An eventful month.
Bitcoin
Sold half my Bitcoin on Thurs night. It *was* weakening, along with Tech. And other Crypto like ETH were already trending down. Bitcoin could be the "last man standing".
I am trading Bitcoin based on Hedgeye's trend signals. I believe in Bitcoin as a stable, distributed network and an alternative to fiat. But I don't have the balls to buy-and-hold something that can drop 70% in a cycle while generating no cashflow or dividends. Hedgeye's signals keep you in for most of the uptrend and out of the downside. Here is an old chart:
I may sell the rest of it or buy it back. Depends on the signal.
Market Correction
Market has corrected the past week, while VIX spiked to the high-teens:
I still think this is a short term correction. But may be a long-term rotation out of tech. Last night Nvidia was down 10% on no news. My portfolio was somehow up last night, down 5% from its peak.
Copper and silver were both up last night, both are risk-on commodities. Bitcoin - the ultimate risk-on commodity - was also up, despite Nvidia's fall. Signals for higher inflation ahead?
Precious-Industrials
Bought 2% Platinum (2%) and 1% Silver (now holding 2% at my buy price).
Platinum fundamentals are covered nicely by the Modern Investing Substack. Not buying any producers (eg: Sibayne-Stillwater) because:
- The metal itself is volatile enough, comparable to silver. They correlated strongly, until silver took off in April, while platinum hasn't followed:
- They're in South Africa, which can't keep the lights on. A collapse in South Africa would collapse the stocks and drive platinum metal prices higher.
- Don't buy equities when the equities market is correcting.
Tin
Tin spiked 20% since the start of this month:
Malaysia Smelting Corp (MSC) is up 40% since I bought. Plan to hold as I think we're still in the start of the industrial production up-cycle. And there are real supply issues. MSC generates cashflows and pays dividends, so its not something I need to trade in-and-out of.
Bloomberg reports this price spike is due to a single trader's futures positions (click on the tweet's picture, then register with Bloomberg to read for free), causing a short squeeze. The article is mostly positive tin, but they report high speculative long positions, meaning its due for a short term correction.
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