What’s this FTX Cryptocurrency Collapse All About?

by Fred Fuld III

FTX is a cryptocurrency exchange that just declared bankruptcy. It was founded in 2019 and based in the Bahamas. The company filed for bankruptcy today, November 11, 2022, due to a collapse in the price of the company’s exchange token FTT and a run on FTX. 

How Did FTX Begin?

FTX was founded in 2019 by Sam Bankman-Fried and Gary Wang. Bankman-Fried started a quantitative trading firm Alameda Research. Bankman-Fried formerly worked as an ETF trader for the proprietary trading firm, Jane Street Capital.

source: about.ftx.us

FTX Investigations

In August 2022, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) issued a cease-and-desist letter to FTX accusing the company of making “false and misleading representations” about FDIC insurance due to a tweet by FTX president at the time, Brett Harrison. He later resigned on September 27, 2022

Two months later, Texas regulators investigated the company for allegedly selling unregistered securities.

FTX Collapse

CoinDesk published an article on November 2, 2022, describing how a large portion of Alameda Research’s assets were held in FTT.

Source: archive.org: alameda-research.com

On November 7, Binance CEO Changpeng Zhao posted on Twitter that his company planned to sell all its holdings of FTT.

 This obviously impacted FTT’s price and affected the prices of other cryptocurrencies.

This led to a bank run lasting three days of approximately $6 billion. 

The next day, Zhao announced Binance had agreed to a non-binding agreement to purchase FTX, but did not include the sale of FTX.US, a separate exchange for United States citizens.

On November 9, Binance decided that it would not go ahead with the deal to acquire FTX, due to FTX’s reported mishandling of customer funds and pending investigations.

On the same day, FTX’s website said that withdrawals would not be processed at that time

Bankman-Fried stated that FTX.US  was “not currently impacted” by the crisis

Venture capital firms that had invested in the company include Tiger Global Management and SoftBank Group.

According to a November 10 article in the Wall Street Journal, Alameda Research owed FTX some $10 billion, as FTX had lent out funds on the exchange for trading to Alameda so that Alameda could make investments.

FTX, FTX US, and Alameda filed for bankruptcy in Delaware on November11, and Bankman-Fried resigned as CEO.

Sponsorships

FTX has the naming rights to the Miami Heat’s basketball stadium, renaming it FTX Arena, plus naming for other sporting events.

NFL star Tom Brady and NBA star Steph Curry were the company’s two main ambassadors.

Don’t Miss Out on Crypto: Larry David TV Commercial

Source: YouTube

Start Your Investment Related Christmas Shopping Now

by Fred Fuld III

Don’t wait until the last minute to do your holiday shopping. Now is a great time to get a gift for your relatives and friends who like to invest or trade stocks.

The following may give you some great ideas to give as presents.

Bronze Bull and Bear Sculpture

The statue measures 10 inches wide by 9.5 inches high, and weighs 6 pounds. The state has a bronze finish with great detail.

Stock Market Wall Street Decision Maker Desk Paperweight

This is cool! A paperweight that you can spin to determine if you should buy, sell, hold, short, etc.

Wall Street Double Feature

Available in both Blu-Ray and DVD.

Stock Traders Almanac 2023


Every stock trader should have this. Filled with great information.

Bull and Bear Cuff Links

Know anyone who still wears cuff links? This would make a perfect gift.

Investment Trivia Book

This book has all kinds of trivia about the stock market, venture capital, bitcoin, and much more!

Bull Market T-Shirt

Here’s a Great Gift for Less Than 20 Bucks!
“I MADE MY MONEY BY BEING A BULL”

Bear Market T-Shirt

For those friends of yours who made their fortune by shorting the market.

Start your holiday shopping early.

This page contains affiliate links.

How to Short Real Estate

Just a year ago, 30-year fixed mortgages for homes were less than 3%, according to Fannie Mae. Now, the average mortgage rate is in excess of 7% for the same type of loan.

by Fred Fuld III

Just a year ago, 30-year fixed mortgages for homes were less than 3%, according to Fannie Mae. Now, the average mortgage rate is in excess of 7% for the same type of loan.

