I had intended on posting my next portfolio after my portfolio companies with quarters ending on 30Jun (DDOG, NET, LSPD, and UPST) had reported their results. However, I’ve made some adjustments that I’d like to discuss, so I decided to write this relatively short write-up at the end of July.

PRIOR PORTFOLIO UPDATES

2021-06-30 Portfolio Update

2021-06-04 Portfolio Update

2021-05-07 Portfolio Update

2021-03-31 Portfolio Update

2021-02-12 Portfolio Update

2021-01-31 Portfolio Update

2020-12-31 Portfolio Update

All Portfolio Updates

PORTFOLIO PERFORMANCE

DATEGauchoRico
Portfolio 
(YTD)
S&P500 
Total Return 
(YTD)
Jan3.1%-1.0%
Feb-1.2%1.7%
Mar-13.2%6.2%
Apr-1.5%11.8%
May3.4%12.6%
Jun28.0%15.3%
Jul33.7%18.0%

Since the YTD low (-23.5%) on 13May, the portfolio roared back hitting an all-time high on 28Jul (+37.9% YTD). The increase from the 13May YTD low to the ATH was 80.3% in just 11 weeks (just under a quarter)! The steep rise was aided by my decision to leverage the portfolio by converting some shares to LEAPS (and some lower strike price LEAPS to higher strike price LEAPS) and selling puts. I have previously described these techniques in two previous posts: Using LEAPS for Growth Stocks and a post on using leverage. I was fortunate enough to apply much of the leverage near the bottom of the Spring 2021 sector rotation. I hardly expect such leveraging to turn out this well every time, and there could be instances when applying leverage can backfire; it is best to exercise caution as leverage amplifies gains as well as losses.

Comparing the portfolio’s 28Jul ATH (+37.9% YTD) with the S&P 500 (+18.1% YTD) on that day, the portfolio outperformed the broad index by 19.2% or more than double the S&P 500’s return! That day marked the largest positive differential (+19.2%) between the portfolio and the S&P 500. However, it was not the largest differential during 2021; on 13May the differential was -33.6% so in 11 weeks the differential has swung 52.8% in favor of the portfolio showing that both the portfolio’s absolute return as well as the portfolio’s relative performance to the S&P 500 have swung hugely in a short amount of time.

The portfolio dropped in each of the final two days of the month finishing +33.7% YTD compared to the S&P 500’s YTD return of 18.0%.

Last month, I updated a table that detailed my portfolio’s big drops since the start of 2018 (when I began tracking the portfolio’s gains and losses in more detail). I wrote about such drops in a previous post. That table is posted again below.

PEAK — BOTTOM% DROPDays:
Old Peak to New ATH
4Sep2018 – 24Dec2018-37%176
26Jul2019 – 22Oct2019-37%207/291*
18Feb2020 – 16Mar2020-45%84
9Jul2020 – 16Jul2020-14%25
5Aug2020 – 11Aug2020-25%27
13Oct2020 – 10Nov2020-27%65
22Dec2020 – 3Jan2021-14%45
12Feb2021 – 17Jun2021-35%125
*Intraday recovery/Closing price recovery

Now that the portfolio has fully recovered from the big 2021 drop, it’s fair to ask when the next drop might start. Of course, no one can know that answer. The portfolio may continue to post more ATHs into August and beyond, or it may experience another big drop at any time. In my last portfolio update, I discussed reversing the leverage that I had applied during the big 2021 drop. In fact, by the end of June 2021, I had already reduced the portfolio’s short put exposure; this was my first step in deleveraging. During the month of June, I also sold some of the Jan 2023 call options on CRWD. In the last portfolio update, I wrote that I thought it was more likely that the portfolio would post additional new ATHs before the next big drop. In fact, that’s exactly what happened in July: the portfolio had six additional new ATHs in July, and it currently sits just 3.1% below the ATH.

I have not yet sold any more CRWD LEAPS, but I may consider selling some if CRWD shares rise in the coming weeks as the earnings release date approaches; however, since my CRWD LEAPS are all in a taxable brokerage account, I’m reluctant to needlessly take a short-term capital gains on them. In July, I continued to deleverage by selling all of the DOCU Jan 2023 call options and using the proceeds to buy DOCU shares. The other position that I leveraged during the 2021 big drop is DDOG; I had converted some shares into LEAPS calls. I’m very optimistic about DDOG going into its Q2 earnings release (5Aug), so I’m not going to sell any of these LEAPS calls prior to 5Aug. But I will consider converting the DDOG LEAPS calls in my non-taxable accounts back to shares if the stock price rallies strongly after the earnings release. In summary, I’m not at all inclined to add leverage at this time, and I’m more likely to continue the deleveraging process which would provide more capacity to leverage again if and when another big drop occurs. And we know that there will be another big drop in the future.

