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06.02.2025
Perfect As the Enemy of Good

Here is the problem, which is nearly at a primary school level. A simple logical puzzle. A shopping street has two grocery stores. One of the stores is much more popular than the other. But both shops are full of customers every day. So both shops are raking in money. Sales output of a more popular store roughly doubled over the past year, from $14.5 billion to $30.8 billion - oh, yes, it's a very big shop - which led to tripling of its market value. Meanwhile, sales in the second store have already grown by 69%, albeit by its lower standards, namely from $2.3 billion to $3.9 billion. Please draw a conclusion, by what percentage the market value of the second store could increase, assuming that professional appraisers are rather objective. It seems ridiculous, but the correct answer is that the second store's market value lost 35% within the same year, and it even dropped by 50% from its peak price of the last spring. Holy Cow! That was a story of some failed expectations of mine. Since the big store is, of course, Nvidia, and the small one (and also, in fact, quite a prosperous marketplace) is Advanced Micro Devices (AMD). And their goods are not essential food, but chips for artificial intelligence (AI) related data centers, which are also in high demand.

Moreover, AMD shares reportedly tumbled 10% additionally on February 5, only because the firm's AI chip revenue failed to be exactly in line with elevated projections of Wall Street analyst pool, which somehow bet on a 80% pace of data centre growth to as much as $4.15 billion YoY. Okay, one might say that Nvidia's "store" sells 8 times more chips that everyone needs. And even remember that Nvidia chips are of better quality, that Nvidia occupies about 80% of global chip market share. Again, Nvidia's last quarter will be finally counted only by February 26, when Nvidia's financial report is scheduled, a month later than in AMD's case. Like most large investment houses, here I have provided growth metrics regarding the major data center segment, which is a proxy for the AI playground, where AMD struggles to compete with Nvidia. Well, AMD CEO Lisa Su admitted that her company's data center sales in the current quarter may go down about 7% from the just-ended quarter, but this announcement was exactly in line with an overall expected decline. Is it really such a big deal that AMD shareholders have to experience pain from seeing their chosen stock falling to a 14-month low, with further need for a 100% rally just to match last year's record prices?

The same Lisa Su declined to give the particular forecast for the company's AI chips, but she said that AMD expects "tens of billions" of dollars in sales "in the next couple of years". And I see no reason to doubt her words. AMD CEO added that the firm is now working to compete against Broadcom (AVGO) in collaborating with its customers like Meta and Microsoft to create custom AI chips for their purposes, as Broadcom helps its partners to design their own chips, contrary to mostly "off-the-shelf" processors by AMD and Nvidia. They know their weaknesses as opportunities for strengthening to work in that direction, so what's wrong with the market's adequacy of perception? Perfect Nvidia is the enemy of good AMD, according to the crowd's opinion. Besides AI chips, AMD is also one of the largest providers of personal computer chips. Until recently, this point was generally the source of their main income. Consumers continue to buy new PCs, which also can handle generative AI tasks, by the way.

Actually, AMD has been the only loss-making company in my large portfolio for a long time, so it even makes me smile now. At least, because it is only a matter of time before AMD's pogo stick ultimately uncoils to come loose. Record annual revenue and earnings have to entail recovering to record market value eventually. I am not sure this will happen in the first half of 2025, even though AMD forecasts its revenue rise between $6.8 billion and $7.4 billion for the current quarter, with the market consensus midpoint being slightly lower at $7.04 billion. If you don't believe me then analysts at Stifel are of the opinion that AMD is well positioned for AI compute and "It is likely" that some of its customers "are waiting for 325/350 systems, which should drive a much stronger second half". Again, the median estimate by the Wall Street's analyst pool was now declined to about $150 per share vs $166.5 before the last downside move, yet even $150 sounds much better compared to $112 on closing price this Wednesday or an intraday low at $106.56 during the last trading session. Anyway, there is a strong technical and psychological support zone near the round figure of $100, from where AMD stock had begun its cool ascension in late 2023.

14.01.2025
Merck Becomes Interesting to Be Added to a Portfolio

Merck & Co (MRK) stocks have shown signs of becoming a compelling buy opportunity. Over the past six months, the stock has been in a downtrend, declining 29.8% to $94.50 per share. However, since mid-November, MRK has demonstrated a reversal of momentum, rebounding by 10.0% to reach $104.87 on December 5. Following a brief pullback and consolidation period, the stock has retested the downtrend resistance and appears poised to continue its upward trajectory.

