitive territory, in the same category as the PayPal company, it may be fraudulent, and yes, it crashed during the latest bear market (which company didn’t crash?). Still, I think the Spruce Point report is not a very convincing one. I have seen better reports.

I still think that the Spruce Point report is to keep the stock price suppressed as they maintain a short position, and they may want to close it at a better price. I don’t think the stock will drop another 50% (though it may, if I am wrong). So I am taking a small position and will see what happens next. I am also placing a stop loss. If the company drops, I will be kicked out. If it keeps moving higher, I will make money. But I think the company offers a good opportunity.

 
Technical view weekly
 

The stock is now MODERATE BUY
 

If you want to learn more about our stock technical analysis subscribe to our weekly newsletter.
 




We all want to hear your opinion on the article above:
No Comments



Posted by Martin April 15, 2023
No Comments



 




Soft landing or recession?


Here we go again. Retail investors and even some bigger players are again afraid of inflation, recession, and ghosts. Media are digging out bears and recycling their stories and narratives, such as Mike Wilson from Morgan Stanley, who has been notoriously predicting a 50% (now only 20%) crash since 2009. Yes, he was right in 2022 when the market shed almost 30%, but he still kept predicting an additional 50% crash.

 
recession
 

And people listen to this crap. Sure, we may go lower again, but I do not see any reason for it. Here is my logic: The FED was raising the interest rates aggressively. Everyone was seeing it as a dangerous game that would put the US economy under such strain that it would break and crash. But it didn’t happen. Even after the aggressive hikes, the economy remained extremely strong. Yes, it is slowing, but it is not collapsing. The labor market also remains extremely strong. And on top of that, inflation is slowing down at a faster pace than anyone expected. So the FED paused hiking the rates.

If the economy hasn’t crashed during a year of aggressive interest rate hikes, why would it crash now when inflation is slowing, and the FED is probably done hiking the rates?
And people listen to doom and gloom predictors like Roubini, Grantham, or Wilson and keep buying puts. And they are losing money. They are selling their stocks and staying aside because people like Wilson are telling them that the markets will crash more. And they are missing the opportunity. Retail investors are still sitting on huge losses despite the recent rally, just because they stayed out of the market.

 
losses in recession
 

Analysts, who are usually wrong and more pessimistic than they need to be, predict earnings to drop by 7% this year. After 13 years of gains, a 7% drop in earnings is not catastrophic. In 2015 earnings dropped by 18%, and yet the US avoided recession. In 2011, earnings dropped by 2%, and the economy avoided recession, too, despite bears like Grantham saying that recession was imminent. Since 2021, earnings have dropped by 10.6% already, yet we are not in a recession. Well, technically, we are, but there is no catastrophic crash; the market already corrected almost 30% last year, if you haven’t noticed.

 
losses in recession
 




We all want to hear your opinion on the article above:
No Comments



Posted by Martin April 12, 2023
No Comments



 




Technical view: Medical Properties Trust, Inc. (MPW)


Technical view
 

MPW is in stage #4. The company recently started fighting back against one of the biggest short sellers. That caused the stock to bounce two weeks ago. But the company still faces strong headwinds as the interest rates rise fast and hospital owners are weak. It is ironic that MPW is one of the largest hospital REITs owning properties around the world but struggles with them.

 
Technical view weekly
 

The weekly chart above shows a rapid selloff after recovery from October lows. There is no sign of relief, at least not yet. The recent bounce may be another bounce in the end. The company now expects another hit to their earnings so this could be a problem and the stock may drop more. However, this could be a good opportunity, similar to 2008-2009 when the stock dropped hard as well:

 
Technical view weekly
 

Definitely, investing in MPW now you need strong guts to do it. If you are worried about the financial situation of MPW, then wait until this clears up.
Recently, there has been a lot of talk about the dividends and that the company will cut them because the current yield is not sustainable. But looking at the financials of the company, there still is no reason for a dividend cut:

 
Technical view weekly
 

As the free cash flow indicates, the company is bringing in approximately $180 bn in free cash and pays out approximately $162 bn in dividends.

 
Technical view weekly
 

MPW pays nice dividends and keeps raising it annually at a steady pace of 3% (5-year average). There appears to be only one cut so far in 2008 and that was obvious:

 
Technical view weekly
 

Earnings were steady, not overly growing but positive except in 4Q 2022. We may see another decline in 1Q 2023:

 
Technical view weekly
 

But this decline may already be included in the recent price as the stock trades significantly below its fair value.

 
Technical view weekly
 

The company’s debt is a concern. But recently they started improving their balance sheet and reducing their debt burden. Hopefully, this trend will continue:

 
Technical view weekly
 

The debt that was due in 2023-2024 was covered by cash and sales of their Australian assets. This can boost the cash flow even in the case of one of their tenants (Prospect) should pay $0 in rent (which is unlikely).

The short selling of this company is so intense (currently sits at 20% short interest) that there may be a short squeeze brewing under the hood. At some point, the short sellers will start taking their profits and that may spark more covering and rapid price action.

Investing in MPW can be risky but it seems the stock hit bottom. If so, the recovery can be rewarding.

 
Technical view weekly
 

The stock is now AGGRESSIVE BUY
 

This post was published in our newsletter to our subscribers on Saturday, April 9th, 2023. If you want to learn more about our stock technical analysis subscribe to our weekly newsletter.
 




We all want to hear your opinion on the article above:
No Comments



Posted by Martin April 08, 2023
No Comments



 




Technical view: Main Street Capital Corporation (MAIN)


Technical view
 

MAIN is morphing back to stage #2. The stock seems to be performing well and offers a good buying opportunity. It pays dividends monthly. However, fundamentally, the stock seems to be providing grim data which may have an impact on the stock growth. MAIN was offering great dividends and small growth matching the index (7.16% vs. 7.23% of SPY). This may not be the case unless financial data improve.

 
Technical view weekly
 

Technical view weekly
 

The monthly chart shows the stock moving higher slowly over time since its inception. It had a huge setback in 2020 when the stock crashed but the company kept paying dividends. On top, the company paid a few special dividends further boosting investors’ income.

 
Technical view weekly
 

The chart above seems to be indicating a dividend cut in 2021 but other sources do not show it:

 
Technical view weekly
 

MAIN is unfortunately trading above its NAV making the stock relatively expensive:

 
Technical view weekly
 

The company has a somewhat erratic revenue stream but overall, its revenue is growing over time. It however grows 6.75% annually. Five-year revenue growth is 9.47%.

 
Technical view weekly
 

The free cash flow of MAIN is pathetic and the company seems to be burning cash.

 
Technical view weekly
 

Another concern is growing debt and little cash to cover it:

 
Technical view weekly
 

The company may cover the lack of cash by issuing more shares and issuing new debt. In the raising interest rate environment, this may backfire and break the company’s financials. Thus, investing in this company requires caution and not investing all of your money.

 
Technical view weekly
 

The company may be a bit expensive based on the NAV valuation (currently, it trades at a premium). Still, I believe this is compensated for by dividends well enough to be investing.
Fundamentally, the stock offers good value at the current price. It appears safe to buy here.

 
Technical view weekly
 

Price vs FCFE/AFFO shows, at least for now, that the company makes enough money to cover the dividend:

 
Technical view weekly
 

Technical view weekly
 

The stock is now AGGRESSIVE BUY
 

This post was published in our newsletter to our subscribers on Saturday, April 2nd, 2023. If you want to learn more about our stock technical analysis subscribe to our weekly newsletter.
 




We all want to hear your opinion on the article above:
No Comments





This site has been fine-tuned by 14 WordPress Tweaks