2021 Notable Days for the Portfolio

Below are some of the notable days in 2021.

DateYTD ReturnNotes
01/27/21-2.2%local bottom
02/05/21+12.6%new ATH
02/08/21+14.0%new ATH
02/09/21+16.6%new ATH
02/10/21+16.8%new ATH
02/11/21+17.8%new ATH
02/12/21+18.3%new ATH
02/25/21-3.4%-6.3% on the day
03/03/21-6.3%-7% on the day
03/04/21-13.6%-9.2% on the day
03/05/21-17.1%-4.1% on the day
03/08/21-22.8%-6.9% on the day
03/09/21-11.0%+15.3% on the day
03/11/21-4.3%+9.6% on the day
03/18/21-10.2%-6.7% on the day
03/24/21-15.6%-8.6% on the day
03/29/21-19.0%close to 3/8/21 trough
03/31/21-13.2%+6.6% on the day
04/13/21+4.0%+8.0% on the day
05/04/21-10.9%-6.1% on the day
05/06/21-21.1%-9.6% on the day
05/07/21-17.5%+4.6% on the day
05/13/21-23.5%new YTD low
05/14/21-16.3%+10.9% on the day
05/20/21-5.3%+7.1% on the day
05/24/21-0.1%7th consecutive up day
06/10/21+11.3%+5.4% on the day
06/17/21+19.8%new ATH (finally!)
06/18/21+23.2%new ATH; +5.1% on the day
06/22/21+27.4%new ATH; +6.2% on the day
06/23/21+28.0%new ATH
06/24/21+28.5%new ATH
06/28/21+30.8%new ATH
06/29/21+31.2%new ATH
07/06/21+33.4%new ATH
07/09/21+33.9%new ATH
07/14/21+25.6%-4.0% on the day
07/22/21+34.2%new ATH
07/23/21+36.9%new ATH
07/26/21+37.0%new ATH
07/28/21+37.9%*new ATH
*2021 portfolio peak (ATH)

Weekly Performance

DATEGauchoRico
YTD
S&P500
TOTAL
RETURN
YTD
DELTA
01/08/216.5%1.9%4.6%
01/15/216.4%0.4%6.0%
01/22/2110.2%2.4%7.9%
01/29/213.1%-1.0%4.2%
02/05/2112.6%3.6%9.0%
02/12/2118.3%4.9%13.3%
02/19/2114.2%4.2%10.0%
02/26/21-1.2%1.7%-3.0%
03/05/21-17.1%2.6%-19.7%
03/12/21-6.3%5.3%-11.6%
03/19/21-7.7%4.5%-12.3%
03/26/21-15.8%6.2%-22.0%
04/01/21-9.5%7.4%-16.9%
04/08/21-3.3%10.4%-13.6%
04/15/210.0%11.9%-11.9%
04/23/213.1%11.8%-8.7%
04/30/21-1.5%11.8%-13.4%
05/07/21-17.5%13.3%-30.7%
05/14/21-16.3%11.7%-28.0%
05/21/21-2.4%11.3%-13.7%
05/28/213.4%12.6%-9.2%
06/04/212.3%13.3%-11.1%
06/11/2112.6%13.8%-1.3%
06/18/2123.2%11.7%11.5%
06/25/2128.0%14.8%13.2%
07/02/2128.9%16.7%12.1%
07/09/2133.9%17.2%16.6%
07/16/2123.8%16.1%7.6%
07/23/2136.9%18.4%18.5%
07/30/2133.7%18.0%15.7%

ALLOCATIONS

TICKER7/31/216/30/215/31/214/30/213/31/211/31/2112/31/20
CRWD19.1%*19.9%*20.0%*30.2%*27.7%*31.2%*31.5%*
DDOG16.4%*15.7%*16.7%*12.0%*12.9%*10.7%10.4%
NET13.4%15.9%15.2%16.6%15.2%17.9%*17.8%*
DOCU13.2%12.6%*6.6%*5.7%*5.6%*16.2%*16.4%*
UPST13.0%7.8%6.3%4.4%5.7%
LSPD11.1%^11.3%^12.1%^13.1%^13.2%^4.8%^3.3%
SNOW6.0%5.6%6.8%6.9%3.0%0.5%
ZM5.5%5.8%10.8%*11.0%*12.3%*11.5%11.0%
GOLD2.0%2.0%2.9%1.6%1.7%1.4%3.0%
NEM1.0%1.1%1.0%1.0%
PATH0.1%
PTON4.0%4.0%4.2%
BPRMF1.2%1.3%1.4%
Cash1.4%6.5%3.0%-0.2%1.2%0.8%0.7%
* includes 2023 LEAPS; ^ includes 17Dec call options

PORTFOLIO CHANGES

Changes since 30Jun2021

  • Sold all DOCU Jan 2023 calls: Used all of the proceeds to purchase DOCU shares.
  • Sold NET shares: Reduced allocation by about 3.5% from an allocation of 16.8%. Also sold some covered calls. My target allocation is now 10%.
  • Bought more UPST: Bought more UPST shares on several occasions during July using cash and proceeds from the NET shares sales to fund these purchases.
  • Paid estimated tax on capital gains: About 2% of the cash allocation was used to paid capital gains taxes.