Source: Freddie Mac

An increase like that, where the annual cost to own has more than doubled, has to affect the price of real estate.

New buyers of homes will be affected.

Existing homeowners with variable rates will be affected.

Potential buyers of commercial properties will also be affected.

When the cost to own goes up, the price of the asset has to drop in value, assuming all other details remain equal.

So suppose you want to make money from the drop in real estate but you don’t want to (or unable to) short stocks or ETFs.

What’s a trader or investor to do?

There are a few Inverse Real Estate Exchange Traded Funds, which increase as the stocks in the portfolio drop in value.

The ProShares Short Real Estate ETF (REK) has net assets of $72.8 million and has an expense ratio of 0.95%. It is up 30.2% so far this year.

If you want to get a bigger bang for your buck, there is the ProShares UltraShort Real Estate ETF (SRS), which has a goal, in very simple terms, of providing twice the inverse return of a portfolio of REITs and real estate stocks. It has $85.2 million in net assets with a 0.95% expense ratio. This ETF is up 61.5% so far this year.

The Direxion Daily Real Estate Bear 3X Shares (DRV) is what is referred to as a triple bearish ETF, the most volatile and speculative. It has $197.85 million in assets, a 0.99% expense ratio, and has a year-to-date return of 88.5%.

Hopefully you can find some way to make money from the real estate market, and congratulations to those with fixed mortgages below 4%.

Disclosure: Author didn’t own any of the above at the time the article was written.

Happy Halloween Stocks

by Fred Fuld III

It’s Halloween today, a boon for the candy manufacturers. The companies that produce horror movie also benefit. It’s hard to believe it’s that time of year. Pretty soon it will be Thanksgiving.

The biggest beneficiaries of the Halloween season are the candy makers.

Hershey Foods (HSY), one of the biggest chocolate and candy companies in the world, with two of its most popular products being Hershey Kisses and Hershey Bars, along with Reese’s. The stock has a trailing price to earnings ratio of 33.5, a forward P/E ratio of 27, and  pays a dividend yield of 1.7%. Next year’s annual earnings per share are anticipated to be up 8.36%.

Tootsie Roll Industries (TR) has an assortment of candy kids, such as Tootsie Rolls, Tootsie Roll Pops, Caramel Apple Pops, Charms, Blow-Pops, Blue Razz, Zip-A-Dee Pops, Cella’s, Mason Dots, Mason Crows, Junior Mint, Sugar Daddys, and Sugar Babies. The stock has a P/E of 40.5 and pays a yield of 0.89%. Earnings per share this year were up 12.5%.

Mondelez International (MDLZ) is a multinational producer of candy, along with food and beverages. Its brands include Sour Patch, Swedish Fish, Cadbury, and Toblerone. The trailing P/E is 22 and the forward P/E is 20. The yield is a tasty 2.5%.

Watching scary movies is another popular event on Halloween. Netflix (NFLX), the huge provider of videos in the US, has an extensive selection of scary movies in its collection of titles. The stock trades as 27.9 times trailing earnings and 28.1 times forward earnings. It does not pay a dividend.

A major producer of scary movies is Lions Gate Entertainment (LGF-A), which has made such films as American Psycho, Ginger Snaps, Route 666, The Devil’s Rejects, House of the Dead 2, Saw VI, See No Evil, Hostel: Part II, My Bloody Valentine 3D and many others. Lionsgate currently has generated negative earnings but has a forward price to earnings ratio of 227.

Then of course, Amazon (AMZN) has plenty of Halloween costumes. Amazon has a trailing PE of 93 and a forward PE of 56.

Hopefully, your Halloween portfolio will bring you treats.

Disclosure: Author didn’t own any of the above at the time the article was written.