With prices currently positioned to target $110.00, this represents a potential 9-10% upside from the present levels. Setting a stop-loss at $93.50 aligns with a prudent risk management strategy, providing protection against further downside while allowing for upside potential. The recent consolidation phase further supports the case for a breakout, making this an attractive moment to consider initiating or adding to a position in MRK.

14.01.2025
Tezos Is Seen Hodling above $1.200

Tezos (XTZ) has declined slightly by 0.2% this week, trading at $1.249, following Bitcoin’s (BTC) drop to $89,158, which triggered widespread altcoin sell-offs due to concerns of a potential further decline in BTC to $80,000. However, Bitcoin managed to hold above the critical support level at $89,000-$91,000, offering some relief to the broader crypto market.

Speculation about a shift in U.S. trade policy has provided additional support to crypto assets. Reports suggest the new U.S. administration may pursue a gradual increase in tariffs rather than an abrupt hike, which could help alleviate inflationary pressures and lead to a less aggressive monetary stance from the Federal Reserve.

This development is a positive signal for the cryptocurrency market and may help Tezos maintain its position above the key support level of $1.200.

09.01.2025
VeChain Is Suffering on Rising Borrowing Costs

VeChain (VET) has fallen 12.7% this week, trading at $0.0445, underperforming the broader cryptocurrency market. Bitcoin (BTC), the leading cryptocurrency, has declined by 5.6% to $93,220, with bearish momentum building as it approaches key support at $89,000-$91,000. This decline is largely attributed to tightening monetary conditions in the United States, which continue to weigh on risk assets. Investor confidence is further shaken by significant net outflows from spot BTC-ETFs, which lost $583 million on Wednesday, marking the second-largest single-day outflow on record.

If BTC falls below the critical support level of $89,000-$91,000, VeChain is likely to extend its losses, with prices potentially declining another 10% to $0.0400. A sustained drop in BTC could push VET even lower, towards $0.0300. Conversely, a strong rebound in BTC prices to the $100,000 level could drive VET back up to $0.0500, representing a recovery of approximately 12% from current levels.

10.01.2025
Dollar Strength Is a Given

The very first slice of statistical data on business activity from the United States this year reaffirmed an almost clear irrelevance and even potential hurtfulness of any immediate steps towards further lowering interest rates on U.S. Dollar-nominated loans from a purely economic point of view. The ISM Manufacturing PMI (Purchasing Managers Index), based on polls compiled from executives in over 400 industrial companies in late December, came out at 49.3 points vs 48.4 a month ago and 48.2 in average analyst estimates. This showed that a slowdown was occurring at a slower or even insignificant pace, keeping inflation risks on the table, especially when the price component increased from 50.3 to 52.5 with a similar rate of increase in new orders. Meanwhile, non-manufacturing PMI came out at 54.1 on Tuesday, compared to 53.5 in analyst polls and 52.1 a month ago, with a contribution of business activity components even jumped to a surprising 58.2 against declining from 57.2 in November to only 53.7 in December.

In other words, the economy is not cooling, and is rather in a positive acceleration, which in turn may lead to a recovery in wage rises and therefore to higher demand pressure, which may be reflected soon in higher producer purchase and output prices. Doubts of the major U.S. financial regulator are understandable at this point after its triple rate cut from 5.5% to 4.5% in 2024. The Federal Reserve (Fed) will now pay closer attention not only to consumer inflation measures, but also to producer prices (PPI), which is just going to be released on coming Tuesday, January 14. And so, this will become the next reference point in the further U.S. Dollar’s trajectory. The Greenback index (DX) is picking up steam since reaching a new record high for the last two years at 109.35, with its temporary pullbacks being limited by a 107.50 support area that previously served as a strong multi-month technical resistance.

In this context, the British Pound (GBPUSD) updated its lows since November 2023 to touch 1.2237 on January 9, EURUSD feels quite comfortable within a range between 1.02 and 1.0450, which corresponds to its 2-year bottom, and having a bias towards a possible further decline. The Aussie (AUDUSD) is one-step away from taking the path for a breakthrough to a quite unknown territory of its 5-year lows that were last time recorded when the initial outbreak of the Covid-19 happened.

A varying extent of the American Dollar strength is surely data dependent as the market community is eagerly waiting for the U.S. job data later today. The average expectations on new Nonfarm Payrolls is just a bit above 150,000 vs 227,000 in early December 2024 and nearly 160,000 for the previous four months on average. However, any value close to 150,000, plus or minus 20,000, or any higher number, may be considered as another positive sign for the Greenback, following the ADP national employment report which contained only 122,000 on Wednesday. The oppressive nature of average hourly wage in its dynamics, +0.4% each time from September to December, also matters.