Explanation of Portfolio Changes

The two changes that I want to explain are the NET allocation reduction and the UPST allocation increase.

NET Allocation Reduction

I wrote this a month ago:

“I have no leverage and no options positions on NET. In my opinion, NET is highly valued compared to other hyper growth companies. NET’s EV/S is among the highest among its cohort companies. In addition, since 12Feb, NET’s stock price appreciation has outpaced its growth. Even adjusted for a 51% growth quarter (reported on 6May), NET is trading 111% above its 12Feb closing price. Even though NET has shown steady revenue growth for a year and a half, I believe that lots of future success is already baked into the stock price. I have zero interest in leveraging my NET position. All of my shares are in taxable accounts, and my highest cost basis shares will go long-term in about five weeks. I may consider reducing my position then.”

— GauchoRico in the 2021-06-30 Portfolio Update

The NET share price continued to increase in July even rising as high as $122.77 on 29Jul. This price is 143% of the 12Feb price and 29% higher even after adjusted for Q1’s revenue growth. In my opinion, NET’s shares have growth far more than is justified for its demonstrated growth. The shares were already frothy at the end of June ($105.84) with much future growth baked in. NET needs to show us some nice growth acceleration to justify its valuation. I do like all the new products. I like their plans and strategy. I like how NET is doing good in the world. But, in the end, I’m an investor looking to maximize my portfolio’s growth. NET needs to show us the money, and until it does so in a big way, I needed to cut back the allocation which I started doing at $115/share. I intend to decrease my allocation further to about 10%, and I intend to do so prior to the 5Aug earnings release.

UPST Allocation Increase

I wrote this a month ago:

“In summary, UPST is definitely on track, and it’s a company with great progress and potential but also some risks that I’d like to see mitigated. Interestingly, with this stock comes great temptation: temptation to sell some after a huge stock price gain in a very short period and temptation to add to a “winner”. While I added a small allocation to my shares after earnings when the stock dipped back into the $80s, I’ve mostly resisted trading in and out on the swings. As long as the business continues to perform, I’d be hard pressed to sell any shares (unless the price gets too crazy….what’s crazy? Maybe $225 in the near term). Until I see some of the risks mitigated, I’ll likely not add shares (unless the price gets too cheap….what’s cheap? Maybe sub-$90).”

–GauchoRico in the 2021-06-04 Portfolio Update

Prior to the above summary, I detailed both UPST’s growth potential as well as its risks. I didn’t want to invest too much into UPST until some of the risks were mitigated. Further details of my analysis can be found in my 2021-06-04 Portfolio Update. So why did I change my mind and add quite a lot to my UPST allocation in July?

First, with the share lockup expiration behind us, UPST’s extreme volatility settled down with UPST trading in a tighter range (about $110-$130) for several weeks. With this share price stabilization +/- $10 of the price of the 15Apr $120 follow-on equity offering, I became more comfortable adding to my position. In addition and more important, the positive news on UPST has been building with more new customer announcements, most recently the addition of Associated Bank with 220 customer locations. In addition to being one of UPST’s largest bank partners, Associated Bank will be using Upstart’s lending platform on its own website rather than having customers passed to it by Upstart. As an investor, I love this and want to see more and more of these types of arrangements. The partnership between UPST and Associated Bank began in February 2021, five months before it was announced. This delay makes me wonder how many other partnerships are already in place but not yet announced.

I expect that the lending environment has already improved (this week I read that consumer confidence in the U.S. in July has hit a 17-month high). Also, the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) on 29Jul issued a news release that contains some information that bodes well for the possibility of increased demand for unsecured personal loans. The release notes an increase in personal consumption led by spending on food services and accommodations. Specifically, personal outlays (i.e. spending by individuals) increased by $681B while their disposable income decreased by $1.42T. Now that’s interesting. People are itching to spend but they earned less so how do you think they’re going to fund all that spending? Furthermore, I would think that spending will continue strong as the economy continues to open.

While the risks that I outlined a few weeks ago are still present, I’ve reassessed the reward versus the risk and increased my position. I was eager to increase the allocation prior to the 10Aug Q2 earnings announcement date.