“How to Delete Twitter” searches up 1011% since Musk announcement

  • Online searches for “How to Delete Twitter” up 1011% in past 24 hours
  • “Delete Twitter” searches up 560%
  • “Twitter Alternatives” searches up 300%
  • “Mastodon” one of Twitters main competitors, has seen searches jump 455.5%
  • However, “How to Sign up to Twitter” searches are up 147.3%
  • “Twitter Sign Up” also up 50%, but is sharply increasing in past few hours

Data in full below, hope this is of use to you! Any questions feel free to get in touch. 

—————

“How to Delete Twitter” searches up 1011% since Elon Musk takeover announcement

Elon Musk’s Twitter takeover is now complete, but what does it mean for the social media giant? 

The 51 year old business magnate has promised to ring the changes, but it seems Twitters current user base isn’t happy. 

Searches for “How to Delete Twitter” have increased 1011% in the past 24 hours, while searches for “Delete Twitter” have also jumped 560%

Could this be an opportunity for some competitors to gain an advantage? The Data certainly suggests so, with searches for “Twitter Alternatives” up 300%. 

Searches for micro-blogging service “Mastodon”, which has a distinctly Twitter-like feel, have jumped 455.5% also

It’s not a complete exodus however, since Musk closed the deal searches for “How to Sign up to Twitter” have increased 147.3%. There has been a small spike in searches for “Twitter Sign Up” also, with a 50% boost, however data shows a sharp increase in searches in the past 2 hours alone, so watch this space.

——

**Data gathered over the past 24 hours, up to 9am GMT**

For more information please contact JJ@Digitalfunnel.ie 

Release compiled by Digital Funnel on behalf of Wisetek

Are You Looking for a Squeeze? Top Short Squeeze Stocks

by Fred Fuld III

Since the beginning of this year, the S&P 500 has dropped by over 20%. Many stocks are approaching bargain levels and some of them are heavily shorted, creating possible short squeeze opportunities.

Why should you care?

What happens when stocks get squeezed?

On August 22, 2022, I posted an article about meme related short squeeze stocks, and pointed out how Bed Bath and Beyond (BBBY) spiked by more than 43% in exactly one week after the article was posted.

Another stock that was described was Intercept Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (ICPT), which increased by almost 5% in just two days.

The stock with the biggest short ratio (days to cover), at 14.3, was Heron Therapeutics, Inc. (HRTX). It rose by 9.5% in three days.

So what are the latest short squeeze candidates? Keep reading.

What Does Shorting Stocks Mean?

When you short a stock, it means that your goal is to make money from a drop in the price of a stock. Technically, what happens is that you borrow shares of a stock, sell those shares, then buy back those shares at a hopefully lower price so that those shares can be returned. This all happens electronically, so you don’t actually see all the borrowing and returning of shares; it just shows up on your screen as a negative number of shares.

What is a Short Squeeze?

Short sellers can be profitable, but sometimes when the stock moves against them, and begins to rise, the short sellers jump in right away to buy shares to cover their positions, creating what is called a short squeeze. When a short squeeze takes place, it can cause the share prices to increase fast and furiously. Any good news can trigger the short squeeze.

Some traders utilize this situation by looking for stocks to buy that may have a potential short squeeze. Here is what a short squeeze trader should take into consideration:

Short Percentage of Float ~ The float is the number of freely tradable shares and the short percentage is the number of shares held short divided by the float. Amounts over 10% to 20% are considered high and potential short squeeze plays.

Short Ratio / Days to Cover / Short Interest Ratio -This is probably the most important metric when looking for short squeeze trades, no matter what you call it. This is the number of days it would take the short sellers to cover their position based on the average daily volume of shares traded. This is a significant ratio as it shows how “stuck” the short sellers are when they want to buy in their shares without driving up the price too much. Unfortunately for the shortsellers, the longer the number of days to cover, the bigger and longer the squeeze.

Short Percentage Increase ~ This is the percentage increase in in the number of short sellers from the previous month.

The following are some heavily shorted tech stock that may be worth considering.