The protective quality of investing more funds into the U.S. Dollar and U.S. bonds against tariff threats is switched on anyway, based on more than a 95% chance for the Fed to keep rates on pause at its January 29 meeting, according to CME's FedWatch tool. Federal Reserve officials never go against a well-established market consensus, when it is almost unanimous, for not to rock the boat of relative market trend stability. The central bankers' reluctance to shift the Fed fund rates lower before mid-March, if not early May, continues to play in favour of short-term speculative transactions on the foreign exchange market, bearing in mind all the listed currency instruments. Some intraday volatility may take place, especially in the case of appearing an abnormal two-digit non-farm value, but not a change in overall direction.

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Incredible Highs in Gold vs Stocks' Correction

Both spot and futures gold prices for April hit incredible highs above $3,000 per troy ounce this week. The widely expected but still landmark achievement came as U.S. inflation cooled in the latest data sets, amid heightened tariff fears and further stock market's correction mood, which only gained momentum. Taking into account the listed take-off drivers, I personally feel that we could keep our eyes on a gradual expansion, probably limited by targets around $3,250, although price goals are unlikely to be higher within the near six months. A natural decrease in interest in precious metals can occur, as soon as money again will flow into properly discounted tech stocks.

A temporary return one step lower, let me call it $2,900+, cannot be completely ruled out either, being fully aware of how gold traders have been cautious, maintaining upward pressure but retreating time and again back, before ultimately going for a decisive upward surge. So, for short-term traders especially, I would not recommend placing stop-loss orders higher than $2,900, as their positions could simply be knocked down by any quasi-random rollback in prices. Yet, the path to the tops now looks cleared.

To clarify the inflation component, the U.S. CPI (consumer price index) rose by 0.2% only, instead of a supposed pace of 0.5%, according to February's metrics, which came out on March 12. This led to a lower-than-expected annual increase of 2.8%, down from 3.0% gain a month ago. This moderation in inflation was later confirmed by PPI (producer price index) data the next day. Again, the Federal Reserve's meeting is scheduled on March 19, and no rate cut decision is expected, but markets are currently pricing in two or three rate cuts before the end of the year, with the first borrowing cost decrease being commonly projected in June of July, according to the Fedwatch tool to show the dynamics in interest rate futures. Cooling inflation works in favour of lower interest rates rather sooner than later, which in turn weakens the U.S. Dollar's position against safe haven assets such as Gold and Bitcoin in the medium term.

Meanwhile, Gold outperformed overheated stocks on this stage of an overall uptrend in most assets, as growing business income is under question when more mutual restrictions are coming or under way from rivals and partners of the Trump-led United States. The first term of the sitting president has shown that tariff fears were only temporary obstacles that have been overcome repeatedly, but two major stock market pullbacks of 10% and 20% occurred in 2018, although the S&P 500 broad market index has grown by 62% overall from November 2016 until the start of the corona pandemic. Meanwhile, Gold climbed from $1,277 to $1,691, or 32.5%, over the same period.

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Rafael Quintana Martinez
Money Manager de alto rendimiento, con una sólida formación académica, profesional y de campo. Más de 9 años de experiencia especializada en el comercio de mercados financieros internacionales. La devoción, la fiabilidad, la responsabilidad y la ética impulsan mi vida. Actualmente me desempeño como Analista Senior para Metadoro. https://metadoro.com/es https://mx.investing.com/members/contributors/235587671/ https://es.tradingview.com/chart/EURUSD/rE9gVips/
Cardano Has a Strong Upside Momentum

Cardano (ADA) is trading neutral at $0.7215 this week, slightly underperforming the broader market, where Bitcoin (BTC) is up 1.5% to $82,381. The token faces additional pressure following the SEC's decision to delay its ruling on an ADA-ETF until May 29. While this news has minimal impact in a rising market, it weighs heavily on ADA during corrections.

Despite this, Cardano's technical outlook remains strong. The token recently dipped below the $0.8000 support level and could decline further to $0.6000, presenting potential buying opportunities. ADA has proven its resilience, and its inclusion in discussions about a Federal crypto reserve adds fundamental support to its long-term prospects.

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A Higher Jump of Intel: Episode III

Intel Corp's share jump to $27.55 in mid-February turned out to be short-lived and was replaced by a retest of the technical support area around $20 in early March. However, investors in Intel have new hope after a nearly 13% spike well above $23 per share during the pre-market trading activity on March 13. In order not to rush to further mid-term conclusions, now we just need to wait until at least the end of the current week, and better yet, the dynamics of the first two days following the weekend. However, the reason for higher excitement this time seems worth attention.