GOING INTO EARNINGS

In the past, I’ve typically posted portfolio updates after a cluster of earnings announcements by my portfolio companies. This practice has given me the opportunity to explain my revised thinking on my holdings. In contrast, this portfolio update is just before my portfolio companies will begin to report their results (starting next week on 5Aug). This enables me to explain my thinking just before an earnings result.

Date
LSPD5Aug BMO
DDOG5Aug BMO
NET5Aug AMC
UPST10Aug AMC
SNOW25Aug (Est)
ZM31Aug (Est)
CRWD1Sep (Est)
DOCU1Sep (Est)

The table to the right shows the earnings release dates for my portfolio companies; those companies with an “Est” after the date have not yet confirmed the release dates, so these dates are my own estimates. The first four companies have quarters ending in June, and the last four companies have quarters ending in July.

For the companies reporting their June quarters, I have formed opinions on how good the results might be in light of expectations, valuations, and recent stock price movements. In particular, I am very optimistic about the upcoming results for LSPD, DDOG, and UPST.

I expect LSPD to have a blowout quarter with strong guidance, and I wouldn’t be surprised to see the stock price rally after the earnings announcement in spite of recent share price appreciation. However, I’ve decided not to make any additional bets on earnings because I already hold a significant number of 17Dec call options that I bought early in 2021. If I did not already own these options, I might be inclined to make some bets on earnings.

I expect DDOG to report a strong quarter with a good chance for revenue growth re-acceleration. DDOG’s valuation, adjusted for revenue and revenue growth, is favorable compared to most other SaaS companies. In recent weeks, I’ve made profits on trading DDOG short straddles and deep-in-the-money puts. I’ve reinvested some of these profits in long in-the-money call options that expire on 20Aug. I think it’s likely that DDOG shares will rally after reporting the Q2 results.

Earlier in this portfolio update, I’ve shared my opinion that NET shares are overvalued compared to the growth that the company has thus far displayed. I’ve been reducing my allocation, and I’m not interested in betting on the upcoming NET earnings report.

UPST’s volatility has settled down, and, as I mentioned, there’s been a lot of good news reported recently. In addition, I think that the lending environment could be very favorable for UPST. It’s really hard to predict what UPST might report because the company is growing so fast. I think there’s a solid chance that UPST will report another blowout quarter and significantly raise its full year guidance as it did last quarter. For more than a month, I’ve been harvesting premiums via options trades, and, in addition to significantly increasing my share allocation in UPST, I’ve placed a number of long call option bets: 13Aug $160 calls, 13Aug $170 calls, and 20Aug $125 calls. It’s possible that I’ll exit the higher strike price options in the days before the earnings release (i.e. if the shares run up), but I plan to hold the $125 calls through earnings.

Note that I’m careful not to make these earnings bets too big; as I mentioned, these bets on DDOG and UPST are more than funded by recent trading profits. In aggregate, these bets cost less than 0.5% of my portfolio.

I haven’t yet considered whether I want to make earnings bets on the companies with July quarters. My current inclination is to pass on making such bets unless we see a significant drop in their share prices prior to the earnings announcements.

FINAL THOUGHTS

The portfolio has rallied strongly for the past 11 weeks. The fundamentals of the portfolio companies has been super strong, and, as we enter the period of next earnings results, I’m expecting them all to continue their very strong growth. The cloud titans (MSFT, GOOG, and AMZN) all displayed very strong growth in their respective cloud businesses; the results were released this past week. In addition, some of the larger SaaS companies (e.g. NOW and TEAM) showed continued strength in their earnings reports that were released in the past few days. While share prices of several of my portfolio companies (CRWD, DDOG, DOCU, LSPD, and NET) are near all-time highs, I’m optimistic about their future prospects (although NET shares have gotten ahead of themselves, in my opinion).

On the macroeconomic front, which I follow but don’t really use to make investing decisions, we’ve had several significant developments. The U.S. economy continues to reopen even in the face of a resurgence of COVID cases; I think we’re now past the point where COVID could derail the reopening (at least in the U.S.). Inflation continues to run hot, but U.S. Treasury interest rates remain very low; we’ll likely find out in the next six months whether Powell is correct about inflation being transitory (I think so); if I’m right about this then the environment will remain very favorable for stocks in general. The U.S. Federal government now seems poised to pass a $1.2T hard infrastructure spending plan which will add further stimulus to the economy The debt ceiling limit could capture increasing attention in August, but that issue will likely get solved. Overall, I’d say the environment continues to look really good for stocks in general. There could speed bumps, but the larger focus for me will be the upcoming earnings results for the portfolio companies. I’ll discuss my take on these results in my next update in early September.

The opinions, thoughts, analyses, stock selections, portfolio allocations, and other content is freely shared by GauchoRico. This information should not be taken as recommendations or advice. GauchoRico does not make recommendations and does not offer financial advice. Each person/investor is responsible for making and owning their own decisions, financial and otherwise.