CompanySymbolShort % of FloatShort % ChangeShort Interest Ratio
EVgo, Inc.EVGO31%-1%8.4
Rocket Companies, Inc.RKT33%7%10.3
Revolve Group, Inc.RVLV31%0%7.8
Switch, Inc.SWCH31%16%9.1
Upstart Holdings, Inc.UPST38%0%3.4

The second stock on the list, Rocket (RKT), which has a price to earnings ratio of 4.16, has 33% of its float shorted, an increase of 7% over last month, a daily substantial amount.

The short interest ratio is 10.3, which means that it would take the short sellers more that ten days to cover their position, based on recent average volume.

Just keep in mind that just because a stock has good earnings ratios and is heavily shorted, doesn’t mean that the stock will go up, especially in a bear market. Also, stocks that are significantly shorted may be shorted for a reason.

Disclosure: Author didn’t own any of the above at the time the article was written.

Stocks Going Ex Dividend in November 2022

The following is a short list of some of the many stocks going ex dividend during the next month.

Many traders and investors use the stock trading technique called ‘Buying Dividends,’ also commonly referred to as ‘Dividend Capture.’ This is the strategy of buying stocks before the ex dividend date and selling the stock shortly after the ex date at about the same price, yet still being entitled to the dividend.

This technique generally works in bull markets and flat or choppy markets, but during bear markets, you may want to consider avoiding this strategy. In order to be entitled to the dividend, you have to buy the stock before the ex-dividend date, and you can’t sell the stock until on or after the ex date.

The actual dividend may not be paid for another few weeks. WallStreetNewsNetwork.com has compiled a downloadable list of the stocks going ex dividend in the near future. The list contains many dividend paying companies, lots with market caps over $500 million. Some of the stocks have yields over 2%. Here are a few examples showing the stock symbol, the ex-dividend date, the periodic dividend amount, and the annual yield.

Pfizer, Inc. (PFE)11/3/20220.403.56%
Intel Corporation (INTC)11/4/20220.3655.41%
Starbucks Corporation (SBUX)11/9/20220.532.39%
Target Corporation (TGT)11/15/20221.082.71%
Southern Company (SO)11/18/20220.684.22%
Johnson & Johnson (JNJ)11/21/20221.132.68%
Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. (GS)11/30/20222.503.08%

The entire list of over 100 ex-dividend stocks will be emailed to all subscribers next week. If you are not a subscriber, you can sign up at the signup box below. Don’t miss out. Remember, it’s free!

Dividend Definitions

Declaration date: the day that the company declares that there is going to be an upcoming dividend.

Ex-dividend date: the day on which if you buy the stock, you would not be entitled to that particular dividend; or the first day on which a shareholder can sell the shares and still be entitled to the dividend.

Record date: the day when you must be on the company’s books as a shareholder to receive the dividend. The ex-dividend date is normally set for stocks at two business days before the record date.

Payment date: the day on which the dividend payment is actually made, which can be as long at two months after the ex date.

Don’t forget to reconfirm the ex-dividend date with the company before implementing this technique.

Disclosure: Author did not own any of the above at the time the article was written; affiliate links are on this page.

Cell Tower Stocks Can Provide Income and Stability

by Fred Fuld III

Without cell towers, your cellular phone would be worthless. It would be like cars without roads, ships without water.

Cell towers, also known as cellular base stations, media towers, or cell sites, are a critical factor in communication.

So the owners of cell towers have a significant and very important set of assets.

There are actually several different stocks that generate revenues from their portfolio of cell towers, most of which are structured as real estate investment trusts or REITs.

A REIT is structured as a trust which is required to distribute at least 90% of its income in order to avoid double taxation. Taxes would be avoided at the corporate level. The REIT invests in some type of real estate or diversified types of real estate.

These cell tower stocks have suffered over the last year, possibly getting close to buying opportunities.

American Tower (AMT) is the largest cell tower owner with approximately 43,000 towers, according to WirelessEstimator. It is structured as a REIT, with a trailing price to earnings ratio of 30.9 and a forward P/E ratio of 39.45. Earnings per share this year jumped by 49.5%. The stock pays a decent yield of 3.13%.