A joint venture to operate Intel’s business in the United States is ultimately formed, according to Reuters sources, with a deal struck by the wide pool of great chip makers, led by Taiwan Semiconductor, with all grands including NVIDIA, AMD, Broadcom participating as Intel’s biggest potential manufacturing customers and Qualcomm "being approached". Joint venture drive for additional income and rising U.S. market share is clear but talks are still in an early stage. The only thing that looked known was that Trump's White House administration allegedly approached the Taiwan-rooted company to help rescue Intel. Such news looks more than plausible, considering Intel was suffering from technology gaps in the face of the AI chip domination. Intel missed the revolution in GPUs (graphic processing units). Republicans are ambitious for not to come to terms with Intel's loss-making factories which they consider as a national treasure. Therefore, making more efforts for a spin-off of Intel's foundry units is a reasonable step.

Another sign of a possible sanitation is Lip-Bu Tan's fresh appointment as Intel's head at this supposedly pivotal moment. To give you a small background, Lip-BuTan is a 65 yo Malaysian-born executive who grew up in Singapore, holding degrees in both physics and nuclear engineering. He initially joined Intel's board in 2022, and he led a chip design software company named Cadence before that. Cadence was among Intel's suppliers for more than a decade. Cadence stock actually climbed over 4,000% under his direct guidance. However, he had to quit Intel's board in summer 2024 due to reported disagreements with Intel's former CEO's Gelsinger's plans, as Tan got frustrated by Intel’s risk-averse and bureaucratic culture. When Gelsinger took the reins four years ago, Intel stock was trading above $60, but times are changing.

In early March, TSMC officially said at a press event with Trump that it plans to make a $100 billion investment to build five additional chip facilities in the U.S. Trump has yet to approve TSMC's proposal, but the same sources said the U.S. President is going to allow TSMC to operate former Intel’s factories under the condition that TSMC will not own more than 50% in the joint venture. Help is on the way. If so, Intel's comeback is somewhere around the corner, even though any real business transformation would take years, so that the crowd of investors should be patient anyway.

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Adobe Breaks Out of Rising Sentiment Again

Markets just got indulged into a renewed scepticism about the proper, or quick enough, speed of monetization for artificial intelligence (AI) features developed by Photoshop creator Adobe. For the previous quarter, Adobe actually sold $5.71 million worth of its services, beating estimates of $5.66 billion. This was a record achievement for the entire existence of Adobe's business, but performed only 1.8% better quarter-on-quarter and 10% higher year-on-year. Consensus earnings were beaten by even a wider margin, as the company earned $5.08 per share, compared with estimates of $4.97 per share and against $4.81 in the previous quarter (+5.6%) and $4.48 in the same period one year ago (+13.4%). However, the crowd, spoiled by the overall AI segment success, is no longer satisfied with these current Adobe growth numbers and is thirsty for more. Recent weeks' pullback in tech stocks played, of course, its role in the negative reaction to the report, which was compounded by Adobe's relatively modest forecast for the rest of the year.

Thus, shares of the company lost almost 5% in the extended trading this Wednesday, March 12, following Adobe's current quarter's revenue projection, set between $5.77 billion and $5.82 billion, even though this clearly continued an uptrend in sales and was basically in line with Wall St analyst pool's numbers, according to data compiled by LSEG. The last wave of the rising market sentiment in Adobe started exactly two months ago, on January 13, when the stock bounced from its 18-month local dips below $404 per share to reach the levels above $465 in mid-February. AThen the growth potential became exhausted, and now it was not restored by the reaffirming statement from Adobe management on its annual revenue forecast as the company is "well positioned to capitalize on the acceleration of the creative economy driven by AI".

Annual "recurring revenue" for Adobe’s "AI and add-on offerings" was $125 million only, as its CFO Dan Durn expects it may double in the next three quarters, which was not enough for the crowd's satisfaction. People want even higher sales numbers instead of eloquence, and are willing to postpone the next wave of Adobe's rally until better times. A return to the major technical support around $400 looks quite possible, as does a slide even somewhat lower for a while. Yet, a move to the average analyst target around $560 promised 27.7% of potential income even before the overnight decline began, and it could give even more to patient investors who are going to wait for lower levels to pick up the stock which is still cheapening. Tough competition from newly born startups is here, but for me, Adobe looks stronger than most newcomers.

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