John Thomas | TalkMarkets | Page 2
Hedge Fund Executive
Contributor's Links: Mad Hedge Fund Trader
John Thomas graduated with a bachelor’s degree in biochemistry with honors and a minor in mathematics from the University of California at Los Angeles (U.C.L.A.) in 1974. He moved to Tokyo, Japan where he was employed by a medium-sized Japanese securities house. Thomas became fluent in ...more

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Ten Reasons Why Apple Is Still Going To $220
Apple is on the verge of becoming the world’s first $1 trillion publicly traded company. The best is around the corner for Apple. The true numbers will be revealed in the next quarterly earnings report in August.
The Tale Of Two Economies
If you are in the right economy, that of the future, you are having another spectacular year. If you aren’t you are probably posting losses for 2018. It's called, "The Tale of Two Economies."
Why The “Midterm Effect” Rules The Markets
Markets will remain trapped in a narrow range for months. A 20% corporate growth rate, a 2% inflation rate, and a 0% stock market return. The six months going into a midterm produced a feeble 1.4% gain since 1896
The Demise Of The Mall
There are now 25 REITs in the S&P 500. Will picking up some REITs be a good call?
The End Of The Iran Nuclear Deal And Your Portfolio
Because of the end of the U.S. participation in the Iran Nuclear Deal, if you own energy producers, you are OK. If you own energy consumers, you are taking it in the shorts.
Reminding You Why You Should Be Selling In May
“Sell in May and go away." $10,000 invested at the beginning of May and sold at the end of October every year since 1950 would be showing a loss today. Remember that this cyclicality is not 100% accurate.
Cybersecurity Is Only Just Getting Started
The cybersecurity sector has taken off like a rocket once again, and there could be another 25% to 50% in it this year. The near destruction of Sony by North Korean hackers has certainly put fear into corporate America.
Storage Wars
In 2017, more than $80 billion was spent on data centers across the country, often in the remotest areas imaginable. There is a severe shortage of cost-effective data storage and the skyrocketing electric power bills to power them.
Anatomy Of A Great Trade
Oil has rallied by 2%, the U.S. dollar has soared, and stocks have been crushed. The TLT has popped smartly, some $2.5 points off of last week’s low, taking yields down from a four-year high at 3.03% down to 2.93%.
Why Indexers Are Toast
Recently, money management giant BlackRock announced that algorithms would take over a much larger share of the investment decision-making process. The problem is being greatly exacerbated by the recent explosive growth of the ETF industry.
Why Consumer Staples Are Dying
Consumer staples have taken a beating in the stock market. Globally rising commodity prices are rising, increasing their costs. Online competition makes it impossible to pass costs of consumer staples on to consumers as in past economic cycles.
The Great American Jobs Mismatch
The Weekly Jobless Claims are bouncing around a 43-year low at 220,000. With a 4.1% headline unemployment rate, the US economy is at its theoretical employment max. Colleges are producing graduates out of sync with the nation’s actual skills needs.
Diving Back Into The VIX
Since 4/1, the Volatility Index (VIX) has performed a swan dive from $26 to $15, a decline of 42.30%. When the market goes up, the (VIX) goes down. When the market goes down, the VIX goes up.
Has The Recession Already Started?
Negative economic data reports have suddenly become increasingly common. The economic data flow has definitely turned sour. Is this a growth scare or the beginning of a full-blown recession?
Rightsizing Your Trading
It's easy for investors to lose sleep if a position goes the wrong way. A good idea is to start out small when taking on your first positions.Paper-trading facilities allow you to practice the art with pretend money.
Why You Should Care About The LIBOR Crisis
A financial crisis is taking place overseas, which is important to us all. The London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR) is a measure of the cost of short-term borrowing in Europe and has been rising almost every day for two months.
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