Revenues for the latest quarter have increased by 16.3% year over year, and quarterly earnings per share have grown by over 18% year over year. American Tower has dropped from about 295 at the beginning of the year to 185 now. It may be approaching a reasonable purchase price.

Crown Castle International (CCI) is another large player in the cellular tower industry. This REIT owns about 41,000 towers. The trailing P/E is 35.6 and the forward P/E is 32.53. Earnings grew by 13.50% this year, and the stock has a yield of 4.64%.

Another company in the tower arena is SBA Communications (SBAC), a REIT with roughly 17,000 towers. The P/E is fairly high at 77, and the forward PE is also on the high side at 54. Even though the yield is low at 1.15%, the earnings skyrockets this year by 906%.

Uniti Group (UNIT) is one of the smaller REITs with less than 1000 towers. The PE is 10 and the forward PE is 9. Earnings were up 113% this year, and the company provides a very high yield of 8.50%.

United States Cellular (USM) is the only company on this list that is not a REIT. The stock has 4,400 towers, a PE of 19 and a forward PE of 22. Unfortunately, earnings this year were down by 13.90%. It does not pay a dividend.

There are a couple ETFs with are participating in the cell tower industry, Pacer Benchmark Data & Infrastructure RE (SRVR) with a yield of 1.72%, and the Defiance 5G Next Gen Connectivity ETF (FIVG) yielding 2.38%.

Watch the price action of these stocks. Maybe if they drop to a bit more reasonable price, they may be calling you as a buy.

Disclosure: Author didn’t own any of the above at the time the article was written.

Elon Musk Going Ahead with Buying Twitter: Stock Spikes

Do you remember back in April when Elon Musk, the head of Tesla (TSLA) said that he was buying Twitter (TWTR) at $54.20 per share?

by Fred Fuld III

Do you remember back in April when Elon Musk, the head of Tesla (TSLA) said that he was buying Twitter (TWTR) at $54.20 per share?

However, Musk attempted to back out of the agreement, primarily giving a reason of too many fake Twitter accounts.

But Twitter sued Musk in court for performance, requesting that he go through with the deal.

According to sources, Musk has decided to move forward with the takeover of Twitter.

This happened just shortly before a deposition was taken of Musk by Twitter lawyers.

The news caused Twitter to spike in price today, closing at $52 per share, up $9.14 or 22.24%. In after-market trading, the stock dropped a little from its close, falling 70 cents.

This transaction will cost Elon Musk $44 billion.

Disclosure: Author did not own any of the above at the time the article was written.

11 Ways to Make Money in a Bear market

by Fred Fuld III

No matter which way you measure it, we are in a bear market. If you want to profit from falling markets stock prices, there are several ways to do so.

Many strategies are available to profit from a bear market and a stock market crash, some of which are speculative, and some that don’t have much risk. It doesn’t matter what your account size is, there are ways to protect yourself, and even profit on the downside. Here are some of those techniques.

1. Sell a Vertical Call Option Spread

This strategy is a little complicated, but I listed it first, because it is one of the least risky, since your losses are limited, unlike most of the other techniques listed here. In addition, I listed it at the beginning, because I use this trading technique all the time.

If you are familiar with options, then selling a vertical call spread is a great way to make money when a stock drops while protecting yourself if the stock goes up. (This happens to be my favorite strategy.)

This involves shorting an out of the money call option and buying a further out of the money call option at the same time. If the stock drops or stays the same, you make money from the short call which exceeds the loss on the long call. If the stock goes up to the strike price of the short call, you still make a profit. It is only when the stock rises above the strike price of the short call that you begin losing money.

To make it simple, here is an example:

Stock is at 50

Sell (short)  one call with a strike price of 51 for 3 (an option that is trading at 3 means $300)

Buy one call with a strike price of 52 for 1 ($100)

If the stock drops to 45, the 51 call drops to $0 and you make $300 because you shorted it, and the 52 call drops to $0 losing $100 because you own or were long it, netting you a profit of $200.

If the stock rises from 50 to 100, you lose $4900 on the 51 call that you shorted, but you make $4800 on the one that you bought, so you only lose $100.

Generally, you want to use options that expire in 40 to 60 days, and close out your position in 15 to 25 days.

Disadvantages of the selling a vertical call spread
  • Your profit is limited
  • You need approval from your broker to do option spreads
  • Both legs of the spread need to be placed simultaneously (easy to do with most trading platforms)
  • May need to wait 25 or 30 days to see a profit

2. Shorting Stocks

This is one of the most speculative ways of making money in a bear market. In simple terms, you make money when the stock goes down and you lose money when the stock goes up. What technically happens is that you borrow the shares and immediately sell them (this all is done electronically through your brokerage firm) and since you owe those shares, you eventually have to buy them back at some price, hopefully a lower price, in order to return those shares. The difference between your sale price and eventual purchase price is your profit (or loss, if you buy back at a higher price).

Can you make a lot of money shorting stocks in a bear market? Yes. Is it speculative? Very. Can you lose a lot? Most definitely. This is why it is so risky. When you short a stock, the lowest point it can drop to is zero. Whereas, if the stock goes up, the amount it can rise is unlimited. Let’s say you short 100 shares of a stock at $20 a share. If you put up funds equal to 100% of the value of the shorted amount, and the stock drops to zero, you’ve made a 100% return. However, suppose the stock goes from 20 to 100, you end up losing 400% of your money with lots of margin calls along the way. This is called a short squeeze. But even on a short term basis, an investor can lose money very fast.

Unfortunately for those who do their trading in retirement accounts, such as IRAs, shorting stocks is not allowed.

So in summery, do I think you should short stocks? Absolutely not, unless you are a professional trader. The risk is almost infinite. If you understand options real well, hedged short selling might be OK (see the next strategy), as long as you are an advanced trader, and know what you’re doing.

3. Hedged Short Selling

Hedged short selling is a strategy whereby you short a stock and at the same time, you buy a close-to-the-money call option. That way, if the stock shoots up, you are protected with the call option. If the stock drops, you will lose what you paid for the option, but you will make money on your short stock position.

Example: you short 100 shares of a stock that is currently trading at 50 (so you short $5000 in stock), and you buy a call option with a strike price of 52 for 1 ($100).

The stock goes to 40. You make $1000 from the stock dropping from 50 to 40, and you lose the $100 you paid for the call option, with a net profit of $900.

The stock stays the same at 50. You don’t make any money on the short sale fo the stock and you lose $100 on the call option for a net loss of $100.

The stock goes up to 60. You lose $1000 on the short stock, but the value of the call option will increase from 1 to 10 ($100 to $1000), netting $900 on the difference, for an overall loss of $100.

In other words, in the example above, you can only lose $100, if the stock stays the same or goes up, but if the stock drops, the profit can be substantial.

Actually, to be more accurate, if the stock goes to 51 and stays there, you will lose $100 on the short stock sale and $100 on the call option, for a total maximum loss of $200. Even still, it may be worth the small loss in case you are wrong about a bear market.

Disadvantages of the hedged short selling
  • You need approval from your broker to short stock and buy options
  • Both positions should be placed simultaneously (easy to do with most trading platforms)

4. Short (Bearish) ETFs

The Exchange Traded Fund known as the Bearish ETF or Short ETF is another option. What these ETFs do is provide a return opposite to the return of the index, sector, or industry that it is tracking.

For example, the Short Dow30 ProShares (DOG) provides a return that is the inverse of the Dow Jones Industrial Average. If the Dow goes down 2%, the DOG is expected to up 2%. The Short QQQ ProShares (PSQ) ETF gives a return that is the inverse of the NASDAQ 100 Index.

The nice thing about these short ETFs is that your losses are limited. Also, if you are long individual stocks that you don’t want to sell, these can be good for protecting your overall portfolio on the downside.

5. Leveraged Bearish ETFs

If you like volatility, you will love the leveraged bearish ETFs. What these ETFs do is provide double, and in some cases triple the inverse return of indices.Some examples include the UltraShort Consumer Services ProShares (SCC) and the ProShares UltraShort S&P S&P 500 (SDS).

In addition there are several triple leveraged bearish ETFs. Direxion Daily MCSI Real Estate Bear 3X Shares (DRV), Direxion Daily Energy Bear 2X Shares (ERY), and ProShares UltraPro Short Russell 2000 (SRTY) are just a few of the many leveraged bearish ETFs.

The volatility of these ETFs is substantial, and so are the wide bid and asked spreads that I’ve seen occasionally.

The advantage of these trading vehicles is that they are a way of shorting on margin, with a limit on the downside. The disadvantage is that the losses can be quick and large, especially with the triple leverage short ETFs.

6. Bear Funds

It may be hard to believe, but there are actually a large number of bearish mutual funds for the long term bearish investors. These include the Grizzly Short Fund (GRZZX), the PIMCO StocksPlus TR Short Strategy Institutional Fund (PSTIX), and the ProFunds Bear Investors Fund (BRPIX). These funds have minimum investments ranging from $1,000 to $5,000,000.

7. Puts

First, a little about option pricing.  Puts and calls are priced on a per share basis, so a put at $1 would cost $100 for a 100 share option, or a call at $3.50 would cost $350.

A put is the option to put your stock to someone at a particular price within a certain period of time. In other words, if you own a stock that is trading at 22 and you buy a put at a dollar which gives you the right to put your stock to someone at $20 per share within three months, there are a couple of things that could happen. The stock could tank to $14 a share and you could put your stock at 20, or just resell the put for 6 (the difference between 14 and 20) and collecting the profit. You would be far better off than just doing nothing. And if the stock goes up or stays about the same, you are just out your $100 for the option. Puts can be useful for experienced traders.

8. Cash

There is another way to make money in a bear market. Sell everything, and keep your money in cash, with the safest way being a T-bill money market fund, that only owns T-bills. (Money market funds that invest in repos are supposed to be just as safe, but I consider them slightly more risky than T-bills.) The advantages are that you can’t lose money and you can receive an income from the investment.

The alternative cash investment is putting your money in a bank certificate of deposit or savings account. Your money is safe up to the FDIC limits, but the interest rate will be very low.

9. Anti ETFs (Bearish ETF of Popular Bullish ETFs)

The Anti-ETF is a new investment vehicle that has cropped up recently. The goal of these ETFs is to provide the reverse return of another popular actively managed exchange traded fund, as opposed to the bearish ETF which attempt to track the inverse of an index, like the ProShares Short S&P500 ETF (SH).

The most popular is the Tuttle Capital Short Innovation ETF (SARK), which has a goal of achieving the inverse of the return of the popular ARK Innovation ETF (ARKK) managed by Cathie Wood.

10. Anti Stocks (Bearish Single Stock ETFs)

Maybe there is a stock you want to short, but you don’t qualify for an account that allows shorting. Or maybe you want to short a stock in a retirement plan, such as an IRA. If you want to short a particular stock, such as Tesla, Nvidia, Paypal, Pfizer, or Nike (the AXS 2X NKE Bull Daily ETF (NKEL) would have been a good one today as it was down 12% today 9/30/22), there are ETFs which have a goal of returning the opposite return of a particular stock.

11. Series I Bonds

If you think the bear market will last for a year or more, Series I bonds are the way to go. These bonds never drop in value and currently pay 9.62%. Plus, they are backed by the U.S. Government. For more information on these bonds, check out the article Series I Bonds Now Paying over 9%.

There are obviously additional risks involved with shorting stock and options, which you need to delve into with your broker before utilizing those strategies. If we are in a bear market, hopefully you can protect your portfolio and make some money on the downside.

Author does not own any of the above mentioned securities.